Aaron Rai shocked the world. Here’s what he revealed in the process

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Aaron Rai (Photo by Richard Heathcote/Getty Images)

Irish Golfer & GOLF.com

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Aaron Rai had no idea what to do.

He’d just finished off a 1-foot putt that secured the biggest win of his professional life, having emerged from a peloton of heavyweights and left them in the dust thanks to a highlight-reel back nine that sent roars bouncing around Aronimink Golf Club. But the moment the job was finished, his first major championship secured, Rai seemed suddenly lost. He didn’t fist pump or wave. Instead he sort of wobbled in one direction, then another, and then, as the Philadelphia faithful cheered his win, Rai did what felt most natural.

He turned to his playing partner, took off his cap and offered his hand.

“He’s just so polite,” said Ludvig Aberg a few minutes later, chuckling at the moment. “He’s got a putt to win his first major and he still said ‘good putt’ to me? He’s taking time to look me in the eye and say well done? That stands out. That’s really impressive.

“If there’s one guy I’d love to lose to, it’s probably him.”

BY NOW, YOU’VE HEARD ABOUT RAI’S IRON COVERS. If you’re a golf fan, you likely know the story. He’s the only high-profile pro who uses them, in part because they’re broadly considered lame, making his a bold choice in a sport that’s mostly same. But that’s also the point. That’s how they serve to explain Aaron. The iron covers tell his story. Here’s a concise version he offered to ESPN:

“My mom and dad worked extremely hard to support me, and my dad used to buy me the best equipment that he could, and he brought me a really nice set of irons, which he paid a lot of money for. And after every practice session he used to come home and he used to clean each groove with baby oil and a pin to get all the dirt and grime out, and then he started to put iron covers on those soon after to look after them and take care of them. So the reason I [use them] now is to remember what I came from — and also to respect the things that I have.”

It’s a remarkable telling. We could leave this piece here and you’d get the idea. Rai is different. He’s grateful. He’s humble. And he’s proud of where he came from. Also he can spin a neat parable.

But plenty of sons learn habits from their fathers and then discard them once they realize they’re uncool. Not Rai. So how’d he dodge the pressures of conformity and sameness? Why isn’t he wearing a single white golf glove, a brand-name hat logo, a too-cool-for-school attitude, the status quo for Tour uniform? He pondered the question in his post-round press conference, then returned to his father.

“I think my dad played a really big role in that,” he said. It was the two of them for most of his childhood, he said. They’d practice together, read about golf, watch Tiger Woods VHS tapes. Amrik implored Aaron to stay in his lane, to control the things he could control.

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