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MARTIN A HOT TOPIC: PGA TOUR, USGA MAY BE TURNING HEAT DOWN

          PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem said yesterday that
     Casey Martin "almost certainly" will play in a PGA Tour
     event this year and "probably will have at least two years"
     to ride a cart on the pro golf tours, according to an AP
     report in the BOSTON GLOBE.  The Tour still plans to appeal
     Wednesday's ruling, but Finchem said that it will "allow the
     appeal to unfold at its own pace," instead of requesting an
     immediate stay of ruling or an expedition of the matter by
     San Francisco's Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. 
     Finchem "[E]veryone needs to recognize that it might take
     years for this to be decided.  What we want to do is get
     back to playing golf" (AP/BOSTON GLOBE, 2/13).  
          OPEN POLICY: USGA Exec Dir David Fay recommended that
     his organization "not stand in the way" of Martin if he
     wants to play in the U.S. Open.  Fay said that Martin should
     ride not in a cart, but in a "single-person, scooterlike
     device" which disabled spectators have used at tournaments. 
     That vehicle, Fay said, "would be less intrusive and easier
     for Martin to maneuver" (CHICAGO TRIBUNE, 2/13).
          SPONSOR EXEMPTIONS: Martin, who is exempt on the Nike
     Tour, is allowed as many as seven sponsor's exemptions to
     compete in PGA Tour events.  USA TODAY reports that he has
     received an invitation to play in the CVS Charity Classic in
     MA from July 26-29 (USA TODAY, 2/13).  The decision on
     whether to offer Martin an exemption into next week's Tucson
     Chrysler Classic is being discussed by its committee.
     Tournament Dir Judy McDermott said that while she would like
     "work something out," with all five exemptions given out,
     "it doesn't look real promising."  Martin's agent, Jim
     Lehman, said that "he would recommend" Martin take the
     exemption if offered (Bill Hoffman, ARIZONA REPUBLIC, 2/13). 
     In Philadelphia, Joe Logan writes that Martin "will not be
     offered" a spot in Tucson (DAILY NEWS, 2/13).  Also, an
     exemption for Martin to play in the Nissan Open "doesn't
     look as though it's going to happen," as the tournament
     "doesn't solicit players to ask for" exemptions (L.A. TIMES,
     2/13).   In IL, Western Open Dir Gary McLaughlin said that
     "he has no plans" to offer Martin an exemption, but
     acknowledged there "are going to be some tournaments looking
     to sell tickets by getting him" (CHICAGO SUN-TIMES, 2/13).
          SPONSORS DARLING? Martin, who "unwound" yesterday by
     attending an "extravagant" party thrown by Nike Chair Phil
     Knight in Beaverton, has three new endorsement proposals
     awaiting his signature (Jeff Babineau, ORLANDO SENTINEL,
     2/13).  On CNBC, Mike Hegedus looked at Martin's endorsement
     potential.  Ryan Schinman of WorldWide Entertainment &
     Sports put possible endorsement dollars "anywhere between"
     $500,000 and $1M, "which is the equivalent of almost going
     out and winning a gold medal."  Nike's Knight: "Casey Martin
     is one of the great stories of sports of the last ten or 15
     years.  A kid like that comes along, really, once every 50
     or 100 years."  However, Partners & Shevack CEO Brett
     Shevack said, historically, disabled athletes "become soon
     forgotten unless the athlete wins."  But he said Martin's
     cart "could become the NASCAR of the PGA Tour, with logos
     all over. ... After all, the golf cart has a bigger space
     for a logo than a golf hat" (CNBC, 2/12).  But Finchem said,
     "We would oppose signage on carts.  And I don't think Casey
     would go that way" (CBS SportsLine, 2/12).
      

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