Golf will grow so long as it's fun.

Golf will grow so long as it’s fun.

My favorite meal has always been fried chicken.

I learned how to win by losing and not liking it.

Sometimes thinking too much can destroy your momentum.

The person I fear most in the last two rounds is myself.

I always could putt. Part of my makeup, I always could putt.

We tournament golfers are much overrated. We get paid to much.

Muirfield without a wind is like a lady undressed. No challenge.

A lot of guys who have never choked have never been in the position to do so.

I love the way the game of golf is lived and played in Scotland. I always have.

This game is so elusive. You try to maintain the peaks and level up the valleys.

A lot of guys who have have never choked, have never been in the position to do so.

That's one of the things you get when you're playing golf. You get bad backs, bad necks.

All the problems of the world could be settled easily if men were only willing to think.

There is no surer or more painful way to learn a rule than to be penalized once for breaking it.

If you have an ego of any sort, this course [Augusta] will take it and shove it down your throat.

After playing Ballybunion for the first time, a man would think that the game of golf originated here.

Confidence in golf means being able to concentrate on the problem at hand with no outside interference.

If a course needs to be in great condition to be played effectively, then the design strategy is flawed.

It's time for old players like me, old fogies like me, to give it up and let the young players have a chance.

Ballybunion is the course on which many golf architects should live and play on before they build golf courses.

Any time you play in a USGA Championship, if you don't drive the ball on the fairway, you're dead. You're done.

From the time I won the Kansas City Match Play championship at age 14, I never wanted to be anything but a golfer.

I've said many times, 'You learn to win through not liking to lose.' And that's what I mean by learning how to win.

I guess I have never been much of a complainer. You just take what is given you, and don't complain about what you can't affect.

Golf is a game of ego, but it is also a game of integrity: the most important thing is you do what is right when no one is looking.

I'm very happy with my life. I am what I am. I don't worry about anything that I can't control. That's a really good lesson in life.

You don't have to go to church to be spiritual, but there are certain times in your life that you know there is a presence of something very spiritual.

No other game combines the wonder of nature with the discipline of sport in such carefully planned ways. A great golf course both frees and challenges a golfer's mind.

Having played the Old Course many times since my first visit in 1981, I am now of the opinion it is one of the best and most beautiful tests of links golf anywhere in the world.

I played team sport as a kid and loved it. I played basketball and football throughout high school into college in the intramurals and I loved it. There was nothing like a team.

The golf swing is a violent swing. You twist, and your spine is under continual stress when you're making a golf swing. Your neck, your spine, your hands, your knees, everything.

I'd rather fight 100 structure fires than a wildfire. With a structure fire you know where your flames are, but in the woods it can move anywhere; it can come right up behind you.

Some guys have trouble sleeping the night before an important round. I never have. Invariably, I sleep longer and better, and have more dreams, when I'm in contention and feeling pressure.

I hope that I've been able to treat people with the respect they've shown me. That's basically the tenet you try to live by. I haven't been successful at it all my life, but that's what I strive for.

The beautiful thing about the game of golf is you can play good golf and compete well into your later years, and you can't do this in basketball or football or baseball. But in golf, it's a longer live sport.

My golf swing is a bit like ironing a shirt. You get one side smoothed out, turn it over and there is a big wrinkle on the other side. Then you iron that one out, turn it over and there is yet another wrinkle.

I have a special feeling for Blue Hills CC, where I won perhaps the most important tournament of my life when I was 14 - the Kansas City Match Play Championship. It gave me a dream of becoming a professional golfer.

Sometimes you have to lose major championships before you can win them. It's the price you pay for maturing. The more times you can put yourself in pressure situations, the more times you compete, the better off you are.

When you come off that last hole and you've just finished a good round of golf, life is good. When you come off that last hole and you messed it up through four or five holes and just played a lousy round of golf, it's just not a very good day. It just isn't.

My father wasn't a hard guy. He was a well-liked guy. He had a lot of compassion about things in life. There were rules, but there was also flexibility within those rules. He didn't push me when it came to golf: he just taught me the right way to play the game.

I didn't learn how to swing a golf club until late in my career. And even though I won all those tournaments, I still struggled with consistency, and I relied on my strengths, which were hitting the ball long and high, and I could chip and putt with the best of 'em.

Golfers who play a lot of courses often encounter short ledges or retaining walls, and I always had fun hopping down from them. I could jump off something six feet high and land like a cat, no problem. Well, today I can't jump off anything higher than two feet without it just killing me.

My career was one of just taking it step by step. I didn't know how I was gonna fare on the professional circuit when I qualified. I didn't know whether I was gonna make a dime. I didn't know anything but this one thing: I had some dreams, and I was gonna work harder than anybody out here to ply my trade.

I never hesitated to promote someone I didn't like. The comfortable assistant - the nice guy you like to go on fishing trips with - is a great pitfall. Instead I looked for those sharp, scratchy, harsh, almost unpleasant guys who see and tell you about things as they really are. If you can get enough of them around you, and have patience enough to hear them out, there is no limit to where you can go.

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