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Kevin Kisner had an interesting take on the Wyndham Clark/Oakmont locker room situation
Kevin Kisner had an interesting take on the Wyndham Clark/Oakmont locker room situation

USA Today

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Kevin Kisner had an interesting take on the Wyndham Clark/Oakmont locker room situation

It has been a tumultuous couple of months for Wyndham Clark. First, he damaged a sign at the PGA Championship and then damaged lockers inside the Oakmont clubhouse, which it resulted in him being banned from the club, it was announced earlier this week. He opened with 76 in the British Open at Royal Portrush on Thursday but put together three great rounds to finish in the top five at the last major championship of the year. During final round coverage on NBC, analyst Kevin Kisner had an interesting take on the Clark and Oakmont debacle, which resulted in numerous golf personalities on social media questioning his comments. "I'm not sure anybody in the situation handled it properly," Kisner said on the broadcast. "Wyndham probably could have nipped that in the bud with an earlier, or justifiable, statement, but locker rooms are supposed to be sacred. Not sure how that picture got out, USGA can help with that. I think if everyone just sat at a table face to face, that situation could go away pretty quickly." His comments make it seem as if he's pointing a finger at the USGA for the photo getting out. No Laying Up's Tron Carter is who initially posted the photo of damage on social media. After Kisner's comments, numerous people flooded social media to post about the situation. Clark finished T-4 at the British Open and spoke with media Sunday after declining to talk Saturday. "Yeah, so obviously I feel terrible with what happened. I'm doing anything I can to try to remedy the situation. We're trying to keep it private between Oakmont, myself and the USGA. I'm just happy we have a pathway moving forward, and like you said, I'm hoping we can get past this and move on and hope there's no ill-will towards me and Oakmont. "Like you said, I'm just trying to get past it. I want the best for Oakmont, the USGA and myself. Like I said, I'm very sorry for what I did and feel terrible, and hopefully in a few months we're past this, and it's something of the past." His T-4 at Royal Portrush is on the heels of a T-11 at the Genesis Scottish Open, so perhaps it's a sign of improving play. Clark was asked about the situation becoming public, and he said, "we were hoping it was going to be private. I'll just leave it at that."

Wyndham Clark barred from US Open course after locker-destroying tantrum
Wyndham Clark barred from US Open course after locker-destroying tantrum

New York Post

time16-07-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Post

Wyndham Clark barred from US Open course after locker-destroying tantrum

A former U.S. Open champ isn't welcome at a U.S. Open course. Oakmont Country Club sent a letter to its members this week in which it detailed a decision to suspend Wyndham Clark from the facility after he destroyed some lockers in a tantrum during the 2025 US Open at the famed Pittsburgh-area golf course. Advertisement 'Several of you have inquired about the situation involving Wyndham Clark and the steps being taken in response to his recent behavior,' the letter read, according to a copy obtained by Golf Digest. 'Following multiple discussions with the USGA and the OCC Board, a decision has been made that Mr. Clark will no longer be permitted on OCC property. This decision will remain in effect unless formally reconsidered and approved by the Board. 'Reinstatement would be contingent upon Mr. Clark fulfilling a number of specific conditions, including full repayment for damages, a meaningful contribution to a charity of the Board's choosing, and the successful completion of counseling and/or anger management sessions. Thank you for your understanding and continued support.' Advertisement Wyndham Clark has been barred from Oakmont for destroying lockers after the US Open. Getty Images After the event in June, photo of destroyed lockers posted by a host of the 'No Laying Up' podcast went viral. Clark, who missed the cut at 8-over par, was identified as the perpetrator and later apologized for the outburst that caused the damage. However, that does not appear to be enough to enough to satisfy Oakmont's leaders based on this latest decision. Advertisement 'Yeah, I mean, I made a mistake in a moment of rage with, you know, a bad year and everything coming together and it just was more than anything a good wake-up call for me to say, 'Hey, you know what, let's get back on track and things aren't that bad,'' Clark, who won the 2023 US Open at Los Angeles Country Club, said about the incident. 'I live a great life and I'm not that far off from playing good golf, so I feel like I've turned a page and we're now maybe on the right track of playing some good golf.' Wyndham Clark during the second round of the US Open on his way to missing the cut. Getty Images Advertisement Clark's temper had reared its head at the previous major too, when he launched his driver after a poor tee shot, damaging a sign at the PGA Championship at Valhalla in May. J.J. Spaun captured the US Open with a lengthy birdie putt on 18 that had him finishing as the only player under par. The US Open returns to Oakmont in 2033.

