Business is booming for Avoda Golf, the fledging club maker of Bryson DeChambeau’s bulge and roll irons

“Everyone is asking when they can get their hands on the Bryson clubs.”

PINEHURST, N.C. – A TV showing the third round of the 124th U.S. Open positioned just outside his friend’s garage workshop kept Tom Bailey abreast of how Bryson DeChambeau was doing with the irons he made him.

“We’ve been running out watching them hit a shot running back in building golf clubs, running back out, watch them hit another shot,” Bailey said from his home in Northern California. “I’ve been involved in building every single set that we’ve had go out the door. It’s definitely been a different few months. It turns out building a set of golf clubs to play golf with actually means you don’t play any golf at all.”

What started as a hobby has quickly become a career for Bailey. All he wanted to do was build a better set of clubs for himself. Once he did that he figured he could sell 50 sets a year to fund his golf habit and Avoda Golf, a besoke golf club company with a Hebrew word meaning precision and Hebrew lettering on the clubs, was born. But the business model changed when Bryson DeChambeau hired him to build a prototype set of single-length irons made through 3-D printing to his exacting specifications with bulge and roll and inserted them in the bag for the Masters. He proceeded to shoot 65 in the opening round at Augusta National and the irons became one of the biggest stories of the week at the most-watched golf tournament of the year.

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“Definitely accelerated timelines a lot faster than we were expecting but what an opportunity for a new business,” he said. “We’re having to learn a lot and learn quick but we’re good learners.”

It’s a remarkable story given that the equipment business is dominated by behemoths such as Titleist, TaylorMade, Callaway and Ping, which began making clubs more than 50 years ago in garage, too. Cobra unceremoniously parted ways with DeChambeau, who found a Krank driver he swears by. He was steered to Bailey by his longtime coach Mike Schy, and the first batches of Avoda clubs were built at Schy’s Academy at Dragon Fly Golf Club, not far from where DeChambeau grew up in Madera, California. Bailey said he didn’t know until the Tuesday of the Masters that the clubs he made would be put in play.

“The prototypes only came in the week before the Masters,” he recalled. “At that point, we believed we were still in the prototyping phase. So we had no reason to even think that they will be in play for the Masters.”

Bailey’s phone began ringing off the hook from individuals and clubs that wanted to get their hands on his single-length irons.

“We sold all our stock very quickly and were lucky we had more inventory on the way. Sold all that very quickly again. So right now we’re on about eight to 12 week lead time on fulfillment,” he explained.

He figured he’s been assembling about 15 sets per day since the Masters.

“Everything’s been so nonstop that we haven’t really had that chance yet to sit, pause and go right, ‘What’s the next step?’” Bailey said. “All I wanted to do was build myself a set of golf clubs, and it got very carried away.”

The PGA Championship in May was a repeat of the Masters as DeChambeau finished second, one shot shy of a playoff. The Avoda name was getting some traction and the PGA pushed it up another level.

“I think a lot of people had been kind of sitting on the fence and not sure they wanted to commit yet. That definitely changed when Bryson was in contention. It reinforced that the irons were working again that week, and he almost got it.”

Bailey said he’s been surprised at the talk about the irons beings 3-D printed rather than the fact the clubs have curved faces.

“The 3-D printing was not our first option. It was just a method of rapid prototyping sets for Bryson,” Bailey said. “The plan all along was to create an actual mold for the head and create almost a better quality club. We realize that 3-D printing has its limitations on the materials you can use.”

Bailey said he has more stock arriving soon from Asia and he’s hired some additional staff to accommodate the demand. As part of the expansion of the business, he hopes to create a custom-fitting approach, which he said remains the best way to get someone set up with the best clubs.

“Everyone is asking when they can get their hands on the Bryson clubs,” Bailey said.

With DeChambeau holding a three-stroke lead going into the final round, Bailey is anticipating there will be no rest for the weary. That’s a great problem and one he never could’ve imagined when he set out to make a better set of clubs for himself. He predicted that he will be better prepared for the surge in demand if DeChambeau takes the title than he was at the Masters when DeChambeau opted to put the clubs in play on short notice. But is he really ready for the phone to be ringing and the website to blow up?

Ask me that question again in a few days,” he said, “and I’ll give you another answer.”

