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Steve Williams TELLS ALL on Tiger Woods' Highs & Lows, Regrets About Getting Fired & More!

March 30, 2025 / 01:53:22

This episode features Steve Williams discussing his experiences as a caddy for Tiger Woods, his new book "Together We Roar," and his philanthropic efforts. Key topics include the dynamics of his relationship with Tiger, memorable moments from their time together, and insights into the world of professional golf.

Steve Williams reflects on his time caddying for Tiger Woods, emphasizing the unique bond they shared and the pressure of working with one of the greatest athletes. He shares stories about their interactions, including humorous moments and the challenges they faced.

The conversation also touches on Williams' philanthropic work, including a significant donation to the Starship Hospital in New Zealand. He discusses the impact of this donation and the importance of giving back to the community.

Williams provides insights into the golf world, including the evolution of caddying and the changes in the sport over the years. He expresses his thoughts on Tiger's legacy and the challenges he faced in the wake of personal scandals.

Listeners will gain a deeper understanding of the life of a professional caddy, the pressures of the sport, and the lasting impact of Williams' career alongside Tiger Woods.

TL;DR

Steve Williams discusses his caddying career with Tiger Woods, his new book, and his philanthropic efforts.

Video

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You bumped into him on a practice range
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in 2019 and it was a little frosty. I
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knew straight away that it just wasn't
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the same. One thing about that
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tournament that most people don't know
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is
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Did Tiger make a habit of doing that?
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Like if they finish
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that's a nauseating amount of pressure.
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That's the way it is. He was
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bitter to Stevie. Thank you for your
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friendship. Love always. Tiger Woods.
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Yeah, I didn't see that coming. It's
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weird.
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You sort of dress him down and give them
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a piece of your mind. When you have a
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conversation like that, you've got a
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number of things that you want to
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address. He needs to be put in his place
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and I did it. Were you [ __ ]
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yourself? You know, I tell it like it
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is. As a husband and as a father, I
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probably faltered there for a little
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bit.
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The first thing that the surgeon told
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me,
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um, hit a [ __ ] shot. You can't blame me
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for hitting a [ __ ] shot.
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[Music]
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You would actually think that I'd have
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some knowledge of what was going
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on. Happy to be able to sit here and
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share my story with you.
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Kiwis love a
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thirst. Like Finn, we're making
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[Music]
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waves. Generate switch online today.
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Steve Williams, welcome back to my
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podcast. Yeah. Um, pretty good to be
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here for the second time, Don. Yeah. Oh,
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mate, this is um this is really cool.
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So, um, you've got a a new book coming
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out called Together We Roar, and I'm one
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of the first people in the world that's
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been lucky enough to read it. It's like
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a uncorrected proof copy, not for sale.
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Um, but you you reached out to me asking
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to come back on and I couldn't believe
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it. I thought, "Fuck, this is epic."
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Yeah. Well, I mean, I've had that many
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people tell me that they've listened to
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your podcast show when I was on it, so
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you're a logical one to put their hand
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up and and and we we're promoting the
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book, so good place to start. Yeah. the
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um the podcast that we did which um came
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out at the beginning of 2024 um by far
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the biggest podcast I've done to date.
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I've done almost like 200 episodes and
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that was the biggest by far. I think
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it's 400,000 views on YouTube or
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something. Um and I suppose that says a
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lot about uh I don't know the respect
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that New Zealanders have for you and
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also just the um the aura of yeah the
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whole Tiger Wood story I guess. Yeah. I
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mean, look, Tigers, a once in
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a-lifetime, once in a generation sort of
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athlete. And people, you know, when he
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was playing, they just couldn't get
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enough of Tiger Woods and that. And I
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think when he was playing, I think, you
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know, a great deal of the people that
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got to see him play realized that he was
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a once in a generational athlete.
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There'll probably be another never be
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another golfer like Tiger and possibly
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another athlete that's dominated a sport
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so seriously like he has. So, uh, I was
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very fortunate to be by his side, uh, in
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those golden years and part of it
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playing a role in it. Yeah. Yeah. Oh,
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look, I mean, it's just, you know, when
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you look back and you've had a chance to
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caddy for someone like him, I've c for a
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number of very, very good players, but
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to have worked alongside arguably the
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greatest player, uh, and, you know, toe
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to toe and watched him compete is pretty
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special. Yeah. Um, yeah, the players you
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that you're talking about, Greg Norman
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from 82 to 89. Um, you love a long-term
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relationship, don't you?
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Greg Norman 82 to 89. Raymond Floyd um
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89 to 999. Tiger from 99 to 2011 and
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then um Adam Scott uh 2011 to 2017 then
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uh 22 23. Yeah, they're your three three
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key relationships. Yeah. home for um but
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yeah they're I've been fortunate that
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each player I've K for have had a
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lengthy stint and in our business we
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sort of c sort of realize that it's you
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know there's no you know you can't tell
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how long a relationship's going to last
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but five years if you can car for
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someone for 5 years it's a pretty good
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stint I mean it's an intense job you
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spend a lot of time with someone and a
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lot of times when players fall out of
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form you know that they're looking for
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changes it could be the coach could be
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the caddy whatever but um it's it you
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know, you don't go to Caddy for someone
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and think it's going to be a lifetime
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job.
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And um the Augusta Masters in 2023 with
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Adam Scott, that's your that's your
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final masters. Yeah, look, I mean, you
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never say never. It's a pretty special
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place. And you know, if the right
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opportunity came along, perhaps I could
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go back there and carry, but like when
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you step aside from something, you did
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it for as long as I have. Um and and
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it's, you know, the game evolves very
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quickly. you know, I I haven't carried
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full-time since 2017. Had a couple of
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stints here and there, but the game
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evolves and I mean, I think unless
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you're out there regularly, you might
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maybe fall behind a little bit. The
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players use a lot of technology now. Uh
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I'm an old school caddy that caddies by
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feel. And u for instance, you know, the
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players, they require the knowledge of
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you know how far up uphill a shot is,
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how far downhill a shot is. They they
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have that information given to them and
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then in the yardage books that are
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provided. That's the book that is
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provided that has all that kind of
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information in it. Uh I used to do that
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all by feel. I just look at something
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and feel it. So, um yeah, I'm probably a
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bit out of date now, but I'd have to,
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you know, get my thinking or change the
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way I do things if I was to keep cing,
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but you know, I've done my time out
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there. Would you would you ever want to
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go back to a Would you ever go back to
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Augusta wearing anything other than like
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white overalls? Like would you want to
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be like behind one of the fences like
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wandering around from hole to hole?
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Yeah. No, look, I mean, I think that'd
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be pretty difficult to go and uh watch a
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golf tournament when you've, you know,
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you've been active in cadding for so
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many years. Um, no, I don't think I
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could go and watch it, but u on the same
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sec on the other hand, I'm not that keen
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to put those white boiler suits on
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either. And what's your what's your
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relationship like with um with golf now?
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Like do do you do you follow it? Like
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when we're recording this, the New
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Zealand Open was on last weekend. Were
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you there? Did you watch it? Yeah. No, I
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was c for Daniel Hillier last week. So,
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I don't follow golf too much, but uh I I
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keep an eye out for Ryan Fox and and
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Daniel Hillier. Um the two Kiwi players
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that I've, you know, come to know pretty
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good. And uh but outside of that, no, I
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don't really follow it too much. I like
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to keep tracks on how they're doing. Um
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you know, at the moment, they're our two
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best players. And I've ci for Ryan, I've
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ci for Dan or Caddy from last week at
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the Open. So, I keep an eye on those two
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guys. Full Swing on Netflix. Have you
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watched that? Do you watch that? No, I
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haven't uh watched that. I'd sort of,
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you know, some of those programs are a
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bit far-fetched, I think, sometimes.
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So, it seems that it seems like a drama
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to you rather than a like a documentary.
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Yeah. Look, I mean, I I look at that as
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sort of a made for TV sort of thing, you
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know? I don't like I watched the I
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watched one episode of the first one and
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I thought, well, that's a bit farfetched
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for me. I know that's not exactly how
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things go on the tour, so I haven't
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watched any further. What about the um
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your old mate with his uh TGL league?
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What what do you what do you think of
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that? Uh I haven't watched any of that
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either. Um I mean anything you can do
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that can broaden the wider audience for
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golf. I think it's great. So um you know
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that that takes place on a Monday night
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or or a Tuesday night. So when there's
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no other direct competition from any
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other golf tournaments on TV. So um and
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if you can get new people into the game,
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new audience and that that's great. I
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think yeah, but I mean I haven't
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actually watched it, so I can't say
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firsthand having watched it, but I know
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if you can have something that can bring
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new people into the game and and just
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people get the opportunity to watch
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great players. I mean, I'm obviously not
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playing on a golf course, but you know,
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there's a lot of people around the world
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that play golf but don't go to a golf
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course. They just go to a driving range
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and hit balls. They don't actually play
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golf. And, you know, you'll get a lot of
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people watch that kind of thing and
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think, you know, let's get let's go to
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the driving range, hit some balls, and
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let's get, you know, see if we can get a
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feel for what's going on here. Yes. How
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Yeah. How would you explain that TGL
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thing for someone that has no idea what
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we're talking about? It's sort of like
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Well, it's like simulator, you know, you
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can do all sorts of things on a
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simulator. So, it's I guess you could
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relate it's like simulator golf. You
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know, you're hitting off a mat um and
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you're hitting into a screen and and
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you'll get all the details of how far
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the ball's gone, where it's positioned
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that they bring up the holes like you're
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playing playing a golf course and they
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have a real putting green there from
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what I'm told. I haven't watched it. I
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can't actually, but my understanding is
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they have a proper putting green and
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they can change that putting green. They
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can change the slope, the surf, you
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know, the different things to suit the
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different holes that they're playing.
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Um, yeah. So, it's it's, you know, it's
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a big new addition to the game. Uh, and
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something completely different. Be a
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great format for a caddy in his 60s. Not
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much walking, right? Yeah. You could
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just stand there in your chair and have
