Some TV personalities simply entertain us. Others impress us with their intelligence.
But very few ever open the door wide enough for the world to see what their heart looks like when the cameras turn off.
Darragh Ennis — the calm, calculated “Menace” of The Chase — was one of the rare ones.
Behind the composed stare, behind the machine-like accuracy, behind the persona fans adored… something was breaking.
The Loss That Changed Everything
In July 2024, while viewers saw an unshakeable quiz titan on screen, Darragh’s real life was coming apart.
His father — who had been living with dementia — passed away.
To outsiders, it was simply a sad headline.
To Darragh, it was the moment the ground disappeared beneath him.
Months later, during a deeply emotional appearance on Loose Women, he finally let the truth slip out:
“I was broken inside… and I didn’t even realise.”
Grief moves strangely.
Sometimes it screams.
Sometimes it hides.
Sometimes the quietest people are holding the loudest pain.
Returning to The Chase Suddenly Felt Impossible
Stepping back into the studio should have been comforting.
The routines, the rhythms, the adrenaline — all of it once felt like home.
But after his father’s death, that home felt unfamiliar.
The pressure of the final round, normally Darragh’s strongest moment, suddenly suffocated him.
Mistakes rattled him.
His focus blurred.
And when he reached for that calm, mathematical steadiness he was known for… it wasn’t there.
He described the sensation simply:
“Every time I reached for that calm part of myself… it was gone.”
He wasn’t just grieving — he was losing his sense of self.
The production team noticed instantly.
But instead of demanding perfection, they offered patience, support and even counselling.
Not because he was “weak.”
But because even the strongest minds sometimes collapse under grief.
When Life Goes On… But Grief Doesn’t
Darragh eventually turned to a sports psychologist — something viewers might not expect from a quiz expert — and began working to stabilise what grief had shattered.
He tried pretending nothing was wrong.
He tried moving forward without looking back.
But heartbreak doesn’t follow instruction.
He admitted quietly:
“There was nothing underneath my feet… I just fell away.”
This wasn’t just the loss of a parent — it was the loss of the emotional foundation that shaped him.
Behind the Intelligence: A Human Being Learning to Stand Again
Darragh didn’t share his story for pity.
He shared it because so many people — especially men — are taught to hide their pain behind “strength.”
But real strength is not refusing to break.
Real strength is breaking… and choosing to get back up anyway.
And that is exactly what Darragh has been doing.
The Strongest Minds Can Crack — Healing Is the Comeback
Today, Darragh has returned to The Chase, steadier and sharper — not because he “moved on,” but because he learned how to keep going even when everything feels unfamiliar.
The intimidating quiz genius has shown something far more powerful:
Even the strongest hearts can fracture.
Healing begins the moment you stop pretending you’re fine.


