The Arizona Republic

Johnson’s calm contribute­s to success.

- STEVE DIMEGLIO

ERIN, Wis. – From the first days as a kid that Dustin Johnson started tagging along to the golf course or driving range with his father, Scott, a former teaching pro, he obeyed the most important lesson his father bestowed.

“Probably the biggest thing I learned from him would be controllin­g my attitude,” Johnson said. “He didn’t put up with pitching a fit on the course or throwing clubs, anything like that. That was not acceptable, especially because anything I did reflected on him.

“I might have done it a few times, but he straighten­ed me out pretty quick.”

The strict guidance has served Johnson well. By controllin­g his emotions and tackling any issue with a peaceful dispositio­n, the world No. 1 and defending U.S. Open champion has become the game’s dominant player. That trait has been instrument­al as Johnson has outlasted heartache on the game’s biggest stages, from his collapse in the 2010 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, to his penalty miscue on the final hole in the 2010 PGA Championsh­ip at Whistling Straits, to his out-of-bounds 2-iron on the back nine of the final round in the 2011 British Open, to his three-putt on the 72nd hole from 12 feet in the 2015 U.S. Open at Chambers Bay.

As he got into the car with his family following the one-shot loss to Jordan Spieth at Chambers Bay, Johnson was met with silence.

“I turned around and I’m like, ‘Guys, it’s just a golf tournament,’ ” Johnson said. “They were more upset about it than I was.”

That’s Dustin Hunter Johnson in a nutshell.

“It’s like he’s made out of Teflon. Everything you throw at him just slides off,” said Butch Harmon, Johnson’s coach for nearly 10 years. “His theory has always been, ‘They’re not going to let me go back and hit the shot again so why the hell should I think about it?’ To me he not only has the natural, God-given talent, and works as hard as anybody, he has the mentality to play this game unlike anyone I’ve ever known. Nothing bothers him.

“If you look at what happened to him in those four majors, any one of those things would probably ruin a guy’s career.”

Johnson’s biggest confrontat­ion with potential ruin, however, came in last year’s U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club. On the fifth hole in the final round, his ball moved a hair as he addressed it with his putter. Johnson knew he didn’t cause the ball to move, the rules official agreed and no penalty was administer­ed. Johnson, who started the final round four shots back, continued to play well and took a two-shot lead to the 12th tee. That’s when chaos ensued. A group of U.S. Golf Associatio­n officials met Johnson on the tee and told him the incident on the fifth green was being reviewed and he may be assessed a penalty. But the decision would not be made until Johnson was given a chance to watch a replay after the round.

From that point onward, Johnson nor any player with a chance to win knew where he stood on the leaderboar­d. The uncertaint­y scrambled the brains and emotions of a few players. Anger from Johnson’s peers erupted on Twitter. Johnson just moseyed along. “There was nothing I could do about it, so all I tried to do was just focus on that tee shot on 12, and just focus on every shot all the way to the house,” Johnson said afterward.

He played the last seven holes in even-par, with his towering 6-iron from 191 yards to four feet on the last cementing victory. The USGA did decide to penalize Johnson for the infraction on the fifth hole, but it proved meaningles­s as his final advantage was three.

Lee Westwood was paired with Johnson that final round. Westwood’s caddie, Billy Foster, bowed to Johnson behind the 18th hole.

“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. I just tapped Dustin on the shoulder and said, ‘Listen man, forget it. You didn’t cause that ball to move and just concentrat­e on what you have to do.’ And some of the shots he hit on the last three or four holes were magnificen­t. Respect to him. That’s why I bowed to him.”

 ?? GEOFF BURKE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Dustin Johnson stands at the driving range during a practice round for the U.S. Open on Wednesday at Erin Hills in Erin, Wis.
GEOFF BURKE/USA TODAY SPORTS Dustin Johnson stands at the driving range during a practice round for the U.S. Open on Wednesday at Erin Hills in Erin, Wis.

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