Photos: 2024 U.S. Open Sunday final round at Pinehurst No. 2

Check out some of the best photos during the final round of the 124th U.S. Open.

The final round of the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2 was a thriller, with Bryson DeChambeau, who won the U.S. Open in 2020 and started Sunday with a three-shot lead, fending off 2011 champion Rory McIlroy.

This was the fourth U.S. Open contested at Pinehurst No. 2 and the first since 2014, when Martin Kaymer took home the trophy. There will be another U.S. Open contested here in 2029 (being conducted back-to-back with the U.S. Women’s Open), as it is one of the USGA’s anchor sites for future national championships.

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Check out our best photos during the final round of the 124th U.S. Open.

Bryson DeChambeau explains the salty golf balls he’s using at 2024 U.S. Open

“Thanks for the salty balls question. I appreciate that.”

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He did’t get the nickname ‘Mad Scientist’ for nothing.

Bryson DeChambeau, leading the 2024 U.S. Open by three shots after 54 holes, is known for experimentation.

At the Masters, it was revealed his golf clubs were produced by 3D printing.

Now at Pinehurst No. 2, the talk on Saturday was the process of floating his golf balls in a salt solution.

“Thanks for the salty balls question. I appreciate that,” began his response. “Yeah, I put my golf balls in Epsom salt. I’m lucky enough that Connor, my manager, does that now. I don’t have to do it. But essentially we float golf balls in a solution to make sure that the golf ball is not out of balance.

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“There was a big thing back in the day where golf balls are out of balance, and it’s just because of the manufacturing process. There’s always going to be an error, especially when it’s a sphere and there’s dimples on the edges. You can’t perfectly get it in the center.

“So what I’m doing is finding pretty much the out-of-balanceness of it, how much out of balance it is. Heavy slide floats to the bottom, and then we mark the top with a dot to make sure it’s always rolling over itself.

“It kind of acts like mud. If there’s too much weight on one side, you can put it 90 degrees to where the mud is on the right-hand side or the mud is on the left-hand side. I’m using mud as a reference for the weight over there. It’ll fly differently and fly inconsistently.

“For most golf balls that we get, it’s not really that big of a deal. I just try to be as precise as possible, and it’s one more step that I do to make sure my golf ball flies as straight as it possibly can fly because I’m not that great at hitting it that straight.”

It’s working so far. DeChambeau is at 7 under and is the first to ever break 70 the first three rounds of a U.S. Open at Pinehurst.

2024 U.S. Open Sunday final round tee times, pairings and how to watch

It’s time for the final round at Pinehurst.

The purse for the 2024 U.S. Open is $21.5 million with $4.3 million going to the winner. It’s the largest major championship purse.

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Here’s everything you need to know for the final round of the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2.

Sunday tee times

Sunday’s TV information

Golf Channel: Golf Central: Live From the U.S. Open, 8 a.m. – 10 a.m. ET

Featured Groups, usopen.com, USGA App, Peacock, all day

Peacock: U.S. Open All Access, 9 a.m. – 12 p.m. ET

USA: 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. ET

NBC: 12 p.m. to 7 p.m. ET

Golf Channel: Golf Central: Live From the U.S. Open, 7 p.m. – 9 p.m. ET

NBC’s Brad Faxon shared Rory McIlroy’s ‘eureka moment’ on Saturday and McIlroy was none too happy

Faxon and McIlroy have a unique relationship given that Faxon serves as his putting coach, too.

PINEHURST, N.C. — As Rory McIlroy played the 13th hole of the 124th U.S. Open at Pinehurst Resort & Country Club’s No. 2 Course on Saturday, NBC Sports analyst Brad Faxon shared an insight into McIlroy’s game this week that was telling.

McIlroy shot 1-under 69 to improve to 4-under 206 and tied for second, just three strokes back of 54-hole leader Bryson DeChambeau as he bids for his fifth major and first in nearly a decade. It also means he will enter the final round of the U.S. Open inside the top 10 for the sixth year in a row.

Back to Faxon, who shared that McIlroy turned to Sean O’Flaherty, his agent, and boasted, “Sean, I just figured it out,” during a flight Sunday evening following the Memorial Tournament.

“What do you mean?” Faxon said was O’Flaherty’s response.

