Sunderland Echo

Augusta National braced for another display of DeChambeau power

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It requires something spec i a l to ta ke th e s p otl i g ht away from Tiger Woods at the Masters, especially when he happens to be the defending champion.

Yet Bryson DeChambeau h a s ac h ieve d exac tl y th at as the pre-tournament favourite aims to overpower Augusta National to claim back-to-back major titles following his emphatic victory in the US Open in September.

While Winged Foot’s narrow fairways and thick rough were meant to expose the limitation­s of DeChambeau’s p owe r - ove r - ac c u rac y ap - proach, the wide expanses of Augusta and ‘second cut’ only an inch thicker than the fairways appear vulnerable to the American’s ferocious hitting.

So keen is the interest in just how DeChambeau will tackle the course that he was asked to list which clubs he had been using on each hole during practice, something usually only requested after an impressive championsh­ip round when describing vital eagles and birdies.

The list made for sobering reading for his rivals, Masters officials and golf ’s traditiona­lists as DeChambeau revealed a link to Woods’ eye-opening victory in 1997 and that the longest club he had used for an approach shot was a six iron to the 570-yard, uphill, par-five eighth.

“On 11 (on Monday) with Tiger and Freddie (Couples) and JT (Justin Thomas), I had pitching wedge in,” De Chambeau revealed.

“I asked Tiger, I said, ‘What did you hit in in ’97?’ And he goes, ‘Pitching wedge’. I’m like, ‘That’s cool’.”

The same sentiment is unlikely to be shared privately by DeChambeau’s rivals for the green jacket, but in public Thomas – and others – have been full of praise for his dedication to his approach.

“He’s done a lot of things that a lot of players aren’t willing to do, make life changes and swing changes and equipment changes and extreme body changes,” Thomas said. “He’s earned it.

“Obviously I wish he didn’t have an advantage over me and everybody else, but the fact of the matter is that he does and I just need to grow up and get over it because I can still beat him like I can anybody else, but it just comes down to playing better.”

Woods easily led the field in driving distance with an average of 311 yards as a slender 19-year-old amateur in 1995, but noted with a wry smile that he actually got shorter off the tee as he “filled out” in his 20s.

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