‘He found a better way’: Bryson DeChambeau flipped the script (in more ways than one) to win the 2020 U.S. Open at Winged Foot

Bryson DeChambeau simply found a better way when it came to winning at Winged Foot last fall. Can he do the same at Torrey Pines?

Editor’s note: This is the first story in a three-part series.

Throughout his 27 years, Bryson DeChambeau has discovered answers to problems confronting him by racking his brain and body, whether devouring a textbook, during strenuous workouts or laborious experimentation.

Simple old observation didn’t hurt, either.

But with the clock ticking ahead of the start of the 2020 U.S. Open at merciless Winged Foot Golf Club in New York, he found a solution in the dark.

DeChambeau was lost as he sent one ball after another after another into the Tuesday night sky the week of the U.S. Open. While he couldn’t see the golf balls land, he had his feel and determination and kept at it until something, anything, felt superior.

“He was struggling and was clearly frustrated. He was 36 hours from teeing off in the first round,” said Ben Schomin, director of Tour Operations for Cobra Puma Golf who has worked with DeChambeau on all things equipment for the golfer’s entire pro career. “I know it’s a cliché that you can’t judge a book by its cover, but if you were reading the first few chapters earlier in the week, you would have been hoping this guy would make the cut.”

DeChambeau, however, turned the page.

“It was tough, it was grueling, it was disappointing,” he said of that Tuesday night. “There were a lot of emotions ahead of this big event you’ve worked so hard to get ready for and you feel like you have a great chance. And I just had to get the driver right. Wednesday, I got to a point where I was somewhat comfortable and then Thursday, I teed it up and felt really comfortable.”

The Tale of DeChambeau at Winged Foot got a late rewrite and took hold the first round as the transformed monster with driver in his hands started to demolish the rugged layout full of tight fairways, hefty rough and unyielding greens.

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Bryson DeChambeau chips up onto the eighth green during the final round of the U.S. Open at Winged Foot Golf Club. (Photo by Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports)

With a 1-under-par 69, he was within touch of the leaders. A 68 in Round 2 put him one shot out of the lead. A third-round 70 set him back two shots and set him back to the range.

“The lasting memory for me from Winged Foot will be the practice session on Saturday night. I was struggling and not doing well and going to the range I had to figure this out,” DeChambeau said. “Worked a couple hours and finally got something I got comfortable with. I was the only one on the range and I wasn’t going to leave until I got comfortable.

“Next morning I felt comfortable. I wasn’t hitting it great but by the sixth hole I knew exactly what I needed to do, but I wouldn’t have been able to get to the sixth hole and figure out what I needed to figure out if it wasn’t for the practice session the night before. That was a testament to the resolve, dedication and perseverance that I have, and my team has, to win.”

Win he did, indeed, as DeChambeau proved his blueprint to go full bore and hit the ball as far as he could, a pre-tournament strategy that was met with doubts and a few laughs, was the proper plan.

His late-night range session Saturday night led to a final-round 67 – he was the only player to break par that Sunday – and it capped a week where he outmuscled bruising Winged Foot and toppled Matthew Wolff by six shots.

DeChambeau reckoned correctly that his speed and strength would save him in the thick rough. His stellar touch on and around the greens made a difference, too.

Despite hitting just 23 of 56 fairways, DeChambeau was the lone player in the red at 6-under 274. With his first major triumph, DeChambeau joined Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods as the only players to win a U.S. Amateur, the NCAA individual title and a U.S. Open.

Bryson DeChambeau
Bryson DeChambeau looks over his putt on the first green with his caddie Tim Tucker during the final round of the 2020 U.S. Open at Winged Foot Golf Club. (Photo by Danielle Parhizkaran-USA TODAY Sports)

The Golden Bear was impressed. The 18-time major winner basically was Bryson before Bryson and could get the better of any rough during his heyday. Nicklaus understood DeChambeau’s reasoning – you’re going to miss a fair share of fairways anyway, so get the ball down as far as you can to have shorter irons in your hand for approaches.

“He figured out that he would be better off with a wedge out of the rough. And he was. He won the U.S. Open with that. That was his philosophy,” Nicklaus said. “Bryson’s a cerebral guy, as you know. Nobody else is going to think about that, to change their whole body to play at a U.S. Open. But he did. And you got to give him credit. You give credit where credit’s due and he did a great job with it and he performed well, he won the tournament, and well done.

“I pretty much did that naturally. I had tree trunks for legs and so it allowed me to really just drive through any rough. There were a lot of golf courses I didn’t worry about much about the rough. I thought what he did was fantastic.”

As did Golf Channel analyst Brandel Chamblee.

“I thought it was brilliant,” he said. “He drove it longer and straighter than anybody in the event by quite a distance, even though his driving distance showed he finished sixth. If you measure every single drive he hit where he hit driver, he was considerably longer than everyone else.

“And then if you measure the dispersion of his shots, he was straighter than everybody else. And then he hit his irons beautifully and putted beautifully.

It was cool to see. Golf had always been taught anecdotally and Bryson was the first person to come along that really did use science to plot out a path to another level of the game.”

Or as on-course commentator and former LPGA star Dottie Pepper said: “He found a better way. He found a way to take what he knew and made it work.”

Especially out of the rough. While Rory McIlroy, who finished eighth that week, was stunned earlier in the year with the hulked-up DeChambeau’s length when the game returned after a 13-week quarantine due to COVID-19, the work he saw his peer do out of the nasty, dense high grass was just as impressive.

“The one thing that people don’t appreciate is how good Bryson is out of the rough,” McIlroy said. “Not only because of how upright he is, but because his short irons are longer than standard. So he can get a little more speed through the rough than other guys.”

