Section B · Page 6 The University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 11, 1998 European golfer speaks fresh air Commentary Honest opinions find few friends in American tour By Ron Sirak The Associated Press Give Colin Montgomerie a break. The outspoken Scottsman is the whipping boy of American golf fans because, well, he's outspoken. Few athletes talk — particularly when they become rich and — here's one of the best taking his lumps because he speaks his mind. "I don't think it's right to be false and be accepted that way." Montgomerie said last week, "I think I am who I am, hopefully, and that's the way it is." Montgomerie said at the Ryder Cup that Valderrama, a Spanish golf course, didn't suit Tiger Woods' game. Anyone want to argue with that assessment? He said any of the 12 Europeans could beat Woods. Shouldn't he feel that way and didn't Costantino Rocca — who was working in a box factory when he was Tiger's age — defeat Woods in singles play on Sunday? "I have opinions about things," Montgomerie said. "I have aired them in the past, and I'll air them in the future." Montgomerie said that Brad Faxon "Europe won the Ryder Cup because their young players played better than our young players," a friend of one of the young Americans said. Perhaps Montgomerie helped lift the confidence of his young teammates. True, when things are not going well. Montgomerie does come off as a whiner. But he cares. What's wrong with that? Caring is a huge part of the complicated mix that makes up a champion. was distracted by his divorce. That was not a delicate observation, but Faxon's play proved it accurate. Woods frequently draws gasps from his gallery when he bangs a club off the ground or yells an obscurity. At times, Woods reacts to an iron shot that lands 25 feet from the hole as he has just hit the worst shot imaginable. Yet it is all seen as part of his passion. Maybe the U.S. team needed the same kind of verbal leader. Let Montgomery express dissatisfaction, and he is called a crybaby. It is as if people go out of their ways to slam him. Montgomerie was greeted at Doral by an article in Sports Illustrated that called "the Goon from Troon, golf's Gael-force windbag" and said "many fans see the pasty Scot as a fifth-class lerk." He was more baffled at the attack than angry or hurt. At 34, Montgomerie is at the peak of his game, leading the European Tour money list for a record five consecutive years. Since 1992, he has had two seconds, a third and a 10th in the U.S. Open and a second in the PGA Championship, losing both the PGA and the U.S. Open in playoffs. The misconception is that Montgomerie blew those majors. Tom Kite won the 1992 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach with one of the great bad-wather closing rounds. Montgomery made birdies on the last three holes and shot a final-round 65 at Riviera to make the playoff with Steve Elkington in the 1995 PGA and lost to a 20-foot birdie putt on the first extra hole. He was runner-up to Ernie Els last year in the U.S. Open at Congressional "You put that down to nerves and not my ball flight." Montgomerie said about his approach to the same pin that drifted right, setting up a fatal bogey. How refreshingly honest. He admitted he was nervous. Montgomerie shot a 69 in the final round at Congressional, and his 70.92 scoring average in the U.S. Open is second only to the 70.32 by Els in this decade. In six U.S. Opens, Montgomerie's final rounds have been two 68s, a 69, two 70s and a 72. Only in the playoff at Oakmont with Els and Loren Roberts in the 1994 U.S. Open, when Montgomery shot a 42 on the front nine, was he not up to the pressure of the day. Montgomerie is 0-for-45 in PGA Tour events. But the nine times he led or was within five strokes of the lead going to the final round he averaged 70.11 and never shot higher than 72. "My goal this year, as it has been every time I've come over here, is to win a PGA Tour event," Montgomery said. "I think I have to say that in complete fairness that the competition is stiffer here," he said about not winning yet in America. BODY BOUTIQUE Well put, Montv. The Women's Fitness Facility "From the crowds to the way that the whole thing is run, it's a fabulous, fabulous tour you have here," Montgomerie said. "And hopefully, people realize that." 925 Iowa LAWRENCE'S ONLY WOMEN'S FITNESS CENTER START GETTING READY FOR SPRING BREAK NOW! 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Receipts from cash & check purchases from the Fall '97 Free Cash! semester are now eligible for a 7% cash rebate Rebates are offered each semester by the KU Bookstores on cash or check purchases. Payments made at both KU Bookstore locations at the customer service counter. Payments end 6/30/98. KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only college store offering rebates to students Over $2.7 Million returned to KU students! KU student I.D. required. See store for details or online at www.jayhaws.com/bkstirffo.html There's A New Arrival In Kansas! The Gladney Center Jt. 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