Sun.Star Cebu

Daly sideshow

- PAUL NEWBERRY

Next week, there will be a legitimate major championsh­ip at Bethpage Black. We’ll also get a ridiculous sideshow, at least for the first couple of days.

John Daly will rip it up in the PGA Championsh­ip—while gripping the wheel of a golf cart.

Yep, the guardians of the game are accommodat­ing a 53-year-old who spent a good part of his life not taking good care of himself and has zero chance of winning.

“I think walking is an integral part of being a pro golfer,” six-time major champion Nick Faldo said during a conference call to promote CBS’s coverage of the event. “I’ll leave it at that.”

Sir Nick is right.

If an arthritic knee won’t allow Daly to walk such a demanding course—and we’re in no way questionin­g his condition— then he shouldn’t play.

Making matters worse, this dubious decision denies a deserving player the chance to take part. The alternate list for the second major of the year is filled with regulars on the PGA Tour, any of whom could possibly win the event if they’re on top of their game.

As of Friday, Richy Werenski was the first guy in should someone in the 156-player field withdraw. Sure, one must dig deep down into the world rankings to find his name at No. 201, but let’s not forget Max Homa was 417th on that same list when he won at Quail Hollow last week. Or, for that matter, that a ninth alternate named John Daly won the PGA Championsh­ip at Crooked Stick back in 1991.

Since then, Daly’s life has largely been a well-publicized train wreck, other than that one week in 1995 when he somehow harnessed his enormous talent to win a second major championsh­ip at the British Open.

Now, he’s just a soft drinking-swilling, cigarette-smoking caricature of wasted potential. He has no business scooting around at the PGA Championsh­ip, portraying himself as a worthy player.

“I hope I don’t get a lot of grief from the fans,” Daly told The Associated Press. “My knee is screwed. I had the meniscus cut out. I have osteoarthr­itis so bad ... I can walk up a hill, I just can’t walk down one.”

The PGA of America said Daly applied to use a cart through its American with Disabiliti­es Act policy and provided “the requisite informatio­n to allow for a review of his request by the PGA’s medical team.”

That request was approved, which means Daly will be the first player to ride in a cart at a major championsh­ip since Casey Martin in the U.S. Open at Olympic Club in 1998 and 2012.

“I’m happy for him because I know John a little bit and I know for certain that he’s not trying to get an advantage,” Martin, who is now the men’s coach at the University of Oregon, said in an interview with Golf.com. “He just wants to play in a tournament he has a rich history in. He just wants to be part of the action. I’m grateful that he’s going to get that chance.”

But Martin’s was a much different case. He suffers from a birth defect in his right leg that restricts circulatio­n, making it virtually impossible for him to walk 18 holes a day over four rounds. He successful­ly sued the PGA Tour for the right to use a cart in a case that went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Daly, on the other hand, may have establishe­d a troubling precedent.

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