John Daly (golfer)

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John Patrick Daly (born April 28, 1966) is a professional golfer on the PGA Tour.

Daly is known primarily for his "zero to hero" victory in the 1991 PGA Championship, his driving distance off the tee (earning him the nickname "Long John"), his non-country club appearance and attitude, and his rough-and-tumble personal life.

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[edit] Biography

Daly was born in Carmichael, California. His family moved from California to Dardanelle, Arkansas when he was five, and he began playing golf the following year. The family subsequently moved to Fredericksburg, Virginia, then to Jefferson City, Missouri, then back to Dardanelle where John graduated from high school.

Daly attended the University of Arkansas, where he was a member of the golf team. He turned professional in 1987, and won the Ben Hogan Utah Classic in 1990.

He joined the PGA Tour in 1991 and won the PGA Championship that year. This victory gained Daly a significant amount of media attention due to the fact that Daly was the ninth and final alternate for the Championship. He entered the competition when Nick Price dropped out and no other alternate could make it. He parlayed this opportunity into a first round score of 69, without a practice round. He finished the tournament with scores of 67-69-71, giving him a three-stroke victory over Bruce Lietzke. Daly was subsequently named PGA Tour Rookie of the Year. He was also the first rookie to win a major title since 1976.

John Daly at the 2005 AmEx Championship
John Daly at the 2005 AmEx Championship

In 1992 he won the B.C. Open and the 1994 BellSouth Classic. In 1995, he unexpectedly won the British Open in a playoff with Italian Costantino Rocca at St. Andrews. Daly is the only eligible two-time major winner never selected to play in the Ryder Cup.

Daly's golf swing is easily recognized, as he sends the club way "past parallel" to the ground on his backswing (see accompanying picture), thereby generating tremendous power. Daly is a consistent challenger for the Driving Distance crown and has won that title a record-setting 11 times as of 2004, 8 of which were consecutive. His lifetime average for distance off the tee is 309.4 yards, and his single-season personal best is an average of 314.3 yards, which he attained in 2003. Single drives in excess of 350 yards are not uncommon, and Daly can reach very long par 5 holes in two strokes where no one else can. He is also known for having soft hands and a deft touch in his short game around the greens.

Daly is sponsored by Maxfli Golf (Taylor Made-Adidas Golf), Dunlop Golf (Focus Golf Systems), Hooters restaurants, Winn Grips, and 84 Lumber.

[edit] Off-course life

[edit] Controversy

Daly's career has been interrupted from time to time by off-course personal incidents involving alcohol, including an incident where he was removed from a British Airways airplane by airport security for harassing a flight attendant while drunk. Daly once claimed that he drank a fifth of Jack Daniel's every day during the year he was 23 years of age. He has entered into various alcohol addiction programs, including Alcoholics Anonymous and the Betty Ford Clinic, at least three times and has experienced three divorces since becoming a professional golfer. These incidents resulted in a stretch between 1996 and 2001 without a professional victory. During this stretch, Daly was especially known for having spectacular blow-up holes near the end of rounds such as knocking multiple balls into water or out-of-bounds for a double-digit score or hitting a ball while it was still moving and then walking off the course. During the 1998 Greater Vancouver Open, Daly was visibly shaking as he tried to play, causing the television announcers to audibly wince at the sight. Daly's fourth wife Sherrie pleaded guilty to federal drug charges and was sentenced to a five month prison term.

In December 1992, he was charged with third-degree assault for throwing his then-wife Bettye into a wall; although the actual circumstances of the incident, by all current accounts, indicate the charges were overstated and Bettye did not want them pressed. Daly has said in his book "My Life In and Out of the Rough" that he did not, nor has he ever, hit or hurt a woman. He apologized for the incident, which has now been characterized more as "shoving" than "throwing", and entered an alcohol rehabilitation center and and took time off from golf tournaments in early 1993. He pleaded guilty for a lesser charge of the assault and was withdrawn when Daly completed counseling. In May 1993, he was upset by his opening round at the Kemper Open, threw his scoring card in the scoring tent, walked off, and was disqualified. In late 1993, Daly was given an indefinite suspension for 1994 after quitting in the middle of the Kapalua International and told to seek treatment for his alcoholism. He was at first suspended for the first 12 tournaments of the 1994 season, but he came a few weeks earlier than expected and played in the Honda Classic, finishing fourth.

In July 1994, Daly claimed that many PGA golfers were cocaine users, and said that if drug testing was done on tour, he would be "one of the cleanest guys out there" which brought an uproar among the golfing community. In the final round of the 1994 NEC World Series of Golf, Daly was accused of hitting his long drives too early, hitting his ball toward the spectators walking across the fairways. He would get into a fight with Bob Roth, whose son was competing in the event, although sources seem to state that Roth provoked the fight and his wife was calling Daly vulgar names. Daly hurt his back and would withdraw from the Swiss Open the next week. Daly voluntarily missed the remainder of the 1994 season for physical and mental exhaustion.

Over the past several years, Daly has gotten his alcohol problem under control and, after winning a few minor tournaments, broke his long PGA Tour drought on February 15, 2004, by winning the Buick Invitational. He clinched his victory on the first hole of a three-way playoff by hitting a long, difficult greenside bunker shot to within inches of the hole. Daly went on to have some of his most consistent play ever in 2004 and 2005.

