I have plenty of improving to do.

I've used Nike clubs since I was 13.

Winning is just such a good feeling.

I was a big kid who could putt well.

You can't really force four tournaments a year.

I think at the end of the day, winning is very difficult.

It's nice to have a few moments at night to help me switch off.

My ultimate goal in life is to be the best player in the world.

Par is your friend out there. Doesn't matter what holes they are.

My driver is my strongest club - it's what my game kind of revolves around.

Everyone wants to look to the future and into the past. I stay focused on now.

Of course it's a big moment for me in my career if I could win on the PGA Tour.

If I'm going to be away from my family then I want to make the practice count more.

There's a lot of worse things going on in the world than me hitting a bad five wood.

You know, some of the performances, I have put myself on the world stage a bit more.

You can have ups and downs, and I know that as good as anybody because I've had them.

It's hard if you don't quite feel on your game to go out and put scores on the board.

When it is on, the Ryder Cup is by a country mile the biggest sporting event in the world.

I remember going to The Open in 1998 aged seven and snatching a picture of Tiger walking past.

Golf's not an easy game. You keep working at it and, sooner or later, something good will happen.

It's so easy to just give up or get angry with the course or the conditions, but you can't do that.

I had a really rough time from sort of July 2015 to July 2016. I was really struggling with my game.

Never rush through the stoke. Nervous or not, take your time, and the result is almost always better.

I shaved my head once and learned that I've got, like, a cone head. So I'm never gonna do that again.

At Isleworth, they get the greens up to the sort of speeds we see at Augusta, so it's really helpful.

Going into my first Ryder Cup, my big fear was that I would contribute nothing to the team and that we'd lose.

There's always a sense of, 'Oh, if I change my irons, they might not be as good or might not perform as well.'

If you like dry humor, Henrik Stenson thinks he's very funny, but I think I'm very funny in a dry sense as well.

The hard part is majors are exhausting on their own. They're a long week. So the hard part is your energy levels.

It's really, really cool when you win a tournament. And it's great for the people who go on the journey with you.

Race to Dubai winner, playing in Ryder Cups, winning majors - these are all great parts of a career you want to have.

Struggling has done a couple of things for me. It is an experience to have and it makes you appreciate the good stuff.

I don't have the look of a golfer. Do I look like a rock star? I didn't make it playing guitar so I started playing golf!

Whether I win or not, it won't be down to inexperience and hopefully it won't be down to some sort of mental misjudgment.

My game is getting better all the time. I'm consistently working hard, and I feel like I'm always doing the right things.

No matter what's going on, on the leaderboard, you have to know that par is a very, very good score and just keep playing.

I have one idiosyncrasy that helps my driving accuracy. I grip down on the club. This makes it easier to control the clubface.

Two birdies and a lot of bogeys doesn't really help. I say if you're going to do it, do it properly and be dreadful on all fronts.

It is not a cliche to say golf is for the well-off. It is the reality. But the old system which used to make it elite is fading away.

I'd much rather be in this position where people might be talking about me as a contender than turning up and sort of being a no-show.

I got recognized at the market the other day, but, no, nothing that spectacular. There's nobody fainting in the street as I walk past.

I'm 28, your career is a long time. We're not tennis players or football players. I'm just about reaching what should be my peak year.

To be on the winning team on your debut is amazing enough anyway but to do so alongside one of your best mates is the stuff of dreams.

Seriously, as a father, I want golf to be cool for my children. Easy to access. If they want to play in tracksuits and trainers, why not?

I think the winning scores are always pretty much the same but it's a very big deal to sort of prove yourself against some of the world's best.

I just had to get on the golf course and play holes whether it was practice or tournaments. Just keep playing. There's nothing else you can do.

You don't know where your career is going to take you. It might all go wrong and I might never play in a Masters again. So it's important to keep things real.

I don't particularly like talking about it much, but after a year of struggling, when you start playing better, you have a much better perspective on the game.

Every time you tee off as a professional golfer, whether people say it or not, your first prerogative is to make the cut. You can't win if you don't make the cut.

Expectation is a good thing. I think it shows you're doing a lot of good stuff. Clearly, I'd rather it to be that way than people expecting it to be the other way.

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