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a beer and say, "I think it's this club
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or Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Um I I uh
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mentioned on Instagram that you were
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coming in and someone had a um a comment
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which I thought was brilliant. They they
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said um last year when I heard that
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Oasis was having a reunion, I bought
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tickets straight away and I'm more
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excited about that than anything. But I
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think more exciting than an Oasis
00:09:07
reunion would be seeing Tiger and Steve
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have one more round together. Yeah.
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Well, Tiger's not playing much these
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days. Last year he only uh competed
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sparsely and and did the major
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championship. So, um, yeah, that would
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be, you know, it would be actually kind
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of fun, I guess, from my perspective if
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you were to step out there one more time
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and just finish off knowing that you're
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finishing off. Um, when I when I stepped
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away caring for Tiger when he was out
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injured, um, and then he came back, you
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know, you don't know when your last
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tournament's going to be, but if you
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went out there and had a reunion, be
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kind of fun. But I guess that's probably
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a bit of a pipe dream. That's what we
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thought about Oasis. Yeah. Well, that's
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a good point. You never know. Um yeah,
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just before we get into it, something
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that I think is is worth a mention um
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because we did talk about this in the
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last um episode where we caught up, but
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um I thought it's better getting this
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early early on in um the Steve Williams
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Foundation um and your philanthropy work
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because a lot of people may not know
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about this and I feel like it's worth
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running a highlighter through it. So,
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um, yeah, in October 2008, yourself and
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your wife Kirsty made a $1 million
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donation to Starship, um, in particular
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their oncology department there, which,
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um, [ __ ] it's phenomenal. Yeah. Look, I
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mean that my wife got behind that
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project. She met with the CEO of the
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Starship Hospital. So, they were about
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to commence the rebuild or the planning
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of the rebuild of the oncology unit and
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they need a founding donor to start off
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the the fundraising. So, uh, we decided
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what a no greater place to put some
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money into. It's a fantastic facility
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that needed upgrading. Uh, sadly, the
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rate of oncology in in our young people
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today is always ever increasing, which
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is, you know, it's kind of sad. But
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look, if you go into a place like that,
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I've said this to so many people,
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sometimes you get a little bit down and
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out on on different aspects of your
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life. And if you go into the Starship
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Hospital or the Ronald McDonald House,
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particularly the oncology unit and spend
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a bit of time there, uh you get a deep
00:11:02
appreciation of how fortunate you are,
00:11:04
uh to have good health and and good
00:11:06
people around you. So, um but as far as
00:11:09
the Steve Williams Foundation go, um
00:11:11
last year 2024, my wife and I shut that
00:11:14
down. We've done it for 22 years
00:11:17
non-stop. Uh we've done it on our own,
00:11:19
so it's a tremendous amount of
00:11:20
fundraising. Um we're extremely proud of
00:11:23
what we've achieved. We've supported um
00:11:26
not only the Starship Hospital and the
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Ronald McDonald House extensively, but
00:11:30
we've helped a lot of uh junior golfers
00:11:32
in the country and then most recently
00:11:33
quite a few speedway drivers, uh youth
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speedway drivers. So, you can't do
00:11:38
something forever. Uh we feel like we've
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done as much as we can do and it's a lot
00:11:42
of work running a foundation. So, you
00:11:44
know, we need to step we decided to step
00:11:46
aside and concentrate on some other
00:11:48
aspects of our life. M well, thanks for
00:11:51
doing it in the first place. Um, you
00:11:53
know, it's not like you were doing it
00:11:54
for, you know, clout or kudos or the
00:11:56
attention or publicity or anything like
00:11:58
that. And, um, I've got no idea what
00:11:59
your financial situation is, but a
00:12:01
million dollars is a lot for anyone,
00:12:02
right? Yeah. Look, I mean, obviously,
00:12:04
I'm fortunate uh to being very
00:12:05
successful in in a job that I love. I
00:12:07
never stepped out to be a golf caddy to
00:12:09
make money. It was just something I
00:12:10
loved. I love being outdoors. Loved the
00:12:12
opportunity to caddy, loved working on
00:12:13
the golf tour, watching golf pros play,
00:12:16
and got to caddy some great players. uh
00:12:18
and fortunately you know got rewarded
00:12:20
very well for it but um like if people
00:12:23
always ask me what's the single greatest
00:12:25
moment of your career you know and you
00:12:27
know not many people would think the
00:12:28
answer would be actually given that
00:12:30
million dollars to ship hospital and you
00:12:32
know the the feedback that Kirsty and I
00:12:35
have had from that the amount of people
00:12:37
that go into that unit and
00:12:39
um since the rebuild uh and know how
00:12:43
much more spacious it is how much more
00:12:44
better it is for their family and far
00:12:46
now they have to spend time in there and
00:12:48
yeah, it's pretty special. My
00:12:50
father-in-law actually he took on the
00:12:51
job of rebuilding the kitchen there and
00:12:53
he got all the product and all the uh
00:12:55
what they needed to do for nothing and
00:12:57
he spent him and his colleagues um built
00:13:00
that out free of charge. So, it was a
00:13:02
family project and yeah, we're super
00:13:04
proud of that. And and that all started
00:13:06
with um a Christmas day trip to the
00:13:08
Gizbborne Hospital in 2006 where you you
00:13:11
and your wife went in and you were
00:13:12
handing out chocolates. Um see see this
00:13:15
this stuff goes unnoticed, you know. So
00:13:17
there there's no there's no cameras
00:13:18
there. You're not even on social media
00:13:20
from what I can get at you. You [ __ ] at
00:13:21
responding to texts on your phone. So
00:13:24
yeah, what were you doing at hospital on
00:13:25
Christmas Day 2006? My wife is, you
00:13:28
know, she's got a big heart and she has
00:13:29
some great ideas and that. Yeah. So I I
00:13:31
I was going to go to Gisbon um to race
00:13:34
on Boxing Day. So you can't drive from
00:13:36
Aland to Gisbon and race on the same
00:13:38
day. So we had to go on Christmas Day,
00:13:40
which is not ideal. And um my wife said,
00:13:43
"Well, if you're going to do that, we're
00:13:44
going to do something good." And um
00:13:46
prior to leaving, we went and got as
00:13:47
many chocolates and boxes of chocolates
00:13:49
as we could and we took them in there to
00:13:51
the children's ward at Kisman Hospital
00:13:53
and just handed them all out. I mean,
00:13:54
nobody knew who we were or anything. We
00:13:56
just went and asked the people we could
00:13:58
hand out some chocolates and that and
00:13:59
that's what we did. And it's actually on
00:14:01
that uh we were the following day after
00:14:03
Boxing Day we were racing in Napia and
00:14:05
that's when my wife sort of put her
00:14:07
thinking cap on and what can we do next
00:14:09
and that's how um she came up with the
00:14:12
Starship Hospital um with the you know
00:14:16
they were looking to rebuild the
00:14:17
oncology unit. So we got jumped on
00:14:19
board, became the founding donors and
00:14:21
yeah I mean look it's a lot of money
00:14:23
granted I get that but you couldn't ask
00:14:26
to give money to a better charity and to
00:14:28
a more worthwhile cause in the starship
00:14:30
hospital and I always say to people like
00:14:32
I said earlier you know just go in there
00:14:34
one day go to the reception there they
00:14:35
have so many volunteers that'll be happy
00:14:37
to show you around what a marvelous
00:14:38
facility is and and you know it it it is
00:14:41
a very worthwhile cause when they're
00:14:43
looking for money that or the McDonald
00:14:45
House if you're ever out there and
00:14:46
they're looking for some Honey, that's
00:14:48
great causes to give it to. Yeah. Do you
00:14:51
do you feel an immense sense of pride
00:14:52
like when you talk about it now? Oh,
00:14:55
100%. Like if you go into the oncology
00:14:56
unit now that the uh when you walk into
00:14:58
the doors there, it bears our name. My
00:15:00
wife, our name is up on the on the door
00:15:03
there above the door. And uh yeah,
00:15:05
absolutely. It's a was a huge thing and
00:15:07
uh like I said, we're immensely proud of
00:15:10
our association with two great
00:15:11
charities. Yeah. Well, thanks for that.
00:15:14
Now, together we roar. Um yeah, this
00:15:17
this podcast is going to come out around
00:15:19
about the same time as the book. So um
00:15:21
who whose idea was it? Who was Evan
00:15:23
Priest? Yeah. So Evan's a journalist, an
00:15:26
Australian journalist who I'm friends
00:15:27
with. So during co um like a lot of
00:15:30
people, Evan was not he he was a golf
00:15:33
journalist following the golf tour and
00:15:34
and you know it was difficult to be on
00:15:36
the tour with the co thing and he he was
00:15:38
looking to do a podcast. So they asked
00:15:40
me would you do a podcast based around
00:15:42
your major championship wins which I
00:15:44
agreed to and we did that and it was
00:15:46
hugely successful to the point where we
00:15:47
had quite a number of players like Rory
00:15:49
Maroy Henrik Stenson and a few really
00:15:51
really top players listened to it and
00:15:53
and and really found it good and they
00:15:54
reached out and said how much they
00:15:56
enjoyed the podcast. Uh so based on the
00:15:58
podcast there was quite a bit of
00:16:00
interest uh from publishing companies to
00:16:02
perhaps uh extend on that podcast go a
00:16:05
bit deeper into it and a bit broader as
00:16:08
far as not just the majors but my entire
00:16:10
time with Tiger um and um yeah so
00:16:14
through that Evan and I discussed it
00:16:16
with a publisher and we came up with
00:16:17
what we were going to do and yeah we did
00:16:19
it at at that point was the podcast
00:16:21
series with Evan and my podcast the only
00:16:23
podcast you you'd ever done? The first
00:16:25
podcast I series I did was with Evan.
00:16:27
Yeah. And that was during co. So, uh,
00:16:31
yeah. Yeah. There's very little about
00:16:32
you online. So, um, yeah. What was the
00:16:34
process? What was the process with Evan?
00:16:36
Yeah. So, we we having done two books
00:16:39
before, I I realized that, um, the most
00:16:42
important thing is time. And when you
00:16:45
commit to do a book, um, you know, the
00:16:47
the general time frame from the two
00:16:49
previous books was 6 months, which I
00:16:50
knew was not going to be long enough. um
00:16:52
the longer you can do it, the better you
00:16:54
can you can do it. So we we extended
00:16:55
this one out to 9 months. Uh and that
00:16:58
way we we were able to so twi every week
00:17:01
uh twice a week Evan and I would talk
00:17:03
for 2 hours um and in between he would
00:17:05
do research, I would do research and
00:17:07
then Evan came over to finish the book
00:17:09
up. We came to New Zealand for a week uh
00:17:11
to tidy up all the loose ends and that.
00:17:12
So we we we've really really happy the
00:17:15
way the book turned out. Uh there was no
00:17:17
rush to it. Uh we got everything in
00:17:19
there and tweak things around when we
00:17:20
needed to and um yeah no it's really
00:17:23
turned out good. I think the reader will
00:17:24
find a very good insight uh into my
00:17:28
relationship cing for Tiger and a little
00:17:29
bit behind the scenes and what make
00:17:30
Tigers tick and how we're so successful
00:17:33
and some really you know untold stories
00:17:34
in there that people will find
00:17:36
fascinating. Yeah, I I love the um
00:17:39
behind the scenes stuff. Um yeah, like
00:17:41
the peak behind the curtain into a
00:17:42
lifestyle. Yeah, the tiger mania
00:17:44
lifestyle lifestyle that none of us will
00:17:45
ever see. Um, and there there's almost
00:17:48
nothing negative in the book at all.
00:17:50
Yeah. Look, was that deliberate? Oh,
00:17:52
well, there's nothing negative to
00:17:54
report. I mean, you know, like the media
00:17:56
portray a lot of stuff that happened
00:17:57
between Tiger and myself and Tiger
00:17:58
personally. Um, you know, I don't get
00:18:00
into that, but you know, as far as, you
00:18:03
know, working for Tiger as a golf caddy.
00:18:05
I mean, there was nothing negative to be
00:18:06
reported. I mean, we had a great
00:18:08
relationship. He was a very successful
00:18:10
player. Uh, and it's just a look at
00:18:12
between how two players or a caddy and a
00:18:14
player coexisted in that time. No, no,
00:18:17
but like if you if you know someone
00:18:19
intimately for 11 years, like the in any
00:18:22
situation, you've got stories where you
00:18:23
can throw them under the bus. Like you
00:18:25
hear conversations or you you know you
00:18:27
just the chat you have um like I'm
00:18:29
thinking Prince Harry's book last year
00:18:30
called Spear. Like he really threw his
00:18:32
dad under the bus on a couple of
00:18:33
occasions. Um, but it's like the closest
00:18:36
you come to doing that is may maybe
00:18:37
there's a line in there saying when you
00:18:39
first met Tiger, you've never seen
00:18:40
someone eat McDonald's so often.
00:18:43
How much McD How old was he then? Like
00:18:45
19, 20? Yeah. So, how much Meccas was he
00:18:47
eating? Yeah, he he he he was when I
00:18:50
first started cing for him, he was
00:18:51
fueled by McDonald's. I found that
00:18:53
pretty fascinating. Um, I'd never been
00:18:55
to so many drive-thrus and I and I can't
00:18:58
stand McDonald's. It's just I don't mind
00:19:00
their milkshakes, but that's about it.
00:19:01
But yeah, so no, but he he he turned his
00:19:04
diet around and everything. But yeah,
00:19:06
look, the book's about, you know, like I
00:19:08
said, you know, as far as my time with
00:19:10
Tiger, you know, you always have some
00:19:11
tense times that everybody does when you
00:19:13
spend that much time working for
00:19:14
somebody. And, you know, a player and a
00:19:16
caddy spend an immense amount of time
00:19:18
together over a period of a year. Some
00:19:19
players play 30 weeks, 40 weeks. Tiger
00:19:22
play, you know, 23, 24 weeks, and it's 7
00:19:24
days a week. And a lot of time, uh, the
00:19:26
days are lengthy. So, you're close to
00:19:28
someone. You're going to have some
00:19:29
moments where you're not getting on or
00:19:30
you have a difference of opinion, but
00:19:32
there's nothing in that book. There was
00:19:34
no need to to throw Tiger under the bus.
00:19:36
It like I said that it's a story about a
00:19:38
player in a caddy and and what made us
00:19:40
so successful.
00:19:43
Yeah. It seems like um even though you
00:19:45
guys don't have any sort of relationship
00:19:47
to speak of now, there is the sort of
00:19:49
like un definitely an unwritten respect
00:19:51
between both of you. Oh, abs.
00:19:53
Absolutely. I mean, you know,
00:19:55
realistically, how could there not be? I
00:19:56
mean, you know, Tiger played arguably
00:19:59
the greatest golf ever played and and
00:20:01
particularly in the major championships
00:20:03
and, you know, I was there all the time
00:20:04
in that and we we were getting on
00:20:06
famously until we split. So, you know,
00:20:08
there's there's it's a great story. What
00:20:10
do you hope his response would be if if
00:20:12
he um comes across the book and picks it
00:20:14
up, has a read through. How could how
00:20:16
could you not, by the way? Yeah. Yeah.
00:20:18
Look, we we we've Yeah. the the copy
00:20:20
that you receive is called a galley copy
00:20:22
which we sent uh to Tiger's management
00:20:25
people hoping that he would read and I'm
00:20:26
and and I'm pretty sure he would read to
00:20:28
be honest. Um and I I would think he'd
00:20:31
find it very very good. Um it's a very
00:20:34
accurate true account. There's it's uh
00:20:37
it's very um yeah it's very thoughtful
00:20:39
the book. Were there any moments or
00:20:41
stories that are in the book that you
00:20:43
sort of armed about but ultimately left
00:20:45
in? Oh no. Look the given the time that
00:20:47
we we had to do the book it was really
00:20:49
fascinating. It was like taking a step
00:20:51
back in time and that I did the podcast
00:20:53
which was great. Um but that was a week
00:20:55
toe thing. So this book was taking more
00:20:56
time than that. And so you know when you
00:20:58
you're doing some research and I was
00:20:59
going through my notes and I had my
00:21:01
yardage books and and just actually
00:21:03
going through a lot of my statistics and
00:21:04
compiling a lot of information for the
00:21:06
book. It was it was really uh I find it
00:21:08
quite empowering actually. It was very
00:21:10
good because when you're catting and you
00:21:12
when you're out there and you're
00:21:13
competing and when I'm not competing but
00:21:15
I'm catting it's just next week next
00:21:17
week you never look in the rear mirror.
00:21:18
It's always on to the next week on to
00:21:20
the next thing onto the next thing and
00:21:21
and even outside of cing I'm a bit like
00:21:23
that myself just keep moving on to the
00:21:25
next thing. But to actually sit back for
00:21:27
a, you know, like it took us 9 months to
00:21:29
put that all together and, you know, go
00:21:30
back in time a little bit and look at
00:21:32
all those moments and um recall a lot of
00:21:35
moments. And when you when you have a
00:21:36
bit of time and you're not under
00:21:37
pressure, it's very easy to remember
00:21:39
things that. But when you're always
00:21:41
active and you're moving forward like
00:21:42
when we're doing the podcast sometimes,
00:21:45
um, you know, it's hard to remember a
00:21:47
lot of stuff. But with a bit of extra
00:21:48
time and that, um, between Evan and I
00:21:50
been able to research a lot of stuff and
00:21:52
go back in time, that was great. M what
00:21:55
what do you hope readers will take away
00:21:56
from the book? Oh, look, I mean, it'll
00:21:58
just give them a a really true
00:22:00
appreciation of what goes on between a
00:22:02
player and Caddyy and what made Tiger so
00:22:04
special and and what that relationship
00:22:06
was like. I mean, you
00:22:08
know, I get asked every day, every every
00:22:11
every week, you know, what was it like
00:22:13
having Tiger? Well, here's a book now
00:22:15
that you can buy and it'll give you a
00:22:17
really, really good account of what went
00:22:19
on between Tiger and myself with some
00:22:21
lighter moments, some darker moments,
00:22:23
and some really enthralling moments
00:22:25
along with, you know, what made them so
00:22:27
good and and and a lot of the highlights
00:22:30
of the time that I carried for him.
00:22:31
Yeah. What what you're saying, lighter
00:22:32
moments, darker moments, that's like any
00:22:34
long-term relationship or friendship,
00:22:35
isn't it? It's um Yeah. It's part of it.
00:22:38
Um how of Yeah. How often do people say
00:22:40
something to you? Oh, look, it's it's
00:22:42
it's hard, I guess. I mean, you know,
00:22:45
everybody looks at me and just says,
00:22:46
"Oh, that's the guy that catty for Tiger
00:22:48
Woods." I mean, I guess a lot of people
00:22:50
don't know. Um, you know, my previous
00:22:53
story to Cing for Tiger and look, we had
00:22:55
a bit of a funny moment last week. We
00:22:57
were at the New Zealand Open. And we're
00:22:59
playing with American John Catelan, a
00:23:01
fantastic player, the winner of the
00:23:03
Asian Order of Merit last year, a
00:23:04
fantastic player. And he said to me,
00:23:06
Steve, uh, how long you been catting in
00:23:08
the New Zealand Open? I said, well, my
00:23:09
first one was 1976. cuz he nearly fell
00:23:11
over.
00:23:13
So 29 years. Yeah. So um next year's New
00:23:16
Zealand Open um 2026 New Zealand Open
00:23:20
will mark you know 50 years from the
00:23:22
first time I carried in a professional
00:23:24
tournament for Peter Thompson. So it's
00:23:26
actually a a moment I'm looking quite
00:23:28
special to and you know perhaps that
00:23:30
might be the time I say well never
00:23:31
again. I'm the only bag I'm going to
00:23:32
carry is my own not someone else's
00:23:35
maybe. Yeah, I feel like um yeah, you
00:23:38
definitely get reflective as you get
00:23:39
older and um you may maybe at the time
00:23:41
maybe it's what you're talking about
00:23:42
before. It's like that sort of growth
00:23:44
mindset where it's just on to the next
00:23:45
onto the next onto the next. Um but as
