Patrick Reed on being cast as a villain, his controversies, and how he sees himself

Patrick Reed on being cast as a villain, his controversies, and how he sees himself

The 2018 Masters champ and LIV star Patrick Reed prefers when he lets his clubs do the talking. But that doesn’t mean he’s without a few things to say.

Patrick Reed: It was [in 2011], right after we won our second national championship at Augusta State. I was 6-0 in match play there. I literally tapped in, we won, and then drove to Memphis because I was in my first-ever PGA Tour event. My caddie was our assistant head coach, and we made a game plan. I’m paired with two veterans; both have won on Tour before. And the next thing you know, about six holes in, I’m seeing both of them hit iron off this one tee. My game plan was to hit 3-wood or driver, but I was like, Oh, maybe I need to do what they do. So I completely changed and just tried to do what they were doing and ended up missing the cut. And the first thing my coach said was, “Well, why did you miss the cut? Did you stick to your plan? Why not?” So you have to keep your identity when you’re out there, because when you stray from your game plan, that affects you mentally. Then, all of a sudden, it’s a trickle effect — you start changing things, your mind starts going, you start second-guessing. That’s built me to get to where I am now — by doing it how I do it. And keep grinding.

DD: And what is it that has made you so successful? Take someone else that hits it the same distance as you but never made it past, say, high-level college golf — what’s the difference between you two?

PR: I think the biggest thing is self-belief. You have to really believe you belong out here, believe you can win. And the only way that’s going to happen is by working really hard and keeping yourself uncomfortable. I feel like I’ve always done that through practices, giving myself bad lies, nestled down a little bit, maybe a little into the grain, on rough edges. I practice being uncomfortable, because when I do get those lies I’m like, I’ve done this before.

DD: Take me back to the final round of your win at the 2018 Masters. How’d you get it over the line?

PR: Playing with Rory McIlroy, who’s won a lot of majors — on paper he’s longer than me. I still have a better short game, but he’s longer. He’s in better form. The list goes on. When you’re in that final group, to either keep your lead or try to play like another major champion, it’d be very easy to stray from your game plan. But we just kept on preaching the entire week that, hey, we’re just going to stick to our plan and take one shot at a time — that’s it. Don’t focus on where you’re at. Don’t focus on who you’re playing with. Nothing.

DD: Is that easy to do?

PR: It’s very hard. It’s a lot of work. I’ve always prided myself on being very mentally strong, and so it’s a little easier for me to get into that mindset, that, hey, it’s Groundhog Day. We’re gonna go and just do the same thing we did yesterday. You can’t win that golf tournament with one golf shot, but you can lose it with one shot. You have basically 200-something battles throughout the four days in the overall war. Well, let’s see how many of those battles we can win.

Patrick Reed skewers Augusta National hole, wants it to ‘disappear’

DD: What was the coolest moment that came from winning at Augusta?

PR: It was after the ceremony, after the press conference. I went back to Butler Cabin and I knew [my wife] Justine was there, but I didn’t know our kids, my mother-in-law, everyone that was at the house [that week] would be there. But when I opened the door, there was my daughter, first one at the door and she goes, “Daddy, you did it, I love you.” And she gave me a hug. That was the moment.

DD: As time went on, I don’t think you necessarily chose to be some sort of villain, but in these team events, in these Ryder Cup moments, you’ve seemed to play your best golf when people are against you. Even when other controversies came up — like at Torrey Pines, where there was a dispute about a drop, you won by 5 or 6.

PR: Take Torrey and that drop. I felt like it could have been handled a little differently on the Tour side; that they’d had my back a little more, rather than have one rules official come out and say, hey, he did everything correctly. But because the media wants to keep me in that villain role, they were gonna read it [the other] way. So I sat there and I was like, well, there’s one way to shut these people up: win this thing by more than two shots. You trounce everybody on Sunda

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