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Tiger Woods: Bill Clinton Cheats at Golf, Too
NewsMax ^
| 1 June 2006
Posted on 05/31/2006 4:34:34 PM PDT by Aussie Dasher
In Arkansas for a children's golf clinic, Tiger Woods was asked about playing golf with former President Bill Clinton.
"Interesting math," Woods said, drawing a laugh before telling a story about a round the two played in February before the opening of the Tiger Woods Learning Center in Anaheim, Calif.
Woods described a hole on the back nine.
"President Clinton rolls one in the bushes, then hits another one off the tee ... right in the middle of the fairway, hits a nice little wedge shot up there to about, I don't know, 6-7 feet.
"I hit a bad pitch, I blasted it by about 12 feet. ... Then all of the sudden, he does one of these," Woods said, gesturing like a player picking up his ball.
"It was 6-7 feet and he walked off the green. ... So I'm sitting in the cart. He's writing down the numbers, I happen to kind of ..." Woods said, leaning back as if reading a scorecard over someone's shoulder.
"Woods 4, Clinton 3."
On a more serious note, Woods said playing with Clinton was fascinating.
"We had a good time," Woods said. "He was a cool person to play with, very intelligent. Brilliant, the things that he knew to describe world politics ... actually really remarkable."
TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: billclinton; bj; bjcheatsalways; bubba; cheat; clinton; clintoon; corruption; golf; slickwilly; tigerwoods; x42
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To: Aussie Dasher
Imagine that...The first black president being dissed by another...golfer
61
posted on
05/31/2006 8:23:17 PM PDT
by
FDNYRHEROES
(Always bring a liberal to a gunfight)
To: Aussie Dasher
"We had a good time," Woods said. "He was a cool person to play with, very intelligent. Brilliant, the things that he knew to describe world politics ... actually really remarkable." An intelligent, shrewd, and cunning cheater! The worst kind of human being.
62
posted on
05/31/2006 8:42:04 PM PDT
by
Fruitbat
To: EyeGuy
"He was a cool person to play with, very intelligent. Brilliant, the things that he knew to describe world politics ... actually really remarkable."
Someone just turned in his grave.
63
posted on
05/31/2006 9:14:27 PM PDT
by
TET1968
(SI MINOR PLUS EST ERGO NIHIL SUNT OMNIA)
To: Aussie Dasher
BJ cheats at LIFE..... rules, ethics, decency.... trivial concepts meant only for the little people. He's so far above us all, you know.......
64
posted on
05/31/2006 9:37:02 PM PDT
by
Enchante
(General Hayden: I've Never Taken a Domestic Flight That Landed in Waziristan!)
To: Aussie Dasher
Tiger did hold back one story that bill told him..about the time he had the hole in one with when he played Monica's back nine not to mention that he lost his ball in her ruff.
65
posted on
05/31/2006 9:45:07 PM PDT
by
MAD-AS-HELL
(Put a mirror to the face of the republican party and all you'll see is a Donkey.)
To: Aussie Dasher
Bet Tiger didn't allow his wife to be alone with Bill.
66
posted on
05/31/2006 9:48:13 PM PDT
by
A CA Guy
(God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
To: TommyDale
By Ann Devroy and Ruth Marcus
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON
A senior White House official was forced to resign Thursday after he and a colleague took the presidential helicopter, Marine One, from Washington to a private country club near Camp David, Md., for an afternoon golf game Tuesday.
David Watkins, director of the White House Office of Administration and one of the Arkansas friends President Clinton brought with him to Washington, submitted his resignation after his outing with Alphonso Maldon Jr., director of the White House Military Office, became public.
__________________
as an aside, this is the same guy who used campaign funds to pay for a hooker. The clinton campaign later paid an FEC fine for this too.
67
posted on
05/31/2006 10:27:11 PM PDT
by
staytrue
(Moonbat conservatives-those who would rather have the democrats win.)
To: TommyDale
I may be wrong about the prostitute
http://gfreitag.tripod.com/Criminal_List.html
"David Watkins - Clinton/Gore campaign manager, Assistant to President Clinton for Management and Administration. He resigned after using the presidential helicopter, at a cost of $13,000, for a golf outing. He also used $37,000 from the Clinton '92 campaign to pay off a sexual harrassment charge.
"
68
posted on
05/31/2006 10:34:49 PM PDT
by
staytrue
(Moonbat conservatives-those who would rather have the democrats win.)
