Rory McIlroy Embarrassed Himself By Stealing Phone From Fan
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I’ve defended Rory McIlroy a lot over the years.
He was put in a tough spot with the PGA Tour-LIV saga—even when he has taken 180-degree opinion turns on golf’s divide, I’ve generally accepted that the situation is complicated and his intentions are genuine (relative to his peers, at least). I appreciate that he has been willing to speak his mind and be honest with media.
Having said that, Rory has had a tough week at the Players Championship.

Things got off to an awkward start during his pre-tournament press conference. Rory, who is leading the charge with TGL, basically scoffed at the idea of watching YouTube golf.
“I’m not of that generation,” McIlroy said. “I’d much rather watch this golf tournament on Saturday and Sunday than watch YouTube golf.”
OK, that’s fine. McIlroy is trying to champion a totally unserious entertainment league that is borrowing a lot of concepts from YouTube golf, a platform that is probably growing the game more than Rory is at this point—but I respect that he likes pure competitive golf more.
If I were him, I would have thrown a little more support behind YouTube golf there. But it’s not a big deal.
Then McIlroy gave another uncomfortable but reasonable quote about how he would never play senior tour golf, saying “something has gone terribly wrong” if he’s still competing at that age.
Again, it’s fine. It’s a little weird Rory is giving such a strong quote about hit-and-giggle golf that wouldn’t happen for another 15 years. I’m not sure if he intended this, but it came off a little dismissive—like his golf is more transactional and business-like as opposed to a passion he is following.
Apparently he already knows he won’t be interested in playing fun golf at that age. I have no issue with that. It’s his life.
I just bring that up to show he was clearly in the mindset of letting things rip this week in Florida.
That is a good thing on the whole—but it crossed the line into a real embarrassment during Tuesday’s practice round.
The heckler heard ’round the world
On Tuesday afternoon, McIlroy was teeing off on the daunting 18th hole.
We’re talking about practice here (Allen Iverson voice), so the vibe is chill. McIlroy pulled his tee shot into the water. Not ideal, but it also didn’t count—it’s just a practice round.
This is where the story gets interesting. Standing near the tee was Luke Potter, a University of Texas golfer who had just won a nearby college tournament. Potter is not some random hack. He is the No. 60 player in the World Amateur Golf Ranking and has legitimate aspirations of playing professional golf.
Potter, standing next to one of his teammates, decided to heckle Rory.
“Just like the 2011 Masters,” Potter said, referencing McIlroy’s painful Sunday meltdown at Augusta.
It was loud enough for McIlroy to hear. And he was definitely offended enough to make a stand.
He walked toward Potter and his teammate, reached his arm across the rope line and said to Potter’s teammate, “Can I see your phone?”
Frozen in shock, the kid let McIlroy take his phone. And away Rory went with the phone.
The kids were escorted off property shortly after that. The phone was returned.
The incident was caught on video, so we have a great view of Rory stealing the phone—I mean, that is what I would call it in that moment, even if it was returned.
That video has now gone viral, even extending into some national news outlets.
Potter later apologized to McIlroy and Tour commissioner Jay Monahan. He has taken a lot of heat for heckling the world’s No. 2 golfer.
“Look, I just made a mistake, and I take ownership for it,” Potter said.
Potter’s college coach, John Fields, told Golf.com that it was an embarrasing moment for his program.
“With regards to our University of Texas program, I mean it’s an embarrassing moment. It is particularly sensitive to me because our program is built on respect for the game, and I would tell you that we coach 18- to 22-year-olds on a normal basis and they don’t always make the right call, and that’s my responsibility as a coach and when they do make a mistake it’s a learning moment.”
For Rory’s part, he has avoided the situation since it happened. After being asked twice in his Thursday interview about taking the phone, McIlroy gave two non-answers and went on his way.
McIlroy is soft as hell
Two things are true at the same time here.
Given his position as an aspiring pro golfer, Potter probably shouldn’t have heckled McIlroy.
It wasn’t a smart move for someone in his position. Would he want to be heckled in a couple of years if he’s a Tour rookie? No. And I’m sure he regrets it.
But I’m looking at this more from Rory’s perspective.
You are a professional athlete who plays golf all over the world. You are 35 years old and have a kid.
You are lauded as a self-aware, well-read, mature person.
It’s baked into professional golf that people are going to say stupid things. These are entertainment events where alcohol is flowing. The entire point of professional golf is to be an interesting product that fans enjoy. Without that element, there is no PGA Tour.
Is it right that people heckle? No, and fans seem to get bolder every year with what they are willing to say. Golf is not played in a football stadium full of white noise where players can barely hear fans in the front row. There should be a baseline of decorum at a tournament.
