How Dustin Johnson’s South Carolina roots molded him into a Masters champion

Here’s how Dustin Johnson’s South Carolina roots molded him into a Masters champion.

(Editor’s note: This is a bonus addition to Golfweek’s series on the life and career of reigning Masters champion Dustin Johnson. Click here to see the entire series.)

The stories are true.

Biff Lathrop heard about them and Chris Miller saw them play out in person in Irmo, South Carolina – an hour and a half drive from Augusta National Golf Club.

As a youngster on the outskirts of Columbia, Dustin Johnson won a lot of money for himself and a lot of other golfers at the Mid Carolina Club, where his father, Scott, served as the head professional in the 1990s.

Known for his raw power and ability to card rounds in the low 60s on a daily basis at courses throughout his neck of the woods, the current top-ranked golfer in the world was turning heads and filling pockets long before he raised the U.S. Open trophy in 2016 or put on a green jacket at the Masters Tournament in 2020.

“The stories about people betting on him at age 14 or so are definitely true over at Mid Carolina when I was a pro at Timberlake. That happened every Friday — that’s a given there,” Miller said, laughing.

Lathrop, executive director of the Irmo-based South Carolina Golf Association, doesn’t have a personal remembrance of any particular moment involving a young DJ, but he’s been around long enough to hear the tales.

“He was a legend around here before he became a legend around the world,” said Lathrop, whose father, Happ, is regarded by many as “Mr. Golf” in South Carolina after serving as the SCGA’s executive director across four decades.

“I can’t speak on anything he did, like driving a par 5 or anything like that … I just know he took a lot of people’s money at a very young age.”

Those stories and memories flooded the minds of Lathrop and Miller in November as they watched Johnson put his twist on a Masters Tournament unlike any other.

“After Dustin won it and we all got to watch, there’s more people that had never talked about golf who were talking about golf all of a sudden in Irmo,” Lathrop said.

“He was the highlight and I think everybody is really excited for him.”

Miller was one of Johnson’s golf coaches during his time at Dutch Fork High School and the former managing director of the South Carolina Junior Golf Association.

He’ll never forget how he felt on Masters Sunday in 2020 as he watched Johnson become the first South Carolinian to put on a green jacket inside Butler Cabin.

“I can’t speak for everybody, but I think for everybody that knew him in South Carolina, that was one of the best days we’ve had yet,” Miller said.

“Obviously, I was just extremely pumped for him. My wife’s sitting over there and I’ve got tears in my eyes and she’s like, ‘It’s a golf tournament, honey.’ ”

Miller was quick with his response.

“You don’t understand,” he replied. “You don’t know what this one means to this kid. I know what it meant to Dustin. I thought that was pretty cool.”

From cutting his teeth at a driving range that’s now an apartment complex to bringing Augusta’s famed course to its knees, Johnson made it look easy at times. But his path has been paved with hard work and an appreciation for a game that’s forever connected him to his roots in the Palmetto State.

Masters Tournament 2020
Tiger Woods helps Masters champion Dustin Johnson with his green jacket after his victory at the Masters golf tournament Sunday, Nov. 15, 2020, in Augusta, Ga. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

Beat balls until the cows came home

Johnson’s laid-back demeanor often leads to conversations about his work ethic and how much time he puts into his game.

Johnson has never lacked the drive to get better. He spent countless hours at two spots as he began to get serious about golf: The Club at Rawls Creek and Weed Hill Driving Range.

Luckily for Johnson, they were located across the street from one another.

He’d shut both down many a night and, ironically, both are now closed. But Miller remembers the work Johnson put in at those venues.

“It was a public golf course, and it wasn’t anything special by any stretch. The members called it an outdoor pool hall,” Miller said.

“Dustin was one of the cart guys there, along with a lot of these kids who all played together on all these high school teams. … It seems like they were always there. When they were out of school, they were there from 8 till dark at the golf course or driving range. They just played and beat balls until the cows came home.”

Johnson recalls hitting a seemingly endless supply of balls into Lake Murray from the front yard of a house that belonged to Art Whisnant, his late grandfather.

As Johnson became older and started to play in more events around South Carolina, Miller noticed the growth. He knew this kid had the goods to be something special.

“He was definitely a little bit above the normal, as a special player. It was fun to see the progression,” Miller said.

