Good Inside with Dr. Becky

Tony Finau: Staying in the Swing

35 min
Feb 10, 20262 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Dr. Becky interviews professional golfer Tony Finau about his journey from a makeshift garage driving range to PGA Tour success, exploring how early sacrifice, parental support, and emotional resilience shaped both his athletic performance and parenting philosophy with his six children.

Insights
  • Constraints and limitations in childhood (free chipping/putting, garage driving range) created intrinsic motivation and work ethic that outcompeted resource-rich competitors
  • Elite performance recovery involves emotional regulation through ritual (club in bag = move on) rather than in-the-moment analysis, preserving mental energy for forward focus
  • Parental repair after mistakes is more impactful than preventing mistakes; presence without lecturing during difficult moments builds resilience and connection
  • Competitive drive manifests differently across individuals; calm demeanor and high expectations can coexist, challenging stereotypes about what excellence looks like
  • One-on-one time and device-free family meals are practical anchors for maintaining connection amid high-demand professional schedules
Trends
Parenting philosophy shift from performance-focused correction to repair-based connection and unconditional loveMental performance training emphasizing emotional regulation and self-talk over external motivation or punishmentReframing sacrifice and constraints as competitive advantages rather than disadvantages in talent developmentIntegration of faith and family rituals (prayer, family dinner) as performance and wellbeing anchors among high-achieving athletesAuthenticity in leadership: rejecting one-size-fits-all models of competitiveness and drive in favor of individual expressionBalancing dual identities (part-time golfer, full-time father) as complementary rather than competing prioritiesGratitude cultivation as a foundational life skill for children from privilege to build resilience and purpose
Topics
Parental repair and emotional recovery after mistakesMental resilience and emotional regulation in competitive sportsWork ethic development through constraint and sacrificeOne-on-one parenting time and family connection ritualsUnconditional love and performance-based parentingSelf-talk and narrative management in high-pressure momentsAuthenticity in leadership and competitive drive expressionGratitude and grit development in childrenBalancing professional ambition with family presenceFaith and spirituality in athletic performanceEarly childhood influences on adult resilienceDevice-free family time and communicationCoaching children in sports while managing parental emotionsCultural representation in professional golfRecovery and repair as performance strategies
Companies
Airbnb
Sponsor providing vacation rental and co-host management services featured in pre-episode ad read
Nike
Partner with Good Inside for 'The Playbook' limited series featuring conversations with elite athletes
People
Tony Finau
Professional PGA Tour golfer and first player of Tongan and Samoan descent on tour; subject of episode discussing car...
Tiger Woods
Referenced as major childhood inspiration for Tony Finau after winning 1997 Masters; influenced Finau's entry into golf
Jack Nicklaus
Golf instruction author whose book 'Golf My Way' was used by Tony's father as foundational learning resource for teac...
Scottie Scheffler
Referenced as current best player in world golf; example of alternative competitive expression style compared to ster...
Michael Jordan
Referenced as stereotype of intense competitive drive; contrasted with alternative expressions of competitiveness
Tom Brady
Referenced as stereotype of intense competitive drive; contrasted with alternative expressions of competitiveness
Quotes
"I'm a part-time golfer and full-time father"
Tony FinauMid-episode
"The game's hard enough. Don't allow the game to make you salty. Don't allow the game to make you who you're not."
Tony FinauPerformance philosophy section
"Your kids need you there as someone that can help them recover and heal and strengthen them."
Tony FinauParenting philosophy section
"Love your kid unconditionally, without conditions, without your pre-determined, result-driven conditions."
Tony FinauClosing rapid-fire section
"Two things can be true at once. I'm trying to be the best golfer in the world and also trying to be a great parent to my kids."