00:23:47
you get older, you pause and reflect and
00:23:49
you realize just what a special not just
00:23:51
the tiger period, but the whole career,
00:23:53
how special the whole thing's been.
00:23:54
Yeah. Look, I started out, you know,
00:23:56
like I said, 1976. It's a long time ago,
00:23:59
50 years next year. And
00:24:02
um you know I've the the players that
00:24:04
I've c for have all been very intense
00:24:07
players and guys with absolute
00:24:09
determination to win and that puts a
00:24:11
pressure on yourself. So I I guess the
00:24:15
get stepping away from the tour after
00:24:16
being under pressure particularly with
00:24:18
Tiger and and also Greg to start with
00:24:21
maybe not so much with Ray Floyd but you
00:24:23
know Adam's a little bit more laidback
00:24:25
um you know wants to do well but it's
00:24:27
not the end of the world if he didn't do
00:24:29
well. was with was Greg and Tiger. It
00:24:31
was just that was their world. They had
00:24:32
to do um and more so even Tiger. So, um
00:24:36
when you step back and and look at the
00:24:38
length of time I carried for and and the
00:24:40
success I've had and and the journey
00:24:42
that I've been on, um you know, starting
00:24:44
out for somebody that, you know, left
00:24:46
school and started their dream at a very
00:24:48
young age and that cing professionally
00:24:51
at 15 years of age to start out and
00:24:53
heading overseas at such a young age. Um
00:24:56
yeah, when you look back it's you know I
00:24:58
I often say to my son now like you know
00:25:00
I imagine you out there at 15 or when he
00:25:02
was 15 you know jumping on a plane going
00:25:04
to Europe and starting your career. So
00:25:06
yeah no it's been an incredible journey
00:25:07
and like you say when you get a bit of
00:25:09
time and you retire and you sit back and
00:25:11
not relax but sit back and reflect it's
00:25:13
pretty cool. Yeah there's so many little
00:25:16
um I suppose you could call them Steve
00:25:18
Williams isms in the book um which I
00:25:21
wanted to like bring up and run through
00:25:23
some of these. First of all, the peanut
00:25:25
butter and banana sandwich thing. Um,
00:25:27
this is like a a treat that you made for
00:25:29
like all your players. Did you do this
00:25:31
as far back as Greg Norman? Yep. It was
00:25:32
just a ritual that I had. Um, as as a
00:25:35
kid that was my staple diet, peanut
00:25:37
butter, banana sandwiches, and then for
00:25:39
every player I've gave or you know, I'd
00:25:40
bring two sandwiches. Uh, and I'd get
00:25:43
one on the seventh tea, one on the 13th
00:25:44
tea, one third way through the round,
00:25:46
two/3 way round. I'd give them half a
00:25:48
half a sandwich each. And it just became
00:25:50
the thing. They all accepted it and they
00:25:51
all loved it. So this is this is long
00:25:53
before the internet. So this isn't isn't
00:25:56
from some nutritional advice you got or
00:25:58
anything. This is just what I as a kid
00:26:01
every breakfast I had was peanut butter
00:26:02
and banana on toast and then for lunch
00:26:04
was peanut butter banana sandwiches. I
00:26:06
just loved it. My parents uh they
00:26:08
obviously uh told me about it and it's
00:26:10
just something I have done and you know
00:26:12
to this day it would be it would be an
00:26:14
interesting thing. People often say,
00:26:16
"How many miles do you think you've
00:26:17
flown?" And I always think to myself,
00:26:18
"Well, how many one I don't know how
00:26:19
many peanut butter sandwiches I've
00:26:21
eaten?" Because I still do it today
00:26:22
every day. Yeah. The funny thing for me
00:26:24
was just the um you know, the I suppose
00:26:27
the justosition of this, you know, you
00:26:29
making these sandwiches and, you know,
00:26:31
almost force-feeding them to these like
00:26:33
billionaires that are, you know, flying
00:26:34
around their private planes and stuff,
00:26:36
you know, these elite high professional
00:26:38
sports people. Yeah. Hey, it's just a
00:26:40
bit of kiwism, isn't it? That's it's a
00:26:42
popular thing in New Zealand. Pen up an
00:26:44
ar sandwiches. I just took that with me
00:26:45
and um yeah, just that's what it was. Um
00:26:48
white bread, brown bread. Brown bread.
00:26:50
Brown bread. And and um did you open the
00:26:54
banana and squish it in just before
00:26:55
presenting? I sliced it. Sliced it. Did
00:26:57
it go brown? Oh, you know, on a hot
00:26:59
steamy day in in Memphis in 110° when
00:27:03
you hand that sandwich on the 13th, it's
00:27:05
not looking like it's freshly made, but
00:27:06
still tastes good. Does the job. Um
00:27:10
another I suppose Williamsism. uh you
00:27:14
chose one song and sung it over and over
00:27:15
again uh during every major. Yeah, look
00:27:18
I mean like I don't watch a lot of TV,
00:27:21
never had that. So when I was catting in
00:27:23
these tournaments and that my relaxation
00:27:24
at night time that was just to sit on
00:27:26
the sofa or sit on your bed and listen
00:27:28
to music and that and and plug in some
00:27:30
music and every week I'd sort of come up
00:27:32
with a song and that was my song and I'd
00:27:34
play it over and over and over. Um it
00:27:37
was just something I did and and um some
00:27:39
of those songs had a reference to the
00:27:40
tournament, some of them didn't. Um, but
00:27:42
most of them did have some kind of
00:27:43
reference to either the town that you
00:27:45
were cadding in, the course you were
00:27:47
catting in, or uh the tournament. So,
00:27:50
um, just something else I did. Yeah, it
00:27:52
always classic rock songs like um Yeah,
00:27:55
I I pretty much just listen to classic
00:27:57
rock. My whole music roll on my iPod or
00:28:00
iPad uh is just classic rock. Yeah. I
00:28:02
don't venture into country or anything
00:28:04
else. Just classic rock. I mean, you
00:28:06
know, like that's what I like. Yeah.
00:28:08
Foreigner. Um, NXS, Australian Crawl.
00:28:12
Yeah, you can go through them all. Yeah.
00:28:14
Brian Adams. Yeah. Super [ __ ] AC/DC,
00:28:17
NXS, Mental is Anything, Choir Boys,
00:28:21
lots of Osok in there. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
00:28:23
I think when I first cried in Australia
00:28:25
uh in those early years and that um we
00:28:27
used to go so often to pubs in Australia
00:28:29
and all these bands before a lot of
00:28:31
these bands I listen to like Mondo Rock
00:28:33
and Cold Chis and that they were pub
00:28:34
bands to start with um before they
00:28:36
really hit the the big time and that and
00:28:38
you could see them in the pubs in
00:28:39
Australia and anyone that's been to
00:28:41
Australia you knows the pub rock scene's
00:28:43
huge there. I mean, not that it's not
00:28:44
here in New Zealand, but they've
00:28:46
obviously had a far greater number of
00:28:48
bands given the population and it's a
00:28:50
big scene, the Aussie pub rock scene.
00:28:52
And I used to love that when I was
00:28:53
younger. So, so you you select a song,
00:28:56
say for the majors um you know, for say
00:28:59
Augusta Masters and um are you singing
00:29:02
it to yourself or are you singing it out
00:29:03
loud and sharing it with Tiger? Yeah. He
00:29:05
must be like, "What the [ __ ] is this
00:29:06
song light up? What's this?" Yeah. Yeah.
00:29:08
Yeah. So, you know, sometimes it was
00:29:10
just there and and other times I'd, you
00:29:12
know, be humming it away a little
00:29:14
bit and and most of the times he was
00:29:17
like, "Man, what's your kind of music,
00:29:19
man? You need to get updated here, son."
00:29:20
Cuz his music when we were in the car
00:29:22
and that and he' pushed his radio
00:29:24
station. I'd pushed my radio station.
00:29:25
They were two different varieties. Yeah.
00:29:27
What was he doing? Like sort of hip-hop.
00:29:29
Yeah. Correct. Yeah. Yeah. Um, another
00:29:32
thing, I suppose this is a Williamsism.
00:29:34
You You didn't have a cell phone. you
00:29:36
were like resistant about technology and
00:29:39
Tiger had to end up buying you one your
00:29:40
first cell phone because it became too
00:29:43
um I don't know arduous I guess like
00:29:45
trying to track you down in your hotel
00:29:47
room again again to time stamp this this
00:29:49
is like the late '9s so yeah they
00:29:51
weren't smartphones it was probably like
00:29:52
a yeah I just I guess I've always tried
00:29:56
to do things a little bit different uh
00:29:59
not just in any aspect of life I like to
00:30:02
do things a little bit different to the
00:30:03
norm um and I just resisted on getting a
00:30:06
cell phone. I said, "I mean, what do you
00:30:07
need a cell phone for?" I mean, uh, you
00:30:10
know, you you if you need to call me and
00:30:11
call me in the morning at night in the
00:30:13
hotel and that that that I I held my
00:30:15
ground for as long as I could and he
00:30:16
made me have one so that he could get a
00:30:18
hold of me outside of the Yeah. So, I
00:30:20
held off as long as I could. Yeah.
00:30:22
What's your relationship like with a
00:30:24
cellular device now? Oh, look, I'm not
00:30:25
I'm not a big phone person at all. In
00:30:27
fact, my wife recently um we had a bit
00:30:31
of a moment in our house where my son
00:30:33
Jet had some mates come over and and up
00:30:35
until two years ago, I still was using a
00:30:38
flip phone and they thought that they
00:30:40
had never seen a flip phone. They
00:30:41
thought that was the remote for the TV
00:30:43
and they were trying to turn the TV on
00:30:45
with my phone and we got a huge laugh at
00:30:46
that and my wife said, "I think it's
00:30:48
time you actually went and got a a
00:30:49
proper phone." So, yeah, I had to bow to
00:30:52
that. But, uh look, I mean, I just like
00:30:54
I said, I like to do things different.
00:30:55
I'm not I'm not a technology person and
00:30:57
and like to be fair I just I actually
00:30:59
hate phones. I mean I think the way the
00:31:01
world is now people just spend way too
00:31:04
much time on their phones and you know
00:31:05
when we were younger you make a phone
00:31:06
call you ring someone from the telephone
00:31:08
in your home and that was all that was
00:31:10
available. I don't know why we still
00:31:11
can't do that today. Yeah. Um another
00:31:14
really cool thing um handwritten notes
00:31:16
of feedback and criticism back and forth
00:31:18
between Tiger and yourself. So you'd
00:31:20
finish a round um and you you'd end up
00:31:23
with the golf clubs and you'd have to
00:31:24
return them to his room. Yeah. So I was
00:31:26
always in charge of the clubs and that
00:31:28
and and sometimes I'd take them if we
00:31:30
were staying in the same same hotel, I'd
00:31:31
be in my room or he I'd put them in his
00:31:33
room. Uh and sometimes when I thought
00:31:35
there was uh something nice to be added
00:31:38
to the day, we did these handwritten
00:31:40
notes and then quite often in the
00:31:42
morning I would come back to get his
00:31:44
clubs and you know he would leave
00:31:45
earlier to either go to the the gym or
00:31:48
stretch at the golf course or or go to
00:31:49
the golf course to have his breakfast
00:31:51
whatever it may be and there would be a
00:31:52
note accompanying the golf clubs, a
00:31:54
return note from yesterday's note. Um
00:31:57
they were special things and that's you
00:31:59
know that was done primarily cuz I
00:32:01
didn't have a phone obviously. So I
00:32:03
would write a little note and I found
00:32:04
you and I've kept those notes and they
00:32:06
meant a lot to me. There was some very
00:32:07
powerful statements in those notes and
00:32:09
some very reflective things and you know
00:32:11
and sometimes if I thought there was
00:32:13
something glaring that Tiger needed to
00:32:15
work on before he came out the next day.
00:32:17
You know my way of telling him that was
00:32:19
um via a note. Um I I guess you could
00:32:21
say that's about as old school as it
00:32:23
gets. But um there's something more
00:32:25
meaningful to writing a note as opposed
00:32:28
to a text. And I would still say that
00:32:29
today if I want to leave my wife
00:32:31
something really a nice taste or a nice
00:32:33
note my son the same way I think a note
00:32:36
is far better than a text or any other
00:32:38
kind of device communication. So um yeah
00:32:42
some of those notes and when Tiger got
00:32:45
into you know a dark space here recently
00:32:48
um he sent me a couple of notes uh yeah
00:32:52
which was really awesome. So he he he
00:32:55
you know still upheld that thing that he
00:32:57
that he knew that I liked the note side
00:32:59
of things as opposed to and this was at
00:33:01
a time where you know I had an iPad and
00:33:03
he could have sent an email but instead
00:33:05
he sent you know a letter by letter. So
00:33:07
yeah. Yeah, you're right. It's so much
00:33:08
more so much more meaningful. It's like
00:33:10
sending someone a happy birthday email
00:33:11
rather than giving them an actual
00:33:13
greeting card. Um yeah why did you why
00:33:16
did you keep all of them? Did you did
00:33:18
you realize that did they mean something
00:33:19
to you even at the time? Oh yeah,
00:33:20
absolutely. Uh yeah, I just
00:33:23
um I'm not sure what you know I just I
00:33:26
guess the first one I actually remember
00:33:27
the first one when I gave it to him and
00:33:29
um Can you remember what it said? Yeah.
00:33:31
Well,
00:33:32
we Tiger played Steven Ames. He was um
00:33:36
to play Steven Ames in the world match
00:33:38
play at Carl'sbad, California. And
00:33:41
Steven Ames made a bit of a song and a
00:33:43
dance in the media when he was asked
00:33:45
about facing Tiger. and he sort of
00:33:47
thought he was a bit overrated Tiger and
00:33:50
that and his comments weren't very uh
00:33:53
they were quite derogatory and and I
00:33:54
left Tiger a note uh to say you know
00:33:57
like hey tomorrow this is going to be a
00:34:00
match that we want to take control of
00:34:03
right from the first hole he beat him
00:34:04
nine and eight biggest victory ever in
00:34:07
that tournament um he put Steven Ames in
00:34:10
his place that was the first note and um
00:34:12
you know Tiger left a nice note um that
00:34:15
evening after I placed the clubs back as
00:34:17
room and it just something that evolved
00:34:18
from there.
00:34:20
Yeah, that's um that's a good story
00:34:22
about Steven AS. There's a line in the
00:34:23
book that um you got to remember
00:34:24
clearly. It's something like there's two
00:34:26
things you don't want to do in life. Um
00:34:28
floss a pit bull's teeth and aggravate
00:34:31
Tiger Woods. Something like that. It's a
00:34:33
great line. Yeah. Yeah. Look, I mean,
00:34:35
you know, quite often players, you know,
00:34:38
look, I it's a difficult situation for a
00:34:40
lot of the players and that because
00:34:41
Tiger, when he was in the peak of his
00:34:43
power on the tour, he was getting 90% of
00:34:45
the media coverage. Everything was
00:34:46
Tiger. It was just Tiger this, Tiger
00:34:48
that, Tiger this. And a lot of players
00:34:50
got sick of being asked about Tiger
00:34:51
instead of themselves. I get that side
00:34:53
of the situation. And they became quite,
00:34:55
you know, a lot of resentful in a lot of
00:34:57
ways. And it was, it became glaring
00:34:59
occasionally. And then some players when
00:35:01
they had the chance when they were asked
00:35:03
about Tiger instead of themselves, you
00:35:05
know, they they gave an answer that
00:35:07
probably they may maybe wish they hadn't
00:35:08
said and in particularly if they got
00:35:10
drawn with Tiger that week and then you
00:35:11
know that just you know you just you
00:35:14
never wanted to add any fuel to the fire
00:35:15
because this guy was just you know he
00:35:17
just thrived on that kind of
00:35:18
controversy. Yeah. I ended up um I ended
00:35:21
up watching uh stumbling on YouTube the
00:35:23
other day um an interview that Tiger did
00:35:24
when he was very very young like at the
00:35:26
beginning of his career. Do you know
00:35:28
what I'm talking? It's a the where the
00:35:29
reporter like laughs and says you'll
00:35:31
learn. Do you know that one? Yeah. Yeah.
00:35:34
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So there's there's you
00:35:38
know there's a lot of moments like that
00:35:40
where um you know you just add fuel to
00:35:43
the fire. And look, when Tiger came back
00:35:46
after his um ordeal where he was away
00:35:49
from golf and his private life became
00:35:51
public, u when he went to play at the
00:35:54
Masters, the chairman of the Masters
00:35:56
when he had his address, you know, about
00:35:58
Tiger, you know, the comments he made
00:36:00
were pretty unfair. And you know, and
00:36:02
and in the back of my head, I said,
00:36:04
"Well, that's just the fuel he needs
00:36:05
this week to to get him fired up to play
00:36:08
well when he hasn't competed and been in
00:36:10
front of anybody for a while." And sure
00:36:12
enough, he played well. And I think
00:36:13
those comments that the chairman of
00:36:15
Augusta made were probably not the right
00:36:17
comments to come at that particular
00:36:18
time. Yeah, we we talked about that in
00:36:20
the podcast. Um yeah, last year that
00:36:22
whole thing like with the passage of
00:36:24
time, you look back and it was um it's
00:36:26
it's quite unbelievable really. Even
00:36:28
Tiger having to stand in that room and
00:36:30
make a public apology for his
00:36:31
indiscretions. It's the whole thing's
00:36:33
like it's wacky and weird. Look,
00:36:35
everybody has, you know, has their own,
00:36:39
you know, has their own story and and,
00:36:42
you know, some of it not people are
00:36:43
proud of. And look, you look at last
00:36:45
week's New Zealand Open, Dom, the guy
00:36:47
that won the Open last week, his story,
00:36:49
you know, it's it's an incredible story.
00:36:51
And everybody's got a story. It doesn't
00:36:53
matter who they are, where they come
00:36:54
from, how successful they are,
00:36:55
everybody's got a story, and everybody's
00:36:57
made errors. And that's just the way
00:36:59
life is. And when somebody that's in a
00:37:00
prominent position, as we all know here
00:37:02
in New Zealand, we're now all blacks
00:37:04
stumble, they get crucified. And and
00:37:06
Tiger was no different. Um, is it
00:37:08
justified in the media? Probably not.
00:37:10
You know, someone's private life, we all
00:37:13
make mistakes, but you know, you and I
00:37:14
make a mistake, it's doesn't mean
00:37:16
anything, but you get someone of that
00:37:17
level make a mistake and it all becomes
00:37:19
public news and and a lot of it gets
00:37:21
exaggerated and so forth. Yeah. Well, I
00:37:24
mean, yeah. the stuff we're talking
00:37:25
about like Tiger owed some people an
00:37:27
apology like his wife for example and
00:37:29
you and your wife but um in terms of
00:37:32
like standing in front of a room with
00:37:33
his mom there and all these like um golf
00:37:36
executives. Yeah. The whole thing is
00:37:39
very very weird and I think the more
00:37:40
time goes by the more we're going to
00:37:42
realize just how weird that time was.
00:37:44
Yeah. I mean people like you know like
00:37:47
people going to like anything do
00:37:49
everyone's just going to remember Tiger
00:37:51
as a guy that's won you know 15 major
00:37:53
championships won the four majors in
00:37:56
concession and was the greatest player
00:37:58
that ever played and like in 20 years
00:38:00
time like anything nobody's going to
00:38:01
remember that kind of stuff 100%. Oh
00:38:03
there there was um there's a motto in
00:38:05
the book which um I wanted to ask for
00:38:06
elaboration on cuz I didn't really
00:38:07
understand it. Um fast pay makes fast
00:38:10
friends. Oh we we we we had lots of
00:38:13
bets. Tiger and I were would continually
00:38:15
um make little bets sometimes when
00:38:18
things would wouldn't go so well on the
00:38:20
course and that and you're looking for a
00:38:22
way to stimulate some energy and and
00:38:24
some find some quick form on the course
00:38:26
to reather yourself. You know, we'd have
00:38:28
a little bet. Uh okay, over the next
00:38:30
nine holes, if you can hit every fairway
00:38:32
in every green, I owe 100 and for every
00:38:34
green that you miss and every fairy
00:38:36
miss, you owe me 100. and we'd have all
00:38:38
sorts of bets and those bets had to be
00:38:41
paid at the end of the end of the day.
00:38:43
They weren't carryovers from last week
00:38:44
or that fast pay makes fast friends. So
00:38:46
bets any betting had to be exchanged the
00:38:49
straight away. So yes, it seems like
00:38:51
there was a lot of betting going on like
00:38:53
u you you'd be running a golf course and
00:38:55
bunch of people would be having bets on
00:38:57
you doing it in a certain time. Um did
00:38:59
you did you do quite handsomely out of
00:39:01
it up or down at the end?
00:39:04
Well, I mean I I I I I guess you know I
00:39:07
would generally come out on top because
00:39:09
when I'd say to tiger you got nine holes
00:39:11
to go every fairway and that well you
00:39:13
know generally over the course of period
00:39:15
you know he'd hit 65% of the fairways
00:39:17
would be would be his average. So I
00:39:19
would know probably going to miss one
00:39:21
out of four fairways and that. So, um,
00:39:23
but when there's 100 bucks on the line,
00:39:24
that was meant more to him than the
00:39:26
tournament. And like getting a 100 off
00:39:27
me or his mates or his coach, that mean
00:39:29
more than winning the tournament cuz he
00:39:31
hates losing. And he, um, he gifted you
00:39:34
a Ford GT40. I'm not really a car guy.
00:39:37
What, what, what, what, what, what,
00:39:37
what, what, what, what, what does, what
00:39:37
does that mean? What does it look like?
00:39:39
Uh, a Ford GT40. Uh, Ford, sorry, a
00:39:42
GT40. Uh, the GT the 40 comes from 40 in
00:39:46
over the off the ground. It's it's a
00:39:48
replica of the cars that competed
00:39:50
Lemon's way back. It was yeah it's a
00:39:52
pretty special vehicle. It's a race car
00:39:54
basically a road road ready race car and
00:39:57
that and uh it was a very very funny
00:40:00
story how that came about. We were in
00:40:02
Dubai in 2004. Tiger was playing in the
00:40:04
Dubai Desert Classic and we were on
00:40:06
Sunday. We were in the gym. Um we were
00:40:08
watching the final round unfold from
00:40:10
Miami where the it's called the Ford
00:40:11
Open. And Craig Perry actually hold his
00:40:13
second shot on the last hold to win the
00:40:15
tournament, Australian player.
00:40:17
And apart from the prize money, there
00:40:20
was a Ford GT on offer. And I said to Ty
00:40:22
cuz I'm a big Ford guy and he was with
00:40:24
Buick at the time. So, you know, it's
00:40:25
that Ford versus Holden, Ford versus
00:40:27
Chevy. And I'm I'm a stoic Ford person.
00:40:30
And I said, you know, what are we doing
00:40:31
here playing in Dubai? You could be
00:40:33
playing in that tournament, winning that
00:40:34
car. You know, I'm a big Ford man. It
00:40:36
was just a bit of banter while we were
00:40:37
actually riding, peddling along on our
00:40:39
bikes, having a bit of banter. The next
00:40:41
year, he plays in the tournament. And um
00:40:43
you know, it was an epic duel with Phil
00:40:45
Mickelson. And on on the Sunday,
00:40:48
the play went outside the TV time that
00:40:52
so they didn't have time to do the
00:40:53
presentation after the they check the
00:40:55
cars. They do a very quick impromptu
00:40:57
presentation on the 18th green there.
00:40:58
And as we're walking off the green,
00:41:00
Tiger just chucked the car keys. No word
00:41:02
spoken. Just chuck the car
00:41:04
keys. So, you know, I had that Ford GT
00:41:08
delivered in Oregon where I was living
00:41:10
uh when I was in America, shipped home
00:41:11