The heckling isn’t good, but it’s also expected. This is a professional sporting event.
Rory has to be bigger than some young kid shouting a pretty mild heckle at him. This wasn’t even a barb that crossed the line as a personal insult—it’s just the equivalent of saying “you suck” to any professional athlete.
To me, this is a soft move. And I think if you look at Rory’s history, he’s not particularly evolved in the thick skin department.
Rory getting butt-hurt is exponentially more embarrassing than some kid who yelled a stupid comment to make his buddy laugh.
And then he has the opportunity to own up to his mistake after Thursday’s round. Instead, Rory gives a “next question” answer.
Scottie Scheffler literally got arrested for no reason and acted way cooler than this.
What do you think? Let me know below in the comments.
Top Photo Caption: Rory McIlroy tees off on Thursday during the Players Championship. (GETTY IMAGES/Richard Heathcote)
MLK is revered today but the real King would make white people uncomfortable
This article is more than 4 years old
Martin Luther King Jr was a walking, talking example of everything this country despises about the quest for Black liberationMon 17 Jan 2022 11.00 GMTShare
Every year, on the third Monday in January, America hosts a Sadie Hawkins-style role-reversal where the entire country pretends to celebrate a man whose achievements and values they spent the previous 364 days ignoring, demonizing and trying to dismantle. Today, your favorite vote suppressors will take a brief respite from disenfranchising Black voters, denying history and increasing inequality to celebrate a real American hero.
That’s right, it’s MLK Day!
You might think it’s a little disrespectful to refer to a great American hero by his initials but, in this specific case, it’s perfectly fine. The actual Martin Luther King Jr who lived and breathed is not the man most people will be honoring today, because that Martin Luther King is dead and gone. No, the man upon whom they will heap their performative praise with social media virtue-signaling is MLK, a caricature of a man whose likeness has been made palatable for white consumption. Like BLM, CRT and USA, the people whom King fought against have now managed to flatten a three-dimensional symbol to a three-letter, chant-worthy phrase worthy of demonization or deification.
I am not condemning this all-American tradition of gaslighting. I had an imaginary friend growing up and he was not nearly as eloquent as this history – refurbished MLK they have invented. I, more than anyone, can appreciate the effort this country has put into manufacturing a version of King that is based on a true story. Whitewashing an entire human being is not as easy as you think. Plus, I understand why they do it:
The real Martin Luther King would make white people uncomfortable.
Anyone who knows the unwhitened story of Martin Luther King Jr understands why whitesplaining “what MLK would have wanted” is a favorite pastime of politicians and performative sympathetic social media “allies”. The average American might get the heebie-jeebies if they knew they were celebrating a radical who challenged systemic racism, supported reparations and advocated for a universal basic income.
For the entirety of the 39 years that King lived, there wasn’t a single day when the majority of white Americans approved of him.
Although in death he became one of the most revered figures in US history, for the entirety of the 39 years that King lived and breathed, there wasn’t a single day when the majority of white Americans approved of him. In 1966, Gallup measured his approval rating at 32% positive and 63% negative. That same year, a December Harris poll found that 50% of whites felt King was “hurting the negro cause of civil rights” while only 36% felt he was helping. By the time he died in 1968, three out of four white Americans disapproved of him. In the wake of his assassination, 31% of the country felt that he “brought it on himself”.
One does not have to reach back into the historical archives to explain why King was so despised. The sentiments that made him a villain are still prevalent in America today. When he was alive, King was a walking, talking example of everything this country despises about the quest for Black liberation. He railed against police brutality. He reminded the country of its racist past. He scolded the powers that be for income inequality and systemic racism. Not only did he condemn the openly racist opponents of equality, he reminded the legions of whites who were willing to sit idly by while their fellow countrymen were oppressed that they were also oppressors. “He who passively accepts evil is as much involved in it as he who helps to perpetrate it,” King said. “He who accepts evil without protesting against it is really cooperating with it.”
To be fair, King readily admitted that it was his goal to make white people uncomfortable. Just before he condemned white moderates in A Letter from Birmingham Jail, he revealed that his goal was to “create the kind of tension in society that will help men to rise from the dark depths of prejudice and racism”. He went on to explain that nonviolent direct action – King’s primary strategy to affect progress – was an attempt to induce the white community to a point where marginalized people’s desperate cries could no longer be ignored.
