Gerardo Mora/Getty Images for SiriusXM

By Joel Beall
It was inevitable. That doesn’t make it any less astonishing.

Last week golf instructor Hank Haney, along with co-host Steve Johnson, made remarks deemed racist and sexist regarding the U.S. Women’s Open on Haney’s eponymous radio show. Haney mockingly predicted “a Korean” would win this week’s event at Country Club of Charleston, adding he couldn’t name six players on the LPGA Tour save for those with the last name “Lee.”

The outcry was swift, with the LPGA, its stars, golf personalities and fans criticizing Haney for his insensitivity. Haney tried to clarify those comments later in the program, saying he couldn’t remember what he said. “I guess people are taking this as racially insensitive,” Haney said.” He then apologised “if I offended anyone.” The show ended with Johnson telling Haney he was not a racist, to which Haney replied, “I am definitely not a racist.” Haney later issued a longer apology to Golf Digest and on Twitter.

That acknowledgement was not enough in the eyes of the PGA Tour and SiriusXM. The entities suspended Haney from his program Thursday, issuing a statement that they were reviewing Haney’s status going forward.

For his part, Haney has been quiet since the suspension…that is, until Jeongeun Lee6 won the Women’s Open on Sunday. That gave Haney all the ammo he needed to fire back at his critics.

Whatever Haney’s intentions were—vindication, exoneration, self-effacement—the messages received, at best, a mixed reception. Especially given Haney misspelt Lee6’s first name.

Though some offered replies of support and agreement, most deemed Haney’s tweets ignorant and obtuse, with a fair share of responses accusing Haney of unjustifiably taking a victory lap.

Wherever one sits on this spectrum, it’s abundantly clear this controversy will not end with Lee6’s triumph in Charleston.