Report: Patrick Reed’s Caddie Gets Into Altercation With Fan Following Presidents Cup Match
According to reports, Patrick Reed’s caddie, Kessler Karain, got into an altercation with a fan after Reed dropped his third-straight match in the Presidents Cup.

It’s been a rough start to the 2019 Presidents Cup for former Masters champion Patrick Reed.
Initially, Reed lost his first two matches of the event. And now, according to Golf Channel’s Steve Sands, Reed’s caddie, Kessler Karain, got into an altercation with a fan after Reed dropped his third-straight match in Saturday morning’s (Australian time) four-ball session.
“It got a little out of control there after the match,” Sands said on the event’s broadcast. Sands reported that both the PGA Tour and event security are aware of the incident.
According to reports, Karain was scheduled to meet with PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan at 2:30 p.m. local time.
Through his first three Presidents Cup matches, Reed was a frequent target of taunts from the International team fans.
Less than a week ago at the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas, Reed was penalized two strokes for appearing to deliberately improve his lie in a bunker during the third round. The American was filmed taking a number of practice swings, which had the effect of flattening the sand behind his ball.
Reed would go on to finish two strokes behind winner Henrik Stenson.
Specifics related to Saturday’s Presidents Cup event are still unclear.
Reed was already sitting out Saturday afternoon’s foursomes session.
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USC Men’s Basketball Program Receives Notice of Allegations From NCAA
The USC men’s basketball team has received a notice of allegations from the NCAA, the school announced in a statement Friday.

The USC men’s basketball team has received a notice of allegations from the NCAA, the school announced in a statement Friday.
“USC has received a Notice of Allegations from the NCAA related to a former coach in the men’s basketball program,” the school said. “USC has cooperated with the NCAA since it first became aware of the issues raised in the Notice of Allegations. Because the notice involves a pending NCAA case, USC is unable to discuss any of the allegations in or facts relating to the case. USC looks forward to an expeditious resolution of this matter.”
The former coach presumably referenced is one-time assistant Tony Bland. Bland, fired by USC in January 2018, was sentenced in June to two years probation and 100 hours community service for his involvement in the college basketball corruption scandal. The first of four former coaches charged with crimes in the FBI investigation, Bland will not serve jail time.
The sentencing came after Bland pleaded guilty in January to a felony count of conspiracy to commit bribery as part of a deal with prosecutors, admitting that he accepted $4,100 in cash–the least of the implicated coaches–to direct Trojans’ players to use Christian Dawkins’s sports management company after college. Dawkins was sentenced to six months in prison by a federal judge in March.
Bland was the first assistant coach arrested by the FBI in the investigation to be sentenced.
USC is the fourth Division I program to receive an NCAA notice of allegations related to the federal investigation, joining Kansas, NC State and Oklahoma State.
Friday’s statement fails to provide a timeline for any kind of resolution with the NCAA investigation.