Ahead of this week's PGA Championship, Jason Day is confident his consistent record over the past five years will eventually see him win a major.
The Australian has recorded six top-five finishes since 2011, but is yet to clinch his maiden major success. Day comes into this week's PGA at Whistling Straits as the world number five and insists his excellent record will pay dividends sooner or later.
MORE: Day and others without major titles | Tee times, TV
"I would still take this — I would still take what I have right now," he said. "I know that as long as I keep doing the things I'm doing it's going to happen.
"I've just got to keep working hard and stay motivated and stay fit. I think it's good to be consistent, because every once in a while you can strike lightning in a bottle. And I don't want to be that one-hit wonder and just kind of go off in the distance.
"I want to be a dominant player and I want to be able to, in big tournaments like this, be able to close and win, not only one major but more consecutive majors, two, three, four — I don't know how many majors, but I just want to win as many as I can.
"I definitely would take the more consistent route, rather than just the one major."
Day also heaped praise on Jordan Spieth, who has won two of the three majors so far in 2015 and could end the week on top of the world rankings.
"Now he's 21 or 22, with the amazing year that he's had already, I mean it's tough to win, but to be able to do it like that and dominate and have 13 or 14 top-10 finishes, right now his confidence is through the moon," Day said.
"Whatever he's doing right now, he needs to just kind of bottle it all up and know that this is a winning formula for him and never go away from it.
"Because what he's doing right now is working and if he stops that, then hopefully it will bring us into contention a lot more."