R4, HOLE 10: John Mascari & On Course with Friends (OMB Peezy, Angie Martinez) & Tips with Stephen Malbon

Primary Topic

This episode combines insightful interviews with tips on golf from the Alpine Country Club, featuring a mix of guests discussing their personal connections with the sport.

Episode Summary

In a vibrant setting at Alpine Country Club, NJ, J.R. Smith and Stephen Malbon host a dialogue-rich episode. They delve into the intricacies of golf course design with John Mascari and share personal golfing anecdotes with guests like OMB Peezy and Angie Martinez. The episode paints a vivid picture of the golfing lifestyle, highlighting how the sport blends competitive spirit with personal stories and community connections. Conversations span from technical aspects of golf courses to personal reflections on why guests love golf, providing a comprehensive view of the game’s impact on individuals and communities.

Main Takeaways

  1. Personal Stories: Guests shared personal stories linking their lives to golf, revealing the sport's deep emotional resonance.
  2. Course Design: Insights into the challenges and nuances of designing a golf course that keeps players engaged.
  3. Community Impact: Discussion on how golf fosters community and inclusivity among diverse groups of people.
  4. Sport's Evolution: Conversations highlighted how golf adapts to modern cultural shifts, becoming more accessible and less formal.
  5. Therapeutic Nature: Guests spoke on the therapeutic aspects of golf, emphasizing its role in personal relaxation and mental health.

Episode Chapters

1: Opening Remarks

J.R. Smith and Stephen Malbon set the stage at Alpine Country Club, hinting at the exciting guest lineup and discussions to follow. J.R. Smith: "Welcome back to the part three podcast."

2: On Course with John Mascari

An engaging interview with John Mascari, focusing on the course’s history and design. John Mascari: "It's a tough test of golf."

3: Guest Interactions

OMB Peezy and Angie Martinez share their personal golf stories, connecting lifestyle elements with the sport. OMB Peezy: "It's the only place I can go and have my peace."

4: Cultural Impact of Golf

Discussions on how the sport is evolving to embrace new cultures and lifestyles. Stephen Malbon: "The game is now opened up. It's not as stiff as you're so."

5: Closing Thoughts

Reflective thoughts on the episode and what golf means to the hosts and guests. Stephen Malbon: "We'll see you next week."

Actionable Advice

  1. Explore Local Golf Courses: Get to know the history and design features of courses near you to enhance appreciation and strategy.
  2. Join Community Golf Events: Participate to connect with others and enjoy the social aspects of the game.
  3. Embrace Golf's Therapeutic Benefits: Use golf as a way to relax and unwind, focusing on the experience rather than just the score.
  4. Experiment with Golf Attire: Modernize your golf wardrobe to reflect personal style, contributing to the sport’s evolving culture.
  5. Introduce Friends to Golf: Share the joy and benefits of golf with friends, especially those who might not typically consider the sport.

About This Episode

We are Par 3 Podcast & here to discuss: Unifyd Healing: Kevin Lyles & CC Sabathia being members, the course being created in 1928 & being a Tillinghouse designed course, false fronts, tucked pins, how many members they have, why he plays golf, where he grew up, how much the game has changed & what the future looks like & so much more. This episode is not to be missed!

People

J.R. Smith, Stephen Malbon, John Mascari, OMB Peezy, Angie Martinez

Companies

Alpine Country Club

Books

None

Guest Name(s):

John Mascari, OMB Peezy, Angie Martinez

Content Warnings:

None

Transcript

Jr Smith
What's going on, everybody? Welcome back to the part three podcast. I am one of your host, Jr Smith. We are here in Alpine, New Jersey. You know Stephen doing another great event. Kevin Lyles 300 group. Got a couple of great guests coming on. Stay tuned and we'll see you soon.

Stephen Malbon
Park. Welcome, park three podcast.

Press fucking go, Stephen. Marvin.

Marvin
Oh, my goodness.

Stephen Malbon
Let's get right into it.

Unknown
Put us down for the birdie dog.

Stephen Malbon
Somebody give me your fucking putter.

Poured the putter.

Jr Smith
Had to make it.

Malvin
Okay.

