Founders - #301 Tiger Woods
Episode Date: May 1, 2023What I learned from reading Tiger Woods by Jeff Benedict and Armen Keteyian.----Follow one of my favorite podcasts Invest Like The Best and listen to episode 326 Alexis Rivas----[3:00] He was someone ...no one had ever seen or will ever see again.[5:20] You can always understand the son by the story of his father. The story of the father is embedded in the son. — Francis Ford Coppola: A Filmmaker's Life by Michael Schumacher. (Founders #242)[7:15] His output was enormous, much greater than that of nine tenths of other composers. He was a mature artist in most forms at the age of twelve. There was never a month, often scarcely a week, when he did not produce a substantial score. — Mozart: A Life by Paul Johnson. (Founders #240)[7:50] Tiger's opponents were never people; it was always history.[14:05] I've always been a practice player. I believe in it. — Michael Jordan: The Lifeby Roland Lazenby. (Founders #212)[17:00] Grinding It Out: The Making of McDonald's by Ray Kroc. (Founders #293)[18:30] Tiger was filling his mind with words that were intended to make him great. He wrote some of the messages from the self-help cassettes on a sheet of paper that he taped to his bedroom wall:I believe in meI will own my own destinyI smile at obstaclesI am first in my resolveI fulfill my resolutions powerfullyMy strength is greatI stick to it, easily, naturally My will moves mountainsI focus and give it my allMy decisions are strongI do it with all my heartTiger listened to those tapes so often that he wore them out.[31:50] People would ask him how did you get so good Tiger? And he would answer, practice, practice, practice.[32:10] The world is a very malleable place. If you know what you want, and you go for it with maximum energy and drive and passion, the world will often reconfigure itself around you much more quickly and easily than you would think. —The Pmarca Blog Archive Ebook by Marc Andreessen.[36:45] The Score Takes Care of Itself: My Philosophy of Leadership by Bill Walsh. (Founders #106)[40:15] That’s all training is. Stress. Recover. Improve. You’d think any damn fool could do it. But you don’t. You work too hard and rest too little and get hurt. — Bowerman and the Men of Oregon: The Story of Oregon's Legendary Coach and Nike's Cofounder by Kenny Moore. (Founders #153)[46:15] Money didn't motivate him. Nor did fame. He played for the hardware. He played for the win.[53:45] Robert Caro’s Books----Join my free email newsletter to get my top 10 highlights from every book----“I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested so my poor wallet suffers. ” — GarethBe like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast ----Founders Notes gives you the ability to tap into the collective knowledge of history's greatest entrepreneurs on demand. Use it to supplement the decisions you make in your work. Get access to Founders Notes here. ----“I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested so my poor wallet suffers. ” — GarethBe like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast
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Tiger Woods was the kind of transcendent star that comes around about as often as Haley's Comet.
By almost any measure, he is the most talented golfer who has ever lived,
and arguably the greatest individual athlete in modern history.
For a 15-year span, from August 1994, when he won his first of three consecutive U.S.
Amateur Championships as an 18-year-old high school senior, to the early morning hours of
November 27, 2009, when he crashed his SUV into a tree and effectively ended the most
dominant run in the history of golf. Woods was a human whirlwind of heart-stopping drama and
entertainment. He was someone no one had ever seen or will ever see again. At the height of Tiger's
career, golf beat the NFL and the NBA in ratings. He was mobbed by fans wherever he went.
Kings and presidents courted him.
Corporations wooed him.
Women wanted to sleep with him.
For the better part of two decades,
he was simply the most famous athlete on earth.
Despite his killer instinct on the course,
he was an introvert off of it,
more comfortable practicing and training
in solitude. As far back as childhood, he spent far more time by himself. Tiger is the most
mysterious athlete of his time, an enigma obsessed with privacy who mastered the art of being
invisible in plain sight, of saying something while revealing virtually nothing. The two qualities Woods values most are privacy and loyalty.
So that begs the question, why tackle this project?
They're talking about the book.
Why tackle this project in the first place?
Our answer is simple.
Very few individuals are known throughout the world by one word.
That is an excerpt from the book that I'm going to talk to you about today,
which is titled Tiger Woods, and it was written by Jeff Benedict and Armin Kantean.
There is a companion to this to this fantastic biography.
It is an excellent biography or an excellent documentary that I walked that I watched a few years ago, maybe like a year ago on HBO.
It's simply called Tiger. And so when they said, hey, you know, why are we reading this?
Why are we writing this book? Very few individuals are known throughout the world by one word.
A few months ago, I was in Los Angeles and I was going to a bookshop, a bookstore, and I noticed this book.
And it speaks to what they're talking about, the fact that he is known just by the word tiger.
He's also known by just his face.
I saw the book.
There is no title on the cover of the book.
All it is is tiger's face. And I the book. There is no title on the cover of the book. All it is is Tiger's
face. And I immediately knew what it was about. And then the reason I picked it up is because it
says on the cover that it was the basis of the HBO documentary Tiger. I was like, oh, wow,
I should actually, I like the documentary. I should read the book. And so in addition to
reading this book, I also rewatched the documentary. And so I want to start in the prologue
with a main reoccurring theme that you and I have talked about over and over again, that pops up in nearly every single biography that you and I talk about, that you can always understand the son by the story of his father. The story of the father is embedded in the son. That is a quote from Francis Ford Coppola's biography regarding the relationship that Francis had with his father. I covered all the back on episode 242. We see it right away. Arguably the main theme and what I'll probably
spend most time talking to you about today is the unusual childhood and unusual family
that Tiger Woods came from. I said, and his father's name is Earl. Earl achieved worldwide,
and you'll see exactly what I mean. Earl achieved worldwide acclaim for his almost mythical role in
raising the most famous golfer of all time. He was notorious for making outlandish statements
like the time he predicted that his then 20-year-old son
would have more influence on the world
than Nelson Mandela, Gandhi, or Buddha.
He is the chosen one, Earl said.
He will have the power to impact nations.
And for his part, Tiger says,
Tiger repeatedly said that no one in the world
knew him better than his father,
the man he frequently referred to
as his best friend and his hero.
And so I want to start in the early life of Tiger when he's very, very small and
really focus on this relationship that he had with his dad. If you could look at all the notes
that I left throughout this entire book, the most common note I just kept writing to myself over and
over again is this reminds me of Mozart. It happened so much that I actually went back and
reread all of my highlights for the biography of Mozart that I read.
This is episode 240.
I want to read those highlights to you in advance because I really think it will help frame the relationship.
It is spooky.
I wrote down, Tiger Woods is the Mozart of golf.
The parallels are incredible.
Not only the talent, you know, Tiger Woods being the most famous, maybe the best golfer
of all time, Mozart's widely considered the same in his field, but the relationship with their
father. Earl makes the claim in the book that he had his first golf ball when he was like 11 months
old. Mozart starts composing when he's like two. And so I'm just going to read a few of the
highlights from the Mozart book. And really, this is just a way to describe Earl and Tiger. Mozart's output
was enormous, much greater than that of nine tenths of other composers. So my friend David
Perel, when he found out I was doing a podcast on Tiger Woods, he sent me like notebook after
notebook of all the data that he's collected. David's a huge golf fan and it sounds like a
huge Tiger Woods fan. He's got all these quotes and these highlights and these graphs.
Essentially, like when I read this, his output was enormous, much greater than nine cents of other composers.
It is in line with all the stats and the data that David sent me.
There is two things I want to read from here, actually, from David's notes that I thought was fascinating.
I read David's notes after I read the book and it said, Tiger's opponents were never people.
