Oddly fetching in a Van Dyke beard and cheerleader bloomers, David Feherty,
the 1991 Ryder Cupper from Northern Ireland and now America’s best TV
golf analyst, has been bouncing onto our TV screens of late.
In the best of his inspired adverts for Cobra Golf, the half-daft Feherty
leaps on a giant trampoline and between ka-thoings tells us why some miraculous
zirconium gesundheit driver has the springiest clubface on earth.
“And while the trampoline was Cobra’s idea,” Feherty coos
into the camera, with a schoolgirl’s bow, “the outfit was mine.”
This we never doubted.
The droll jester from Bangor, County Down, may have won 10 times professionally
(including the Madrid, Scottish and Italian Opens) and made more than $3 million
before retiring a decade ago, but he has easily surpassed those earnings and
found his true calling by becoming a trenchant and hilarious voice in the
stuffy confines of network TV golf.
“I’m convinced my Irishness is a huge part of my success over
here,” he says.
“Well, that, and I make fun of people. I’m really more of a stand-up
comedian who happened to be good at golf.”
For a decade he has patrolled the manicured country clubs of the PGA Tour
with headset, microphone and intellect – often in shorts and barefoot
on his off-camera days – pricking the pompous and creating a whole new
golf vocabulary, especially for the best player in the world.
After one of Tiger Woods’ other-worldly shots, Feherty once proclaimed:
“Never has my flabber been so completely gasted.” In a Pythonesque
skit on a late-night golf highlights show he impersonated a stalker who screamed
at Tiger on the driving range. (Yes, Tiger was in on the joke.) Feherty gets
along so well with the impenetrable golf messiah that the two occasionally
engage in covert gaseous duels on the links.
“I’ve never beaten him,” Feherty insists. “He doesn’t
allow himself to lose anything, including his sense of fun. Going into the
final day of last year’s Buick (Open), which would be his 50th win,
I had assumed he was too preoccupied to remember we were tied in our juvenile
contest at eight each. But when he came out of the scorer’s tent, I
offered him my hand, which he grasped, and I heard an almost imperceptable
squeak. He looked me in the eye, and deadpanned, ‘I win.’”
Feherty’s rapport with players is obvious. “I think he’s
one of the funniest, quickest-witted people I’ve ever met in my life,”
says Nick Price, who dismisses several other TV heads as insipid. “I
love being around him. We love his off-the-wall comments.”
Honest but understanding, Feherty empathizes with the players without becoming
a sycophant.
“These guys chasing Tiger – Ernie Els, Vijay, Mickelson, Furyk,
Retief – they’re the best group the world has ever seen,”
he says. “But they all know that if Tiger plays well they’re screwed.
Look at Mickelson – 42 majors without winning and he endures the most
withering criticism of any player at anytime in the game’s history.
Just vilified. Then he wins three majors, but badly loses one again, and he
gets crucified. When anyone other than Tiger wins a major these days, it should
count as three.”
Feherty is clearly doing well. He’s just signed a four-year contract
with CBS-TV that will have him doing 20 tournaments this year. He’s
written five books, is struggling with a sequel to his first novel, A Nasty
Bit of Rough, and writes an irreverent monthly column for GOLF magazine. Aside
from the Cobra TV spots, he’s done sit-com work on television, voice-overs
for Tiger Woods’ video games, and in addition to free appearances for
numerous children’s charities, this year Feherty will do about 30 corporate
outings and speaking engagements, for which delighted barons of industry pay
about $25,000 a pop.
Consequently, Feherty doesn’t ride five-to-a-Fiat anymore. An adopted
Texan who loves his macho Ford truck and hand-crafted shotguns – he
hunts birds with guys like Tom Watson – Feherty now lives in a plush
North Dallas mini-manse with his second wife, Anita, and their only daughter,
a precocious eight-year-old joy, Erin. (Both have two older boys from previous
marriages. He has dual Irish and UK citizenship, but not American.) Anita,
an interior designer with a soft Mississippi drawl, met Feherty on a blind
date, and married him in May 1996. Lately, she spends much of her time furnishing
an even bigger mansion they’re building nearby, complete with pool,
elevator (“Who knows why?” he moans) and an acoustically-engineered
office for Feherty, an audiophile and opera fan whose vinyl collection ranges
from Puccini to Johnny Cash.