Stephen Malbon
And now we are here with the one and only John Mascheri, the director of golf of the world famous Alpine Country Club in New Jersey. Thank you for being here, man.

Marvin
What's up, Steve? How you doing, man? Thank you.

Stephen Malbon
Thank you for having us.

Marvin
Yeah, man. This is a fun event. We look forward to it every year.

Stephen Malbon
Oh, so do I. Love coming out. Love Kevin. So Kevin is. How many years has Kevin been a member?

Marvin
Gosh, at least seven. So I've been here seven years. He was here before me, so probably eight or nine, I think, at this point. And what about CC Sisi's about five years, I think.

Stephen Malbon
Five years. And they both live in the neighborhood?

Marvin
Yeah, they're right around the corner from here. So.

Stephen Malbon
So tell everybody about the club. Tell us about the club, the community. I heard this is the most expensive area to live in all of New Jersey.

Marvin
It's pretty close. For sure? Yes, for sure. It's an old golf course, right? So it's 1928. So we're getting close to 100 years.

Fantastic greens, as you know, well manicured. Ryan Pomwitz, who's our superintendent, does amazing work every day keeping this place perfect. And we get a lot of play. You know, for a private club up in the corner of New Jersey, we get a lot of play. Members are active. They're using the range. They're playing golf. They're coming here for food.

It's a very active club in that manner, which is amazing, considering we're so close to New York. Right. There's a lot of options. So when people come here to eat, recreate, hang out, it means a lot to us. It means we're doing a good job.

Stephen Malbon
Absolutely. And who designed it?

Marvin
Tilling house.

Stephen Malbon
Tilling house. Tilling house for you. Some of you may not know. Also did Wingfoot.

Marvin
That's correct.

Stephen Malbon
Is that correct? And Beth Page.

Marvin
That's correct. Yep. You're getting there. Yeah. A lot of courses in the northeast, obviously, but.

Stephen Malbon
Yes. And he's very famous.

Marvin
Yeah. And you'll notice Tillinghaus courses will always have that false front on their green. So you've played here a few times. I'm sure you've hit the shot that goes up, and then you're walking up to the.

Stephen Malbon
Matumboed.

Marvin
That's right.

Stephen Malbon
Matumboed. If you hit the front of the green, it's coming back, basically.

Marvin
No, no, no, no.

Stephen Malbon
And I played winged foot. It's the same.

Marvin
Yep.

Stephen Malbon
You can hit really, really good shots and get horrible results, which makes for a course you could play every day.

Marvin
Yeah. This is a golf course where you're gonna hit every club in your bag. Right. You're not. It's not going to be driver wedge. Driver wedge all the time or something like that. You're going to be forced to shape shots because we have such terrain, level lies are very few and far between, so the ball's always going to move on you. And then you throw in the green complexes.

It's a tough test to golf.

Stephen Malbon
And you can move the pins and move the tee boxes enough where literally, like, I could play here every day.

Marvin
Yeah.

Stephen Malbon
It doesn't get boring.

Marvin
Nope, it does not get boring. We move the tees up, we move them back. Tuck pins. You know, a tucked pin on a hole, maybe just as tough as something right in the middle of the green.

Stephen Malbon
Yeah.

Marvin
Because there's so much undulation no matter in the ball.

Stephen Malbon
So I just played it. I was telling Jr. Last week, I.

Marvin
Played it in Jersey or New York.

Stephen Malbon
No, I played in New York at golf, the PGA Golf links of America, was it called?

Marvin
Oh, national.

Stephen Malbon
Oh, my God, that place is national. And one of the greens, I hit a nine iron out of the bunker and hit the greenhouse. I told Ducati, I said I stayed right on it a bit because I was nervous. And he said, well, anybody who hits into this green is nervous. Only 30% of the green will hold.

Right. So 70% of the green, it's coming off. But this reminds me of it. Where there's areas you can hit the green and it just cannot stay.

Marvin
There are spots where we can't put flags anywhere near them.

Stephen Malbon
Yeah.

Marvin
Because it would be a disaster. Now, listen, there's. When you have a good player, they know how to hit shots. They know where to hit shots. But we're given the same hole locations for everyone during every member. So when you get a 22 handicap coming through.

