Bangkok Post

Kiradech among Asians likely to do well in 2021 PGA season

- CHUAH CHOO CHIANG Kuala Lumpur-based Chuah Choo Chiang is senior director, internatio­nal marketing and communicat­ions, Asia Pacific for the PGA Tour.

Unless you’re Bryson DeChambeau, the old adage “Drive for Show and Putt for Dough” has for a long time been an essence in golf’s wisdom where the difference between success or despair may be a matter of inches instead of yards.

How quickly a player gets his ball into the hole often makes the vital difference between winning or losing in a sport where only one golfer from a typical starting field of 144 will emerge victorious each week on the PGA Tour.

Of course DeChambeau has rocked the golf world with his Popeye-like forearms and power-packed swing enabling him to launch ball after ball into oblivion in recent times.

The American was ranked as the tour’s longest driver in 2020 with an average 322 yards off the tee and currently leads the 2020-21 season with an eye-popping 337 yards.

Interestin­gly, a 428-yard drive by

DeChambeau at the Travelers Championsh­ip last June — he did have a bit of help when his ball rolled on a cart path for a good 100 yards — has been recorded as the longest drive on the tour.

But thankfully for the rest of the field, while DeChambeau did put on a show, it was Dustin Johnson who ran off with the dough that week.

It was Johnson’s first of three wins in 2020 which helped him become the new FedEx Cup champion, earning a whopping US$15 million along the way.

Distance and power is vital in today’s modern game and the 27-year-old DeChambeau, who has used science, lots protein shakes and massive chunks of steaks to great effect, has reaped the fruit of his hard work by adding two more titles in 2020 to his career haul of seven PGA Tour wins.

As the Tour has begun a new calendar year in 2021, Asia’s leading stars are unlikely to emerge from their winter hibernatio­n with added muscles like how DeChambeau showed up last June.

The Asians will do well to remember golf’s most famous catchphras­e where the flatstick remains as one of the most important tools in their golf bag.

Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama, for one, will be fired up to end a more than three-year winless streak that dates back to the 2017 World Golf Championsh­ips-FedEx St Jude Invitation­al.

Matsuyama, who turns 29 next month, is widely regarded as one of the purest ball strikers in the game and has the stats to back him up.

He has consistent­ly ranked high up in strokes gained: tee to green stat and approach the green stat over the years, finishing second and fifth on the lists

last season.

Alarmingly, though, Matsuyama’s strokes gained: putting stat saw him ranked a lowly 170th, where as he currently lies in 158th position in the ongoing 2020-21 season.

CBS golf analyst Nick Faldo, a sixtime major winner, is one who has noticed Matsuyama’s uneasiness with the putter.

By no means though has Matsuyama languished in the game. He still finished a high 15th in the 2020 FedEx Cup final standings and qualified for his seventh successive 30-man field Tour Championsh­ip. But once he figures out his putter, it would be unthinkabl­e to imagine what damage he can do in 2021.

South Korea’s An Byeong-Hun is another player keen to finally secure a breakthrou­gh victory on the PGA Tour.

Like Matsuyama, the former US Amateur champion is a magnificen­t ball-striker but is often frustrated by a misbehavin­g putter.

He hooked up last year with Brad Faxon, an eight-time PGA Tour winner, to improve his putting fortunes and ended last season ranked 40th in strokes gained: tee to green, 14th for around the green, and a modest 176th in putting.

An said: “There are a few things we’re working on, more of a visual, green readings and trying to get better at those. To be fair, not much technique... changed my routine a little bit. It’s so simple I changed it within like four, five days.”

The Korean still finished a careerbest 33rd in the 2020 FedEx Cup rankings despite the lack of sharpness with his putting.

Like An, India’s Anirban Lahiri and Kiradech Aphibarnra­t of Thailand are tipped to challenge for a first PGA Tour win this year.

Playing in his sixth straight season in the US, Lahiri has put behind some poor form which has dogged him over the past two years.

During golf’s shutdown due to Covid-19, he rebuilt his game with long-time coach Vijay Divecha and was rewarded with a first top-10 since 2018 at the Corales Puntacana Resort and Club Championsh­ip, followed by a T11 at the Bermuda Championsh­ip.

“It’s all about building that momentum going forward, build on that confidence and belief and snowball it into getting into contention more often, and try to work for a ‘W’. I have to think that way,” said Lahiri.

While big-hitting Kiradech may not be as long and powerful as DeChambeau, like all top Thai golfers, he is blessed with soft hands and great touch around the greens and once he gets back to full fitness, he may well break through in his third season on the PGA Tour.

 ?? AFP ?? Thailand’s Kiradech Aphibarnra­t plays a shot during a PGA Tour event last month.
AFP Thailand’s Kiradech Aphibarnra­t plays a shot during a PGA Tour event last month.

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