Danny Lee tweets apology after six-putt and early exit at last week’s U.S. Open

By Tuesday, Lee, the 30-year-old New Zealander with one career PGA Tour title, had spoken out about his four-putt and WD at the U.S. Open.

Danny Lee made an early exit from the U.S. Open at Winged Foot Golf Club on Saturday evening – one culminating with a six-putt from 4 feet on the 18th green for a quadruple-bogey 8. After that, Lee withdrew from the championship, citing a wrist injury, and left the property.

Video of Lee’s putting melt-down didn’t surface until the next day, but it shows a golfer at his wit’s end. (Haven’t we all been there?)

By Tuesday, Lee, the 30-year-old New Zealander with one career PGA Tour title, spoke about his six-putt and withdrawal. He posted a statement to Twitter apologizing for his actions.

In the Tweet, Lee pledged to think about his actions and use it to get better.

“I apologize for my poor actions at (the) U.S. Open at week. It was very unprofessional and foolish. Obviously hurts lots of my fans and followers and my sponsors out there,” Lee wrote in part. “My frustration took over me and combined with injury I had to fight with it all week. … I shouldn’t have left it like that.”

It’s a frustrating game – even, as it turns out, for the professionals.

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Will Zalatoris cashes in, surpasses Korn Ferry season earnings at U.S. Open

Will Zalatoris made $403,978 in 16 Korn Ferry Tour starts this year. Then he tied for sixth at Winged Foot and earned $424,040.

Will Zalatoris made $403,978 in 16 Korn Ferry Tour starts this year, establishing himself as the best—and most handsomely paid—player on that circuit. The 24-year old thus earned a spot in the all-exempt field at the 2020 U.S. Open, where he finished T-6 alongside world No. 1 Dustin Johnson.

For breaking into the top 10 by carding 5-over par last weekend, Zalatoris more than matched his Korn Ferry Tour season earnings with a check for $424,040. He also received an exemption for next year’s U.S. Open at Torrey Pines.

“It was a great experience,” Zalatoris said about his U.S. Open effort. “I’ve been playing well all year. I just found out that obviously top 10 gets us into next year too, so that’s obviously pretty exciting.”

Zalatoris turned heads with his hole-in-one on Thursday at the 7th hole, accomplishing the feat roughly six hours after Patrick Reed did the same. He almost did it again at the 13th, only to have his ball ricochet off the flagstick.

Far from being a one-hit wonder, Zalatoris battled Winged Foot all weekend, shooting 70-71 over the final two rounds on a difficult golf course that saw many of his opponents lose ground. The wiry San Francisco native clawed up the leaderboard to finish neck-and-neck with Johnson, this year’s FedEx Cup champion.

“I’ve been really working hard over the past couple of years, and nice to finally see it pay off on the big stage,” Zalatoris said.

“Pay off” is right.

Zalatoris will now attempt to keep the momentum going. He has finished T-19 or better in all 11 starts since golf returned in June, including six top-5 results and a win at the TPC Colorado Championship at Heron Lakes.

Due to pandemic-necessitated changes to the qualifying process, Zalatoris will likely have to wait until the 2021-22 season to see full-time action on the PGA Tour. However, he will start at this week’s Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship in the Dominican Republic, where a victory would earn him automatic PGA Tour status.

“I’m playing Puntacana (this) week. We’ve got two more events on the Korn Ferry Tour between now and the end of the year,” said Zalatoris. “Hopefully I’ll get a couple more (PGA) Tour starts between now and the end of the year.”

As long as he keeps doing what he’s doing, PGA Tour fans are going to see a lot more of Will Zalatoris in the future.

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Bryson DeChambeau’s journey to become a U.S. Open champion was born…under a tent

Bryson DeChambeau developed his unique way of playing golf under a beat up tent in Madera, California under the tutelage of Mike Schy.

On Saturday night, when Golf Channel showed video of Bryson DeChambeau hitting balls under floodlights, 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 playoffs began. DeChambeau arrived back home at the Mike Schy Golf Performance Institute headquartered at Dragonfly 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 fix for him, and to give up his fix 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 first 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 floodlights.

“I told everybody on Thursday that he would win,” Schy says shortly after DeChambeau holed out for a final-round 3-under 67 and six-stroke victory over Matthew Wolff. “Bryson called me on Tuesday and told me he’d figured 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 first three holes and I knew he was going to win.”

Mike Schy with an assortment of his homemade gadgets and training aids. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

Schy watched the broadcast from home as DeChambeau validated all their hard work. He considered flying to New York before the final 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 confidants 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. “I told him, I’m a Golfing Machine instructor. There are 13 million swings so pick one and trust it’s the right way for you. You have to own this 100 percent because there are going to be people who are going to crap on you every day. And they did. There have been rough times, but that’s all part of the journey.”