“I figured out my swing,” Faxon said McIlroy proclaimed.

“He got up in the aisle and showed him,” Faxon continued. “He started standing a little closer to the ball.”

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Brandel Chamblee, NBC’s lead analyst this week on the telecast, quipped, “That’s harder to do in 23C.”

Faxon and McIlroy have a unique relationship among players and announcers given that Faxon serves as his putting coach, too. This was a rare insight Faxon offered as to one of the reasons why McIlroy ranks first in Strokes Gained: Tee to Green and Strokes Gained: Off the Tee.

But when interviewer Kira Dixon, working on-site for Sky Golf this week, told McIlroy about what Faxon had shared on national TV and asked him to elaborate on what she called his ‘eureka moment,’ McIlroy was none too pleased.

“OK?” he said, eyebrows arching. “Umm, it may be true. I don’t know if I want to disclose it right now. I’m not sure why Fax is giving away sort of all my secrets.”

McIlroy chuckled and continued, finally confirming that Faxon’s story was accurate: “We spend a lot of time on planes and I spend a lot of time thinking about my game when I’m in the air and sometimes things come to me.”

McIlroy didn’t offer any more on what he discovered while flying the friendly skies but for three rounds it seems to be serving him well. And thanks to Faxon for potentially over-sharing to the golf public at-large.

Winner’s Bag: Bryson DeChambeau’s golf equipment at the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2

These are the sticks DeChambeau is using at Pinehurst.

A complete list of the golf equipment Bryson DeChambeau used to win the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2:

DRIVER: Krank Formula Fire Pro (6 degrees), with LA Golf Bryson Series shaft

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FAIRWAY WOODS: Krank Formula Fire (10, 13 degrees), with LA Golf Bryson Series shafts

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IRONS: Avoda prototype (5-PW), with LA Golf Bryson Series shafts

WEDGES: Ping Glide 4.0 (45, 50, 56 and 60 degrees), with LA Golf Bryson Series shafts

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PUTTER: SIK Pro C-Series Armlock

BALL: Titleist Pro V1x Left Dash

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GRIPS: JumboMax UltraLight XL (full swing) / JumboMax JumboFlat 17 (putter)

Rory McIlroy’s golf equipment at the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2

Here are the sticks McIlroy is using at Pinehurst.

A complete list of the golf equipment Rory McIlroy is using at the 2024 U.S. Open Championship at Pinehurst No. 2:

DRIVER: TaylorMade Qi10 (9 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 6X shaft

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FAIRWAY WOODS: TaylorMade Qi10 (15 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 8X shaft, (18 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 9X shaft

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IRONS: TaylorMade P760 (4) TaylorMade RORS proto (5-9), with Project X 7.0 shafts 

WEDGES: TaylorMade MG4 (46, 50, 54 degrees), Titleist Vokey Design WedgeWorks (58 degrees bent to 59), with Project X 6.5 shafts

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PUTTER: TaylorMade Spider Tour X

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BALL: TaylorMade TP5x

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GRIPS: Golf Pride New Decade Multicompound (full swing) / SuperStroke Zenergy Pistol Tour (putter)

Collin Morikawa got back in the 2024 U.S. Open mix by posting a career day in this statistic

“Numbers don’t lie. I’ll take that.”

PINEHURST, N.C. — After a tough-to-swallow 74 pushed him closer to the cutline than the top of the leaderboard on Friday, Collin Morikawa rallied on Saturday to post an impressive 66 that had him within five shots of the leaders before they teed off.

How’d he do it?

Whether it felt so or not, Morikawa used the best statistical putting day of his career in pulling back to even par for the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2.

“I think I putted better at the Open, to be honest. The Open I made everything when I won in ’21,” he said of his victory at Royal St. George’s, the second major win of his career. “Numbers don’t lie. I’ll take that. I mean, look, after yesterday’s round, didn’t really do much. I just felt like they were getting really bumpy yesterday late in the day. They got a little crusty. Sometimes they just don’t fall. Today I just kind of made sure I stuck with everything that we’ve been working on.

“It was nice to see the first one go in and build off that.”