“He didn’t play a lot of tournament golf compared to some of the other juniors at the time, just due to some family scheduling and how much time he could play. When he did, he was always competitive, and he always could hit it a mile.”

That behind-the-scenes work led to some remarkable feats. Johnson won the Columbia city championship in both of his appearances, but Miller always goes back to an astounding three-day stretch.

“A lot of these kids could go out and shoot 3-, 4-, 5-under par on a given day. Dustin had gone out, and over a three-period day between two golf courses that we had eight miles apart, he had shot 63, 64, 63,” Miller continued.

“He had done that in a week. That kind of sets yourself a little different from what the rest of the guys are doing.”

Johnson also won the state junior championship and finished in the top 10 of the state high school tournament as a seventh-grader. By his senior year, after transferring to Dutch Fork, he helped win the 2002 state championship by 26 strokes in the state’s largest classification.

It was a team, as Miller candidly described it, that “destroyed everybody.”

As part of the SCGA, Miller got to see Johnson and his brother, Austin, play a lot on the junior circuit. The golf was pleasant, but Dustin’s hair during a certain Georgia-South Carolina team match also sticks out in Miller’s memories.

“He had dyed his hair orangish-red and we still have a picture at the golf association offices. It looked hideous, so we gave him a lot of crap about that,” Miller said with a laugh.

“It was not a good look on him, but as a kid he was always extremely quiet. On the high school teams, the guys almost had to really talk him into playing high school golf, and I’m glad they did.”

Despite the hair, Miller knew Johnson was capable of achieving greatness.

“There’s no doubt in the quality of golf that he was playing, but he also worked at it, even at that age. He was at the golf course and practice range every day,” Miller said.

When former Coastal Carolina coach Allen Terrell called Miller to “get some impressions” on Johnson, Miller discussed that three-day stretch in the low 60s.

Johnson later committed to Coastal Carolina and Terrell helped the young golfer go from a “raw” talent to one that was chasing a chance to do it for a living.

Dustin Johnson during the first round of The Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Rob Schumacher-USA TODAY Sports

He still calls him ‘Coach’

When asked about his earliest impression of Johnson, Terrell had a one-word answer: “Skinny.”

“He was a really tall, skinny kid back then,” Terrell added. “He hit it further with some speed at an early age; nothing earth-shattering. I’d say a raw, junior golfer with a lot of upside.”

So how did Johnson make his way to Conway, S.C., to play for Terrell?

“You’d probably have to ask Dustin that one,” Terrell said, laughing. “I think, maybe, I was just the last man standing. Maybe other schools, and I don’t want to speak for them, may have quit trying. I think maybe they weren’t sure if he was gonna play college golf. His grandmother confirmed to me that he was.

“We were happy that (Johnson’s grandmother) Carole Jones was retiring and moving to Myrtle Beach and there was a connection there. To get a good player, there was some luck involved.”

Jones, who died in 2008, helped Johnson pay for college and financed his junior and amateur careers. Like most grandmothers, Allen said, she thought Johnson was the best thing in the world.

“Back then we had fax machines, so she was faxing me his results. It really wasn’t about making our team better at the time,” Terrell recalled.

“Of course, we were getting a solid player but it being a South Carolina state school and having a kid from South Carolina that had a lot of upside, it was really about giving a kid a chance. This was late July — we didn’t have scholarships available at that point. I’m trying to convince a good player to come for free in Year 1. Not what I would have wanted, it was just the situation and the timing. Thankfully, it worked out for everyone.”

And so began the tough love relationship between Johnson and Terrell, who added an element of structure and increased discipline to the young golfer’s life.

“If you get a chance to be around him and Allen Terrell, to this day it’s amazing that there’s still so much respect there. He still calls him, ‘Coach.’ It’s Coach Terrell, it’s not Allen,” Miller said.

“Allen put him on the golf team with a lot of practice regimen and, obviously, didn’t mess much with the golf swing as far as the physicality of it. The regimen, you see where his maturity as a golfer came in and the next thing you know, he’s winning amateur events and it’s like, ‘Now we’re starting to see something.’ ”

By the time he left Coastal Carolina, Johnson had won multiple tournaments as a two-time First Team All-American and led the Chanticleers to a program-best fifth-place finish in the 2007 NCAA Championships.