Stephen Malbon
Yeah.

Marvin
And it's one of those areas that's in that 70% that you can't hold.

That's what I have to drive out there and be like, hey, guys, let's pick up the pace a little bit. It gets a little slow, as you could tell.

Stephen Malbon
And so talk to me, talk to us about the membership. How many members?

Marvin
Just south of 300.

OMB Peezy
Wow.

Marvin
So 295 ish.

Stephen Malbon
And you stay there. That's where you like to stay.

Marvin
You know, I'd be lying if I said we would love to get to three.

Stephen Malbon
Yeah, but that's it.

Marvin
Give it a couple more weeks, and we'll probably get there.

You know, we're at that point where golf is still real popular.

We're a good product, so people come in and are interested, but I think once we start climbing over, that is where we get a little bit. You lose that exclusivity of it, and it gets a little busier, and, you know, people want to come here and, you know, turn off, tune out, and just have a good time and not be worried about, you know, people up their butt on the. On the golf course and not enough spots on the range, stuff like that. So it's a fine balance. You know, you want to have a healthy membership, but you also don't want to be packed.

Stephen Malbon
Your membership is very healthy. Like, it's very active here.

Marvin
Yeah, very.

Stephen Malbon
Like, it's very, very active. And they have. They have the big grand clubhouse up top over here where we do the breakfast. That's where you do the evening, the silent auction to raise money, the dinners, et cetera, et cetera. And then down here, you have the golf house with the pro shop, the grill, et cetera, et cetera. Driving range is great. I mean, all around. Just. What a great club. Super close. How long? Half hour to an hour to the city. No traffic. Half hour.

Marvin
You have to put the card in. It could be like a half an hour or an hour and a half, but anywhere. 13 miles is our, you know, as the crow flies from Manhattan. But, you know, it's a quick jump on the Palisades Parkway, and you're right into the. To the bridge and into the city. So a lot of our members are on the upper east, upper west side.

Stephen Malbon
And they just come across, and it's.

Marvin
You know, the time is they're coming, like, on the weekends, Friday, Saturday, Sunday morning. It's an easy.

Stephen Malbon
And where were you before you were here?

Marvin
I was the head pro at Preakness Hills Country Club, which is an old club in Wayne, New Jersey, but spent time at Hamilton Farm and Canoebrook before that. So some really great clubs in the northeast New Jersey area, so cut my teeth at great places, and I'm blessed to hang my hat at a place like alpine every day.

Stephen Malbon
So we've been asking all of the guests today just one simple question. Why do you play golf?

Marvin
Well, you must have gotten 15 different.

Stephen Malbon
You're not gonna get the same answer twice, that's for sure.

Marvin
Yeah, probably a little different for me other than, you know, loving the game as a kid, playing with my dad, who was a good player, I played division one college golf after that and decided to turn pro after college and learned that it wasn't just about playing, it was about doing stuff like this, doing tournaments, running a club, meeting members, learning hospitality, learning agronomy, all the stuff that goes into golf, the business of golf, that really drew me to the game at a different level. Still love to play competitively and love to play, you know, with our members.

But for me, it was more about a career and having a career at a golf. And I've obviously working at a great place. I'm starting to do a lot of media stuff, so I'm on ESPN radio in New York City every Sunday.

Stephen Malbon
Wow.

Marvin
So I'm doing a lot of that. It's just fun for me to talk about the game because I'm so passionate about it and grew up around it, and it's given me opportunities I would never, ever have thought about.

Stephen Malbon
Exactly. You grew up in Jersey?

Marvin
No, I grew up on Staten Island, New York. Staten island, yeah, the rock.

Stephen Malbon
So funny. My son has been watching YouTube videos or something in New York, and so he's been for, like, the last month. He's like, dad, I want to go to Staten Island. I want to go to Staten island. Let's go to Staten island. I'm thinking, like, why the hell does he want to go to Staten island? Like, I can't quite figure out why this is happening.

Marvin
I'm taking that as a personal insult.

Stephen Malbon
Yeah. But then he tells me, yeah, they have the famous hot dog spot in the Ferris wheels. I'm like, that's Tony. What are we talking about?