It was always history. And then another early example that I think is a good parallel with Mozart is the fact
that you have somebody that starts unbelievably early, is unbelievably disciplined, but also
extremely gifted and born with like natural intelligence. And this is an example of this.
This is a quote from Tiger when he was older. By the time I was 11 years old, I had already won
113 tournaments. I peaked at 11, to be honest with you. I went 36 and 0
that year and never lost a tournament all in California. I also had straight A's, no A minuses.
They were all perfect A's. So go back to the Mozart highlights. He was a mature artist in most
forms at the age of 12. That's exactly what Tiger just told us. There was never a month and often
scarcely a week when he did not produce a
substantial score. Another description of Mozart. He very rarely made any kind of mistake, and when
he did, he noticed it. We're going to talk about the obsessive and disciplined nature of Tiger
Woods. The truth is he started earlier than anyone else and was still composing on his deathbed.
Those 30 years were crammed with creation. That he started so early was largely due to his father.
The parallels are
spooky here. Mozart's dad seemed to have decided that his own musical future was limited and his
efforts centered on his children. Earl picks up golf later in life, becomes completely obsessed.
He is completely obsessed by the time that tiger is born. So there's a parallel there again. When
Mozart was four, his father decided to concentrate on bringing him out and virtually gave up on composing and performing himself.
Earl was retired from the Navy.
He had no other job than dedicating his his his self to his young son's golf, amateur golf career and then professional career.
He soon came to the conclusion that he had fathered a genius.
That's what Earl said, being a very highly religious man, that he was responsible for a gift of God to music.
So he talks about the fact Earl talks about the fact that this is like, you know, this was meant to be.
This is from God. I don't know if I consider Earl a religious man.
There's a lot in this this biography that's actually shocking.
Back to Mozart, it is important to grasp the strong religious element rating from his father that existed in Mozart's life from his infancy. Mozart's father felt that the musical education of his son
was a profound spiritual business
as well as a professional one.
So did Earl.
He literally thought that Tiger was like the anointed one,
like he just said,
that he's going to,
that through golf,
he's going to like cure racism and all this.
He just got a very interesting,
like,
almost like Messiah-like vision for his son, I guess is the way to put that.
And then one more highlight before we jump back into the Tiger book.
He, Mozart's father, is often seen as a tyrant towards his children.
There's no way you're going to read the book and not think Earl's the same way.
But the fact is, he surrendered his own future as a musician for their sake, and their progress justified his sacrifice.
And on that point, after you read this book, you get to the end.
That is an unknown, in my opinion.
Let's go to five-year-old Tiger Woods.
This is very unusual.
Tiger felt different from all the other kids.
Instead of toys, his prized possession was a custom-made set of golf clubs.
Besides his parents, his closest friend was his golf instructor.
He was five years old.
By the time he was five, he'd already appeared on national television
and performed in front of millions of people.
This goes to his unusual... I mean, I'm going to read my note to you before I read the paragraph to you.
Disciplined and obsessed at five, I feel ridiculous for even writing this note.
Each morning, his mother would drop him off at school, and each afternoon, she picked him up.
Then she would drive him to the nearby golf course where he practiced.
Tiger had an unusually structured routine that left little to no time for interacting with other children outside of school. Academically, he was also way
ahead of other kids in his class as well. He was also unusually disciplined for a five-year-old,
and he seldom spoke. So just like Mozart's father was obsessed with music before Mozart was born,
we see the same thing with Earl. It says Earl was instantly hooked.
This is right before Tiger was born. If golf were a drug, he would have qualified as an addict. He liked it so much that it consumed him, leading him to spend far more time with his clubs than
with his wife. I realized what I'd been missing my whole life, Earl said. I decided if I had another
son, I'd introduce him to golf early on. And so there is this huge element. You can't really
understand Tiger without
understanding his father. His father was a Green Beret. He believed in engaging in psychological
warfare on his son. Even the name Tiger came from Earl's experience in Vietnam. He immediately
nicknamed his son Tiger in tribute to a comrade from Vietnam. And then we go back to more notes
where I feel even silly for writing
intense training before Tiger was one.
By the time Tiger turned one,
he had spent 100 and between 100 and 200 hours
watching his father hit golf balls.
So what they would do is they'd go out to the garage,
they'd put him in a high chair
and Earl would just sit there and swing
and hit into the net over and over again.
Tiger got so transfixed by this,
he would watch,
his mother would try to be feeding him, and he would not eat. He'd wait till the swing,
like the swing was done, then he'd turn and open his mouth so his mom could feed him. He'd take one bite, then look again, stare at the swing, back and forth. That's how he ate. When Tiger
was about 11 months old, after watching his father practice, Tiger slid down from his high chair and
picked up a club that Earl had cut down to size for him to make a new tour. He waddled over to the carpet
patch, stood over a golf ball, and swung. All these things that I'm reading are happening over
many, many pages. It's insane how consistent this is. Instead of carrying around a security blanket
or a stuffed animal, Tiger dragged around a putter from one end of the house to the other.
It seldom left his hand. Earl deserved credit for recognizing so early on that his son possessed rare natural talents and abilities, just like Mozart's dad. When he was
18 months old, his mother started bringing him to the driving range to hit balls. After Tiger,
like the baby version of Tiger, the toddler version of Tiger, would hit balls, she would put him back
in his stroller and he would fall asleep. By the time Tiger was two years old, Earl made sure that he had spent two hours a day hitting golf balls. This was insane. Tiger was developing the habit
of practice, practice, practice. This is, so I guess one of the reasons I wanted to read this
biography. So I don't, I've never played golf. I don't even know the rules of golf. I've never
watched golf, but I know who Tiger Woods is. I obviously can see he's clearly an extreme winner,
clearly has a lot of the same parallels in the way he approaches his work to a lot of golf, but I knew who Tiger Woods is. I obviously can see he's clearly an extreme winner, clearly
has a lot of the same parallels in the way he approaches his work to a lot of history's greatest
entrepreneurs. But what really made me want to read this book is because one of my favorite books
I've ever read for the podcast and one that's changed my life was episode 212. And that's the
biography. I read a 600 page biography of Michael Jordan. And I was a huge basketball fan and Michael
Jordan fan my entire life. It's still my favorite game to play.
And what was fascinating is how the reason that book changed my life is because, you know, I always saw the highlight, like the games, the highlights, the championships.
I never saw the practice. And that the main theme of that book is the same theme of this book.
Practice, practice, practice.
Tiger Woods idolized Michael Jordan. Tiger Woods is definitely the Michael Jordan of golf. The way they approach their practice and their insane work ethic around improving parts of their game is identical.
Earl is, this is the strange part where he's like constantly trying to get attention for his son,
even from a very early age.
And we see how wild and like almost like messianic his, how he feels about his son.
Earl Woods made a decision that would alter the course of his young son's life.
He placed a call to a television station and asked for the sports anchor.
My son is two years old, Earl said, and I'm telling you right now that he's going to be the next big thing in golf.
He's going to revolutionize everything, including race relations.
This sentence might be the funniest sentence in the entire book.
It was a blunt way to open a call with a complete stranger.
So this sports anchor goes out.
It's like, oh, yeah, there's a lot of overzealous parents.
This might be BS, but let me go out here and see if that's the case.
And he's like, oh, well, he might be right.
Not on the race relations, but he might be the next biggest thing in golf.
I see this little tiger hitting golf balls straight.
I mean straight, not kind of straight, straight.
