Henrik Stenson told by LIV Golf pro: You are the angriest player on our tour
LIV Golf League player David Puig has revealed who he thinks the angriest player on the breakaway tour is, and it's not Tyrrell Hatton.
David Puig has revealed who he thinks the angriest LIV Golf player is.
Puig recently jumped on GOLF's Subpar to discuss all manner of subjects.
The young Spaniard talked about his experience of being the first collegiate player to join LIV and why he's not bothered the breakaway tour doesn't have access to world ranking points.
He also spoke about his recent trip to celebrate Jon Rahm's 30th birthday.
And he was also asked to rank the top three players on LIV that have troubles with their temper.
Given LIV have Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton on their books these days, you would expect Puig to list the European Ryder Cup teammates as the top two.
But according to Puig, Henrik Stenson is number one.
"I mean, Henrik Stenson's got to be up there," he told the pod.
"I love the guy man; he's the best. [But] he's got to be the first one."
Puig said he witnessed Stenson pull a 7-iron into the water once during an Asian Tour event when they were paired together.
Stenson proceeded to lob his club in anger that ended up smashing a microphone into pieces.
Sergio Garcia, Puig said, is also up there.
The aforementioned Hatton has been making headlines again in recent weeks.
Hatton rubbed some golf fans the wrong way for his outbursts during the DP World Tour finale in Dubai.
The Englishman snapped a club, blasted the greens and didn't hold back in what he thought of the par-5 18th hole at the Earth Course.
"He gets pretty dicey, but I can't stop laughing when he says all that," Puig said of Hatton.
"You are standing next to him and he's saying all these things and I'm like, 'I f—ing love this man.'"
You can watch the whole podcast here.
Chacarra outlines next LIV move
Sergio Garcia's former Fireballs teammate Eugenio Chacarra has been speaking about his future.
He was axed by Garcia at the end of the season and is yet to find a new team.
Chacarra's poor form no doubt had an impact on Garcia's decision.
But the 24-year-old has now claimed he was injured for half of the season.
"It was hard for me to compete, which was a downer for me - competing against the best in the world injured is very difficult" he said.
"But after that I have been playing quite solid and everyone out there knows me, and knows I am a solid player and when my putts go in, I go low."
Read more about that here.