In 2006, Daly revealed in the last chapter of his book My Life in and out of the Rough : The Truth Behind All That Bull**** You Think You Know About Me ISBN 0-06-112062-6 that he has had great difficulty with a gambling problem. He claims to have lost between $50 and $60 million dollars(US) over the past 15 years. This includes losing $1.5 million in one day, most of it lost on $5,000 Las Vegas slot machines. Daly has been able to pay his gambling debts mostly through making more paid public appearances and through sponsorships opportunities.

Despite prodigious consumption of cigarettes and Diet Coke, Daly has never conquered his weight problem; he refused to partake in the British Open Champions Dinner because "You don't get a guy this big into a suit."

In addition he has admitted the only reason he does not lift weights is because the health club does not let him smoke there, and he would get sick after he would workout.

[edit] Public involvement

Daly recorded an autobiographical album entitled My Life, featuring guest performances by Darius Rucker, Willie Nelson, Johnny Lee, and Daron Norwood.

Daly does not fly to tournament sites and instead travels in a personal recreational vehicle. He is known for his involvement in many charities including several in northwest Arkansas. He has donated money to his high school, the Make-A-Wish Foundation, and Boys and Girls Clubs of America. Daly is also an active supporter of the sports programs at the University of Arkansas.

He shaved his signature "mullet", and donated the proceeds from the event to various charities.

His likeness, voice, and golfing abilities were the basis of a character in the Hot Shots Golf 3 video game.

Often compared to the character Happy Gilmore in the movie with the same name starring Adam Sandler. His controversies, long drives and abilities to bring new audiences to the sport leaves one to wonder if the character of Happy wasn't in fact partly based on Daly.

Claimed on the Howard Stern Show to have done a 806 yards drive on the LA airport runway.

A John Daly is also a kind of drink. It is an Arnold Palmer (Lemonade and Iced tea) with whiskey and a splash of ginger ale. This drink was invented by Matt Schroeder.[citation needed]

[edit] 2007 Exempt Status

John Daly entered the 2007 PGA Tour season without full exempt status for the first time since his 1991 PGA Championship victory, which carried a 10-year PGA Tour exemption. Another such exemption was earned with his 1995 British Open win. When Daly won the 2004 Buick Invitational, he earned a 2-year exemption, which expired at the end of 2006. Daly finished 193rd on the 2006 PGA Tour Official Money List, thereby losing his full exempt status for 2007.

As he is not among either the Top 25 or 50 on the PGA Tour's All-Time Career Money List, Daly must now depend heavily on Sponsor Invitations (PGA Tour Exemption Category 12). Some 2007 PGA Tour events have already extended such invitations. Outside of sponsor invitations, Daly can also play in most 2007 regular events via Exemption Category 30, "Past Champions, Team Tournament Winners and Veteran Members beyond the Top 150 Leaders on the 2006 PGA Tour Official Money List".

As far as individual tournaments are concerned, Daly is exempt for life in the PGA Championship and AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, up to age 65 in the British Open and up through 2009 in the Buick Invitational. In order to play in the Masters, U.S. Open, a World Golf Championship or a Fed Ex Cup Playoff Event, Daly would have to satisfy the particular invitational requirements of such events.

Most fans and golf columnists will readily point to the 2005 WGC-American Express Championship as the event where John Daly's current post-2006 exempt status would be determined. Tied with Tiger Woods at the end of regulation play, Daly missed a short par putt on the 2nd extra playoff hole, giving Woods the victory. Had Daly instead made the par, and then had gone on to win, he would have earned a 3-year PGA Tour exemption through 2008.[1]

Daly was invited to play in the Honda Classic on March 1, 2007 on a sponsor's exemption, but had to withdraw after two holes. Daly pulled a muscle near his shoulder blade when he tried to stop his backswing after a fan snapped a picture.[2]

[edit] PGA Tour wins (5)

Major championships shown in bold.

[edit] Other wins (11)

[edit] Results in major championships

Tournament 1986 1987 1988 1989
Masters Tournament DNP DNP DNP DNP
U.S. Open CUT DNP DNP T69
British Open DNP DNP DNP DNP
PGA Championship DNP DNP DNP DNP
Tournament 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
Masters Tournament DNP DNP T19 T3 T48 T45 T29 DNP T33 T52
U.S. Open DNP DNP CUT T33 CUT T45 T27 WD T53 68
British Open DNP DNP 75 T14 81 1 T67 DNP CUT DNP
PGA Championship DNP 1 82 T51 CUT CUT CUT T29 CUT DNP
Tournament 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Masters Tournament CUT DNP T32 DNP CUT CUT CUT
U.S. Open WD DNP T70 DNP DNP T75 DNP
British Open CUT CUT CUT T72 CUT T15 CUT
PGA Championship CUT CUT CUT CUT CUT T74 CUT

DNP = did not play
CUT = missed the half way cut
WD = withdrew
"T" indicates a tie for a place.
Green background for wins. Yellow background for top-10.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Woods wins as Daly misses short one, SportsNetwork.com October 9, 2005.
  2. ^ Daly withdraws from Honda Classic with injury, ESPN.com March 1, 2007.

[edit] External links

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Adapted from the article John Daly, from Wikinfo, licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.