That was part of the calculations that led to Team DeChambeau’s plan. Let the big dog eat, if you will, and then, with the ball closer to the green, rely on your other talents.

“It was very rewarding to trust in the process of our game plan even knowing that it may have been considered somewhat unconventional,” said Chris Como, DeChambeau’s coach. “We went in there and had a game plan and trusted it. The results of the win were icing on the cake, the cherry on the top of a sundae.”

DeChambeau never wavered from the plan despite the repeated warnings in the golf biosphere that the rough would eventually wreck his scorecard.

“The swing speed is massive; it just gets the club through the rough better,” Como said. “And the strength and the mass help because he’s able to get his muscles though it. And he also had the strategy of, as the greens get faster, you’re more inclined to stop the ball through trajectory, through the angle of descent than you are through spin.

“So to be able to kind of hit these higher lofted clubs and just throw the ball up as high as he could and basically aim to the middle of the green more or less when you’re coming out of the rough worked.”

This week, DeChambeau, the world No. 4 who counts eight PGA Tour titles and another on the European Tour on his record, defends his U.S. Open victory at Torrey Pines in San Diego. There will be those who will point to DeChambeau’s limited history at Torrey Pines and say he can’t win. And others, despite his success at Winged Foot, will continue to insist his power strategy won’t work on a U.S. Open setup.

Bring on the doubters, said DeChambeau, who missed the cut in the Famers Insurance Open in 2017 and 2018; in his two rounds on the South Course, he shot 78 in 2017 and 76 in 2018. But he finished second in the Junior World on the South Course in 2011.

Farmers Insurance Open - Round One
Bryson Dechambeau plays his shot from the 18th tee during the first round of the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines South on January 26, 2017, in San Diego. (Photo by Donald Miralle/Getty Images)

While he said he has yet to develop his strategy to attack Torrey Pines, he very well might incorporate the same blueprint he followed at Winged Foot.

“I’m totally fine with people saying Torrey Pines doesn’t fit me,” he said. “I’m quite comfortable with the golf course but I’ve never had the speed I do now going into the South Course. Length was a problem. In 2017 and 2018, I wasn’t hitting it as straight and certainly not as long as I can hit it now.

“And I didn’t have as good a putting game. With my length, with my control out of the rough, with my putting game, I feel I have a great opportunity this year.”

His biggest challenge might be the Poa annua greens, which will get bumpy.

“You have to figure out how to roll the ball well. I’ve always struggled on it but since going to the Sik putter and arm locking and figuring out how to launch the ball more correctly, I’ve become way better on Poa,” DeChambeau said. “Not my favorite, but I have had success on Poa before.”

He very well may again.

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Georgia star Davis Thompson rallies to play the weekend at Palmetto Championship, his pro debut

It wasn’t pretty to start, but former Georgia standout made it to the weekend at the Palmetto Championship.

RIDGELAND, S.C. — Those who know of Davis Thompson as a University of Georgia star golfer and one of the world’s top amateur players could not have expected to see him stumble so badly to start the first round of his professional debut.

Five bogeys in his first eight holes. Just think how Thompson felt.

“I kind of see myself as a very consistent player, which kind of shocked me what I did (Thursday),” he said Friday at the Palmetto Championship at Congaree. “It’s golf. You can’t predict anything.”

This was new territory for Thompson, currently No. 4 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking and a highly decorated player over four years at UGA, now his alma mater.

He closed out the front nine with a 4-foot, 10-inch birdie putt to get to 4-over par, but gave it back with a sixth bogey at No. 11.

“My course management just wasn’t very good,” he said. “I don’t know if I was nervous or I wasn’t making the right decisions. I think it was a combination of both.”

Instead of folding, the 22-year-old told himself he still had seven holes to play, and he wanted seven good chances for birdies.

Maybe that’s the kind of mindset followers of Thompson’s career expect of him. He certainly does.

Thompson birdied the par-5 No. 12 from 15 feet, 1 inch, his longest made putt of the day. He mixed in a couple of pars, then closed out the topsy-turvy round with four straight birdies to climb all the way out of that crater he dug and finish 18 holes at even par.

“I’ve gotten off to bad starts before, but I don’t know if I’ve ever been 5-over and brought it all the way back to even,” he said. “It’s kind of crazy to think I was 5-over through eight holes during this tournament. That’s all in the past.”

Right, because he still had to play the second round Friday at Congaree Golf Club, located north of Ridgeland near Gillisonville in Jasper County, South Carolina.

On Thursday night, because of the mighty comeback, he received encouraging texts telling him “great finish” and “keep it rolling” and avoided the well-intentioned “you’ll get them next time” after poor results. Thompson said he’s got great support around him, especially from his family in attendance this week.

On Friday, he started on the back nine and followed his 31 on Thursday with a 33, which would make an eye-catching 64 if he exclusively played Nos. 10-18. He vastly improved on the front nine, bettering the 40 on Thursday with a 36 on Friday.

He shot 2-under-par 69 on Friday with four birdies and just two bogeys, plus 12 pars to make the cut at 2-under. He played the third round on Saturday afternoon.

“Pars are good out here,” Thompson said Friday after the second round. “I’m usually a pretty good player, make a lot of pars, but (Thursday) was a different story.”

All-America golfer

As he has closed out his collegiate career with All-Southeastern Conference and All-America honors (including Golfweek’s 2021 first team), and was a finalist for every major award, Thompson was asked Tuesday before his pro debut to reflect on his Athens days.

“I really don’t think it’s set in yet,” said Thompson, who attended UGA after an outstanding high school career as a state champion in Auburn, Alabama. “When I don’t have classes in the fall, I think that’s when it will kind of set in. But, no, I mean obviously like just the relationships that I formed there with my teammates and coaches, formed some great memories, had a lot of great laughs, great tournaments.

