Justin Thomas on Winning, Losing, and the Reality of Greatness
DEC 18, 202554 MIN
Justin Thomas on Winning, Losing, and the Reality of Greatness
DEC 18, 202554 MIN
Description
<p>Justin Thomas opens up like never before.In this full-length, wide-ranging conversation with Trey Wingo, two-time major champion Justin Thomas reflects honestly on winning at the highest level, losing confidence, battling expectations, and what it actually takes to stay elite in modern professional golf. From back surgery and rehab, to Ryder Cup pressure, to the mental grind of going years without a win, this is the most candid Justin Thomas interview you’ll see.Thomas walks through the physical and emotional toll of dealing with a herniated disc and back surgery, explaining how the injury showed up in his swing long before the diagnosis — and why choosing surgery now was about protecting the long-term future of his career. He shares what rehab has been like, how patience has become the hardest part, and why rushing back too soon can cost elite athletes far more than a few missed tournaments.The conversation also dives deep into the mental side of greatness — the part fans rarely get to see. Justin explains how hard it truly is to win on the PGA Tour, why some of his statistically best seasons didn’t produce the results people expected, and what it feels like to go nearly three years without a win while still believing you belong at the top. He reflects on learning to trust himself again, managing expectations, and how confidence in golf can quietly disappear — and slowly return.Trey and Justin also discuss:Why winning on the PGA Tour is harder now than everHow elite golfers think differently about success and failureThe emotional reality of coming close and not finishingWhat team golf reveals about pressure at the highest levelRyder Cup heartbreak and what the U.S. needs to changeCompeting alongside legends like Tiger Woods and Scottie SchefflerWhy process matters more than trophies — even for championsJustin also shares personal stories from the Ryder Cup, including emotional moments with teammates, the pressure of playing overseas, and why the event means more than most fans realize. He explains why Europe has had the edge, what the U.S. can learn, and how overthinking may be costing American teams when it matters most.The interview closes with reflections on legacy, longevity, and what Justin Thomas still believes is ahead of him — not just as a golfer, but as a competitor learning how to evolve.This is not a highlight reel.This is the real conversation behind greatness.</p>