When you have a lot of confidence and you feel like nobody can beat you, it's game over for everyone else.

Anything can happen, so you have to control your attitude and stay strong.

I'm getting better and better each year that I'm playing golf on the world stage, and finishing runner-up only teaches you how to continue being patient - something that is key to our game.

I'm proud to partner with organizations that place an emphasis on and share my interest in giving back to the community. RBC has a rich history of doing this through their sponsorship of golf and the extensive ambassadorial program they have in place.

You can't pick up a golf club if your thumb hurts.

I've got good vibes up here in the Akron area, Cleveland area.

There's a lot of spotlight that comes along with being the best in the world.

I remember not having a hot water tank, so we had to use a kettle for hot showers. So, you know, we would put the kettle on and go have a shower, and then my mum would come bring three or four kettles in, just to heat them up. And it would take five, 10 minutes for every kettle to heat up.

From the vertigo, I found out how far I can push myself physically and also mentally.

If you don't believe in yourself, somewhere or another, you sabotage yourself.

All I did was go to school and play golf. I didn't have much of a social life.

The only two things that I think about in life is my family and golf. That's all I want to think about.

The vertigo is a difficult thing: it just comes and goes whenever it pleases. I wasn't expecting it. I've had it before, and there have been years between stretches, and unfortunately it happened at the U.S. Open, and that knocked me off my feet.

I have two mini dachshunds, Lola and Charlie.

Sometimes your immune system gets a little heated, and you're more susceptible to getting some illnesses that way.

The want to improve myself and win tournaments and see how far I go is crucial.

Just looking when I was little at pictures of cars and houses that I wanted - it gives you a certain motivation, it gives you a goal.

Winning is never enough, and I've got to try and do it as much as I can before my time is over.

I'm trying to adapt - they say you have to adapt to vertigo.

'Golf Digest' had all the old school swings, and my favorite swing, ever, was Nick Faldo's swing. And it had all the greats, Ernie Els and Nick Faldo and all that stuff, and I had the pictures of their swing sequences on my wall.

Driver has always been fine, and the rest of the clubs have been fine. It's just for some reason, the 3-wood... that's just one of those clubs.

What I'm doing with my body and with my golf game, I'm trying to extend the longevity of my career.

I travel with Club Glove.

Being an Australian that's been No. 1 in the world back home playing in Australia, that's a pretty cool moment to have.

My dad was the way he was, but he also gave me a motto: never say die. Just to keep pushing and pushing, fighting until the end. He put it in my head that you're always going to fight, and you're always going to beat them.

If you're going to have a bad attitude, you may as well not even tee it up that week because you probably won't play good anyways.

Everyone has an uncomfortable club in their bag.

I've never been more motivated to be No. 1 in the world. I've never been more motivated to try to extend that lead from one to two. All the hard work that I've put into my game right now has paid off, but I've got to keep working hard to win as much as I can.

As I get older, my body isn't bulletproof, and it's starting to break down. And I'm still young, so it's something that I have to maintain, something that I have to work extra, extra hard, just as hard as my golf game, I have to work on my body as well.

My goal is to be the No. 1 golfer in the world, and I want to chase Tiger.

Australian golf did so much for me, and that is why I am here today.

I honestly thought I was going to win a major championship quicker than what I did, but it clearly took a little bit longer than expected.

The biggest waste of time of my life was playing 'Call of Duty.' But I got really good at 'Call of Duty' - a little bit too good at that time.

It's emotional highs and lows in the game of golf.

I think everyone expects if you're in the lead, or if you're a favourite to win, you will win, and if you don't, then you're in a slump. It's not the case.

You could have all the tools in the world, but if you really don't want to be there, or if there's something that's off course that's playing on your mind... the game of golf is so mental, and if you don't have everything in the right order, it's very difficult to win golf tournaments.

It just flat-out sucks losing. It really - it doesn't feel good.

When I get to 40, I'm going to re-evaluate everything and then go from there. Because when I get to 40, I would like to see where I'm at in my career because I might want to go, 'You know what, I'm done. I'm just happy with everything,' and I'm going to go off my merry way, and I'll probably never pick up a golf club ever again.

My dad was a violent alcoholic. Really aggressive.

I think I definitely like the solitude of golf.

I was very poor when I was young.

My sister ran away for four years; she was living on the streets. I didn't know where she was, and then I was getting in trouble.

I'm Australian, so I love the stores near Crowne Plaza Melbourne, on the banks of the Yarra River.

I didn't have a dollar to my name in 2006.

I don't feel as though I am under any pressure to return to Australia, given I won the PGA Championship, and I am just hoping everyone back home will understand my situation. I just want to make sure I am there for Ellie and that she has my support when she has our second child.

It's about the learning, because obviously I learn more when I fail than when I win.

When I lost my dad, there was no one there to be the disciplinarian, and we kind of ran amok.

I think if you try a little bit too hard sometimes, you can kind of shoot yourself in the foot.

I want to win every single tournament that I'm playing in.

It's okay to say what you want to do.