The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Big-hitting Bryson has plan to master Augusta

- STEVE SCOTT

Bryson DeChambeau wants to change golf – and we’ll get an idea if he’s going to be successful at the Masters this week.

The 27-year-old has taken the game’s distance gains to unapproach­ed levels.

Whether this is good for the game or not is a debate that will accelerate if he dismantles Augusta National.

Golf ’s other great icon, the Old Course at St Andrews, stands to be next in 2022, and that should hopefully concentrat­e the mind of the R&A.

DeChambeau, who comfortabl­y won the US Open at Winged Foot, is already a 10-1 favourite for the green jacket – a bit mad, for someone whose best finish at Augusta is tied 21st (as an amateur).

Half of this is driven by the hype h e’s happily fuelled, half by genuine wonder at what he’s doing to the game.

Here’s three reasons why I think DeChambeau can dismantle Augusta… and three more why I think he won’t.

SHEER LENGTH

When Augusta was previously overwhelme­d by a young and lithe Tiger Woods in 1997– he averaged nearly 50 yards more than the field – the green jackets took swift action.

Mature trees materialis­ed from nowhere, tees were walked back, rough (or first cut, in Masters-speak) started to appear.

They’ve had no time to Bryson- proof Augusta – they did acquire extra land from a neighbour property, ostensibly for a new 13th tee, but only a service road has been constructe­d there so far.

The 13th is one of golf ’s most treasured holes and DeChambeau’s stated plan is to bash over everything all the way to the 14 th fairway, in the process stomping all over the sacred strategic ethos of the club’s founder, Bobby Jones.

DeChambeau can drive the third green with a three- wood – he drove through the back in practice with Sandy Lyle – hit every par five in two and, perhaps ominously, significan­tly allay the terrors of holes like the fifth and the 10 th – although he’s said he won’t take on the 10th off the tee.

HE’S GOT A LOT MORE TOUCH THAN YOU THINK

Such are the wild elevation changes and the green contouring at Augusta, a strong short game is a necessity – Ballestero­s, Olazabal and Mickelson didn’ t win multiple times here by accident.

DeChambeau has been typecast as a basher, not surprising­ly, but at Winged Foot his dominance was at least halfway based on his touch on and around the greens.

Putting was not the strongest part of his game until he switched to the clumsy-looking set-up which proved just about faultless in the US Open.

Augusta’ s marbled, sweeping greens are another kind of challenge, but he’s been there often enough now to know where to hit and miss.

PREPARATIO­N

DeChambeau wants to change the game – merely winning majors does not appear to be enough for him. Winged Foot was great but he knows the place to make epochmakin­g statements is Augusta National.

The club has always been generous to competitor­s needing practice rounds prior to the tournament, and DeChambeau tested that to the limit by going 10 times before his debut as an amateur in 2016.

Pre-tournament practice rounds for those without a green jacket are now limited to five, but DeChambeau appears to have used them judiciousl­y.

He’s taken a whole month out of tournament golf to fine-tune for Augusta.

BUT… THE FIELD IS DIFFERENT

Augusta is obviously the one major venue they play every year, and as a result there are players in the field who just about know every blade of grass.

DeChambeau has a new strategy all mapped out which he believes will be revolution­ary, but it’ s untested and there are many more players– certainly many more than there were at Winged Foot – who know exactly where they’re going and what they have to do.

Brooks Koepka, who missed the US Open and is still probably golf ’s Alpha male of the moment, was really just one loose shot away from Tiger last year.

Woods himself knows Augusta better than anyone and realises it represents his best chance of adding more major titles.

Patrick Reed, Bubba Watson, Jordan Spieth, Justin Rose – all have performed well at Augusta in the recent past.

And Augusta suits Rory McIlroy’s game so well you have to believe that at least once he’s going to get into the Sunday mix.

AUGUSTA IN ‘THE FALL’

An autumnal Masters is an unknown quantity, and the course could well play differentl­y – McIlroy, who played there in late October, thinks it will.

Temperatur­es are forecast to be the same, but the course had no grass on the fairways a month ago – they close the course in summer because of the extreme heat. The turf ’s as lush as ever now, but it’s had much less time to bed in, and it’ll be softer.

Those who’ ve played Augusta at this time of year say the ball doesn’t fly or roll as far, and some believe that the big- hitters will have less of an advantage than they do in April.

If DeC hambeau’s perceived advantage of length doesn’t materialis­e, he falls right back into the pack.

Also, DeChambeau trumpeted hitting it 400 yards on the fly the other week, but the Trackman results showed he also hit that prodigious blow 45 yards left.

There’s many examples of players winning out of the trees and the “pinestraw” – Phil Mickelson, Bubba Watson, even Tiger at times last year – but it’s pot luck and being so wild and in the trees is not usually a sound strategy at Augusta.

WILL HE OVER-REACH HIMSELF?

DeChambeau’s gameplan certainly worked at Winged Foot but it doesn’t work all the time.

Not all of his muchherald­ed scientific approach over the first few years of his pro career has been that effective – some would argue only the rather basic plan of bulking up weight to hit it further has actually worked.

And is he overthinki­ng this detailed plan, where, apart from the par threes and the 10th, he has a new scheme for every hole?

Take the 13th – hitting into the 14th fairway is a grand plan, but is it really worth the risk?

A birdie is almost assured playing the hole convention­ally, and there is always a huge risk taking on the top of the treeline.

 ??  ?? GEARING UP: Tiger Woods, left, and Bryson DeChambeau during a practice round.
GEARING UP: Tiger Woods, left, and Bryson DeChambeau during a practice round.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom