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1991 PGA Champion John Daly

by Cameron Morfit, Senior Writer, GOLF Magazine

John Daly’s career has featured a litany of surprises, but none more audacious than the first: his win at the 1991 PGA Championship. Forget that Daly, a rookie, had missed 11 cuts in 23 starts preceding that week at Crooked Stick Golf Club in Carmel, Ind. The real shocker was his getting into the tournament at all, the result of a domino chain of withdrawals that ranged from excusable to extraordinary and that introduced Ken Anderson, the PGA’s czar of the alternates list, to a new kid on the Tour block: 9th alternate John Daly. “I had never heard of him,” Anderson recalls today. “I had to go look him up in a PGA Tour player guide so I’d know what he looked like in case I had to go find him and get him registered.” What transpired, of course, was one of the most fateful clashes of time and circumstance in golf history. Here, from those who were there, is how it all unfolded.

Legend has it that Daly drove all night from his home in Memphis to get to Crooked Stick and didn’t know he was in the field until Thursday morning, when Nick Price withdrew due to the impending birth of his first child, Gregory. That was a slight exaggeration.

Anderson: “I spoke to John on Tuesday night or Wednesday morning to tell him he was first alternate, and he said he was going to get in his car and start driving. He got lucky in that Price had an afternoon tee time. It allowed him to sleep in. I looked up where the players were staying that week and left a message at John’s hotel to say he’d gotten [into the field] and didn’t have to get to the course at 7 a.m.”

Daly had never seen Crooked Stick — all 7,295 yards of it — and needed a caddie who had. Jeff (Squeaky) Medlin, a hard-working former bricklayer, was set to work for Price, but had driven from his home in Columbus, Ohio, to Carmel knowing his man might withdraw. When Price did scratch, Medlin picked up Daly. After winning four majors, three with Price and one with Daly, Medlin would die of leukemia at age 43 in 1997.

Dianne Medlin, Squeaky’s widow: “Jeff was pretty meticulous about walking the course. He’d be out getting yardages for hours. He was there, I believe, on Monday — it’s only a three-hour drive from Columbus to Indianapolis, and I think he drove over just to see what was going to happen, if Nick was going to play.”

Daly and Medlin worked together for the first time Thursday, and despite being relatively unknown, Daly tapped into the form he’d displayed that July, when he notched three top-15 finishes on Tour.

Daly: “I was pretty loose because I had just secured my card. I had made 160 grand — I don’t know where I was, 50th on the money list, maybe 40th.”

Grouped with Billy Andrade and Bob Lohr, Daly shot an opening 69. It made a nice note for the papers, nothing more. The PGA of America had moved the tees up, and Kenny Knox and Ian Woosnam were the co-leaders after shooting 67s.

Andrade: “I knew John from college. He was at Arkansas, I was at Wake Forest. I just remember every hole he’d go, ‘Where do I hit it here, Squeaky?’ John was like a blind man with a guide dog. He didn’t miss a lot of shots.”

Lohr: “The first hole he hit 1-iron, which I thought was interesting. We were all hitting driver there. The fairways were soaking wet. I vividly remember hitting a good drive, and John flying it by me with a 1-iron. The third hole, a par 3, he hit three clubs less than I did. I remember he had this white, plastic-looking Cobra driver nobody else had. It was the best driving exhibition I’ve ever seen.”

Medlin: “Jeff had caddied for guys like Freddie Couples, Nick, Jeff Sluman, and to go from that caliber of player to someone he’d never heard of, he was like, ‘Oh, I’m working for a rookie.’ But after the first round he called and said, ‘I can’t club this guy. He hits it longer than anybody I’ve ever seen.’”

A spectator had been killed by lightning at the U.S. Open at Hazeltine earlier that summer, and during a rain delay in the PGA’s first round a bolt killed 39-year-old Thomas Weaver, who was 100 yards from his car, in a parking lot a mile from Crooked Stick.

Jim Nantz, who covered the tournament for CBS: “I remember that lightning bolt shaking the ground and finding out later someone was killed. I was doing the late-night show as I do now, and I remember going to the hospital. I think I’d been dispatched by CBS to see if there was a statement or something from the hospital.”

