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Xander Schauffele, Cam Young, and Jesse Droemer shared memorable quotes at the PGA event, discussing topics from trees to technology and snakes.
Xander Schauffele on Tuesday at Aronimink.Getty Images
Cam Young talked about his iPhone.
And Xander Schauffele talked about trees.
And Jesse Droemer talked about snakes.
And Keegan Bradley talked about Bud Light and cereal.
Talk, talk, talk, talk. It can be cheap, as the saying goes āĀ but major championship press conferences are more than sessions full of other commonly spoken phrases. Maybe thatās due to whatās at stake. Maybe thatās because of the questions. But the answers are more than thoughts about the need to keep the ball in the fairway and the desire to make putts. Thereās occasional gold spoken from the dais.
After 15 press conferences over the past three days at the PGA Championship ā should you be curious, the pressers lasted nearly five hours ā here, then, are a few things that were spoken:
Young is reserved, but an easy way into a personās personality is through a question into how long they scroll.
āIt depends,ā he said. āIf Iām on my own on the road, itās a lot more. Itās probably four hours or something. And if Iām at home with my family, itās probably more on the order of half that.
āI try to be conscious of it. So I know when Iām by myself, itās somewhere in the four, four-and-a-half range, and when Iām not, when Iām at home, itās usually two or under two.ā
What does he look at when heās on his own?
āI donāt know,ā Young said. āI go on YouTube. I like to read articles. I look at golf swing videos for more time than Iād like to admit, yeah.ā
To best capture the moment, here is the complete exchange between European Ryder Cup captain Luke Donald and a reporter, with the reporterās question in italics.
Luke, youāre clearly a firmly organized fellow and very good at details and things. Iām just wondering how you cope with all the issues of the Ryder Cup? I mean, you must have had hundreds of questions before Bethpage, before you took the job on and since you agreed to do it. Iām wondering if you and Diane [his wife] have an agreement that over dinner youāll talk about wine, painting and the family and anything other than the Ryder Cup?
āI think the dynamic between Diane and I is interesting,ā Donald said. āI donāt get too involved ā especially when it comes closer to the Ryder Cup.
Jim Furyk speaks at a press conference table with microphones, in front of a red PGA Championship backdrop featuring various sponsor logos. The PGA Championship logo is displayed on a white wall beside him.
āRight now weāre certainly having some discussions together at dinner whenever the time is right about the team spaces. Certainly I donāt talk to her about the golf course. She doesnāt really talk to me about ladies clothes.
āI just have complete trust in what she does, and she has complete trust in what I do. There are some overlaps. Like right now weāre talking about team spaces. Thereās a distinct difference between part of the hotel to the other. Oneās a ballroom, oneās sort of part of the old hotel, and which might be better for our team. Those are things we would discuss together.
āBut thereās definitely stuff that I have complete faith in what she does, and she has complete faith in what I do. So we donāt need to go into too much detail then.
You donāt have a feeling, āLook, we have to stop talking about this. There are other things going on.ā
āI mean, we talk about other stuff as well,ā Donald said. āIf something is needed [to be] discussed with the Ryder Cup that involves both of us, then we talk about it. If not, weāre just dealing with everyday life.ā
Scottie Scheffler was asked whether he treats major weeks the same as normal tournament weeks, and he said that wasnāt possible, as each environment is different ā and the one at Augusta National was especially so.
āWhen you look at the Masters,ā he said, āyou look at the practice rounds there, and the Masters is like the only place on earth where people actually follow the rules because theyāre just afraid to get kicked out all the time. So those practice rounds are actually quite calm in terms of thereās not a lot of yelling, thereās nobody running around, thereās not a ton of noise. Except when youāre swinging, thereās camera clicks on every single shot because people are allowed to have real cameras out there. So youāre at the top of your backswing, for every practice round, itās just camera clicks.
āYou come here and thereās a lot of noise and a lot of energy. Thatās why you canāt treat them quite the same because thereās so much energy around the tournament. You come into the press room, thereās more people, more fans, more noise. Thereās just a lot more stuff going on.ā
To set this up, a topic this week has been the trees at Aronimink Golf Club, or the absence of a few, following a renovation. That led to this back-and-forth between Xander Schauffele and the Associated Pressā Doug Ferguson, who are friendly with each other. Fergusonās comments are in italics.