“… just the thing I’m probably most proud of there is I think I just got better every single year and that was kind of my goal going into school. But, yeah, I’m just excited to get my professional career started.”

Pro-am history

Thompson has played in pro events as amateur, twice at the RSM Classic on St. Simons Island, where he and his family reside. He tied for 23rd at 10-under in 2019, and missed the cut in 2020. He also missed the cut at the Puerto Rico Open in February 2020 and at the U.S. Open in September 2020, when he opened with a 69 and followed with a 78.

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Davis Thompson looks over the eighth green with his caddie Todd Thompson during the first round of the U.S. Open at Winged Foot Golf Club – West. (Photo: Danielle Parhizkaran-USA TODAY Sports)

Now he’s starting a new chapter as a pro, and plans to play in the Travelers Championship on June 24-27 in Connecticut, and the Rocket Mortgage Classic on July 1-4 in Detroit.

“If I have a few good finishes here and there, maybe I’ll get some status out of it,” said Thompson, who got his first look this week at the Congaree course, where he’s playing on a sponsor exemption. “Right now, I’m trying to have as much fun as I can. I’m 22 years old. I’m having fun with it and trying to learn a lot and grow and just mature as a player.”

He has status on the PGA Tour’s developmental Korn Ferry Tour through a new initiative called PGA Tour University to reward four-year college players for outstanding careers. Thompson, as No. 2 in the ranking behind national player of the year John Pak, is exempt into all open, full-field events on the Korn Ferry Tour through season’s end.

“It’s definitely a great path for guys like myself and John who stayed in college all four years and have played well to kind of earn that,” Thompson said Tuesday. “But I’m in a very lucky spot where I kind of have options where I’m, obviously hoping and trying to get some PGA Tour starts, but at the same time I can play Korn Ferry. So I think it’s a great deal by the PGA Tour and I’m lucky enough to be the first class to kind of use that.”

Nathan Dominitz is the Sports Content Editor of the Savannah Morning News and savannahnow.com. Email him at ndominitz@savannahnow.com. Twitter: @NathanDominitz

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Despite slip up, Dustin Johnson in prime position to win first title in South Carolina

The 18th hole wasn’t pretty, but Dustin Johnson is still in position for his first PGA Tour title in his home state.

RIDGELAND, S.C. – Despite a mishap on the final hole, Dustin Johnson continued his march toward his first victory in South Carolina on Friday.

And he’s certainly headed in the right direction leading into next week’s U.S. Open in California.

The world No. 1 made a double-bogey 6 on the 18th hole when his club slipped in his hand during his tee shot, the ball winding up in the middle of a small bush in the waste area to the left of the fairway. He was forced to take a penalty shot but still signed for a 3-under-par 68 to stand two shots behind leader Chesson Hadley through 36 holes of the Palmetto Championship at Congaree.

“That’s a first for me. I obviously was not expecting that,” Johnson said of the club slip on the 18th tee using a 3-iron. “Actually my glove hand slipped on the tee shot and just ended up in the only spot you can’t hit it on that hole, which was a couple of bushes there on the left. It got wet. I don’t know if the end of my 3-iron was wet or what it was. When I took a couple of practice swings, I didn’t notice it.

“So, unfortunate finish, but I’m playing well, I’m swinging well, I’ve got a lot of confidence in everything I’m doing.

“Still in a really good spot going into the weekend.”

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Johnson stretched his bogey-free start to 30 holes on Friday – the third-best bogey-free start of his career – with some of his finest golf in quite some time. Johnson has but one top-10 on the PGA Tour in eight starts this year but is in prime position to win his 25th PGA Tour title and first in his native state.

“The first 14 holes played extremely difficult and I was playing really well. With the wind, the wind was blowing pretty hard, it was really gusty, so it was just really hard to get a good beat on it. I felt like I did a really good job, though, controlling the golf ball,” he said. “I’m still in a really good position leading into the weekend and still a lot of golf to play.

“So got a lot of confidence in what I’m doing.”

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Chesson Hadley’s putter carries him to top of Palmetto Championship, renewing his confidence

Chesson Hadley took some time off after five missed cuts. Now he’s back at it with a hot putter and the second-round Palmetto lead.

RIDGELAND, S.C. – As soon as he said it, Chesson Hadley knew the comment could sound odd in the wrong context.

The PGA Tour player had just finished his second round Friday morning at the Palmetto Championship at Congaree, and he was atop the early leaderboard. It was not a place he had visited recently, as Hadley had missed the cut in 10 of his last 12 tournaments.

Interviewed after a round of 5-under-66 put him at 11-under for two rounds, Hadley credited his putting.

“So it’s nice to hit some good shots, and the putter’s hot,” Hadley said. “So if I can just keep riding the putter, she’s a sweet girl. So I’ll just ride her until — you know.”

Before he could fully answer the next question about putting, he broke into laughter.

“I’m just kind of thinking about that last comment I made now,” he said. “Use that. Absolutely.”

And why not? Golfers love their putters when they’re this hot. On Friday, Hadley made seven birdie putts, including one of 35 feet, 8 inches on the par-4 No. 11, and two of 22-11 at Nos. 3 and 7.

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“It certainly makes golf a lot easier,” Hadley said. “Most of your strokes are done on the putting surface. So if you see the ball going in the hole a lot, it does something to you. I certainly made my fair share of putts today for par and for birdie. Don’t want to get ahead of myself, but I like the way everything feels, for sure.”

Hadley uses an Odyssey 2-Ball putter which he calls “Nana” after his grandmother, as he explained.

“So my grandmother – she actually passed away earlier this year – but she was just like the most lovely and sweet, kind woman. That’s how I want my putter to be, lovely and sweet and kind, right? She’s just good to you, right? So she’s Nana.”

