Music Star Colt Ford Joins “The Charlie Rymer Golf Show”

Country rapper Colt Ford wasn’t always a chart-topping musician; he played golf professionally on the mini tours for years, and taught other high-level players as an instructor. Hear how Colt blazed his own unique and fascinating path to notoriety in this wide-ranging discussion with host Charlie Rymer.

 

 

Charlie Rymer:
I’m Charlie Rymer, and this is the Charlie Rymer Golf Show, powered by PlayGolfMyrtleBeach.com.

Okay, folks, we’re going to start the Charlie Rymer Golf Show just right in the middle of a lesson. Thrilled to be joined with my long-time buddy, Colt Ford, and we’ve known each other going back to junior golf days. And before we jump right in, I’ve got to tell you, Colt, I appreciate all our special guests that come on. We’ve had Jack Nicklaus, we’ve had Peter Jacobsen. Thrilled to have you. But I give all our guests a very special gift. And right now, not real sure where you are. I don’t even know that I want to know where you are, but the most-

Colt Ford:
I don’t know where I’m at.

Charlie Rymer:
… precious substance on the planet right now, you ready for this?

(Displays roll of toilet paper)

Colt Ford:
Yes. Please, please send it!

Charlie Rymer:
The interesting thing is we ran out of toilet paper, and two days ago, I am quarantined like everybody else, I do get a chance to get out on the golf course, but it’s hard to get into normal stuff as we know, but I read where it’s really hard to get clippers to give yourself a haircut. So, I went into Target, I couldn’t get them. I get online, I couldn’t get them. Everything’s back ordered to like July.

Colt Ford:
Oh, really?

Charlie Rymer:
So, I’m getting that quarantine haircut going. You’ve always had the quarantine haircut.

Colt Ford:
Well, my hair’s luscious and long and lovely. You don’t have that, so …

Charlie Rymer:
Exactly.

Colt Ford:
It is crazy. But saying that, I went and got some … Walgreens was full of them when I went. I’ve been in two Walgreens, and clippers and all stuff, all covered up in there.

Charlie Rymer:
Well, Amazon doesn’t have any until August 2023, so I’m going to look like you by then. Maybe I’ll be as sexy as you are by then.

Colt Ford:
We ain’t got that kind of quarantine time.

Charlie Rymer:
All right. So, I was putting together this timeline, and it’s you and I over the years, and it starts with junior golf. Then you played Alex City Junior College for a couple of years, then you end up at Georgia. We played a lot of golf together when you were at Georgia and I was at Georgia Tech. We played some mini tour golf together. We played some on what’s now the Korn Ferry Tour together. After that, you actually got into the PGA program. You were the assistant professional of the year in the state of Georgia, and in back-to-back years, you were teaching players like Blake Adams that made it to the PGA TOUR. Then, we got in a business together that failed spectacularly. And we’re not going to get into that. And now you’re a country music star. What doesn’t fit in that timeline? I’ve got to write a book about this. This is the most incredible thing I’ve ever seen.

Colt Ford:
It’s a little strange, there’s no doubt, and we go back further than we probably care to tell. Yeah, I don’t know. I’ve always fooled with music. I’ve always done it. I’ve always loved it. I’ve always written songs. We’ve known each other so long, I’ve always been around it, fool around with it. It really probably has always been my first love. I was pretty good at golf. I could play pretty good. I played pretty good for a while.

Charlie Rymer:
Yeah, you did.

Colt Ford:
Able to make a living for a while, and you know how golf is, though. You make one putt at the tour school and you go from playing for $10,000 to a million dollars. Sometimes it happens and you see guys who are can’t-miss guys that do, and you see guys that you think some guy from North Dakota State out there just beating people to death. I just never could turn music off, Charlie. It just never went away for me in my mind. Even when I started saying what I was going to do with our business, it was like, I’m going to try to do this, and you’re like, “You’re out of your mind.” A lot of people said that, and I think I probably was. I was just too hard-headed to listen, and I just had to get it out of my system, and it just … Here I am, seven albums later, and I would’ve never thought that that would’ve happened, but I’m just completely humbled and appreciate what I get to do every day.

Charlie Rymer:
Well, I remember a couple things about you that really … Well, there’s a lot about you that stands out.

