Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

BIG BANG THEORY

DeChambeau’s tee shots reshaping how game is played

- By Doug Ferguson

AUGUSTA, Ga. — The scene was straight out of the World Long Drive Championsh­ip spectacle. Bryson DeChambeau would consider that a compliment.

He took a slow practice swing, then the next one at full force. Eyes focused, deep breath, chest fully expanded, exhale. Another violent practice swing. And another. Just then, a leaf blew in front of his ball. He stooped over to flick it away, and started the routine over until he was ready to smash his tee shot at the TPC Summerlin in Las Vegas. Wait.

DeChambeau walked over to his bag, removed a wrench and tightened the screws on the bottom of his driver.

Joaquin Niemann couldn’t suppress a smile as he watched this unfold. It was worth the wait. The golf ball came off the club at 198 mph. It hit a small tree right of the fairway, dropping straight down and robbing DeChambeau of what he figured would have been a 400-yard drive. “I killed it,” he said. Moments like these are why DeChambeau is the talk of golf going into the Masters. It has been this way since golf returned in June from the pandemic and DeChambeau showed up with his incredible bulk, more than 40 pounds of muscle to support a swing that is producing prodigious shots. He has driven into groups on the green on a par 4. He powered (and putted) his way to the lowest score ever at Winged Foot to win the U.S. Open by six shots.

And he says he is just getting started.

“He went to the Nth degree of everything we have available to us — science, TrackMan, biomechani­cs, everything,” Rory McIlroy said. “Now that we have all that, Bryson is the personalit­y that goes down that rabbit hole more than anyone else. I think that’s credit to him. He’s worked his (tail) off and it’s paying off hugely.

“He’s definitely the most talked about man in golf right now.”

Next stop: Augusta National, where DeChambeau hopes to unveil a 48-inch driver, the legal limit typically seen only in long drive competitio­ns.

That’s where this latest experiment began. It was a year ago in September when DeChambeau watched Kyle Berkshire win the World Long Drive Championsh­ip.

“The real light-bulb moment,” DeChambeau said. “I said, ‘If I could do that and hit it straight, what would happen? ‘That was the question that inspired me to go down this road.”

Berkshire said he has never met DeChambeau in person, only over the phone to share ideas. DeChambeau wants power; Berkshire is trying to get back toward tournament golf. He believes DeChambeau is headed down the right path.

And he thinks it’s a path others will have to follow.

“It’s exciting to see what he’s doing, but not surprising,” Berkshire said. “This will be the new norm. When someone does something that threatens your living, it’s a scary thing.”

McIlroy noticed that at Colonial in June. He was paired with DeChambeau in the final round, and said there were times he and caddie Harry Diamond couldn’t believe what they were seeing.

“He hit one into the wind on 11. I hit a really good one and probably hit it like 315, 320. He must have flew my ball by 40 yards,” McIlroy said. “It was crazy.”

McIlroy wasn’t banking on Winged Foot until DeChambeau did something so crazy it made perfect sense. With the fairways tight and firm, the analytics suggested even playing less club off the tee wasn’t going to assure keeping drives in the short grass. So why not hit it as far as possible? It helped that he had a great week with his irons.

As for Augusta National? DeChambeau didn’t want to reveal too much, but he already has singled out a half-dozen holes where he could have an advantage. He has talked about taking his drive on the par-5 13th over the pine trees and into the 14th fairway. Some par 5s and tougher par 4s would leave him a wedge into the green.

And that’s without a 48-inch driver.

“If he can get the 48-inch driver, he will shoot 20 under or better. It’s going to be a slaughter,” Berkshire said. “He could force a lot of things to change.”

 ?? Charles Krupa The Associated Press ?? A more muscular, stronger Bryson DeChambeau is smashing shots off the tee, threatenin­g to reshape how the game is to be played.
Charles Krupa The Associated Press A more muscular, stronger Bryson DeChambeau is smashing shots off the tee, threatenin­g to reshape how the game is to be played.

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