He was only a couple of feet tall, yet he was hitting it 50 yards
and he was hitting the ball flush every time. And so anybody that sees Tiger Woods golf, it's like you
have a gifted, you know, once in a century talent. His teachers would say the same thing. Tiger showed
unmistakable signs of being a bona fide gifted child in school. He shared the textbook attributes
of the gifted child, quiet, sensitive and isolated. And so his parents don't really have any money,
but they find ways throughout the entire book to get professional help, even from an early age.
By the time I think he's 13, Tiger's getting recruited by Stanford.
It was well known that he's going to be a pro.
And so there's a bunch of people that say, hey, I'll give you my services for free.
That coach, like a swing coach, trainer, everything else,
just pay me back when he turns pro and becomes a superstar because it's obvious that that's going to happen those are their words and so they wind
up getting this um this golf coach and same thing where he's just like this kid is so i think tiger's
four at this time it's like this kid is so gifted i'm willing to help him uh for free and then we're
going to get into another main theme of this book that tiger uses over and over again and it's the
power of visualization.
So it says this is now his golf coach.
I think he's four years old.
Instead of drilling the youngster over and over,
Duran simply allowed Tiger's natural abilities and his love of the game to grow organically.
Tiger would play 18 holes of golf with Duran.
Kindergarten was still months away,
but Tiger was already starting to learn valuable lessons.
Superior athletes don't have to pay for things.
Not only do they not have to pay for things, they get paid.
The business aspect of, this is the same thing Michael Jordan realized, where he's like,
listen, the only reason that I'm a billionaire now is because of my dedication to winning.
If I didn't win six championships, no one's going to buy my shoes.
And then he had no way to predict that his shoes, you know, people were buying shoes not to play basketball on them, but they wind up becoming
like a very strong piece of culture. You know, to this day, he's gets a 5% royalty on gross sales
of all the Jordan brand. He's making about 150 to 180 million a year, you know, 20 years after he
retired. So Tiger Woods at his peak, I think this is like 2007, 2008,
he was making over $100 million a year just from endorsements, not including any other businesses
that he owns, not including his winnings from golf or anything else. And so today, they say
Tiger is still a billionaire. And again, it comes from this idea that superior athletes, people want
to be associated with winning. And winning is the genesis of both jordan and tiger woods uh fortune tiger now this
goes to the visualization part that i thought was that was very interesting a few weeks ago i did
ray crock's uh autobiography and same thing he would drive around now tiger's doing this when
he's a boy i think he's in elementary school when he started doing this ray crock would drive around
listening to these like positive affirmation tapes i don't think tony robbins was a thing
at that time because it's probably before t might even be born or Tony was a kid,
but it's that kind of, you know, positive mental affirmations. So it says Tiger was in grade school
when his father furnished him with a cassette player and motivational self-help tapes. Tiger
was filling his mind with words that were intended to make him great. He wrote some of the messages
on a sheet of paper that he taped to his bedroom wall.
So he taped it to his wall
and then read it over and over again.
What are these messages?
I'm gonna read every line to you.
I believe in me.
I will own my own destiny.
I smile at obstacles.
I am first in my resolve.
I fulfill my resolutions powerfully.
My strength is great. I stick to it easily and
naturally. My will moves mountains. I focus and give it my all. My decisions are strong. I do it
with all my heart. And then the author says, Tiger listened to those tapes so often that he wore them
out. So now we're going to see
another parallel with Tiger Woods and Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant as well. Michael Jordan
would watch tapes of like Dr. J, all these other NBA players that came before him. Then Kobe in
turn started to watch tapes of Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson. Same thing, 10-year-old Tiger. You
don't get to the top of your profession without studying the great people who came before you.
This is very clear. Now we're 301 biographies in, and this is in nearly every single one of them.
10-year-old Tiger Woods stared intently at the television. It was the final round of the Masters.
He was watching 46-year-old Jack Nicklaus. His reactions, this is what Tiger is reflecting back
on this when he's older about him being 10 years old and doing this. His reactions over those last
holes of the 1986 Masters made an impression on me because they were spontaneous,
and they showed me how much of yourself you have to put into your shot.
Jack was 46, and I was only 10,
and I couldn't put it into words then,
but I wanted to be where he was and doing what he was doing.
After the 1986 Masters,
Golf Digest published a list of Nicholas' career accomplishments.
It included his age at the time
of each significant achievement. Tiger tacked the list to his bedroom wall. From that moment on,
each morning when he woke up and each night when he went to bed, Nicholas was there. This is not
unique to golf. It's not unique to Tiger. It's no different than Jeff Bezos running around with
highlighted copies of Sam Walton's autobiography, giving it out to a ton of people, taking, I think it was the bias of action
and Sam's penchant for frugality and imbibing those characteristics and traits into the very
foundation of early days of Amazon. One of my favorite rappers is a guy named J. Cole. I've
heard interviews with him and he's also mentioned some songs. When he was young, he would literally print out other rappers like Nas that he looked up to
and print out their lyrics and hang them up on the wall.
That is exactly—J. Cole's version is exactly what Tiger is doing with Jack Nicklaus' achievements.
And Tiger mentions this in the book, and it's also in that file that David Perel sent me that his goals were, they, they were confused that what he was chasing was pure
numbers. And he's like, no, I wanted to do it when younger than they were. So he talks about,
this is a quote from Tiger that David sent me. Is there a misconception about what drives you?
And then this is what Tiger says. Here's the major misconception that people have gotten all wrong.
It it's what was posted on my wall about Jack's records.
It was not the majors.
Okay.
That one was on there, but it was the first time he broke 40.
The first time he broke 80.
The first golf tournament he ever won.
First time he ever won the state amateur.
First time he won the US amateur.
And the first time he won the US Open.
That was it.
That was the list.
It was all age related.
To me, that was most important.
This guy's the best out there and the best of all time.
If I can beat each age that he did it, then I have a chance of being the best.
If you buy the book and read it, which I highly recommend, there's no reason not to,
and watch the documentary, I'm focused on things that you and I can take for our work and our career, right?
That's the point.
Learning from history is a form of leverage.
There is an unbelievable amount of sex in this book. Makes sense in the sense that he was the
most famous person, maybe the most famous person on the planet when he had that huge sex scandal
back in 2009, 2010. I'm not going to go into this guy's sex life. At the same time, I think if I
don't mention it and you buy the book, you're like, whoa, you left out a big part. What I'm focused on is how he could hate parts of what his dad did.
His dad was obviously a philanderer.
It's in the documentary.
It's in the book.
Tiger loves his mom.
His mom, you know, was there just as much as his dad was.
And he hated what his dad, his dad would cheat on his mom in front of like a 10 year old.
This is some weird
behavior and yet he wasn't able to avoid he hated that part he hated what his dad did to his mom
and then yet in many ways like he followed the path like the story of the father's embedded in
the son at the same time though his family like i don't want this environment i don't care if my
next my kid is the next tiger woods or the next Michael Jordan or the next Taylor Swift,
because my daughter really loves to sing.
I would never push them like this.
He was raised in this almost psychotic environment.
So you take this unbelievably disciplined kid, this unbelievably, like, genius-level IQ kid,
and you put him with parents that are, listen to this.
This is Tiger's mom.
While driving him to tournaments, she shared her philosophy.
He is like 10.
While driving him to tournaments, she shared his philosophy with him.
In sport, you have to go for the throat, she said, because if you're at all friendly, they'll come back and beat your ass.
So you kill them.
You take their heart.