Today, Terrell is the head instructor for Johnson’s golf school at the TPC Myrtle Beach and is the vice president of Johnson’s foundation, which benefits junior golf with a focus on growing the game in Myrtle Beach and beyond.

“It went from me having to be – probably Dustin would say an asshole – a disciplinarian with structure and stuff like that to a big brother of sorts and a friend,” Terrell said.

“When you’re coaching, everyone has their different philosophies and strategies. I felt more comfortable being at arm’s length with players and not being buddy, buddy. But we’re both quite older now and we’re talking 17 years ago. He can say whatever he wants to to me. Whatever he needs, Dustin knows he can always call me.”

Dustin Johnson walks off the tee box at the sixth hole. (Rob Schumacher-USA TODAY Sports)

More than a name on a tournament

Johnson didn’t “create South Carolina golf.”

“To be fair, there’s a hell of a lot of good players that’s come out of South Carolina before DJ,” Terrell said.

Terrell’s not wrong. Jonathan Byrd, Bill Haas, Lucas Glover, D.J. Trahan, Scott Brown and Kevin Kisner are among the most-recent greats from the Palmetto State. Each of them has won on the PGA Tour, including Glover’s major championship at the 2009 U.S. Open.

“He’s just, right now, the highest-ranked player from South Carolina,” Terrell said.

“I doubt he would want to be appointed … but what he’s meant more to Myrtle Beach and growing the game with what our foundation and the school is doing, he’s made a huge impact.”

Lathrop, who rattled off many of the same names, knows Johnson’s importance at the moment.

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“Just seeing his face, we’ve got a picture of him on our wall here of him at one of those junior team matches that he qualified for back in the day,” Lathrop said.

Johnson, who has 27 PGA Tour victories, is also featured on the cover of the SCGA’s Spring 2021 “Palmetto Golfer” magazine.

“I think everybody was aware of Dustin as he’s been coming through the last few years and how well he’s done on the golf course and on the Tour,” Lathrop continued.

“Obviously, when he won the Masters – which is only an hour and 15 minutes from here down I-20 – I think it’s made a little more of a difference. From what I understand, they’re naming a road here in Irmo after Dustin. Apparently, we’ll have a Dustin Johnson Lane or something like that around here pretty soon.”

And every year, Johnson tries to make an appearance at the World Junior Golf Championship, which bears his name, to show his thanks and appreciation for the next generation of golfers.

Johnson swung by TPC Myrtle Beach on March 4 to spend some time at his golf school ahead of the sixth annual event, which has quickly become one of the top junior events in the nation.

“I think it’s just gonna keep coming,” Lathrop said of the 36-year-old Johnson’s role as an ambassador for the game.

“I mean, Dustin’s young and he hasn’t had time to make a stamp on anything but playing golf right now. Most of that stuff comes as you work through your years, so I’m sure he’s got more of that coming in.”

From names on their lockers to placards on the driving range, the tournament provides junior golfers a top-level experience.

“It’s not like somebody just putting their name on something or writing a check and that’s it,” Miller said. “When Dustin’s schedule allows, he comes down. These kids got to hang out and take pictures with the U.S. Open trophy (in 2017). … They make it feel like it is a Tour event.”

Terrell, who said he thinks it’s “relaxing” for Johnson to be at the junior event, noted the consistent commitment to everyone involved with the tournament. Every time Terrell sees Johnson in Myrtle Beach, the coach often has “100 things to try and get him to sign for his foundation.”

“I mean, how many Tour players, especially the No. 1 Tour player, take the time?” Terrell asked.

“Most people do something because of ulterior motivation, but there’s nothing he gets from this. He does it because he wants to do it. He’s passionate about this tournament and he wants the kids to know he’s thankful that they decided to play his event.”

Before the Players Championship, Johnson discussed his appreciation for his roots in South Carolina and his tournament in Myrtle Beach.

“I mean I grew up playing golf there. I went to college in Myrtle Beach … so it’s definitely a big part of where I’m at today for sure,” Johnson said.

“It was great to get back up there. … The golf tournament, it’s come a long ways. It’s become one of the best tournaments in the country, so definitely proud of that. For me, it’s just obviously growing up playing the South Carolina Junior Golf Association tournaments, it’s something that I can do to try to give back to junior golf a little bit.”

Masters Tournament 2020
Dustin Johnson celebrates with the green jacket after winning The Masters golf tournament at Augusta National GC. Mandatory Credit: Rob Schumacher-USA TODAY Sports

Setting the stage

In November, Johnson showed junior golfers in South Carolina what’s possible.

“Growing up so close to here, that’s what it was, dreaming of playing in the Masters, putting on a green jacket,” an emotional Johnson said after his historic win.

“Ever since I played in my first Masters, it’s always been the one I wanted to win the most. It still seems like a dream, but hopefully, it’s not.”

For golfers in Irmo, Columbia and anywhere else near Augusta National, that’s always been the dream.

“Everybody that’s grown up in this area that’s played the game has just got a reverence for that facility like no other. There’s no doubt about that,” Miller said.

There’s no secret to the sauce for Johnson, who has matched his talent with an incredible work ethic and mental edge to rise to No. 1 in the world, where he’s been since Aug. 23, 2020.

A ‘freakishly athletic’ Dustin Johnson hit the next level when he made two pivotal changes to his game

Dustin Johnson could rely on his athleticism to get by but doubling down on his game took him from a top-10 player to the best in the world.

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(Editor’s note: This is the final piece of a seven-part series on the life and career of reigning Masters champion Dustin Johnson.)

Given his enormous physical gifts, Dustin Johnson could shun the weight room and practice ground and likely still make do against the best pro golfers in the world.

Especially since one of his favorite hobbies is to kick back and float down a waterway. But when it comes to his occupation, the reigning Masters champion and world No. 1 eventually learned work isn’t a four-letter word.

“Dustin is freakishly athletic,” said David Winkle, Johnson’s agent his entire professional career. “I think it was a little bit of a curse early in his career that he was so athletic that he probably gets three or four hours of benefit out of an hour’s work of time.

“He became an extremely hard worker about four or five years ago and took his focus and his dedication to a new level. That’s when he made the leap from being a top-10 player in the world to being the best player in the world.”

About a decade ago, Johnson met uber trainer Joey Diovisalvi – Joey D as he’s better known – and gradually increased his workload in the weight room and on the practice range. Now he’s a beast in the gym and a machine on the range.

“He’s just big and strong with athleticism oozing from every angle,” Diovisalvi said. “I’ve been with him everywhere and the perception doesn’t match the reality.

He works as hard on the driving range as he does in the gym and he works as hard as he can. He puts in hours out there and sometimes too much.

“His work ethic is off the charts even though his talent is off the charts.”

Johnson discovered there are a lot more fruits that come with the labor and despite reaching the summit of golf – world No. 1, two-time major winner, FedEx Cup captain, future inductee into the World Golf Hall of Fame, reigning Masters champion – he isn’t about to put his feet up and lighten up.

“Having the success I’ve had, the feeling I get when I win, especially a major, all those things make my family proud and drive me to continue to work hard and continue to try and be the best I can,” Johnson said. “And I like being the best.”

Getting there included two pivotal discoveries.

The first took a few years to come to fruition. When Johnson started working with Butch Harmon in 2009, the coach quickly preached that Johnson should master the fade. Up until then, Johnson relied on a draw that much of the time he couldn’t control. As Lee Trevino said, you can talk to a fade but a hook won’t listen.

“We would work on it every practice session but he wouldn’t put it in play in a tournament. He just didn’t have the confidence. Try as I did, it took a while to catch on,” said Harmon, whose son, Claude, regularly works with Johnson while the elder Harmon stays in touch from afar. “And then one day he called me and he said, ‘Hey, Butchy, I was just playing today and I decided I was going to hit fades off every tee and man I drove it good. I think I’m going to play that way.’

“And I just laughed and said, ‘Yep, that’s a good idea.’”

That was in 2015 when Johnson was testing equipment

“It wasn’t like I couldn’t hit a cut,” Johnson said. “But if I had to cut one around a tree or something like that, it took me a while to trust it. Then when I was testing equipment, I hit a couple of cuts on the range and it felt really good. So the next three days I played and hit nothing but cuts.

“That was all she wrote.”

A few months later, another foundational moment occurred. At the 2016 Northern Trust Open at Riviera Country Club north of Los Angeles, Johnson won the morning wave of the pro-am with Janet Gretzky and Tristan Gretzky, his fiancée’s mother and younger brother.