here to New Zealand. So, it's a pretty
00:41:13
uh unique vehicle. In fact, there's only
00:41:15
two of them of that. Um they made 3,000
00:41:18
of those in that remake and uh there's
00:41:20
two of them in New Zealand, one of which
00:41:22
I have one of them. Yeah. How often you
00:41:24
take it out? Uh, not often enough, but I
00:41:28
it's um it's a collector vehicle, so the
00:41:30
less miles on it, uh, the greater the
00:41:32
value. Um, but I, yeah, I run it around
00:41:35
the block. It's very noisy and very
00:41:36
quick, and, you know, it's a hard car
00:41:38
not to put your foot down, so I have to
00:41:40
take it out on a bit of road where I
00:41:41
know there's going to be no cops around
00:41:43
and give it a blast. They'll be setting
00:41:45
up cameras in your neighborhood now.
00:41:47
Yes. So, it's worth um, according to the
00:41:49
book, like worth like half a million
00:41:50
now. US. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, it's a very
00:41:52
valuable car and that but um yeah, I
00:41:55
mean it'll stay in the family. I'll hand
00:41:56
it down to my son and he'll hand it down
00:41:58
and you know those sort of vehicles, you
00:42:00
know, in a hundred years times it'll be,
00:42:02
you know, an incredible amount of money
00:42:04
that it's worth. But it's just a
00:42:05
collector thing and and I see that as a
00:42:07
great uh family treasure. Yeah. I feel
00:42:10
like for you it's not um it's not so
00:42:12
much the investment, it's um the
00:42:14
sentimental value. Oh yeah, absolutely.
00:42:15
And it would never go outside the
00:42:17
family. It was just it started as a joke
00:42:19
in in a hotel in Dubai riding the bikes
00:42:21
to you know just chuck me the car keys
00:42:24
uh and I had uh a little bit of a thrill
00:42:27
in it and and um when I got the vehicle
00:42:30
and you know Tiger Phil Mickelson who
00:42:33
who defeated on the last hole there hit
00:42:34
a chip shot that realistically I don't
00:42:36
know how it didn't go in cuz Phil was
00:42:38
iring up that car too and he was with
00:42:40
Ford at the time. Uh, and I had sort of
00:42:43
I had great pleasure in saying to Phil,
00:42:45
"Well, Phil, it's too bad, but you
00:42:47
wouldn't have fit in it
00:42:49
anyway." So, Tiger and I had a great
00:42:51
laugh. He said, "Steve, you didn't say
00:42:53
that, did you?" I said, "Yeah, I
00:42:55
did, dude."
00:42:57
Um, yeah. I mean, did did Tiger secretly
00:43:00
love that stuff? Oh, look. Like, you I
00:43:03
mean, there's the the Phil staff. Um,
00:43:04
you Yeah, you called him a prick once or
00:43:06
something like that publicly. Um, even
00:43:09
other things non-filler related like you
00:43:10
kicking the camera when someone's
00:43:12
shutter went off um during a back swing.
00:43:14
Um, I suppose publicly he's sort of had
00:43:16
to be seen to sort of not, you know,
00:43:19
disapprove, but secretly he loved that
00:43:20
[ __ ] right? Oh, we we had some great
00:43:22
jokes and that. Look, I mean, I I like I
00:43:24
said, I tried to protect him, you know,
00:43:26
the best I could, but like you know, him
00:43:28
and Phil were great arch rivals. He he
00:43:30
knew um that once Phil got on a roll
00:43:34
with majors, he was going to be hard to
00:43:36
beat in that. And um and they became
00:43:38
great rivals. They weren't best of
00:43:40
mates. You know, you don't have to be
00:43:41
best of mates. They were rivals. And
00:43:43
it's not often that the the guy that you
00:43:46
have the most respect for and and you
00:43:48
think is going to be the the guy that's
00:43:50
is going to challenge you the most. You
00:43:52
know, it's unlikely that you're going to
00:43:53
be friends with him. And um but yeah,
00:43:54
little moments like that when when I
00:43:56
told Tiger that you when we had a great
00:43:58
laugh. It's such a [ __ ] line. So good.
00:44:01
Um, oh, so yeah, one more question on
00:44:03
that GT. I say how many KS on the clock,
00:44:06
do you know? Uh, it's got 1,600 miles.
00:44:08
Unreal. Yeah. Still left hand drive.
00:44:11
Yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah. There you could
00:44:12
you couldn't change a car like that from
00:44:13
left hand drive to right hand drive.
00:44:15
Yeah.
00:44:17
That's very low miles, isn't it? Yeah.
00:44:19
Yeah. Well, it is the thing though that
00:44:22
that the less miles they have and uh a
00:44:24
vehicle like that when you if you did go
00:44:26
to sell it, you've got to give Ford the
00:44:27
first chance. That's part of the deal.
00:44:29
You got to give them the first option to
00:44:30
buy it back. But the less miles it's
00:44:32
got, the better condition it's in. And
00:44:34
um yeah, that's just that that's how
00:44:36
those cars are judged by the mileage and
00:44:38
the condition. Yeah. Um there's another
00:44:40
story in the book about you dropping a a
00:44:42
yardage book into a portaloo. So um like
00:44:47
first what is a yardage book? How
00:44:49
important is it? And was there any way
00:44:50
you could have, you know, fished it out?
00:44:54
Well, I did fish it
00:44:55
out, but uh a yardage book is is a memo.
00:45:00
It is a diagram of the hole, a very
00:45:02
accurate diagram of the hole with all
00:45:03
the measurements. So, you know, how far
00:45:05
from the tea to the bunker, from the
00:45:07
bunker to the green, all the
00:45:08
measurements on the green is it's a
00:45:09
catty's bible. Uh when I first started
00:45:12
cadding, we made them ourselves. And
00:45:15
that was the the the art of catting is
00:45:17
has severely been diminished over the
00:45:19
years that because we had to make those
00:45:21
books ourselves. And it took hours to do
00:45:23
that. For instance, uh the very first
00:45:25
time I went to St. Andrews uh in 1980 to
00:45:28
make a yardage book. I think it took 14
00:45:30
hours from memory to actually compile a
00:45:32
yardage book accurately and get every
00:45:35
bunker in that book and everything you
00:45:36
need to know. Now you just turn up and
00:45:38
buy one of these books. So, you know,
00:45:40
like and and and we have, you know,
00:45:43
green reading devices and uh lasers that
00:45:45
shoot the distances and stuff. So, u but
00:45:48
as far as Yeah, I did drop a yardage
00:45:50
book one morning. Um it it was in
00:45:52
Florida and it was a very hot morning.
00:45:54
Fortunately, no one had been into the
00:45:55
toilet. It had been cleaned out and it
00:45:57
was just clear blue water. It was a
00:45:58
really hot morning and I got that out
00:46:00
quickly and and as we were walking
00:46:01
along, I'd open each page under the
00:46:03
morning sun hoping it would drive it. It
00:46:05
was very embarrassing moment. Oh, that's
00:46:07
a that's a good explanation. I sort of
00:46:08
imagined like a festival at the end of
00:46:10
the day. Oh, no, no, no, no. It was
00:46:11
during play.
00:46:13
Um Oh, yeah. Michael Jordan gets a few
00:46:16
mentions in the book. Uh you talk about
00:46:17
him and Tiger being hilarious on the
00:46:19
golf course together.
00:46:21
Yeah. Can you elaborate on that? Well,
00:46:23
Michael's just the ultimate competitor.
00:46:25
Um, just like Tiger. Absolutely hates to
00:46:28
lose. And he he plays, you know, like I
00:46:31
used to joke with Michael that, you
00:46:32
know, you play more than Tiger does. I
00:46:33
mean, you know, if he can play 72 holes
00:46:35
in a day, he would. And one day, uh, I
00:46:38
was cing for Tiger or not C like with
00:46:40
with Tiger. Uh, they played 54 holes at
00:46:43
Madina one day, just went round and
00:46:45
round and round. And the reason why they
00:46:46
kept going around because Michael got
00:46:48
further and further down and just kept
00:46:49
double doubling up, doubling up,
00:46:50
doubling up. You know, he he's well
00:46:52
known for his gambling. Uh he's not an
00:46:54
addict, but he just loves to gamble and
00:46:56
he loved to gamble on the golf course
00:46:57
and and he's a very good player. And um
00:47:00
you know, the banter between them two
00:47:01
was hilarious uh when they played golf.
00:47:03
And two incredibly gifted athletes and
00:47:07
two incredible desires to win. And
00:47:10
whilst out in the golf course, it's
00:47:12
Tiger's domain and not Michael's domain
00:47:14
because obviously if you step onto a
00:47:15
basketball court and try and compete
00:47:16
with him. Well, there's no handicap in
00:47:18
basketball, he's just going to knock you
00:47:19
over like a fly. But on the golf course,
00:47:21
he's got a handicap and he can compete
00:47:23
against Tiger and he wanted every scent
00:47:24
he could get out of him. What sort of
00:47:26
stakes? Oh, they're playing for big
00:47:28
stakes. I mean, it's not for me to delve
00:47:30
into that, but they're playing for big
00:47:31
stakes and that, you know, $1,000 a
00:47:33
whole sort of stuff, but which, you
00:47:34
know, a big deal. Yeah. If you're a
00:47:36
billionaire, that's nothing, right? Like
00:47:38
it was never about the money. just the
00:47:40
the guy that could at the end of the day
00:47:41
that had to buy the drinks and and you
00:47:43
know that was a special moment whether
00:47:45
it would be Tiger or Michael and cigars.
00:47:47
Yeah. Yep. Yeah. No, Michael loves that
00:47:49
cigar. Tig Tiger not while he was
00:47:50
playing, but Michael he he's got that
00:47:53
scar and he's got that swagger and you
00:47:55
know you can't sort of he his charisma
00:47:58
is just you know second to none that
00:48:01
I've met and you know you if the moment
00:48:03
you give him a bit of banter he's just
00:48:05
right back with the right line and that
00:48:07
um very clever and I can imagine him on
00:48:09
the basketball court in his heyday um he
00:48:12
would have been a hard guy to navigate
00:48:13
because he's got all the answers. Yeah.
00:48:16
Have you seen The Last Dance TV series
00:48:18
on Netflix or Yeah, absolutely. When you
00:48:20
got it when you when you know somebody
00:48:22
personally and you've had a bit of an
00:48:24
insight uh with someone like that, you
00:48:26
you can't help but like looking at that.
00:48:28
Yeah. I mean, just a you know, I mean,
00:48:30
what what a gifted guy. I mean, tried
00:48:32
baseball for a little bit uh went back
00:48:34
to basketball and and and and uh carries
00:48:37
a very low handicap. I mean, you know,
00:48:38
just those guys are incredible. Some of
00:48:40
these sportsmen, not just the the sport
00:48:42
that they make a living at, but they can
00:48:44
play other sports. Yeah, you you can see
00:48:46
why those two um like bond today because
00:48:49
they're I mean there's a lot of
00:48:50
parallels between them. Very different
00:48:51
sports, but you very very similar
00:48:54
mindsets I guess and um you know
00:48:56
uniqueness in terms of their ability.
00:48:57
Well, look, I'm sure you know Michael's
00:48:59
had a word into Tiger's Air from time to
00:49:01
time and and assisted him greatly in in
00:49:04
and modeling himself become the athlete
00:49:05
he became.
00:49:07
There's another story um in the book.
00:49:09
Uh, so you're staying on Tiger's boat
00:49:12
privacy and um Roger Fedra dingies in
00:49:15
for for dinner or whatever. It's just
00:49:17
the most surreal stories. It's crazy.
00:49:19
So, who who else is at the dinner? Is it
00:49:21
just the three of you? It's or is there
00:49:23
a bunch of people there? Yeah. No. So,
00:49:25
when they um used to have the World Golf
00:49:28
Championship event in Miami, um the tour
00:49:32
the Kiscane tennis tournament was on at
00:49:34
the same time. I think the I don't
00:49:36
recall it was the first week or second
00:49:37
week. So Roger was in town in Miami the
00:49:39
same the golf tournament was in town the
00:49:40
same time as the tennis tournament. Uh
00:49:42
and Roger and his wife had come over
00:49:44
onto the boat one night for dinner. It
00:49:46
just be Tiger and his wife and myself
00:49:48
for dinner. And um yeah it was
00:49:50
fascinating. I I was very fortunate to
00:49:54
meet a lot of those people like um that
00:49:56
Tiger Wayne Gretzky and another and uh
00:49:59
Ken Griffy Jr. and some of these players
00:50:01
and I was never afraid to ask some of
00:50:02
these guys, you know, how do they get to
00:50:05
be so good? what you know how do they
00:50:08
practice this that and the other but the
00:50:09
the common thing between all these guys
00:50:12
is just not so much how much you
00:50:14
practice but how you practice you know
00:50:16
you've got to make every shot hit counts
00:50:19
and that doesn't mean matter whether
00:50:20
you're on the golf course or you're on
00:50:22
the practice and that's one of the
00:50:23
reasons why Tiger became as good as he
00:50:26
was because every shot he hit had a
00:50:28
meaning to it a lot of players just get
00:50:29
on the if they go and practice for three
00:50:30
or four hours they just stand there
00:50:31
hitting balls they might chat to their
00:50:33
mates for a half an hour make a phone
00:50:35
call for 10 minutes or you know da da da
00:50:37
when Tiger practiced every shot he hit
00:50:39
had a purpose. It had you know had a
00:50:40
meaning to it. he was trying to hit a
00:50:42
particular shape or he was visualizing a
00:50:44
shot for a particular hole and there was
00:50:47
there was concentration to every shot
00:50:48
was just wasn't okay hit a ball place
00:50:51
another you know you know it's like you
00:50:52
go to the drive range you hit one get
00:50:53
another one hit one hit one there was
00:50:55
none of that it was so that the not like
00:50:58
I say not so much the time but the
00:51:00
effort that went into it and and you
00:51:02
know when I was talking to Roger about
00:51:04
his success and how how he got to be so
00:51:06
great it's the same story you know he he
00:51:09
said he didn't practice as much as other
00:51:10
players but those practices, every
00:51:12
practice had a meaning to it. He was
00:51:14
thinking about a match that he was
00:51:15
coming, the kind of shot he was trying
00:51:16
to practice, the type of spin he was
00:51:18
trying to put on the ball, how he's
00:51:19
trying to execute the shot. So, there
00:51:21
was thought that goes into every shot.
00:51:22
And you know when you you when you look
00:51:24
at that uh what makes some of these guys
00:51:27
so good is you know what's the
00:51:29
difference between Roger Fedra a Wayne
00:51:31
Gretzky a Tiger Woods between the other
00:51:33
guys is they can execute on Sunday or
00:51:36
not in our case it's Sunday and tennis
00:51:38
would be Sunday but they can execute the
00:51:40
shots under the highest amount of
00:51:42
pressure and why is that because they've
00:51:43
put themselves under that pressure in
00:51:45
their own space when they're practicing
00:51:47
they visualize they're hitting the
00:51:49
second shot to the masters or Michael's
00:51:51
making that last bucket, you know, at
00:51:54
the buzzer and that sort of thing. They
00:51:55
they play that over and over. So, when
00:51:57
they actually have to come and do it,
00:51:59
the muscle memory takes over and they
00:52:00
can do it. It's a fascinating thing. And
00:52:03
uh there's a lot to be said for how you
00:52:05
practice.
00:52:06
Yeah. There's a saying I really like. I
00:52:08
don't know who it's um attributed to,
00:52:09
but um the saying is um perfect practice
00:52:11
makes perfect. Yeah. Proper preparation
00:52:13
prevents poor performance. The five Ps.
00:52:15
And I live by that saying that it
00:52:17
doesn't matter what sport you do. If you
00:52:19
prepare properly and accurately for what
00:52:22
you're trying to do, you'll succeed.
00:52:23
Yeah. Did Did you Is this just knowledge
00:52:26
that you've picked up along the way with
00:52:28
these champions that you've worked with
00:52:29
or did you sort of have this like like
00:52:32
pre-orman? Oh, no. No, not not pre-
00:52:34
Norman. No, you just you just like you
00:52:37
know I when you are as fortunate as I
00:52:40
was to be on the tour at a very young
00:52:42
age and I knew I was fortunate based on
00:52:44
how you know looking around like all
00:52:46
these other guys I'm counting with are
00:52:47
old and I'm out there one of the
00:52:48
youngest guys out there. Well I was the
00:52:49
youngest when I started uh and and and I
00:52:53
quickly you know wanted to be different
00:52:55
and I thought collecting notes and just
00:52:57
taking all this information and
00:52:58
listening in and that but yeah Greg Greg
00:53:00
was a big one on the you know on the
00:53:02
five Ps. Proper preparation prevents
00:53:04
poor performance and um yeah that's you
00:53:08
know it's a it's a great motto to live
00:53:10
by.
00:53:12
Yeah he he's yeah we haven't really
00:53:14
talked about him but he's amazing. How
00:53:15
old is how's Greg Norman now? He he's
00:53:17
ripped out. He's in incredible shape.
00:53:19
Yeah. So Greg just had his uh 70th I
00:53:22
believe uh just recently. Yeah. I mean,
00:53:25
yeah. Um, you know, another wonderful
00:53:27
athlete that's had an amazing career and
00:53:29
obviously, uh, has had a lot of, uh,
00:53:31
been in the news a lot in the last years
00:53:33
with the introduction of the Liv Tour,
00:53:34
which he had run, uh, the first two
00:53:36
seasons of the Liv Tour, got that up off
00:53:38
the ground and was the front man for
00:53:40
that. So, yeah, he's had, you know, an
00:53:42
incredible career and now he's involved
00:53:44
with the um, the Olympics. They're
00:53:46
coming to Australia in another couple of
00:53:47
Olympic cycles. Yeah. Yeah. So, um,
00:53:50
yeah. Like CEO or director or something?
00:53:52
Yeah. Well, I mean, he's obviously had
00:53:54
huge experience with putting this live
00:53:56
league to tour and it's a worldwide
00:53:58
thing and that. So, um, golf's included
00:54:01
in the Olympics and will be in
00:54:02
Australia. So, yeah, he you know, look,
00:54:04
Gre Greg's one of the most prized
00:54:07
Australian athletes of all time and that
00:54:08
and, um, you know, he'll he'll be a huge
00:54:11
asset to the organizing committee there
00:54:13
with his knowledge and and his
00:54:15
popularity and and, um, it'll be great
00:54:17
for the Olympics. Yeah. Was that the
00:54:20
first private plane you went on, Greg
00:54:21
Norman's? Yeah. Yep. Yeah. So he he had
00:54:23
his own plane. When was this? In the
00:54:24
80s. Yeah. So Yeah. No one had private
00:54:27
planes back then, right? Oh, a few of
00:54:28
them did, did they? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
00:54:30
So, yeah. No, look look, a lot of the
00:54:32
guys that make a tremendous amount of
00:54:34
money, not not just in golf, but in all
00:54:36
these sports there, that they they use a
00:54:38
plane. It's it's a tax write off for a
00:54:40
lot of them. They make so much money and
00:54:41
and it makes like if you consider if
00:54:43
you've got a family and a couple of kids
00:54:44
and a trainer and a caddy and a coach
00:54:46
and a manager, all that and you got your
00:54:47
own plane that as opposed to getting
00:54:49
five or six air tickets and that. But
00:54:52
yeah, it's a convenience thing that in
00:54:53
America u very few of the pros that play
00:54:56
the tour. They don't have their own
00:54:57
planes personally, but they buy into
00:55:00
these companies where they buy hours off
00:55:02
these companies, these, you know, quite
00:55:03
executive jet NetJets and a few of these
00:55:05
companies that you can buy hours off. So
00:55:08
you, you know, you buy 100 hours and you
00:55:10
just ring up and say, I want to go from
00:55:11
here to here on this day and that plane
00:55:12
will pick you up and take you there. And
00:55:14
uh it's just a sheer thing. But um yeah,
00:55:17
pretty uh when you look back now and
00:55:20
you're flying on private planes, my son
00:55:22
recently or but when I last cattied for
00:55:24
for Adam and he's got his own plane too
00:55:26
and and and um my son Jet had the chance
00:55:30
to ride for few hours on a private
00:55:32
plane, he he thought that was pretty
00:55:34
cool.
00:55:36
Yeah. Sorry about these. Um, the these
00:55:37
are probably inane questions, especially
00:55:39
for someone as low-key as you, but I'm
00:55:40
just intrigued and I'm asking these on
00:55:42
behalf of myself and anyone else that
00:55:44
will never get to go on a private plane.
00:55:45
Um,
00:55:46
but yeah, it's badass, right? Yeah.
00:55:50
Well, I mean, the the ultimate private
00:55:51
plane uh outside of what they call a
00:55:53
bisjet is a G5, a GFream 5. There's a
00:55:56
Gulf Stream 1 2 3 4 5. Golf Stream 5 is
00:55:58
the is the choice of champions if you
00:56:01
like. And Tiger's got a G5 and Adam's
00:56:03
got a G5. Um Arnold Palmer had one, Jack
00:56:07
Nicholas had one. There's not uh but
00:56:09
that's that's there's actually a thing
00:56:10
called a bisjet which is like a 737
00:56:13
decked out privately um which some of
00:56:16
the
00:56:17
um teams use like the you know like
00:56:21
we've been on the Orlando Magic plane
00:56:22
one time so they they have a setup and
00:56:25
that but like as far as an individual
00:56:26
person having a private jet a G5 is the
00:56:28
ultimate uh jet and you know I've been
00:56:31
fortunate to cave two guys that have a
00:56:32
G5. So, uh, it's a pretty nice way to
00:56:35
travel. Yeah. Is it Is it hard to go
00:56:36
back to commercial? Even like business
00:56:38
class commercial after Oh, there's no
00:56:40
comparison.
00:56:42
Yeah. So, so, um, in the book you talk
00:56:44
about sometimes you're on um, Tiger's
00:56:47
Jet and you know, he's got friends or
00:56:48
there's a conversation going on, so you
00:56:50
just sort of disappear to the back of
00:56:51
the plane. What's the layout like? Is it
00:56:53
like 12 seats, eight seats? Oh, they
00:56:55
configurate, you know, they they you can
00:56:57
configurate the plane however you want
00:56:59
in that. So e each person might have a
00:57:01
different configuration when they
00:57:02
purchase a plane like that. But um it
00:57:04
easy accommodates 10 people. Yeah. And
00:57:07
has four beds. And who who was usually
00:57:10
on there? Tiger yourself, Tiger's
00:57:12
manager. Yeah, that's basically it.
00:57:14
Yeah. Tiger's wife if she was coming
00:57:16
along and that it's a very very uh there
00:57:19
was never a case of who's sitting where.
00:57:21
Everyone knew where their place was and
00:57:23
it was a small select thing. Tiger,
00:57:25
unlike a lot of the athletes in his
00:57:27
position, always had a small group of
00:57:29
people. Had a manager, a coach, um, and
00:57:33
a trainer, and that's about it. Yeah,
00:57:34
very small group. A lot of a lot of
00:57:36
these guys have extra people. Um, but
00:57:38
no, he liked to have a small group.
00:57:42
Um, yeah, something that else that's
00:57:44
referenced in the book that I'd
00:57:45
forgotten about it completely. Um, so in
00:57:47
2005, Tiger finished second in the US
00:57:49
Open. Um, the year that Cambo, Michael
00:57:51
Campbell, won. Um, so you're cattying
00:57:54
for Tiger. Um, it's basically Tiger
00:57:56
versus um, one of our local heroes.
00:57:59
Yeah. How's that for you? Yeah. Well,
00:58:01
look, it's mixed emotions. Look, I would
00:58:05
say that's my ultimate cadding dream.
00:58:08
Um, and that only got to happen a couple
00:58:10
of times. Uh, firstly, uh, with Grant
00:58:13
Weight at the Canadian Open, uh, and
00:58:16
secondly with Michael Campbell at
00:58:18
Pinehurst. And um and you know in fact
00:58:21
um you know this year is the 20th
00:58:24
anniversary uh of Michael's triumph at
00:58:27
at Pinehurst. And right or wrongly, I
00:58:30
said at the time that, you know, I
00:58:32
thought it was the greatest sporting
00:58:34
achievement by any New Zealander. And I
00:58:35
wasn't taking anything away from Bob
00:58:37
Charles's victory in the 63 Open
00:58:39
Championship or, you know, Sir Edman
00:58:41
Hillary climbed Mount Everest. But, you
00:58:44