A couple of moments. You told me out of the blue, we’re talking about golf and this little business we had going, and we were going to eat lunch, and you go, “Oh, yeah, I wrote this anthem for the Pro Bull Riding Tour,” you know what’s on NBC on the weekends, and I’m like, “The Pro Bull Riding what? And they got a tour?” And you’re like, “Oh, yeah, they fill up coliseums. And I just happened in my spare time to write this song, it’s going to be their anthem. They’re going to start all their shows with it and all that.” And I’m like, “You’re crazy.” And that song, “Buck ‘Em,” that’s really what got you going, right?

Colt Ford:
Yes, that’s kind of what got it started. I just wrote it because I was really getting pestered to write it, and I wrote it, and it just worked out, man. It’s crazy. Randy Bernard was the CEO of PBR at the time, and Randy went on to be CEO of Indy Car, and now he’s manager of Garth Brooks. But Randy loved the song, and I sent it to him, and he’s like, “This is awesome. We’re going to use it.” We opened up at Madison Square Garden next year, the first time ever in New York City, bull riding, and he’s like, “This is going to be the theme song.” And he texts me back, “Who did it? Who is this?” And I text back, “Me.” And two seconds later, my phone rings, and I can’t even say what he said, but he’s like, “You’re full of it. This is not you. Who is this?” And I’m like, “No, I swear this is me,” because all he knew was me about golf and playing golf and teaching golf, and there it was. That got me started, and then Colt Ford was born, and here we are, all these years later. It’s crazy.

Charlie Rymer:
Well, and the other point on the timeline that stands out is you and I were sitting in some sort of truck, in your dad’s used car lot. God bless your dad, I love him to death and you know that, and your mom, too, and you’re sitting there, and you’ve done “Buck ‘Em,” and you’re telling me some story about this and that and how you listened to what the kids are listening to, and they’re listening to rap, and they’re listening to rock, and nobody’s putting them together. And you said, “I’ve written this song with a guy named Brantley Gilbert.” He goes, “Listen to this.” And you played it, and it was “Dirt Road Anthem,” which was Grammy nominated, was #1 with Jason Aldean for a long time, and honestly, the hair’s standing up on my arm when I tell this story, because that was the coolest thing I’d ever seen because I’m sitting there thinking, “Well, you did ‘Buck ‘Em.’” Every now and then, a 20 handicapper makes a hole in one. That’s what that was. Then all of a sudden, I listen to it, and I’m like, “Damn, that’s good. That’s got a chance.” But I’ll never forget that moment. That was just the coolest moment, you and I sitting in that truck.

Colt Ford:
Yes. When you had gotten that Ridgeline, we went and played golf somewhere. It’s crazy. You didn’t know. Me and Brantley wrote that song. I just did an Instagram Live with him the other day, and he’s gone on to be one of the bigger stars of country music as well, but we were just getting started. We wrote the song in probably 30 minutes. We didn’t have any idea that anybody in the world would care about what we were doing, and what we were talking about. We just thought it was fun. And we went on later that day, we were meeting to go write with Mike Dekle, who you know very well, who’s a great friend of mine.

Charlie Rymer:
“Ain’t No Trash in My Trailer” you did with him, right?

Colt Ford:
Uncle Mike has been so good to me and Brantley, ventured us a little bit with songwriting, and he’s written big hits for Kenny Rogers, like “Scarlet Fever” and stuff. And we wrote this song before we went to lunch to go write with Mike, and we didn’t have no idea, we went and wrote a song with Mike, and Brantley and I were trying to recall, we spent six or seven hours writing, and we don’t remember what we wrote that day, we don’t even remember what it was. But “Dirt Road Anthem” has gone on to be the biggest song of Aldean’s career and almost … It probably within the next year or so will be 10 million. A platinum record’s a million. 10 million is called … good lord, they call it diamond, I think. There’s only been a few songs that have ever done that, and it’s getting close to that. Who knew?