Instead of celebrating, Johnson went to the range. There he hooked up with reps from TrackMan, a launch monitor that provides precise analytics concerning what a golf ball does after being hit.

At the time, Johnson was a middling wedge player. More harshly, it was a weakness, especially when he lived in the 50- to 150-yard range.

“He was leaving so many shots out there,” Winkle said. “If he could become even a medium-range wedge player, game over. He spent hours that day and then turned to me and said, ‘Wink, order me one of these.’”

It came in the mail three weeks later, and Johnson quickly developed a system where he’d spend hours working on half-, three-quarter and full shots with his wedges. Now he’s one of the best wedge players in the game.

“I knew I had to really work on my wedge game,” Johnson said. “Now I’m never surprised with whatever number I have to the green. I probably practice like 80 percent of my time on wedges.

“It took me a long time but as you get older, you figure out some things.”

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What’s really going on in Dustin Johnson’s head? Coaches and competitors say it’s more than DJ lets on.

The golf world has long questioned Dustin Johnson’s intelligence. DJ’s coaches, friends and fellow golfers have something to say about that.

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(Editor’s note: This is Part VI in a seven-part series on the life and career of reigning Masters champion Dustin Johnson. Check back to Golfweek.com each day for the next part of the story.)

The brilliance of Dustin Johnson is his uncluttered mind.

While many fellow pros can go on and on about course management and others can talk endlessly about the complex principles of the golf swing, Johnson’s simplistic approach to life and putting the golf ball in the hole does just fine.

He isn’t about to sit down with the Mad Scientist, Bryson DeChambeau, and converse about the relationship between mass and velocity or do a deep dive on air density and local slope adjustment. And he doesn’t have much to say about the psychology of handling the game’s mind-numbing disturbances.

But because of his unwavering and carefree demeanor, a few infamous gaffes over the years on the golf course and his distant appearance during press conferences – where he often responds to long-winded questions with brief frankness – many tend to question his intelligence.

He has served as a punchline for followers on Twitter, been disrespected by the media at times and even disrespected by a few of his colleagues. Thus, despite winning a U.S. Open and last November’s Masters, collecting 22 other PGA Tour titles as well as a FedEx Cup, and reaching No. 1 in the world, his mind is rarely credited as a strength.

Well, as the English idiom goes, don’t judge a book by its cover.

“People don’t think he’s the smartest guy in the room and I think it’s because he’s got the southern drawl and he kind of talks slow, but that’s just how he talks and if it makes him sound maybe not the smartest, then so be it,” said 2007 U.S. Amateur champion Colt Knost, who roomed with Johnson the first year they turned pro. “He might not be book smart but he’s smart. And he’s like Rain Man when it comes to his golf IQ. I’ll bet you he can go through and tell you every shot he hit last year on the PGA Tour.

“He knows what’s going on, he knows how to manage his game now as good as anybody, he knows what he’s looking for in his equipment and he knows a lot about the golf swing even though he doesn’t let on that he does.

“Sounds pretty smart to me.”

Johnson just shrugged when asked if he’s bothered by the unflattering perception that he isn’t the sharpest tool in the box.

“I don’t know. Don’t really care about what others think,” he said.

Others, however, do care.

“He isn’t stupid. He’s sly like a fox,” said swing coach Butch Harmon, who started working with Johnson in 2009. “He gives a lot of those short answers because he doesn’t want you to bother him. To me, that makes him pretty smart. Now, does he have a lot of book smarts? I don’t know. And he can say some pretty crazy things at times, but he is not dumb.

“He understands his game and he understands what he’s good at and he understands what to do in the heat of the battle. He’s matured golf-wise and he’s become an incredibly intelligent player. That was one of Tiger’s great strengths – he knew when to be conservative. DJ has come to understand that.”

David Winkle, Johnson’s longtime agent, brought up the time six years ago when TaylorMade brought together their heavy hitters including Johnson, Jason Day, Justin Rose and Sergio Garcia for a few days of photo and video shoots. There also was a psychological profile examination with 144 questions.

“They wanted to get into the mind of a champion,” Winkle said. “And the expert who was analyzing the responses said there was one guy who has an innate ability to go into a cocoon of concentration like nothing he has ever seen.