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Even now that DeChambeau has achieved the ultimate validation in winning a major, Schy doesn’t expect DeChambeau’s triumph to inspire a revolution of followers rivaling that of Tiger Woods winning the 1997 Masters. Not immediately, anyway. It will take time for DeChambeau’s principles to be accepted.

“Do I think it will change? I do. I think people will view what he’s done and say I need to evaluate it. Even after today, they’re probably going to say, eh, that worked for him but that’s it,” Schy says. “There will eventually be a groundswell and it will happen over time.”

Schy still isn’t sold on the DeChambeau diet and the way he has bulked up, but he trusts DeChambeau’s team of experts who treat him like the elite athlete that he is.

“He’s a beast when he works out,” Schy says.

Hitting bombs was always part of the plan. “We used to say that we want to be like Jack Nicklaus. We want to hit it to the moon and have it land soft,” Schy says.

But he argues that’s not what has made DeChambeau into a major champion. Schy says DeChambeau has become such a dramatically better putter. He remembers the time in January 2018 when DeChambeau snapped his putter and dragged it behind his car to teach it a lesson after a particularly frustrating performance at the Farmers Insurance Open.

“I don’t know if I ever believed that he would be one of the best putters in the world,” he says.

At an early age, Schy recognized that DeChambeau’s inquisitive mind was one of his greatest assets. He’s never been afraid to go down a rabbit hole, test something new and different, and challenge the status quo.

“He’s been that way since he was a kid,” Schy says. “For him, the more numbers he has the better he feels. Give him 100 numbers and he’s happy. Give him 1 and tell him you’re not sure about the others and he’d rather shoot you. People don’t understand that about him. It’s about feeling comfortable. For him the more information he has, the better he feels.”

As for DeChambeau’s many quirks, Schy shakes his head and says, “We call it the Bryson Way.”

Now, the Bryson Way is major-championship proven. Validating? Sure. But the mad scientist is far from done shaking things up. He’s already talking about a 48-inch driver and adding more bulk to his frame. He’s going to continue to tinker and pursue greatness; that, too, is the Bryson Way.

“We’re still crazy, just remember,” Schy says.

They wouldn’t have it any other way.

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Bryson DeChambeau tears up when his parents surprised him after his U.S. Open win

Bryson DeChambeau was surprised outside the clubhouse at the U.S. Open and saw his parents and family on a video call.

Bryson DeChambeau, the protein-drinking, weight-lifting golfer who has become the villain the PGA Tour needs, won the biggest golf tournament of his life on Sunday when he ran away from the field at the U.S. Open with a six-stroke victory at Winged Foot.

DeChambeau, who has changed the game of golf since changing the way his body looks during quarantine, used his incredible length off the tee and muscle to get shots out of the rough, now has one major championship to his resume and has to be the favorite to win the Masters in November.

After his final round on Sunday, DeChambeau was surprised when he turned the corner outside the clubhouse and saw his parents and family on a video call.

He instantly got emotional:

DeChambeau told his parents he loved them as he walked up the 18th fairway on Sunday:

Winner’s Bag: Bryson DeChambeau wins 2020 U.S. Open

In this week’s Winner’s Bag, Golfweek’s David Dusek takes a look inside Bryson DeChambeau’s golf bag after DeChambeau wins the 120th U.S. Open at Winged Foot.

In this week’s Winner’s Bag, Golfweek’s David Dusek takes a look inside Bryson DeChambeau’s golf bag after DeChambeau wins the 120th U.S. Open at Winged Foot.

How much money each golfer won at the U.S. Open at Winged Foot

Check out the prize money earned by each player this week at the 120th U.S. Open at Winged Foot Golf Club.

Bulked-up mad scientist Bryson DeChambeau can now add “major champion” to his list of titles.

DeChambeau was the lone player under par at the 120th U.S. Open, running away with his first major title at 6 under par thanks to a final-round 3-under 67 (the lone round under par on Sunday). Matthew Wolff finished second at even, followed by Louis Oosthuizen in third at 2 over, Harris English in fourth at 3 over and Xander Schauffele in fifth at 4 over.

The win earned the 27-year-old the $2.25 million top prize, making him the 83rd player in PGA Tour history to break the $20 million mark for on-course earnings. Check out how much money each player earned this week at the 120th U.S. Open at Winged Foot.


