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John Daly happy to be where he
is
John Daly trudged,
cigarette in mouth, up the hill to the 16th green at Atlanta Athletic Club on
a steamy Georgia morning. A small gathering of fans applauded as his familiar
figure emerged on the green.
"I gotta quit smoking up these
hills," Daly said, tossing the offending butt aside.
A few minutes
later, Daly stroked three 20-foot practice putts into the hole, then paused for
a moment to reflect on the tumultuous life he's lived.
He kept
it simple, just the way he'd like his life to be.
"It's all
good because I'm still living," he said. "The way I look at it the man upstairs
is keeping me around for something. I thank him every day."
Ten years
after he electrified the golf world by winning the PGA Championship as an alternate,
Daly has a lot to be thankful for as he returns to the event that made him a household
name.
He's married
again, slimmed down and rededicated to his game. He's still booming drives but
now has a better short game to go with it.
The drinking?
He hasn't trashed any hotel rooms recently and if he has a beer or two he's not
telling anyone about it.
"It's my
discretion now, which makes it a lot easier," Daly said. "The less I talk about
it is best because if I don't talk about it, I don't even think about it."
It's hard
to believe a decade has passed since Daly put the crowd at Crooked Stick in Indiana
in a frenzy with his huge drives and good Ole' boy manner.
Daly slapped
so many high-fives to fans walking down the fairways on the weekend that his right
hand was sore for a week. He charmed the press with his stories and immediately
a star was born.
"It was
so awesome. It was one of those weeks that just flew by," he says. "Even now it's
just a blur."
Stardom
was more than the 25-year-old country boy from Arkansas could handle. Daly won
and lost a fortune, went through a few wives and more lives than a charmed cat.
There were drinking binges that ended with trashed hotel rooms, then addictions
to sweets and colas that pushed his weight over 250 pounds.
He estimates
he gave away enough items or made loans to friends that ended up costing him $7
million over the years.
"You learn
a lot about life when you go through stuff like that," he says.
That learning
curve brought Daly to the back nine of the Atlanta Athletic Club early Wednesday
with both a refurbished game honed on a new practice facility at his Arkansas
home and a new attitude toward golf and life.
The new
game has helped him make 12 of 19 cuts this year, earning nearly a half million
dollars. He was in contention in the Scottish Open and believes he has the game
to win again.
"If I didn't
think I could win, I wouldn't be out here," said Daly, who hasn't won since his
British Open victory in 1995.
That's
all part of the new attitude, one he says has come with maturity and the understanding
that he can have a bad hole and still come back.
Daly's
attitude was evident as he played a practice round Wednesday with his 9-year-old
godson, John Michael, and 13-year-old Chad Smith tagging along.
Daly pulled
Smith out of a crowd at a tournament a few years ago and has taken him under his
wing. He talks to him on the phone and the youth comes to a few tournaments a
year to walk with his hero.
Only a
few fans were around as Daly and Greg Chalmers played the early holes of the back
nine. By the time they got to the final few holes, though, fans lined the walkways
between holes begging for Daly's autograph.
"We think
the world of you Big John," one called out.
Daly signed
hats, programs, flags and almost everything thrust in front of him as he kept
walking. Tiger Woods may be golf's big star, but Daly still clearly holds a place
in their hearts.
"I still
sign most stuff but it used to be I wanted to practice but I'd sign for two hours
because I couldn't say no to fans," Daly said. "Now I've learned a bit how to
say no when I have to."
Daly dropped
his girlfriend of four years this summer to marry his new wife, Sherrie. Five
minutes after a friend introduced him, he said he wanted to marry her and did
just that seven weeks later, also adding a 2-year-old stepson to his life.
"She's
just a good old sweet Southern girl," Daly said. "And she was the one who wanted
a prenuptial agreement. She said my other two wives took me to the cleaners and
she didn't want any part of that."
One thing
that hasn't changed is his prodigious distance.
That could
be in his favor at this year's PGA, where the driver is in play and the final
hole is a par-4 over water that stretches 490 yards.
Daly put
on a show there Wednesday, hitting a driver that nearly plugged when it hit, yet
still needed only a 5-iron to the green.
Daly handed
the club to his caddie, took a drag on his cigarette and briefly reflected on
his life.
"It's all
good because I'm still living."
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