To: wideminded
Please don't tell us it was Ike. I won't believe it.
69
posted on
05/31/2006 10:37:37 PM PDT
by
Rte66
To: Suzy Quzy
That's how I feel, too. The cult of Tiger always does this.
70
posted on
05/31/2006 10:39:29 PM PDT
by
Rte66
To: hodaka
Personally, I was anxious to see whether Hill & Bill were singing along with the hymn, "Great is Thy Faithfulness," at Bentsen's funeral yesterday - but the camera wouldn't go there!
71
posted on
05/31/2006 10:41:38 PM PDT
by
Rte66
To: All
72
posted on
05/31/2006 10:47:11 PM PDT
by
David Allen
(the presumption of innocence - what a concept!)
To: ronnied
Yes, the looming horror of Hildebeast...
73
posted on
05/31/2006 11:49:49 PM PDT
by
karnage
To: Aussie Dasher
Tiger Woods: Bill Clinton Cheats at Golf, Too A similar story is described in Dereliction of Duty, by one of Clintons military aidesone who carried the nuclear footballabout BJs golf cheating.
To: Rte66
Please don't tell us it was Ike. No, but he was mentioned as the most competitive presidential golfer. Also IIRC the author stated that Ike played 800 times in 8 years. I remember seeing a cartoon once that showed someone with Ike talking to the party ahead of them on the golf course. He was saying, "They've just bombed New York. Can we play through?"
To: razorback-bert
You couldn't be more correct.
I have always maintained that if I could play golf with someone, by the end of the round, I would know enough about that person's character to decide wether or not I wanted to do business with that person or wanted them as a friend.
76
posted on
06/01/2006 5:22:59 AM PDT
by
babydoll22
(The facts ma'am, just the facts. I don't want to know what you feel!)
To: Aussie Dasher
If it wasn't for mulligans, my score would be in the 200s! 8-)
77
posted on
06/01/2006 5:33:13 AM PDT
by
Aquinasfan
(When you find "Sola Scriptura" in the Bible, let me know)
To: Aussie Dasher
Didn't Bill cheat Chelsea at miniature golf?
To: Aussie Dasher
It's truly a character issue with the former President. He may be bright but that doesn't mean he's right.
Excerpt from Arnold Haultain's The Mystery of Golf (circa 1898):
Chapter XII
Golf a Test of Character
Golf seems to bring the man, the very inmost man, into contact with the man, the very inmost man. In football and hockey you come into intimate and often forcible enough contact with the outer man; chess is a clash of intellects; but in golf character is laid bare to character. This is why so many friendships and some enmities are formed on the links. In spite of the ceremony with which the game is played: the elaborate etiquette, the punctilious adhesion to the honour, the enforced silence during the address, the rigid observance of rules, few if any games so strip a man of the conventional and the artificial. In a single round you can sum up a man, can say whether he be truthful, courageous, honest, upright, generous, sincere, slow to anger or the reverse. Of these arcane of golf the uninitiated onlooker knows nothing. Yet if ever that onlooker is initiated into these Eleusinian mysteries, he changes his mind and sees in the links a school for the disciplinary exercise of a cynical or stoical self-command rivaling that of the Cynosarges or the Porch.
Not only is golf an excellent test of character, it is also an excellent medicament for character. If we only know it, there is a whole Materia Medica between sand-box and flag. The volatile can find, if he will, a sedative; the phlegmatic, an alternative; the neurasthenic, a tonic. And it is a test of character in more ways than one: the cheat simply could not play golf: in the last resort, no one would play with him. It is also a test of tact. Many a man has to learn how to lend a deaf ear politely to a loquacious friend, or to curb his own tongue when playing with a taciturn one; and probably there is no one but has had on some occasion or other to keep his own temper sweet while the atmosphere about him was mephitic with a surly silence or rent by vituperative abuse.
Note italics are my emphasis.
79
posted on
06/01/2006 7:41:36 AM PDT
by
Barney59
("Time wounds all heels.")
To: razorback-bert
[If someone will cheat at a game , why wouldn't they do the same in a business deal?]
That's why I don't form friendships with people who cheat on their spouses. How could I trust them?
80
posted on
06/01/2006 8:35:07 AM PDT
by
spinestein
(The Democratic Party is the reason I vote for Republicans.)
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