 Well, I really didn't ever think I was going to be good enough to be a pro golfer. I wanted to be one, but I was not a good player. When I qualified to play the U.S. Amateur the start of my senior year, I had no idea I was going to win it. And so my goal then was to become a professional golfer, so I didn't go to school, I didn't graduate. Coach Brown would always call me until he died, and I spent a lot of time with him. He said, Pro, you've got to get your college degree. It means a lot to the University of Alabama. And finally in 1997, when my daughter came up to freshman orientation, Susie, my wife and I were driving back with Jenny. And she said, I'm going to have the first degree from the University of Alabama, and I thought about it and it kind of bugged me because I'm so competitive. I joined the Arts and Sciences, the external degree program, and I set it up where I could come back and graduate with my daughter. We walked through graduation in 2001 with her caps and gowns on, and unfortunately the bet she had with me, she won because they called Jenny Payton before they called Jerry Payton.