What happen to being grateful?

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Joined
Apr 14, 2009
Messages
9,756
Reaction score
12,439
Location
Owasso
So who is the greedy person here? The guy that exceeded his payment agreement for a service or the guy who agreed to an amount, but then wants a lot more?!? This is a good example of a driver for all the illegals pouring into America.

Matt Kuchar defends paying caddie $5G after winning millions in tournament: ‘You can’t make everybody happy’
Pro golfer Matt Kuchar defended paying his caddie $5,000 for his services after Kuchar took home $1.296 million for winning the Mayakoba Golf Classic in November.

Kuchar, 40, told Golf Channel at the Genesis Open on Wednesday that he indeed paid local Mexican caddie David “El Tucan” Giral Ortiz, who was replacing Kuchar's regular caddie, John Wood, $5,000 and offered him an additional $15,000 but he turned it down.

Kuchar told Golf Channel that he and Ortiz made an agreement that the caddie would make $3,000 for the week with a bonus that would have allowed him to earn $4,000.

“I ended up paying him $5,000 and I thought that was more than what we agreed upon,” Kuchar said. “I kind of think, if he had the chance to do it over again, same exact deal, that he’d say 'yes' again.”

Ortiz, 40, told Golf.com he thought he was underpaid. He told the website he “believed his work and contribution toward the win was worth $50,000.”

“Matt is a good person and a great player. He treated me very well. I am only disappointed by how it all finished,” Ortiz told Golf.com.

The New York Post reported caddies normally get about 5 percent of a player’s earnings “with as much as 10 percent depending on whether the golfer wins or finishes near the top.” The Washington Post reported Wood, Kuchar’s regular caddie, would have made approximately $126,000.

When asked by the Golf Channel if Kuchar could change anything about the agreement he said he felt he was fair.

“It’s done. Listen, I feel like I was fair and good,” he said. “You can’t make everybody happy. You’re not going to buy people’s ability to be OK with you, and this seems to be a social media issue more than anything. I think it shouldn’t be, knowing that there was a complete, agreed-upon deal that not only did I meet but exceeded."

He added: “So I certainly don’t lose sleep over this. This is something that I’m quite happy with, and I was really happy for him to have a great week and make a good sum of money. Making $5,000 is a great week."
 

Poke78

Sharpshooter
Supporting Member
Special Hen Supporter
Joined
Aug 8, 2008
Messages
2,838
Reaction score
1,125
Location
Sand Springs
Kuchar certainly comes off as a great guy when you watch him on the TV coverage of tournaments. He's regularly in contention and has a game that has all right parts, i.e. no real weaknesses, IMO. A substitute caddy can't possibly expect to make what the regular guy would and should negotiate with the player's game and likelihood of success in mind. It appears the guy was perfectly happy to make the $3K which was probably well beyond what he would have done in a regular week of caddying for resort hackers. It was only after the win and getting a nice bonus that he realized he left money on the table by taking the guarantee. He could have gambled on the win or a top 10 finish to get a slice of the bigger money and chose not to go that way. Ortiz may have operated from a position of imperfect knowledge so he went for the sure thing of $3K.
 

tRidiot

Perpetually dissatisfied
Special Hen
Joined
Oct 23, 2009
Messages
19,521
Reaction score
12,715
Location
Bartlesville
Sour grapes for sure. I agree, regular caddies make more, but they follow their guy all around the world regularly, they develop a relationship, etc. A fill-in caddie shouldn't expect to make that kind of money. Sorry.
 

Latest posts

Top Bottom