These claims are absolutely, unequivocally and completely false," Woods' agent Mark Steinberg answered back. "They are unsourced, unverified and completely ridiculous."
"There is no truth whatsoever to these claims," PGA Tour executive vice president Ty Votaw said. "We categorically deny these allegations."
Next, we heard from Olsen, a 48-year-old journeyman who last played on the PGA Tour in 2011.
"I retract the entire interview," he said on the web site of WVFN-AM in Lansing. "My comments were ill-advised."
So Olsen has backtracked, and rightly so, unless he has a way to prove his claims, which he apparently does not. For golf, drug accusations such as these are a shock to the system. Professional golf is new to the drug testing business, beginning in 2008.
These claims are absolutely, unequivocally and completely false," Woods' agent Mark Steinberg answered back. "They are unsourced, unverified and completely ridiculous.""There is no truth whatsoever to these claims," PGA Tour executive vice president
Either story would seem a bit less far-fetched without the other. The ball story is ludicrous. The drugs tale only slightly less so, only that we know the PGA keeps some strange rules when it comes to Peds, like not actually informing anybody whenever a player is serving a suspension, so they can always deny and no one will be any the wiser.
One month suspensions aren't uncommon, usually for stuff like not filling in exemption forms properly and things like that
Either story would seem a bit less far-fetched without the other. The ball story is ludicrous. The drugs tale only slightly less so, only that we know the PGA keeps some strange rules when it comes to Peds, like not actually informing anybody wheneve