Not bad for a blue collar kid from Bangor.
Bored with school, except in English and music, Feherty says his best education
came from his father, Billy, once a surveyor at the Belfast docklands, and
mother, Vi, a “typical Ulster housewife” with a dry wit, who raised
their three children through the Troubles without instilling hate for anyone.
“We had murders and explosions in our town,” he says, “but
the violence seemed an irrelevance. That’s how localized it was...My
father always found something good to say about someone, no matter their reputation.
I remember when he came home after being laid off at 42. I had never seen
his face like that. The next day – thinking Dad would need to start
his own business – I stole some office supplies from primary school.
I was nine. He marched me back to confess what I had done.”
Skinny and obviously skilled, Feherty became the pro shop kid at Bangor Golf
Club, learning the game from “a wonderful man,” then head pro
Ernie Jones, now at the K Club. Feherty went on to work at Holywood, Balmoral
and Royal Belfast golf clubs before turning pro at 17. (His favorite courses
would be: Portmarnock, Waterville and Rosses Point.) “But I knew by
the time I was 20,” he says, “that I wanted to be in broadcasting.
Early on I was always on stage, either at school or in church. At Christmas
I would be the little asshole in front of the choir singing ‘Once in
Royal David’s City.’”
Feherty definitely had his moments in golf. He captained Ireland’s winning
1990 Dunhill Cup team at St. Andrew’s – hitting what Sam Torrance
tells me was “maybe the greatest four-iron ever” to win in sudden
death match play on the 17th hole against England’s Howard Clark. “Once
the Scots were knocked out,” says Feherty, “the whole crowd turned
Irish. I’ll never forget it.” He played well on the 1991 Ryder
Cup team that lost at Kiawah Island, and barely missed qualifying for the
team in 1989 and 1993. Yet Feherty is the first to admit, “I knew early
on I would never be a world-beater.”
“For David, golf was just a way of earning money,” says Torrance,
Feherty’s best friend on the Euro Tour. “He loved the game as
much as any of us, but he didn’t like the hard work of traveling and
being away from home. It’s a lonely life.”
“Most of us didn’t understand why he didn’t play better,”
says Nick Price, another longtime friend. “He was a bit of an enigma.
I think he was better than me, but David is extremely intelligent and sometimes
very smart people have trouble playing the game because golf is not an equation.”
Feherty says he had chances to win majors in 1989 at Royal Troon, in 1991
at Crooked Stick (PGA) and in 1994 at Turnberry, where he finished tied for
sixth, seventh and fourth, respectively. “But I didn’t want the
responsibility that came with winning a major. There was always this one pivotal
shot...and I would always miss that shot.”
And this was a conscious thing?
“Oh, yes. Oh, yes. There was a comfort in mediocrity,” he says.
“I had the good sense not to Van de Velde myself (to self-destruct on
the final hole). I played just well enough to be perceived as an almost guy.
And since I was honest about that, people really identified with it....
“The truth is that I felt like it was a 9 to 5 job at times. I’d
run out of money, then go win a tournament. The aspect I enjoyed most was
the social life. I was around the same hundred guys every week, really close
friends like Torrance, John O’Leary, Ian Woosnam. It was like a boys
club for the best part of 20 years, and for me it revolved around the nightlife.
“I was the Tiger Woods of drinking. I was a world-class drunk.”
For nearly two years, Feherty has gone through a very public and cathartic
confession about his alcoholism and clinical depression, incorporating the
struggle into his stand-up comedy and going so far as to discreetly pose nude
in GOLF magazine to illustrate one of his near-suicidal moments in what was
a two-bottles-of-Bushmills-a-day hell. Some might prefer recovery to be a
more private affair – he attends Alcoholics Anonymous after all –
but he’s the first to say he’s more comfortable with an extroverted
life that holds few secrets. “What are strangers gonna say about me,”
he muses, “that I haven’t said publicly about myself?”