Marvin
Totally different.

Stephen Malbon
His godfather grew up on Staten island, and I love going through there. I go through there sometimes when I go to the hamptons, I go that way.

Marvin
You can.

Stephen Malbon
Is that right? Can I stop and get pizza at lB's?

Marvin
Oh, that's in Brooklyn. LB spumoni gardens.

Stephen Malbon
Yeah, yeah, that's.

Marvin
We could talk, like, for another 20 minutes about Staten island and Brooklyn pizza.

Stephen Malbon
Yeah.

Marvin
But, you know, it was fun playing golf on Staten island because what's the.

Stephen Malbon
Course I played out there? That one course on Staten island.

Marvin
Right. So they have three public courses. Yeah, I played and one private course, and it's the only private club in the New York City boroughs. Richmond County Country Club.

Stephen Malbon
And I actually grew up playing in there.

Marvin
It's awesome. Another old country club.

Stephen Malbon
Old italian members, mainly.

Marvin
Yes.

Stephen Malbon
Yeah.

Marvin
So a lot of that, but really at a high elevation, so you can see the water, you can see the city. It's really a cool place. But, you know, for me, growing up, it was more public golf. So, city courses.

Stephen Malbon
Yeah.

Marvin
I was telling a story the other day about we were giving relief to someone on a tournament here at Alpine, and I said, I remember playing golf in high school and getting relief from a burned out cadillac that was in the fairway.

Like, they would. They stole the car and they, you know, they set on fire for the insurance money. But here I am, I'm out there. Like, that's a burned out car in the fairway. I'm gonna need a drop. But, you know, that was. That was the golf that I grew.

Stephen Malbon
Up at and playing.

Marvin
But it was fun, you know, like, it was. You got to meet a lot of people. You'd play with hustlers. You play with guys who were. You didn't think were good players, who were sticks, because that's what kind of what New York City was for me was just a hodgepodge of everyone. The game of golf just brought everyone together.

Stephen Malbon
Yeah, I think it still does today, just as you can see out here with this tournament we're having in the vast variety of people playing and the different skill levels, the different walks of life coming together. And I was thinking about the first year we did it here. We had funk flex dj all day, like 10 hours. Funk master flex djing at Alpine Country Club on the back of the grill on the 18th green. It's like, what does this world come?

Marvin
We had. We had someone come by the club while you guys were playing today. He was doing, like, some scouting for a tv show, looking for a golf course, and they came today and they're like, is this how it is every day? Here's music going and who's partying this and that? I'm like, you know, not that much, but it's pretty close.

Stephen Malbon
Yeah, you should see the pool on Saturdays.

Marvin
But if you were to tell me ten years ago that this is the kind of event we'd be having, or this is what we're open to doing, it just shows how much the game has changed totally from, you know, top button.

Stephen Malbon
Yeah.

Marvin
So now we're wearing hoodies and we're hanging out. We got music playing. Everyone's having a great time, but in a good way.

Stephen Malbon
Yeah.

Marvin
The game is now opened up. It's not as stiff as you're so.

Stephen Malbon
Interesting of, like, just thinking through kind of, like, where it was, where it is today, and then, like, what does the future look like? Right. Like, if this is where we are today, what does ten more years look like when there's more and more younger people? Obviously, Covid affected it. I think there's an additional, you know, 1015 million new golfers playing that started during COVID And they're all young and creative, and they're coming into the game with no perceived, like, when you and I were young and we started playing, it's like, look, if you go to the course, you have to do this, that, and the other, the new 15 million people, like, they have no clue. They're just like, if I'm gonna golf, this is what I'm gonna do. And I think what someone told me to do, just, yeah, this is what I'm gonna do.

Marvin
And for us in the business, it's now those, the people that are grew up that way are kind of phasing out.

And the people that are in charge and running clubs and making decisions for clubs and golf communities and associations are the ones that are like, let's just do something different. Let's not do the same thing. Let's be open to this. Let's be open to music on the golf course. Let's be open to having events like we have today where we're going to be open.

It's more welcoming.