Tony FinauParenting balance discussion
Full Transcript
You know those weeks in winter when everyone just feels on edge, the dark, the cold, the being cooped up, it all adds up. Kids are arguing, routines are off and you catch yourself thinking, okay, we might need reset. Look, nothing fancy or dramatic, just a little break from the norm. When I feel that way, I check out Airbnb. I'll filter for a cozy spot, a living room where we can actually relax. Maybe a snowy view, maybe a fireplace, if we're lucky. On a recent family trip, that change of scenery made such a difference. Having space to settle in, be together and step out of our usual routine helped us all reset and breathe a little easier. And something I really appreciate, while we're away, we could host our home on Airbnb. So it doesn't sit empty and earns us a little extra income to put toward our next trip. But the thought of handling everything that comes with hosting sounds overwhelming. And that's where Airbnb's co-host network comes in. You can hire a vetted local co-host to help manage everything from check-ins, guest communication, and on-site support so each stay run smoothly. It's a simple practical way to earn some extra income without adding more to your plate. If you're ready to host, but want some support, find a co-host at airbnb.com slash host. This is The Playbook, a limited series by Good Inside and partnership with Nike. I'm going to be talking to some of the most successful athletes of our time, leaders who have had real impact in their sport. And I'm going to be talking with them about their highs, about their lows, about their mindset, about team dynamics, about what really motivates them, about the way they talk to themselves and recover from difficult stages. And I also have some of my favorite moments with these athletes, where we talk about their life off the field. Their early years, their family life, the things that keep them grounded, their rituals and superstitions that keep them going. We cover so much in every conversation. I'm Dr. Becky, and this is Good Inside. Today I'm sitting down with someone whose story I cannot wait to dive into. Tony, you know, Tony is a professional golfer on the PGA tour with multiple wins and he's made history as the first player of Tongan and Samoan descent to compete on the tour. But beyond all the trophies, Tony is known for something even more powerful. His groundedness. He's a devoted father of six, who talks about being a part-time golfer and full-time father and about raising kids who understand hard work, gratitude and faith. His story is about sacrifice, resilience, grit, and what it means to stay true to your values in the face of success. Today, I want to focus on what's going on on the inside, the part of the story that doesn't always show up on the leaderboard or during a broadcast. Hi, Tony. Hi. How are we going, Dr. Becky? So good to talk to you today. And probably, as expected, I want to talk about a lot of things around sports and performance. But before we get there, I always actually love to rewind with someone before we come to the present because so much has happened in our stories. So what were those early years like? I think about you and this amazing athlete you are today, but there must have been themes in your early years that shaped who you are today. So what comes to mind first? Tell me a little bit about that. Yeah, thank you. No question. I'm looking forward to our chat. So I started playing golf in the summer of 97. And there's a couple of people that I really oh, starting this game to one of them is my younger brother, Gipper, and then the other ones, you know, Tiger Woods. I mentioned the summer of 97 just because we all know as sports fans in April of 97 Tiger won the Masters. And that was a huge deal for me watching with my brother and my dad. But I'll rewind a little bit. And in 1995, my younger brother started playing, started playing golf, but he just had this curiosity about golf, which was so let-filled. Nobody in my family played golf. Golf wasn't cool, you know, 30 years ago. Golf was not what it's like now where you got a bunch of cool athletes playing it. It was so random that my brother started watching golf on TV and took this liking to golf. And so he brought it up to my dad that he wanted to play golf. And my dad's idea, and this is him telling me the story, his idea was he's going to go to the golf course, bore my brother to death for a day. And then he's never going to ask him about golf ever again. And that pretty much changed the story for the Fienals. They went to the golf course and and everything changed. My dad started asking questions, becoming curious about golf. And my brother's, they stayed at the golf course all day and my brother loved it. He loved chipping and putting and and so that was kind of our start. And then my dad took it upon himself to be my brother's coach. They went and played and the very next summer, this was in the summer of 95, the very next summer, he, my brother, I ended up winning a junior golf tournament at the age of six, a ten and under division tournament. And