In a dark wood-paneled office that could pass for a divorce lawyer’s,
Feherty scoops up his cherished hunting beagle, Ziggy, for moral support as
we move into the mandatory introspection phase. To somber things up he puts
on his sublime Naim stereo the sweet, haunting voice of Eva Cassidy –
“she’s dead now, cancer” – doing Sting’s “Fields
of Gold.” The comic bravado recedes a bit.
“I honestly don’t know how Anita managed to deal with me. I had
these horrible hallucinations. People doing horrible things to my children,
but I couldn’t see their faces. I couldn’t do anything. I withdrew
socially. I couldn’t get out of bed in the morning. Physically I was
wracked with pain. Head to foot. I thought I had some kind of degenerative
muscle disorder. Turns out, that’s a symptom of depression.
“I drank heavily from about the time I was 16, but I’ve never
been drunk on the air. I became a spectacular drunk toward the end. I would
drink one bottle of whiskey to prepare myself for drinking the second. That
was what it took to put me to sleep at night. I went days without sleep. That’s
the real killer, when you wake up screaming and realize you haven’t
been to sleep yet.
“After I told my doctor how much I was drinking,” he says, needing
a punch line. “He asked, ‘Have you thought about getting help?’
‘No,’ I said, ‘I can drink it all myself.’”
Ba-da-boom. He reaches back for a George Best line: “I spent a lot of
money on fast cars, women and alcohol...The rest I just squandered.”
If he knows of any deep root cause for his pain, he’s not saying. He
was misdiagnosed in 2000 with adult attention-deficit disorder and there was,
by his account and others, a pretty miserable first marriage to a South African
woman that lasted ten years, but he doesn’t dwell on it. “There
was no priest fondling,” he quips. “With my protestant background
the priests weren’t even fondling themselves.”
His epiphany, his angel of intervention, finally came in the voice of little
Erin, rambunctious and full of brown curls, who two years ago, at 6-years-old,
saw him nearly passed out in a living room recliner at home, with an empty
bottle of whiskey beside him. “She crawled into my lap,” Feherty
tells me, his voice drained and slow, “and she said, `Dad, you need
another bottle.’ She looked really sad, so I sent her to get one.”
With that, Anita could take no more. Sober up, or she and Erin would leave.
So he agreed to stop killing himself. Says Feherty: “I looked into the
eyes of a young child who had the accidental wisdom to flip the switch.”
In the made-for-TV world he inhabits we’d go straight to the happy violins
now, but this is Planet Feherty. “There’s nothing worse than a
reformed whore,” he bellows. So, yes, there have been a few lapses on
the road back. A trip to Donegal in June 2005 for his dad’s 80th birthday
turned into a three-week binge. “How else was I to know if I was truly
cured?” he cracks. “There’s no fence-sitting with Feherty,”
says Torrance. “If he goes off the rails, he goes off the rails.”
Sober for six months now, he’s off his depression medication and looks
like a clear-eyed athlete again, biceps all thick from pumping iron, channeling
Lance Armstrong as he rides his Trek road bike through Dallas, itching to
hunt for blue quail with Ziggy. “Everyone around me is happier. When
you help one depressive you help a hundred other people.”
“We miss him terribly over here,” says Torrance. “He’s
left a hole in my life.”
The only thing missing from this tidy story – this is America, remember
– is a testimonial from the athlete thanking God for his rescue. That
is the way it’s done over here, where steel-tough warriors routinely
point to the heavens after touchdowns and begin post-game TV interviews with,
“I just wanna give God the glory.”
Feherty’s not buying it. “I am a diehard atheist,” he volunteers,
joining Einstein, Darwin and, hmm, Annika Sorenstam, but clearly crossing
into uncharted waters for an American TV personality.
“Funny how on TV in America you can talk about pedophile priests,”
he says, hunting for his copy of Richard Dawkins’s best-seller “The
God Delusion,” “but you can’t talk about why you would ever
need priests...I have no trouble with Jesus. I used to wear Payne Stewart’s
WWJD bracelet (“What Would Jesus Do?”). But all the rest is superstition.
