Ok, misleading title. Should Read "Tiger Woods' ex CADDY spills SOME beans".
I am pretty sure tiger had his inner circle on the Derek Jeter plan and had them all sign non-disclosure agreements.
So I am guessing Steve Williams has spent the last year in and out of a lawyers' office looking at the contract he signed and talking about what things he could and could not put in the book. I don't think anyone believed him at the time the scandal broke that he had no idea what the Tiger was up to off the course.
From the excerpts I read it looks like everything in the book are things that have been reported publicly (the mistress in OZ, club tossing, turkey day smash up) and I think public knowledge is fair game. So Steve is offering his perspective. When it comes to NDAs I don't know how your own personal opinion on public knowledge lays but that looks like that is the meat of "Out Of The Rough"
From an instructional POV, I would be interested to read Steve Williams' thought on course management and how to get around a golf course and post a score when you are playing great and when you don't have your best stuff. Hopefully that is in there.
Even though Tiger was not the world's best boss, Stevie Still seems a little ungrateful and doesn't seem to understand the totem position of the golf caddy.
Somebody please buy this book, read it and let me know if their is anything worthwhile.
I am pretty sure tiger had his inner circle on the Derek Jeter plan and had them all sign non-disclosure agreements.
So I am guessing Steve Williams has spent the last year in and out of a lawyers' office looking at the contract he signed and talking about what things he could and could not put in the book. I don't think anyone believed him at the time the scandal broke that he had no idea what the Tiger was up to off the course.
From the excerpts I read it looks like everything in the book are things that have been reported publicly (the mistress in OZ, club tossing, turkey day smash up) and I think public knowledge is fair game. So Steve is offering his perspective. When it comes to NDAs I don't know how your own personal opinion on public knowledge lays but that looks like that is the meat of "Out Of The Rough"
From an instructional POV, I would be interested to read Steve Williams' thought on course management and how to get around a golf course and post a score when you are playing great and when you don't have your best stuff. Hopefully that is in there.
Even though Tiger was not the world's best boss, Stevie Still seems a little ungrateful and doesn't seem to understand the totem position of the golf caddy.
Somebody please buy this book, read it and let me know if their is anything worthwhile.
Check out who wrote the quote on the front cover, Ha! Surely Hank Haney's success (and the big bucks he earned) with his bestselling Tiger book was a serious motivator for this book.