Charlie Rymer:
You’re off to the races. The next point on the timeline I want to talk to you about, I had a great friend of mine, now a great friend of yours too, Steve John. Steve runs the Monterey Peninsula Foundation for Clint Eastwood, who I believe is the chairman, and they run the AT&T Pebble Beach along with a PURE Insurance event on the PGA Tour Champions. And Steve called me and he said, “Tell me something about this Colt Ford.” He goes, “I heard you know him.” I say, “Oh, you don’t want to do anything with him. You don’t want anything to do with him.” No, no, I said-

Colt Ford:
I know that’s not true. You got me in front of Steve, and …

Charlie Rymer:
Right. I said he’s the best, and you came out and played, and I said … the other things I told Steve was I said, “Listen, Rudy Gatlin for a long time back in the 1940s …” (He’s not that old), but back in the ’80s and ’90s, into the early ’90s, he was the best celebrity golfer. Vince Gill, and Vince didn’t play a lot of tournaments, but I played a lot with Vince, and then when Rudy got old, Vince was the best celebrity golfer. Jake Owen is a good player. Josh Kelly is a good player. But people ask me who’s the best celebrity player, and that’s what I told Steve, I said, “Colt Ford is the best celebrity golfer.” He said, “Are we talking about the same person? He’s 5’2″, a little over 200.”

Colt Ford:
I’m a lot taller than 5’2″.

Charlie Rymer:
But he called me. Your first round in the AT&T was over at Monterey Peninsula, and you shot six under on your own ball, was the report I got, in your first round at the AT&T. How cool was that?

Colt Ford:
I wish I had never done it. Now I can’t get enough shots, it sucks. I wish I would’ve shot … I did a thing with Steve the other day, and I don’t know if I have, but thank you, because the reason I’ve played six AT&Ts is because you introduced me. You opened the door for me there with Steve. He thinks the world of you, and he’s become one of my dearest friends.

Charlie Rymer:
He’s the greatest.

Colt Ford:
It was so funny, though. I get done that day, and it was so cool, I was playing a little bit then, so I was sitting okay. It’s Monterey Peninsula. The place is phenomenal. The golf course is perfect. We teed off like 8:00 in the morning to 70 degrees and sunny. Caught a great day. I can reach the par fives. I’m hitting wedge into every hole. I’m only getting one shot, and all my old friends, [Jerek 00:11:38] and Memphis and the guys, they’re wearing me out. And I’m like, there’s another guy that played with Pat Perez, I think, he’s a 12, and he shot 76 with three birdies. I don’t know what you all are yelling at me for. At least I have a background, a history that I can do that. I played with Billy Horschel that year, and when we walked off the eighth green on Saturday, he was leading the golf tournament, and we were leading the division because Friday’s round he shot 64 at Spyglass, and you and anybody knows who’s ever played that-

Charlie Rymer:
That’s the toughest one.

Colt Ford:
That’s stronger than a garlic milkshake. It was unbelievable to watch. When we walked off the eighth green, we were leading. When we walked off 18, we missed the cut by a shot, and he was at 40. It was the most epic derail, train wreck you have ever seen.

Charlie Rymer:
It sounds like our business we did together.

Colt Ford:
It was very similar to that. Very similar to that. It was crazy, but I love playing that event. I’ve gotten to meet Mr. Eastwood and become friends with him and go play in his event that he holds out at Tehama. That event is just such a special event. The people that you meet there, the friendships, the great super CEOs that make the world go ‘round that you can learn from and spend time with. Some of those younger players on the tour need to remember that, there’s some guys there that make the world go ‘round. It ain’t about hanging out with me or Toby (Keith) or Jake Owen or Darius (Rucker). There’s guys there you need to know. [inaudible 00:13:13] McKenzie and Stu Francis, guys that are really … It’s just such a treat to be a part of it. Thank you so much for … You opened the door. Steve and I became friends. He gave me a shot, and it’s been really cool to be a part of it.

Charlie Rymer:
Hey, listen, all I did was just say, “Hey,” just told him the truth. I’m glad you mentioned Clint Eastwood. You and I were last together in January when we were shooting the Ace Shootout, the tournament that Ace Hardware does that benefits Children’s Miracle Network out in Hawaii, and you put in a good word for me there, so that enabled me to get out there, and Steve Young hosts that event, and I love doing it. But the thing that was most fun … It was like a half-day shoot, and we get to stay there for a week, at this beautiful resort. It’s tough work.

Colt Ford:
Yeah.

Charlie Rymer:
Tough work. But you were telling me you had just spent some time with Clint Eastwood at Tehama.

Colt Ford:
Yeah.

Charlie Rymer:
How is that to hang out with him?