they wrote this huge newspaper article on him. And I still remember it like it was yesterday. I showed up to school the next day and this is before our phones and all the things. Newspapers were everything, right? And so I showed up to school and people started asking me if that's my brother. And so I decided to pick up golf mainly because my brother was spending a lot of time with my dad. And I was not going to be known as his brother. So that's pretty much how I got started. After he had been playing about 18 months, I told my dad that I want to start playing golf and kind of chase him and my brother around. And so that's where that's where golf started for me. And again, that tiger, tiger having a big impact as well, watching the 97 masters with my dad, with my brother really pushed me over the edge to just start this golf thing. So that's how I got started. And it was all systems go right away. My brother had already been developed into this really nice player as a young, you know, six-year-old even. And so when I started, my dad sat me down. My parents sat me down and told me, you know, if you're going to do this, your brother's already pretty heavily involved and we're all in. You know, I got pretty fortunate. My dad, even though he wasn't a golfer, he has a great background and being an incredible athlete. And so he knew the discipline and just the work ethic that was going to be needed to be graded anything. And so to have him to have him mentor me and my brother growing up together once I started was a huge deal for me becoming the player that I am. And I know you've spoken about kind of sacrificing the early years that, you know, your dad had a build or your dad chose to build this like makeshift kind of driving range or your mom's sleeping in a car so you could compete. What was it like in the family to allow you and your brother to kind of have golf is such a big part of your life? Yeah, so many sacrifices. You know, looking back, it's so humbling for me, but my dad, you know, showed up to the golf course with my brother and he starts asking questions about the about the game of golf and they, he finds out pretty fast. This isn't, this isn't expensive sport. You know, this is not going to be a cheap endeavor if we're going to, if we're going to go down this path. So he points at the driving at the chipping green and asks, you know, what that area is, how much it costs. And they say, well, it's a city course. So it's actually free. If you chip and putt there and he asks about the driving range and they tell him it's about $7 for a bucket of 50 golf balls and, you know, we'll give you a discount for $10 for a bucket of 100 golf balls, you know, and so he's, look, he's starting to do the math in his head. He put it up, took it upon himself that they were going to chip and putt for free and they're going to spend all day at the golf course chipping and putting his golfing Bible and the book that he kind of looked to as one that was going to help him learn the game of golf was golf my way by Jack Nicholas. And so Jack was the greatest player at that time. And so he wanted to learn from the best. But Jack talks about learning the green from the game from the putting green all the way back to the tee. So he thought it'd be a great way to learn and he could do that for free. So chipping putting at home and then he decided to make a makeshift driving range in our garage. And if you can just picture like a rectangular garage, pretty standard garage probably stood at about seven half eight feet. And he just put a mattress right in the middle of the garage with netting on both sides. And so I would hit into one side and then my brother would hit into the other side. And so that's how we learned how to hit. We learned I hit way more golf balls indoor for the first five, six years of my learning than I did outdoor just because of that. And then once every couple weeks, he bought the the seven dollar bucket for us to go out and hit 50, 60 golf balls to see the golf ball fly. But that was how this is how you guys have to deal. This is how I'm going to teach them hard work. There's no excuses. Well, we'll do what we can for free. And and then we'll hit balls in our in our in our do you feel like those constraints that sacrifice do you feel like those were ingredients of your intense drive that led to so much success like I think about families who talked me about their kids and not not every family, but some families, you know, it's a million private lessons. Resources are everywhere and they almost get frustrated with their kids like am I trying more for you than you're trying and I was just in my head as you were talking like it was there something about the sacrifice, the constraints, the limitations, the rarity. Do you think those were ingredients that made you the athlete you are today? Yeah, there's no question those sacrifices. I didn't know it at the time. But once I started to recognize it, I was I was going about we were going about this game in a whole different way and making so many more sacrifices than most guys were doing, you know, now, you