Hours after I posted the article below on junior golf, lo and behold one of my faithful readers alerted me to a breaking story out of that cauldron of intercollegiate lawsuits, Duke University.  The suit involves the school's vaunted men's golf team, composed of former junior circuit golfers.  Andrew Giuliani, son of America's mayor and the former U.S. Presidential candidate, is suing his golf coach and the University for what he claims was unwarranted dismissal from the team.
    In the suit, Giuliani claims he was told to pack his bag because the coach wanted to shrink the size of the squad.  The coach, on the other hand, press reports indicate, believed the young Giuliani was a golfer behaving badly, tossing a club here and there, speeding away from practices in his car, and roughing up his teammates in squad football games.  Giuliani has a Craig Stadler body type, and one wonders why the allegedly smart kids at Duke would want to play a contact sport with the son of the pugnacious mayor.  In any case, it doesn't sound as if it was much of a bonding experience.

   The mayor's son also claims the coach engaged in a Lord of the Flies experiment, giving Giuliani's teammates a chance to vote the kid on or off the island via a formal letter-writing process.  It all sounds bizarre and not entirely out of sync with the public Giuliani family dynamic (recall the mayor's very public split with his wife and the mother of Andrew, Donna Hanover). 

    Giuliani, who was recruited by the previous coach at Duke, is a rising senior at the school.  He played in just two matches last season; although he finished with a stroke average below 75, which most of us would be happy with, that ranked him 12th on the 14-man team.  In the lawsuit, he contends that his removal from the team harms his dreams of reaching the professional ranks in the golf world.
    Many kids on the junior circuit share those dreams, and probably many more parents.  But the vast majority will never make it on any of the pro golf tours and they will settle into alternative careers without suing anyone.  A degree from Duke is a valuable commodity, but dreams die hard.  If golf doesn't work out for Andrew, perhaps his dad can get him a tryout with the Yankees.
    You can read the entire story of the lawsuit at a number of sites, including NBC Sports.

    I got a kick listening last night to my 18-year old son Tim and 16-year old Nicole Agnello of Florida discussing their days on the junior golf circuit.  Tim had caddied for Nicole the last few days at the USGA Junior Girls National Championship at The Hartford (CT) Golf Club.  Nicole played beautiful golf during medal play (148 for 36 holes), made it through to match play yesterday

The kids were careful to excuse us from examples of overbearing golf parents.

but, after two rain delays and then a third stoppage after just two holes, she fell off her game.  After going four down on the first six holes, she won the 7th, 8th and 9th to get it to one down, but a brilliant bunker shot by her Texas opponent on #13 turned the tide, and the match ended on the 15th green.
    Last night at dinner, my wife, Nicole's mom and I sat back and listened to the kids talk about their junior golf experiences.  Nicole talked about one of her high school competitors in Florida who consistently "forgot" how many strokes she had taken on a hole, reporting she had one or two strokes lower than her playing partners knew she had played.  On virtually every hole, Nicole would have to help the player replay each stroke to convince her of the proper score. 

    The kids also talked about classic overbearing parents (they made sure to exclude the parents present at the

Some parents cheer when their child's opponent misses a putt.

dinner table) who dragged their children to the practice green after a disappointing round and didn't let them leave for hours.  Some parents, they reported, cheer when their child's opponent misses a putt.  Others, they said, have been spotted kicking their child's ball out of a bad lie.  One of Nicole's playing partners the other day told her, "My dad is going to be so angry at the way I played."
    Yesterday, after watching Nicole's opponent slide a coin well under her ball to mark it on the green and then place the ball in front of the coin, thereby gaining a few inch advantage, Tim alerted the rules official walking with the players.  A hole later, the rules official warned the girl about it.  Golf is a game of inches, but it is also a game of rules.  For the future of the game, we can only hope junior golfers get the message, even if it is too late for some of their parents.