Thursday, March 13, 2014

Sunday Smack - Patrick Reed's Verbal Warning Shot to the PGA Tour


Barry LeBrock


(An edited version of this article appears on FoxSports.Com)

All that was missing from Patrick Reed's televised post-tournament interview Sunday was the WWE Heavyweight Championship belt slung over his shoulder, and a strategically placed opponent writhing in pain in the background.

Reed's impressive triumph at the WGC Cadillac Championship was capped off with a verbal rampage that was far more Hulk Hogan than Ben Hogan: a grandiloquent cherry on top of a sweet and well-earned Sunday sundae.

The newly-minted youngest champion in WGC history had just ripped through the best PGA field assembled this year to his third professional win and second of this young season.  The man is on a roll.  He is the only player on the planet to pull off the hat-trick of playing his way into the top-20 of the world rankings, finish in the top-20 of last season's money list and win three events since the start of 2013.

Reed's lofty degree of early-career success is a case that, to some extent makes itself. But just in case people hadn't noticed his dizzying ascent, he matter-of-factly spread the gospel of Patrick to the nation moments after sinking his tournament-clinching putt on 18.

Interviewer Steve Sands asked the 23 year-old Reed about comments the golfer made Saturday, expressing his belief that he is amongst the top five players in the world.

"I've worked so hard," the Reed soliloquy began. "I won a lot in my junior career. I did great in my amateur career. I went 6-0 in match play in NCAAs, we won NCAAs (at Augusta State) two years in a row... Now, I have three wins on the PGA Tour. I just don't see a lot of guys who've done that, besides Tiger and the other legends of the game. I believe in myself. I feel like I'm one of the top five players in the world. I feel like I've proven myself."

Whoa!  Echoes of Bobby Jones, right?

The comments spit in the face of the established and accepted norm in golf.  But take a look around.  What outdated, unwritten rules from so many years past remain pristine and untarnished?  You don't have to stop tweeting and look at the world through your Google Glasses to see things are changing faster than anybody can quantify.

Football players can't lead with their helmets. Basketball players are wearing jerseys with sleeves. A handful of baseball players aren't even on steroids anymore.  Things change, people. Everything eventually does. And in this second decade of the 21st century, communication is at the top of the list. If you disagree, write me a letter. When the mailman delivers it, I will call you to discuss. After 5pm of course, when the long-distance rates go down.

Given the evolving nature of communication, who says a little smack talk backed up by performance has no place in golf?  What were you hoping for, perhaps "There are so many great players out here I was fortunate to come out on top this week"?  Yuck.

You can keep your staid and rehearsed answers that we've heard a thousand times after a hundred final-round victories. Give me a secure, confident kid; bolstered by the muscular magic mix of youth and success, his sun-kissed cheeks as red as his Tiger-inspired final-round shirt. Give me the young gun, too green to have yet been gut-punched by professional golf's grand lesson of humility, joyously spewing bullet-points from the resume of his past, all too certain of his continuing success and grandiose plans for the future.

Even the most gentlemanly of golf's old guard can see some beauty in the beast of Reed's self aggrandizing answer. Through his media liaison, I asked Gary Player about the comments. "Frankly, I quite liked Patrick Reed's candor, his self-belief and obvious confidence," the legendary Player responded. "To me it's not really whether he is Top 5, but rather that he thinks and believes he is. You cannot be a champion if you don't believe totally in yourself and your ability."

Doral was a place for Patrick Reed to celebrate. You'll have to forgive the premature anointing of his own greatness as he joined just four others who have won three tour events by age 23. It probably didn't help derail his myopic big-picture perspective that the dream foursome he joins is made up of Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy, Phil Mickelson and Sergio Garcia.

Reed says he didn't even realize his comments made a stir until the day after the tournament. He insists he has no regrets about the interview, but with the benefit of retrospect said Wednesday, "I believe if I keep playing the way I've been playing and putting in the hard work then I will become a top-5 player in the world. That's my next goal and I believe I can be a top-5 player."

He came into this season with the goal of cracking the top-25 in the world rankings by the end of the year. After his recent victory, he checks in at #20. That goal, naturally, has been tweaked. "Now I'm looking for the top-10 or the top-5."  

So, go ahead and gush over your Joe Whatshisname and his scripted run-of-the mill humble Sunday soft talk. Give me Patrick Reed and his truth-saying, star-slaying, gauntlet-laying swagger. You can call it cocky. I call it refreshing.

Remember -- it's March. The Masters is still a month away, Tiger's back has comprimised an already teetering game, Phil is floundering, and Sergio, Rory and Adam Scott finished a combined 14 over par at Doral. This sport desperately needs a good story, and right now, Patrick Reed is it.  Man, oh man, Patrick Reed is it.

Time to choose your Hogan. I'll take Hulk. You've got Ben. Best 2 out of 3 falls. May the boldest man win.



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