It’s official as far as I’m
concerned: John
Daly is a complete jackass.
He earned that distinction
as of late Tuesday night, when he became so annoyed that the Florida
Times-Union newspaper in Jacksonville revealed
the ugly details of the PGA Tour’s 456-page dossier on Daly.
What did the dossier
show?Over the course of his
wild-ride career Daly has been suspended five times, placed on probation six times, ordered to rehab seven
times, cited for "unprofessional conduct" 11 times, cited for "not giving his best effort" in
tournaments 21
times and fined nearly $100,000.
Outraged, Daly’s
response was to call the reporter who wrote the story, Garry Smits, a "jerk" on Twitter.He also gave out the reporter’s cell
phone number and urged his fans to "CALL & FLOOD his line & let’s tell
him how WE feel."
In a second tweet, Daly wrote,
"To me, this isn’t journalism, it’s paparazzi-like gossip."
By Wednesday afternoon about
100 of Daly’s
fans had taken the bait and called Smits’ phone."His fans are very unhappy," Smits told the AP.
I happen to know Smits
pretty well, and I would not describe him a jerk at all.He will talk your ear off, but he is
not a jerk.What he is, is one of
the hardest-working and most prolific golf writers around.Every year, when The Players Championship comes to the
Jacksonville area, Smits almost single-handedly turns out a special section every day.
Knowing a little something
about how the newspaper business works, I also doubt that Smits wrote the about Daly out of
spite; my guess is he wrote it because his editors told him to. That, and the
fact that the dossier contains so many juicy details that it is indeed
newsworthy.
PGA Tour dossiers are normally kept quite secret; in fact,
the Tour
is the only major pro sports league that doesn’t reveal when a player has been
fined or suspended.The only way
the dossier fell into Smits is because Daly is had sued the paper for libel over a column written by a
long-gone columnist. The dossier was part of the public court record.
On Wednesday, the Golf Writers
Association of America formerly asked PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem to suspend Daly for
his attack on Smits.No word yet what, if action, Finchem
will take.
Fact is, Daly who has had had a Tour card
since 2006,surviving on sponsor’s
exemptions.
Daly, the once-likeable, mullet-wearing, redneck-to-riches story, can’t seem
to stop himself from writing more bad stanzas to his sad country song.
There was a time three or
four crack-ups ago when it was fun and easy to be a fan of John Daly.
The man had more demons than
a haunted house, but boy, did he have talent. Daly was the priceless original of the new-generation of
long-bombers, wrapping his driver three-quarters of the way around his
then-bloated body to clobber tee shots 340 yards shots.More remarkably, when it came to
chipping and putting, this enormous heap of a man had perhaps the softest hands
in the game.
Oh, the talent he had, the
gift, the potential.
But somewhere along the line
– was it the third trip to rehab, the on-course meltdowns, the fights in
the fast food parking lot? – rooting for Big John to get his act together became
an exercise in futility and frustration.I finally gave up on him.A
lot of people gave up on him, including the PGA
Tour.
So it was with a wary eye
that I previewed the latest Golf Channel reality show, Being
John Daly, which premiers tonight at 9 p.m.Only the hardest core Daly fans will make it through this 30-minute
downer, which is scheduled to continue to document his 2010 comeback, such as
it is, in subsequent episodes in the same timeslot.
"He is on a mission, crusade,
to regain control of a life out of control," intones the narrator.
How about Mission
Impossible.
Produced by the Golf Channel,
Being John Dalyis a laudable effort by the network to
give us more of the kind of original programming we won’t get anywhere
else.And they make no attempt to
sugar-coat the reality that is Daly.
Yes, you get the present-day
slimmed-down, loud-pants-wearing Daly, but you also get plenty of his train
wreck years.(Remember the
particularly depressing sight of him being escorted off a golf course after
some kind of mid-round breakdown, shivering, wrapped up in a jacket that looked
more like a straight-jacket?
Who knows how long Being John Daly
will actually last.After he
embarrassed himself at the Farmers Insurance
Open in late January, shooting 79-71 to miss the cut by a mile, he told
the producers of the new show he was bagging it, quitting golf.What was the point?
Daly thought better of it, no doubt when he remembered his own personal Ex-wives Club,
and quickly returned to golf.He
missed the cut at Pebble Beach, where it’s hard to know whether he was competing as a
professional golfer or as freak-show celebrity. Daly made his first cut (T-67, $7,308) of the year at the Mayakoba Golf Championship,
when the game biggest stars were at the Accenture Match Play Championship.
Watching Being John Daly
is like watching a fight the ref ought to stop.
During
35 years in the news business, I have been blown off, disrespected, misled and flat-out
lied to by small-town public officials, cops, career politicians, movie stars,
best-selling authors, coaches and athletes from a variety sports and bosses in
my own newsrooms.
Point
is, I like to think I have to bow to no man when it comes to being a cynic.
But
after reading and listening to some of the I-ain't-buying-it backlash directed at Tiger Woods'
public apology this past Friday, cynically speaking, I feel like a rube, a
naive babe in the woods.