All the things we loathe in human beings are the attributes we give to this
God. He wants to be worshiped and told how great he is, meanwhile somebody’s
five-year-old is being raped by her stepfather. Where is her God?”
Feherty pauses. This is no random rant. It’s central to his id. But
surely he’s thinking that in America, where last year a survey found
53 percent of the population (75 in Alabama) believes the Bible is literally
true, network TV executives don’t fancy public atheists for golf broadcasts.
After all, a sizeable number of tour players align themselves with America’s
Religious Right, whom Feherty calls “maybe the scariest people in the
world.”
Ziggy nervously paws the carpet. Who wants to see unemployed beagles?
As if the world didn’t appreciate Eldrick Woods quite enough, Feherty
fervently wants you to know that we mortals cannot conceive of just how stupifyingly
brilliant Tiger’s game really is, and more important, how thoroughly
Tiger has changed everything. Feherty wants it known that his job isn’t
like covering Pele in his prime, or Muhammad Ali. It’s more like covering
DaVinci.
“I know what I’m seeing out there, and this is the 500 year flood.
And there’s no one like him on the horizon. If Tiger quit playing tomorrow,”
Feherty says, thinking of workers at everywhere from Nike to Buick, IMG, ad
agencies, five TV networks, and dozens of others, “tens of thousands
of people would lose their jobs.”
Talk about being in the right place at the right time. Feherty had just started
his television career when, in August 1996 at the Greater Milwaukee Open,
Tiger struck his first professional shot. The wise-cracker has been closer
to him physically during more great moments of Tiger’s career than probably
anyone in the media.
“In Milwaukee, the first time I saw him hit a ball, I thought, holy
shit. He was unlike any creature I had ever seen. There was a controlled violence,
yet a grace and athleticism I had never seen.”
“It’s my job out there to be an expert about these players, to
know what they are capable of doing in certain situations. I’ve played
with all the great players of the modern era. Greg Norman. Tom Watson. Ballesteros.
Seve was magical, yet Tiger has his skill 10 times over. I knew what Norman
could do. But after I saw Tiger play a couple of holes I knew that I had no
clue what he could do. No clue at all.
“People have accused me of being so far up Tiger’s arse that he
can barely make a full swing, but I maintain that he is a special person.
There’s no one else on the planet that can do what he does or even think
of doing what he does. I’ve often thought, instead of showing Tiger’s
reaction to a shot he’s hit, we really should show the reaction of those
around him.”
But here’s the next best thing. “I’m walking down the 18th
fairway at Firestone Country Club with Ernie Els and Tiger, who has popped
up a three-wood about 40 yards behind Ernie into some wet, nasty, horrible,
six-inch rough,” says Feherty.
“Tiger’s cursing and taking clumps out of Ohio with his three
wood. And, of course, we’re not showing this on TV because we want to
be able to interview him later. Ernie and I walk past Tiger’s ball,
and it is truly buried.
“Ernie is tied with Tiger and he’s in the middle of the fairway.
I’m standing shoulder-to-shoulder with Ernie and my microphone is open.
Ken Venturi (in the CBS booth at 18) sends it to me and I say, ‘Tiger’s
got 184 yards with two big red oaks overhanging the green. He’s got
absolutely nothing. With a stick of dynamite and a sand wedge I might be able
to move this ball 50 yards.’ Steve Williams (Tiger’s caddie) tells
me (with a hand signal) that he’s using a pitching wedge.
“Tiger takes his swing. Every muscle in his body is flung at the ball…The
divot went as far as I could hit the ball. I’ve got my microphone at
my mouth thinking, ‘What the hell was that?’ The ball sails over
the trees, lands behind the hole and backs up to about six feet from the flag.
I open my microphone and Ernie turns and says, ‘---- me!’
“My producer comes on in my earpiece and says, ‘Was that Ernie?’
“I say, ‘Yes,’ he says, ‘Fair enough.’ “I
could have described that shot for 15 minutes and not done as good of a job
as Ernie did with two words. This is the second best player in the world talking,
and you wanna know how good Tiger is?
“Ask Ernie Els.”
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