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Harrington still wants his hand on the claret jug

September 23, 2009

British Open champion Stewart Cink decided to thank East Lake for giving him an honorary membership 13 years ago when he was just starting out on the US PGA Tour by bringing the claret jug to display in the clubhouse during the Tour Championship.

The former owner of the jug decided to play a prank.

Cink had the claret jug in its silver suitcase outside his locker on Tuesday. To most people, the nondescript suitcase looks like it might hold audio equipment, perhaps even a musical instrument.

Padraig Harrington, who won the British Open the previous two years, knows better. He saw the familiar case and stashed it in his locker. Cink realized it was missing when he returned upstairs after registering, looked in his locker, then figured the PGA Tour Productions crew had taken it downstairs for their interview.

I assumed they had gotten it and put it on their set, Cink said. I said, So you guys already have the claret jug? And they said, No.

Was he worried? Not for long.

The locker room attendant came over and told Cink, I think Mr. Harrington played a joke on you.

I think Harrington walked in and saw the case - not the jug, but the case, Cink said. A lot of people dont know whats in there. He knew. … Before I could think that it was gone, they told me where it was. I wish it was more dramatic.

Cink said the jug has been in his kitchen, but that he would keep it at East Lake for a few weeks. Bobby Jones grew up at East Lake and won the British Open three times.

This clubhouse is like a Bobby Jones golf history museum, Cink said. With the claret jug in there, the actual one, I think its fitting.

As for Harrington?

He only had it for two years, so he wanted to have it just a little bit longer, Cink said. Ive only had it for two months.

STEWART AWARD: Kenny Perry was honored on Tuesday with the Payne Stewart Award, named after the three-time major champion who perished 10 years ago in a private plane crash.

The award is given to a players commitment to charity, presentation of himself through dress and conduct, and for sharing Stewarts respect for golfs traditions.

Perry is best known for donating 5 percent of his U.S. PGA Tour earnings to a scholarship fund for students from his home county in Kentucky who attend Lipscomb University in Nashville, Tennessee. The support stems from a church elder, Ronnie Ferguson, agreeing to give Perry money for his third try at Q-school. No repayment was required if Perry failed to qualify, but he asked that Perry give 5 percent to Lipscomb if he made it on tour. Since then, Perry has earned more than $30 million.

He also built a public golf course that he designed on his own as an affordable option for recreational players.

Payne personified all the virtues the game of golf can teach us, so being recognized as a person who is worthy of an award created in his memory is incredibly humbling, Perry said. This award is and will always be one of my greatest accomplishments.

HALL OF FAME INTRODUCTIONS: Seve Ballesteros will be part of the World Golf Hall of Fame induction in November through a video message. Two-time Masters champion Jose Maria Olazabal has asked Ballesteros to introduce him at the Nov. 2 ceremony.

Ballesteros, who is recovering from a brain tumor, cannot make the trip to St. Augustine, Florida.

He is one of my best friends, and I have had the honor of sharing with him many different moments in our lives, Ballesteros said in a statement. He has been by my side in the good times and in the not so very good times, and I will always be there for him.

Arnold Palmer will introduce the late Dwight D. Eisenhower, while CBS Sports anchor Jim Nantz will introduce Lanny Wadkins, and Christy OConnor Jr., will introduce his father, Christy OConnor.

SLOW PLAY POLICY: The U.S. PGA Tours fine structure for slow play might eventually get the attention of even those who can afford it.

The tours new pace-of-play policy began in 2003, and one of the components was a $20,000 fine for the 10th time during the season that a player was put on the clock.

In a policy change for this year that was not announced, the tour now is going after repeat offenders.

According to the player handbook, anyone put on the clock 10 times for a $20,000 fine will face double the amount - $40,000 - if he gets put on the clock 10 times the following year. And after that, the amount continues to double. If a player is timed on 10 occasions a third straight year, the fine goes to $80,000.

Whether any player has been docked double - or faces such a fine - is not known. The tour keeps that list private.

DIVOTS: Henry Hughes is retiring next year after 25 years at the U.S. PGA Tour. Hughes was executive director of The Players Championship during its greatest growth, and spent 10 years as the tours chief of operations, in which he was in charge of competition. … Suzann Pettersen will join Natalie Gulbis and Cristie Kerr as the LPGA team in the Wendys 3-Tour Challenge, to be played Nov. 10 at Rio Secco in Las Vegas. … In a statistical oddity, Tiger Woods victory at the BMW Championship was his first this year when he began the tournament with a morning tee time on Thursday.

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