U.S. Open: Leaderboard | Best photos | Winner’s bag


Prize money

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Bryson DeChambeau -6 $2,250,000
2 Matthew Wolff Even $1,350,000
3 Louis Oosthuizen 2 $861,457
4 Harris English 3 $603,903
5 Xander Schauffele 4 $502,993
T6 Dustin Johnson 5 $424,040
T6 Will Zalatoris 5 $424,040
T8 Tony Finau 6 $302,236
T8 Justin Thomas 6 $302,236
T8 Webb Simpson 6 $302,236
T8 Rory McIlroy 6 $302,236
T8 Zach Johnson 6 $302,236
T13 Lee Westwood 7 $210,757
T13 Adam Long 7 $210,757
T13 Patrick Reed 7 $210,757
T13 Viktor Hovland 7 $210,757
T17 Jason Kokrak 8 $157,931
T17 Paul Casey 8 $157,931
T17 Lucas Glover 8 $157,931
T17 Alexander Noren 8 $157,931
T17 Hideki Matsuyama 8 $157,931
22 Sungjae Im 9 $129,407
T23 Erik van Rooyen 10 $101,797
T23 Taylor Pendrith 10 $101,797
T23 Jon Rahm 10 $101,797
T23 Brendon Todd 10 $101,797
T23 Thomas Pieters 10 $101,797
T23 Joaquin Niemann 10 $101,797
T23 Rafael Cabrera Bello 10 $101,797
30 Charles Howell III 11 $83,422
T31 Lucas Herbert 12 $75,649
T31 Renato Paratore 12 $75,649
T31 Bubba Watson 12 $75,649
T34 Tyler Duncan 13 $64,024
T34 Stephan Jaeger 13 $64,024
T34 Romain Langasque 13 $64,024
T34 Daniel Berger 13 $64,024
T38 Cameron Smith 14 $52,074
T38 Jason Day 14 $52,074
T38 Brian Harman 14 $52,074
T38 Adam Scott 14 $52,074
T38 Billy Horschel 14 $52,074
T43 Shane Lowry 15 $39,275
T43 Patrick Cantlay 15 $39,275
T43 Bernd Wiesberger 15 $39,275
T43 Matt Wallace 15 $39,275
T43 Lanto Griffin 15 $39,275
48 Michael Thompson 16 $38,254
T49 Rickie Fowler 17 $30,312
T49 Thomas Detry 17 $30,312
T51 John Pak 18 Amateur
T51 Chesson Hadley 18 $28,563
T51 Ryo Ishikawa 18 $28,563
54 Adam Hadwin 19 $27,720
55 Christiaan Bezuidenhout 20 $27,461
T56 Abraham Ancer 21 $27,073
T56 Robert MacIntyre 21 $27,073
58 Troy Merritt 22 $26,684
T59 Rory Sabbatini 24 $26,296
T59 Sebastian Munoz 24 $26,296
61 Shugo Imahira 25 $25,901

Lynch: Bryson DeChambeau fancies himself a scientist, but he won the U.S. Open as a game-changing worker bee

Bryson DeChambeau single-mindedness might have been the biggest factor in determining the U.S. Open winner at Winged Foot.

MAMARONECK, N.Y. — It shouldn’t be a surprise that a championship that prizes a metronomic style of golf — fairway, green, rinse, repeat — should fall to golf’s most metronomic player, but the U.S. Open victory of Bryson DeChambeau illuminated the extent to which modern power golf, and the tools with which it is played, have neutered what was once the most formidable test in the game.

In adopting a scientific approach to every aspect of his game, DeChambeau expects his carefully (some might say laboriously) calculated input to deliver a predictable output, which is an awfully high happiness bar to set in a sport that is hostage to the vagaries of chance, bounce and weather. Such a mindset would seem to guarantee frustration, and frustration is the very stress fracture that the U.S. Open is designed to locate, from which it will then prise a man open until it exposes every other weakness he didn’t think he had.

But that kind of U.S. Open is now a relic of a bygone era, one when courses were characters in the narrative and none evoked more fear than Winged Foot. Strategy is now dictated not by course architects but by player preference. The main peril DeChambeau faced at Winged Foot would come from a potential swing screw-up, not the USGA’s course set-up. Limit the former and the latter doesn’t matter. He did, and it didn’t.

Sunday’s final pairing was an intoxicating juxtaposition of style and temperament. Matthew Wolff carries himself with the cheery nonchalance of one blessed with youth, talent and good looks. His golf swing is all flailing limbs and shuffling feet, suggestive of a man trying to shake loose a wasp trapped in his pants. DeChambeau, on the other hand, has an almost endearing awkwardness to his personality, as though it too has been as carefully constructed as his swing. He squares up to the ball with all the fluidity of rigor mortis, as though waiting motionless for the wasp to exit his pants — to get crushed.

Eamon Lynch

Before the round, Wolff warmed up with just his caddie on the practice range. DeChambeau marched in trailed by an army of hangers-on and sporting more technical firepower than the Marines had at Khe Sanh. He ripped a succession of tee shots with a force and trajectory that might have unnerved pilots approaching Westchester County Airport. He was on the range after dark Saturday night, and he brought the same intense rigor to every shot during Sunday’s final round. DeChambeau is all about power, not pace, and studies his little guidebook (emblazoned with B.A.D.) as carefully as a condemned man reads a last-minute communique from the governor.

