John Daly
Letting the Big Dog Eat - The Biography
Seiten
2003
Virgin Books (Verlag)
978-1-85227-082-7 (ISBN)
Virgin Books (Verlag)
978-1-85227-082-7 (ISBN)
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Despite his trials and tribulations, John Daly remains one of the biggest draws in golf. His no-nonsense "grip it and rip it" philosophy has struck a chord with golf fans the world over and his length off the tee is truly the stuff of legend. This is the story of his colourful and turbulent life.
It has been said that there are only four things worth seeing in modern day golf. The first is the Augusta National Course, the home of the US Masters, second is the greatest player in the modern game, Tiger Woods, while the third is the living legend that is Arnold Palmer. And the fourth? The fourth is the swing of John Patrick Daly. Rewind to August 1991 and the USPGA Championship at Crooked Stick, Indianapolis. Having driven through the night to get to the course, 25-year-old rookie pro John Daly tees off as an 11th hour replacement for Nick Price and without so much as a practice round, blasts his way to a spectacular and entirely unexpected victory. That triumph, achieved with a combination of brutal ball striking and a rare subtley around the greens, should have signalled the start of the big time for Daly. Instead, it prompted a shocking descent into alcoholism, gambling addiction and more incidents and accidents than most people would encounter in one, maybe two, lifetimes. Indeed, since Crooked Stick, Daly has been in rehab twice (and walked out), fought with fans, clocked up three ex-wives and blown $10 million on a three-year gambling spree.
He has been arrested, suspended, drunk and disorderly. He has trashed his house, wrecked hotel rooms and spurned milti-million dollar sponsorship deals rather than give up drinking. He has witnessed his world ranking plummet to 507 and seen his game deteriorate to the point where he's broken down in tears on the course. He even racked up an 18 at the 6th hole at Bay Hill. Yet, despite his trials and tribulations, John Daly remains a big draw in the game. His no-nonsense "grip it and rip it" philosophy has struck a chord with golf fans the world over and his length off the tee is truly the stuff of legend.
It has been said that there are only four things worth seeing in modern day golf. The first is the Augusta National Course, the home of the US Masters, second is the greatest player in the modern game, Tiger Woods, while the third is the living legend that is Arnold Palmer. And the fourth? The fourth is the swing of John Patrick Daly. Rewind to August 1991 and the USPGA Championship at Crooked Stick, Indianapolis. Having driven through the night to get to the course, 25-year-old rookie pro John Daly tees off as an 11th hour replacement for Nick Price and without so much as a practice round, blasts his way to a spectacular and entirely unexpected victory. That triumph, achieved with a combination of brutal ball striking and a rare subtley around the greens, should have signalled the start of the big time for Daly. Instead, it prompted a shocking descent into alcoholism, gambling addiction and more incidents and accidents than most people would encounter in one, maybe two, lifetimes. Indeed, since Crooked Stick, Daly has been in rehab twice (and walked out), fought with fans, clocked up three ex-wives and blown $10 million on a three-year gambling spree.
He has been arrested, suspended, drunk and disorderly. He has trashed his house, wrecked hotel rooms and spurned milti-million dollar sponsorship deals rather than give up drinking. He has witnessed his world ranking plummet to 507 and seen his game deteriorate to the point where he's broken down in tears on the course. He even racked up an 18 at the 6th hole at Bay Hill. Yet, despite his trials and tribulations, John Daly remains a big draw in the game. His no-nonsense "grip it and rip it" philosophy has struck a chord with golf fans the world over and his length off the tee is truly the stuff of legend.
Gavin Newsham is the sports editor of Maxim, the world's biggest-selling men's lifestyle magazine. Previously, he has been the features writer at FHM, and senior writer at 90 Minutes football magazine. He has written extensively on sport for a variety of publications including the Guardian, the Observer, Total Sport, Loaded, Goal and Time Out.
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 5.6.2003 |
---|---|
Zusatzinfo | 8pp of plates, illustrations |
Verlagsort | London |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 160 x 240 mm |
Gewicht | 580 g |
Themenwelt | Literatur ► Biografien / Erfahrungsberichte |
Sachbuch/Ratgeber ► Sport ► Golf | |
ISBN-10 | 1-85227-082-9 / 1852270829 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-85227-082-7 / 9781852270827 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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