Respect or Stupid?...

dawgstudent

Heisman
Apr 15, 2003
39,257
18,410
113
<font size="5">Ryan Moore, the golfer who left $300,000 on the table</font> <p class="byline">By Jay Busbee</p>

What would it take for you to wear top-tier golf clothing and play with top-of-the-line equipment? Would you don somebody's logo if they gave you a few free shirts? How about if they offered you, oh, three hundred grand?</p>

If it was me, I'd've sold out at the free shirts. But Ryan Moore, winner of this past weekend's Wyndham Championship? He goes logoless to every match, preferring to wear his own gear. It's a mix-and-match collection of various brands, all of which Moore bought himself. As Golf.com notes, here's what he's leaving on the table each year, broken down by equipment:</p>

Hat: $200,000
Chest logo: $50,000
Golf bag: $50,000</p>

Ouch. That's a lot to stand on principle, but that's exactly what Moore is doing. As he said in January, this isn't about some anti-sponsorship tilt, it's about focusing on golf itself: "I pick a club because I want to play, not because I have to make it work. To me, there is a lot of comfort and a lot of confidence in that," Moore said. "Everything you see me wearing, I paid for."</p>

Well, maybe it's a little anti-sponsorship: "He doesn't want to be a billboard," Moore's brother/manager Jeremy told MSNBC's Darren Rovell. "He doesn't want to look like a NASCAR driver with logos everywhere. Ryan is a unique person and he wants to do his own thing."</p>

Rovell summed up a lot of people's confusion: "The sports marketing world is not used to this -- someone who is seemingly untouchable because they are almost not part of the capitalistic society. The only parallel I can think of in the golf world is the Masters, where Augusta National doesn't care about making the most money they can make."</p>

Somebody who's into golf rather than the money. First question: will wonders never cease? Second question: would you do it?</p>
 

HD6

Sophomore
Apr 8, 2003
10,019
108
63
if you feel one particular wood or putter is better than the one made by the company that makes the rest of your clubs, you should go with that. But get a logoed shirt and hat, it affects nothing but your bank account.
 

2thdoc44

Redshirt
Oct 24, 2007
362
0
0
I also don't have 5-6M in the bank. I would wear Rebelchuck's wardrobe on tour for $300K...well maybe $350K
 

FlabLoser

Redshirt
Aug 20, 2006
10,709
0
0
It is damn important to be able to make clothing decisions - what to wear, how to wear it, whether to wear it or not, pecker hangs to left or right, etc.
 

bulliegolfer

Redshirt
Oct 19, 2008
1,844
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you never know how long you will be on the pga tour. You need to bank what you can while you can. Most club deals are for 12 clubs, allowing you to hit whatever driver you want and putter. Ping might be an exception. Oh well, what ever floats your boat.
 

Shmuley

Heisman
Mar 6, 2008
23,694
10,236
113
After he comes out with his own clothing line. Or, he may be holding out to see how much he can get from "the first company to pop Ryan moore's cherry."
 

coursesuper

Redshirt
Nov 1, 2007
773
0
16
A lot of those guys play Odyssey putters and everyone of them seems to be hitting the FT-9, of course its all tour van stuff not off the rack.</p>
 

Todd4State

Redshirt
Mar 3, 2008
17,411
1
0
I respect anyone that does their own thing. Individuality is beautiful. We have too many people in the world that want people to be a certain way, and tell people what to wear, how to think, and how to act. Yeah, it's probably not the best financial move, but it's also his money.
 

cdhmsu

Redshirt
Mar 3, 2008
62
0
0
He used to be sponsored by Ping, Oakley, Callaway, and Rolex. Now he wears Vans shoes with golf spikes built in to them, no joke. There is not a lack of game either. He won the US Amateur, US Amateur Publinks (twice), NCAA National Champion(UNLV), Western Amateur, and now the Wyndham on tour. I asked my buddy on tour about him and he said that he does not know what kind of guy he is b/c he doesnt talk.
 

ckDOG

All-American
Dec 11, 2007
9,813
5,465
113
He's got a new fan in me just because he's different that your average bland tour player. But, we'll see how principled the guy is after a couple more wins and the $300k sponsorship deals turn into $1M or $2M sponsorship deals.
 

bulliegolfer

Redshirt
Oct 19, 2008
1,844
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ckDOG said:
He's got a new fan in me just because he's different that your average bland tour player. <span style="font-weight: bold;">But, we'll see how principled the guy is after a couple more wins and the $300k sponsorship deals turn into $1M or $2M sponsorship deals.</span>
Yeah, I was thinking the same thing.
 

Optimus Prime 4

Redshirt
May 1, 2006
8,560
0
0
or shirt. Extra cash is extra cash, no matter how much you make. And you can make it where you have to approve everything ahead of time. It's not like you don't have any say over what you wear.
 

MSUalum

Redshirt
Jul 3, 2009
51
0
0
I heard on the radio in Jackson the other morning that he felt he was spending too much time negotiating contracts with sponsors
that he felt like his golf game was suffering. So he decided to drop all sponsors and just work very hard on his game and judging
by the results picking up his first win, i would have to say he is doing what is right for him.
I agree with Ckdog i think it is pretty cool.
BTW he will be playing in the Viking Classic.
 

msudawg12

Senior
Dec 9, 2008
3,858
616
113
his "I dont want to have to make it work" phrase is the important part of that. If you're nike sponsored and you cant hit your wedge they make then you wont be confident.

As far as the clothes, he's a 17'n moron. Take the cash</p>