Advertisement

Daly serving PGA suspension

Share
Associated Press

John Daly smashed one tee shot off the top of a beer can during a pro-am. At another tournament, he returned from a rain delay with Tampa Bay Buccaneers Coach Jon Gruden as his caddie. And his most memorable photo this year came in an orange jail suit, eyes half-closed.

Daly said Wednesday that such unwelcome publicity is why the PGA Tour suspended him for six months.

The two-time major champion confirmed his suspension to the Associated Press, calling this the low point of an 18-year career during which he has made as much news off the course as he has with his prodigious game.

Advertisement

“Is it fair that I got suspended?” he said. “It’s not fair in reality, but it’s probably fair in perception.”

Daly said he wanted to go public to let fans and tournaments know that he wasn’t abandoning them by taking his game to the European tour. At least until the spring, he simply didn’t have much of a choice.

“I’m not sure this is the smartest thing to do, but I’d rather be honest, especially with the fans,” he said. “It’s hard for me not to play on the West Coast. I love it out there.”

PGA Tour spokesman Ty Votaw declined to comment, even after seeing Daly’s remarks, citing the tour’s longtime policy of not discussing fines or suspensions.

This is the second time the tour has suspended Daly, along with at least two other times when he agreed to sit out the final few months of a season to get his life in order.

He has not played on the PGA Tour since he missed the cut Oct. 17 in Las Vegas. Ten days later, police in Winston-Salem, N.C., said he appeared intoxicated outside a Hooters restaurant, and Daly was taken to jail to sleep it off. That led to his photo in the orange jail suit, which became an Internet sensation.

Advertisement

Still trying to recover from various injuries, Daly made only five cuts in 17 starts on the tour, finishing 232nd on the money list. His world ranking has plunged to No. 736.

Daly isn’t even sure when the suspension began, but he hopes it ends in May. He said PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem sent a letter to his agent, Bud Martin of SFX Sports, who informed him.

“Tim and his staff have to do what they do,” Daly said. “Truly and honestly, I wish Tim would get to know the facts better before he makes a decision. I would love to sit down and have a nice talk with him, tell him what really happened. But perception is reality in the world.”

Martin would say only that the suspension was to end in the spring, adding “it remains confidential with the PGA Tour.”

Advertisement