Choi learned from scrutiny after Lexi-like controversy
OLYMPIA FIELDS, Ill. Chella Choi will tee it up as co-leader in the final round of the KPMG Womens PGA Championship on Sunday, fortified with hard lessons about the scrutiny that comes playing on television.Shes prepared for the million or more eyes that will survey her every move Sunday in the years second major in womens golf.Watching the intense debate over Lexi Thompsons controversial penalty in this years first major hit home with Choi.
KPMG Womens PGA Championship: Articles, photos and videos
Three years ago, Choi was involved in a similar rules controversy over how she marked her ball on a putting green at the Canadian Pacific Womens Open. After a video review, the LPGA was poised to penalize Choi, based on a television viewers call complaining Choi had incorrectly returned her ball to its mark.Choi's violation, however, was more obvious on video than Thompson'sChoi would have missed the cut by a shot in Canada with the penalty, but she withdrew in protest over the ruling.Choi was asked how she felt listening to the debate over Thompsons plight.I also found out that I mis-marked my ball after my play, after my round, Choi said. I felt very bad for Lexi as an athlete. But, also, that incident helped me realize, and helped me learn, that I need to play more as a model athlete and have more model behavior. And so I felt bad for Lexi as an athlete, but I also learned from that experience. And therefore, as an athlete, like I said earlier, such a lesson teaches us that we all need to conduct ourselves in more model behavior.
Chella Choi poised for major Sunday scrutiny after rules
Three years ago, Choi was involved in a similar rules controversy over how she marked her ball on a putting green at the Canadian Pacific Women's Open. After a video review, the LPGA was poised to penalize Choi, based on a television viewer's call complaining Choi had incorrectly returned her ball to its mark.
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However, after a quarter century, dozens of experiments, and reams of popular articles, the true significance of these cells has become increasingly controversial. What have mirror neurons really told us so far about the human mind, and what remains to be learned from them? What are mirror neurons? The story of mirror neurons began simply enough.
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Viewer Discretion Advised The most recent case on the LPGA Tour involved Chella Choi, who withdrew from the 2014 Canadian Pacific Open after she was presented with video evidence that clearly
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This is a list of scandals or controversies whose names include a "-gate" suffix, by analogy with the Watergate scandal, as well as other incidents to which the suffix has (often facetiously) been applied.
NEW YORK (AP) — Congress is pushing the Agriculture Department to exempt the groups behind promotional campaigns like "Incredible, Edible Egg" and "Pork, the Other White Meat" from public scrutiny of their internal operations despite recent controversy. The push comes after organizations representing eggs, pork, potatoes and even Christmas
Viewer Discretion Advised - Golf Digest
Choi learned from scrutiny after Lexi-like controversy Choi was involved in a similar rules controversy over how she marked her ball on a putting green at the Canadian Pacific Women's Open
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In June 2012, Choi Seong-ryong, head of a support group for relatives of South Koreans abducted to the North, said that he had obtained North Korean government documents which stated that Yokota had died from "depression" on 14 December 2004. It is widely believed, especially in Japan, that Yokota is still alive.
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List of "-gate" scandals - Wikipedia
After persuading her father to stay on her bag after she turned pro, Chella told him he could retire after she won her first LPGA title. Choi learned from her Lexi-like controversy
Chella Choi poised for major Sunday scrutiny after rules
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