Yet, this new, more compassionate America is just as intolerant when Black Lives Matter demonstrators flood into the streets to protest police brutality. Of course, if teaching Black history wasn’t criminalized as critical race theory, more people might know that the Selma-to-Montgomery marchers’ original intent was to confront their governor about police brutality – namely the murder of Jimmie Lee Jackson by an Alabama state trooper. The people who believe the NFL should have kicked Colin Kaepernick out of football for his “un-American” protests would have really loathed Roberto Clemente, who persuaded his teammates to protest King’s death by refusing to play on Major League Baseball’s opening day in 1968. They were furious when Clemente told his local paper: “If you have to ask Negro players, then we do not have a great country.”
King regularly judged white people to explain the insanity of white supremacy.
I wonder how Tim Scott and Mitch McConnell would’ve felt about that. After all, they both invoked King’s name while claiming that America is not a racist country. But I’m sure MLK would never go as far as painting his place of birth as a racist country.
“The first thing I would like to mention is that there must be a recognition on the part of everybody in this nation that America is still a racist country,” said King days before a white supremacist put a bullet in his face. “Now however unpleasant that sounds, it is the truth. And we will never solve the problem of racism until there is a recognition of the fact that racism still stands at the center of so much of our nation and we must see racism for what it is.”
See how many times someone mentions that quote today.
Oh, wait … King made that speech at Grosse Pointe high school, where Michigan’s Republican-controlled House of Representatives recently passed an anti-CRT bill making it illegal to teach that the “United States is a fundamentally racist country”.
Never mind.
That’s why, despite what people who cherry-pick quotes from the I Have a Dream speech would have you believe, King has never suggested that white people should be judged “by the content of their character and not by the color of their skin”. In fact, he regularly judged white people to explain the insanity of white supremacy.
“In their relations with Negroes, white people discovered that they had rejected the very center of their own ethical professions,” King wrote in 1956. “They could not face the triumph of their lesser instincts and simultaneously have peace within. And so, to gain it, they rationalized – insisting that the unfortunate Negro, being less than human, deserved and even enjoyed second class status … White men soon came to forget that the Southern social culture and all its institutions had been organized to perpetuate this rationalization. They observed a caste system and quickly were conditioned to believe that its social results, which they had created, actually reflected the Negro’s innate and true nature.”
Even as a 17-year-old, King used Georgia’s largest newspaper to make the entire state uncomfortable when he reminded the Atlanta Constitution’s readers: “It is fair to remember that almost the total of race mixture in America has come, not at Negro initiative, but by the acts of those very white men who talk loudest of race purity.”
To white America, that Martin Luther King Jr was an America-hating, anti-white commie, just like today’s outspoken Black people who are criticized for “playing” all the things that white America hates: the “race card”, the “victim”, and – my favorite – “identity politics”.
The people who protect broken systems of criminal justice, education and democracy might not hate King but they do not love anything he stood for
But now that King is dead and gone, leaders like Ted Cruz and Ron DeSantis will sing hosannas for MLK while demonizing Black Lives Matter and critical race theory as Marxist, un-American race-baiting that poses a threat to American values. It is no coincidence that Alabama’s governor George Wallace described King as “perhaps the most dangerous racist in America today”. Long before “race-baiting” became a popular term, South Carolina senator Strom Thurmond said King “must always have an agitation objective lest he end up in the street one day without a drum to beat or a headline to make”. One of Thurmond’s first acts after leaving the Democratic party to become a Republican was to implore the FBI to investigate King’s activities as a communist. (Years later, Thurmond voted for the MLK holiday.) Even after his death, conservative leaders sought to sully King’s legacy by erasing the prospect of a holiday honoring him. “Rev. King’s motives are misrepresented,” wrote then Ohio senator John Ashbrook. “He sought not to work through the law but around it.”
And they won.
They agreed to honor King’s legacy only after enough time had passed to sufficiently whitewash the radical who unapologetically fought for liberty and justice for all. This might be why they contend that he “gave his life” for civil rights – as if he agreed to take a projectile from a high-powered rifle to his temple in exchange for a statue, a church fan with his face on it, and a three-day weekend in the future.
But let not your heart be troubled when you hear them shower the memory of Martin Luther King Jr with bouquets of reverence. The people who continue to protect broken systems of criminal justice, education and democracy might not necessarily hate King but they do not love him or anything he stood for.
That’s not even an opinion. The polling data proves it. Historical facts prove it. The bits of blood and bone that stained the balcony outside a Memphis hotel proves it. More importantly, the fact that Black Americans are still fighting the same battles against voter suppression, inequality and the right to have a dream almost 54 years after his death is the most accurate measuring rod of what this nation thinks about Martin Luther King.
Perhaps that is the most uncomfortable fact of all.
- Michael Harriot is a writer and author of the upcoming book Black AF History: The Unwhitewashed Story of America
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