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Steve Young Q&A: The 3-time Super Bowl champ on why he might play golf as a lefty

In an exclusive interview, the 3-time Super Bowl champ says he was never confused about which side of the ball to play on — until he picked up a club.

Steve Young hits a shot at the 2022 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

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The longtime Niners QB and three-time Super Bowl champ was never confused about which side of the ball to play on — until he picked up a club.

***

GOLF: How’s your game?

Steve Young: I think I’ve finally unraveled it.

G: It was tangled?

SY: I grew up on the mean streets of Greenwich, Connecticut. I caddied but I didn’t play much. I just grabbed my dad’s righty clubs and started whaling away. But when you’re left-handed playing righty, you have some fundamental problems.

G: So you play lefty now?

SY: My wife wants me to do that. She said, “If you’re going to suck this badly, you should switch to lefty.” But I said, No, I can fix this. I finally capitulated and asked for help.

G: Who’s your guru?

SY: [Former Tour player] Keith Clearwater is a buddy. I send him videos. We go back and forth. The problem with golf is you’re never doing what you think you’re doing. I look at my swing and I go, What? No frickin’ way!

G: Where’s the fix?

SY: At the American Century tournament in Tahoe, I show up and I get a tip from Annika Sorenstam, so I try that. Then Peter Jacobsen tells me, “It’s not a pendulum game. It’s an around game. You’ve got to swing around.” And I try that.

G: What’s more stressful: playing golf in front of a crowd or a blind-side blitz?

SY: When you’re an expert in something, the stress levels are lower, even if you’ve got Reggie White coming at you. I had some expertise in football, but you put me on a stage where I don’t have that confidence, that’s another level of stress. The key, to me, is you have to have played competitive golf as a kid.

G: It’s like a language — learn too late and you always have an accent.

SY: No doubt. Jerry Rice picked golf up later in life and wanted to go pro. I said, “Jerry, that’s impossible.” He said, “I can do it.” And then finally he said, “You’re right.”

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G: Any particular course you’re dying to play?

SY: Augusta is one. I’ve had many invitations but haven’t done that yet.

G: That’s not something I’d say around other golfers.

SY: I know. No sympathy.

G: What’s the strength of your game?

SY: Everything is relative, but I’ve been driving it pretty well. If I’m going to have my name on a board at a celebrity event, I’ve got to keep getting better.

G: Or at least beat Larry the Cable Guy.

SY: Exactly. I’ve been thinking that I should start playing both ways, with lefty and righty clubs in the bag. Maybe that becomes my shtick. You’re allowed to do that, right?

G: Who am I to say no? Then you challenge Tony Romo in that format and see who wins.

SY: I like your thinking. And if that doesn’t work, I’ll just go to lefty, like my wife says.

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