Bubba Watson: His Tale Of Struggles? It's Simply Called Life - Dog Leg News

About the author

Tom Edrington

Tom Edrington spent the first 10 years of his misguided youth as a sports writer for the Tampa Tribune. His career brought him face to face with many of sports greatest stars -- Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Muhammad Ali, Don Shula, countless Hall of Fame NFL stars, more PGA Tour players than he can count. In 1980 he was honored by the Golf Writers Association of America for writing the best news story that year, his coverage of Jack Nicklaus' U.S. Open victory at Baltusrol. Today, 36 years later, golf is still a great part of his life, thanks to competitive playing days and the wonderful people he has met on this fabulous journey.

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6 Comments

  1. 1

    scalefreak@aol.com

    I used to root for Bubba Watson to become #1 player in the world… only because he said if that happened he’d quit the tour and we’d be rid of him. (He was probably lying, though.)

    1. 1.1

      Tom Edrington

      Just like the quote at the beginning of this article — two Bubbas….one likeable, one despicable — one of the major symptoms of bipolar disorder…..Bubba is now pretty much past his prime, will be interesting to see if he can actually win again somewhere along the line….first indication was his longtime caddie bidding adios…

  2. 2

    RM

    Great column, Tom. I’ve liked the Bubba who you generally see on TV, and really enjoyed a recent article about him playing a muni course as a test of what a tour pro might do at a normal setup on the typical course that many of us play on regularly. He seemed like a great guy. His first Masters win was thrilling to watch on that Sunday with the amazing shot on the last hole.

    But I have some bipolar in the family and it is a maddening disease both for those who have it and for those who have to deal with them. I’ve seen the articles about Bubba over the same period of time and wondered about him. Controlling bipolar is tough but can be possible with medication, therapy, a willingness to accept input from family members, and the capacity to accept that one has a serious problem and is willing to make the commitment to deal with it long term.

    We’ll see how Bubba does, and I wish him only the best.

    1. 2.1

      Tom Edrington

      Thanks RM, it’s tough to deal with when you DON’T have to make putts for a living, no doubt.

  3. 3

    baxter cepeda

    I would say Bubba has come a long long way. He has been to heck and back and come out a better man. I’m very happy for him.

    Im not too happy how these Georgia good ol boys seem to throw teammates under the bus. All I know is I’ll take Bubba and Reed with all their imperfections over all those put-you-to-sleep-gentle-journeymen.

    1. 3.1

      Tom Edrington

      and I think a lot of people would tell you: “You can have them!” I for one, could tell all along that Bubba had “issues”…..heck, everyone has issues, society in general is a lot less kind these days…..

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