| Westwood
leads - Goosen unhappy European
order of merit leader Retief Goosen, locked in a rankings battle with Padraig
Harrington, stormed from the Club de Campo course on Thursday after the Madrid
Open first round, furious at being given a slow-play warning. Goosen,
the Madrid defending champion, threatened he might even quit the tour after his
bad time was confirmed at the recording tent. The
South African was also clearly upset because of his words the previous day when
he had labelled Harrington 'the slowest player on the European Tour'. Goosen
was given his bad time on the 15th hole by Spanish tournament director Jose Maria
Zamora but stayed in control of his emotions long enough to shoot a five-under-par
66, although he missed a six-foot birdie putt on the last to deny himself the
same score as Harrington. The
Irishman's 65 left him only a stroke off the first round leader Lee Westwood,
who is continuing to build on his change of form brought about by Europe's Ryder
Cup success, leading a tournament for the first time since the autumn 2000 Belgian
Open. When Goosen,
playing alongside Westwood, was confronted by Zamora after signing his card, the
normally mild-mannered South African finally lost his cool. "Perhaps
I'll go and play somewhere else," said Goosen, adding: "Good night everybody,"
before heading for the locker room. Zamora
was left to do the explaining: "Retief was given a bad time on the 15th with
his second shot, on which he took 60 seconds when he is only allowed 40 seconds.
"I had to
tell him because with two warnings there is a one-shot penalty. "His
group were 21 minutes over schedule and I told them we were struggling with television
coverage. "The
group went on the clock on the 14th because they were 21 minutes behind for 13
holes." Although
Harrington's group, playing right behind Goosen and Westwood, were also put on
the clock, Zamora said none of them had bad times. Westwood,
though, also picked up a slow-play warning on the 18th when he took 98 seconds
to play his second shot from a bunker. The
tournament leader, while refusing to let the incident spoil his best day for nearly
two years, was unhappy with his treatment and sympathised with playing-partner
Goosen. "A
rules official didn't agree I had that difficult a shot at the 18th," said
Westwood. "So I got a bad time. "I
think there should be some leeway if you're leading a tournament and a little
bit of discretion should be used. "And,
anyway, we were one and a half holes in front of the group behind, so I don't
understand why we were warned. "Over
Retief's bad time, the wind was swirling around, with the flag on the back on
back edge and the ball could have spun right back down the slope so he had to
get it right and sometimes you have to back off. "We
all know who the slow players are on the European Tour are but no-one seems to
be able to catch them. "Maybe
someone should hide in a bush and catch them because they know the routines to
avoid being caught and no-one in a buggy on the fairway is going to catch them."
Harrington refused
to be drawn into the conflict, saying: "Do I care? No." When
Goosen proved to be still unapproachable to Zamora later on, the official said
he would have 'a quiet word' with the South African before the second round.
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