Hadley called his old Odyssey putter Nana, so he updated the new putter with Nana Jr. Whatever the name, the game is working really well at Congaree Golf Club.

“Fortunately, that’s been the bright spot to my year has been my putter,” Hadley said. “Your feels and the way you just look at the ball changes the ball. Sometimes the ball just looks different. You haven’t done anything, and you just wake up one day, and it just looks different for some reason. That just changes everything. But I have a good baseline with the putting right now. I know what I’m doing, what I’m trying to do, and it’s working. So hopefully, it can keep moving forward with that.”

Hadley, who turns 34 next month, sounded relieved just to go to lunch Friday without worrying about the cut line. It’s understandable considering his streak of five missed cuts, followed by two made, then another five missed. He’s played 18 tournaments this season, and of the six made cuts, five resulted in top-25 finishes.

“No, I definitely didn’t see this coming,” said the 2010 Georgia Tech graduate. “… thank goodness I had three weeks off just to kind of hit the reset switch, get out on the boat, and just kind of forget about some things and spend some time with some family.”

Hadley, whose lone win on the PGA Tour was the 2014 Puerto Rico Open, said the stretch of missed cuts didn’t help his confidence. But he looked back on his career successes and started playing better.

“Obviously, we’re a long way from the winner’s circle, and that’s not what I’m saying,” he said. “I’m so thankful to just feel that again, like I belong out here type of thing.”

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Kevin Kisner looking for a first in Palmetto State when Congaree hosts PGA Tour event

For Kevin Kisner, a native and resident of Aiken, South Carolina, it would be very cool to win an event in his home state.

RIDGELAND, S.C. – There’s the competition on the PGA Tour featuring the world’s best golfers battling each week for titles, prize money and points.

Then there are smaller contests within the grander scope, perhaps more for pride and bragging rights than anything else.

For Kevin Kisner, a native and resident of Aiken, South Carolina, it would be very cool to win an event in his home state. South Carolina has an annual tour stop on Hilton Head Island for the RBC Heritage. Kisner, on the PGA Tour since 2011, has come close to being fitted for a tartan jacket, including a playoff loss to Jim Furyk in 2015.

“I always wanted to be the first one to win Harbour Town, and Wesley Bryan snuck in and got me on that one,” Kisner, 37, said Wednesday.

Bryan, a Columbia, South Carolina, native, captured the 2017 Heritage as a PGA Tour rookie to become the first South Carolina-born champion in the tournament’s then-49 years of existence.

“We’ve got another chance this week, and I’m looking forward to the opportunity to have a chance to win,” Kisner said.

This week is a one-time opportunity as Congaree Golf Club makes its PGA Tour debut by hosting the Palmetto Championship at Congaree. The tournament replaced the RBC Canadian Open on the 2020-21 schedule after the Toronto event was canceled because of logistical issues related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Kisner has made four previous visits to Congaree, a private course north of Ridgeland near the town of Gillisonville in Jasper County.

“It’s a fantastic place to come and practice and work on my game. For me, they have an awesome practice facility, and the golf course is topnotch,” Kisner said. “The hospitality and the service they provide to all ambassadors and the PGA Tour has been topnotch. So I think we’re all fortunate to be here.”

Kisner is one of several PGA Tour players associated with the club as Professional Ambassadors. Congaree Foundation programs support golf, academic and vocational skills and opportunities for children, which closely aligns with the mission of the Kevin and Brittany Kisner Foundation in Aiken.

“We recommend a child in our area that we feel is worthy of coming down to participate in their foundation schooling that they have throughout the summer,” Kisner said in reference to the signature program, Congaree Global Golf Initiative.

That program helps high school golfers from around the world learn how to pursue and earn college scholarships. For golfers fresh out of college and new to the professional ranks, they can turn to seasoned veterans such as Kisner.

Davis Thompson plays his shot from the third tee during the second round of the 120th U.S. Open Championship on September 18, 2020 at Winged Foot Golf Club in Mamaroneck, New York. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

Davis Thompson just completed a highly decorated amateur career with his final season at the University of Georgia. He’s making his pro debut this week and had breakfast on Tuesday with Kisner, UGA Class of 2006.

“I was asking him for advice,” Kisner said. “He’s playing better than I am right now, so I was hoping he could help me.

“These kids are so prepared to play the PGA Tour now,” he continued. “They walk around with their protein shakes and TrackMans, and they’re ready to hit it 350 yards. I don’t think they need any advice.”

So what did they talk about?

“We were just cutting up, talking about Georgia,” Kisner said with a smile.

Thompson had his turn with a video press conference on Tuesday and was asked about the consistent success of so many former UGA golfers on the PGA Tour. Former Bulldogs Greyson Sigg and Thompson’s college roommate, amateur Spencer Ralston, qualified Monday for next week’s U.S. Open.

“Definitely gives us a lot of confidence that we’re kind of in the same fraternity and then we kind of feed off each other and congratulate each other. So I think it’s pretty healthy,” Thompson said.

Though he’s not a Georgia guy, Dustin Johnson could have been if he had listened to Kisner, his old friend and competitor as juniors in the Palmetto State.

“Tried like heck to get him to transfer from Coastal Carolina to come to Georgia, and that would have been something special, too,” Kisner said Wednesday.

The world’s top-ranked player, Johnson was born 37 years ago this month in Columbia, S.C. He is playing the first two rounds in a grouping with Kisner, so the whole first-to-win contest might come up in conversation.

“Obviously, it’s my home state,” Johnson said Wednesday. “It’s where I grew up. It’s kind of where I honed my skills throughout my early days all through college. Yeah, it would mean a lot to win in South Carolina.”