On the course, he had only one one rule and that was to play without mercy
sorry he's 11 when she's telling him this at age 11 tiger entered 33 junior golf tournaments and
won every one of them there's no feeling i found that matches the feeling that i've beaten everybody
tiger said second place is first loser so i'm going to pause there real quick you i told you
you and i've talked about this before a lot of times you can read a biography, an autobiography of somebody, you have an idea of
who they are. Like I just read James Dyson's autobiography before time. I have an understanding
of who he is. I have no clue. I've watched the Tiger documentary twice, read this entire book.
This book's about 400 pages. I know how he approaches work. I know he's got almost like
Terminator level, levels of focus. He's completely relentless. But even the authors who, you know, interviewed like 250 people that
knew him spent years. I think they said they read every single book on Tiger as well. He's just an
enigma where you read Jordan's biography and his autobiography. You have a sense of who he is. This
is very different. Now, that's the thing that popped to mind. This is a note I left on my page
on this page. OK, later on in this book, Tiger's mom said that Tiger's dad was soft
because his dad cries and he forgives.
And then they make the connection.
The book opens up with the death of his father and them burying his father.
I think it was in Kansas where he was born.
And they make the point that a decade later, there's no grave.
Tiger's dad is in an unmarked grave.
And he's not in an unmarked grave because of Tiger.
He's in an unmarked grave because of his mother.
They were technically never divorced, but they were separated and lived separately.
He cheated on his wife over and over again.
And this, you never make the connection,
right? She's telling her 11 year old, go kill him. No mercy. Go for the throat. Don't act friendly
at all. Uh, later on, she's like, there's no point in having friends in life. Like she's a
Earl and her almost like the same person. And so these are not people. My point is, is like,
I would never wish, I don't think any
parent is going to wish for this environment for their kids. So the reason I don't, I'm not going
to get heavy into judging him is because this happens, I think, as you get older, there was a
lot of things my parents did that I did not understand. And I did not, I was like, why would
you do this? And yet you get older, you start having your own kids,
and then you just get a perspective with time.
And then I go back and I'm like, listen, I'm obviously not going to do that with my kids.
I understand.
I'm not excusing that behavior, but I understand.
It was like, well, imagine being raised by their parents.
You know, I had both sets of grandparents.
My paternal grandfather, I never met, but the ones
I did meet, the three I did meet were all terrible. And I just like the older I get, I was like, well,
listen, I excuse that behavior, but imagine if that was like the environment you were raised in
and like, that was your parents. And then go back even further. Like, I wonder what their parents
were like. They were probably not great people, right?
But just imagine being told, like, you're going to be Gandhi.
You're going to be Jesus.
Being forced to practice two hours a day when you're two years old.
Like, your mom, you're 10 years old.
I can remember being 10.
I have, like, I have a 10-year-old.
She just turned 11.
Like, they're still kids.
They're kids, man.
This is crazy.
And then later on, after Earl's dead,
you know, saying, hey, he was soft,
he cried, and he forgave people.
I don't cry, and I don't forgive anybody.
And then you put the father of your son and your ex-husband in an unmarked grave.
That is some crazy, ruthless behavior.
This is not...
I read a lot of biographies.
You don't come across like this, in the mother that's wild so then we go into more on this this this level
of training they wanted to train not only tiger's body but his mind his dad man some of the stuff
i'm not going to read you because it's crazy it It's insane. Tiger's dad is nuts. And so he being on the planet that has more mental toughness than you.
Brunza is a guy named Brunza started to teach Tiger how to visualize shots.
He gave Tiger cassette tapes containing subliminal messages that were custom made for him.
The two did breathing and visualization exercises together.
I wanted to bring that up because along with practice, visualization is something that's mentioned over and over again in this book.
The amount of pressure that he's on, he's constantly isolating himself, whether it's the night before a big tournament, muting the world and really getting control of his mind. focus is very similar to how Steve Jobs were. Steve would, people around him and Apple would
say he was focused so intently on one thing that you could talk, you could snap your fingers,
like you're not, until he takes his focus away, he's not hearing any of that. There's a lot,
a lot of that in this book with Tiger Woods when he was young, but also when he was at the peak of
his golf career. And so this is the section where his father's saying, hey, I'm going to build a
bulletproof mind. Tiger's 12 years old when all this is happening. Earl put him through what he
called Woods's finishing school. He would use psychological warfare and prisoner of war
techniques that he had once taught to soldiers. Earl broke down his son in an attempt to toughen
him up. I wanted to make sure that he would never run into anybody who was tougher mentally than he
was. And we achieved that. Tiger says, my dad deliberately would use a lot of profanity when
I was hitting golf balls all the time and throughout my swing. So this is what his father
is telling his 12-year-old son. He probably did it when he was younger than 12. Dude,
fuck off, Tiger, he would say sometimes. It was, motherfucker this, you little piece of shit this.
And then the line, I'm not going to say at all, calling him obviously a racist term,
things of that nature.
He would push me to the breaking point and then he'd back off. He'd push me to the breaking point and then he would back off. I'm not repeating myself. Tiger's repeating himself here. It was
wild. We had a code word that I could use whenever I thought I couldn't take it anymore, but I never
used that code word. I was never going to give in to what he was doing. I was a quitter if I used
that word and I don't quit. That word was enough.
Tiger simply overwhelmed. And so this is the result. This is when he said he was like near
his peak. Tiger simply overwhelmed the competition on the Southern California Junior Circuit
at an elite tournament that attracted the finest players in the region, Tiger absolutely dominated. He was, in their estimation, a decade
ahead of the other kids. And then here's just one of another insane story that it's hard to believe
that's in the book. Imagine being so good at golf that the school district changes the boundaries
for you. Tiger entered Western High School. Western High's golf coach, Don Crosby, felt like his fledgling golf team had won the lottery when Tiger arrived.
Months before school started, the district was considering a modest boundary change that would have put Tiger's home just outside of the Western High District.
In an urgent meeting with Western High's principal, Crosby took out a map and drew a circle around this specific parcel of land.
Whatever you do this summer, Crosby told the principal,
do not lose this tract.
Why? The principal said.
Because a kid named Tiger Woods lives there.
And then we go back to the Michael Jordan is Tiger Woods,
Tiger Woods is Michael Jordan.
Something that pops up over and over again in this book,
my favorite maxim for this,
is the public praises people for what they practice in private.
And we see that over and over again.
Tiger often averaged more than 10 hours per day on the practice range.
Tiger was far more inclined to practice than to play a round of golf.
There's a line just like that in Michael Jordan's biography.
Why don't you play the course more, he was asked.
I like practicing better, Tiger said.
The first thing I taught Tiger, aside from the love of the game of golf,
was a love of practice, his dad said. When he was real small, people would ask him, how did you get so good,
Tiger? And he would answer, practice, practice, practice. One of my all-time favorite quotes that
I found doing research for the podcast came all the way back in episode 50. It's from Marc Andreessen.
And he says, the world is a very malleable place. If you know what you want and you go for it with
maximum energy and drive and passion, the world will a very malleable place. If you know what you want and you go for it with maximum energy and drive and passion,
the world will often reconfigure itself around you much more quickly and easily than you would think.
We go back from a 10-year-old Tiger Woods watching Jack Nicklaus,
hopefully that's how you pronounce his name,
putting his list of achievements on his wall, staring at it every night and morning,
to meeting him at this tournament.
And at one point he says says, Nicholas called on Tiger
to demonstrate his swing. Tiger is 15 years old. Remaining poised, Woods demonstrated his flawless
swing. After a few swings, Nicholas stopped him. Tiger, he said, grinning, when I grow up, I want
to have a swing as pretty as yours. It was a rare display of public validation from the game's
greatest golfer to the child prodigy who had been anointed his successor. A few pages later,
one sentence I highlighted,
but I think I've already told you this,
but he says it explicitly.
