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How do you set up a round of golf with LeBron James?

You ask him if he wants to play a round of golf.

“I said, you know what, I’m just gonna take a shot at it,” said Robby Berger, speaking to me on the latest episode of our Golf Stuff show. “I said, ‘Is there any chance you would want to play, even if it’s just nine?’ He’s like, ‘Definitely, let’s do it.’ So it really was set up pretty much through me and LeBron, as crazy as that is.”

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That’s the simplest version of what would have, a few years ago, been considered an impossibly unlikely crossover. James wasn’t a golfer. Neither was Berger, for that matter. And YouTube Golf has only recently become its own universe.

There’s more to the story. It helps your chances of playing golf with James, of course, if James has quietly — or not so quietly — been watching you play golf with your friends. And even though James’ golf obsession is less than a year old, what he lacks in experience he’s made up for with enthusiasm; he’s watched dozens of hours, Internet Invitational included, shouting out various members of the YouTube Golf mafia on social media and in post-game press conferences as he’s gone. So even though it was still surprising to see James teeing it up alongside Berger and his merry band of golf buddies, the team behind Bob Does Sports, there were signs.

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James’ obsession is a story on its own. He is endlessly interesting, and so is the way he chooses to spend his time, and I was curious to ask Berger about the mechanics of how you actually secure nine holes of golf with one of the most famous athletes — hell, one of the most famous people — in the world.

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But it’s also interesting as part of a larger trend. Golf participation remains sky-high and trending up, and it’s noteworthy that top athletes across sports — think Mike Trout or Carlos Alcaraz or Josh Allen or Lando Norris or Caitlin Clark or dozens of others — are diving headfirst into the game. That coincides with the rise of YouTube Golf, which has demonstrated the appetite for competition outside top-pro tournaments. James watches live golf, too; he was part of the Tommy Fleetwood fan club last summer and was dialed into this year’s Masters.



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