Virginia Golfer July / August 2014 | Page 32

The Virginia Golfer Conversation Tiger be helpful to Watson? RF: It’s pretty much all different players other than Phil and Jim Furyk. It’s been an evolution of players in the last six years, so I don’t know how much that plays into it. from the women about how much she’d be missed and how many things she’d done to help them. The community was a great big uplift for the family and me. VG: Who has impressed you following you around and making you the Hall of Fame member you became. Did the best part of your career come after she challenged you? RF: Without question. She said to me when I was 32 years old that if I didn’t like what I was doing that I was young enough to have a career change. Wow, you could have hit me upside the head with a sand wedge. Did that ever wake me up. All I ever wanted to do my whole life was play professional golf. I’ve said I had two careers—a before and after Maria. I’d won five tournaments and one major when I married her. Counting worldwide and senior tour wins, I think I’ve won 66 times around the world. So it’s pretty impressive when you see the after Maria side. VG: You’ve credited Maria with turning VG: The World Golf Hall of Fame that you’re a member of is very important to you. Do you think the selection changes the Hall of Fame has implemented will help get the right people inducted? RF: I think I’m the one who initiated it. I felt like when you’re putting four or five people a year in, what will your qualifications be like in 10 years? That’s what has happened. You could see the credentials—the wins, majors, titles and however you figure one elevates himself or herself from his or her peers in the game—each and every class that went in, they got lower. What is a Hall of Fame? It’s not the best player available at the time. If there’s nobody who should be there, then don’t induct anybody. The women’s Hall of Fame has specific credentials and they have to play to that level to make it. So I’m pleased with the changes and everybody was seeing the light as well. I certainly have no reflection against Freddie (Couples), who is a dear friend. I was one of his mentors for years. Nor Colin Montgomerie. When those two guys got in, I guarantee you they were the best two candidates without question. But if you go back 20 to 25 years and put those players’ records in, they wouldn’t have even been considered. So it’s been a great move for the Hall of Fame to keep its integrity and put people in there who literally have Hall of Fame credentials. I don’t know if someone with 10 or 12 wins and one major is (a) Hall of Fame (player). It certainly wasn’t when Floyd won the 1986 U.S. Open Championship at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, N.Y. He credits his wife, Maria, (pictured right with their daughter, Christina), who passed away in 2012, with fueling his career success. “I’ve said I had two careers—a before and after Maria,” Floyd says. I went in. I had four majors and 22 wins when I went in. If there aren’t legitimate candidates, select people for other honors— the citizenship award, the ambassador award. That’s fine. But a player going into the Hall of Fame needs to have the credentials to be there to put them up next to Arnold and Jack and Player and Trevino and Watson. With 10 wins and one major? Hmmm. VG: Your wife, Maria, passed away from cancer in 2012, and you went through a very difficult time. It seemed like the golf community rallied around you and lifted you up. How did it feel to have that support? RF: I was totally taken by what a close community we are and what a great fraternity the game is. The respect that my peers, and especially the wives of players, had for Maria... I mean I knew they admired her, but I got voluminous amounts of letters VG: Of all your accomplishments, is the longevity of your game what you’re most proud of as you look back? RF: Most definitely. You hit it. I was able to compete and win in five decades. There’s only one other player who’s done that and that’s Sam Snead. I won in the ’60s, ’70s, ’80s, ’90s and 2000s. That’s pretty unique on the PGA T our. VG: You also came so close to getting the career slam at the 1978 British Open at St. Andrews. Is that the one career regret that you didn’t get that last major trophy? RF: I never really thought about that. When you talk and reflect about it, sure, I’d definitely like to be one of the guys who has won them all. It didn’t happen and I sleep very well without it, but if there was one more feather in the hat, that would be it. Interviewer Scott Michaux is an awardwinning columnist for The Augusta Chronicle in Augusta, Ga., and a regular contributor to Virginia Golfer. “A player going into the Hall of Fame needs to have the credentials to be there to put them up next to Arnold and Jack and Player and Trev [