They
are all over the internet. Bill
Simmons at ESPN.com, Sally
Jenkins in the Washington Post, Stephen
A. Smithin the Philadelphia Inquirer, John
Hopkinsin the Timesof London, just to name a few.There are plenty more where they from, each one meaner and
more skeptical than the other.
I
don’t get it.Me, I watched Tiger for
those 13½ minutes and could not stop thinking about how shamed,
humiliated and broken he appeared.Gone was the confident, cocky golfer who was always so full of himself
in the hundreds of press conferences and interviews of his I sat through. I saw
no hint of defiance in his eyes.They appeared dull and lifeless, his strength and spirit sapped.
For
such a proud man, I could not imagine the humiliation of having to stand before
you, me, his mom and the world and admit, essentially, that he was a no good,
lyin’ fraud – anything but the image of invulnerable, impenetrable
perfection he projected for so long.
I
agree totally with the prevailing observation that he seemed nervous, stilted,
over-prepared and over-rehearsed, right down to the well-timed pauses and
glances into the camera for dramatic effort.
Was
he coached?You bet.Was he wooden and awkward?Yes, painfully so.
But
how anyone can say that his confession was disingenuous or not from the heart
– whatever is left of Tiger’s heart – is beyond me.How do they know that?What could they see that I couldn’t see?
I
don’t mean to be soft on Tiger.Because of his
peerless abilities and accomplishments on the golf course, he has been allowed
to behave like an entitled, arrogant ass for too long. This mess is entirely of
his own making, and he deserves every bit of the misery he has caused himself.
For
that matter, add me to the list of folks who think he and his people have
bungled this disaster from the beginning, trying to control this like he has
controlled everything else.He
only compounded his problems by waiting so long to show his face and, once he
finally did, he could have done without the gratuitous reminders of the good
work his foundation does or his little lecture to the media.
His
problem is not the media in general, by the way, it’s the tabloids and
celebrity websites, who are joyously feasting on Tiger like he was some hapless
wildebeest they chased down on the African plain.How a man who has been in the public eye and dealt with the
media for so long can be so oblivious to their needs, wants and relentless
determination is inconceivable.
Tiger’s announcement,
orchestrated as it was, was boycotted by the Golf Writers Association of America, of
which I am a long-time member.Our
beef was that the three hand-picked reporters who were invited by Tiger’s
people would not be allowed to ask questions, thereby reducing them to mere
props in his little one-act play.
Thing
is, before he was finished, Tiger said most of the things I thought he needed to say, and he
answered most of the questions I had. I don’t think he owes us the seamier
details and, frankly, I don’t want to hear them.
While
I believe Tiger
did himself some good in the PR department with his statement, I don’t
think for a moment he has put sorry chapter behind him.Not a chance.When he returns to golf -- whenever and wherever that turns
out to be – the reporters and the questions will be waiting.The man who for so long dictated
the terms of interviews will find a very changed media landscape.
Tiger is still the best
golfer in the world, but we no longer have any illusions about who he is as a
man.For now, at least, when he
says he is sorry, I am willing to take him at his word.Like his wife says, the real proof will
be in the way Tiger
lives the rest of his life.
I, too, thought I was about as cynical as anyone could get. And yet there I was buying into Tiger’s apology. Actually, compared to the usual Mark McGuire-esque apologies to which we have become accustomed, I thought Tiger’s was as real and raw as one could get. But when I read the writers you mentioned and others, I felt like a chump, a naif, a rube. Now, though, I hear he’s hitting balls and getting ready for the Tavistock Cup and The Masters. If that happens, I guess, that anyone who bought Tiger’s apology really is a chump, a naif, and a rube.
The Tiger Woods that stood before us for 13
minutes today was shamed, humbled shell of his former self.He needed to be, and he was.
Although Tiger’s
apology to his wife Elin, their kids, his mother Tida,
his friends, extended family, sponsors and fans was long in coming – too
long – it felt genuine and sincere, and Tiger, emotional at times, had a
well-earned tear in the corner of his eye.
"I was unfaithful.I had affairs.I cheated.What I did was unacceptable, and I am the only person to
blame," he said, framing the problem perfectly.
It was good to hear Tiger
concede that "fame and wealth" made him feel that the rules of life that apply
to the rest of us didn’t apply to him.It was good to hear him admit that there is nobody to blame but himself
for the mess he is in.
There was a complete absence
of arrogance, which was refreshing coming from a man known for just that.In fact, no matter what you think of
what he did, you’d have to be as cold-hearted and cynical as they come not to
be able to musteer a little compassion after that
performance.
Of course,as Tiger himself said, he can talk the talk, but
now he’s got to walk the walk."As
Elin pointed out to me, my real apology to her will
not come in the form of words," he said."It will come from my behavior over time."
If I had to nitpick, I’d say
at first he seemed, well, a little stiff and wooden, no doubt as a result of
nerves and embarrassment; he seemed a little more at ease once he looked up and
spoke directly into the camera.I
could have done without the lecture to the media, considering it is a very
small segment of the tabloid and gossip media that has been giving him fits.
Tiger is kidding himself if he thinks he’s not going to eventually have to
stand before the media and answer questions.