Price’s wife, Sue, gave birth on Friday morning, and Daly took the lead for good. Among his memorable shots was a 199-yard 6-iron that landed within three feet for eagle on the par-5 ninth hole. No dogleg was safe, and he shot a second-round 67. Upon seeing his name atop the board at round’s end, Daly said, “I’ll remember this day the rest of my life.”

Jim Ferriell, Crooked Stick’s head pro: “Prior to the PGA, [Crooked Stick designer] Pete Dye asked me to look at a new tee he was putting in on 14. It was going to be 275 yards to carry a creek and I said, ‘Some guys will be able to carry it, but they won’t move it right to left enough to turn the corner.’ Hell, Daly did turn the corner. He had wedge or 9-iron in.”

Daly: “All I remember is 14, a big dogleg left, and it was like 280 to carry the water, and I was hitting L-wedge into that hole. Guys were hitting 3- or 2-irons in. It was a big, big advantage.”

Andrade: “I remember waking up in the middle of the night Friday and thinking, ‘This guy is going to win. He’s hitting it over all the trouble.’ He didn’t have any stress off the tee, and that’s so much of what the majors are about. I think Squeaky was a big difference. On every hole, he’d go, ‘Just kill it,’ in that high-pitched voice.”

Fuzzy Zoeller: “The bunkering kind of closed in at 260, and then at 280 it opened back up to the wide-open spaces. Well, John never saw 280. He was pumping it out there 300 yards in the air.”

Pete Dye: “I had Greg Norman out to the course prior to the PGA and he couldn’t carry anything; John Daly carried it all.”

Daly’s fireworks obscured the fact that he was putting well.

Andrade: “I remember him putting like kids putt, ramming everything in. It seemed like they were going in the center at 100 mph, which told you he was confident.”

Daly: “I made all my six-, seven-, eight-footers that week.”

Daly was paired with veteran Bruce Lietzke on Saturday, and by the time they teed off, the Legend of John Daly was growing exponentially.

Lietzke: “It was pretty awe-inspiring. I don’t think I’d ever seen his name. Back in the ’70s, there was this guy who wore the rainbow wig and had a sign that said, john 3:16. He was there, and a writer said he didn’t know if the guy was making a religious statement or giving Daly’s driving distance.”

Nantz: “The story was growing every day, and by the time Saturday rolled around, we were documenting his whole history, every piece of information we could find on the guy. I was diggin’.”

Lietzke: “I’d never seen anyone’s swing go that far past parallel, at least nobody on Tour. He had a real following, even though nobody knew who he was. He played to the crowd; of course they loved the distance and he hit it straight as a string. He was smoking cigarettes and waving. He was the everyman’s hero.”

Bud Martin, Daly’s agent: “The perception in the public and the way CBS presented it was this guy was just kind of driving down the highway, as the ninth alternate, and said, ‘Hey, I might as well play.’”

Daly was putting for eagle on the 11th green Saturday when Medlin touched the green with the flagstick. By doing so he nearly broke Rule 8-2b, which prohibits a player and his caddie from touching the green, for aiming purposes, along the intended line of a putt.

Lietzke: “Somebody called in and we had to go into a trailer to look at the tape for five minutes after the round. It came pretty close, but we determined he didn’t touch the intended line. Squeaky was one of the veteran caddies and would have known you couldn’t do that.”

Larry Startzel, chairman of the Rules Commitee: “John was very professional about the whole thing, and Bruce really saved the day. He was adamant that Jeff hadn’t been giving John the line.”

Having avoided a two-stroke penalty, Daly and his fiancé, Bettye Fulford, attended an Indianapolis Colts preseason game Saturday night. Anonymous three days earlier, they were treated like royalty.

Daly: “Me and Bettye went on the 50-yard line and waved at everybody like I’d already won the tournament or something. The fans were nuts. They were great. The owner, Mr. [Robert] Irsay, asked me if I played any football, and I said I used to kick field goals. I was going to get dressed up for the Colts to kick a field goal in the game, and we almost had it, but the insurance wouldn’t do it.”

