Title: | Welcome to the Golf Notes Conference! |
Notice: | FOR SALE notes in Note 69 please! Intros in note 863 or 61. |
Moderator: | FUNYET::ANDERSON |
Created: | Tue Feb 15 1994 |
Last Modified: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 2129 |
Total number of notes: | 21499 |
Here is some news items on the legal side of golf... Taylor Made Golf Company won their case when they filed against Tour Golf Ltd., Compass Golf Co., and National Product Systems Inc. for producing metal wood heads with dimple patterns. Taylor claimed that the dimples constituted a company trade mark. It will be likely that any metal wood heads with dimples on them (other then Taylor) will be disappearing from the market (if you want them get them while you can). Karsten Manufacturing Corporation (Ping) has files suit against Lynx Golf Company alleging false advertisement. This is in response to the ad that Lynx has in many publications showing a ball striking test that indicates that Lynx's 5 iron hits the ball farther than does a Ping Eye-2 5 iron. Karstan PING is contending that the Lynx 5 irons were manufatured with less loft than the PING Eye-2, thus the non-equal test conditions constitute false advertising... Wilson won its suit against Dunlop and Slazenger. Wilson claimed that Dunlop and Slazenger violated their patent protecting the dimple configuration of the Ultra... And yes Karsten Manufacturing has filed a $100 million suit against the USGA. Resolution is expected to take 1-3 years...! **** SUCH A FRIENDLY GAME IT IS - BUT AS A BUSINESS...? **** Gene
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
768.1 | Ping - USGA | CAM::ZIOMEK | Wed Sep 20 1989 15:07 | 7 | |
On the Ping-USGA suit... Will there be a restraining order of any type against the USGA to allow the use of PING irons during litigation ??? John | |||||
768.2 | A little more info on the PING issue... | MSEE::KELLEY | Custom clubs/club repair | Wed Sep 20 1989 15:47 | 15 |
John, The article I got the info from does not mention anything that would answer your question nor have I heard anything along those lines elsewhwere. The USGA hasn't banned them as of yet and I forget now what the latest date was going to be for them to be allowed... The article does mention that during a TV interview that Karstein Solheim said that his efforts to reverse the USGA's square groove measuring method had failed and that his only recourse was to take legal actions. Karsten also said that the PGA was not included in the suit because the PGA's stand was to ban all square grooves... Gene | |||||
768.3 | CSCOA3::CONWAY_J | Fri Sep 22 1989 10:58 | 2 | ||
Yes, the Ping suit does ask for such a restraining order (from monday's Atlanta Constitution) | |||||
768.4 | The USGA's side of the story... | MSEE::KELLEY | Custom clubs/club repair | Wed Oct 04 1989 12:07 | 66 |
The following is a statement by David Fay, the executive director of the USGA... The United States Golf Association is a not-for-profit organization representing thousands of golf clubs and millions of golfers. It was organized over 90 years ago for one fundamental purpose - to serve the best interests of golf. All of our income is put back into the game. As the central authority of golf in the United States, the USGA has certain obligatins and responsibilities. Among these, it is responsible for writing and interpreting the Rules of the game. Some of these Rules affect the clubs and the ball. Standards regulating clubs have been in effect since 1938. For many years these Rules have included a statement advising manufacturers to submit samples of any clubs that might not conform to these rules. In the early 1980s, the Karsten Manufaturing Corporation produced and sold a certain club - the Ping Eye-2 - without submitting a sample. Once we at the USGA became aware of this club, we advised Karstem Manufacturing Corporation that it did not conform to the Rules of Golf. The grooves on the club face are spaced to closely together. The USGA told Karsten Manufacturing Corporation of its concern, and suggested the company advise those who bought them that these clubs do not conform to the Rules. Karstan Manufacturing Corporation did not do this. Instead, it continued to manufacture and sell a great many of these non-conforming clubs. A short time ago Karsten Manufacturing Corporation filed suit against the United States Golf Association. The USGA will fight that suit. By taking golf into the courtroom, Karsten Manufacturing corporation places the game at grave risk. The issue becomes whether the USGA and the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews, Scotland, can continue to write and interpret the Rules of the game. If they can't, then will and organization ever again have that right? The administration of gold doesn't belong in the courtroom. It belongs in the hands of the golfers themselves. Unlike many other games, golfers have always controlled their game. Not those who manufacture and sell our equipment, but golfers - those who play the game for their own enjoyment. This suit puts at risk the right of golfers, through the USGA and the R&A, to determine how they want the game to be played. This right could be lost. In addition to risking your rights, Karsten Manufacturing Corporation asks the court to cause the USGA to pay damages of $100 million. The United States Golf Association doesn't have $100 million. But even if we did, we would still defend our obligation and our responsibility to regulate the game and its equipment with all the vigor, all the determination, and all the conviction of purpose we can command. |