Tiger says, I want to be the Michael Jordan of golf.
I'd like to be the best ever.
Later on, Tiger Woods is going to be obsessed
with the U.S. Navy SEALs.
He winds up training with them,
has this idea to quit golf
and to become a Navy SEAL later on.
Likely causes a lot of problems with his golf game
because it aggravates some of his injuries,
like this intense training that he's going to.
But he has this idea where it's like this U.S.,
I think it comes from the Navy SEALs, about violence of action.
And violence of action is the unrestricted use of speed, strength, and surprise
and aggression to achieve total dominance against your enemy.
I have no idea why, but when I got to this section, the description of Tiger's swing early in his career reminded me of violence of action. It was the speed and power of Tiger's
swing that left the most lasting impression. The adjective that came to mind was violent.
Tiger swung so violently that he had raw spots on his forearm from the
friction created by their rubbing together on his release. What's your go-to shot when you aren't
swinging well? Harmon asked. That's I think his first or second swing coach. Swing as fast as I
can. Unleash everything I have through the ball. Then I go find the ball and I hit it again.
We got to read that again. Swing as fast as I can. Unleash everything I have find the ball and I hit it again. We got to read that again.
Swing as fast as I can.
Unleash everything I have through the ball.
Then I go find the ball and hit it again.
Violence of action in the form of a golf swing.
And so then it goes into some of the things that Tiger was witnessing when he was a kid.
And this is a main point that's made in the documentary where his dad would have like
this Winnebago or this RV and they'd park it right next to the golf course.
And so Tiger is a young kid and he'd see his dad, start having drinks, invite all these
ladies over.
And then like the Winnebago would start shaking.
And so this is going to become a big problem later on.
It says he was he was conflicted over his relationship with his father.
He loved him and considered him his best friend.
Yet he hated some of the things that he did.
And you see this manifest once Tiger has complete control over his life.
He's a grown man, world famous athlete.
Overnight, you know, his net worth goes from zero to 60 million dollars the day he turns pro.
And his he spends less and less time with his father and i think
in the documentary it's his mom they know he's dying because he's got cancer diabetes he's had
like a bunch of heart attacks he's like smoking and drinking and doing all kinds of crazy stuff
there's a lot of crazy stuff this guy does even when he's an old man in the book but i'm pretty
sure it was his mom that said hey you need to like go and you know patch things up because he's about
to die and you're going to regret it if you don't.
They also had no problem putting an unbelievable amount of pressure, like financial pressure on him.
He knew.
So he's like, listen, his father wasn't a CEO.
He had no money.
His mother was an immigrant from a distant land.
His family had little money and few connections.
Their only real chance for upward mobility rested squarely on Tiger's golf game.
Tiger knew that this was his way out his family could not pay for all the lessons um that that he needed the travel everything else and so they put financial pressure on him
and then they kept he like kept engaging in this this psychological warfare over and over again
and this is like his dad the crazy thing about his dad is like, he almost like bragged about it.
Like he would be, he would talk about it unprompted.
And he's like, yeah, when he gets a little cocky,
I say you weren't shit before, you aren't shit now,
and you'll never be shit.
I could never picture me talking to my son that way.
That just seems insane to me.
Tiger eventually gets recruited to Stanford.
And then he winds up building a relationship with Bill Walsh, who wrote that fantastic book, The Score Takes Care of Itself.
I think it's episode 106 of Founders.
I actually need to reread that book because I think I'll have a better understanding of it on the second time through.
But what's fascinating is Tiger's young.
Bill's towards the end of his career.
I think he'd already retired from San Francisco, 49ers. I think he'd already won five Super Bowls. And yet he saw like a lot of parallels and stuff he could learn from Bill. Tiger had long admired Walsh and his reputation as a genius coach. And so he went to pay him a visit. with cerebral approaches to their respective sports. They were both introverts to the extreme,
and they were more at ease by themselves than in the company of others.
They instantly connected.
They were both perfectionists with similar organizational qualities.
And so Game recognizes Game.
Bill Walsh sees, oh, this guy's special.
He gave Tiger his own personal key to the weight room.
No other student athlete on the Stanford campus had such a key.
Within a month, Woods was practically living in the weight room. And it sounded like getting away to college was one of the best things could ever
happen to him. Because there's all these people that are going to wind up playing a role in Tiger's
early career that are kind of recruited and introduced to Tiger by his dad. One was this guy
named Merchant. But Merchant became friends with Earl, but he saw the way Earl was with Tiger's mom.
And so I'm just going to read, and there's a bunch of stories in the book.
I don't think I have to read all of them to you.
I think you'll get the point here because I'm really just trying to understand.
What did you expect when you have somebody that is raised in an environment like this?
So he says, when he was in Earl's home, Merchant witnessed things that he could no longer ignore.
He had it with Earl's foul mouth abuse of Tiger's mother
and the way he would tell Tiger's mother to shut the fuck up.
One night during Tiger's freshman year, Merchant finally confronted Earl.
Listen, if I don't speak up, my mother will rise up out of her grave and slap the shit out of me
if I allow you to continue to verbally abuse your wife as you do in my presence.
So please stop it.
Merchant figured that if Earl behaved this way in front of him, he no doubt did the same or worse in front of his son.
He knew how much Tiger revered and loved his father and seeing his father mistreat his mother was bound to do long term damage.
And so then Merchant describes what I was trying to say earlier.
It's like, yes, the impact of his father is undeniable,
but we can't discount his mother either.
Fans of golf and Tiger Woods see only the positive of the father-son relationship
and the accomplishments of the son, Merchant explained.
But Tiger's greatest fan without question was his mother.
She went to all the tournaments.
She walked around the fucking golf courses everywhere he played.
She wore the hat.
Talk about worship. She loved that boy beyond golf courses everywhere he played. She wore the hat. Talk about worship.
She loved that boy beyond belief,
but Earl treated her like dirt,
and it pissed me off.
It really did.
And so that may have played a role
in Tiger turning pro earlier.
It says the family dysfunction at home
weighed heavily on Tiger at college.
His parents desperately needed space.
They needed separation,
but their ability to live apart
was restricted by their finances.
And so when you look at the the totality of, you know, Tiger's career, you say,
hey, are there things like we can learn from there maybe to avoid? And so his practice habits were unbelievable. His workouts were extreme. And a lot of people, you know, say like he just essentially
like a lot of the decisions he made later on also stem from the fact that he had so many surgeries
and then those surgeries, he was in so much pain.
And he's on all kinds of prescription medication.
And I saw this firsthand.
My mom was dying of cancer.
There's nothing they could do.
And they just give a ton of pain medication.
And it just changes who that person is.
But I just can't help but wonder if Tiger had like a Bill Bowerman.
And who'd know if he would even listen to somebody like that.
But Bill Bowerman, I read his biography back on episode 153. Bill Bowerman is the co-founder of
Nike. He's a legendary track coach. Phil Knight, you know, has been on record over and over again
saying that there is no Nike without Bill Bowerman. And the interesting thing about
Bill Bowerman was way, this is decades, people know the importance of rest and recovery now,
but he was decades ahead of the curve. And so in that
biography, back on episode 153, I'm going to read from it real quick. He talks about the fact that
he just sees class after class after class of track stars, right? And they all make the same
mistake and that they don't rest and they get injured and then their career goes to shit.