But for all the mockery he is subjected to (some of it deserved), it bears noting that while there are plenty of golfers on the PGA Tour more talented than DeChambeau, there isn’t one who can be bothered to outwork him. That reality will one day be altered — by life, relationships, family, physical frailty — but for now, he is the most single-minded man in golf.

He is also the most polarizing man in the game, which is an estimable achievement in the era of Patrick Reed. His occasional absence of self-awareness and hints of narcissism rankle fans. His contention that he is essentially reinventing the game doesn’t win popularity contests in the locker room, suggesting as it does that his peers aren’t smart enough to have done it themselves. But there’s truth there.

DeChambeau has reinvented the game, and his impact will only grow. He will prompt a reimagining of what constitutes a modern U.S. Open test. He will hasten a reckoning with untrammeled equipment advances. He will force a rethinking of PGA Tour marketing, which still cleaves to a vanilla presentation of players that doesn’t engage modern, fickle audiences. And he will revolutionize how future generations of aspiring Tour pros develop. He is, simply put, the most important player in golf. He was that even before he won at Winged Foot.

This was not the most thrilling of major championships, but then U.S. Opens are typically as repetitive as NASCAR races, as competitors try to dodge disasters and fans eagerly await a crash. Leaderboard charges seldom occur, at least not in an upward direction. This is a tournament in which standing still has long been celebrated as advancement, but what we witnessed from DeChambeau at Winged Foot represents real advancement, not all of which will or should sit easily with golf’s many constituencies.

Let it be the final indignity of the COVID era that the man who most animates golf fans claimed his seminal victory in front of a smattering of volunteers and officials, and had to celebrate via video call with his parents.

Just another way in which this U.S. Open — and this U.S. Open champion — is quite unlike the 119 that preceded it.

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Bryson DeChambeau wins 120th U.S. Open at Winged Foot as lone player under par

Bryson DeChambeau was the lone player under par at the 120th U.S. Open, winning his first major championship at 6 under.

The quest for distance has now produced a major championship.

After adding 40 pounds of muscle, the bulked-up Bryson DeChambeau flexed his muscles and won the 120th U.S. Open with a strong performance on Sunday, claiming his first major title at 6 under for the tournament with a 3-under 67 in the final round at Winged Foot Golf Club in Mamaroneck, New York.

DeChambeau was the only player to finish the tournament under par and his Sunday 67 was the lone score under par in the final round.

Rising star Matthew Wolff, who held a two-shot lead entering the final round, fizzled throughout the finale en route to a dimming 5-over 75 and a second-place finish at even par.

U.S. Open: Leaderboard | Best photos

After the two contenders made a pair of eagle putts on the par-5 9th hole, Wolff made the turn at 1 over, one shot back from DeChambeau, who turned at 2 under.

Wolff bogeyed No. 10 to go two down, then DeChambeau made birdie on No. 11 to go up three shots. The lucky breaks Wolff admittedly received on Saturday DeChambeau received on Sunday, specifically off the tee on the par-5 12th. DeChambeau’s drive landed in the rough and kicked out to the fairway. Wolff hit almost the exact same shot, different result, nestling down in the rough. Both players would make par on Nos. 12 and 13.

In fact, DeChambeau made par on his closing seven holes.

Wolff failed to go on a last-minute charge, making bogey on No. 14 and double on No. 16 for a disappointing finish to an impressive weeklong performance.

With the win, DeChambeau joined Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods as the only players to win the U.S. Open, U.S. Amateur and NCAA Div. I individual championship.

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Winner’s Bag: Bryson DeChambeau, 2020 U.S. Open

Bryson DeChambeau, the 2020 U.S. Open champion, has a set up that is different than every other player. See all his clubs at Winged Foot.

Here is a complete list of the golf equipment Bryson DeChambeau used to win the 120th U.S. Open at Winged Foot Golf Club. For clarity, we have included the clubs’ lengths, because not only are all of his irons the same length, DeChambeau’s fairway woods both have modified 3-wood heads fitted on different length shafts.

DRIVER: Cobra King Speedzone (5.5 degrees), with LAGP BAD prototype 60X shaft, 45.5 inches long

FAIRWAY WOODS: King Speedzone Tour (11.5 degrees), with LAGP BAD prototype 70X shaft, 43 inches long; (17.5 degrees), with LAGP BAD prototype 70X shaft, 41 inches long

IRONS: Cobra King Speedzone One Length (3, 4), King Forged Tour ONE Length (6-PW), with LAGP Graphite Rebar prototype shafts, each is 37.7 inches long

WEDGES: Artisan prototype (47, 53, 58 degrees), with LAGP Rebar prototype shafts

PUTTER: SIK prototype

BALL: Bridgestone Tour B

GRIPS: Jumbo Max Tour