Stephen Malbon
Absolutely. Well, thank you. You guys are the absolute best. I look forward to coming here every year.

Marvin
And you always have a spot.

Your locker is always right by the urinal, so you're good to go.

Stephen Malbon
Right near the urinal. I'm going to come play with Cece tomorrow.

Marvin
All right, cool.

Stephen Malbon
Got invited. Thank you. All right, man.

Marvin
Always a pleasure. Thank you. Thank you.

Stephen Malbon
The part three podcast is brought to you by Topgolf. Perfect for family, friends, and fun. Enjoy a top golf around you this summer.

Malvin
Malvin, golf.

Stephen Malbon
It's the only way.

Malvin
Listen, here we are. 300 entertainment. Ja rule, Jimmy Jones Junior. Stephen Malvin pulling up in the cut.

Coming to the range. Follow me.

All right, side up in here.

OMB Peezy
Hey, man. It's omb peas and man. I'd like to send a special thank you to Stephen Melbourne. 300, man. Inviting me to the tournament, man. Game, bro. I started picking up golf my first time playing. I was twelve years old.

My mom had a boyfriend. It was one of his good hobbies. And then they wouldn't let me go nowhere. Cause I was always bad at school. That was the only place I could go with him to the golf course. So I just ended up. I just ended up trying one day and hit a good ball. You know when you hit your first good ball and then just fell in love with it. You feel me? And it's a peaceful game. You feel me?

Like nature, water, lakes. Yeah, I love that shit. It's the only place I can go. And all my homeboys not gonna go with me. If I say I'm going to the club, everybody gonna want to come. If I say I'm going to the golf course, they're going to let me go have my piece by myself. You feel me? And it's like I be needing that. My favorite club in the bay was like, the 99. I love the 99. I don't know why, bro. And then I like the pitching. Wedge is fun.

Like anything with hand eye coordination. I feel like I kind of got. I kind of got a little bit in me. You feel me?

Stephen Malbon
Yeah.

OMB Peezy
That's a good one right there.

That was a good ball. That was a good ball. That was a good ball. That was a nice ball. I'm telling you, man, I came to play, man. What y'all came to do, huh? This is a part three. I'm going straight on the green first.

Stephen Malbon
Try.

Marvin
That.

Look at him.

Unknown
He predicted it.

Stephen Malbon
He predicted it.

Marvin
He predicted it. He predicted it.

OMB Peezy
I'm trying to tell you, man, it ain't easy being p the baby.

Hey, man, it peasy pee. You already know, man. 300 male born golf tournament, man. I'm coming to take home another motherfucking championship, man. I won the last one. Everybody said I cheated because I had pros on my team. Well, I switched the teams up this time. And let's see who talking at the end of the day.

Jr Smith
Game part three. Podcast junior Smith here at Alpine, New Jersey.

Try the long drink.

Hit it in the fairway.

Marvin
We here at Malbon 300 golf tournament. Let's go. Let's get it.

Stephen Malbon
Other than this is my buddy over here. So long story short, been a caddy out here forever. Practice his golf like crazy. Introduce yourself. And now he is on a professional golfing level.

Milan
Yeah, I'm Milan. Nice to be around the Melbourne team. I'm a caddy at Alpine. I have been for the last three years. I just turned professional. And, yeah, I'm just here for the outing today after a long weekend at caddying.

Stephen Malbon
And he came back up for the vip caddy.

Certain members fly them up just to caddy for their tournaments and the money games and such. And then since he's here, he might as well stay another night or so and then go back to Dallas to keep grinding and going. Looking forward to starting on the corn ferry, then work his way onto the PGA Tour. So remember the name. You heard it here first.

Milan
Team Albin, team Alvin. Thanks, Stephen. Thanks, bud.

Stephen Malbon
Thank you, bud. Yeah, we're here. He's good as fucking golf, dude. He's so fucking good at golf, that kid. He caddy every single day. He caddies every day, and then he tracks his six, 7 hours. Oh, yeah.

Unknown
We're at the Malbon 300 Open. Last year, I went viral. Sank the 90 footer for bird, dropped it in. Shout out to Odyssey, Callaway, all my people. Shout out to Stephen. And, yeah, we're here for a good cause. Today, I'm doing a double Malbon collab.