know, just get considering that a local
00:58:46
Kiwi boy from Tahi Bay that grew up uh
00:58:49
on a golf course with sheep around the,
00:58:51
you know, fences around the green with
00:58:52
sheep on the golf course uh took down
00:58:55
the number one player in the world in
00:58:56
his prime at the US Open. Um, you know,
00:58:59
that was uh a pretty gifted moment and
00:59:03
it was a lot of thing that a lot of one
00:59:06
thing about that tournament that most
00:59:07
people don't know is Tiger stood around
00:59:11
for the presentation. um which no one
00:59:15
ever would do when they finished
00:59:17
second. Tiger knew the story of Michael
00:59:20
and he had the utmost respect for that.
00:59:22
He obviously knew that Michael and I
00:59:23
were friends and Michael's caddy,
00:59:25
Michael White, uh known as Sponge, a New
00:59:27
Zealander here from New Plymouth that
00:59:29
was cing for Michael at the time. Uh him
00:59:31
and I are great mates. Um and Tiger
00:59:34
stood around for the presentation. Um
00:59:37
you know, which he would never do and no
00:59:39
one that's finished as runner up. They
00:59:40
are not required at the presentation.
00:59:41
and he he was there for the presentation
00:59:44
and um that was a very special moment
00:59:46
for me. It just kind of told me how much
00:59:48
he respected uh the bond that we have
00:59:51
between New Zealanders and um yeah
00:59:54
that's something that went probably you
00:59:55
know unnoticed there. Did Tiger make a
00:59:58
habit of doing that like if Right.
01:00:00
Right. the only time he ever did it. And
01:00:02
and you know, like I said, um he just
01:00:04
had the utmost appreciation of Michael's
01:00:06
upbringing
01:00:07
um and his background and what what he'd
01:00:11
accomplished and he he was there for the
01:00:12
presentation. It was a special moment.
01:00:16
Yeah. I suppose that says a lot about um
01:00:19
your relationship with Tiger and what
01:00:20
you meant to Tiger rather, you know, he
01:00:22
probably didn't really know Michael
01:00:23
Campbell from a bar of soap, right? No,
01:00:25
no. I mean he just he was another player
01:00:27
but you know he he he knew the
01:00:28
camaraderie between us Kiwis and yeah
01:00:31
look it was just an incredible moment. I
01:00:33
mean, Michael took down Tiger in the
01:00:35
power, you know, in the when he was at
01:00:37
the power of his, you know, the peak of
01:00:38
his form and that was an unbelievable
01:00:40
achievement. And um, you know, it's
01:00:42
incredible. Like, that's the last major
01:00:45
wouldn't have had. We've only had two
01:00:46
and, you know, we're producing a lot of
01:00:48
good players and, you know, who's to
01:00:49
know when the next one is, but you know,
01:00:51
1963 to 2005 and here we are 2025.
01:00:54
That's another 20 years gone past. It
01:00:56
just shows you how difficult major
01:00:58
champions are to win. you know, for
01:01:00
Michael to do what he did was a special
01:01:02
moment in sporting history here in New
01:01:04
Zealand. Yeah. What's Cambo doing these
01:01:06
days? It's a name you don't hear much
01:01:07
about. Eh, yeah, Michael has a uh golf
01:01:10
academy in Spain. Um uh where he
01:01:12
teaches, the Michael Campbell Golf
01:01:14
Academy. And uh more recently, he
01:01:16
started to get back playing a little bit
01:01:17
on the European Senior Tour. Um they
01:01:20
have a a tour. It's not a big tour
01:01:22
unlike the uh Champions Tour in America,
01:01:24
but he has got back to playing a little
01:01:26
bit and and actually playing a little,
01:01:29
you know, found a little bit of form
01:01:30
last year in a number of tournaments.
01:01:31
So, yeah, it's great to see. Um
01:01:35
something else in the book, um the the
01:01:37
sheep shagger stuff. Have Have you um
01:01:40
So, you've got like a a man cave at
01:01:42
home, like a is it a billion billyard
01:01:44
room? Yeah. Yeah. Um have you got a the
01:01:47
photo there of the sheep shagger photo?
01:01:48
Yeah. I don't know where, you know, we
01:01:50
always had the, you know, someone else
01:01:53
gave Tiger the, you know, the sheep jag
01:01:55
and thing and I always said to don't
01:01:56
knock until you've tried
01:01:58
it. And somehow he managed to get a
01:02:01
photo put together of myself and a
01:02:06
sheep. Um, referring to his comments. I
01:02:09
mean, we have a great laugh, but we had
01:02:11
a great laugh over that. But, you know,
01:02:13
oh, you used to call me you sheep shag
01:02:14
and mother this and you sheep shag and
01:02:16
mother that. And my reply, don't knock
01:02:18
until you
01:02:19
try. God.
01:02:22
Yeah. And he even um at a key moment
01:02:24
during the 2008 US Open um he called you
01:02:27
a sheep shagger. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I was
01:02:29
kind of wishing him to
01:02:31
maybe perhaps not continue on the
01:02:34
tournament. I thought it could be
01:02:35
detrimental to his career if he kept
01:02:37
going given the pain that he was in and
01:02:39
the agony and so forth. But that Yeah.
01:02:41
So that sheep shag and explicit came out
01:02:44
there very very loudly and clear.
01:02:48
That's so good. E that's awesome. Um
01:02:50
there's a quote from you in the book. Um
01:02:52
Tiger knew he was in great form and I
01:02:54
felt the only thing that could stop him
01:02:56
from winning was poor catting.
01:02:58
Yeah. So sometimes
01:03:01
um I I I worked out this through time
01:03:05
and keeping all my statistics. It was an
01:03:08
incredible statistic that if Tiger hit
01:03:10
65% of the fairways and didn't three
01:03:13
putt, you couldn't beat him. And all my
01:03:16
records would tell me that uh that I
01:03:19
compiled that that was 100% true. So
01:03:22
sometimes when he was in, you know,
01:03:23
unbelievable sublime form, the only
01:03:26
thing that could prevent him winning
01:03:27
would be would be me, you know, if if
01:03:29
there was some bad club selection, some
01:03:31
bad advice. So even that sometimes put a
01:03:34
an added pressure on because there was a
01:03:36
lot of weeks where you know if you
01:03:39
watched him in the practice rounds and
01:03:40
practice on the practice um there was
01:03:43
just no way that he wasn't going to win
01:03:44
the tournament. And the best example
01:03:45
that was at the 2000 US Open I mean he
01:03:49
he if there was ever a time when you say
01:03:51
you've got a golf ball of string that
01:03:53
was it practice was just absolutely out
01:03:56
of this world. He was hitting every shot
01:03:58
absolutely perfect, hitting it to
01:04:00
exactly how he was trying to do. Uh the
01:04:03
practice rounds was just out of this
01:04:05
world how good he played. And you know,
01:04:07
then it becomes a case of the only thing
01:04:09
can happen here is if I make some bad
01:04:10
mistakes here and so forth. And uh Adam
01:04:13
Scott when he won the Masters in 2013
01:04:16
was exactly the same way. He played his
01:04:18
practice rounds. There were only two
01:04:20
nine-hole practice rounds. Uh, and we
01:04:23
myself and his coach talked him into
01:04:25
only playing nine holes to the fact that
01:04:27
we didn't want him to lose his form. It
01:04:29
was so good. And it's the same thing.
01:04:31
Then you're under pressure yourself
01:04:32
because you're the only one that can
01:04:34
change things here. You know, he's going
01:04:36
to hit the shots. You got to make sure
01:04:37
you give him the right advice and you
01:04:39
got the right club in your hand. So that
01:04:40
adds a different dimension sometimes
01:04:42
when that happens. That's a nauseating
01:04:44
amount of pressure. Oh, look, you know,
01:04:46
there's pressure anyway. when you like
01:04:48
catting for Tiger, his
01:04:50
only a successful week is just a win and
01:04:52
if you don't win and and and you you go
01:04:54
a number of weeks or a long period
01:04:56
without winning and you know we had a
01:04:58
couple of streaks there or periods
01:04:59
during the majors where he didn't win a
01:05:01
major for some time and that and you
01:05:02
know that pressure was getting more and
01:05:04
more every time. So you know catting for
01:05:06
a guy like that is um you know
01:05:08
incredible amount of pressure.
01:05:10
Yes. So there's um a phrase I learned in
01:05:12
the book um it's called a catty's trophy
01:05:14
which is um the flag. So you you win a
01:05:17
tournament and you get to you've got
01:05:19
like a little implement like a little
01:05:20
tool 10 mil spanninner ring spanninner.
01:05:23
So you can't just like rip it off or cut
01:05:25
it off. You need to Yeah. Well, I mean
01:05:27
it it was uh you know you're with a good
01:05:28
golfer if you need to carry that
01:05:29
spanner. Well, that was a bit of a joke
01:05:31
there because quite often when a player
01:05:33
wins a tournament um you you'll read in
01:05:36
a lot of publications what's in the
01:05:38
player's bag from that week and you know
01:05:40
I was the only one that was actually
01:05:42
carrying a 10 mil ring spanner because I
01:05:44
needed it so often. But yeah, a caddy's
01:05:46
trophy. The player gets a trophy and a
01:05:47
caddy's trophy is the flag on the 18th
01:05:50
green which you um take off and that's
01:05:53
your trophy. So um you know I've
01:05:55
collected those from day dot. So you got
01:05:57
so many of these things framed. Um well
01:06:00
I had a I had them all up on the wall
01:06:03
but you know they just kept coming in.
01:06:07
They were coming and coming and coming.
01:06:08
You know I've had 150 wins as a caddy.
01:06:11
So there's no there's no wall big enough
01:06:14
to put them up in. But um more recently,
01:06:16
so I've taken all the major championship
01:06:19
flags and had those um done very nicely
01:06:22
and then all the remaining flags put
01:06:24
into a big binding book.
01:06:27
Um you know, starting back and then just
01:06:29
through the years. Um, yeah. So, I've
01:06:32
put them all into a book, but the ones
01:06:34
the most meaningful ones, um, you know,
01:06:37
when I first started catting, you know,
01:06:39
you you don't know that what you're
01:06:40
going to what's ahead of you as far as
01:06:42
you just hope that one day you might be
01:06:44
able to get to America and one day you
01:06:45
might be able to caddy in the majors.
01:06:46
That's what you're always hoping to do.
01:06:48
Um, and then, you know, time goes on,
01:06:52
you're actually catting in the majors,
01:06:53
then you start winning them and then,
01:06:54
you know, you've won all of them
01:06:55
multiple times. It's, you know, even now
01:06:57
when I'm thinking about it's like, jeez.
01:06:59
I mean that's just unbelievable. Um
01:07:01
there's no other caddies won all four of
01:07:03
them and I've won all four of them
01:07:04
multiple times. Um you know three or
01:07:07
more all of them. Um and yeah so I have
01:07:10
all those flags and and Tigers signed
01:07:13
them all obviously and and and most of
01:07:15
them have a comment written on them uh
01:07:17
about that tournament. Um, so you know,
01:07:20
a lot of fun uh memories to have those
01:07:23
all in one room to look at uh and and
01:07:25
reflect and you know, quite often I'll
01:07:27
just go into that room and on my own and
01:07:29
just sort of turn around and it's um you
01:07:31
know, you look back to a young kid that
01:07:34
started catting at Paumu and just
01:07:36
catting for members of the golf course
01:07:38
which I absolutely cherish for, you
01:07:39
know, 50 cents a round and became $2
01:07:41
around and I sort of had a knack for it
01:07:43
and then there some guys might pay me $5
01:07:45
and the other caddies were getting $2
01:07:47
and then there was a guy that offered me
01:07:48
to pay me $20 and the other caddies are
01:07:50
still getting two and this cing this
01:07:52
cadding is fun. And then you know you
01:07:54
look back then um you know to to go on
01:07:57
to do uh to caddy on the tour. Yeah. One
01:08:01
of these um one of these flags on these
01:08:03
Caddy's trophies is signed to Stevie.
01:08:06
Thank you for your friendship. Love
01:08:08
always Tiger Woods. Um yeah. How do you
01:08:11
like when you when you look at that now?
01:08:12
If you're in that room and you look at
01:08:13
that now and you read that message like
01:08:15
how how does it make you feel now? Oh
01:08:16
yeah. Like I mean amazingly, you know,
01:08:19
one thing when these notes started going
01:08:23
back and forth between Tiger, you know,
01:08:25
I just sign off as cheers Steve or have
01:08:27
a good night Steve or he always put love
01:08:29
on it. And uh you know, I found that
01:08:30
quite interesting between two two guys.
01:08:32
But um we look we had a unique bond. I I
01:08:36
know that he had the utmost respect for
01:08:38
what I was doing and and I had the
01:08:40
utmost respect what he was doing. And
01:08:42
yeah, when I step into the room and and
01:08:44
look at some of those notes, um it's
01:08:46
very, you know, it's very meaningful.
01:08:47
And look, as I've alluded to earlier,
01:08:51
when players and caddies fall out,
01:08:53
particularly players at that level, you
01:08:54
just go your own way. That's just what
01:08:56
it is. I mean, it's like a transaction
01:08:59
in a way. Yeah. I mean, it's like you
01:09:01
look at rugby coaches, you know, that
01:09:02
they coach teams and that and then they
01:09:04
go and they have nothing to do. That's
01:09:05
just it's just it's not anything
01:09:06
personal. It's just what happens. Um,
01:09:10
and you know, I I kept the relationship
01:09:14
between Tiger and I, particularly on the
01:09:16
golf course, as business-like as it
01:09:17
could be. And and I spent, you know, I
01:09:20
spent a great time, a lot of time off
01:09:22
the course with him in buildups to major
01:09:24
championships. But, you know, I I
01:09:26
resisted all the time when like Tiger
01:09:28
would constantly ask uh my wife and I to
01:09:30
come out to dinner with him and we'd
01:09:32
always have other plans cuz I didn't
01:09:34
want to get too friendly with the guy
01:09:35
because I wanted to make it, you know, I
01:09:38
made that mistake with Greg. I got too
01:09:40
friendly with him. But when you make it
01:09:42
a work, a work proposition every day and
01:09:44
that you're going to be more committed
01:09:45
to what you do. And if you get a little
01:09:47
bit friendly and become too matey, um
01:09:50
you won't have the same, you know,
01:09:52
drive. I don't believe.
01:09:54
But you sort of did end up falling in
01:09:56
the same trap as what you did with Greg
01:09:58
like Yeah. In the book you sort of talk
01:09:59
about that. So you and Greg Norman hit,
01:10:01
you know, they sort of crossed this line
01:10:02
and became like really good friends and
01:10:04
then the same thing did end up happening
01:10:05
with with Tiger.
01:10:07
Um yes. So like like messages like that
01:10:10
on the
01:10:11
flags. I don't know. I suppose you can
01:10:13
look back now like enough times passed
01:10:14
and feel like a sense of pride with it
01:10:16
or whatever. But there must have been a
01:10:18
period of time there where it felt
01:10:19
bittersweet or something or you know
01:10:22
look amazingly you would think that Dom
01:10:24
and everybody would think that but just
01:10:27
having you know ci picked up tiger's bag
01:10:32
um you
01:10:33
know there's no time frame or no
01:10:36
definite time frame when you cry for
01:10:38
somebody and you know when you split um
01:10:41
that's the way it is. So no, there was
01:10:42
there was never any of that thought um
01:10:44
which probably a lot of people would
01:10:46
find surprising and that you know it was
01:10:47
surprising that we did split and there
01:10:49
was a little bit of you maybe two or
01:10:51
three weeks where oh you know I didn't
01:10:53
see that coming. Um but no that's just
01:10:55
that's the relationship between a player
01:10:57
and a golfer that's just sorry a player
01:10:59
and a caddy that's the way it is. Maybe
01:11:01
I'm just too sentimental. I'd still want
01:11:03
a birthday card from time to time or
01:11:06
just how you doing just checking in text
01:11:08
once in a while. Yeah. What about other
01:11:10
memorabilia? So, you've got like um uh a
01:11:13
a Quantis red bag from Greg Norman, some
01:11:17
signed bank notes from Jack Nicholas.
01:11:18
Yeah, just Oh, little tippets here and
01:11:20
there. You know, each player that I've
01:11:22
key for um I've kept one of their bags
01:11:24
and it's always uh from a winning
01:11:26
tournament and just, you know, got a bag
01:11:28
from Greg and Ray Floyd and a couple of
01:11:31
bags from Tiger
01:11:33
um and a bag there from Adam and that.
01:11:36
So yeah, just a a good showpiece in in
01:11:39
the memorabilia room and um yeah, some
01:11:42
they had a when Jack played his last
01:11:44
round or last time he was going to
01:11:46
compete at St. Andrews, the Royal Bank
01:11:48
of Scotland had a commemorative£5 note
01:11:50
which I make sure I get my hands on a
01:11:52
few of those and um you know was
01:11:54
fortunate enough to know Jack well
01:11:56
enough to get him to sign one of those.
01:11:57
So um I hope I never get to the point
01:12:00
where I need to spend that £5.
01:12:04
Yeah. Well, what's he like? The Golden
01:12:06
Bear. Yeah. Oh, look, he you know, he he
01:12:08
he was like, you know, when you compare,
01:12:10
you know, as I mentioned before, you got
01:12:12
Arnold and Jack and Tiger and Phil.
01:12:13
That's probably, you know, the good
01:12:15
analysis of comparison, but um and Jack
01:12:17
was a hugely serious competitor just
01:12:20
like Tiger was. But, um an incredible
01:12:23
wealth of knowledge and um you know, I
01:12:25
was fortunate enough to when I was
01:12:27
caring for Greg, Greg played a lot of
01:12:30
practice rounds with Jack and and that
01:12:31
was who he looked up to. So, you know, I
01:12:33
was never afraid to quiz. Um, I think a
01:12:36
lot of these guys always had a a little
01:12:38
bit of respect me cuz I'm a kid from New
01:12:40
Zealand and I I never had any problem
01:12:43
quizzing these guys. Didn't matter who
01:12:44
they were. If I if there's some
01:12:46
knowledge or question I want to ask
01:12:47
these guys, I was never shy about asking
01:12:49
it. So, um, that was always a good
01:12:51
thing. Yeah. But he he was great. Had
01:12:53
quite a bit to do with him. He was a
01:12:55
fantastic player. My brother actually
01:12:56
got to caddy from him a couple of times
01:12:58
in Australia as well. So, that was fun.
01:13:00
A little bit of a connection there as
01:13:01
well. Unreal. So, so all this who who
01:13:04
gets to go into the memorabilia room?
01:13:06
Oh, not too many people. It's my That's
01:13:08
my man cave. And yeah, when we get a few
01:13:11
different guests come over that um I
01:13:14
guess couple of beers for a look. Yeah,
01:13:18
there's a pool table and that. Yeah,
01:13:19
it's a it's a Yeah, it's a funny thing,
01:13:22
you know. It's a very reflective kind of
01:13:24
room and um you know like in years as
01:13:27
every year goes by it's probably get a
01:13:29
you know a little bit more teary eyed I
01:13:31
guess. Yeah. Are you quite an emotional
01:13:33
guy? I feel like you you would never
01:13:35
have been an emotional guy. No certainly
01:13:37
wasn't when I was cing but uh when it's
01:13:39
all been said and done and you you know
01:13:42
time to reflect on is is huge. You know
01:13:44
like I said I was always it's next week
01:13:46
next week next week. You know Tiger won
01:13:49
the US Open in 2000 there by 15 shots.
01:13:51
one of the greatest ever performances.
01:13:53
Uh when you came out of the recording
01:13:55
room, the first thing he quizzed me
01:13:57
about was the um what was the story
01:14:00
about, you know, the the last hole there
01:14:01
with the one golf ball left. You know,
01:14:03
we had a great joke about that. The
01:14:05
second thing he said to me, Dom, uh I'm
01:14:07
going to play even better at St.
01:14:08
Andrews. That was the next tournament
01:14:09
he's playing was the open championship.
01:14:11
I'm going to play even ever I'm going to
01:14:13
play even better than I did this week,
01:14:14
Steve. I need you to get over there and
01:14:16
know every inch every blade of grass in
01:14:19
that golf course. So instead of coming
01:14:21
off the 18th green a and I had a couple
01:14:24
of mates there and I was returning back
01:14:25
to New Zealand. Um instead of having
01:14:28
this triumphant um victory and a
01:14:30
celebration to go with it, you know, now
01:14:31
I'm under the pump now cuz he's just
01:14:34
told me he's going to play even better
01:14:35
and I know he's going to practice and he
01:14:37
wants to win that tournament to you know
01:14:38
cuz he he's you know got his eyes on
01:14:40
this grand slam thing. Um so there's no,
01:14:43
you know, there's no relaxation. you
01:14:45
know, I came back to New Zealand for a
01:14:46
couple of weeks and and I'm just re, you
01:14:48
know, going over the course day and
01:14:50
night in my sleep thinking about the
01:14:51
course and how he's going to play the I
01:14:53
mean, so it was just relentless amount
01:14:55
of pressure.
01:14:57
I feel like you thrived on it though as
01:14:59
well as as well as what he did. Yeah.
01:15:01
You know, so you sort of like completely
01:15:02
bought into his vision or maybe you were
01:15:04
built the same way. So you weren't like,
01:15:05
"Fuck man, just give me a break. Let's
01:15:06
have some champagne and enjoy this
01:15:08
moment." You were like dialed in as
01:15:10
well. Correct. Yeah. And and look, you
01:15:12
know, I I I know admittedly I've said
01:15:13
this to my wife and that, you know, you
01:15:15
know, I probably as a husband and as a
01:15:17
father, I probably faltered there for a
01:15:19
little bit because I I brought into this
01:15:21
picture um of Tiger winning, you know,
01:15:24
19 possibly more major championships.
01:15:26
And I had that that was what kept me
01:15:28
going. I had that that moment. I could I
01:15:31
could see that moment in my head, if you
01:15:32
know what I mean. And then when that p
01:15:34
when that picture got smashed, um it was
01:15:38
hard to carry on. Um but yeah, so
01:15:43
your your um your other passion uh
01:15:44
Speedway. So there was this accident in
01:15:46
January 2005 where you um broke ribs um
01:15:49
and had a a hand hand injury that was so
01:15:52
severe there was like bones sticking
01:15:53
out. Um now you don't have to be a golf
01:15:56
expert to know that a hand is fairly
01:15:58
important for a caddy. Um, do when
01:16:01
something like that happens, like do you
01:16:03
sort of get told off by Tiger's
01:16:04
management or anything? Like Steve,
01:16:06
maybe you should watch what you're doing
01:16:07
in your downtime or No. Tiger Tiger
01:16:10
thought it was great that I was an
01:16:11
adrenaline junkie and he even the so the
01:16:13
story behind that that was on a Saturday
01:16:15
night at Bay Park Speedway. He was
01:16:17
playing the next week in Hawaii and the
01:16:21
first thing that the surgeon told me
01:16:25
um following I had to have my um finger
01:16:29
sewn back on. I I del gloved my finger
01:16:31
and I had to have my finger sewn back
01:16:32
on. Um and when I was left the hospital,
01:16:35
these two things you can't do. One is
01:16:37
fly into a swim with your broken ribs. I
01:16:40
didn't say a word, but that was um on
01:16:42
Saturday night, released from hospital
01:16:44
Sunday morning. Monday morning I'm on a
01:16:46
flight to Hawaii and the first thing I
01:16:48
did went to Hawaii I went for a
01:16:50
swim and you know what I felt much
01:16:52
better for it and when I told Tiger he
01:16:55
just said you're just
01:16:57
unbelievable you're a savage the salt
01:17:00
water would have been good for it you'd
01:17:01
think abs well no it was the rib the rib
01:17:03
thing and and oddly enough um after