know, being from Utah, we only had the weather half the year. So having a makeshift dry region or garage was useful, but, you know, I played against guys in California and Arizona and Florida where they had the weather. It taught me grit and it taught me that I had to earn it. But it definitely, you know, my dad was just a huge outwork the competition. And just a true grit, I think that it was going to take for me to be great at anything I learned in those early years. What were you like as a golfer when you were young? Were you obsessed with winning? Were you impatient? Did you always have a kind of calm to you? I'm just curious a little bit about Tony as an early golfer. Yeah, I would say, you know, I've also had a pretty calm demeanor on the golf course. You know, a little bit of that has had to do with my dad, you know, he was kind of a drill sergeant for us, you know, growing up and he didn't take any any slack on the golf course. There was no throwing clubs. There's no throwing tantrums. Any of that, you know, that wasn't acceptable. So a little bit of it, you know, came from how my dad raised me. But a lot of it was just I think just my demeanor in general, you know, I'm not, I'm pretty chill guy. I feel like I'm pretty easy to get along with. And that translated right into my personality on the golf course. But it ended up being a great thing, you know, being like an even killed person on the golf course helps has helped me throughout my career. And yeah, and a lot of that, I think is just the nature of of how I am and who I am. But I will say this, you know, like a lot of people look at being competitive and they look at Michael Jordan and they look at Tom Brady and they say, well, this is how this, these guys are the greatest. That's how that's what competitive looks like. And I've learned, you know, there's something that I've learned with how I am and then just how a lot of great athletes are, you know, the best player in the world right now is Scottie Sheffler. And he goes about his business in a different way. Does that mean that I'm less competitive than they are? No, I'm just competitive in a different way. You know, everybody finds their inspiration from something different. You know, I think if you watched me on a golf course, I may not jump out and jump out at you as someone that's like, oh, he doesn't quite have the fire or the grid. If you know where I came from in my story, like those aren't words that you would ever use against me. I think that's so important because I also think about parents who are listening to this who have a kid and I think we'll get into it. But watching your kid play a sport can be so triggering because you could have been one way as a kid or you can have a model of whether it's leadership or excellence. And if your kid shows up in a different way, it can get very, very messy for many reasons, right? But one of the things that you're saying that's just so helpful is grit and drive and wanting to be the best that can feel similar inside people but look extremely, extremely different to the viewer. And what you're saying, it's interesting and golf too because one of the things I think about a lot in life is it's not so much an event that bothers us as much as it's the story we tell ourselves about the event. So maybe I yell at my kid. I don't want to yell at my kid. But what's the story? I tell myself is it the worst parent ever and you know, oh, I ruined my kid. Is it okay, Becky? That was not my best moment. Let me take a breath. What do I want to do next and let me move forward? And it makes me think about and engulf you literally have like these walks between the shots, the walk between the whole and the tantrum can come from not just a bad shot, but probably the story you tell yourself about the shot, right? And it makes me wonder about like you've had bad shots, right? You've had a whole like talk to me a little bit about the walk between the shots or the walk between the whole your process, how you talk to yourself. I love a little peek inside. Yeah, that's the I think that's the hardest part about being a great golfer and being a competitive, a high level competitive golfer is the time in between shots. You know, it only takes me, they've done the math. I'm standing over the golf ball five to six minutes around, you know, where I'm really over the golf ball ready to hit the shot. And so if I'm out there for five hours, you know, we average about four and a half, five hour rounds on the tour. So if I'm out there for five hours, but I'm only over the I'm only over the golf ball for five minutes, that's a lot of time that my brain has think of a bunch of stuff, you know, and so when I hit a shot, if I know that I've done everything I can preparation wise to go into the shot and execute the shot, if I don't execute the shot the way I wanted to, there's always going to be a reaction. And I think some guys react to it different than I do. I haven't been one to throw my club and different things, but I definitely will get mad. Like I definitely will be disappointed. Like I can't believe that just happened. But