Colt Ford:
I can’t even … It’s surreal. I’ve been lucky. You and I both have met some of the biggest celebrities in the whole world, some of the coolest people, whether it be music, athletes, presidents, whatever. We’ve been lucky to be around … But Clint Eastwood, he’s my dad’s guy, you know what I mean? I remember the first time I saw him. Matter of fact, I saw you were playing, when I was a club pro, you were still playing, and I remember Mizuno used to do a tournament following for all their club pros for the following week from AT&T, and I brought a group out from Harvard Club, and that was the first … and you were playing. I remember I saw Zack, I saw Michael Clark still playing then. I saw Clint for the first time up close in person. I called my dad right after he walked by, and I called him and I said, “Dad, he doesn’t walk, he floated by me. It looked like he was walking on an escalator. He’s so cool. He looked like he was just floating.”

And to get to hang out with him, once you get to hang out with him, he’s unbelievable. He’s still so down to earth. He’s still unbelievably funny. And I got to play with him and Toby Keith and Mel Schultz, who used to own the Diamondbacks and the Phoenix Suns, and him and Clint are really close, and four days with him is just like … I can’t even tell you. He’s unbelievable. He’s so funny, and he’s still … I’m scared of him. I wouldn’t want to take a swing at him.

Charlie Rymer:
You’d have to get on a stool to take a swing at him.

Colt Ford:
Nah, he’s shrunk down a little bit now, but he’s tougher than 50 cent steak, I swear.

Charlie Rymer:
Well, everybody thinks Clint Eastwood, the Dirty Harry movies, I liked all those, but we were probably, I don’t know, seventh, eighth grade, “Any Which Way You Can,” “Any Which Way But Loose,” those movies came out, and I didn’t see this, but my buddy Larry the Cable Guy tells me this happened.

Colt Ford:
Oh, I saw it.

Charlie Rymer:
You finish this story for me, because I think Larry the Cable Guy had a really good point on this one.

Colt Ford:
Well, it was that first event at Pebble, and Steve had asked about some other people, because he knows I know a lot of guys. I’m one of those guys that just knows a lot of different people. I said, “Larry the Cable Guy would be great. He’s not great at golf. He loves golf. He’s gotten a lot better.” But sometimes celebrities forget that it’s not about them, it’s about the fans and it’s about the people that support the tournament. I said, “Larry gets it. He’ll take every picture and he’ll sign every autograph.” And so, we do all that, and we get around there on 17 on Saturday, and they got the booth set up on the famous 17th hole, and there’s Jimmy Nantz and Nick Faldo in there, and I’ve known Nick a little bit, and I’ve known Jim a little bit, not as well as you did from working with him. But Jim is as good as there’s ever been when it comes to sports broadcasting. He’d be a first ballot Hall of Famer. But Jim’s used to being in control, and he’s very calm and relaxed. The moment you give the microphone to Larry the Cable Guy, you are no longer in control. He is in control.

And so, for me, I’m just taking it in because Larry’s got on the camouflage shirt, golf shirt, with the sleeves cut off of it, which he says is from the Boo Weekley Collection. Jim and Nick, and Nick’s British, so sometimes he doesn’t he doesn’t get everything. And Larry’s carrying on, and he goes, “Colt and Clint have a long history.” Clint was there, too. He said, “Colt was a child actor.” And I have no idea where he’s going with this. And I’m looking at him going, “Okay, we can lie. Maybe they won’t look it up or something, I don’t know.” He goes, “Colt played the orangutan Clyde on ‘Every Which Way But Loose’,” and then I’m like, “This is live network television. Millions of people around the world can see this,” which he proceeds to follow up with … It was Valentine’s Day. He proceeds to follow up with, “Colt and I are selling kisses by the 18th green. It’s $25 for women and $10 for men,” and Nantz can’t get us out of this booth fast enough. It was pretty funny. Pretty dang funny.

Charlie Rymer:
Well, Cable Guy, like I said, he had a pretty good point. Clyde the Orangutan, his arms are just a little longer than yours. Other than that, it’s perfect.

Colt Ford:
I can see some similarities, I will agree with that. I will agree with that.

Charlie Rymer:
You mentioned Toby Keith. I hadn’t spent any time with Toby Keith until this January when we were out in Hawaii with that Ace Shootout. After five minutes, I absolutely fell in love with Toby Keith. What an amazing personality. He’s had 42 number ones or something like that. It’s unbelievable what he’s done in music. But, you two guys seem to really get along well. Tell me a little bit about your friendship with Toby Keith.