Nathan Dominitz is the Sports Content Editor of the Savannah Morning News and savannahnow.com. Email him at ndominitz@savannahnow.com. Twitter: @NathanDominitz

No, really, Angry Golfer Tyrrell Hatton stayed calm during semi-calamitous wedding day

Weddings can bring out the worst in all of us, but Tyrrell Hatton managed to keep his cool during his despite much going wrong.

RIDGELAND, S.C. – The scene-stealing star of the hilarious “Angry Golfers” video released by the European Tour had every reason to go ballistic on his wedding day.

Somehow, however, world No. 11 Tyrrell Hatton’s head didn’t explode.

It was unsettling enough that the wedding plans needed to be altered due to COVID-19 restrictions, which led Hatton and his longtime girlfriend, Emily Braisher, to wed alone May 28 in Asheville, North Carolina.

And then things didn’t go as planned on the way to “I do.”

“The day wasn’t very smooth,” Hatton said Wednesday ahead of his start in the Palmetto Championship at Congaree. “Our driver turned up an hour late, so that meant we arrived half an hour late for our ceremony.

“Obviously, it wasn’t ideal. I think the most frustrated I got was when we were actually in the car driving there because the fact that he pitched up an hour late and then was driving under the speed limit. I politely asked him to use the right pedal and press a little harder to try and make up a little bit of time.”

Then the day took another unfortunate turn for the man who has helicoptered irons after poor shots, bitten into the shaft of his putter after bad putts and nearly broken clubs over his knees.

Mr. and Mrs. H wanted to take their wedding photos along the scenic Blue Ridge Parkway but Mother Nature chimed in. And Hatton kept his cool.

“We wanted to hike up and have some nice pictures. Unfortunately, after finishing the ceremony, it absolutely pissed down with rain, and we then had to drive like two miles down the road, pulled over in a lay by, and we had our wedding pictures taken on the side of the road,” Hatton said. “Not quite as magical as you’d planned it, I guess, but it was still pretty special.”

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Hatton, who won the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship in January, last played in the PGA Championship two weeks ago, where he tied for 38th. He’s back at work but needs some gym time.

“It might have changed my waistline because I certainly drunk my body weight in beer up in Asheville,” he said of his wedding day. “I need to get back in the gym and sort myself out.

“I started practicing again last Wednesday, so I’ve had a few days to kind of try to get back into it. Naturally, I think I’ll be quite rusty. I would say the last month and a half has been a little bit awkward for me really. I started to feel like I was playing really well again at the Zurich Classic when I partnered with Danny Willett, and then getting the COVID test, the positive result the following week in Tampa was a surprise, and I felt like I was going to have a really good week there.

“All of a sudden, it’s two weeks off, and my next event’s the PGA. Again, rusty at the start, and as the week went on, it felt like it got a bit better, and I’ve just had two weeks off again. So naturally, going to be quite rusty, and just hoping that I can hit some good shots to find some momentum out there.”

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Memorial Tournament Fantasy Golf Power Rankings

We look at the fantasy golf power rankings and odds for the 2021 Memorial Tournament, with PGA Tour picks and predictions.

A field of 121 golfers is at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio, this week for the Memorial Tournament. Below, we look at the fantasy golf power rankings and odds for the 2021 Memorial Tournament, with PGA Tour picks and predictions.

The event is being held two weeks before the 2021 U.S. Open but there are still many big names in attendance for Jack Nicklaus’ tournament. Each of the top three players in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings – headlined by defending champion Jon Rahm – are in the field. Webb Simpson (No. 4) and Dustin Johnson (No. 6) are the most notable omissions.

Muirfield Village underwent a dramatic overhaul since hosting the Workday Charity Open and the Memorial in back-to-back weeks last summer. The long-time PGA Tour stop now measures 7,543 yards. The Nicklaus-designed venue puts an emphasis on iron play and short game.

2021 Memorial Tournament: Fantasy Golf Top 20

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Odds last updated Tuesday at 11:58 a.m. ET.

20. Christiaan Bezuidenhout (+6600)

Up to 39th in the Golfweek rankings with nine straight made cuts to open his 2021 schedule, including six PGA Tour events. He’s fourth among golfers with at least 18 measured rounds played with 0.54 Strokes Gained: Around-the-Green per round.

19. Shane Lowry (+5000)

Six straight made cuts on the PGA Tour with three top-10 finishes in that span, including a T-4 at the PGA Championship. He has 16 career rounds played at Muirfield Village with 0.42 strokes gained on the field per round.

18. Sungjae Im (+5000)

Fourteenth on Tour in driving accuracy, 17th in par-4 efficiency from 450-500 yards and tied for 40th in scrambling. He’s struggling around the greens but has been very sharp with the putter this season.

17. Joaquin Niemann (+4500)

Averaging 1.61 strokes gained per round at MVGC over 14 career rounds played, including a T-31 finish at last year’s Workday Charity Open where he averaged 1.03 SG: Approach into the tricky greens.

16. Matt Fitzpatrick (+3300)

Tied for 27th at the Workday Charity Open and then finished third in tougher conditions the next week. He leaned heavily on his putter in the second event.

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15. Keegan Bradley (+5000)

Ninth on Tour with 0.84 SG: Approach for the season and is averaging 0.31 SG: Around-the-Green per round, as well. He has made nine straight cuts and broke 70 in the first round of seven of those events.

14. Gary Woodland (+4500)

Fourteenth in this field with 40 rounds played at Muirfield Village and has averaged 1.28 strokes gained per round. He tied for fifth at the Workday Charity Open in conditions that are expected to more closely resemble this week than the 2020 Memorial.

13. Hideki Matsuyama (+2200)

The 2021 Masters champ has struggled with the short game this season, but he put it together at Augusta National Golf Club. These greens were redone in the offseason overhaul but remain comparable to those at Augusta.

