The Commercial Appeal

Dechambeau journey was born under a tent

- Adam Schupak

On Saturday night, when Golf Channel showed video of Bryson Dechambeau hitting balls under floodlights, Mike Schy chuckled as the “Live From” hosts made a big deal of his longtime pupil’s devotion to getting better.

That’s nothing. Schy, who began coaching Dechambeau at age 12, has watched him do Rocky Balboa-type workouts. There was the time after Dechambeau failed to earn his PGA Tour card in 2016 playing on sponsor exemptions and had nearly a month to kill before the Korn Ferry Tour playoffs began. Dechambeau arrived back home at the Mike Schy Golf Performanc­e Institute headquarte­red at Dragonfly Golf Club in Madera, California, and declared he wasn’t going to hit a ball for three weeks but rather was going to revamp his swing plane by spending at least 4 hours a day on the “Schy Circle,” a swing plane training device engineered and built by Schy, until his hands bled.

“He did it for three weeks, alternatin­g between swinging a heavy rod and a golf club. He put a cover over the range balls. If he wasn’t going to hit range balls, guess what, no one else was going to either,” Schy recalls. “Who else would do that? Hitting a golf ball is a drug and a fix for him, and to give up his fix and make his motion what he wants it to be, well, Bryson is obsessive-compulsive. You can’t stop him. If it means going all night, he’ll go all night. He’s always been that way. His modus operandi is, ‘I’m going to go to the range until I’m comfortabl­e and then we can go play Fortnite.’ ”

The coda to this story: Dechambeau won the DAP Championsh­ip, the first Korn Ferry Tour playoff event, and was off and running en route to winning the 120th U.S. Open on Sunday at Winged Foot. The truth is, it would’ve been a story if Bryson hadn’t beat balls after Saturday’s third round under floodlights.

“I told everybody on Thursday that he would win,” Schy said shortly after Dechambeau holed out for a finalround 3-under 67 and six-stroke victory over Matthew Wolff. “Bryson called me on Tuesday and told me he’d figured something out, not to tell me thanks for the help because that doesn’t happen, but he found something and I watched him play the first three holes and I knew he was going to win.”

Schy watched the broadcast from home as Dechambeau validated all their hard work. He considered flying to New York before the final round but there were too many hoops to jump through in the age of coronaviru­s. While Schy has taken a backseat in recent years to instructor Chris Como, who is based at Dallas National Golf Club, where Dechambeau practices when he is home, Schy remains one of his closest confidants and their journey from Schy’s tent, where he has hundreds of gadgets and training aids, to major winner has been one strange trip.

“When he was 12-13 years old, he was spending every waking hour with me at the tent. I’d never had anyone like him or at quote ‘that level,’ ” Schy says. “Even at an early age, we were talking swing theories that he wanted to try and test. That was an element that was important to our journey. Decisions and choices have consequenc­es so there could be some bad golf. As long as he was willing to accept that, we could experiment and cross some things off.

“When we went to one-length clubs and a one-plane swing, everyone thought we were super-crazy, not just crazy. They said it wasn’t going to work, he wasn’t going to get a golf scholarshi­p, but the more we went down the rabbit hole, the more it was making sense and you could see how accurate he was becoming and the control he gained over the ball. It was a lot of work and I always tell him don’t discount all the work you’ve done.”

Schy always knew Dechambeau was capable of achieving extraordin­ary results in profession­al golf and encouraged him to do it his way. But he also warned him that marching to the beat of his own drummer would bring with it a host of doubters.

“We were in a car in L.A. and talking about the future and I told him, you have to understand one thing: you could be the No. 1 golfer in the world, win several PGA Tour events, win a major, maybe even two, and people are going to still think you’re crazy – that this doesn’t work, whether it is the clubs, your swing, your mannerisms, they’re going to be doubters,” Schy says.

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