01:17:06
swimming I thought the ribs felt better
01:17:08
than they did so so much for the
01:17:09
doctor's advice so then um yeah April
01:17:12
2006 there's a great story in book um
01:17:15
Tiger Catti for you the morning of your
01:17:18
wedding. So bunch of boys went out for a
01:17:21
pre-wedding um round of golf and um he
01:17:23
he cied for you. How was he as a caddy?
01:17:25
Is he all right? Oh no. Yeah, we that
01:17:29
was um that was fantastic like you know
01:17:31
to have Tiger in my home club Southhead
01:17:33
Golf Club and u you know we kept it as
01:17:35
quiet as we can and um to have him you
01:17:38
know my mates out there playing and he's
01:17:39
carrying the bag and winding them all up
01:17:41
was pretty good fun.
01:17:43
Yeah, that must have been a like a huge
01:17:45
like buzz, you know, for you to do for
01:17:47
your mates that were there. Yeah. Oh,
01:17:49
yeah. Yeah. We by the time we came back
01:17:51
round to the clubhouse, there's a hole
01:17:52
by the clubhouse. Um, and there's, you
01:17:55
know, a number of people had cottoned on
01:17:57
the Tiger Woods was out on the golf
01:17:59
course. So, um, people were very good.
01:18:01
They did they did they respected what
01:18:02
was going on, but there was a number of
01:18:04
people gathered around the clubhouse and
01:18:05
there's a whole the 12th hole tea off
01:18:07
right by the clubhouse. And, you know,
01:18:10
not people, you know, Tiger have a hit.
01:18:11
Tiger had a Tiger have a hit. So he
01:18:13
pulls out a club. It was a 3-wood and
01:18:16
it's a par four. It's about 300 m and
01:18:18
just knocked straight on the green. No
01:18:20
practice swing, no nothing. And he
01:18:21
turned around and said, "Is that good
01:18:22
enough?" It was a classic Tiger moment.
01:18:26
Yeah. Cuz he he um he sort of encouraged
01:18:29
you to propose to your wife. Yeah. Yeah.
01:18:32
He Well, wasn't that I wasn't going to
01:18:35
propose to her, but um I guess he he
01:18:37
thought it was, you know, I don't know.
01:18:39
It's a funny story. He he sort of
01:18:41
thought he needed me to make that leap
01:18:43
first before he could make it. I I found
01:18:45
that quite strange, but that's how it
01:18:47
was. And then and then he then he
01:18:49
roasted you for a redneck proposal.
01:18:52
Yeah. I mean, I guess that uh that was
01:18:55
pretty redneck, as he would call it. I I
01:18:57
I put the proposal on my race car and
01:19:00
drove and taped it to my race car in a
01:19:03
in a in a warm-up uh at one of the
01:19:06
speedways in that. Yeah. So you you
01:19:08
could probably think that's pretty
01:19:09
redneck. Yeah. Oh, and I love that. And
01:19:11
you you watched um Yeah. There's
01:19:13
something in the book which um kind of
01:19:14
gave me goosebumps. You guys you got him
01:19:16
into rugby. You got him watching a bit
01:19:17
of rugby together. Um he was a fan of
01:19:20
this is when Tana was leading the All
01:19:22
Blacks. He was a big Tana fan. Yeah. So
01:19:24
when the every year we were at the Open
01:19:26
Championship, the All Blacks would be
01:19:28
contesting the tri series. Um so every
01:19:31
Saturday morning um Sunday morning, the
01:19:35
All Blacks would be on TV. Um, so I was
01:19:38
always says, "Tiger, I said, you know,
01:19:39
Tiger, you got to play good this week.
01:19:41
The All Blacks are on TV at 9:00 in the
01:19:43
morning that and I want need to watch
01:19:44
the whole match. So, you need to play
01:19:45
good." So, there's always a bit of
01:19:46
banter that and he loved watching that
01:19:48
hacker. Um, you know, Tiger got to the
01:19:51
week after my wedding, we had a
01:19:52
celebrity stock car race and I had some
01:19:54
celebrities and motorsport people
01:19:56
driving stock cars and which Tiger was
01:19:58
involved and Tana was there. So Tiger
01:20:00
got to meet Tana was a huge thing and uh
01:20:03
you know Tana gave him a signed all
01:20:04
black jump and Tiger thought that was
01:20:06
pretty cool and he's got that up in his
01:20:07
house. So um but yeah know he he
01:20:10
absolutely admired watching that
01:20:12
harker and you know he enjoyed and he
01:20:14
enjoyed watching the game and he you
01:20:16
know we'd sit there and he'd explain a
01:20:19
little bit about it then he you know he
01:20:20
loved it. Yeah you cuz you were quite a
01:20:23
handy player before you discovered golf
01:20:24
and caddying. Yeah, I mean I was
01:20:26
fortunate enough to I played for New
01:20:28
Zealand school boys and um I played in a
01:20:30
test match or sorry as a curtain a
01:20:32
curtain razor to a curtain raiser at
01:20:34
Athletic Park for New Zealand school
01:20:36
boys when the British Lions played and
01:20:38
uh all the boys that played in that
01:20:40
game, the New Zealand team were allowed
01:20:42
into the locker rooms afterwards and I
01:20:44
managed to get uh a pair of socks from
01:20:46
one JPR Williams, the Lion sock. So
01:20:50
pretty special moment but yeah, no I I
01:20:52
loved rugby like any kid growing up. I
01:20:53
think any kid growing up here, I mean,
01:20:55
it was um you know, rugby and stock cars
01:20:57
were the things I loved here. Not it
01:20:59
wasn't really golf, but then um started
01:21:02
catting and yeah, the the rest is
01:21:04
history.
01:21:06
Um yeah, the book together we roared. Um
01:21:09
as I was getting towards the end of the
01:21:11
book, I thought, oh, they're not going
01:21:12
to talk about they're not going to talk
01:21:13
about the scandal, the infidelity, and
01:21:15
stuff like that. But sure enough, that
01:21:16
is that is addressed um and it's
01:21:18
addressed respectfully and um with, you
01:21:20
know, your side of events, which I think
01:21:22
is really cool. and something which
01:21:24
surprised me. So that happens. Then
01:21:26
there's a period of time where Tiger's
01:21:28
not playing and you're sort of, you
01:21:29
know, apart and there's sort of email
01:21:31
correspondence a little bit. Um then
01:21:33
when you finally connect, um you you
01:21:35
sort of dress him down and give him a
01:21:37
piece of your mind. Yeah, I thought that
01:21:39
was important to do so and and um you
01:21:42
know, I wasn't really sure how I was
01:21:44
going to go about that. And um I
01:21:47
actually talked to Lori Mains a little
01:21:49
bit uh someone who I had great faith in
01:21:52
to give me some good advice and he told
01:21:54
me how I should go about that. And you
01:21:56
know I think there's a certain number of
01:21:58
things need to be addressed. We don't
01:21:59
need to go into it, but there was a
01:22:00
certain number of things to be addressed
01:22:01
and how to go about it and I did that
01:22:03
and um yeah, it was just never quite the
01:22:06
same returning uh after, you know,
01:22:08
Tiger's time away from the game in that
01:22:10
period and that. But um yeah, look that
01:22:12
it's just it's just part of it. Were you
01:22:15
were you nervous? Like um I've just
01:22:18
finished reading the um or listening to
01:22:19
the Ivan Clearary audio book and um he's
01:22:22
got a saying like hard conversations
01:22:23
don't have to be hard conversations, but
01:22:25
the reality is often they are like you
01:22:28
you know it's a there's a definite power
01:22:30
imbalance between the caddy and the
01:22:31
golfer. You were you [ __ ] yourself
01:22:33
before that conversation? There's not a
01:22:34
hard conversation that the difficulty in
01:22:37
a conversation like that is how the
01:22:39
other person's going to perceive it and
01:22:41
are they going to override you? Are they
01:22:43
going to hear you out? you know, so you
01:22:45
when you have a conversation like that,
01:22:46
you've got a number of things that you
01:22:47
want to address and you want to get all
01:22:50
those points across the table, but
01:22:52
sometimes that doesn't happen because
01:22:54
the other person goes in a completely
01:22:56
different tangent and takes your mind
01:22:57
away from what you were trying to
01:22:58
achieve. Uh, fortunately, Tiger, he he
01:23:01
he listened to everything I had to say
01:23:02
and and we sorted our situation right
01:23:04
there and then. Um, and that was on the
01:23:06
way to his first tournament back. I we
01:23:09
were on the plane uh heading to Augusta
01:23:11
for his first tournament back. Um, and I
01:23:15
knew straight away, uh, when I got on
01:23:19
the golf course that it just wasn't the
01:23:20
same. Um, that I guess, like I've
01:23:23
mentioned, that picture had been
01:23:25
shattered and I was seeing it through a
01:23:28
different lens and it just wasn't the
01:23:29
same. And I knew I didn't know how long
01:23:33
it was going to last, but I knew it
01:23:34
wasn't going to last forever at that
01:23:36
point. Um, that's just what it is.
01:23:38
though. But from your perspective, I
01:23:40
feel like that conversation was a very
01:23:42
important um thing to get off your chest
01:23:44
because that time was like very
01:23:46
difficult for you. There were like all
01:23:48
sorts of accusations of like guilt by
01:23:50
association. Um yeah, you talk about the
01:23:53
New Zealand media having a go at you in
01:23:55
the in the the book. Yeah, it was a a
01:23:57
bloody It sounds like it was a
01:23:58
challenging time. Oh, 100%. I mean, and
01:24:01
and and I concur 100%. If anybody is
01:24:05
with somebody as much as as I was with
01:24:08
Tiger, you would actually think that I'd
01:24:11
have some knowledge of what was going
01:24:12
on, but he knows how hard aheaded and
01:24:15
how um sort of stubborn I am and how my
01:24:19
morals are that I just wouldn't allow
01:24:22
something like that to happen. Um and
01:24:24
that's exactly what it was. And yeah, it
01:24:26
was important for me to get my message
01:24:27
across. I did. Uh and he respected that
01:24:30
100%. um you know that one of the great
01:24:33
things about our bond and what made it
01:24:35
so special is when you when someone like
01:24:37
Tiger Woods you know he he he's looked
01:24:39
upon as you know sort of a superstar but
01:24:42
like to me they're just he's just
01:24:43
another person I'm cing for and I don't
01:24:47
I'm not a yes man and a lot of these
01:24:49
guys that are sportsman everyone just
01:24:51
bows down to them and they're just yes
01:24:53
man yes sir yes sir that's not me you
01:24:55
know I tell it like it is I do it like
01:24:58
it needs to be done and I don't sugar
01:25:00
coat anything. So, he had the utmost
01:25:02
respect for that.
01:25:05
Yeah. So, so that incident, it sounds
01:25:07
like it was um sort of just a just a a
01:25:09
one-sided dressing down, like not even
01:25:11
an argument. And um yeah, for Tiger,
01:25:13
that was probably at the end of a fairly
01:25:15
challenging few months where it felt
01:25:16
like the whole world was having a having
01:25:18
a crack at him. Um yeah. Did So, did
01:25:21
like with that in mind, like did you
01:25:22
feel a little bit guilty afterwards or
01:25:24
Oh, no. No. This is something, you know,
01:25:26
I talked to Lori Mains about it. when
01:25:27
would the time be right and and how
01:25:29
would I go about it and this sort of
01:25:30
thing and and taking that all in
01:25:31
consideration. Um but you know uh it
01:25:34
needed to be done before I stepped back
01:25:36
onto the golf course. So that I chose
01:25:38
the moment and and proceeded. Yeah. What
01:25:41
what about um like previous arguments
01:25:43
style with you two because you don't get
01:25:45
to have like a 10 11 year relationship
01:25:47
with someone without some sort of
01:25:48
adversity. like um did would you guys
01:25:51
get things out in the open and then just
01:25:53
like park it and move on or was it a
01:25:55
silent treatment thing or you get it out
01:25:58
there? I had I'd only ever addressed
01:26:00
Tiger Down once before. We were on the
01:26:03
we're on the golf course at Augusta and
01:26:06
we had a bit of an argument on the third
01:26:07
TE. I'd been out in the morning and
01:26:09
scouted the golf course. So on the third
01:26:11
TE it's a par4 and sometimes they move
01:26:13
the tea up on Sunday which makes it
01:26:15
possible to drive it on the green. Uh I
01:26:17
was out Sunday morning and and and and
01:26:19
noted that there's a few holes where you
01:26:21
want to know where the tee is so that
01:26:23
you can tell the player a couple of par
01:26:24
three T's. You want to tell them is it
01:26:26
on the front front tee or the back tee
01:26:28
so they can have a shot. You can tell
01:26:30
them because you can go out there,
01:26:31
you've got the pin placement, you know
01:26:32
exactly how far the shot is. And you can
01:26:34
tell the guy, okay, uh the fourth hole
01:26:36
is one of those holes, you know, how far
01:26:37
the fourth hole is playing today, how
01:26:38
far the 12th hole is playing today,
01:26:40
where the tea is, and so they can hit
01:26:42
those shots on the range and practice.
01:26:44
Uh, so the third TE was moved up and um
01:26:46
I told Tiger that in the range and there
01:26:48
was no conversation about it on the
01:26:49
range. I just said, "Hey, they moved the
01:26:51
tea up in three today. You can knock it
01:26:52
on the green." And we got there and uh
01:26:55
he didn't want to hit driver and I just,
01:26:57
you know, he was at the time he was, I
01:26:59
think, four shots back and it was, you
01:27:01
know, he needed to hit driver. You can
01:27:02
get it on the green. I didn't see why he
01:27:03
didn't want to. It was an easy shot, big
01:27:05
wide fairway. I mean, nothing, you know,
01:27:08
that's if you if you don't hit a good
01:27:09
shot, you end up left and okay, every
01:27:12
player took driver that day and he
01:27:13
didn't want to. And anyway, he ended up
01:27:14
taking driver cuz I coached him into it
01:27:16
and he hit a terrible shot. Absolute
01:27:18
[ __ ] shot over into the right trees made
01:27:20
bogey and basically that was the end of
01:27:22
the tournament and he was bitter and he
01:27:25
was carrying on carrying on carrying on
01:27:27
and he was sulking away and carrying on
01:27:29
and you
01:27:30
know reading me the ride at then we got
01:27:33
up the ninth hole. It's a big wide
01:27:34
fairway, so I didn't think anything
01:27:37
about possibly anyone hearing what I was
01:27:40
having to say, but amazingly one media
01:27:42
person did. But I dress them down and
01:27:44
and like gave him an absolute earful. Um
01:27:48
a and you do so knowing that if he takes
01:27:51
it the wrong way, he might fire you
01:27:52
after the round. But it needed to be
01:27:53
said and I did. And uh after the round,
01:27:56
he said, "Hey, thanks very much for
01:27:58
that. I deserve that." And it was good.
01:28:00
But once again, and and but one meaty
01:28:02
guy for some I don't know how he heard
01:28:05
me. I mean, I must have been louder than
01:28:06
I thought because I gave him a good
01:28:07
bollocking. Um and then of course, you
01:28:10
know, the next the very following day,
01:28:11
oh, you know, the the relationship
01:28:13
between Steve and Tiger's nearly over
01:28:15
this, that, and the other. It's like,
01:28:16
oh, here we go.
01:28:18
Sometimes a rigorous debate debate is
01:28:19
healthy and it can't be taken out of
01:28:21
context. Yeah. Yeah. But um he he truly
01:28:23
respected that and and and that's what
01:28:25
one of the things why we got on so good
01:28:27
because nobody else in his organization
01:28:28
would do that. He's tiger, which I'm not
01:28:30
going, you know, they the people just
01:28:31
don't do that.
01:28:33
Yeah. And I I don't know if you
01:28:35
necessarily appreciate the amount of
01:28:37
courage it has to have these difficult
01:28:39
conversations, you know, with with
01:28:41
someone like Tiger that's um surrounded
01:28:43
by by Yesmen. You are older than him,
01:28:45
but not not like older older like you.
01:28:47
You're not like old enough to be his dad
01:28:49
or anything. You're slightly older, I
01:28:50
guess.
01:28:51
Um yeah. Where did that cat come from?
01:28:54
that sort of I don't know that moral
01:28:56
compass or just that that sense of you
01:28:59
doing what's right and saying saying
01:29:00
what needs to be said regardless of the
01:29:02
consequences. Tell it like it is. I mean
01:29:03
that's just you know you learn that in
01:29:04
school. You it's a school of hard
01:29:06
knocks. You just tell it like it is. I
01:29:07
mean that's just um I I guess if I had
01:29:11
to put my finger on it um you when I was
01:29:13
cing for Greg he, you know, he he was
01:29:15
always upfront and just told it like it
01:29:17
is. I mean he was he was very
01:29:20
controversial throughout his whole
01:29:21
career but he just told it like it is.
01:29:22
And you know, I guess I probably learned
01:29:24
from that. You just tell it like it is.
01:29:25
And I didn't, you know, walking up that
01:29:27
ninth hole, I I said to myself, you
01:29:29
know, this might be the last time I g a
01:29:30
gusta, but this guy needs to be told he
01:29:32
needs to be put in his place. And I did
01:29:33
it.
01:29:35
It's so awesome. That's so God, you must
01:29:38
be proud of that. Oh yeah. And that that
01:29:40
you know that makes your bond even
01:29:42
greater because you know, Tiger knows at
01:29:45
the time that I was right. He needed to
01:29:46
hit driver on that hole. if he was going
01:29:48
to win the tournament that Sunday, he
01:29:49
needed to possibly try and knock it on
01:29:51
the green there and make three or four.
01:29:52
You know, I mean, he hit a [ __ ] shot.
01:29:53
You can't blame me for hitting a [ __ ]
01:29:55
shot. It was a terrible shot. Um, and if
01:29:57
he was going to win the tournament, he
01:29:58
he knows at the end of the day when he
01:30:00
thinks back, you know, there was no
01:30:02
reason not to hit a driver. Um, and I
01:30:06
was right and he he deserved a good
01:30:07
bollockin because he carried on like a
01:30:09
spare chop, a pork chop for, you know,
01:30:11
six or seven holes.
01:30:13
So, um the um the firing um comes sort
01:30:17
of after that. Um we talked about that
01:30:18
in the podcast last year. So, Tiger was
01:30:21
out injured. Uh you asked him if you
01:30:23
could um caddy for this guy Adam Scott.
01:30:25
Uh Tiger said yes and then he changed
01:30:27
his mind. Um something I didn't realize
01:30:29
until I read the book. So, your wife
01:30:30
Kirsty, she she told you she thought
01:30:33
that was a bad idea. It would end badly.
01:30:35
Yeah. So, um look, if I if I had have
01:30:38
ever changed one thing in my whole
01:30:39
canning career, that would be it. I
01:30:41
should have listened to Kirsty then. I
01:30:42
mean, yeah. I just Or always should
01:30:46
always listen to the wife. Yeah. Yeah.
01:30:47
Oh, look. I just, you know, I didn't uh
01:30:50
I hadn't caddy for a while and
01:30:53
um there was some uncertainty whether
01:30:55
Tiger was going to play um at the 2011
01:31:00
uh US Open. And I'd I left here on the
01:31:04
Saturday under the intention that he was
01:31:06
playing in the tournament and I took my
01:31:08
father-in-law and another friend with
01:31:09
me. And so we'd flown to the west coast
01:31:12
to Los Angeles and upon arriving there I
01:31:14
find out he's not playing in the
01:31:15
tournament. Um
01:31:19
and within an hour or so uh I got a call
01:31:22
from Adam Scott and said could you come
01:31:24
car for me? So I ran it by Tiger said
01:31:26
yeah no problem. So we carried on to
01:31:28
Washington DC and then the next thing I
01:31:30
get a message from Tiger's manager
01:31:31
saying Tiger would rather you not cry in
01:31:33
the in the US Open for Adam. Um and and
01:31:37
when I look back I understand why at the
01:31:38
time I didn't give it enough thought but
01:31:40
you know I'm a sort of loyal sort of
01:31:42
bloke and I told him yes and I didn't
01:31:43
you know Mark sort of said well you know
01:31:46
might mark the end of the road for you
01:31:47
and at the time I thought well you know
01:31:49
why would it mark the end of the road
01:31:51
I'm just going to go and caddy for a guy
01:31:52
for a week I'm already here I brought my
01:31:53
father-in-law and a friend over to watch
01:31:55
the tournament it's going to be a bit
01:31:57
funny to go to the tournament and not be
01:31:58
cattying in it you know and they're
01:31:59
coming to watch and I'm not going to
01:32:01
walk around and my wife said no if a
01:32:03
tiger doesn't want you to caddy you
01:32:04
shouldn't c and I should have listened
01:32:06
to it because, you know, arguably I'd
01:32:08
probably still be crying from to this
01:32:09
day. But, um, yeah, it was just at the
01:32:12
time I made the wrong decision and and
01:32:14
and that's that's where it all unfolded.
01:32:16
So, um, that's just way it is.
01:32:21
Yeah. With the reflection of time, like,
01:32:23
do you think if it wasn't then it would
01:32:24
have been it would have been something
01:32:26
shortly after or Oh, look, I I I knew
01:32:29
when I first went back to the first
01:32:30
tournament that that I just didn't have
01:32:32
the same feeling about it. Um and and
01:32:36
who knows how long it was going to last,
01:32:37
but um yeah. Hey, look, you know, it
01:32:41
happened then and that's the way I just
01:32:44
didn't see that coming. But yeah, you
01:32:47
was that a confusing period for you
01:32:49
after that? Like just being being so
01:32:50
must be weird like just being so close
01:32:52
with someone and then it's like a steep
01:32:53
drop off a cliff. Yeah. Yeah. I mean it
01:32:55
was Yeah, it was. But then, you know, I
01:32:57
straight onto the bag of Adam Scott and
01:32:59
and then um you know, so you you you you
01:33:03
turn your focus from one player and then
01:33:05
it was it was Adam was a guy that I had
01:33:07
great respect for and often wondered why
01:33:09
he didn't compete more better or play
01:33:12
better in the major championship. So
01:33:14
that became a new goal. So straight
01:33:15
away, you know, that the goal of the the
01:33:18
the the dream or the goal of trying to
01:33:20
eclipse Jack's record of 18 majors,
01:33:22
catting for Tiger, now it was a complete
01:33:25
new goal is, okay, I'm Cing Van Scott.
01:33:27
He's never won a major. How can we get
01:33:29
together and win a major championship?
01:33:31
So, that was a uh a real energizer and
01:33:34
and provided great uh motivation and
01:33:37
desire to try and get him over the line
01:33:39
in a major championship. So that was a
01:33:41
really um you know really great period
01:33:44
in my career cing for Adam. Yeah. And
01:33:47
yeah you were bursting with pride
01:33:49
whenever I did well too. E like yeah
01:33:52
it's it's hard to explain but maybe it's
01:33:54
um like an Australasian thing or Well
01:33:56
yeah no no no Australians won Augusta
01:34:00
and I'd go for Greg and Greg just that's
01:34:04
all he wanted to do was adorn that green
01:34:06
jacket. He just that's the tournament
01:34:08
that meant the most to him. That's the
01:34:09
one he wanted to win. and and and it
01:34:11
eluded him. Uh and to be on the bag for
01:34:14
the first Australian and to this point
01:34:16
the only Australian uh to put on that
01:34:18
green jacket. Um you know look
01:34:22
Australian New Zealanders we're all
01:34:23
together. You know we're down under
01:34:25
Australasians Oceanana what however you
01:34:28
want to describe us. Um that was just a
01:34:30
you know a huge amount of pride to be
01:34:32
catting for the first Australian or the
01:34:34
first person from Australasia to put
01:34:36
that green jacket on. Um it was it was
01:34:39
uh an incredible amount of um thrill
01:34:42
that was. And it was kind of ironic cuz
01:34:45
the first person that called me, not the
01:34:48
first person, but first person I
01:34:49
actually spoke to when I answered my
01:34:51
phone was Greg.
01:34:54
Yeah. So um that tournament had a like a
01:34:57
little asterisk to it. Yeah. How was it?