Nantz: “The Colts were playing Seattle. I didn’t go with John, but I went because I wanted to see what the reaction was. I was just trying to make sure I had a front-row seat to this week from out of the blue.”

With one round to go, Daly led by three over Kenny Knox and Craig Stadler. Knox got the call to play with the game’s new star on Sunday, which would have a profound impact on Knox’s career.

Knox: “He hit this high ball that looked like a pop-up, but you’d get out there and it would have gone 325 yards. I’d never seen anybody do that. The real difference was on the par 5s. I’d be hitting driver off the deck for my second shot, and he’d hit mid- to short-irons. The first hole, he hit it in the trees and bladed it over the green to make bogey, and I missed like a 10-footer for birdie, but he hit it to a foot on two for birdie and was off to the races.”

Daly: “It was a big week for Ryder Cup. Steve Pate chipped in on 18 to get in. I found out that 1990 had been the last year where if you win the PGA you get in the Ryder Cup. I honestly thought I might get picked.” [A PGA official confirms the rule to not have the on-year PGA winner appear in the Ryder Cup was made in 1989.]

Knox: “I’d won three tournaments, and this was my best chance to win a major. But I was always hitting 5-iron while other guys were hitting 7 or 8. I tried to get longer, started taking the club back farther and hurt my back in 1992. I hit the ground at the Western Open and was never the same after that. I tried to fix a swing that worked. The distance — you either have it or you don’t. I never did.”

Daly birdied the second, fifth, 13th and 15th holes. He then three-putted to double-bogey the 17th hole, and with water guarding the right side of 18, Ken Venturi said on CBS, “I’ll tell you what, it’s not over yet.” But it was. Daly managed to avoid the drink and left himself with only an 8-iron in for his second shot, and he found the green. He would beat Lietzke by three, Jim Gallagher Jr. by five, and Knox by six. As he walked to the green Daly waved a towel in the air.

Daly: “I was doing the Arsenio Hall, the towel thing. Winning the [1995] British Open was sweet but not as rowdy and cool as that. It was cool going through the crowd high-fiving everybody. My right hand was so sore after that week. My fingers were so sore. Man, I don’t do that anymore. I’m scared I’m going to get injured.”

Daly, Fulford, agent Bud Martin, and Daly’s then best friend, Donnie Crabtree, were among a small group who piled into a limousine and instructed the driver to head toward the nearest McDonald’s drive-through, where Daly stuck his head through the sunroof and ordered. Then they went to a party thrown by Crooked Stick president Michael Browning.

Crabtree: “It didn’t get too crazy. John didn’t have that many friends and family there. You can’t really plan that type of thing. I don’t remember him drinking at that party. If anything he might have had a beer or two, but it wasn’t a big drunk or anything like that.”

Daly: “I was going to McDonald’s all the time. I was drinking some whiskey back then, but not like everybody perceives. I’m not any different; when things aren’t going good, you drink. A lot of people drink when things aren’t going good. I never drank that whole week.”

Ben Wright, who worked the 17th hole for CBS: “I knew John, and I walked in with him down the 18th hole Sunday, and I said, ‘Is that a beer you have in your cup?’ He said no, it was iced tea. I suspect it was beer. I don’t have any compunction about saying that. I’ve always had a terrific relationship with John; he’s been a terrific friend to me.”

Even while basking in the glow of victory, Daly remembered the family of 39-year-old Thomas Weaver, who during a rain delay in the PGA’s first round was killed by lightning in a parking lot a mile from Crooked Stick.

Nantz: “I was there to present the Wanamaker Trophy, and John right off the top said he was giving $30,000 to a scholarship fund for those two little girls who lost their father earlier in the week.”

Dee Fisher, Weaver’s widow who has since remarried: “It was a tragedy we have learned to move forward from. But it was such a nice gesture that John, especially at such a young age, would think of my family. The money gained interest, and their dad and I had set aside some, too. Emily started at Purdue, got married and finished at a school in Illinois. She got a degree as a respiratory therapist. Karen got a degree in biology at Indiana and is doing clinical rotations at medical school in Michigan.”

Daly finally met the family at Fuzzy Zoeller’s Wolf Challenge tournament in Indiana in 2006.