12. Louis Oosthuizen (+3300)

A co-runner-up at the PGA Championship, Oosthuizen averaged 1.25 SG: Around-the-Green two weeks ago. He has three top-10 finishes in seven stroke-play events this year and is up to 19th in the Official World Golf Ranking.

11. Rory McIlroy (+1600)

Disappointedly followed up his Wells Fargo Championship win with a T-49 finish in his return to Kiawah Island for the PGA Championship. Struggled off the tee and on the greens, but still averaged 1.09 SG: Approach per round.

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10. Xander Schauffele (+2000)

Finished in the top 15 of both the 2020 Workday Charity Open and Memorial Tournament. He’s second in the Golfweek rankings and has four top-10 finishes this year, but is coming off a rare missed cut at the PGA Championship in which he was bad around the greens.

9. Corey Conners (+2800)

Up to 14th in the Golfweek rankings with just one missed cut and four top-10 finishes through 13 events this year. He tied for 22nd at last year’s Memorial Tournament with 1.20 SG: Tee-to-Green per round.

8. Tony Finau (+2500)

Tied for eighth at the PGA Championship with his sixth top-10 finish of 2021 where he posted a 1.57 SG: Around-the-Green per round, the best among those who made the cut. He’s also fourth on Tour with 1.79 SG: Tee-to-Green per round for the season.

7. Patrick Cantlay (+2200)

Won the 2019 Memorial Tournament by two strokes at 19-under par, and this week’s conditions are expected to be more similar to the 2019 tournament than those of last year. He’s third on Tour in scrambling.

6. Bryson DeChambeau (+1600)

The 2018 Memorial champion won in a playoff at 15-under par. His added distance off the tee won’t be as much of an advantage at this venue, but he’s also second on Tour in SG: Tee-to-Green per round, and his putting can’t be overlooked.

5. Jordan Spieth (+1600)

Finished second last week at the Charles Schwab Challenge with a disappointing Sunday round of 73. He has averaged 1.56 strokes gained per round over 32 career rounds at MVGC.

4. Viktor Hovland (+1800)

Fifth on Tour in SG: Tee-to-Green and tied for 11th in SG: Approach for the season. He finished third at the Workday Charity Open and tied for 48th at the Memorial last summer.

3. Collin Morikawa (+1800)

Morikawa won last year’s Workday Charity Open but followed it up with a T-48 in tougher conditions at the Memorial. Putting cost him in the second event; however, the greens are expected to be softer and slower this year. He’s first on Tour this season in SG: Approach and SG: Tee-to-Green.

2. Justin Thomas (+1600)

Went to a playoff with Morikawa at the Workday last year and tied for 18th at the Memorial. He has 26 career rounds played at MVGC with an average of 1.36 strokes gained on the field per round. He’s second in SG: Approach and sixth among qualified golfers in SG: Tee-to-Green.

1. Jon Rahm (+1100)

Survived the difficult conditions last year to win by three strokes at 9-under par. He led the field with 3.87 SG: Tee-to-Green per round. He enters the week atop the Golfweek rankings while looking for his first win of 2021.

Get some action on the 2021 Memorial Tournament by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com. Please gamble responsibly.

Follow @EstenMcLaren on Twitter. Follow SportsbookWire on Twitter and like us on Facebook.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage. This information is for entertainment purposes only. We make no representations or warranties as to the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any content.

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Charles Schwab Challenge Fantasy Golf Power Rankings

We look at the fantasy golf power rankings and odds for the 2021 Charles Schwab Challenge, with PGA Tour picks and predictions.

The PGA Tour is back in Fort Worth, Texas, this week for the Charles Schwab Challenge. Colonial Country Club, one of the Tour’s longest-standing annual stops, hosts the strong post-major field. Below, we look at the fantasy golf power rankings and odds for the 2021 Charles Schwab Challenge, with PGA Tour picks and predictions.

Phil Mickelson, the 2021 PGA Championship winner and a two-time champ at Colonial, is among those looking to overthrow 2020 Charles Schwab winner Daniel Berger. Last year’s tournament featured a major-caliber field as it was the first event upon the Tour’s mid-June restart.

Colonial CC is 7,209 yards and plays to a par of 70. It demands accuracy off the tee and precise iron play as the fairways are well-guarded by tight tree lines.

2021 Charles Schwab Challenge: Fantasy Golf Top 20

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Odds last updated Tuesday at 2:15 p.m. ET.

20. Brendon Todd (+10000)

Todd has struggled over 15 career rounds at Colonial, including a missed cut last year, but his current form should fit well despite having no finish better than a T-13 through 11 events in 2021. He leads the PGA Tour in driving accuracy, and he’s one of the top putters.

19. Gary Woodland (+5000)

The former U.S. Open winner followed a fifth-place finish at the Wells Fargo Championship with a T-38 at the PGA Championship. He was in contention for much of the tournament until a Sunday round of 5-over 77. His iron play was a strength last week with 1.53 Strokes Gained: Approach per round and he’ll need that type of performance again at Colonial.

18. Chris Kirk (+5500)

The 2015 champ at Colonial is coming off back-to-back missed cuts at the Valspar Championship and PGA Championship, but he has four top-10 finishes through 11 events this year, including a T-2 at the Sony Open in Hawaii. He leads the Tour in Par 4 Efficiency: 400-450 Yards, and there are seven such holes here.

17. Kevin Na (+6600)

Second in this field among those with a least two appearances in the event with an average of 1.68 strokes gained on the field per round, with over 48 career rounds logged at Colonial. He’s won here before, in 2019, and has a victory this year at the Sony Open in January.