Split image: On the left, a large crowd watches golfers practice at a PGA Championship; on the right, an older man in a hat and plaid shirt swings a golf club on a quieter, grassy area with trees in the background.
Pardon the vagueness, but do you like trees?
āI do like trees, Dougā Schauffele said. āDo you like trees?ā
I like trees, too, Xander. Letās do āCat in the Hatā next. In terms of a golf course ā¦
āI know where youāre going,ā Schauffele said. āGo ahead.ā
Go somewhere then. Keep making me work.
āYeah, when I hear certain designers saying, āIām going to restore this course to 1915,ā Iām like, āWell, it probably takes a good 100 years for a nice tree to grow, just to take it out, just to say it was where it was before,ā Schauffele said.
āI think people keep talking about distance and how the game is played, but just put a bunch of trees on a course ā I think Hilton Head is a good example. Do I like Hilton Head? Not really. But itās hard. Itās kind of crazy, if you look at the winning score at Hilton Head and the winning score at Doral ā oneās called Hilton Head, and oneās called the Blue Monster ā youāre like, I think the winning score at Miami is lower. Itās just funny when you kind of look at it in that sense.ā
āThatās all I have to say to your tree question.ā
Is it more framing, or is it more trouble?
āItās just hard,ā Schauffele said. āI think when you have ā like this rough, for example, if we had trees in the rough and you hit it in it, this week youāll see guys kind of gouging it towards the green. If thereās a tree there, youād be chipping out sideways. This is the type of rough where you canāt get a ball to curve at all. You just grab a high-lofted club and hit a knuckleball and have it kind of trundle somewhere.
āThereās certain weeks where the rough is, you can kind of curve it a little bit. But thereās reasons guys are praying to be on the pine straw or dirt when they hit it off line, versus being in thick rough, just because you can get some movement on the golf ball.ā
Collin Morikawa has been battling a back injury, and he noted whoās been helping him through it, including his caddie, who did a relatively simple task in which Morikawa was appreciative.
Past PGA Championship winners pose before the 2026 PGA Champions Dinner
āYeah, itās everyone,ā Morikawa said. āIāve got great physios at home, Iāve got a great physio on the road. Rick Sessinghaus and I have been working for quite some time and talking about the mental game and finding ways to feel comfortable out there. Heās a big, big proponent and component of me being able to play out here, so I owe a lot to him.
āBut I owe a lot of credit to Mark Urbanek, my caddie. At the Masters, we were doing things that just didnāt make sense from simply like him handing me my water bottle. I think itās ridiculous for him to hand me my water bottle, but if it was going to save me one extra bend that was going to make me uncomfortable, heās going to do it. So I give him a lot of credit over the last few months of sticking with me through the chaotic things Iām asking for.ā
Jesse Droemer, one of the 20 club pros in the field, went into detail about previous injuries.
āYeah, I would say the biggest injuries that affected my golf,ā he said, āI broke my left wrist pretty bad when I was probably 10. I broke three bones in my ankle in football. That was pretty rough. But yeah, itās been 13 broken bones. Itās been a battle. But at the end of the day, it just makes me feel grateful to be healthy and to not have to deal with pain anymore.
A reporter then asked Droemer to confirm whether he had also once been bitten by a snake.
āYeah, I was in my backyard, I was like 12 or so and stepped on a water moccasin,ā Droemer said. āMy mom didnāt believe me. I told her I just stepped on a snake, and she just kind of shrugged it off. Then I actually fainted, and my toe was about this big [a couple of inches]. So she had to rush me to the hospital. And then I used to go down into the Brazos River with a machete and boots and look for golf balls. So I had to fight off snakes for that.ā
āBut, yeah, that was pretty serious. But after that, I donāt really have a fear of it anymore, so ā¦ā
Fighting snakes?