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Morikawa posted three birdies on the back nine and while many were struggling with the course’s dome greens, he seemed calm and comfortable. The former Cal star hasn’t won since capturing the Zozo Championship last October, but he’s been consistently in the mix, placing in the top 10 in five of his last seven starts, including a runner-up finish at the Memorial last week.

On Saturday he executed his plan to perfection in trying to get back into the conversation.

“I was trying to get to even,” Morikawa said. “You can’t be aggressive out here. I think if you’re aggressive, it can put you in really bad spots. You got to just kind of take your 30-footers. If you have a wedge, sometimes you’re able to go at pins. Didn’t play the par 5s as well as I have been. Look, you can’t play aggressive out here at all. You play aggressive to the right parts, you take what you can. If you get lucky, you get lucky.”

Now that he’s played his way back within striking distance, what is the game plan?

“To win,” he said definitively. “I mean, look, if I play the way I did today, who knows what could happen. This course is only going to get tougher. I know it’s not going to be easy.

“Today was not easy by any means. I just put it in the right spot, kept the ball in front of me, really just played very simple golf.”

Scottie Scheffler finds Pinehurst No. 2 to be ‘a mental torture chamber at times’

Scheffler has posted four straight over-par rounds for the first time in 120 professional starts on the PGA Tour.

PINEHURST, N.C. – Scottie Scheffler is human.

The world No. 1 and five-time winner this season, shot 1-over 71 at Pinehurst Resort & Country Club’s No. 2 Course on Saturday.

With a 74 to close last week at Muirfield Village Golf Club and rounds of 71-74-71 this week at the U.S. Open, Scheffler has posted four straight over-par rounds for the first time in 120 professional starts on the PGA Tour. The only other time he’s posted four straight over-par rounds dates back to his amateur days and his pro debut: the 2017 U.S. Open (amateur): 73 (R4), 2018 Genesis Open (amateur): 73 (R1), 76 (R2); and 2018 FedEx St. Jude Classic (professional): 71 (R1).

“The game of golf is a mental torture chamber at times, especially the U.S. Open,” said the reigning Masters champion. “Another frustrating day. Today was a day where I thought I played a lot better than my score.”

Scottie Scheffler waits to putt on the 17th green during the third round of the U.S. Open golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Katie Goodale-USA TODAY Sports

Scheffler snuck into the weekend with no room to spare as the 36-hole came at 5-over 145. In the third round, he made two birdies and three bogeys to fall to 6-over 216. He lost more a stroke and a half on the greens and has lost more than 5 strokes on the greens this week.

“I’m having a lot of trouble reading these greens. I had a lot of putts today where I felt like I hit it really good. I looked up and they were not going the way I thought they were going to go,” he said.

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Scheffler’s tee game has been unusually erratic. He’s hit 25 of 42 fairways, including only six on Thursday.

“The first 27 holes, I was in the native area way too much of the times. Everything felt really tough,” he said. “Now that I was able to hit a lot more fairways today, it maybe felt a touch easier to me.”

Asked if he might alter his approach to preparing for tough tests such as the U.S. Open, Scheffler suggested he could tweak his schedule in the future.

“I think going into the major championships, especially the ones we know are going to be really challenging, it may be in my best interest not to play the week before,” he said. “That’s stuff for me to figure out later in the year. That’s some of my thoughts sitting around watching the cut.”

Cameron Smith’s shirt at the 2024 U.S. Open is a periodic table of alcohol — and you can own it, too

This is too good from the Aussie.

Cameron Smith played solid golf during the first two rounds of the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2 in North Carolina. After scores of 71-72, the Aussie star was 3 over after 36 holes and comfortably made it to the weekend, eight shots behind solo-leader Ludvig Aberg.

Many liked Smith’s chances around the Donald Ross design due to its resemblance to many golf courses found in the Australia Sandbelt. On top of that, he made both weekends at the previous two major championships this year, highlighted by a T-6 finish at the Masters in April.

However, the best part of Smith’s week at Pinehurst might be the shirt he’s wearing during the third round.

The periodic table of alcohol. It’s just unreal.

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Original Penguin Pete's Flash Cards Print Golf Polo
Original Penguin Pete’s Flash Cards Print Golf Polo (Photo: Original Penguin)

The shirt is from Original Penguin and it’s called the “Pete’s Flash Cards Print Golf Polo.” It’s available for $90.

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