Zitat des Tages von David Duval:
It's a silly old game.
We might not make what athletes in other sports make, but we have greater longevity and we do have certain freedoms to do things they can't do. Like stay home one week and play the next week.
I went to Q-school knowing that I could play well and get through.
I'm content. I want to have better success in the tournaments than I've had, but I know I'm playing well, so I'm happy with that.
I love competing.
But more than that, I wanted my wife and my family to see how I can actually play this game. They haven't seen me at my best, and I want them to.
We're often portrayed as rich, spoiled athletes who play a game for too much money.
Maybe that's some of the reason I feel so good today. Maybe I finally realised that it's just a game.
I slowly continued to compensate for the physical problems I was having and ended up completely destroying my swing, my set-up, my posture. Everything was gone.
I've seen the bottom and I know the difference between good golf and bad golf.
I didn't do anything spectacular when I won the Open in 2001. I hit the ball good, not great. I putted good, not great, but I think I missed maybe two putts inside eight feet all week.
And if people do like me, I think it's because I'm a stand-up guy.
The way I grew up playing, and the way most Americans have grown up, is that you hit the ball up in the air and then it stops where it lands.
But you know, I'm just not a quitter.
I love hitting the ball, controlling the ball. And yeah, even the roar of the crowd. I enjoy the roar of the crowd probably less than some players and more than some. But I'm not out here to be a celebrity.
I know the other side. I know what awful golf is.
I think about what I say. I don't give stock answers. I'm not trying to cultivate an image with the public, like several of the top players do.
You do what you need to if you're serious about playing great golf.
Confidence is such a fragile and precious thing.
The best way to explain it is that I'm not yearning anymore, on or off the course. I appreciate what I have. I feel like I'm blessed.
I've just been working hard, trying to get some good stuff to come out.
You don't have to hit perfect shots all the time here. The variety of shots you get to play, the shots you sometimes have to hit along the ground, it's just a lot of fun to me.
When I'm swinging well, nobody hits the golf ball any better than I do.
At the U.S. Open, you're going to make bogeys.
But just like I've always said when people complain about tee times, 'I just want a tee time. Just give me one so I can play.'
I was in the middle of the golf tournament trying to make birdies and I was just having a blast. So that probably qualifies as having a greater appreciation.
You've got to make an effort on your own. Some people don't even try.
What I'm saying is that, unlike a lot of portrayals of me, I'm not hiding behind the sunglasses. I'm out there working. I'm not trying to sell anybody anything, but I do realize we're entertainers.