Watch: Two US caddies take tops off at Solheim Cup

United States' Alison Lee, centre, reacts after two caddies strip off their tops to celebrate her holing out from the fairway during the Solheim Cup at Robert Trent Jones Golf Club, Saturday, September 14, 2024
Alison Lee is all smiles as two caddies strip their tops off to celebrate her holing out from the fairway - AP/Matt York

The traditionalists would have hated it and no doubt the European team were not impressed, but the US caddies could not resist.

When Alison Lee holed out from the fairway on the second hole in the fourballs at the Solheim Cup, the wild celebrations were marked by Shota Takada taking off his bib and his shirt and performing a bare-skinned hug with Jack Fulghum, Megan Khang’s bagman, who had also disrobed in the excitement.

In mitigation, there was a backstory to the madness. On the tee-box, Fulghum had announced that if there were any hole-outs they would give the players $500 (£381). But Lee countered and said, “No, you will have to take off your shirts”. The bet was thus struck and it is remarkable that it was paid out so quickly.

There was a serious side, however. Madelene Sagström was still due to take her own approach and deserved the respect of trying to emulate Lee, however unlikely. What is it with caddies on US teams?

A year ago at the Ryder Cup in Rome, Joe LaCava was widely condemned for acting up on the 18th green after his boss Patrick Cantlay had holed a long putt. He waved his cap and walked up to Rory McIlroy as he was about to putt. The Northern Irishman was rightly incensed and told LaCava. Naturally, tensions run high, but these sort of histrionics display a lack of class — especially from caddies who should know to stay in the background.

Watching on TV, a nine-time DP World Tour winner was dismayed. “Shirts off from caddies to celebrate a great shot at the Solheim Cup?” Pablo Larrazábal posted on X. “The game that I love is going too far the wrong way.” Later the Spaniard added: “Please, respect the game we love.”

That this extremely “un-golfing” behaviour occurred on a Saturday and not a Sunday — and with the result of the match a long way from confirmed — served only to underline how much the Americans want to end the European run of three Solheim Cups in succession.

It was mayhem, but whatever anyone thinks, at least it was infinitely a more preferable chaos to the scenes on Friday that witnessed tens of thousands outside of the gates due to the LPGA Tour’s shameful disorganisation.

All of that was suddenly forgotten in this euphoria — for the record, the eagle on the par four handed Lee and Khang a one-hole lead over Anna Nordqvist and Sagström on their way to a 4&3 triumph — although we may not have heard the end of this. Of course, removing one’s shirt is an instant yellow card in football and the pair could be fined.

They can only hope that the officials come to the same judgment as the PGA Tour disciplinarians two years ago on the infamous par-three 16th at the Phoenix Open. Then the pros Harry Higgs and Joel Dahmen dispensed with their polo shirts and waved them above their heads. They assumed it would hit them hard in the pocket, but the Tour let them off and actually used the clips in promotional clips. Will the LPGA Tour be so lenient?

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