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Among golf’s loudest internet personalities, Bob Does Sports’s Joey Cold Cuts has always been the most likely to blow a fuse. The Bob Does Sports, which includes Joey, Robby Berger, and Fat Perez, has over one million YouTube subscribers, and just this week, they dropped a video they called the ‘Greatest Crash Out in YouTube Golf History.’ That video had barely settled before Robby Berger posted another clip on Thursday from the Hater series, and things have gotten even louder.

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The argument erupted here over a potential penalty. Joey’s opponent believed his ball landed in a penalty area, where a ball landing within its marked boundaries forces the player to take a penalty stroke and drop. However, Joey insists the ball sat on the ground just outside it, in his typical way, we might add. The verbal spat continued even when they were on the green.

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“No it’s not! It’s in the ground, you dumb f**k! You can’t see s**t! You know what, you can accuse me of a lot of s**t, but don’t accuse me of cheating. I got nothing to lose here,” yelled Joey, clearly upset that his opponent insinuated he cheated. His opponent countered, “You don’t know that you did [cheat], that’s all.” Cold Cuts lost it at that moment.

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“I didn’t cheat, you dumb bi**h,” Cold Cuts screamed while pointing to the camera, “F**k, this guy is stupid.” The expletive-laden outburst might seem unseemly in golf but is not unexpected when you force a golf influencer to tee off against their online hater. That’s what the Hater Series aims to do, and trash-talking and angry outbursts over an 18-hole golf match have been far more common than you would expect.

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Still, the verbal jousting was surprising. A woman standing near the fairway was shocked to see what was unfolding on the green. Meanwhile, Nick Stube, better known as Fat Perez, was visibly in the corner laughing and hinting that the ball indeed landed near a water hazard.

This kind of blow-up is not out of character for Joey. Compilation clips of Joey’s on-course meltdowns have gone viral over Golf TikTok for years, and the BDS audience treasures his volatility as a part of the package. Earlier in 2026, Joey similarly faced online criticism in a Hater Match. The BDS channel called it the “most intense hater match of all time,” and tensions escalated even before the cameras started rolling.

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Joey first met Robby Berger while he was managing a Los Angeles restaurant, and the two started playing golf together during the pandemic. Those early rounds were filmed on a $130 cam recorder, and they shot the early videos just to share their time on the golf course. However, over time, they realized that their candid relationship had a lot more spark and eventually became the foundation of Bob Does Sports.

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“I never would have ended up meeting Bob in a hotel a year and a half later, and we became best friends. It just changed my whole life. When Bob Does Sports came into the picture was when I really started realizing that I could have an opportunity to evolve and transition into this career. And I think that’s when I was really ready to take over and when I realized that I was getting closer and closer when Bob made the plunge and quit his job.”

Along with the Hater series, Robby Berger has been running his own saga since November 2024, but it has nothing to do with trash-talking.

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Robby Berger Has His Own Unfinished Business on the Golf Course

Since November 2024, Berger has been chasing one goal on camera: breaking 80, in his series, “Is This the Day Bobby Fairways Finally Breaks 80?”

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In golf, shooting under 80 for 18 holes is the mark that separates a genuinely good, competent amateur from someone who’s still figuring it out. Robby has attempted the challenge at some of the most well-known courses in the country, including Tiger Woods’s private design, and the answer has always been the same. He has had seven attempts so far, and he has not been able to reach his goal.

What makes it compelling and relatable is that he keeps losing, but it is never a disaster from the first hole. He looks likely to break 80 in every edition until an unforced error plays the spoilsport. Most times, he can’t keep his nerves. His closest attempt ended with him three-putting the 14th, 15th, and 16th consecutively to finish 82, only two shots short.

Of course, Berger’s self-awareness about his own limitations has its own viral story. He was once spotted with Rory McIlroy at a gas station in Florida, and he panicked and asked him to be on the show without explaining what the show was. McIlroy had no idea who he was. Berger later called it a “miserable interaction,” and that was “all self-inflicted.”

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On the course or off it, Robby losing to himself is its own kind of entertainment.

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Written by

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Roshni Dhawan

301 Articles

Roshni Dhawan is a Golf Writer at EssentiallySports, covering the financial and human side of the professional game. Her reporting centers on player earnings and tournament economics, from net-worth profiles of pros such as Sahith Theegala to the prize-money breakdown at the 2026 U.S. Open, alongside explainer features that introduce readers to the tour's lesser-known names, including her profile of Harry Higgs. She also reports on everything that define a tournament week, covering on-course conduct, rules decisions, and the fan and media reaction that follows, with much of her 2026 work centered on the U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills. Roshni's background is in research and brand strategy, which informs the accuracy and structure she brings to her coverage. She works methodically, prioritizing verification and the detail that a strong earnings or profile piece depends on.

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Riya Singhal

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