Three majors at 28. It's a cool feeling. It really is.

For some reason, I can really tune in in the majors, and I have no idea why. They really get my attention.

If I can stay healthy and actually show up to a major, I feel like I've got a good chance.

Anytime you can get some congratulatory - anything said or the guys waiting around the green - that's always nice. You're out here so many weeks a year, and sometimes away from your family, and the tour kind of becomes your family. So when you have these guys hanging around, it's special.

There's something about majors where I just focus a lot more. Obviously, I need to do that more often.

It's taken me a long time to learn how to not try to win. I've been trying to win too badly. I feel like I've underachieved.

I'm not a big fan of losing.

My goals? They're pretty high.

I think I can win multiple times a year.

I'm usually out there grinding. You see a birdie go up on the board, and you're not thinking about how it affects the tournament because you're playing.

I've played the game for 23, 24 years. Four months off, I'm not going to lose it.

I've been so in the zone, you don't know where you are or where you're at.

Records are meant to be broken, I guess.

I'm always overlooked.

I don't feel like there is anybody out there with more confidence than me.

The U.S. Open just takes so much discipline. You have got to be a great putter and just kind of let things roll off your back.

I enjoy being pushed to the limit. Sometimes you feel like you are about to break mentally, but that's what I enjoy.

I can really appreciate how hard it is to win a major, and to win back-to-back is special.

I enjoy hard golf courses.

You always feel like you've got something to prove, whether it be to yourself or somebody else. I can think of plenty of people along the way telling me I'll be nothing, working at McDonald's, doing things like that. The whole time, you're just trying to prove them wrong.

I have a lot of self-belief.

When you're out here grinding away, firing at some flags, firing at the middle of the green, you just got to be very patient, and I always do a pretty good job of that in the majors.

To defend your major is pretty tough.

There's a different feeling when you show up and you're defending. You can't wait to get out there. You're not anxious that Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday would be over, but you're just excited to get that ball in the air on Thursday.

I'm just focused on me.

It's really impressive when you've got two teams that are really battling it out, low-scoring game, a pitcher's duel. To me, that's so fun to watch.

I couldn't hit a home run to save my life, and I was a sucker for the curveball.

There are a lot of things that people love, they just can't do for a living.

It was very frustrating, sitting on the couch, not doing anything. I couldn't pick up anything with my left hand. I was in a soft cast all the way up to my elbow. It wasn't fun. A lot of TV. I don't wish it upon anybody.

I've got a good game plan... keep things simple with my golf swing.

I just think pressure is all what you put on yourself.

Pressure comes from fear. If you start thinking about the result or what might happen if you do something, that's the only time there's pressure.

I need to play well in the majors; that's been my key. That's been something that I've created a pattern in the majors, and I just need to keep improving.

It's amazing to go World No. 1 on a win. I think is something I've always wanted to do.

Sitting on that couch eating and gaining 20 pounds isn't exactly fun - there's only so much you can do.

You've got to be able to let things roll off your back, and you've got to have some patience.

You're always working to try and climb that ladder.

I play fairly aggressively week to week and fire at a lot of pins. So I might miss more greens than other pros, but I'm still only a few yards from the hole when I do. That being said, when I really need to hit a green in regulation, I'm confident in my swing.

A lot of golfers take the club back with almost no upper-body rotation - they're all arms. And even when they do rotate back, it's usually on a flat shoulder plane. If your shoulders turn back fairly level with the ground, it's hard to swing down from inside the target line and hit an accurate shot.

A question I get asked a lot in pro-ams is how I'm able to swing the club as hard as I do. Honestly, I'm not swinging that hard. I'm using about 75 percent of my maximum effort.

I typically opt for a fade when I'm hitting into greens. It's just an easier shot to control.

To be No. 1 is something I've dreamed of as a kid.

I'm not somebody who's going to panic if things go the wrong way.

Being in the fairway, I think the fairways are a little bit more overrated.

I'm going to have wedge when guys are going have a 6-iron, plain and simple.

I'm just really good at blending in. If you look at how I've grown up, I wasn't the best, so hanging back comes more naturally.

There are some things you have to accept come with being really good at something: more attention, more eyes on you, every move you make - whether good or bad, you have to answer. If that's the price of where I want to get, it'll be worth it.

To be honest, I'm not a big golf nerd. Golf is kind of boring, not much action.

I don't mind being by myself, even in a foreign country.

I haven't had too many tragedies in my family where there has been a loss or even an accident. I've been lucky in that sense.