Colt Ford:
He took me on tour several years ago, took a chance with me, didn’t really … Toby is quite honestly doesn’t get … he does in the country world, but so many people don’t realize how unbelievably talented this guy is. He could sit down with a guitar and play you 3,000 songs. He’s just unbelievable. And he took me on tour, and we just hit it off, man. He’s the Big Dog Daddy. He says I can be the Little Dog Daddy, I guess, because he is about a foot taller than me. But, he’s mentored me a little bit. The friendship has been unbelievable. He’d be a great one to get on here. I’ll try to set that up if you’d like to have him. He loves-

Charlie Rymer:
Tell him I got plenty of this.

(Flashed roll of toilet paper)

Colt Ford:
I texted with him yesterday, and he says he’s still converted … He’s only texting in Mexican and Spanish now, because he’s been in Cabo for like five weeks. He’s like, “I ain’t coming home and playing golf.” He’s been great. He’s unbelievable. He’s so unbelievably talented it’s crazy, and he’s been super good for me. Owns the fold course. Loves it. His life, Trish, one of my favorite ladies I’ve ever met, she has a women’s clothing line called Swingdish that is really blowing up, being sold in Dick’s and other big sporting goods stores. They love the game. It was cool … Toby, they had always wanted him to play at Pebble. He never played before. I kept trying to say, “Nah, you got to play.” He’s like, “I don’t know.” He thought it was really stuffy. I was like, “You can smoke cigars and drink liquor walking down fairway and …”

Charlie Rymer:
Yeah, there you go.

Colt Ford:
And he was like, “Really?” And I’m like, “Yeah.” And he goes, “Okay, then I’m in, then.” He came and has been a part of it. He’s been a good, good friend to me and a good person. Like you said, you can’t help … If you don’t like that guy, heck, I think something’s wrong with you, not him.

Charlie Rymer:
So, you mentioned that Toby’s mentored you with music. I want our viewers to understand, people look at you now, music’s doing great, number one hit, number one album, everybody loves you, touring all the time, when the world gets back to normal. They think maybe golf is a hobby for somebody like you, but your intention was to be a golf professional, come up through the PGA program. And along with being a phenomenal teacher, you actually spent some time with TaylorMade as well, and that’s when our late great friend Jim Flick was still around.

Colt Ford:
Oh, wow.

Charlie Rymer:
I know you had a chance to spend some time with Mr. Flick on the practice tee, and I know he mentored you some with teaching. Tell me a little bit about maybe some things that you learned from Jim Flick back in those days.

Colt Ford:
Another one of those guys. I love teaching. I got a video. I don’t even want to say who, from a professional today that sent me a video and said, “Take a look at this just real quick,” and I’m like, “Really?” He’s like, “Yeah, but you have a good natural eye,” and I’ve played golf with him for a long time, and it’s like … I love teaching. You know. You and I have worked together. But getting to work with Mr. Flick and Tom [Ness 00:22:41] is another one, just all-time great teachers. I loved it so much, and those were guys like, if you approach them in the right way, and they knew that you really wanted to learn and you really wanted to get better, they would do anything in the world for you.

Jim Flick is as great a gentleman in the game of golf as there’s ever been. It was the way that he taught. It was the way that he talked to people. What he really explained to me is, in teaching, obviously, some guys, if you’re really good, you can work with tour pros or really good amateurs, college players. That’s all great, but a lot of times, you got to still teach Mr. Havacam and Mrs. Havacam that are 35 handicappers and hit 120-yard slices every time they draw back. So, how do you make them better? The thing that I got the most from Mr. Flick … two things.

One thing, he said, “You can’t be afraid to put your hands on them,” and I know that might be a little weird in this day and age that we live in today, but it’s like, you have to be able to physically show them positions and everything. But the other thing he said, me talking to you about a golf swing, or something I’ll say to you versus something I’ll say to Mr. Smith, who’s a 25 handicapper, you would take completely differently than he may understand it. And that’s a little bit of the issue sometimes to me with some of the stuff that’s on … whether it be on Golf Channel or not. Nothing against them, but sometimes people don’t know how to decipher the information correctly.

So, when I’m talking to tour players, I can say things that they totally … like a 20 handicapper would take in a completely different direction. And understanding that really was a neat thing, and it made me … I’ve never been a very technical teacher, I guess, because I’m not smart enough. I didn’t go to Georgia Tech. You’re a lot smarter.

Charlie Rymer:
Well, you’re not a technical player, though. It wouldn’t make sense for you to be a technical teacher.