Fisher: “Everybody was very kind and it was nice to meet the man with the generous heart after all those years. He liked meeting the girls, and they’d put together a scrapbook of what they’d been doing since their father had been gone. I think John was touched. That’s what I think of when I see bad articles about him.”

Thanks to Daly’s theatrics at Crooked Stick, hoards of people turned out to watch him at the following week’s International

near Denver.

Daly: “In Colorado it finally hit me what I’d done. I’d had a few people following me because I hit it long, but this — 7,000 people for a practice round on a Tuesday — was unheard of out here.”

Daly would return to Crooked Stick only once, later that year.

Ferriell: “He came back to do an outing, I think it was the end of September, and did something for me. I had posters left over from the tournament, and I had this idea, if John would sign ‘em, I could sell ‘em for a minimum of $100 and start an employee scholarship fund. John sat at my desk and I kept feeding ‘em to him. There were at least a hundred of these things. And now we’ve endowed the fund, and the kids of the people here, the waitresses or whoever, have gotten scholarships from it. They’re all on the wall — 59 kids.”

The ensuing 20 years for Daly have brought divorces (four), suspensions, on- and off-course blow-ups and rehab.

Lietzke: “As long as John Daly was at the time, the first couple years Davis Love III was on the Tour, I thought he was just as long. Davis toned it down, but I’m not sure Daly ever learned to do that.”

Fuzzy Zoeller, a friend of Daly’s: “He was one of the first long hitters to come out with that kind of touch and imagination around the green. I would have thought he would have won a lot more with the talent he had.”

Daly: “Yeah, I’ve done some stupid things, some people have done some bad things to me. I’ve gotten a few divorces. It’s not any different than anybody else; mine just gets publicized. That’s what goes with the territory of winning a major or two majors or whatever. People watch what you do. And I was real stubborn back then. I wasn’t going to change anything, and when I did change I didn’t like it. I just couldn’t not be me.”

Nine Lives

Nine players needed to withdraw from or decline an invitation to the 91 ‘PGA for Daly to punch his ticket. Here’s how it happened:

1. Dave Barr — replaced Mark James, who chose to stay in Europe in his quest of qualifying for a spot on the European Ryder Cup Team
2. Keith Clearwater –replaced Lee Trevino, who claimed mental and physical exhaustion
3. Mark Weibe — Buick Open winner Brad Faxon already in the field
4. Bob Wolcott — replaced Gibby Gilbert, who had an inner ear problem
5. Doug Tewell — replaced Paul Azinger, who had not full recovered from shoulder surgery
6. Bill Sander — passed on final spot. Back hurting, and wanted some time off
7. Mark Lye — passed on final spot. Didn’t want to play without a practice round
8. Brad Bryant — passed on final spot. Had some “personal family problems” arise at last minute and went to Texas
9. John Daly — replaced Nick Price, who withdrew Wednesday afternoon to stay with his wife, who had her baby on the following Friday

Source: PGA of America Championship Department

Read more: http://www.golf.com/golf/tours_news/article/0,28136,2084962,00.html#ixzz1TPf9kUgu

by Joe Posnanski, Senior Writer, Sports Illustrated

Of all the stunning things that I’ve seen John Daly do through the years — these would include hitting screaming drives off a Diet Coke can, winning the PGA as a ninth alternate, breaking into a country song about his own life in the middle of an interview, getting served with divorce papers at the Masters, and so on — the most stunning happened during a pro-am at Doral.

The year was 1992; it was only months after Daly had become the biggest thing in golf by winning the PGA Championship at Crooked Stick. Though by now Daly’s story has been told a million times, it is difficult to re-create just how much his victory shook the foundations of the game. Pro golf, for the first time in probably a half century, had no transcendent figure. Greg Norman seemed cursed. Nick Faldo seemed bland. Nick Price seemed almost too nice a guy to be the best player in the world — you couldn’t help but think that even he thought so.

Then came Daly with his past-parallel swing, his Arkansas grip-it-and-rip-it style that perfectly mirrored his Arkansas grip-it-and-rip-it life. He just showed up in Indiana and swung the club harder and with more feeling than anyone we had ever seen. Who was this guy?

