John Huggan: The fall-out between Allenby and Ogilvy isn’t golf’s worst bust-up – and won’t be the last

IT ALWAYS provokes a smile, or at least a shake of the head. Whenever golf’s carefully-crafted veneer of absolute purity in all things is breached by a less-than-savoury example of perfectly natural and/or normal everyday human behaviour by one or more members of the sport’s cosseted community, the resulting outcry invariably reeks of hypocrisy.

And so it has been over the past few days when a minor spat between Presidents Cup team-mates and fellow Australians Robert Allenby and Geoff Ogilvy has been steadily built up into something akin to the Third World War by the game’s ever-eager thought-police.

Ogilvy’s perfectly justified criticism of the wretched Allenby in the wake of the latter’s claim that his miserable and pointless performance in the recent Presidents Cup was due solely to the, well, miserable performances of his various partners (of whom Ogilvy was one) was just that: perfectly justified. It is one of the basic tenets of any team sport that the members of said teams must win and lose together; anything else and the notion of unity is lost.

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