When I find a golf course or a restaurant or a market that I like, that's pretty much exclusively where I go.
It's nice to win. I'll never win again. I may have to take up golf - take on Tiger.
If he's got golf clubs in his truck or a camper in his driveway, I don't hire him.
I just enjoy playing in wind, grew up in it, and it makes the golf a bit more fun.
Golf has always been a game where you have to control both ends of the club.
I am decidedly unfriendly during a golf game, from the first hole to the last.
Exercise? I get it on the golf course. When I see my friends collapse, I run for the paramedics.
I know this golf tournament has my name on it but it's not about me. It's about the Louisiana Tech family. There is nothing greater than being a part of the Bulldog family.
Women in pro-ams are always telling me about all the business deals they've struck on the golf course playing with their male work colleagues.
I really enjoy what little time I have at home. The golf course and practice facilities are perfect and so close to home!
On the average, I don't spend more than 15 minutes in the car - to go to the golf course or the gym. And that's the only time I listen to the radio.
My dad is a big dreamer, so I got that from him. Golf was my main thing when I was a teenager, and that's what I wanted to do.
It strikes me that golf's great virtue is that it gets you out of the house, away from everyday bothers, away from the endless round of looking for this, that and the other.
Acting is a great gig. It pays well, I get to meet some nice people, and it allows me to play a lot of golf. I'm a real lucky guy.
The game of golf would lose a great deal if croquet mallets and billiard cues were allowed on the putting green.
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.
The good part is if I play a solid round of golf, it will be very hard for the others to beat me. And that's all I'm thinking about.
Brushing up on your short game at the practice area is fine and good, but taking it with you to the golf course - when your score is really on the line - is another story.
This is what I love to do. And if pressure is something that comes with playing good golf, that's something a professional golfer has to handle.
I worked at a hospital for a week. And at a golf course when I was in college at Kansas for about a week. The tips weren't good so I quit.
The pat on the back, the arm around the shoulder, the praise for what was done right and the sympathetic nod for what wasn't are as much a part of golf as life itself.