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  • La Reservae Golf Club, Costa Del Sol

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  • Lie of the Land

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  • Thorpenes Golf Club

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  • Golf Equipment

    Golf insurance specialists Golfplan offer their top tips for how to protect yourself from thieves targeting expensive golf equipment

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Posted by Unknown
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Vijay Singh was nearly suspended for using a banned substance, but wasn't after months of haggling and deliberations. As the controversy was settling down, Singh then dropped a bomb of a lawsuit on the PGA Tour at their marquee event.

It was a forgettable 2013 for Vijay Singh on the course, but he still garnered plenty of headlines off it with his ties to a previously banned substance and his subsequent lawsuit against the PGA Tour.

The situation began when Singh was tied to deer antler spray use provided by a company called Sports With Alternatives to Steroids (SWATS). Singh was one of several pro athletes listed in a Sports Illustrated article about the substance, which contains IGF-1. In the article, which was published in January (most notably for mentioning Ray Lewis just before the Super Bowl), Singh admitted to frequently using the deer antler spray.

That article set off a series of events which continued through most of the PGA Tour season. The IGF-1 substance was on the PGA Tour's list of banned substances, and the Tour opened an investigation into Singh's use after his admission in the article.

Now thrust into the middle of a doping scandal, Singh pulled out of the Phoenix Open, in order to not be a distraction. There was very little news about the situation through February and PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem said the Tour was in no rush to decide on how to handle the situation.

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