He won that PGA by three and he instantly became one of the biggest sports stars in the world. You will remember, of course, the way Tiger Woods exhilarated the golf world. John Daly did it first. Golf, perhaps more than any other sport, has inspired writers to invent wild and hilarious and slightly unreal characters like Tin Cup McAvoy and Kenny Lee Puckett and Carl Spackler. Now, with Daly, golf had its very own fictional character.

And for 20 years now, Daly has played golf on the edge — often over the edge. More than one commentator has talked about Daly living like he swings, past parallel. Name a vice, any vice, and Daly has probably overdosed on it.

We’ll spare you the ugly details because at some point it all just blends into a hard-to-watch reality TV show (Daly indeed had such a show on the Golf Channel). The life certainly dulled his breathtaking game. Yes, Daly won the B.C. Open in 1992, the Bellsouth in ’94, and the St. Andrews Open in ’95. But that was pure talent. Daly was bursting with pure talent. Nicklaus suggested he could win 10 Masters. He was the one guy before Tiger Woods came along who would make other golfers shake their head in wonder.

Daly did not win another tournament for almost a decade after St. Andrews. Even during his brief glory period as a golfer, he was suspended, divorced, and he checked into the Betty Ford Clinic to deal with his drinking problems. Daly, from the start, seemed destined to be one of those golfers who could not ever quite live up to the talent…and he fulfilled his destiny.

But that didn’t stop people from loving him. People love him still. I love the guy. The thing about Daly’s many flaws was that the main person he seemed to hurt with all of his obsessions was himself. He spent countless hours working with charities — he seems to have a good heart. He constantly wanted to entertain crowds, and in a sport where the best golfer in the world sometimes seems to treat galleries like vague annoyances, everyone loved Daly for caring.

The question that sparked this column was simply: Has John Daly been good for golf? But there’s nothing simple about the question. Daly has walked off golf courses. He has embarrassed the game countless times. He has also inspired a million smiles. Good for golf? It’s hard to imagine golf without him.

Back to Doral: I was a kid reporter for the Augusta Chronicle when I nervously asked Daly for an interview. He was, as mentioned, perhaps the hottest sports star on earth at the time. He said, “Sure, kid, walk with me.” (“Kid” — he was eight months older than me.) And so I walked the pro-am with John Daly, and he was funny and thoughtful and charming and irrepressibly kind. He also smoked the entire time and seemed ready to get on to the next thing, whatever the next thing happened to be.

I remember he hit a long drive — with the ever-present “You da man!” shouts that have followed his tee shots for two decades — and the ball rolled into a fairway bunker. We walked to it, and Daly was in the middle of a particularly involved story. A cigarette dangled from his mouth, and his face showed the effects from the night before, and he said, “Hold on a second, I have to hit this shot.”

He walked over to the ball and without looking, apparently without thinking, he hit a full sand wedge. The sound was as crisp as breakfast cereal, and the ball rolled to within two inches of the cup.

Daly, without hesitating, handed the wedge to his caddie, walked back to me and picked up his story mid-sentence. The miraculous shot did not impress him. I suppose he thought he had an infinite supply of miraculous shots in him. He did not. We know that now. But through it all, he had enough miraculous shots to make the game of golf a whole lot more interesting.

Read more: http://www.golf.com/golf/tours_news/article/0,28136,2084979,00.html#ixzz1TPdHZdeY

John Daly smacks a shot out of the rough on the 2nd hole during The Greenbrier Classic Pro-Am on Monday, July 25, 2011, on the Old White TPC Course at The Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va

Sholten Singer/The Herald-Dispatch

John Daly smacks a shot out of the rough on the 2nd hole during The Greenbrier Classic Pro-Am on Monday, July 25, 2011, on the Old White TPC Course at The Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va

July 25, 2011 @ 11:45 PM

ANDREW RAMSPACHER

The Herald-Dispatch

The Herald-Dispatch

WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W.Va. — On the practice tee at The Greenbrier Resort, he arched negatively with his signature backswing and unleashed fury on a poor golf ball that probably didn’t land until it hit somewhere in Virginia.