Wall Street's summer status symbol
Wall Street's summer status symbol

Business Insider

time16-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Business Insider

Wall Street's summer status symbol

It's summer on Wall Street. Thus, enter the polo shirt. Thus, enter the golf polo shirt. Thus, enter the moisture-wicking technical golf polo shirt with the logo of the fancy schmancy golf course you've played at — the ultimate flex. In the realm of hoity-toity sports, golf is among the hoity-toitiest. Sure, anyone can golf at public courses, and there's always Topgolf, but the most sought-after courses are at private clubs, generally open to members only (and their limited number of guests). The elitist, exclusive nature of the sport manifests in fashion — at least among a certain type of guy. Golf bros are low-key showing off to each other all the time, via polos and hats and other gear with logos of specific clubs and courses. Men I spoke with for this story describe the logoed gear as a "head nod," a "badge of honor," a "talisman," being "part of a secret society," and "like porn for golfing men." Most insist it's about starting a conversation — guy A recognizes guy B's logo at work or the airport bar, and they chat. Vince Sampson, a 50-something attorney in Virginia, tells me he thinks the logos are a good ice breaker. "You end up talking about everything but the logo," he says. But these are subtle status symbols, and ones that sometimes spur some snark. They have a hierarchy to them and an unspoken set of rules for how and when they can be worn. Wearing too many logos at once is tacky, lest you become a "Bag Tag Barry." If you wear a golf polo to the office — which a lot of guys do — expect some eye rolls from the stuffier types. The most important rule: Under no circumstances can you wear a logo from a course you haven't played. It's stolen valor. There's a certain type of guy — often with a certain-sized bank account — who seeks out status symbols. Maybe it's something quieter, like a specific cologne. Maybe it's a little louder, like an Eames chair or a watch. Maybe it screams, like a Ferrari. On the status symbol decibel scale, golf club logos whisper. They're one of those things that nobody cares about unless they really care — or know enough about golf course rankings to get why someone would care. "Golfers, we're just really weird and kind of self-absorbed as a sport, and it's this entire subculture," says Todd Schuster, better known publicly as Tron Carter, who's one of the hosts of "No Laying Up," a podcast for whom he describes as golf "sickos" like himself. "This is all going on, meanwhile, the rest of society just has no idea." Logoed merchandise is a revenue driver for golf courses. According to the Association of Golf Merchandisers, golf shops generate annual sales of over $1 billion a year, thanks to a growing assortment of golf merchandise and gear (including clothing that sometimes doesn't even comply with the course's dress code). Forbes estimated in 2022 that Augusta National Golf Club, which hosts the Masters, makes $69 million in merchandise sales from the tournament alone. Historically, course golf pros ran shops, but today more courses are running their retail operations themselves, given how lucrative they are. The merch is a marketing opportunity, too. It's a way to quietly advertise to a target group of customers and generate envy and buzz. "With a course, if they want to be known as being this prestigious course or even a well-known resort course, you almost have to do this logo that you can market with your merch," says Ben Palet, a 30-something operations manager in Wisconsin who golfs multiple times a week. He compares the logo-peeking among golfers to an inside joke. Under no circumstances can you wear a logo from a course you haven't played. It's stolen valor. Alec Emerson, a 20-something trader in Chicago who's an avid golfer, wears a golf shirt to work almost every day in the summer. "Given that most of the best golf courses in the country are country club private courses, it is seen as a measure of clout of places that you've been — either, if you're lucky enough to be a member at a top, call it, 150 place, or you swim in these sort of finance circles," he says. "There's a lot of old money at these courses, and so there's this sort of conservative sense of in-group, out-group type thing going on." As we chat, he ticks off the names of various courses and logos and their significance. A managing director at a high-end firm in New York might be a member at Winged Foot. A Sleepy Hollow logo translates to "big shot." Masters merch is so ubiquitous it could actually be a "negative status symbol," depending on who you're asking. The real juice is in the Augusta National logo, "a whole different ball game" that means the person played there — at least in theory. "The No. 1 crime you can commit," he tells me, is buying a shirt on eBay from a course you haven't played. "It's so egregious." The logo ladder makes some sense, given the nature of the sport. The fact that the clubs are hard to get into — unlike a baseball diamond or basketball court — leads to a sense of scarcity, and exclusivity brings status. That you've been to an elite club is a signal of who you know (sometimes more than of how good you are at golf or how much you even like it). Some courses differentiate logos between merchandise for members and guests, or create logos for special events and tournaments, establishing an ultimate in-crowd ranking. And because golf attire isn't especially thrilling, for men in particular, the logos are a way to spice things up. "There's a lot you can glean from someone about what logo they're wearing," Schuster says. "If you're going to wear something to the Hamptons, you've got Sebonack out