Zach Johnson throws shade on author Rick Reilly to perfection

Fifteen years may have past, but Zach Johnson hasn’t forgotten Rick Reilly’s bad take.

Zach Johnson threw some serious shade on former Sports Illustrated and ESPN columnist Rick Reilly on Monday.

Johnson, who was named U.S. Ryder Cup captain for 2023 in Italy, typically lets his clubs do his talking, but he couldn’t resist needling the 11-time National Sportswriter of the Year. Reilly, who recently launched his latest book, “So Help Me Golf,” was in Johnson’s hometown of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on a book tour when Johnson got him good.

It all dates to 2007 when the unheralded Johnson was the surprise winner of the Masters and Reilly was hardly impressed. Speaking on Dan Patrick’s radio show shortly after Johnson slipped into the green jacket, Reilly proclaimed, “I think Zach Johnson – in 10 years – has a real chance to be your server at Olive Garden.”

Well, Reilly’s hot take clearly didn’t age well, considering Johnson has gone on to win a second major, the 2015 British Open at St. Andrews, among 12 career PGA Tour titles. On Monday, Johnson reminded Reilly again that he shanked his prediction.

With Reilly speaking at Cedar Rapids Country Club, Johnson had his father, who was in the audience, present Reilly with an Olive Garden gift card for $30 – or the equivalent of the price of Reilly’s book.

“Uh, I was WAY wrong,” Reilly tweeted. “Monday night I was back in Iowa. Waiting for me was a present from him, a $30 gift card to fill my big mouth with.”

“Well done by them,” Reilly wrote in a text to Golfweek.

Reilly likely wasn’t the only one who thought Johnson would be delivering soup, salad and breadsticks to his table by now. Johnson, after all, wasn’t even the No. 1 golfer on his Drake University golf team and yet has become an enormous success story, banking more than $47 million in career earnings, which currently ranks 14th on the PGA Tour all-time career money list.

To his credit, Reilly has offered multiple mea culpas. In 2009, during a previous visit to Johnson’s hometown to host a TV show about Kurt Warner, Reilly said, “Of course, it turned out to be the dumbest comment in the history of golf commentary. Good for (Zach), he shut me up.” In response to an ESPN reader email calling him out for his bad read, Reilly conceded he blew this one and wrote, “If I don’t shut up, I’ll be working for him.”

And when Johnson won the British in 2015, Reilly ate crow again, tweeting his congratulations to Johnson and added, “at this rate, you’ll OWN Olive Garden.”

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Rick Reilly’s ‘So help me golf’ is a love note to the game that will make you laugh and cry

Rick Reilly hasn’t lost anything off his fastball. He’ll still make you laugh and cry in this page turner.

I don’t mean to make Rick Reilly feel old, but as a kid I used to run to the mailbox on Thursday, grab my new copy of Sports Illustrated, flip to the back, and drop everything to read his latest back-page column.

Sometimes he’d make me laugh, other times he’d make me cry. He’d rarely disappoint.

So, it was with great anticipation that I dove into reading Reilly’s latest book, “So Help Me Golf,” which was released last month (Hatchette Books, $29.)

Reilly channels his insatiable curiosity, trademark sense of humor and vast knowledge of the game in what amounts to a collection of 80 new columns that is a love letter to the game he clearly loves so much.

I’ve been fortunate to get to know Reilly a bit in the press room and we were colleagues for a hot minute at The Athletic in 2018, but still, I had no idea that he grew up with a father who was an abusive alcoholic with a golf habit too, and how that colored his feelings about the game initially.

Reilly’s personal journey is interspersed throughout the book and is the glue that holds the various sections together spanning his life and connecting his tumultuous relationship with his father. Spoiler alert: golf saved his relationship with his father and the two eventually reconcile through the game.

Rick Reilly’s latest book includes a collection of columns on why we love the game.

Reilly also recounts how he talked editors at Sports Illustrated into letting him do a story on the 18 most unforgettable golf holes around the globe. He flew around the world for the story but never wrote it … until now. His scorecard includes an underwater hole in Australia, a green in Indonesia where monkeys are the most serious hazard and a par-3 shot over a pit of alligators.

There are stories of Hall of Famers such as Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and Greg Norman – I didn’t know that Ernie Els throws away every ball that makes a birdie – and lesser-known pros such as Joel Dahmen and his funnyman caddie Geno, Maverick McNealy and unlikely major winner Sophia Popov. He writes poignantly about Erik Compton competing on his third heart, and the equally impressive displays of courage by Amy Bockerstette and Casey Martin. There are hilarious practical jokes played, bets won and lost and the sad story about how he got screwed out of millions of dollars by a certain company (TopGolf).

Reilly has been writing this book in the back of his head since he fell in love with golf at age 11. He’s at his funniest when he’s a participant, whether trying speed golf, to beat the 55 shot by Rhein Gibson at the same course (with 100 mulligans), or attempting to play the most mini-golf in one day.

Reilly gets to the heart of why we love this game and all the aspects that make golf so utterly addictive. I laughed and smiled at his one-liners and original turns of phrase every bit as much as when I used to run to the mailbox with anticipation to read his work. The final father-son story and Reilly’s epilogue of sorts had all the feels for my dad, who texted that it got a little dusty in the room as he closed out the book. For me, it was just further confirmation that Reilly’s lost nothing off his fastball. He’s still in a league of his own at making readers laugh at one moment and tear up the next.

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