“And it turned out to be Dustin’s profile. He gets into depths of concentration at times where he turns it on and turns it off, whether he’s ordering fast food or coming down the last hole of the Masters.”

Johnson’s state of mind certainly played into his record-smashing victory in the 2020 Masters. He dialed back his aggression when needed, trusted his top-flight precision and didn’t buckle in the final round when his lead nearly vanished and another tragic ending – such as his three-putt from 12 feet on the 72nd hole of the 2015 U.S. Open at Chambers Bay that cost him a chance at the title – seemed imminent.

“I think other than Jack and Tiger he has one of the greatest golf minds in competitive history,” said Claude Harmon, Johnson’s regular swing coach and son of Butch Harmon. “When he missed that putt at Chambers Bay and was walking off the green in ’15, and I would have told you all that would have happened from that point onward to here, would you have believed it? The scars are too deep, he’s never going to come back from that, all that.

“He’s just a very unique golfer. If you could design a golfer, you’d design him; no memory, just freak athlete, and we’re seeing an incredible amount of maturity from the last time that he won a major.”

Four-time major champion Rory McIlroy was equally impressed. McIlroy said he thinks Johnson has one of the best attitudes toward golf in the history of the game.

“And when he wants to engage with you and have a proper conversation about whatever topic it is, he can have it,” McIlroy said. “He just would rather not have it with you guys (media). That’s basically what it is. He saves that for his inner circle and the people he trusts and the people that he likes.

“When you are friends with him and you spend a lot of time with him, he’s much more engaging than a lot of people think.

“And he’s basically done everything there is to do in the game, and he’s done that by basically changing his game after turning pro. That’s a huge compliment. Not a lot of people can do that.”

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Dustin Johnson’s short memory, mental ‘island’ have played a big role in overcoming several bizarre major moments

When it gets weird in the majors, Dustin Johnson retreats to his mental island. It’s one of his strengths.

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(Editor’s note: This is Part II in a seven-part series on the life and career of reigning Masters champion Dustin Johnson. Check back to Golfweek.com each day for the next part of the story.)

As Dustin Johnson sauntered up the hill toward the 18th green on Masters Sunday last November, he turned to his brother and caddie, Austin, and asked him where he stood on the leaderboard.

“What do you mean where do you stand?”

Austin then told his older brother that he was five shots clear and just minutes away from polishing off a remarkable, record-setting romp to win the green jacket.

“I told him I could win the Masters from where he was,” Austin said. “And he did the same thing at Oakmont on the final hole on Sunday when he won the (2016) U.S. Open. That’s DJ.”

Yes, through and through, that’s DJ. As much as his video-game physical gifts separate him from most everyone on the planet, his uncanny knack for focusing on the matter at hand or escaping to another world where there is no noise and distraction is pure, enviable genius.

“I call it DJ Island,” Austin said. “I remember so many times that he’d be watching a TV show and I’m having a full-on conversation with him and then he’d just look at me and go ‘What?’ He just has this ability to check out and go to his own little island. It’s him there and no one else. He puts things in the rearview and just looks at the upcoming road. No matter what has happened.

“It’s unbelievable.”

And helpful in the world of golf.

His fleeting memory allows him to move on like no other golfer, no matter how tragic the result. And there have been many soul crushers, starting with the 2010 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, where he blew a three-shot, 54-hole lead with a final-round 82. Two months later in the 2010 PGA Championship at Whistling Straits, he grounded his club in a bunker he didn’t think was a bunker on the 72nd hole. The resulting two-shot penalty cost him a spot in a playoff.

In 2011, he was in contention deep into the final round of the Open Championship at Royal St. George’s before he hit a 2-iron out of bounds. In the 2015 U.S. Open at Chambers Bay, he three-putted from 12 feet on the 72nd hole and finished one shot behind Jordan Spieth.

Losses like that leave scars and create demons who set up shop between the ears. But not for DJ. Without question, the losses hurt Johnson, some more than others, but they don’t remain haunting – and certainly not lasting – memories.

“I always jokingly use the phrase he was dipped in Teflon at birth,” said David Winkle, Johnson’s longtime agent. “At Chambers Bay, we get in a car to go up to the makeshift clubhouse area and it was about a minute and we get up and he gets out of the car and goes immediately to a place where kids are yelling for autographs and he signs all their stuff.

