Daly’s book a walk on the wild side
Literary effort sure to enhance his grip-and-rip-it reputation
![]() Jeff Chiu / AP file "My life is unbecoming of a professional," John Daly said in his book. |
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CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Typical of how he plays, John Daly holds nothing back in his new book.
There are stories of how he lost 60 pounds in college by drinking a fifth of whiskey and smoking three packs of cigarettes a day. One of the longest chapters is devoted to sexual exploits with his four wives and a woman he calls “Almost Ex No. 4.” In a harrowing account, he writes about the time his father put a gun to Daly’s head in a drunken rage.
But all anyone really needs to know about Daly is this — he named his second daughter after a rehab center.
That would be “Sierra,” as in Sierra Tucson, the Arizona clinic where Daly spent three weeks in January 1993 after trashing his Colorado house so badly the police were called.
Clearly, this isn’t the stock variety of PGA Tour player autobiographies.
“John Daly: My Life In and Out of the Rough” will be in bookstores Monday, and no one will mistake it for Ben Hogan’s book on the fundamentals of modern golf.
“It’s the truth. I’m not going to sidestep anything,” Daly said Tuesday. “It brings back memories of stupid stuff I’ve done in my life, and good stuff. It was honest.”
And it is sure to enhance his grip-and-rip-it reputation.
Some highlights:
- He got disqualified from a junior event in Atlanta when officials found a bottle of whiskey in his bag.
- Forced to lose 60 pounds at Arkansas if he wanted to play on his college team, he once went three days without hardly any food, drinking four bottles of whiskey until he passed out in his room and had to be taken to the emergency room.
“But you know what? My cigarettes-popcorn-whiskey diet worked,” Daly wrote. “The pounds just peeled right off. By Christmas, I’d lost 65 pounds. I probably ought to have written a diet book or something.”
- He said he has lost between $50 million and $60 million during 12 years of heavy gambling, and owed $4 million to casinos until he won the 1995 British Open, which enabled him to pay off the debt. Daly says Callaway Golf took care of a $1.7 million gambling debt when he signed an endorsement deal in 1997, after his second stint in alcohol rehab.
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No doubt, the book is causing great consternation at PGA Tour headquarters, where commissioner Tim Finchem rarely misses the chance to talk to players about upholding their clean image. Finchem called Daly on Monday to discuss the book. Daly called their conversation “positive,” whatever that means.
“It’s tough to match what the tour wants with what the publisher wants,” Daly said.
Finchem said Monday that nothing in the book violates PGA Tour regulations. The only violation in question falls under “conduct unbecoming a professional,” although such conduct isn’t spelled out in the players’ handbook.
Even if it were, Daly has an answer for that, too.
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Daly’s lifestyle borders on depravity. His actions lie somewhere between irrational and irresponsible.
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