I want to be able to be looked back on and know that he was one of the greats in the game.

Sometimes I play for the media, sometimes for the fans, sometimes for my sponsors, and sometimes it's for my family. Really, I play for everyone.

I did play other sports growing up. I played cricket and all those other things, but I was just so much more talented in golf, and that's all I wanted to do.

I have always practiced by myself. It's just because that is when I can do the most work, the most efficient work, is when I am by myself, and I think I just find a little bit of peace when it comes to being able to be out here on the golf course, and you are just you and yourself and your thoughts.

I'm still trying to be No. 1 in the world, like everyone else is out there.

I need to get better with my 3-wood and hybrid. Those are the clubs I missed the majority of my fairways with.

I have to work harder than what I am now to make sure that I stay on top of this and stay on top of the world and be competitive in major championships.

It really is amazing that some days you'll come out and you'll feel like you can beat anyone, and then some days you come out and you've got no confidence in the world, and you can't break an egg with a hammer.

It's like Jordan Spieth and Rory McIlroy had a baby, and I was it. I've got Rory's length, and I'm hoping that I've got Jordan's touch.

This is a great thing, to make a living as a professional golfer, isn't it?

It's O.K. to fail. Just keep putting yourself there. Once I started saying that and really believing that, over time, it just gradually gave me confidence.

To be able to know that I can push myself a little further than you think you can was so important. And that it's a mental barrier more than anything. You can break through it.

I think the stress of being No. 1 in the world is more of a motivating factor for me just because I don't want to lose it.

I've got to come into the day enjoying myself and go from there.

It's very stressful being the No. 1 player in the world. You're in the limelight a lot. You've got more things to do when you get to tournaments, more things to do off weeks. But I wouldn't change it in any way because this is exactly where I want to be. I want to try and stay here as long as I can while I can because nothing beats this feeling.

I look at that 10 PGA Tour wins, and I say to myself, 'That's not enough,' and it isn't enough for me. It's just 10. I want more than 10.

A lot of people underestimate rest, especially sleeping and recovery time.

For some reason, every time I get a little bit under the weather, I've got zero patience.

You've got to come out and fire on all cylinders and get yourself up the leaderboard and show people that you're there and you're ready to win.

I look back on the influence my dad had on my life and career, and I just try to take the best parts of what he had.

I tend to watch the score board a lot.

It's quite nice to play on a golf course that, even though it is links, that there's not much wind, which is good.

Golf is so selfish - it's so much about how do we get better and get to the next level.

Family comes first, and golf is second.