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Jon Rahm, world's No. 1 player, turns page to Torrey Pines after 'letting some frustration out'

Jon Rahm, the No. 1 player in the world, doesn't regret calling The American Express a "[expletive] putting contest" last week.

But Rahm, 27, of Spain, admits had he known his outburst was being caught on camera by a fan's phone, he would have cleaned up his language.

"My reaction? I mean, the video's pretty self-explanatory," Rahm said Tuesday, in a news conference ahead of this week's Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines. "I mean, we're the PGA Tour, we're the best golfers on the planet and we're playing a golf course where missing the fairway means absolutely nothing. There [were] times where missing the fairway by an inch was worse than missing the fairway by 20 yards, that to me is a mistake. I don't know what else to say."

Rahm said plenty when his outburst was captured by a fan's phone as he walked off a green on the Nicklaus Course at PGA West in La Quinta, California, during Friday's second round. He called The American Express "putting contest week."

"I mean, if I knew somebody was recording, I wouldn't say it the way I did, but I was just thinking out loud and letting some frustration out because that's what I felt, right?" Rahm said. "No matter where you hit it, you're going to be able to hit it on the green and it becomes a putting contest, who can make the putts. That's about it, there's no premium for anything else."

Rahm finished in a tie for 14th at 14 under, 9 shots behind winner Hudson Swafford.

"I can tell you right now with the way I struck the ball last week and the way I putted, if it was in, let's say, major championship conditions, I probably wouldn't have made the cut, let alone finished 14th, or I shouldn't have, I believe," he said. "Maybe, maybe not. But I just think it was a bit too easy for the best players in the world. That's just my opinion."

Rahm figures to face more difficult conditions at Torrey Pines, where he won his first PGA Tour event in the 2017 Farmers Insurance Open and his first major championship in the U.S. Open in June. He finished 6-under while beating South Africa's Louis Oosthuizen by 1 shot in the U.S. Open.

So what would be Rahm's setup of choice?

"A lot of it depends on the golf course, but I would like a setup that would challenge us in every aspect of the game," Rahm said. "I like fairways to be narrow, I like the rough to be up so you can't just miss the fairway and go for the green with whatever you want. I would like the greens to be firm. They don't need to be ridiculously firm -- but firm -- and the greens at the right speed.

"I think a golf course [should] challenge us in every aspect of the game, and that's where I believe you would find the best player, somebody whose whole game completely is playing good throughout. And if something is missed, you have to make up with really good stuff on the other parts of your game."