as soon as I as soon as I hand my club to my caddy and he throws that at the, you know, throws that in the bag and I hit there here the grip hit the bottom of the bag. That's like a that's like a trigger to me that it's time to move on. That's over with and it's and and now my focus is is moving forward. We all know there's nothing you can do about the past. There's nothing but it's easy for us to blame ourselves for the past, but it's like you did everything you could to try to execute the shot in your power. Bad shots happen. It is what it is, you know, the faster you can learn how to get on with it, I feel like in the game of golf, the better chance you have it being good. I have two follow-ups to that. Number one, you just I feel like you you held two things as true without just saying that. I'm a big fan of that idea that we can hold two things as true, right? And I think what you just said is I have a very high expectation for my game and bad shots are going to happen. Like those are just both equally true. One's not more true than the other. I expect myself to hit great shots and bad shots will happen. Those are just both true. Is that is accurate? That is accurate. Yeah. And I just I love I think so many times we feel like we have to pick. Like there's no picking. They're just both on the shelf. They just live next to each other. So that's number one. The other thing that's that's a true question for you. Okay. So you hit a bad shot in the masters, whatever it is. Okay. You hear the club hit. There is a moment at some point and maybe to reflect on wait. Like did I do this is my limited golf knowledge. It wasn't my grip. Like what did I do? What okay. But are you saying in the match itself, are you not even doing that? Are you not even reflecting? Are you like that's what I'll think about after the tournament. I'll learn from the past to change. Are you doing that live? Are you literally like that happened? I'm in a heated moment. I trust my prep enough. I'm not even learning in the moment. I'm just letting it go and moving on. Yeah. Mostly let's move on. Let's move on to the next one. You know, and I feel I feel like a lot of times, you know, like if you get so upset on a bad shot, it's almost like you're telling you're telling yourself, well, I'm not good enough to recover. I'm not good enough to go to move forward and do better on the next thing. And so it's almost like a self deprecating type attitude. When to me, it's like, this is an opportunity to recover. This is an opportunity to show this is an opportunity to show that I can still fight back after that shot. And so I'm not going to react. I'm not going to give this this bad shot the energy that it deserves. It's already given me. It's already costing me a shot or two. Whatever the case may be, it's like not adding my bad energy to that. I'm going to add good energy and no, I'm not going to re-over react to this because it's like, look, I just hit in the water. I know I can recover. I've done it thousands of times. I've got up and down from everywhere. I've made who knows if I'm going to make a 40 footer. But that's like repetition, training of the mind. That's a whole different. Yeah. And that's a whole different practice. And that's that's what I've seen myself. But with the best players in the world, just being around them and watching them, I think as a parent, trying to incorporate that and for my son who plays trying to be an example of that, not only tell him, but also when he watches me, he knows it's like I hit a bunch of bad shots. But man, I don't really react to them. It's like it's not that I'm not mad. It's like I have so much confidence that I'm going to recover. I'm not wasting my energy on this bad shot. It doesn't even deserve my attention. I'm moving forward and I'm going to show my golf ball that I can put you in the home. I see y'all. Okay, parents, quick check in. If your brain feels like it's holding everyone's schedule, except your own, you're not doing it wrong. You're carrying a lot. I see this all the time, school emails, activities, chores, dinner plans, and somehow it all lives in one person's head, usually moms. And that gets exhausting. That's why I love Skylight Calendar. It's a smart, touchscreen calendar that takes everything swirling around in your brain, schedules, chores, meals, grocery lists, and puts it in one place where the whole family can actually see it and participate. It syncs with Google, Apple, Outlook, all of it, and you can color code each family member. So there's a lot less, wait, I didn't know in your house. Plus with the free Skylight Companion app, you can add or update events, lists, and more on the go. And I appreciate this. If after 120 days, you're not 100% happy, you can return it for a full refund. No questions asked. Right now, you can get $30 off a 15 inch Skylight Calendar at myskylight.com slash Becky. That's MYSKYLIGht.com slash Becky. So you know what I'm associating to and I'm curious, I know being a dad is being part of your life. So when parents ask me like, what's one thing I should do? What's the one thing I