Toshiba Senior Classic: Moonshine McCord
Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - Coffee was hardly necessary for Tuesday’s
early-morning tee time with Gary McCord.
The defending champion of the Toshiba Senior Classic, McCord said he only
had about three hours’ sleep prior to his appointment as keynote speaker
of the golf tournament’s Community Breakfast, presented by Deloitte &
Touche, at the Newport Beach Marriott.
But with stories about mooning the Snoopy II Blimp from his television
perch to his wife’s new dog, a hairless Chihuahua named Rex, McCord gave
the near-capacity crowd a rib-tickling wake-up call with his hilarious
antics and a memorable recap of his life in last 24 hours.
McCord, a part-time CBS golf analyst and part-time golfer who created a
new chapter in Senior PGA Tour history in last year’s Toshiba Classic
with an unforgettable five-hole playoff victory, revealed the truth about
his remarkable 18-foot putt for eagle on the first playoff hole to extend
the playoff with John Jacobs.
“It was like neuro-Ping Pong (before the putt), knowing the guys in the
television truck were saying something about me,” McCord said. “But, the
thing is, I forgot to look at this putt.”
Bent over in a putting position at the podium, McCord said once he got
over the ball, there was no way he could retreat and line up his putt.
“If I had to back out, can you imagine what they would be saying in the
truck?” said McCord, who admitted he was paying more attention to the
ESPN television cameras than his long pressure putt to remain alive in
the playoff.
“If I get up out of this (putting) stance, they’d say I’m going to choke
and probably throw up all over my Foot-Joys. So I thought, ‘I don’t want
to come out of this thing, so just hit it. Hey, I’m probably not going to
make it, anyway.’
“So I stay in my stance and go with my gut, and the (ball) went in.”
McCord told the tale about how he landed his network television gig in
the mid-1980s, but one of his most enduring occasions involved his bare
buttocks high atop a TV tower at the 1994 World Series of Golf, won by
Spain’s Jose Maria Olazabal.
During a commercial break, McCord looked at the monitor in his tower and
noticed a camera was on him. He looked around, but couldn’t see a camera
anywhere. There were no greenside cameras, none under the tower, none
hiding in the trees. Finally, he realized it was a camera aboard Snoopy
II high above the golf course, which was panning in on him.
“They’ve got a camera that can catch a flea on a rat’s (tail end),” said
McCord, who relishes in attention-getting behavior and promptly pulled
his pants down to provide the blimp camera with a good moon shot.
“You know, you’ve really got to bend over if you want to give a good
one,” he added.
His director wasn’t happy and began screaming in his headset, “like he
usually does,” McCord said, and called him an “idiot,” which he “called
me that a lot.”
The CBS director told McCord that, even though it was during commercial
time, his mooning appeared throughout the country club television
monitors in hospitality tents and the clubhouse.
“Three ladies were having lunch and just threw up,” McCord said.
Some consider his humor more blasphemous than funny -- just ask the folks
at Augusta National who host the Masters and won’t have him back.
When asked after Tuesday’s breakfast about his narrative involving his
ban at the Masters, McCord said it was “a long story and it would take
about 20 minutes to explain it. It was seven years ago. They didn’t like
my attitude -- and I don’t blame them.”
Before arriving in Orange County late Monday night -- McCord said he
stayed in a Motel 6 in Garden Grove, because his reservations in Newport
were canceled, but at least he got “free coffee” -- the wisecracking
prankster lost in a playoff Sunday at the LiquidGolf.com Invitational in
Sarasota, Fla.
Concerned about making his 6 p.m. flight out of Tampa, so he could get
home (to Phoenix) in time for a Monday morning golf clinic, McCord had a
painful second-place finish. He missed a five-foot putt on the second
playoff hole that would’ve tied Tom Wargo, who rattled in a long birdie
putt on the water-guarded 18th hole. Even worse, McCord missed an easy
birdie putt on the first playoff hole, also the 18th.
But, after missing his scheduled flight home, McCord took a red-eye to
Phoenix, arriving in town at 4 a.m. “And I get up at 6 a.m. for the golf
clinic,” he said.
At the clinic, McCord said an interesting looking gentleman from outside
Des Moines, Iowa, who was wearing “knee-high black socks, plaid pants and
a Tony Bahama-type shirt,” began giving him a hard time. “What happened
in the playoff? How come you didn’t make those putts?” the visitor asked.
Later, McCord had lunch with his wife, Diane, and told the Marriott
breakfast crowd about an annoying kid who looked just like “Fester” on
the old television series “The Munsters.”
Then, when he finally got home, just in time for some laundry and to read
some letters he received in the mail, he sat in his new “king-back high
leather chair,” but discovered that his wife’s new dog did a number on
it. McCord booted him off the chair.
“My wife got this stupid hairless Chihuahua, and of all things named him
Rex,” McCord said. “If you’re going to get a dog, get a dog. And, yes,
the vet said he’s going to live.
“This is my life.”
McCord said it’s nice “having two jobs,” and people ask him why he
doesn’t play golf full-time -- considering he averaged more than $58,000
per start on the senior tour last year, his first full season.
“I tried playing full-time once, and I was pathetic,” he said.
The self-deprecating McCord had automobile license plates that read “NO
WINS” before capturing his first title -- PGA Tour or Senior PGA Tour --
in 383 career starts at the Toshiba Senior Classic in 1999.
Win, lose or draw, he’ll be good for a few more laughs at the 2000
Classic.
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