Based on mechanics alone, he’s the old John Daly. The into-orbit sending basher who wooed crowds with monstrous drive after monstrous drive.

But based on apparel alone, Daly looks like, well, something out of a Jimmy Buffet concert.

During Monday’s practice round at The Greenbrier Classic, Daly rocked a fire-engine red hat with a matching cardinal-looking three-buttoned shirt. From the waist down, it was a crimson belt mixed with a wild maroon and gold patterned set of pants.

It was kind of a disappointment that his shoes were a modest black-and-white pair of Nikes.

Twenty years after he welcomed himself to the golf world by winning the PGA Championship as the ninth alternate, this is the new John Daly.

The hair’s shorter.

The body’s slimmer.

And the clothes are much, much brighter.

“A good buddy of mine was part-owner of this company and he asked if I would wear these and I said, ‘Eww, I don’t know,’” Daly said of a meeting he had with a higher-up from the Loudmouth clothing line three years ago. “And then I put them on. They’re comfortable. They’re great.

“And here we are, three years later, still going strong.”

There was a long period in Daly’s career when “going strong” was rarely put in the same sentence as his name. He’s been through several bouts with alcoholism, had a severe gambling problem and isn’t far removed from finalizing his fourth divorce.

He lost his exempt status on the PGA Tour in 2006 and now relies on sponsor invitations to get him to events.

Yet Daly and his loyal pack of followers keep showing up.

It seems J.D. fans have embraced his struggles in hope that one day it all comes back around.

“Since Tiger (Woods) met his waterloo, it’s given everyone else a chance to step up,” said Larry Black, a Lexington, Va., native who donned Daly-inspired polka dot shorts with his wife, Vickie, on Monday. “And of course, John Daly, I’ve always admired him because, you know, he has the big, long hit.

“But he’s laid back. I’ve never talked to him but I’ve heard people say that John Daly will stop to talk to you and sign autographs and what not.”

Daly’s down-to-earth attitude is what’s kept him steady during dark times in his life. Behind the man who’s twice been suspended by the PGA is the one who’s joined forces with the likes of Darius Rucker and Willie Nelson to record his own album, the one who’s a die-hard Arkansas Razorbacks football fan and yes, the one who’s not afraid to sport the most outlandish of outfits.

“He’s brought color,” said Black, whose wife admitted he was a pretty plain dresser pre-Daly. “I like color. I like it out on the golf course. I just think it looks pretty on the greens and fairways.”

And what about a more beautiful sight? How about Daly, with all those vibrant tones, using those greens and fairways to take his first tournament title since 2004?

The 45-year-old, coming off a top-10 finish at last weekend’s RBC Canadian Open, said he’s not done yet.

“I keep coming back because of the love of the game,” Daly said. “And I still feel like there’s some game in me that I might have a chance to win again.

“But I love the game. I love the competitive nature of it. I love the challenge probably more than anything.”

hey all… There are several great articles out there this week about jD’s play at the Canadian Open.

Feel free to post links to articles and I will share them with you all. Just let me know what you find and
Make sure to send JD positive thoughts for tomorrow.

REX HOGGARD, Senior Writer, GolfChannel.com Posted 10/22/2010, 9:56 PM EST

In an exclusive interview with Golf Channel, John Daly revealed Friday that his computer has been hacked and that the culprit was behind bogus postings on his Twitter and Facebook accounts and threats to his children.

According to Daly the hacker gained access to his social networks as well as his e-mail account.

“(Daly’s girlfriend Anna Cladakis) got on Facebook and the guy was talking to her and says, ‘If you want this back you know what to do. I will get you and I will get your daughters. I’ll steal their identity.’” Daly said in an interview that will air Saturday on Golf Central at 1:20 a.m. (ET). “Other things that were said scared me to death.”

Daly said the FBI took Cladakis’ computer to check for evidence and that he informed his two daughters, 18-year-old Shynah and 15-year-old Sierra, to close their Facebook accounts.

Daly’s home page on Twitter remains (@PGA_JohnDaly), but it has been essentially deactivated with just 60 followers and not a single Tweet.

