New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Faldo overcome with emotion in send-off from CBS

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Asked by longtime broadcast partner Jim

Nantz for his “final thoughts on this remarkable run,” Nick Faldo was momentaril­y unable to muster a cogent response.

At the end of a telecast Sunday marked by tributes and displays of emotion, Faldo broke down in tears in the CBS booth as he bid farewell to the lead golf analyst role he held for 16 years.

The six-time major winner, ever mindful of a performer’s ability to maintain composure in a high-intensity situation, then began his response with a typically blunt critique — this time, of himself.

“I blew it,” Faldo sputtered, before burying his head behind his hands. “I was all ready.”

With the help of some pronounced deep breaths, the 65-year-old Englishman gathered himself to offer insight into his feelings about signing off one last time. Faldo started by going back to the moment he learned he’d landed the gig that would gain him legions of new fans in the golf world, several years after his Hall of Fame playing career ended.

“I was in a boat in Ireland,” he told CBS viewers, “and they gave me a call and said, ‘How would you like to sit next to Jim Nantz?’ And I literally fell out the boat, I really did. That was 2006, and here we are 16 years later.”

CBS and Faldo had announced in June that his tenure as a full-time analyst would end with this weekend’s Wyndham Championsh­ip, the PGA Tour’s final regular-season event before the field winnows down through its threetourn­ament FedEx Cup playoffs.

Faldo said then that he wanted to spend more time with family and friends on a farm in Montana he and his wife recently purchased. Replacing him next year as Nantz’s partner and the network’s lead analyst will be Trevor Immelman, a former Masters winner who has worked with CBS for several years.

On Sunday, Immelman was part of the Golf Channel’s early coverage of the Wyndham Championsh­ip before CBS’s crew went on the air, and the 42-year-old South African paid tribute to his “good friend” Faldo.

“I was very fortunate to meet Sir Nick when I was 15-years old,” said Immelman. “He took me under his wing, he’s been a mentor to me ever since through my playing career, starting on the European Tour and then the PGA Tour. And when I started broadcasti­ng, he did the same.

“So, Nick, thanks so much for everything that you’ve done for me. Every time I sit in this chair, as lead analyst, I will be thinking of you.”

During CBS’s telecast, Nantz and others noted that whereas Faldo was known for a “stoic” demeanor during his playing career, he had revealed to CBS viewers not just a dry wit but a deeply felt connection to the sport of golf and its competitor­s.

“If you take a look at your broadcasti­ng career, you were bold enough to show everybody out there, including ourselves, really what’s inside your emotions,” fellow analyst Frank Nobilo told Faldo. “You weren’t scared to do that.”

Faldo wasn’t the only member of the CBS booth to shed tears on Sunday.

Ian Baker-Finch, a British Open champion and PGA Tour contempora­ry of Faldo’s who has been a CBS analyst and hole announcer for 15 years, gave his friend an emotional send-off.

“You’ve taught me so much, and for that I’m grateful,” Baker-Finch, 61, told Faldo.

 ?? Chris Condon / PGA Tour ?? Six-time major winner Nick Faldo, CBS’ lead golf analyst, signed off Sunday after 16 years in the booth.
Chris Condon / PGA Tour Six-time major winner Nick Faldo, CBS’ lead golf analyst, signed off Sunday after 16 years in the booth.

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