Stephen Malbon
As you see.

Unknown
I went prince, then I went to players. You know what I mean? I'm gonna unzip at the tee box and go into shorts, you know what I mean? Because I got a little surprise. Bang with the socks.

Stephen Malbon
You heard?

Unknown
But it's not about me. It's about the cause, and that's why I'm here, guys. You know what I'm saying? It's your boy swag advance. And I'm out. See you guys later. I gotta go back to clubhouse warm up.

Angie Martinez
I'm Angie Martinez.

Not professional golfer, but golf junkie nonetheless. A friend of mine, one of my girlfriends about two years ago, said, come golf with me and my girls. I was like, I don't golf. And she said, nobody golfs. Even people who golf don't golf. You know, we ride the carts, we have drinks, we listen to music. I was like, all right, sounds fun. Day with my girls. And I came, and I took a lesson before, and I made one good hit, and that was it. I was stuck. And then I didn't immediately go crazy. And then this past summer, I started golfing regularly. This past summer is really when I was like, maybe I could be better at this if I put a little work in. And so it's been about a year. Study. I was always a tomboy, so I wasn't a sports girl, but I was, like, the girl who played pool, I bowled, I play, you know, all that type of stuff. And I think there is something similar. And it's, like, strategic. It's creative. You don't need to be a bodybuilder to be able to or in athletic shape to be able to golf. There's 80 year old women out here that are out driving me right now.

I mean, listen, if you're fit, it helps, but at any fitness level, I think it's a game that you could kind of get into and enjoy. So I love it. I even say, like, when I golf bad or it's a bad day, like just being out here outside, I'm forced to walk. Sometimes I walk, sometimes I cart. But even when I cart, I'm getting 10,000 steps in. So that's like a plus. That's like, bottom line, it's a good day. Then if I golf well, well, then that's a whole other level of the day.

Stephen Malbon
It all comes together.

Angie Martinez
It all comes together and that's where the addiction kicks in. Cause you have one or two good shots and that's it. You wanna catch that all the time. My one regret is that I didn't start earlier.

That is the one regret. I was just talking to some women here who've been golfing for 30 years. I'm so jealous of that. Hey, guys, it's Angie Martinez. This is the par three podcast which I'm so happy exists cause I'm a new golfer. I need all the golf tips I could get. So shout out to Steven and junior and make sure you check out the.

Stephen Malbon
Pod world famous part three podcast. And we're out here with all our friends at Alpine, New Jersey, the Alpine country club.

Look forward to sharing some moments sometimes and beautiful day for golf out here in Jersey.

So if I'm coming out to golf and I'm gonna play, and I have plenty of time, first I like to start off hitting like little baby soft flop shots and little chips, and get my tempo really slow and calm. And then I move up to the driving range, keep hitting little baby, like 50%, 70% wedges, 60 degree wedges, and get my tempo right and get the feeling of like the club actually falling like that. So as it falls, then I just turn and try not to use my arms. And I try to activate my hips and legs first.

And then from there I just build up and start moving my hips a bit quicker. At first I start like this, and then when I move up, it's more like.

But it's the same tempo, same swing, same full shot. And then I build all the way up to driver, try to putt first and then chip, and then go through the process as I said. And then the last thing I end on is a driver. If I'm going to hit driver on the first tee, I'll stop with the driver and go right to the tee. But if I'm going to hit like a three wood off the first tee, then I'll hit a few three woods just before I go, because I know I'm gonna hit three wheel on the first tee, and then I hope to hit it. And I try not to. I try not to just beat balls. I try to think about shaping the ball and, like, you know, either cutting it or hitting the draw, hitting high, hitting it low, things like that. Because when I play, that's what I do. So sometimes it's negative for me. I don't get better if I just hit balls. I have to actually try to hit shots. Because golf about golfing is hitting shots, not just hitting it. If I'm hitting it bad on the range and such, I have very good.