Colt Ford:
I was a feel player, and even now, some of my buddies, like John Tillery who’s become one of the best teachers in the world, I taught John when he was in college and when he was trying to play professionally, and that time was when I was teaching Blake Adams. I got him to the tour, got him with TaylorMade. And then when I wanted to do music and stuff, JT started teaching, and then he started teaching Blake, and he almost won the U.S. Open. So, it’s fun to see how that’s full circle. Our buddy Taylor Crosby who you know from Athens has become a great teacher. He’s down there at [Laco County 00:25:13], and I went and had a lesson with him before Pebble Beach, and I’m going, wow, this is kind of real. I was helping Taylor when he was 12 years old, and now here he is trying to help me to get better, with the technology, things that we can see now with video and stuff that you didn’t know before we couldn’t see, and the terms have changed.

But it was great to be able to spend time with those great, great teachers, and some of the people we got to hang around. You got me my deal with [Peerless 00:25:39], Mr. Palmer’s company, and I got to meet Mr. Palmer a few times, and I know you spent a lot of time with him. Those kind of things, especially now with what’s going on, you sit back and reflect a little bit and go, “Wow, pretty cool some of the stuff we’ve gotten to do.”

Charlie Rymer:
Yeah, absolutely. And just one more thing and we’ll get to you with, but John Tillery, by the way, along with having PGA TOUR winner Scott Brown and Kevin Kisner and his stable just within the past few months picked up a young man by the name of Rickie Fowler.

Colt Ford:
I saw that.

Charlie Rymer:
Everybody is interested in talking to JT. The problem is that he’s more redneck than me and you. I don’t know if any of those guys can understand him. Well, (Kevin) Kisner can, but I don’t know about Rickie.

Colt Ford:
Kisner can … but yeah, Rickie’s California, so he might have to have an interpreter, because JT and Scott Hamilton, two guys from Georgia, are as big a country bomb … some people might not understand what they say, you’re right. I get that a lot too with me. Sometimes I have to change my dialect a little bit.

Charlie Rymer:
Understood. Well, in normal times, you tour a lot. You probably do in the neighborhood of a couple hundred shows a year, don’t you?

Colt Ford:
I think I did around 150 last year, but I love it. I love playing. I cannot get enough of being on the stage. I did a thing today with Justin Moore, who’s one of my good buddies, and he’s a golfer, and we play a lot of music together, and we just sit there going, “I miss the fans. I miss that feeling of walking on stage, our fans are giving us all this hope and excitement, and our band and our crew …” My God, those are my family now, and we can’t work, I can’t see them. It’s tough. And there’s so much … I don’t know if it’s misinformation, false information, one expert’s saying one thing, the other guy says he’s the expert, and he says something different. But there’s some of that in golf, too. You can draw some correlations to that. I’ve seen guys go do this, this, and this, and that guy plays pretty good, and I’m sitting there going, yeah, I’d never do that. That’s terrible. It takes all kinds and all things.

Our good buddy, Jim Furyk, who we grew up with, Jim and I grew up together, our junior year, if you remember, he changed his golf swing because he was tired of people giving him a whole lot of junk about it, and he had a perfect golf swing his junior year, and he couldn’t hit his butt with both hands. He was terrible. But he went back to original Jim Furyk and has won about $100 million since then. Would you teach someone to do that? I don’t know, but that’s what he did, and he does it very well, still does it well.

Charlie Rymer:
You are who you are.

Colt Ford:
A lot of truth to that.

Charlie Rymer:
Colt Ford, we appreciate you spending some time with us. It’s important for the folks out there that love music, love golf, love sports to hear from the people that we love and respect and we watch perform in tough times like this. Thank you for your time, buddy.

Colt Ford:
Man, it’s unbelievable. I got a tattoo on my arm, and a few albums ago, I had an album … I ended up naming it after this tattoo, but there’s three things you don’t want to lose, and you definitely don’t want to lose it right now, and that’s love, hope, and faith. So, we got to keep doing that. I appreciate your friendship all these years, and keep rocking, man. We’ll get back out there. We just got to stay after it.

Charlie Rymer:
You got it. Love you, brother.

Colt Ford:
God bless you, brother. Thanks, love you man, see you.

Charlie Rymer:
See you.

Charlie Rymer:
Thanks for joining us. I’m Charlie Rymer. We’ll see you next time on the Charlie Rymer Golf Show, powered by PlayGolfMyrtleBeach.com.