And I just wonder if he had a strong influence. You know, Phil Knight is a very
formidable individual. And yet he was able to like he listened to and admired Bowerman. Bowerman
never let Phil Knight overtrain. And so this is the speech that Bowerman would give to the incoming
freshmen, incoming track athletes every year. Take a primitive organism, any weak, pitiful organism,
say a freshman. You make it lift or jump or run,
and then you let it rest, what happens? A little miracle. It gets a little better. It gets a little
stronger, a little faster, a little more enduring. That's all training is. Stress, recover, improve.
You think any damn fool could do it, but you don't. You work too hard and rest too little and you get hurt. That was said decades
before Tiger turns pro. And it sounds like that's like one of the biggest lessons that jumps from
this book. You work too hard and rest too little and you get hurt. And so this is the first time
in the book where it's many, many surgeries he's going to have. It marked the first of what would
become many surgeries over the course of his career,
stemming from excessive wear and tear on his body.
He never, Tiger never let on that he was in pain.
The mind, he said, is a powerful thing.
Then we go back to this insane mentality
that he's learning from his mother
because a main theme of the book is the fact that he had,
it says Tiger's lack of sentimentality
and personal connection to others can be traced directly to his mother.
This is what she says.
I'm a loner and so is Tiger.
I don't have many close friends and never have.
I'm independent and strong willed.
That way you survive.
And so eventually Tiger makes the decision, much with Nike's encouragement.
Phil Knight's a character that pops up.
There's a bunch of cameos of him in the book as well.
And so he makes this decision.
He's going to turn pro.
And he gets to meet, he starts getting to meet Michael Jordan, who he idolized.
He says, Jordan was another story.
Tiger had idolized him throughout his teenage years.
Phil Knight even saw Tiger as Jordan's equal.
When asked whether Tiger was comparable to Jordan, Knight said flatly, you bet your ass he is.
Jordan, the world's most famous athlete,
publicly stated that his only hero on earth is Tiger Woods. It was a hell of a compliment
for a 20-year-old. Tiger was too young to drink, but with two strokes of a pen,
he had secured $60 million before playing his first round of golf as a pro. Around this time,
this is where his dad's starting to talk publicly about his 20-year-old
son. He's going to be Gandhi. He's going to be Mandela. He's going to be better than all of them.
I know I was personally selected by God himself to nurture this young man. That is exactly,
exactly what Mozart's father said. And so they have an entire chapter dedicated to the 1997
masters. I just want to go back to this point that the world is a very malleable place.
Tiger had sat in his living room at age 10,
watching Jack Nicklaus win the 1986 Masters on television
and dreamed of doing just that.
Here he was 11 years later,
and Jack Nicklaus was now elbowing his way through the masses of spectators,
trying to get a glimpse of Tiger.
And so we go back into what was his practice habits,
like what was his regimen
after he turned pro? And it goes back to maybe this is, who knows, you have to ask if he went
back and did it, would he take more like a Bowerman approach or is it like, hey, he just
has this like ruthless intensity and drive and competitive spirit that maybe he couldn't even
control. And so it says Tiger had compulsive habits. By the spring of 1997, he was consumed
with practicing and working out. A typical practice day for him entailed hitting 600 balls,
working on a short game, working on his putting, and then playing a round of golf,
and working out in the gym for two or three hours. That was the life I wanted, he said.
And he never rested after a win. The joy he derived from winning tournaments was always fleeting.
Even after shattering records at Augusta wasn't enough. I didn't care if I won. I didn't care that I won by 12 shots, he said. I was addicted
to staying on the range for hours. And so right away as he turns pro, he's breaking records,
he's winning all the time. And then this is a, this goes, this was really helpful to have David
Perel text me and send me all this stuff because, you know, I'm not, I don't understand golf the
way he does. And he's like, listen, listen the man is wild he literally becomes the best player in the world twice and he's like nope
i'm gonna i'm gonna scratch everything and rebuild my swing from scratch he was relentless and so
the first time he rebuilt his swing it's gonna take some time from he's you know winning winning
winning he's like okay this isn't i may win I'm going to rebuild my, my swing because I want to win long-term. And some people debate if this was
good or bad or whatever the case is. But the main point is he had, that means he has to go from
dominating and winning to losing. And he does not like that. And so this is what happens.
He goes nine months between victories, which is an excessive long time for him.
And this is just funny to me.
It had been nine long months since his last PGA victory.
Tiger received the trophy and held it up.
So this guy named Rick, who is the director for the tournament, he's holding it.
Tiger's holding up the trophy.
And you go from the end of the tournament to now they're going to go over to like the pavilion where you take photos and you do the media center.
And Tiger's like, OK, I'll head over there.
And then Rick's like, I'll take the trophy, reaching for it.
And Tiger's like, no, I just beat 155 guys.
I will take the trophy.
It was unheard of for the winner to carry the trophy
from one stop to the next following,
to the next stop following the tournament.
But Tiger wasn't about to let it out of his hands.
His adamancy was an important clue to what makes Woods tick.
Money didn't motivate him, nor did fame.
He played for the hardware.
He played for the win.
He always cared more about collecting trophies than making friends.
Above all, Woods was a scorekeeper,
and trophies symbolized wins wins and wins denoted dominance.
And so let's go back to this idea that game recognizes game and the world is a malleable place.
Imagine what this must have felt like.
And I wish you could elaborate on it, but you're not getting anything out of the enigma that is Tiger Woods.
And this is Jack Nicklaus saying like there's nobody else like him.
Like he is the only one. Remember he's watching
Jack when he's 10 years old. He has Jack's achievements on his wall. Listen to this. He
joined Jack Nicholas at the post-tournament press conference. The great thing is my game is starting
to come around, Tiger said. I'm starting to understand how to play the game of golf a little
better than I had before. And then Nicholas says, whoa, I had never seen this kind of playing before.
How old are you? You're 23 now? Yes, Tiger said. Most players are 23 don't have your kind of
imagination. As far as he hits it, there's no reason for him to even bother practicing his
short game. But he has. And that is why he is winning. I don't know if anybody can play the
way he does. He has the ability to do things that nobody else can.
And then there's a bunch of golfers in this book just talked about if you competed with him at this
point, it was very intimidating. Woods was a rare athlete who liked to practice as much as he liked
to play, whose obsession with perfection and ability to perform without fear gave him intimidating
psychological advantage. And so it then goes into his mindset, his inner monologue. He's the night before the
last day of play. He would just, he'd get in a room. He started doing this visualization.
He says, no one else stands a chance tomorrow. That night alone in his room, Woods would close
his eyes. He visualized the first tee. From there, he played every shot in his mind, one by one,
all the way through the 18th hole. Then he went to sleep. The next day he shot 65 in the opening
round with three rounds still to play.
Everyone else had already recognized
that they were playing for second place.
So I thought that was the night before the last day.
That was wrong.
They still have three rounds to go.
This idea of visualization sounds to a lot of people
about, hey, it's willy-foo-foo.
It's like some nonsense.
All I can tell you is that it is in a ton
of the biographies that I read.
When I type in visualization in Readwise, I pull up all the notes and highlights I have about this.
This is S. Day Lauder.
I think the first time I covered this was episode 136.
I think the second time was episode 217.
And this is what she said.
And she's writing this in like the 1970s, 1980s.
So decades before where we are in the book.
Visualize.
In your mind's eyes, you see, if in your mind's eye, you see a successful venture,
a deal made, a profit accomplished, it has a superb chance of actually happening.
Projecting your mind into a successful situation,
which is exactly what Tiger is doing where we are in this book,
is the most powerful means to achieve goals.
If you spend time with pictures of failures in your mind, you will orchestrate failure.