01:34:59
How was that for Greg? Yeah. Well, he
01:35:02
bit of sweet. Yeah. No, no, because the
01:35:04
conversation was because, you know, Adam
01:35:07
had that part to win the tournament and
01:35:09
Greg read my lips. So, you know, Adam
01:35:12
said to me, Stevie, what do you think?
01:35:14
Cup out to the right, right to left, put
01:35:16
cup out the right. And and my exact
01:35:18
comment were that's not even [ __ ]
01:35:20
close. It's two and a half cups with a
01:35:22
bit of speed. So, you know, he's read it
01:35:24
this much and and I've read it like
01:35:27
double and a bit more than what he's
01:35:28
read it. and Greg read my lips and um
01:35:32
you know Tiger uh sorry Adam knocked
01:35:35
that putt straight in. Um you know it
01:35:37
was a huge moment because that that's
01:35:38
what makes a good caddy. Most people are
01:35:40
just going to agree it's the Masters.
01:35:42
You you don't want to give guy a bit of
01:35:44
advice. He's got a putt to win the
01:35:45
Masters. You're going to give him some
01:35:46
advice and you're going against what he
01:35:48
says. That's what makes a great caddy. I
01:35:50
if if I'm wrong I'm wrong and it cost
01:35:52
him the Masters. Well, so be it. But I
01:35:54
mean, you know, I'm not going to not
01:35:56
stand there and not give my two cents
01:35:58
worth. and I did. He knocked it in, won
01:36:00
the Masters. So, it was uh Yeah, it was
01:36:02
a m You know, there's some moments
01:36:04
you'll never ever forget. And that
01:36:05
that's certainly one that's right up
01:36:06
there.
01:36:08
Got I can't imagine the anxiety you're
01:36:10
going through when he's lining up that
01:36:11
part after like listening to your
01:36:13
advice. There's really Look, it's funny.
01:36:17
You would think that, Dom, but you know,
01:36:19
whether it's the first hole Thursday or
01:36:21
it's the second half of playoff for the
01:36:23
Masters, you just do your job the same.
01:36:25
You don't take the situation into
01:36:27
account. It doesn't matter if it's if
01:36:29
it's just playing in the New Zealand
01:36:30
Open or it's the US Open, you know,
01:36:32
small tournament, big tournament, middle
01:36:34
of the road tournament. You do
01:36:35
everything the same. The process the
01:36:37
same. You can't let the situation get on
01:36:39
top of you. And that's what I was always
01:36:41
able to do. You know, I didn't think
01:36:44
think about what was ahead, what could
01:36:46
be, what might be in the moment and do
01:36:49
your job the same as you would do, you
01:36:51
know, if I was cing for you or catting
01:36:53
in the proam or cing for anybody. Just
01:36:55
do the job the same. So the moment never
01:36:57
gets a hold of you. Um I've seen so many
01:37:00
player and caddy failures coming down
01:37:02
the stretch because the moment can get
01:37:04
too much but you treat like from the
01:37:07
first hole Thursday to the 72nd hole
01:37:09
Sunday and whatever becomes after that
01:37:11
the same. Um you're not really going to
01:37:13
get um you know you're not going to feel
01:37:17
the pressure. I mean I'm not hitting the
01:37:18
stroke. I'm just giving you the best
01:37:20
available that I can give.
01:37:21
But keeping statistics and notes, I had
01:37:24
a note in my book that that putt. So I
01:37:28
have a little hole drawn where that is
01:37:29
and I've got an arrow which means over
01:37:31
here if you're putting that direction
01:37:33
that putt breaks more than it looks. The
01:37:35
ironic thing is Adam Scott would never
01:37:38
have had that putt because you that's a
01:37:40
pin that you don't challenge on Sunday
01:37:43
at Augusta. If you ask Adam Scott what's
01:37:45
the best golf shot he's ever hit would
01:37:47
be a second shot there and he wanted to
01:37:50
hit a seven iron there and just hit it
01:37:52
20 foot under the hole. Keep it under
01:37:53
the hole where Cabrera hit it and I said
01:37:55
no let's get it back to the hole there.
01:37:57
Let's take what we we we called it a
01:37:59
hold off six is how we describe the
01:38:01
shot. So it's a six iron like a 3/4 six
01:38:03
iron. Uh it's called a holdoff shot. Um
01:38:06
basically what that means is you you you
01:38:08
prevent the ball from going left. You
01:38:10
just you know hold on hard with the left
01:38:12
hand. It's a golf term.
01:38:14
uh and get that ball back there. But I
01:38:16
knew that he would never have had that
01:38:18
part. So I had that note in my book from
01:38:20
the 80s right from caring for Greg and
01:38:22
we're now 2013. That's how long I've had
01:38:24
that, you know, cuz I keep all the notes
01:38:27
and I knew that he wouldn't know that
01:38:29
and and I knew it breaks more than it
01:38:31
looks, you know. So that's keeping notes
01:38:33
and keeping data and keeping every
01:38:35
possible thing. Yeah. Would it be ever
01:38:38
worth releasing these these um like
01:38:40
caddy notes as some sort of a book or
01:38:42
would they not make sense to anyone
01:38:44
else? Oh, it would only make sense to
01:38:46
people that were playing in those
01:38:47
things, but you'd be giving away all
01:38:48
your all your IP all your IP.
01:38:52
Um yes. So 2021 um Tiger had this big
01:38:56
car crash in um California. I think he
01:38:59
was like going from a hotel to a golf
01:39:01
course. Um so you hadn't spoken to him
01:39:04
in like 10 years then. I think you you
01:39:05
bumped into him on a practice range in
01:39:07
2019 and it was a little frosty, a
01:39:09
little icy, a little awkward. So, where
01:39:11
were you in 2021? Were you on the road
01:39:12
with Adam Scott or were you at home? How
01:39:14
did you hear about that car crash? Yeah.
01:39:16
Um, I I was actually in uh I was at my
01:39:19
uh our house in the States at that
01:39:21
particular time and that. So, you know,
01:39:22
it was obviously deep concern because
01:39:24
there was no forthcoming information
01:39:26
straight away as to what his health
01:39:28
predicament was going to be. But um
01:39:30
yeah, I mean look, it's a real sad
01:39:32
moment cuz it's obviously impacted
01:39:34
his possibility of continuing on with
01:39:37
the march to to eclipse Jack's record,
01:39:39
which I hoped he did. Um I just whether
01:39:43
you know up until that accident
01:39:45
happening, I think there was still some
01:39:46
chance and that dream was still alive.
01:39:48
And you know, even though I wasn't on
01:39:50
the bag, I was just so hoping that he
01:39:52
would, you know, so that if he did get
01:39:54
to 19, I could say, well, you know, I
01:39:56
was on I was on the bag for 13 of those
01:39:58
19. Um but um I think that accident you
01:40:02
know obviously had a a big impact on his
01:40:05
on his um future and and his in his
01:40:08
body. So yeah it was sad but hey look uh
01:40:11
when you hear the description of the
01:40:13
accident it probably could have been
01:40:14
worse. So there's always a favorable
01:40:16
side to any outcome and and and um it
01:40:18
was you know from what I read and what I
01:40:20
saw of the pictures it was a pretty
01:40:21
severe accident. It could have been
01:40:23
worse. So yeah. But is it a surreal
01:40:25
feeling for you? here's this here's this
01:40:27
this this guy that you you know you love
01:40:28
and you you care about deeply. Um and I
01:40:31
suppose the instinct is to you know
01:40:33
reach out or send a message or send a
01:40:35
bouquet or whatever it happens to be and
01:40:36
you there's this barrier where you just
01:40:38
can't sort of get to him. Oh, like you
01:40:41
know I can get to him through his
01:40:42
management all the time and that but I
01:40:44
mean you know me and how many other
01:40:45
people can get um so forth but yeah look
01:40:49
I mean you know like whatever happens
01:40:51
like you know Tiger's mother passed away
01:40:53
recently and um you know I shared a
01:40:56
great bond with his his mother. She was
01:40:58
fantastic and um you know deeply
01:41:01
saddened as well. So it's just life and
01:41:04
that's what happens. You're so
01:41:06
philosophical about these things e oh
01:41:08
look yeah it is. I mean, you know, you
01:41:11
you you know, there's there's that
01:41:13
thing, Dom, and you would know very well
01:41:15
when you you know that half the the
01:41:17
glass half full, half empty. You know,
01:41:18
I'm a half full man, just like you are.
01:41:22
Yeah, I love that. Does odd you
01:41:24
mentioned before about Jack's record,
01:41:25
actually, you've mentioned it a couple
01:41:26
of times. Does it does it annoy you that
01:41:28
you and Tiger or even Tiger um didn't
01:41:31
get to it because that was like the big
01:41:32
goal you guys had. I was very clear from
01:41:34
day one. I I I dreamt about it all the
01:41:37
time, Dom, every day. Um, maybe not so
01:41:39
much when I was cing, but every day when
01:41:41
I was home in New Zealand, I I thought
01:41:42
about that every time. I had a clear
01:41:44
picture. I could I could picture it. And
01:41:47
I guess in my in my dreams and in in the
01:41:50
in the vision that I had, I could see it
01:41:52
happening at Augusta. And I I I'd played
01:41:54
it over and over my head. And that's
01:41:56
what motivated me every week, every
01:41:57
month, every year when I was counting
01:41:58
for Tiger is and every time when he
01:42:01
ticked one of those majors off, it was
01:42:03
one step up the ladder to that next one.
01:42:04
And I didn't have any doubt uh that he
01:42:06
was going to do it. and and and uh and I
01:42:08
think the rest of the world thought he
01:42:09
was going to do it and that was what
01:42:10
kept me going. And you know that the
01:42:12
moment that picture in my head was
01:42:14
shattered, it just was never the same.
01:42:16
Mhm. Yeah. It's unlikely to happen now,
01:42:18
isn't it? Oh, you know, it can't happen
01:42:21
now. So, it's and I don't believe
01:42:23
there'll ever be another player that'll
01:42:25
get to the position where we would even
01:42:27
talk about it. Domin, that's just how
01:42:28
special he was. I mean, you know, fast
01:42:31
forward 50 years down the line, you
01:42:33
know, there'll be no player that we'll
01:42:35
be talking about. um that it'll be in
01:42:37
that position to say whether Jack breaks
01:42:39
Jack's record. There's just there won't
01:42:42
be another athlete that come along or
01:42:43
not another golfer that come along that
01:42:45
could be so dominant in the major
01:42:47
championships like he was.
01:42:50
What what about legacy? Um yeah, like
01:42:52
how how do you think Tiger and and
01:42:55
particularly your partnership with Tiger
01:42:56
will go down in history? Oh, look. I
01:42:58
mean, you know, I
01:43:00
mean, however you look at it, you can
01:43:03
look at your partnership, you know, you
01:43:04
can, however you look at it, we won more
01:43:06
tournaments together than anyone in any
01:43:09
other partnership and won more majors in
01:43:10
our partnership. So, that speaks volumes
01:43:13
in itself right there. However you want
01:43:14
to look at it, but you can't take away
01:43:16
the amount of tournaments we won
01:43:17
together and in particular the amount of
01:43:19
majors we won together. Yeah. It was
01:43:21
like two It was like a perfect storm,
01:43:23
eh, like two worlds colliding at the
01:43:24
right time. It was Yeah. One of those
01:43:26
amazing partnerships. Yeah. Not
01:43:28
surprised you get misty eyed when you go
01:43:29
into your your billiards room. It's it's
01:43:32
really cool to reflect on this stuff,
01:43:33
eh? Oh, yeah. Look, um but like you
01:43:36
know, like as I said to you, um you
01:43:38
know, people I often get asked uh in a
01:43:41
in a in a public arena, I'm speaking
01:43:43
whatever, um what's your greatest
01:43:45
moment? And you know, most people are
01:43:47
looking for a story from one of the golf
01:43:48
tournaments. But when I tell them about
01:43:50
my wife and I have been involved with
01:43:51
the Starship Hospital and making that
01:43:53
donation, um, you know, you're very
01:43:56
fortunate to be able to give that money
01:43:57
away. And I've never done catting for
01:44:00
the money. I've never lived for the
01:44:01
money. I, you know, I I don't live
01:44:04
extravagantly. It's never ever been
01:44:05
about the money. It's been about
01:44:07
catting, but uh, and enjoying the job.
01:44:10
But to be able to be fortunate enough to
01:44:11
be able to do something like that and
01:44:13
make a significant impact on other
01:44:15
people's lives, that's the best moment
01:44:17
um my wife and I will ever forget.
01:44:20
Yeah. Yeah. I know you just said it's
01:44:22
it's never about the money. And in the
01:44:24
book you talk about how for Tiger it was
01:44:26
never about the money. Like he'd never
01:44:27
look at the at the the board afterwards
01:44:29
to see how much prize money he got. But
01:44:32
um were you aware of that stuff? So you
01:44:33
were getting 10% of whatever he won. So
01:44:36
if you're going down the 18th fairway on
01:44:38
Sunday and you know he's going to win,
01:44:40
are you thinking he gets a million
01:44:42
dollars so I'm going to get $100,000 I
01:44:44
can buy a new saloon car? It it just
01:44:47
never never ever you know never it was
01:44:51
never from day dot it was never about
01:44:52
the money. I mean it's just you know
01:44:55
money doesn't make you happy. You know
01:44:57
having love and having family make you
01:44:58
happy. Money doesn't mean anything. I
01:45:00
mean it's never meant anything to me and
01:45:01
that's why I've had no problem giving a
01:45:03
lot of it away.
01:45:05
Yeah. Were you you were financially
01:45:07
secure, I guess, before you even met
01:45:08
Tiger. Oh, yeah. I mean, I was
01:45:11
fortunate. You know, Ray Floyd was very
01:45:12
successful. Greg was very successful.
01:45:14
So, yeah. I mean, um, but like I said,
01:45:17
you know, it's never about the money,
01:45:18
but you know, I used to, we used to love
01:45:20
having jokes with Tiger when he'd start
01:45:22
playing badly and that he had this thing
01:45:25
which I've mentioned in the book about
01:45:26
TWW's car wash and he said, "Well, we'll
01:45:28
have TWW's car wash and you'll be the
01:45:30
guy cleaning the car, Steve." and and
01:45:32
you know he he'd get on the 17th hole of
01:45:34
a tournament in three part and I'd say
01:45:36
Jesus Christ Tiger that's a whole brand
01:45:38
new set of tires off me race car you've
01:45:40
just cost me there we you know we'd have
01:45:41
some banter but he didn't do it for the
01:45:43
money and I didn't do it for the money
01:45:45
you know we we did it for the love of
01:45:46
the game and and um chasing down that
01:45:49
ultimate goal and the um the joke TWW's
01:45:52
uh car wash that came about because you
01:45:54
guys both like this was a hobby outside
01:45:56
of golf you both love cleaning cars
01:45:57
which I found really odd yeah I when I
01:46:01
first met, you know, I I I love mowing
01:46:03
lawns and cleaning cars, which is, you
01:46:04
know, I guess that's a little strange. I
01:46:06
mean, it's two jobs that you do that
01:46:08
when you finished, you have a very good
01:46:10
self satisfaction when you've cleaned a
01:46:12
car. And I mean, I mean clean, I mean
01:46:14
detailing it and mowing the lawns to
01:46:16
perfection. And oddly enough, when I
01:46:17
first met Tiger, you know, here's a guy
01:46:19
that's, you know, wealthy beyond belief.
01:46:21
And he loves cleaning his car. So, you
01:46:23
know, we'd be cleaning his cars together
01:46:25
out uh at his place. And that's where
01:46:27
the joke of TWW's car wash. You know,
01:46:29
Steve, if it goes bad, TWW's car wash
01:46:31
and you're the man cleaning
01:46:32
cars. Um I I said on Instagram you were
01:46:35
coming and I asked if anyone's got any
01:46:36
questions. So there's a few random ones
01:46:38
here. Um someone wants to know um about
01:46:41
tall poppy syndrome. It's considered to
01:46:42
be like a Kiwi or an Australasian thing,
01:46:44
but um yeah, what are your thoughts
01:46:46
about tall poppy syndrome like
01:46:47
internationally? Is it is it a thing in
01:46:50
the States? No, it's a thing that's to
01:46:52
my knowledge is only in Australia and
01:46:55
New Zealand. Yeah, it doesn't exist
01:46:56
anywhere else.
01:46:58
Although, yeah, when Tiger had a scandal
01:47:00
like the Yeah, the med it seemed like
01:47:02
the media were trying to tear him down.
01:47:03
That in America, it's almost like they
01:47:05
want to tear you down but then try and
01:47:06
build you back up. I don't know if
01:47:07
that's tall poppy. That's just the
01:47:09
media. But no, tall poppy is something
01:47:11
uh that to my experience and to people
01:47:13
that I've talked about, it's just
01:47:14
something that's uh specifically evolved
01:47:17
in Australia, New Zealand. Yeah. Yeah.
01:47:20
We need to do better with that. E Oh, we
01:47:22
we absolutely that's something um Yeah.
01:47:24
I don't know how it how it all got
01:47:26
started and how we can change it, but
01:47:28
that'd be a long story for another day,
01:47:30
I guess. Part three. Uh, what's the
01:47:34
difference between confidence and
01:47:35
arrogance in professional sports? Well,
01:47:38
yeah. I mean, they go hand in hand
01:47:40
because somebody that's extremely
01:47:42
confident and and knows that they have
01:47:45
the ability to perform has some kind of
01:47:48
arrogance to them and that is somewhat
01:47:51
of an intimidation factor. So the the
01:47:53
arrogance and confidence comes together.
01:47:56
Um you know someone that's got an air of
01:47:59
confidence has to have a little bit of
01:48:00
arrogance as well. So they go hand in
01:48:02
hand. It's not something that someone
01:48:04
tries to be arrogant but to be
01:48:06
confidence and show some kind of
01:48:08
arrogance uh is is is definitely uh a
01:48:12
tribute to that person's ability to know
01:48:15
that they're going to perform.
01:48:17
Does Steve have any regrets or anything
01:48:19
he would do differently? Oh only only
01:48:21
one thing. Um, and that was at the um
01:48:26
199 I can't actually 1992 masters uh
01:48:30
with Ray Floyd. It's the only time in my
01:48:33
40 plus years of cadding that there's
01:48:36
something a thought that came to my
01:48:37
head. I didn't tell Raymond and
01:48:39
ultimately I believe I cost him winning
01:48:41
the Masters. He would have been the
01:48:43
oldest player to win a Masters, first
01:48:45
player at 50 to do so. And I I believe I
01:48:47
played a role in him. He lost in a
01:48:48
playoff to Felo. Uh, and I believe if I
01:48:51
had have said what I came into my head,
01:48:54
uh, I could have prevented that from
01:48:55
happening. That's my only regret. Oh,
01:48:57
did did I read about that somewhere?
01:48:58
Does he remind you of it? Um, you know,
01:49:00
when I used to stay with him, uh, he'd
01:49:03
say, "Steve, I could have had two of
01:49:04
these green jackets." I said, "Man,
01:49:06
they're really ugly. Why would you want
01:49:07
two of
01:49:09
them?" Um, if Steve could caddy for a
01:49:13
dream round, whose bag would he be hold
01:49:15
whose bag would he be holding and who
01:49:16
would make up the foresome? Uh my dream
01:49:19
round would be I'd be cing for Rory
01:49:21
Maroy and he would be playing with um
01:49:25
Adam Scott, Greg Norman, and Tiger
01:49:27
Woods. Why Rory?
01:49:30
Why not? He's just a an unbelievable
01:49:34
player, a guy that I love watching
01:49:36
playing golf. And um yeah, if if there
01:49:39
was a guy that I'd like to catch for, it
01:49:40
would be him.
01:49:42
Um what are your biggest flaws? My
01:49:45
biggest flaws? Um, biggest flaws is I
01:49:49
don't know how to relax. Uh, I I I'm not
01:49:51
a guy that ever sits down. I just keep
01:49:53
going, keep going, keep going. And and
01:49:55
and that drives my family around the
01:49:58
twist a little bit because a lot of
01:49:59
people like to sit down and relax and
01:50:01
that uh for me
01:50:04
um my when I go to heaven, that's when
01:50:06
I'm going to relax. So, I'm just I'm I'm
01:50:08
just always on to the next thing. Oh,
01:50:11
heaven. E that's optimistic. Um, there's
01:50:14
a uh I'm a bit like that. There's a term
01:50:17
for that, too. It's an active relaxer.
01:50:19
Just means you're always like your your
01:50:20
your version of relaxation is like doing
01:50:23
something like it's whether it's
01:50:24
detailing a car or 100%. I don't think
01:50:26
that's a bad thing either. You You're in
01:50:28
great shape. What are you now? 62. 62.
01:50:31
What do you do? What do you do? You
01:50:32
still work out? You you run? Um Yeah.
01:50:33
And I I I frequent the gym or we have a
01:50:36
gym at home, but I frequent the gym two
01:50:37
or three days a week. I like to row,
01:50:39
like to run, like to bike, uh and do a
01:50:42
lot of swimming. So yeah, I mean when
01:50:44
you get older, um it's, you know, you
01:50:46
like to keep yourself in some kind of
01:50:48
shape that that so that you can continue
01:50:50
to do the things that you love. You
01:50:51
know, I'm still trying to pursue
01:50:53
Speedway a little bit. I'm probably a
01:50:54
bit old in the tooth for that, but um if
01:50:56
I when I do race, you got to be in some
01:50:58
kind of shape. Oh, you're not too old.
01:51:00
Who's Who's the really old motor um
01:51:02
motor racing guy? Kenny Stewart. Is it
01:51:05
Kenny Stewart? Yeah. Yeah. He's What?
01:51:07
He's in his 80s. Yeah. Unbelievable.
01:51:09
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You're you're a Sorry,
01:51:11
Kenny Smith. Sorry. Kenny Smith. Yeah.
01:51:13
Um, what are your future goals?
01:51:16
My future goals is to just um support my
01:51:20
family the best I can and and basically
01:51:23
um yeah, I don't really don't have any
01:51:26
more goals that I'm chasing. Uh just to
01:51:28
basically enjoy life now, sit back,
01:51:30
relax, um enjoy life, and yeah, make my
01:51:34
family happy. Speaking of your family,
01:51:37
three words that family or friends would
01:51:39
use to describe you. Driven. Um, I say
01:51:44
driven, motivated, and um, yeah, loving.
01:51:49
That's awesome. Are you proud of
01:51:51
yourself? Well, I don't know if you look
01:51:53
at that. I think, you know, you're happy
01:51:55
with what you've done. I don't know. I
01:51:57
don't like the word proud. Um, I'm just
01:52:00
h happy to have been uh been able to do
01:52:03
what I want to do. And I think that's
01:52:05
important in life that you should make
01:52:07
it a goal to do what you want to do. Not
01:52:10
what you what others make you do, but to
01:52:12
do what you want to do.
01:52:15
Well, it's all worked out all right for
01:52:16
you, has hasn't it? Like 50 year career
01:52:18
like I mean if you pursued rugby, you
01:52:21
wouldn't have had the longevity you
01:52:23
could say. Yeah. No, it might have had a
01:52:24
few injuries long way. No, look Dom.
01:52:26
Yeah. Like if you want to use the word
01:52:28
proud. Yeah. Extremely proud and uh you
01:52:31
know, happy to be able to sit here and
01:52:32
share my story with you. Yeah. I I'm so
01:52:35
appreciative that you reached out and uh
01:52:36
we got together for part two of the
01:52:38
podcast. Um hopefully this isn't this
01:52:40
isn't this isn't the end. Hopefully
01:52:42
there's a part three. Yeah. Yeah. No,
01:52:44
look, we're Evan and I who's done we've
01:52:45
done the book together. We're extremely
01:52:46
excited about the book. Comes out April
01:52:49
the 1st on in in the shelves of stores
01:52:51
and it's will be available online before
01:52:53
that. But we're we're extremely proud of
01:52:54
it and um yeah, I think it'll give
01:52:56
people a really good insight into my
01:52:58
time cing for Tiger. Steve Williams,
01:53:00
you're a great New Zealander. Thanks so
01:53:02
much for coming on the podcast again,
01:53:03
mate. Really appreciate it. Awesome,
01:53:04
Dom. Thank you. Cheers.