“We get in the car to leave. And it’s kind of quiet. And Dustin pulls the car over and says, ‘Guys, lighten up. It’s just golf.’ And I thought, good lord. Here we are trying to lift him up and he lifted us up. This guy is unbelievable.

“And I’ll never forget the 2011 British Open. I think he’s devastated. But he walks out of scoring and high-fives me and goes, ‘Best finish in a major, Winky.’”

But that’s the way Johnson has always been.

“Even as a kid or a junior golfer, I’ve always had the ability to get over things right away, especially with golf,” Johnson said. “I don’t know where exactly it comes from, but obviously it’s good for a golfer because there are so many things that happen, and weird things that happen, especially to me.

“At the end of the day, it’s still a game. I love the game. But there is zero I can do to change something that’s already happened. I just keep trying to push forward.”

That’s what he did in the 2016 U.S. Open at Oakmont, which is an 18-hole migraine-level headache. Johnson, with all his immense talents, had yet to win a major, but he was well within reach of winning his first. And then chaos erupted.

On the fifth hole in the final round, Johnson had a 6-footer for par but his ball moved a hair at address. Johnson knew he didn’t cause the ball to move, the rules official agreed and no penalty was administered.

But as he walked to the 12th tee with a two-shot lead, he was met by USGA officials who told him the incident was being reviewed and he may be assessed a penalty. Thus, Johnson and others chasing the title didn’t know where everyone stood on the leaderboard because the governing body’s determination was on hold.

U.S. Open - Final Round
Dustin Johnson talks with USGA official Mark Newell after Johnson’s ball moved on a green at Oakmont in the 2016 U.S. Open. (Getty Images/David Cannon)

“I don’t think it could have happened to a better player out there. Maybe Adam Scott,” Austin Johnson said. “But Dustin just looked at me and said, ‘I guess we have to win by two,’ and ripped a drive 370 yards. Lee Westwood’s caddie, Billy Foster, had to calm me down. But Dustin just went about his business.

“I still get blown away by what he’s able to do sometimes in situations like that.”

Johnson played the last seven holes in even par, with his towering 6-iron from 191 yards to 4 feet for birdie on the 72nd hole cementing victory. The USGA decided to dock him one stroke, but it proved meaningless as he signed his corrected scorecard of 1-under 69 to finish three shots clear of Jim Furyk, Scott Piercy and Shane Lowry.

“Dustin was the class player of the day,” Foster said. “For the USGA to come out on the 12th tee and say you may or may not have a penalty, I thought was disgraceful. Respect to DJ. That’s why I bowed to him on the 18th hole.”

Paul Azinger, the victorious Ryder Cup captain in 2008 and the 1993 PGA Championship winner, was the lead analyst at the time and called Johnson’s triumph one of the greatest wins in the history of golf.

“When you consider having your gut ripped out the previous year in the U.S. Open at Chambers Bay and then the following year he has to deal with that ruling thing in the final round and he wins, that’s something next level,” Azinger said. “DJ has that intangible. That’s the way Tom Watson was. They put the past behind them and are always moving on. It’s extraordinary.”

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‘I was just so happy and proud’: The world saw another side of Dustin Johnson when his post-Masters tears flowed

DJ’s post-Masters tears revealed a new side of the 24-time PGA Tour champion. But what was behind them? DJ and those closest to him explain.

Dustin Johnson made grown men cry.

The soft-spoken, gentle giant of the south turned the emerald valley of Augusta National Golf Club into his own octagon and battered and bruised not only the field of play but all of his 91 foes last November.

In becoming the first player in Masters history to card multiple rounds of 65 or better in the same tournament  – his previous career low had been 67 – the world No. 1 tied the 54-hole scoring record of 16 under after three rounds and then went where no man had gone before by reaching 20 under in the final round and finishing there for a five-shot victory, the largest winning margin since Tiger Woods won by 12 in 1997.

Johnson threw haymakers from the beginning of the 84th Masters, made just four bogeys (the fewest of any champion), and hit 60 of 72 greens. When his lead was trimmed to one after two early bogeys in the final round, it spawned fear another major tragedy was at hand. Instead, he knocked an 8-iron from 185 yards to 6 feet for birdie on the sixth, added another red number on No. 8, then scored again at Nos. 13, 14 and 15 to leave his pursuers with nothing to do but weep and wave a white flag.