Countless times before the event, I have pictured a heroic sale to a large department store.
Every step of the way, and the picture in my mind became a reality.
Every step of the way.
That's exactly what Tiger is doing, isn't it?
I have visualized success, then created the reality from the image.
Great athletes, business people, inventors, and achievers from all walks of life seem to know the secret.
That is the end
of S.A. Lauder's highlight. I had written in my own note at this point, Bob Noyce, Edwin Land,
Steve Jobs, Arnold Schwarzenegger all did this. And now we can add Tiger Woods to that list as well.
And so a large part of the book too is Tiger dealing with, you know, being relatively unknown
to being literally one of the most famous people on the planet. This is something that I don't think anybody would actually understand unless
they go through. And we see him trying to cope with this. Like he would, he's got two giant yachts
at the end of the book. One is named Privacy. The other is named Solitude. About a decade and a half
before that, he gets obsessed with scuba diving. And he says that he was obsessed with it and spent
so much time under
the water he even gets certified to be like a cave diver too which is kind of crazy but one the reason
one of the reasons he did is because that's one of few places on the entire planet where no one
could recognize him and no one wanted anything from him and that he just felt very uh at peace
being alone among the fish.
And he felt that there was no other place on the planet that he could achieve that level of peace
than on the bottom of the ocean floor.
But there is one person that Tiger could go to
and talk like, how do you deal with these kind of things?
Just so happen to idolize Jordan,
but also become friends with Jordan.
Jordan obviously was Tiger Woods
before Tiger Woods was Tiger Woods. And this is in the documentary. It's also in the
book. And it says, perhaps it was inevitable that Tiger would turn to Jordan. There was no other
athlete alive who had experienced the same level of fame. The two of them essentially belonged to
their own exclusive club. Jordan exercised considerable influence over Tiger's attitude
toward fame, women, and power. And so that's when the book goes into a lot of detail.
I mean, they're spending a lot of time in Vegas.
You can imagine what's happening.
You know, I don't have to fill that in for you.
There was one thing that was kind of funny, though.
Tiger went up to Jordan and is just like, well, what do you say to all these women?
And Jordan goes, you tell them that you're Tiger Woods.
And so that's like the conundrum or the paradox maybe that Tiger is in because if no one feels sorry for somebody that's super famous and
super rich, that's just not that doesn't happen. But imagine being around every single person
around you doesn't actually give a shit about you as a person. They just want something from you,
whether it's money, fame, access, something you can do. How do you make true friends if you're
as famous as Tiger Woods?
And the answer is, I don't think you do, unfortunately. Not that he was gifted in
making friends anyways. Now this is wild though. This goes back to like his dedication. And this
is really the main reason, like I think the book is worthy for entrepreneurs to read is because
Tiger paid attention to every single detail, every single aspect, any little piece, part of his game
or any aspect of it that he could
improve knowing that these little improvements uh over time like just create something that's so
hard to compete with and so we see like just he had this innate sense of even the equipment that
he used uh he considered tiger's mastery of every facet of the game right down to the equipment he
used downright intimidating for instance nike had recently shipped a box of prototype titanium
drivers to wood so that he could test them. There were six in total. After putting the drivers
through their paces, Tiger told him that he preferred the ones that were heavier than the
others. But then this guy informed Tiger that all six drivers were the exact same weight.
Tiger argued otherwise, insisting that one made more than the others. So they send the drivers
back to Nike. And this is what they found. They found that one made more than the others. So they send the drivers back to Nike,
and this is what they found. They found that five drivers were exactly the same weight,
but the sixth was two grams heavier. When they pulled the club apart, they discovered that an
extra dab of goo had been added to the inside of the head by one of the engineers. The weight of
the goo was equivalent to the weight of two $ says he possessed unsurpassed talents that he honed through a lifetime of practice.
It is just so hard to compete with somebody that's obsessed and that is just doing more work than anybody else.
They said that on his college team, like he practiced more
than all of them combined. So that is the part of the book that it's all about his career up until
what people consider his downfall. But I do think there's a point, there's a few highlights that's
worth pointing out. I've been going deep on Robert Caro and I've been, I watched his documentary,
I've been reading his biographies.
I'm on the third biography of his right now.
I'm going to eventually do an episode on his autobiography called Working, which is all about his approach to his craft because I like how deliberately inefficient it is.
He writes out his books by hand, types them in a typewriter.
It takes like 10 years.
It's like the level of detail this guy has is fascinating.
But something was interesting that i
heard robert carl say i read about in an interview and also heard him say in the biography or excuse
me in the documentary was that like people think he's writing a biography on robert moses and he's
writing this like five-part biography of lyndon johnson he's like no no i'm using the form of
biography to tell a story of how power works in the real world and he had done done this like, he got basically like this fellowship, I think it was at Harvard,
I can't remember, where he's taking all these classes and he kept talking about the fact
that what he was learning at, I'm pretty sure at Harvard, power doesn't work like that.
That power as described in the classroom is not how power works in the real world.
And he decided to dedicate his entire life to educating us on how power actually works.
And this is the reason I would pay attention to Tiger's story.
And again, I'm never going to get on this podcast and like criticize.
I would say, hey, that's a decision I wouldn't want to make or I can avoid it.
My point is not to criticize. My point say, hey, that's a decision I wouldn't want to make or I can avoid it.
My point is not to criticize. My point is to understand. And the part of studying history,
the part of reading so many biographies is because I think the understanding that I have of human nature and the world around me now, compared to when I started this project, is not even the same.
And I'm starting to understand how the world actually works and how humans actually are, which I think is like just
in a weird way, comforting and will benefit. Like I have a huge benefit as I navigate the
rest of my life and my work and my career and my personal life. Right. And so this is after the
fallout where it becomes made public that he's got, you know, who knows how many mistresses,
his wife didn't know anything was going on, winds up losing, you know, at this point he was making over a hundred million
from endorsements. So just all the stuff that's happening. And what was crazy to me is, it's in
the documentary, but the National Choir has essentially a network of spies and a bunch of
other media organizations have this. And so when I'm reading about this, I'm like, how many people
know that this is actually how the world works? So if I could tie what's happening on this page to what Robert Caro taught
us, he's like the way real power works, political power, power to shape cities in Robert Moses'
case, power to shape entire societies in Lyndon Johnson's case is not how they teach you. That's
not actually what's happening. And I feel that a large part of the world is like that and so first of all the
fact was that tiger was unbelievably gifted and unbelievably intelligent and he did not see his
demise coming that's a surprising to us right that and when i look at that i'm not like oh
like what's wrong with the guy i couldn't see it's like okay he had a blind spot what are my blind
spots and then i get into essentially like he had an entire
like he was followed everywhere he went and people were being paid a ton of money to contribute to
his downfall so they could profit off of it. I'm not excusing the behavior he made. I'm just saying
that these people also did some really crazy things that I don't think most people would
realize. This is an example. The National Choir made its business to know what A-list celebrities were doing after the sun went down. To that end,
it employed a network of women pretty enough to blend right in at the hottest clubs.
They backed up that surveillance with various valets, bartenders, bouncers, and cocktail
waitresses at every hotel, restaurant, and club. Everyone keeping tabs for the National Choir
was paid between $200 and $500 a night in cash to inform on the behavior of various actors, comedians, musicians, and politicians known to boost newsstand sales.
Think about, you wonder why he names his two mega yachts privacy and solitude like a decade after this is happening.