I abandon my thoughts and my memory and all of that stuff. I don't have it. So it doesn't really carry over with me. If I hit one good shot, that doesn't mean I'm gonna hit the next shot good. If I have a great rain session, that doesn't mean I'm gonna play good. But if I have the worst rain session ever, that doesn't mean I'm gonna play bad. I just basically try to forget it and it. Golf's just one shot. So if I'm hitting the ball bad, then I just try to use, like, slow my tempo down and such and such. Maybe if I'm gonna hit a hard eight, I say, nah, I'm just gonna just hit a little smooth seven. If I'm playing as bad as I could ever fucking play, all I need is one good shot and then I'm right back in it. So I just try to do my best not to think about the negative of anything and just positively think that I'm good enough to hit this shot. So not over complicated, and just try to be smooth and hit a shot. Sometimes when I have the worst warm up session, then I go play the best I ever played. Or sometimes you warm up perfect. You go out there and you start topping it and shit. It's like, what the fuck? I basically. All I'm really doing while I'm warming up is just trying to get my body warmed. Like, trying to get my body warmed up where then I can hit shots inside.

OMB Peezy
I'm warmed up.

Let's go.

Stephen Malbon
I got. Because it's escapism at its finest.

I golf because it's the greatest sport in the world. No other sport that allows you to meet new people, be outside in the environment, and it's challenging. Stay competitive, man. Love it. Why do I golf? It's therapy. Cause it's something that I can be bad at, and I can't blame anybody else but myself for the results, you.

OMB Peezy
Know what I'm saying?

Stephen Malbon
So it helps me stay accountable and calm.

It's the greatest. It's the greatest frustration in my life. You know what I'm saying?

Jr Smith
That's a good ball.

Stephen Malbon
That's a good ball.

What you hit with?

Marvin
Nine ayah.

Jr Smith
No more nine. Yeah, I better go.

Stephen Malbon
Nine ayah.

Unknown
You see what it is, Artie? Green on the green.

Stephen Malbon
You know what I'm saying?

Unknown
With yours, like, the flight on that thing was pretty.

OMB Peezy
That was.

Unknown
That was Rory like. That was Rory like.

Stephen Malbon
Why do I golf? Gives me the opportunity to hang out with the fellas for about 5 hours, and I get some solitude, relaxation, and a great time. That's why I golf. Nice.

Malvin
Okay. Well, I golf because I like to practice my cuss words a lot, you know? No, I'm just kidding. It helps get out a lot of frustration. Helps us to focus, look at our target, and it helps with lifestyle. Right? So we get to go out, spend some time with friends, and it's a great time.

Jr Smith
I golf because golf is great.

Bang.

Oh, shit.

Stephen Malbon
We look good.

Unknown
Y'all know what it is. 300 entertainment cab. We appreciate you having us all day, every day. Came in second place last year.

Marvin
This year, Steve.

Unknown
I'm coming in first place. I want a bag, I want clubs, I want speakers. I want it all, and I want a new deal.

I'm pen seeking baby pinsy. I'm Pinsick.

OMB Peezy
Don't stop rolling the camera.

Angie Martinez
This guy's famous.

Stephen Malbon
And she's famous, too.

OMB Peezy
Sorry.

Stephen Malbon
So we're here representing the ladies of the LPGA, and, you know, we're just.

Angie Martinez
Gonna do what we can.

Stephen Malbon
Representation matters. That's why we're here.

Angie Martinez
I'm obsessed with golf.

There's nothing I love more in life that doesn't have a heartbeat. Thing off.

Jr Smith
What's going on?

OMB Peezy
See me out here, gloved up.

Stephen Malbon
Ball bone.

OMB Peezy
Yeah, yeah. It's this boy, PJ splash. I'm at the 300 miles bond golf tournament. You know what's going on? Got the squad out here. You know what I'm saying? Make sure you get your goods. You see me on aisle five on lane five. I got it, I got it, I got it.

Stephen Malbon
Steven Malbin here. Part three podcast, over and out. We'll see you next week. Tell a friend, subscribe on YouTube, follow us on all of your Spotify's broadcasting, podcasting, everything you could possibly think of globally. And we'll see you when we see you, see you on a golf course, see you on the YouTube, and see you on the Instagram in the near future. All of those things be good to each other and we'll see you next week.