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Episode Highlights

  • Steve Williams' Philanthropy
    In 2008, Steve and his wife donated $1 million to Starship Hospital's oncology department.
    “What a no greater place to put some money into.”
    @ 10m 35s
    March 30, 2025
  • Together We Roar
    Steve Williams discusses his new book and the podcast that inspired it.
    “The podcast was hugely successful.”
    @ 15m 46s
    March 30, 2025
  • Reflections on a Long Career
    Steve Williams reflects on his 50-year journey in professional caddying, marking a significant milestone.
    “It’s been an incredible journey.”
    @ 25m 06s
    March 30, 2025
  • The Meaning of Notes
    Handwritten notes carry more weight than emails, making them more meaningful.
    “It's so much more meaningful.”
    @ 33m 07s
    March 30, 2025
  • Everyone Has a Story
    No matter who you are, everyone has a story filled with mistakes and lessons.
    “Everybody's got a story, and everybody's made errors.”
    @ 36m 51s
    March 30, 2025
  • The Importance of Practice
    It's not just about how much you practice, but how you practice. Every shot should have a purpose.
    “Every shot he hit had a meaning to it.”
    @ 50m 23s
    March 30, 2025
  • Tiger's Respect for Competitors
    After finishing second, Tiger Woods stayed for the presentation, showing respect for Michael Campbell's achievement.
    “Tiger stood around for the presentation, which he would never do.”
    @ 59m 46s
    March 30, 2025
  • A Unique Bond with Tiger Woods
    Steve reflects on his deep connection with Tiger, marked by mutual respect and memorable moments.
    “We had a unique bond.”
    @ 01h 08m 36s
    March 30, 2025
  • The Importance of Honesty
    Having difficult conversations can strengthen bonds, as seen in the relationship with Tiger Woods.
    “I tell it like it is, I do it like it needs to be done.”
    @ 01h 24m 55s
    March 30, 2025
  • A Moment of Reflection
    Reflecting on a past decision, the speaker acknowledges the importance of listening to loved ones.
    “I should have listened to Kirsty then.”
    @ 01h 30m 47s
    March 30, 2025
  • Reflections on Life and Legacy
    Steve Williams shares poignant thoughts on life, loss, and the bonds formed with Tiger Woods.
    “It’s just life, and that’s what happens.”
    @ 01h 41m 01s
    March 30, 2025
  • Giving Back
    Steve discusses the significance of charitable contributions over monetary gains in his life.
    “To make a significant impact on other people's lives, that’s the best moment.”
    @ 01h 44m 11s
    March 30, 2025

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Philanthropy Work10:01
  • Positive Relationship17:52
  • Dinner with Legends49:46
  • Tiger's Unique Gesture59:46
  • Caddy's Trophy1:05:46
  • Reflecting on Success1:07:29
  • Shattered Perspective1:23:20
  • Family Values1:51:39

Words per Minute Over Time

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