Caddie takes matters into his own hands

Williams tosses camera after incident with Woods

? With $200,000 on the line, Tiger Woods dug his feet in the bunker, waggled his sand wedge over the ball and was at the top of his swing when the silence was pierced by a nerve-racking noise he has come to despise.

Click!

Even more outrageous was the sound that followed.

Splash!

Not long after someone took a premature picture of Woods at the Skins Game, caddie Steve Williams took the law – or the lens, in this case – into his own hands and deposited the camera in the pond surrounding the 18th green at Landmark Golf Club.

The question is: Who crossed the line?

Does a caddie have the right to destroy someone’s property?

“Just because he’s Tiger Woods’ caddie doesn’t give him the right to do that,” Vijay Singh said. “It may have been spur of the moment, but I cannot say it was good what he did. If my caddie did that, I’d make him fish it out of the lake.”

Did the fan get what he deserved?

No one knew who the guy was, only that he was not authorized to have a camera or be stationed inside the ropes.

“Did Stevie throw the camera away? I’ve been wanting to do that for a long time,” Davis Love III said. “I’ve taken them away from people, but I haven’t smashed one or thrown one yet. I think it’s fair.”

Steve Williams, caddie for Tiger Woods, has a bead on some rowdy fans during the Buick Open last August. Not long after someone took a picture of Woods during his swing at the Skins Game, Williams tossed the camera into a pond.

It was not clear whether Williams would be fined or ordered to reimburse the man, if he ever comes forward. Photojournalists who saw the camera said it was worth about $7,000.

Any fine – and Woods said he expects one – is assessed to the player, who then passes it along to the caddie. But not this time. Woods said he would pick up the tab.

This is not the first time Woods has defended his Kiwi caddie.

During the “Showdown at Sherwood” three years ago, a PGA Tour official told Williams he could not wear shorts, even though the temperature was pushing 90 degrees. When Williams refused to change, the official told the caddie he would no longer work on the PGA Tour.

“Guess I’ll be playing in Europe next year,” Woods said, and that was the end of that.

Woods had to back off twice because of cameras on the opening hole at the British Open, where he was going for the third leg of the Grand Slam. An early click on the final hole in Ireland cost him a chance at his first bogey-free tournament. There were so many cameras in Germany that Woods felt as if he was model on a runway.

And those are just a few examples from this year.

“He backs off a lot more than you realize,” Mark O’Meara said.

The national photojournalists are guilty by association. The early clicks almost always come from those who don’t cover golf, such as the Japanese photographer who got Woods on the first fairway at Muirfield and was puzzled when he was asked to leave.

The real problem stems from fans who come to the course with cameras, from marshals who spend more time watching golf than policing the crowds, and from tour officials who fail to enforce their policies.

“We’ve had poor camera control on the PGA Tour, and it’s jeopardizing the integrity of the championship,” said Phil Mickelson.

That’s not to say the answer is tossing cameras into the water.

“I don’t think I would have handled it that way,” Mickelson said. “But I can understand the frustration he must have felt. I don’t have a problem with it.”