should get good at? And I said, look, if I had to pick, it would be repair. So let me finish this because I think it's so connected to what you just said. And I'm curious if you think so. We all have moments when we yell at our kid or were distracted or we blame them when really we had some bad day. And to me, that's like my bad shot. Like, I don't want to do that. I don't want to do that. I have high expectations for myself as a parent. And sometimes because I'm human, it's going to happen. Kind of like a bad shot. And of course, and I think sometimes the story we tell ourselves after I'm the worst parent. Oh my goodness. If anyone saw me, they couldn't believe it. And I messed up my kid forever. And now, ironically, the moment lasts so long because of the story, kind of like the bad shot. And what I think is so powerful as a parent is when I can say, okay, Becky, that moment happened. Like, if repair is my most powerful strategy, like what I'm proving is, like, I'm going to show up in my next moment with my kid. And maybe you're equivalent to like, put the ball in the hole. But like, I'm going to go to my son and say, hey, sorry, I yelled at you. That was not cool. Honestly, that had very little to do with the situation. I was stressed from my day. I'm sure that felt scary. I love you. Something like that. And what I tell parents is that repair is some of the most powerful connection building you can do with your kid. And you can't even repair unless you mess up. So it's not even the messing up. That's the bad thing. It's what do I do after? Everyone messes up, but not every parent can like crush a repair. And I think kind of what you're saying is every golfer is going to hit bad shots. But the golfers who are really elite are the ones who can kind of like repair on the next shot. I was playing in, I was a freshman in high school. This is one of the greatest, my greatest stories because it's meant so much to me. I told you, and I told you at the beginning of the show, my dad was tough on us. He was a drill sergeant. There was no throwing clubs. There was no, all those, you know, no attitude. That was the first thing. Clean up the attitude. But so anyway, so I'm a freshman in high school and I'm playing in the state championship golf, high school golf. And I'm in the final group. I'm leading the tournament. And I get to the last hole with, I'm a freshman and a senior is I'm playing with and we're neck to neck for the state title. We both hit it in the fairway. Anyways, I have a five foot par to tie and go to a playoff as a freshman to win state championships. I proceed to miss the putt. I knew the situation. I missed the putt and because I missed the putt, I was extremely disappointed myself. I tried to backhand the next one and I missed that and then I tried to tap in the next one. So and I missed that. So I five putted the last green of the state championship tournament of my freshman year to win state. And so I finished second place, you know, which for most freshmen, that'd be a really nice finish. For me, I looked at it and said, you're supposed to win this, you know. Everybody was around the green watching and I was just totally embarrassed by how I acted and then what I did. I'll never forget the drive home. We got in the car and pretty much silence all the way, all the way home. And my dad just said to me, son, are you okay? And I just think like that's pretty much all he said, you know, he made it through in a couple other things, but I'm getting a little emotional just because I still remember that moment and it was like, I'm waiting for him to scold me. I'm just ready for him to lay the law down and I was embarrassed because of my how I acted and you know, feeling like I should have won the tournament. I was defeated. I defeated my own self and I'm expecting this thrashing of yelling in the car and of just an absolute scolding and it was the opposite. And so I think what I learned from that and that I try to take with me as a parent is your kids need you there as someone that can help them recover and heal and strengthen them. But a lot of it is exactly that. And so like I love that you shared that. That's exactly I think as a parent, maybe some of the best things we can do for them is after tough performances of just being like an anchor for them and not someone that's going to push, you know, kick them down while they're kicked them down while they're already down. First of all, thank you for sharing that. That like really struck me. I was like picturing you in the car ride. And the other thing that your dad did and I'm going to say it the way we say it now is if it's a negative. He was just there. Like I think being just there and saying very little is probably one of the most underutilized parenting strategies. He didn't lecture you. He didn't yell at you, but he also didn't say like here's all the shots. He wasn't fixing anything. He recognized you're upset. Like you were there. I always picture. I call this thing like the feelings bench. Like if you were on a bench, you were on the bench of embarrassed, of sadness, of frustration. You were