Orlando Sentinel

Must-see TV: DeChambeau

Compelling personalit­y, player eyes 1st major title

- By Tim Dahlberg

It’s hard to find a reason to like Bryson DeChambeau. It’s even harder to take your eyes off him.

He smashes jaw-dropping drives that seem to defy the very physics on which he bases his game. Bulked up on protein shakes and M&M’s, DeChambeau has so far this year been making a mockery of golf courses designed by architects who had no idea what golf of the future might look like.

In a sport where conformity is king, he’s the most compelling player not named Tiger Woods. If there were fans at Harding Park in San Francisco this week for the PGA Championsh­ip, they would be crowding tee boxes to ooh and aah at every massive swing he takes.

Then there’s the DeChambeau without the driver in his hands.

He plays so slowly he annoys even his fellow tour pros. At a tournament last year DeChambeau walked 100 yards to the green and back before hitting a shot. One video from the same event that attracted a lot of attention on social media showed him spending more than 2 minutes before hitting an 8-foot putt he eventually missed.

He’s petulant, self-absorbed and prone to argue with rules officials about things like boundary fences and fire ants. He thinks cameramen should turn away and not show him when he gets mad about a shot because it might not be good for his brand.

He exasperate­s fellow players so much that England’s Eddie Pepperell called him out on Twitter as an “unaffected single minded twit.”

Game changer or spoiled brat? Take your pick, but there’s no arguing that DeChambeau is a lot more interestin­g to watch than the average tour pro.

He’s in San Francisco this week to try to win his first major championsh­ip, a task that shouldn’t be out of hand for the No. 7 player in the world. DeChambeau is the talk of golf. But if you want to hear him talk, it has to be in a softball interview with Golf Channel because he refused to appear before the media and answer questions the way Woods and every other top golfer do every week.

Then again, who wants to answer questions about fire ants when the Wanamaker Trophy is sitting there for the taking?

DeChambeau tees off Thursday afternoon as one of the favorites in a tournament that originally was supposed to take place in May. He does so after taking advantage of the pandemic to add another 20 pounds to the 20 he gained over the winter in a largely successful effort to build up his club head speed.

He’s 6-foot-1 and 240 pounds and can propel a golf ball a ridiculous 205 mph, which translates into regular drives of 350 yards or more. While others are hitting 8-irons to greens, DeChambeau is trying to decide what wedge to play, and there are few par-5’s he can’t easily reach in two.

He can also putt a bit, becoming the first player to lead a tournament in both strokes gained off the tee and on the green when he won in Detroit last month for his sixth PGA Tour title.

All this from a 26-year-old who wears a Ben Hogan-style flat hat and is so scientific about his golf that he’s liable to consider the rotation of the Earth as he studies the break of a putt.

“It’s impressive. He’s big,” Rory McIlroy said earlier this year. “He’s sort of gone down a path and he’s got a conviction and he’s following it.

He’s always thought outside the box and a little differentl­y than most people.”

 ?? TOM PENNINGTON/GETTY ?? Bryson DeChambeau enters the PGA Championsh­ip ranked No. 7 in the world.
TOM PENNINGTON/GETTY Bryson DeChambeau enters the PGA Championsh­ip ranked No. 7 in the world.

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