16. Matt Kuchar (+6600)

The runner-up of the 2013 Crowne Plaza Invitational at Colonial has averaged 1.42 strokes gained per round over 44 career rounds played at this venue. The nine-time PGA Tour champ is 19th in driving accuracy and sixth in par 4 efficiency from the key distance of 400-450 yards.

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15. Billy Horschel (+5000)

Four straight made cuts in stroke-play events to go with a victory at the WGC-Match Play. Averaged 1.27 SG: Putting per round in a T-23 finish at the PGA Championship and is 30th in driving accuracy this season.

14. Justin Rose (+3000)

The 2018 champion at Colonial has averaged 1.50 strokes gained per round over 28 rounds there. He tied for third in last year’s stronger field.

13. Scottie Scheffler (+3000)

Tied for eighth last week while recording 0.69 SG: Off-the-Tee per round and a strong putting performance at the Ocean Course. He tied for 55th in his debut at Colonial last year but was excellent with the driver and his irons.

12. Brian Harman (+3500)

Thirty career rounds played at Colonial with an average of 1.25 strokes gained per round. Finished inside the top 35 each of the last seven years with three top-10 results.

11. Joaquin Niemann (+2500)

Twenty-second in par-4 efficiency from the key distance of 400-450 yards this season and eighth in SG: Off-the-Tee. Tied for 32nd in this event last June but his play around the green has improved.

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10. Sungjae Im (+3300)

Tied for 10th last year in just his second appearance at Colonial. Tied for 17th last week with strong play off the tee. He’s 14th in driving accuracy on tour this season.

9. Patrick Reed (+2200)

Eleventh in this field with 1.46 strokes gained per round at Colonial. Tied for seventh in the event last year with an excellent putting performance and also gained 0.76 strokes per round around the greens.

8. Will Zalatoris (+2800)

Picked up a third straight top-10 finish at a major with a T-8 last week. Was second among those to make the cut with 2.04 SG: Approach per round.

7. Abraham Ancer (+2000)

Second on Tour in driving accuracy and fourth in par 4 efficiency from the key distance of 400-450 yards. Finished T-14 last year at Colonial and has improved his play around the putting surfaces.

6. Corey Conners (+2200)

Hasn’t missed a cut since February’s Genesis Invitational and has four top-10 finishes in his last eight stroke-play events. Tenth on Tour in driving accuracy and fifth in SG: Approach.

5. Daniel Berger (+2000)

The defending champ was in the top five of last year’s field that made the cut in both SG: Approach and SG: Tee-to-Green per round. He struggled to a T-75 finish last week but his iron play is much better suited to Colonial.

4. Collin Morikawa (+1400)

Lost in a playoff to Berger last year but is being given a better chance of winning this week by the betting odds. He’s first on Tour in SG: Approach and won the WGC-Workday Championship earlier this year.

3. Tony Finau (+2200)

Sixth in this field in average strokes gained per round at Colonial. Was the runner-up in 2019 and is coming off yet another top-10 major finish last week.

2. Jordan Spieth (+1000)

This week’s betting favorite won here in 2016 with runner-up finishes in 2015 and 2017. He returned to the winner’s circle in April and has six other top-10 finishes this year to move back to 21st in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings.

1. Justin Thomas (+1200)

Debuted at Colonial with a T-10 finish in the strong field last year and was second among those to make the cut with 1.75 SG: Approach per round. Got an early jump on his preparation for this week with a missed cut at the PGA Championship.

Get some action on the 2021 Charles Schwab Challenge by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com. Please gamble responsibly.

Follow @EstenMcLaren on Twitter. Follow SportsbookWire on Twitter and like us on Facebook.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage. This information is for entertainment purposes only. We make no representations or warranties as to the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any content.

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D’Angelo: Watch video of Brooks Koepka’s disgust with Bryson DeChambeau after Bryson’s snarky remark about Brooks’ putting

The feud between Brooks Koepka and Bryson DeChambeau is very much alive, and the jabs started long before the PGA Championship.

Brooks Koepka may have been unhappy over his putting during the PGA Championship. He surely was disappointed in the fans who overwhelmed security to make his trek up the 18th fairway an adventure on Sunday.

But Koepka felt all that and more for Byson DeChambeau after Friday’s second round.

The look on Koepka’s face and disgust in his voice while muttering a few expletives after DeChambeau interrupted an interview said all you need to know about their relationship.

In the leaked video, Koepka was talking to Golf Channel’s Todd Lewis about his poor putting when DeChambeau walked by and chimed in.

“I just felt it difficult to read, you sometimes …,” Koepka said before stopping. He rolled his eyes and then lost his concentration.

DeChambeau just appeared in the background and part of what he said was clear: “Keep it on the line.”

After his initial reaction, Koepka tried to continue before shaking his head again. “I (expletive) lost … I lost my train of thought. Yeah, hearing that bulls—t,” he said.

PGA: PGA Championship - Final Round
Brooks Koepka putts on the 18th green during the final round of the PGA Championship golf tournament. (Photo: David Yeazell-USA TODAY Sports)

Clearly upset, he added another expletive before Lewis said, “Alright, we’re starting over,” before telling Koepka how much the crew would enjoy that.

“I honestly wouldn’t even care,” Koepka said.

The Koepka-DeChambeau feud started three years ago and it appears to be simmering. Could this bring it to a full boil?

These are two proud, intense competitors, though very much opposites in personality. DeChambeau is the more popular on Tour and clearly the more outgoing. He has become a showman this season since bulking up last summer to add length to his game.

DeChambeau loves the energy and lets the fans know it, the best example his reaction at Bay Hill this year when his drive on the 555-yard, par-5 sixth hole cleared the lake and traveled 370 yards. He acknowledged the roars by thrusting his arms into the air.