just sitting on the bench and the worst part of being on a hard emotional bench is actually just being alone. We think it's the feelings, but it's actually that we're alone in the feelings. And ironically when someone piles on, we're more alone in the feelings and they're more intense. And when someone tries to pull us off the bench, oh, it's fine. You'll get the next one like too quickly or invalidating that also doesn't feel good. And sometimes saying little and just kind of saying, I pictured Tony, when you say when your dad said, are you okay? It's like he just sat down on the bench next to you. And now it's so interesting, Tony, is you seem to have the ability as a golfer to do that for yourself to access that calm, collected feeling right next to your frustrated feeling. I just wonder how much moments like that happen and they kind of started to get wired together. His calm next to your embarrassment and all of a sudden over time it became your calm next to your own embarrassment on the course. Yeah, yeah, that's exactly right. I think just little by little, I picked up on things that I, the feelings that I liked and then the stuff that I didn't, but you know, you try to take the good things and build on them. And for sure, I think it's helped me engulf. You know, one thing, you know, that I try to tell myself all the time is the game's hard enough. You know, the game's incredibly difficult. And if you're trying to be great at anything, getting to be successful is extremely, extremely hard. But I always try to tell myself engulf, you know, like don't allow the game to make you salty. Don't allow the game to make you who you're not. So I don't want to be on myself for trying my best, doing my best, and adding to that fire of negativity and bitterness and all the hard things that life just is already without us adding to it. So one of the things you've said is you're a part-time golfer, you're a full-time father. How does all of this translate into your parenting? Whether it's literally your kids with sports or just like the day-to-day non-sports related stuff with your kids? Yeah, it's been quite the juggling act. I love what you said earlier. You know, two things can be true at once. I feel like I'm trying to be the best golfer in the world and also trying to be a great parent to my kids. I'm trying to do, I'm trying to juggle both. You know, and it's a tall task, you know, there's no way around it. It's a tall task, but I really find so much gratitude and joy in the journey of what I'm trying to do and what I'm trying to accomplish on the golf course and then having the opportunity to be a father to my kids. Man, I'm like, I feel blessed all the time. Anything Tony, like I know a lot of people who are listening, whether it's sports or just their lives, we're also busy, right? Like it's so much. Anything with your very busy schedule, are there any like very small, even practical things that you do that you feel like really help you stay connected to your kids with this kind of life you're balancing? Yeah, so I mean, I always make my time, you know, my time for practice. I always have, I'm training in the morning and then I'm at practice, you know, it's a nine to five, it's a nine to five job pretty much, but you know, I go on like, I do these daddy dates that I do with my kids that I think just mean a lot to them because I have six, you know, and so they don't get a lot of time by themselves with me and Elena. And so I take the opportunity to do that once a week with just one of them. And that's, I feel like having individual time with them and that that could be a drive to the gas station and get gas and and grab some snacks from the gas station and and just catch up with them and really try to have a conversation with them. We add dinner, my wife and I try to put our phones away and just and and have a dinner setting, you know, it's something that I have when I was a kid, but I just think that the dinner table being with your kids, them knowing that they that's something we look forward to to just talk as a family. The love, you know, those little things, you know, have been everything I think to anchor our family together and bring us together, you know, we have family prayer. I think we don't morning and night and I'm a huge advocate for just praying together as well. And so I think those are a few things that that I do to make sure I'm anchored to my children in a way that means something to them and just giving them the time that they deserve outside again. When I'm when I'm home, I'm it's like a job, you know, I leave for training before the kids start school. And then I I'm not back until they're done with school. And so it's basically like a job, but the time in the evening is means a lot, you know, trying to just time with them. But I think those are just a few things that I really try to try to do with them. I love those two things and they're huge. I mean, one on one time, right? We're you don't have a huge agenda, right? It's not like I'm trying to get something on my kid. Kind of it's one on one time I'm there. And family dinner without