Disgraced Ryder Cup announcer breaks silence over offensive Rory McIlroy chant

“I made the absolute horrible mistake of saying it back to them once. And if you watch the video, I’m kind of like laughing to myself, like, ‘F— you, Rory?’ 

“I’m just, like, what? And the media took that, spun it and said that I had started all of these chants. 

“I would just like to say … I did not like the energy and the vibe from when that started to happen. 

“I will take full responsibility and sincerely apologize to Rory, Team Europe, for saying that. It was so foolish of me. 

“I did not start the chant. I would just like that narrative to get out there. I did not start it. 

“But, anyway, that I had participated in that, even just saying it once was so foolish and silly of me, and as soon as it came out and they started chanting, I was just like, ugh, the energy just shifted. 

“It went from us trying to be fun and funny and like get it going to immediately just was negative and felt really kind of toxic.

“So as soon as I said that, I was like, ‘Ugh, I don’t want any part of this. Like this is just getting weird and I don’t know how to control this crowd of 4,000 dudes at five o’clock in the morning, shouting crazy s—.’ 

“So as soon as that happened, I immediately turned to my producer. I was like, let’s just get the DJ to play music. I don’t know what to do with this audience right now. So I’m not gonna participate.”

Rory McIlroy and Luke Dpnald

Rory McIlroy and Luke Dpnald

She added: “Somebody from the European tour came over and he was, like, ‘Listen, it’s one thing if you guys cuss, we’ve said that’s fine. 

“You can say like, let’s f—— go. But nothing directed towards a player. We were, like, ‘heard, understood, Roger that, you got it.’ 

“I will do the best I can to shift the energy fully on the same page. I’ll get out the T-shirt cannon, I’ll be shooting out free s— into the audience and hope that that keeps ’em happy.

“But I was honestly, like, I’ve been hired as a comedian and I’m not quite sure what I’m supposed to do. I was feeling it out as I went, but I’m, like, am I a cheerleader? 

“I probably would’ve been better off just like taking my top off at this point. That’s how fratty the energy felt and I’m like, this is kind of insane, and I don’t really know what I’m expected to do here.”

McMahan also belies the media span what truly happened.

She said: “I have to say something, a lot of these articles, a) didn’t have the facts straight and b) explained it as potty mouth, foul-mouthed woman from America. 

“First, you would never call a male comic potty-mouthed or foul-mouthed. So that’ strike one – I’m a woman. 

“But also, like, is this the Salem witch hunt trials – you’re telling me I had so much power over a group of men? 

“You’re telling me that I have that much power that I then told them to go out the rest of the day, continue to drink til they’re absolutely in a stupor and say horrible things to professional athletes? 

“What? That’s where I had to draw the line and be, like, hey, that makes no sense to me.

“I’m happy to roll up my sleeves and have fun and get like everybody pumped up. But it just wasn’t feasible in the setting that we were in. 

“It wasn’t feasible in front of this crowd. We should have just had the DJ, maybe brought cheerleaders out just to like shake it and get the boys, like seeing what they want. … What I could offer was just not what the first team needed.”

McMahan joked that, by means of an extending an olive branch to the people of Ireland, she would happily get dunked in tank full of Guinness. 

Alternatively, she would also be happy for people to lob soft clumps of Kerry Golf butter at her as she walked through the street.

“I’m happy to do it for a way to make us giggle,” she said.  

“We can look back on this and all think we made it through the other side.”

Watch McMahan’s full comments below:




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