But over all, Tiger Woods
did himself a world of public relations good today.Now, let’s see if he really means it.
When Tiger Woods makes his grand
reappearance on Friday, he plans to make a statement but take no questions from
the few, hand-picked members of the media in the room.As always, he wants to be in control.
Well, I’ve got a few
questions, and you’ve probably got a few of your own.
How about these for a
starter:
1. What the hell were you
thinking?
2. Other than that rehab
clinic in Mississippi, where have you been?It’s easier to find Osama bin Laden?
3. Are you cured or
whatever?
4. If you were Elin,
would you
take you
back?
5. Do you really, truly want
to salvage the marriage?
6. If you were a golf fan,
would you take you back?
7. Do you understand the
shock, disappointment and betrayal your fans and the sports world feel?
8. It’s hard not to notice
that Elin is a beautiful, classy woman, not to mention the mother
of your two children, while the women you ran with on the side were largely skanks.What was that about?
9. Come to think of it, why
no women of color?You prejudiced?
10. Why have you remained
silent for so long?
11. You have shamed not only
yourself but the entire game of golf.Do you have a long-range plan to make amends?
12. How did you pull this
whole secret, parallel life thing off?
13. Who around you
knew?Do you plan to fire
them?If not, why not?
14. Tell the truth, did Elin
catch you in the kisser that night with that golf club?
15. Can your mother ever
forgive you?Do you think
your father would be proud?
16. From everything we’ve
seen, you had fine parents and stable, loving upbringing.Could you please make some effort at
explaining your behavior?
17. When you do return, do
you think fans who heckle you at golf tournaments should be removed by security
or do you think you have it coming?
18. Do you think you are a
sex addict or merely the world’s worst narcissist?
Why would anyone even bother to attend or watch TW’s "presentation" Friday. Any reporters who go to a hotel a mile away are stupid. The man continues to hide behind a shield to continue his phony image. Will "Mr. Clean" propose a refund of the royalaties to the "fans" who bought products he profited from?
To everyone who stopped by
our booth at the North Coast Golf Show, thank you.
The just-ended annual show
at the Expo
Center in Oaks was our first real effort to promote and market MyPhillyGolf
and the response was favorable and incredibly gratifying.Our director of advertising, Paul LaPotin, and I passed out more
than 4,000
informational postcards and golf pencils bearing the website logo.
Now that you’ve found MyPhillyGolf,
we will do our best to give you reason add it to your list of "Favorites" and
return day after day, even in the dead of winter.
My vision for this website
was to offer news and information but, more importantly, to give golfers in the
region a place where they can meet and talk to each other, to share their
passion for the game and their thoughts on people, issues and courses to play
or avoid.
As I pointed out to golfers
at the golf show, under "Course Finder,"MyPhillyGolf empowers you to write your own reviews of courses you
play.Under the "Discussion
Boards," you can start a conversation about any golf topic under the sun.
As you explore MyPhillyGolf,
if you come across something you don’t understand, or if you have an idea you’d
like to suggest, please let me know in an email.
If the gossip website Radar
is correct and Tiger Woods has
indeed left the Gentle Path sex
addiction rehab clinic in Hattiesburg, Miss., well, who among us doesn’t wish
him the best?
Forget for the moment his
return to golf; the man has his work cut out for him earning his wife’s trust
and forgiveness.His mother’s, too.The kids are probably too young to know
what’s going on. What his millions of fans around the world will feel upon his
return is probably a mixed bag.
The men I talk to, for the
most part, shrug and say, "That fool screwed up big time."
On the other hand, knowing
the temptations Tiger likely faced
on a daily basis, men also seem to be more willing to eventually close the door
on this ugly chapter.That door
will close all the quicker if Tiger’s return, whenever it is, is highlighted by
an victory of Secretariat
proportions.
Women, they’re another
story.The women I’ve talked to
don’t seem nearly so ready to forgive and forget.They think Tiger
is a rotten, low-down dirty dog, and they seethe with rage over the shock, betrayal
and humiliation Elin must have felt.Can Tiger earn back female fans’ trust and respect, let alone Elin’s?Women shake their heads.Not likely.
A newspaper in Melbourne,
Australia purports to have inside info that Tiger will return to action in mid-February at the Accenture Match Play Championship.Don’t count on it. For one thing, Tiger has never been a big fan of match
play, even if he has won it three times.If that tournament wasn’t one of the World Golf Championship events, he’d like skip it every year.
For another thing, the
sponsor, Accenture, was one of the
early corporations to publicly dump its endorsement deal with Tiger, saying he "no longer fit the
company’s image." Tiger, a
well-known holder of grudges, will not be doing Accenture any favors anytime soon.
It’s
also a given that when Tiger does
return to golf, we will want to make a statement by winning and winning
big.You know, show’em that
the High Sheriff is back in town. Unless
he has been secretly pounding balls by moonlight out behind the Gentle Path clinic, even the great Tiger is going to need some time to
knock the rust off his game.
What is unknowable at this
point is what Tiger is thinking, or
what he wants from golf and life from this point forward.We’ll find out soon enough, but not
before Tiger is ready to tell us.