phones. It's it's, you know, I know a lot of people listening. There's a guilt spiral. I haven't done that. Like anyone can start it. I always say, you know, today is always earlier than tomorrow, which it's always true mathematically. So today could be the first day. They're like, you know, let's do no phones and try it on. And I agree. They got a huge impact. And now when it comes to your kids, going back to your childhood, how do you think about building grit, resilience, gratitude? I'm guessing their life is very different from yours as a kid. So how do you think about that? It's extremely different. And that's something that really, you know, I'm strongly with at the moment is how do I teach the grit, you know, but I think the thing that has come to me on there, you know, for them is to teach them gratitude, you know, another G word. I think if they have gratitude and just understanding that their life is is is is different than my, you know, Elena and I's life. And different than most people's and just have that gratitude. I think, you know, I think that they'll they'll recognize it and and use it as a source of inspiration to continue down a good, a good path. You know, the grit part is tough. I have to say, you know, like I'm Dr. Siskotch, you know, he's playing golf. I'm his coach. I'm his dad is at the same time, you know, and I'm also working on my game, but I take him out there and I do my best to try and give him inspiration to teach him that, you know, it doesn't matter what you have, what matters is inside, you know, and that's that's what's going to carry you through to become successful at anything, you know, whether it's coach, that's that's fantastic. If that's what you want to do, but just being having having that come from inside is going to make you accomplish great things in any field that you choose. I happen to choose golf and my atmosphere assisted with my grit. And he knows his atmosphere is a lot different than mine. He's got, he's starting at a little different starting point that I started, but that's more, you know, I'm trying to teach him that's more inspiration for you to to work as hard as you can and and and have it come from within. I want you to think about when your kids are older and someone says, oh, like your dad, what was he like? And they just have kind of one or two sentences that they say, what do you hope they say about you? I hope they say he was he was fun to be around and he was loving, he loved me. Yeah, I that'd be great. Those two things I hope are true. Well, we say two things can be true, fun and loving. There you go. I have a feeling they'll say that we're going to kind of wrap it up with overtime. Okay, some overtime or playoff. I guess golf better playoff playoff, right? I'm going to give you a bunch of questions in a row, rapid fire. You ready? Ready. Best piece of advice you've gotten along your golf career. Know yourself and play your game. Do you have any superstitions or rituals that you kind of secretly believe in or just like part of your rhythm? I wear green every Sunday. My mom's favorite color was green. She passed in 2011. So just on her, I wore green and that's yeah, that's something I definitely just love to do. The last thing your kid did that, I don't know, knocked you off your chair or kind of made you say like, what the heck? My son sage likes twerking. I don't know. And so he starts twerking randomly and it gets, guess me pretty skew. It doesn't get invited. So we'll talk about that offline. We'll figure that out together. Something you want to tell parents who have their kids in sports right now. Love your kid unconditionally, this meeting without conditions, without your pre-gestined, pre-determined, you know, result driven conditions. Just love them unconditionally. I think that is the perfect note to end on. Thank you. This was incredible. I have loved getting to know you and thank you for your stories and your wisdom and so much that's so applicable to so many areas of life. So thank you. Thank you. Thanks for having me on Dr. Becky. It was great. I absolutely love that conversation with Tony. There were so many parallels between themes we talk about and parenting themes on the course and what grit and resilience really look like. And there are two main things that I'm thinking about and we'll continue to after this conversation. Number one was this common theme of repair. We all have bad moments, whether it's at work and parenting on the course, but actually what's most important is what we do next, how we recover and how we repair. The other thing that I'll be thinking about is the power of being there, of being there to help your kid recover and how there's not a lot we can say. There's no fixing definitely not time for a lecture. Being present, sitting down on the bench with your kid in their hard moment, that has more impact than we know and that's what really really matters. Let's end the way we always do. Place your feet on the ground, place a hand on your heart. And let's remind ourselves, even as we struggle on the outside, we remain good inside. I'll see you soon.