Elway is one of four celebrities who have played in each of
the 23 events since its inception in 1990, when NBC conceived the event to fill
the void the network had after losing the major league baseball contract.
“It was 1989. We had just lost major league baseball and
(president) Dick Ebersol called me in his office,” recalled Jon Miller,
president of programming for NBC Sports and the NBC Sports Network.
Ebersol told Miller, “You’re the programming guy. We just
lost baseball and you now have 26 weeks to fill. But you have no money to
spend.”
The network was open to many new ventures in sports to fill
the void. One of the ideas was a celebrity golf tournament.
“Let’s give it a shot,” Miller thought. “This event was the
first and most successful of those ventures. But we knew we needed the biggest
star of that time to make it go, and that was Michael Jordan.”
He said yes, and a good friendship was born. Jordan is
playing in his 17th Tahoe event.
Elway also said yes, and he’s been here ever since, with a
runner-up finish in 2010 being his best. He finished tied for 15th
in 2011.
“This is the last hurrah for me before we jump into the
season,” said Elway, a Hall of Fame quarterback who is now executive vice
president of football operations for the Denver Broncos. “I like playing here
and I think I’m still competitive, but my chances of winning here are
dwindling.”
Next week, the spotlight will begin to shine for the
anticipation of Denver Broncos training camp, where Payton Manning will wear a
new uniform after many great years with the Indianapolis Colts.
“The hype is still there with our team,” said Elway. “I
think we’ve gotten better on both sides of the ball and having Payton Manning
immediately makes us competitive. Payton works really hard. There’s a reason
he’s so good. I’m looking forward to the season.”
But for this week, Elway is looking forward to having a
chance at beating other quarterbacks and former quarterbacks for a chance to
hold the winner’s trophy on Sunday. The favorite is Tony Romo, even though
actor Jack Wagner is the defending champion
The 54-hole celebrity event uses a Stableford scoring system
that awards graduated points for pars or better. The three other celebrities
who have played in all 23 championships are Wagner, Mike Eruzione and Jim
McMahon.
Special to SB Nation
from Craig Smith, former director of media relations for the U.S. Golf
Association.
1 comment:
Elway has won the NFL award as most valuable player in 1987. He was selected as first pick by Baltimore in in1983.
Ladies Golf Tops
Post a Comment