The star power for the Knoxville News Sentinel Open got a lot brighter Tuesday.

John Daly, winner of two majors, committed to playing in the Nationwide Tour’s oldest event, which will be held Aug. 23-29 at Fox Den Country Club in Farragut.

Daly, 44, received a sponsor’s exemption, as will veterans Jim McGovern, 45, and Ben Bates, 49. McGovern won the 1993 Shell Houston Open.

Daly isn’t the only marquee name in Knoxville News Sentinel Open field.

Rich Beem, who won the 2002 PGA Championship, is scheduled to play on a rehabilitation start.

“I’ve known Rich forever,” said Daly. “I’ve known Jimmy McGovern and Ben Bates. They’re the ones who kept calling me, going, ‘C’mon. C’mon. You gotta play.’ I just now got it in my schedule to where I can – unless some miracle happens and I got in the FedEx (Playoffs).

“But I love those guys. . . . It’s cool that we have guys like that who are down-to-earth and very humble. They’ll entertain the amateurs during the Wednesday pro-ams. We’re just old school. We follow in the footsteps of the Fuzzies (Fuzzy Zoeller) and the Arnold Palmers. We feel like we treat our amateurs really good. I’m not bragging, but we’re a lot of fun to be around, you know?”

The tournament committee asked first-year tournament director Patrick Nichol to speak with Daly at the Nationwide Tour’s Fort Smith (Ark.) Classic. Nichol was there and was able to approach Daly about the possibility of playing in Knoxville.

Nichol received Daly’s OK on Tuesday.

“We really thought John could help us out this year, when we’re kind of in a rebuilding mode,” said Nichol. “John played here in 1990, and he’s part of the original Ben Hogan Tour, along with Ben Bates and Jimmy McGovern. It just seemed like a perfect fit to get those old guys back here at the oldest tournament on this tour.

“We know that they can play good golf and that they’ll be great with our sponsors. That’s what we’re trying to deliver this year: total value to all the businesses that are part of the event.”

Daly’s game is slowly making a resurgence.

He shot a 6-under-par 66 in the first round of the British Open at St. Andrews in mid-July. He went on to tie for 48th.

He has made 11 of 15 cuts on the PGA Tour this season but has yet to accumulate enough points to qualify the FedEx Cup Playoffs, which begin the same week of the Knoxville News Sentinel Open.

He will play in the PGA Championship next week and the Wyndham Championship, Aug. 19-22 in Greensboro, N.C., before driving his tour bus to Knoxville.

“I’m frustrated with my putting,” said Daly on the status of his game this season. “I’m hitting it so good. I’m just not making any putts. If I can start making some putts, it’ll be a lot more fun, you know?

“I know what I’m doing wrong. It’s just hard to change.”

Daly played in the inaugural Knoxville Open in 1990 at Willow Creek but has since been on the PGA Tour, reaching superstardom when he won the 1991 PGA Championship and 1995 British Open.

Daly’s appearance at the Fort Smith Classic was his only Nationwide Tour appearance this season and his first on the circuit since 1991. He finished 22nd.

He should hold fond memories of Fox Den Country Club. He made a hole-in-one on the 388-yard, par-4 15th during a charity scramble in October of 2006.

It was his first ace on a par 4.

“It’s a great golf course,” said Daly. “It’s a golf course that if you can keep it in play scores will be low. The greens were good. We didn’t play the back tees (in that scramble), so I’m sure it’ll be harder than when we played it.

“But it’s a great golf course. I’m looking forward to coming back there.”

Dress Like Daly: Daly disclosed that his clothing sponsor Loud Mouth Golf – known for its non-conservative flashy designs – has agreed in contract with the University of Tennessee to sell orange “check-pants, shorts, shirts and skorts.”

“The good news for you guys is: the University of Tennessee is our first Loud Mouth NCAA contract that we got,” said Daly. “(The items) are going to hopefully be in some of the stores there at the university.”

Daly said there also may be an opportunity to purchase some at the Knoxville News Sentinel Open.

Help Needed: The Knoxville News Sentinel Open is still in need of volunteers.

Visit www.KNSopen.com or call 865-966-7693 for more info.