there, which is the new money, a little bit more loud club. You've got National Golf Links, which is as old-school golfing as it gets. Or you've got Shinnecock, which is as high society, traditional as it gets." The etiquette can be as dizzying as it can be ridiculous. Lots of people have lots of differing — and borderline catty — opinions about golf merch. One 50-something insurance professional in Chicago tells me golf attire in the office has long been a pet peeve of his. "Golf shirts are for the golf course," he says, adding that he once called one of his charges out for sporting the look in the wintertime. "I was like, 'Are we going golfing this afternoon?' And he kind of looked at me with a blank stare." A 30-something private equity professional in New York jokes that he sees a lot of "clowns" sporting golf shirts around Midtown Manhattan during the summer, while also acknowledging he's sometimes one of said clowns. It's not so much the shirts that bug him; it's the conversations he gets forced into with guys who aren't even good at the game that get on his nerves. "I'm like, 'Dude, come on, let's talk about something else.' And it's people who suck at golf, too," he says. Both spoke with me on the condition of anonymity out of fear of being ostracized over their hot takes. It's people who suck at golf, too. Nick Ribeiro, who runs Preserved Links, a private club for golf aficionados, tells me the problem isn't the logos; it's the people who get jealous of the logos because they haven't played a round at the elite clubs. They'll make comments — in jest-ish — about people flaunting the logos, or they make fun of the "rules" and who is and isn't following them. A lot of the envy is unspoken, he says: "mostly a cry session between those without logos with each other." And in his mind, they should just try harder to meet members so they can get in. "They haven't put in the effort or the work in order to meet a member at any given club and build a relationship with that person to be one of the 20 guests he's allowed to bring in a year," Ribeiro says. "Younger people, they do to an extent believe that they should just be able to walk through the gate, play the golf course, order whatever they want to order, and the club should just roll the red carpet out for them." Big-letter hats — as in baseball caps with block letters on them that are abbreviations or acronyms for certain clubs — are a point of contention among golfers. They were partially popularized by G/Fore, a golf and lifestyle brand, and its founder, who's a member of the Bel-Aire Golf Course and made "BACC" hats — a play on blood alcohol content — because the stereotype is that people drink a lot on the course. Now, they're ubiquitous, with different acronyms for different courses. Sampson tells me he finds them "distasteful." Schuster says they're "tacky," "corny," and "obnoxious." "Golf tends to be somewhat understated," he says. There's some disagreement about how many logos are allowed to be worn at once, too. "If somebody's just logoed out head to toe, all right, probably that person either is just a douche or has a total inferiority complex or just doesn't get it," Schuster says. A few people sent me a link to a document called "the sacred code of golf gear etiquette." Among the list of rules are no two of the same logo unless you're a member of the course, no driver headcover from a nonmember course, and no Masters gear unless you're under 18, over 65, or doing yard work. These supposed rules come with a wink and a nod, or as Ribeiro tells me, they're "half joke but def true." But as the saying goes, rules are made to be broken. Anthony Polcari, a 20-something consultant and "vibrant masculinity" influencer in Washington, DC, who goes by Tony P online, doesn't seem to sweat these cultural golf edicts. He likes the big letter hats. He thinks it's fine to bring Bluetooth speakers onto the golf course. Perhaps most horrifyingly, Polcari — gasp! — would absolutely wear a logo from a course he hasn't played, especially if the shirt is nice. "A lot of folks take things very, very seriously," he says. "It's kind of like how people, a lot of my followers, will get on me for why I put ketchup on a hot dog." Everyone else tells me that wearing a logo of a course you haven't played is the ultimate faux pas, because what if someone asked you about it? "It's almost the, I hesitate to say, sort of embarrassment of saying that you haven't been there. It might be awkward to have that as a conversation," says Sam Jones, a golf fashion influencer who goes by The Golf Fashion Guy online. "You're risking looking phony," says Don Bostic, the executive director at the Friars Golf Club, a virtual golf society. "I'm just going to feel weird," Sampson says. If somebody's just logoed out head to toe, all right, probably that person either is just a douche or has a total inferiority complex or just doesn't get it. I have to admit that I'm on Tony P's side here. If a stranger asks about the cute little insignia on your shirt, it's totally fine to blow them off or say it was a gift and move on. If you can bond over it, that's awesome! If not, that's fine, too! Who's played at what golf courses is a kind of lame thing to base a social power ranking on — it's probably good that golf is loosening up a little. "It's become more of a, I would say, less stuffy game, where the game is actually more reachable to the masses from an accessibility perspective and just a cultural perspective," Polcari says. There's also no guarantee the cool kids will think the logo is cool, in finance, among golf bros, or elsewhere. "The only status symbol on Wall Street is your W-2 or K-1," says Josh Brown, a cofounder of Ritholtz Wealth Management in New York, in an email. "Everything else is Mickey Mouse."

