"I think as golfers, whenever you've had a long period off, you always sort of plan for a bit of rust. Not necessarily how you hit it, but just how you go about playing golf."
"I think there are certain events that would be an amazing torch for a turn in how the world is getting on, and the Ryder Cup would be one of them that is like a shining light at the end of the tunnel."
"The Ryder Cup is an event people dream about and sometimes it can only happen once."
"It's really, really cool when you win a tournament. And it's great for the people who go on the journey with you."
"This is my third year in a row where I'm one of those players that has a chance to win the Race to Dubai. I just think it's important this year that I take the experiences of 2017 and 2018 into it and know that it still takes a lot to do it and it's not in my hands at all."
"I was a big kid who could putt well."
"When I started playing well all I wanted to do was win. Which was a problem. When it became clear I wasn't going to win, I would get fed up. I played poorly on a few Sundays, finishing 50th because I wasn't interested in finishing 30th. But I've learned not to do that."
"It was such a relief to win. You tell yourself you can do it, but until you do you don't know for sure. And I found out I can do it by doing what I do, not what others do."
"Every round I have three little targets. Maybe it is just 'talk to myself properly' or 'stand up straight on the greens.' One day I might say, 'Don't talk to anyone.' On another I'll be a lot chattier. Or I might say, 'smile all the way round.' Little things. But little things turn into bigger things."
"I have one idiosyncrasy that helps my driving accuracy. I grip down on the club. This makes it easier to control the clubface."
"Good putting starts with understanding the difference between a stroke and a hit. You want to make a stroke and let the energy of that back-and-through motion carry the ball to the hole."
"You can roll the ball a long way with a stroke that has the force of a five-yard chip. Good rhythm and less effort are how you control the putterface and, in turn, the ball."
"Never rush through the stoke. Nervous or not, take your time, and the result is almost always better."
"I've pictured winning the U.S. Open a lot of times before."
"It's hard if you don't quite feel on your game to go out and put scores on the board."
"I'd much rather be in this position where people might be talking about me as a contender than turning up and sort of being a no-show."
"Being managed by your wife means you just get told what to do all the time as opposed to some of the time."
"If I'm going to be away from my family then I want to make the practice count more."
"I remember going to The Open in 1998 aged seven and snatching a picture of Tiger walking past."
"It is not a cliche to say golf is for the well-off. It is the reality. But the old system which used to make it elite is fading away."
"I don't have the look of a golfer. Do I look like a rock star? I didn't make it playing guitar so I started playing golf!"
"Seriously, as a father, I want golf to be cool for my children. Easy to access. If they want to play in tracksuits and trainers, why not?"
"Golf has been the sport of the social elite, with lawyers and doctors. But I have never been embarrassed by the looks I've been given by others. I have sometimes been looked at with condescension and it still happens now, but I know how to deal with it - I know whose opinions count."
"My game is getting better all the time. I'm consistently working hard, and I feel like I'm always doing the right things."
"Winning is just such a good feeling."