Chiefs take steps to curtail long drivers
BRYSON DeChambeau could be prevented from using a 48-inch driver in April’s Masters in the latest step in golf’s long running distance debate.
DeChambeau, who won his first major title at last year’s US Open, has been experimenting with such clubs in a bid to gain yet more length off the tee.
However, the game’s governing bodies want to break the “ever-increasing cycle of hitting distance” and are now seeking feedback from manufacturers on three proposals related to equipment standards.
Two of the proposals deal with testing protocols for clubs and balls and are open to comments until August 2, but the third is the adoption of a “Model Local Rule that would provide flexibility for committees, if they so choose, to limit the maximum length for clubs other than putters from 48 to 46 inches”.
The deadline for comments on that proposal is March 4, five weeks before the Masters.
The R&A and USGA’s Distance Insights Project (DIP) had been delayed by the coronavirus pandemic but R&A chief executive Martin Slumbers said: “We are now able to progress with the work on this critical topic and are beginning the next phase as expeditiously as possible.
“The research topics and the proposed changes we have announced will be the focus of our attention in the coming months and we look forward to gaining insights from the golf industry and fully understanding their perspectives on these key areas.
“We remain fully committed to conducting this hugely important exercise for the sport thoroughly, efficiently and collaboratively.”
USGA chief executive Mike Davis added: “The research conducted through Distance Insights clearly shows that hitting distances have consistently increased through time and, if left unchecked, could threaten the long-term future of our game at every level and every course on which it is played”.