Everywhere he goes, he's in a restaurant a club
he might think he's the the waitress is you know helping him you know get order food or get a drink
and she's literally being paid she is a spy that is crazy and it gets even crazier because
there is so much of this stuff that comes out from from in some of these mistresses, like they're getting paid a ton.
I think it was said something like he paid the main one, Rachel.
You could tell I forgot her name or how to pronounce her last name.
I think he had to pay her like ten million dollars.
But in some cases, like People magazine and all these other magazines, they're paying like one hundred grand, two hundred grand.
You know, I try to think about this as like having a daughter.
Right. Like, how am I going to put this? Let like having a daughter, right?
Like, how am I going to put this?
Let me read this sentence to you.
In exchange for cash, she informed the supermarket tabloid of an upcoming tryst between her daughter and Woods.
What the hell is the implication of that sentence?
There is a woman, there is a mother
willing to sell out her own daughter
for money. Her daughter was telling her that she's having an affair with Tiger Woods,
that they meet in these parking lots, do all this crazy stuff. The details are in the book
if you want to read it. And she's like, OK, I bet you I can make a couple hundred grand off this and say, and now you Google her daughter.
Anybody can Google her daughter. And I did this for a bunch of the people in the book
to see what's the first thing comes up. You know, what is the first thing that comes up?
It is the affair they had with Tiger Woods and in graphic detail, pictures, text messages, disturbing things. And you sold
out your daughter for money. What does that say about our species? And there's a line here with
Tiger's friend. These are people who live their lives failing. So they want to read negative
things about people who have gone up and then come down. And then it wasn't until I read the
book because I missed the connection while I was watching the documentary i was like wait a minute like this poor decision making that tiger would
even say it was poor decision making his his end too like something that could have contributed to
it other than like the natural human nature is the fact that he's just had so many so much pain
he's on a bunch of pain medication which there's just no way like when it would in the documentary
it shows like him getting
like his car was just pulled over. He's like sleeping in the car in the middle of the road.
And I think they said he's like on Vicodin, Xanax, Ambien. He's like mixing all these things. He
could have died. He was on the same, the same medication that Michael Jackson OD'd on, like
Dilaudid or something like that. I don't know how to pronounce it. And so I was sitting here
thinking about this. It's like, okay. And some of my notes are just very simple, like avoid pills, pin or something like that i don't know how to pronounce it and so i was sitting here thinking
about this it's like okay and some of my notes are just very simple like avoid pills but it's like
his greatest strength might wind up being his undoing his greatest weakness in the sense that
he just worked so much harder and he had a high tolerance of pain not realizing that that caused
more injuries than necessary then his doctors say hey take it easy after surgery he doesn't take it easier he goes back he's like this relentless drive in hey, take it easy after surgery. He doesn't take it easier.
He goes back. He's like this relentless drive in him. And then it causes another surgery to happen.
And the more surgeries you happen, the more drugs you have to happen, the more drugs you have to
happen, the worse your decision making gets. And so it goes into now he's starting to be
distracted. Maybe he's distracted because he's also maybe he's interested. Maybe he just can't
deal with the pressure, but maybe he's also on a lot of prescription medication. This is when he
starts aggravating his injuries, not from golf, not from practice, but from like jumping out of
planes. And so they make the point that in 2007, you're going to think he's still amazing, but his
swing coaches and some of the data they were collecting noticed that, oh, there's like a lag
time between doing work that leads to success and it and success, but also failing before the failure.
By 2007 was the first time Haney started to think that Woods was closer to the end of his greatness than he was to beginning.
There were signs were too subtle to spot in tournaments.
They were more apparent in practice sessions and in the shot disbursement charts kept in testing sessions.
Tiger's work habits began to slip.
There were more distractions. The breakdown of Tiger's body, as he was often in physical pain and therefore taking pain medication,
were both attributed by his caddy and his swing coach to his extreme workout regimen and his
fascination with Navy SEAL training. They were pleading with him, asking him, please stop doing
all this Navy SEAL stuff. It's not good for your golf game. Tiger ignored them. He stepped up his
SEAL activities. He started training in army boots and going for military-style runs while wearing
a weighted vest. Tiger had both Williams and Haney, or had told them both, that he was thinking of
leaving golf to pursue a career in the military. Tiger would do as many as 10 parachute jumps per
day, and he admitted to a friend that he had injured his shoulder on one joke when he collided
with a partner. And so at 31 years old, he's like, all right, maybe I'll just switch careers.
He says he was going to take concrete steps to qualify to join the Navy SEALs. But Haney
pointed out that Tiger was 31 and the age limit for Navy SEALs was 28. Woods insisted that they
were making an exception for him. And so he's pleading with him. He's like, what are you doing?
You're the best golfer in the world. Why would you do this? Doesn't Jack Nichols' record mean
anything to you? Woods stopped, looked him in the eye and said, no, if my career ended right now,
I'm happy with everything that I've accomplished. And so when I read this, that might be true.
Maybe it's true. Maybe it's he's under so much pressure and all this, you know, he's having a
hard time. It's got to be disorienting what he went through. And so one of my favorite quotes
that I discovered recently,, probably 20 episodes ago,
was from Charlie Munger. Charlie says, the problem isn't getting rich, it's staying sane.
That human mind is not used to dealing with extreme levels of success. So few people are able to deal with extreme levels of success and actually stay sane. And so they have an entire
chapter on him dealing with pain. This is where I wrote to myself, avoid pills.
And Tiger has like this internal monologue.
He's like, listen, there's a difference between being hurt and being injured.
If I'm hurt, I can deal with the pain.
Pain is no big deal.
I can block that out.
But when I'm injured, my body doesn't respond.
And this is the problem.
He's like, he got taught, he was played through pain his entire life.
His first reported instance of using painkillers was in 2002. You can see highlights
from his 2008 Masters appearance where he is like wincing. They try to get him to quit and he says,
F off, I'm winning this tournament. And he was using Vicodin, and I forgot something else,
at least Vicodin, to manage the extreme pain that he had in his knees during the Masters. So he's had, at least at that point,
a half a decade, maybe more, of confirmed painkiller use. And from all the medical
professionals around Tiger, they're saying this doesn't make any sense. This is not possible.
They said it was hard to reconcile the condition of Tiger's knee with his performance. He had won
nine of his previous 12 tournaments, and he had done it with a severely compromised left knee.
A few pages later this is
the inner monologue of tiger again that's just what we do as athletes and competitors you have
to deal with it it's trying to get up every day and knowing that you have to go in the gym and
bust your butt and that it's going to hurt and you're going to put yourself in a different place
a different state of mind for me i just enjoyed that part of it and then both the book and the
documentary do a great job of showing this very
common arc. He's coming up, he's coming up, he's coming up. Once he gets to the pinnacle,
he's torn down. We see him suffer. We see him repent. He loses his wife, his family,
his endorsements. Then he starts working his way back up. The apex is when he wins his last major
in 2019. His reputation today in present day is nothing like it was, you know, 15 years ago when all this happened.
I think one of the lessons and realizations he had after going through all this was actually a very positive one and one that you and I can use in our work.
And we'll end on what I think is one of the most important lessons in the entire book.
I learned one thing for sure, Tiger said.
When I play golf again, I'm going to play for myself. I'm not going to play for my dad or for my mom or for my agent or for my caddy or for Nike or for my foundation or for you
or for the fans. I'm going to play for myself. And that is where I'll leave it for the full story.
Highly recommend buying the book and watching the documentary on HBO. If you buy the book using the
link that's in the show notes in your podcast player, you'll be supporting the podcast at the same time.
That is 301 books down, 1,000 to go, and I'll talk to you again soon.