His master work was so staggering that Cameron Smith lost by five despite becoming the first player in Masters history to shoot all four rounds in the 60s.

“I proved I could get it done on Sunday with the lead at a major, bro,” said Johnson, who previously had been 0-for-4 with at least a share of the 54-hole lead in a major. “There were doubts, for sure. I was proud of that round. After the bogeys, it wasn’t like I was frustrated. It didn’t bother me. Just had to stay patient and take it to the house.”

While others left the grounds to tend to their wounded souls, Johnson headed to the terrace putting green for the abbreviated closing ceremony. There, Woods, the five-time Masters champion, helped Johnson slip on the 42-long green jacket.

And then Johnson lost it.

The indestructible force who pulverized Augusta National broke down during an interview and as hard as he tried to hold back the tears and collect himself, the waterworks flowed and his words ceased.

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“The tears came from all the joy, knowing all the work that went into it, the team around me,” Johnson said. “Being the Masters champion in that moment, I was just so happy and proud. And having (fiancé) Paulina (Gretzky) there and my two boys and the family were across the street, and it was just a special moment. I was at a loss for words. I just couldn’t say anything there for a while.

“It’s still kind of a little surreal when I see the jacket and know I’m a Masters champion. All the memories come back.”

It was an understandable outburst of emotion. Growing up across the Georgia-South Carolina border on the outskirts of Columbia, about an hour’s drive from Augusta, the Masters was his Holy Grail. He went to Masters practice rounds with his dad before he turned 10, played the course for the first time in 2008, played in his first Masters in 2009. And long into the nights of his youth, he was making putts to win the Green Jacket.

“The Masters will always be in my heart, with the history and growing up so close,” Johnson said. “It’s pretty cool when a childhood dream comes true.”

There was more behind the tears than a childhood dream fulfilled. Johnson thought of the heartache he endured in squandering victory in five previous majors, some with tragic tones attached. And he was just two months removed from the most recent major disappointment when his one-shot 54-hole advantage in the PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco vanished as Collin Morikawa raced by everyone.

Or the time he rolled down Magnolia Lane in 2017 having won his last three starts but was forced to miss the Masters after he slipped and fell and injured his back in his rental home.

He thought of the six-month sabbatical in 2014 he took from the PGA Tour to deal with “personal challenges” and how he worked to overcome them. Since then, he’s won 16 of his 24 PGA Tour titles, including two majors.

Put all that together and Johnson let his guard down on this rare instance and let the world see what only a few of his closest friends and family had seen.

“I was surprised that he cried and lost it,” said younger brother and caddie, Austin. “I’ve seen him get emotional about other things but not golf. But that tournament means so much to him. It humanized him a bit and everyone else got to see that.”

Colt Knost, the 2007 U.S. Amateur champion who played a bunch of amateur golf with Johnson and later roomed with him on the road the first year they turned pro, was moved by Johnson’s victory and post-round interview.

“I started crying when I saw him cry,” Knost said. “He’s got the biggest heart in the world and he’ll do anything for anyone that’s in his circle and those tears show you how much that tournament means to him and how much working his butt off to be the best means to him.”

The Masters masterpiece also came a month after Johnson spent 11 days in quarantine in a Las Vegas hotel after testing positive for the coronavirus. Johnson, as is his nature, dealt with it and moved on without missing a beat.

The Masters capped a 13-tournament, post COVID-19 tour de force to end 2020 in which he won four times, including the Tour Championship that earned him the FedEx Cup, and an 11-stroke romp in the Northern Trust where he shot 60 in the second round and finished at 30 under. He also finished runner-up three times.

The victory solidified his perch atop the world rankings; he’s now spent more time as the world No. 1 than anyone not named Tiger Woods and Greg Norman.

“The way he was playing at the end of 2020 I think is the closest thing to what Tiger Woods was,” said elite swing coach Butch Harmon, who has worked with Johnson since 2009 and was with Woods from 1993 to 2004. “The only difference is Tiger was on for 20 years. When DJ’s on, and he’s firing on all cylinders, and everyone else is on, DJ wins.

“He is the closest thing to Tiger Woods I have ever seen.”

Editor’s note: This begins a seven-part series on the life and career of reigning Masters champion Dustin Johnson. Check back to Golfweek.com each day for the next part of the story.

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