Koepka, meanwhile, is not among the fan favorites. One spectator at the first tee box before Sunday’s final round of the PGA Championship implored Mickelson to “not screw it up” because “we would not want to see Brooks win.”

Taking a much more businesslike, serious, me-against-the-world approach to his game, Koepka does not interact with fans as much as most of the Tour’s stars. Koepka, though very serious and emotionless, can be honest and give thoughtful answers during interview sessions.

This week, Koepka has been criticized, unfairly, for his comments on the fans’ behavior Sunday. His issue when complaining about the out-of-control scene was safety and not the juiced crowd trying to get a closer look at eventual champion Phil Mickelson. He said it was “cool for Phil,” but not for him after his knee was “dinged” a few times.

This may not be Jack vs. Arnie or Tiger vs. Phil when it comes to royalty or prestige, but it’s getting to be a lot more fun in a game that could use a good old-fashioned rivalry to spice up things.

While both have won eight times on Tour, Koepka clearly has the upper hand when it comes to majors with four to DeChambeau’s one, and 14 top 10s to Bryson’s two.

This feud dates back to when Koepka started voicing his frustration over pace of play. Others were as annoyed, but none were as outspoken about it as Koepka. And DeChambeau took offense. After all, he was the poster child of slow play, especially after a video of him taking more than two minutes to hit an 8-foot putt.

“I mentioned his name once. I don’t think I’ve come at him. I just talked about slow play, and obviously he feels I’m talking about him every time,” Koepka said at the 2019 Northern Trust.

DeChambeau told Koepka’s caddie, Ricky Elliott, that Koepka should speak to him directly if he had a problem with his pace of play, according to reports.

The two then had a talk and said the air was cleared.

Apparently not.

Last summer, as DeChambeau was pumping iron to reshape his body in pursuit of the 400-yard drive, he took a shot at Koepka’s physique on a video-game live stream, poking fun at Koepka’s abs.

One day later Koepka fired back with a tweet showing his four major trophies.

“You were right @b_dechambeau I am 2 short of a 6 pack!”

This could get to be fun. The two certainly will be in the U.S. Open field in June at Torrey Pines, but three events will be played before then. While neither is playing in the Charles Schwab Challenge this week, DeChambeau is entered in the Memorial, Jack Nicklaus’ tournament held in Dublin, Ohio, starting June 3. It is unknown if Koepka will play the Memorial.

Now, the Tour needs to do the right thing and put them in the same grouping at their next tournament.

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PGA Championship prop bet picks and predictions

We’ve made our picks to win and highlighted some long shots for this week’s PGA Championship.

The second major of 2021 is here with the world’s best golfers at the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island in South Carolina for the PGA Championship. We’ve made our picks to win and highlighted some long shots; below, we’ll look for the best value prop bets in the 2021 PGA Championship odds, with placings, groups and first-round leader picks and predictions.

There are six players with odds lower than +2000 to win, led by tournament favorite and defending Kiawah champion Rory McIlroy at +1200. He won here by eight strokes in 2012.

The best way to maximize your profit potential in the 156-man field when betting the 2021 PGA Championship is to fade these favorites and look at the various prop markets.

2021 PGA Championship picks: Placings

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Wednesday at 11:40 a.m. ET.

Top 5: Tyrrell Hatton (+900)

Hatton shares the 20th-best odds to win at +5000, but he’s 18th in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings. This is a sign of value in a vacuum, but he’s also an excellent fit for the course

The Englishman is 10th on Tour in sand save percentage and fourth in Strokes Gained: Approach for the 2020-21 season.

Top 10: Shane Lowry (+700)

The Ocean Course, which runs entirely along the coastline of the Atlantic, shares many similarities to Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland, where Lowry won the 2019 Open Championship.

Harsh winds and some rain will play to Lowry’s favor if the course is playing longer and tougher than its already high standard. He made the cut in each of his four major appearances since the 2019 Open, and he finished eighth at The Players Championship in a very similar field. Both TPC Sawgrass and the Ocean Course were designed by Pete Dye.

2021 PGA Championship picks: Top player

Top American: Bryson DeChambeau (+900)

DeChambeau, the reigning US Open champ, shares the fourth-best odds to win, but he’s still third by the odds in this pool with McIlroy and Jon Rahm removed.

He’s No. 1 on Tour in driving distance and SG: Off-the-Tee per round. He also averages 0.48 SG: Putting per round.

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Top Asian: Si Woo Kim (+400)

Kim is just 99th on Tour in driving distance, but he’s ninth in par 4 efficiency: 450-500 yards, of which there are five such holes on the course. He won already this season, and he won The Players in 2017.

2021 PGA Championship picks: First-round leader

Keegan Bradley (+5000)

Bradley tied for third at the 2012 PGA Championship, albeit nine strokes back of McIlroy. He’s not the same golfer in 2021, but he has two runner-ups in 10 events this year and is seventh on Tour in Round 1 scoring average.

He’ll tee off at 8:17 a.m. ET Thursday morning and should get in the clubhouse before winds pick up in the afternoon.

Russell Henley (+10000)

Henley has a slightly less appealing 1:31 p.m. ET tee time but it’s always a good idea to have a little diversity in your first-round leader bets in case the weather doesn’t stick to the forecast.

Born in Georgia, he currently resides in Charleston, South Carolina, and has somewhat of a home course advantage this week. He’s tied for 19th on Tour in Round 1 scoring average and is second in bogey avoidance.

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Get some action on the 2021 PGA Championship by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com. Please gamble responsibly.

Follow @EstenMcLaren on Twitter. Follow SportsbookWire on Twitter and like us on Facebook.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage. This information is for entertainment purposes only. We make no representations or warranties as to the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any content.

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