AUGUSTA, Ga. — After finishing at No. 5 on Sunday at the Masters, Tiger Woods’ caddie Joe LaCava had a word with him. Woods had just three-putted for bogey, his second in a row, while Francesco Molinari, the leader in his sights, pulled off some up-and-down wizardry from short of the green. His lead — Woods’ deficit — was stretched to three. LaCava pulled his boss aside. It was time to remind Tiger Woods who he was. After the round, Woods cited that conversation as a turning point — and grinned when he was asked about specifics. “The talk that Joey and I had off of 5 — I just listened. He was saying some things that I can’t really repeat here. Then I went into the restroom and proceeded to say the same things over and over to myself, and then came out and I felt a lot better.” The pep talk worked. Woods stuffed his tee shot on the par-3 6th. His birdie try slid by, but no matter: his approach shot at No. 7 was even closer, leading to a kick-in birdie. At 8, Molinari poured in a birdie putt right in front of him, but Woods answered with a steely putt of his own. Game on.

So what were the words Woods needed to hear? LaCava, perched happily on the tailgate of his courtesy car in a New York Giants Saquon Barkley t-shirt, gave reporters some insight. “We just talked about — never lose the intenseness, but always be loose, know what I mean?” he said. “Don’t carry the weight of the world on your shoulders. Not a smell-the-roses-and-enjoy-it kind of thing, just be a little loose. But never lose the intenseness.” It was clear from Woods’ takeaway that LaCava’s words left a strong impression. On Sunday at Augusta, there’s no question that caddies are crucially important, particularly down the back nine in a swirling wind. LaCava walked through some of their decisions: Staying certain that 9-iron was the correct club at 12, despite Molinari dumping 8-iron in the water short. Picking 5-iron from 227 after a long wait before his approach into 15. And knowing that full 8-iron — not some cut 7 — was the shot to hit on 16 to slam the door on the tournament shut. All three ended up pin high. LaCava was quick to downplay his own role in the victory — and in Woods’ comeback, big-picture. “I didn’t put in all the hard work. I didn’t have all the surgeries. I wasn’t down in Florida grinding. So for me, it’s easy. I just show up, try to do a halfway decent job and he has to do all the tough work,” he said.

But above all, it’s LaCava’s loyalty that has stood out. Consider this quote from late 2018, when LaCava looked back at the dark times, the injury times, when there was no certain golf future. “If I could live another hundred years, I’d wait another hundred years,” LaCava said at the time. “I was never not going to work for Tiger as long as he was going to have me. I just wanted to work for him and no one else. And I think that helped a little bit, knowing that he had a friend that thought that much of him, as a person and with his game.” In hindsight, that looks like an obvious decision. To LaCava, it always was. “I feel fortunate to have the job that I have, y’know what I’m saying?” He said on Sunday. “He took great care of me when he was down and hurt. Listen — I love working for the guy. I’m not going anywhere.”