āWell, I couldnāt afford Pro V1s back then,ā Droemer said, āso I would sell the kind of beat-up ones and I would keep the best ones. So in tournaments I wasnāt going to lose a golf ball that I fought off snakes for.ā
Rory McIlroy, the worldās second-ranked player, was asked about what he admires about Scheffler, the top-ranked player. Answers to this type of question are oftentimes good, as theyāre complimentary ā and they give a peek into what the player would want for themselves.
Jon Rahm, Rory McIlroy and Jordan Spieth at the 2026 PGA Championship.
āI think it is, itās his relentlessness,ā McIlroy said. āItās his ā the comfort in which he does the same things over and over. Itās the little ā itās not flashy, but he dots his Iās and crosses his Tās and does all the right things.
āYeah, I just think itās that relentless pursuit of the process and not just letting the outcome happen. Whatever that means is what it means.
āIāve said, again, I think his faith has a big part to do with how comfortable he is with doing that because he accepts whatever happens, whatever comes his way, and he moves on.
āHe just doesnāt seem ā thereās not a lot of volatility there in his life and in his game, and I think that sets him up so well for the future.ā
To properly capture this moment, here is the complete exchange between Jordan Spieth and a reporter, with the reporterās question in italics.
I read something where you used an analogy of grilling meat to describe the process of working on getting your swing back to where you want it to be. Where did that analogy come from and how is it going?
āI was just kind of thinking,ā Spieth said, āI was smoking chicken in the fall on a big smoker I have and it got up to 155 quickly and then takes awhile. I was like, man, this kind of feels like ā I was working on stuff and I was ā it kind of feels like what Iām trying to do in the swing. I go play and itās a little bit out of the barriers that we call sustainable. Kind of outside the margins that we call OK.
āSo, I donāt know, I kind of was just thinking about it one day and came to me.
āBut yeah, it seems to be ā I donāt know how ā if itās that way for everybody and just seemed that way for me right now where, you know, itās there, itās there. Itās like close. Itās matching what I want to do. It feels good and itās producing right stuff.
āAnd then, you know, if it just gets ā itās just not quite consistent enough yet to be able to be contending week in and week out.
āBut I know what to do and how to get there. Itās just I have to stay the course and just trust that it will happen.ā
Is [smoking] a hobby of yours?
āNot really,ā Spieth said, āIām very average. Probably a 15-handicap at it. In the fall, itās fun sometimes.ā
Jon Rahm looks on during a press conference at the 2026 PGA Championship
Bradley was asked how he celebrated his win at the 2011 PGA Championship, and he answered this way:
āSo after the PGA in ā11, my mom and sister were there, and I remember my agent, Ben, was there, and I remember driving out of the Atlanta Athletic Club with the Wanamaker in my lap, holding it like this [in his lap], and we were looking at each other like, this is crazy. Like I was holding it.
āAnd then I went ā we tried to ā it was Sunday night. We were trying to get some beers or something. Everything was closed. And we went back, and I had Bud Light and cereal for dinner. We still have a picture of it in my house somewhere.
āAnd then I took the trophy and put it right next to my bed. I remember waking up in the morning and looking at it, like this is crazy. I canāt believe this.
āAnd then I got back, and a few of my buddies picked me up. I was single and 25 years old, and all my buddies picked me up from the airport. We went on a few-day celebration tour with the trophy, bringing it everywhere.
āOne of those moments that you get to share with people, and you know, some of the fondest memories of my life.ā
Did he remember the cereal?
āI forget what it was,ā Bradley said. ā⦠Whatever ā I was starving. It was midnight. After youāre done with media, and I just remember like thinking, how surreal this was. It was Bud Light and cereal. It was the best meal of my life. Like one minute Iām a rookie and now Iām a major champion and Iām looking on my Twitter and every couple minutes, Iāve gotten 1,000 new followers. It was crazy, the night and the next following couple weeks.ā
The post Fear of Masters discipline? Snake fighting? Here are the PGA's BEST quotes appeared first on Golf.
Xander Schauffele shared his thoughts on trees during his comments at the PGA event.
Cam Young talked about his iPhone while speaking at the PGA event.
Jesse Droemer was the one who talked about snakes during the PGA event.
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