Wyndham Clark Breaks Silence After Damaging Oakmont Country Club's Locker Room
Wyndham Clark Breaks Silence After Damaging Oakmont Country Club's Locker Room

Yahoo

time20-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Wyndham Clark Breaks Silence After Damaging Oakmont Country Club's Locker Room

Wyndham Clark Breaks Silence After Damaging Oakmont Country Club's Locker Room originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The challenges faced by the golfers at last week's U.S. Open were well-documented. One golfer who appeared to allow his emotions get the best of him was Wyndham Clark. Advertisement The 31-year-old golfer was alleged to have damaged two lockers at the historic Oakmont Country Club. "No Laying Up" podcast host Tron Carter confirmed via social media that multiple sources knew the locker-room damage was placed squarely on Clark. On Thursday, Clark addressed his misdeeds and attempted to take accountability. "I've had a lot of highs and lows in my career, especially this year some lows," said Clark. "I made a mistake that I deeply regret. I'm very sorry for what happened. But I'd also like to move on, not only for myself but for Oakmont, for the USGA, and kind of focus on the rest of this year." This year's U.S. Open was a difficult event for the entire field. Clark's lashing out in the Oakmont locker room came after he failed to make the cut. The eventual winner, J.J. Spaun, finished the four-day event with just a 1-under-par final total as every other golfer finished above par. Advertisement However, this is far from the first time Clark has shown flashes of poor sportsmanship. Wyndham Clark plays his shot from the 10th tee during the first round of the U.S. Open.© Bill Streicher-Imagn Images Earlier this season, during the final round of the PGA Championship, Clark tossed his driver into an advertising board and, in doing so, just missed hitting an event marshal. Clark issued an apology after that incident as well. Rory McIlroy, the world's No. 2 golfer, also unleashed some frustration during his play at Oakmont. He threw his club after a poor tee shot, smashing a nearby tee marker during last Friday's round. Clark, a Denver, Colorado, native, is still seeking his first PGA win this season. He has played in 16 events in 2025, with one top-10 finish and four top-25 finishes. He has made 12 cuts, missed three and had one withdrawal. Advertisement Related: Tiger Woods Affiliate Emerges as PGA Tour CEO Frontrunner This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 19, 2025, where it first appeared.

Major winner 'very sorry' for damaging Oakmont lockers
Major winner 'very sorry' for damaging Oakmont lockers

Perth Now

time19-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Perth Now

Major winner 'very sorry' for damaging Oakmont lockers

Wyndham Clark has delivered an apology for damaging Oakmont Country Club lockers in anger last week at the US Open. Clark missed the cut at the third major championship of the season, going 74-74 (eight over par) through two rounds. On Saturday, social media posts from golf podcaster Todd "Tron Carter" Schuster of "No Laying Up" showed photos he obtained from the Oakmont locker room. Two of the lockers' doors were seriously damaged, with Schuster connecting it to Clark. Oakmont officials later confirmed Clark's locker had been damaged. Clark was asked about the incident Thursday at the Travelers Championship after he opened with a six-under 64. "Yeah, I mean, I've had a lot of highs and lows in my career, especially this year some lows," Clark said. "I made a mistake that I deeply regret. I'm very sorry for what happened." "But I'd also like to move on, not only for myself but for Oakmont, for the USGA, and kind of focus on the rest of this year and things that come up. "I still want to try to make the Ryder Cup team. I still am on the outside looking in for the FedEx Cup. So I'm starting to move on and focus on those things." Clark did not comment further on the matter. It was not known whether he had apologised directly to Oakmont. It was the second straight major where Clark, the 2023 US Open champion, had to apologise for aggressive behaviour. At the PGA Championship in May, following a poor drive, Clark threw his driver toward the back of the tee box. It crashed into signage with a volunteer standing mere feet away, and the head of the club snapped off.

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