Once Gabi Powel competed in a long drive contest (and hit a ball 350 yards) she was forever hooked

“It’s such an adrenaline rush. It’s a feeling of, ‘Let’s go!’ You get so much confidence from hitting one perfect.”

Gabi Powel was sitting in the crowd watching a golf exhibition in Bogota, Colombia, last spring when the announcer suddenly asked her to hit a few shots.

Powel nonchalantly grabbed her driver and –— to the amazement of the crowd — started smacking 300-yard-plus drives down the range.

“I love that kind of moment,” Powel said. “People are not expecting me to hit it nearly that far.”

Two years ago, Powel didn’t expect to be hitting a golf ball longer than the length of three football fields, either. The Jupiter, Florida, resident had been a top golfer at William T. Dwyer High School and Florida International University, who said she was known as a long hitter.

Powel realized she wasn’t good enough to play on the LPGA Tour, so she tried to stay in the game as a social media influencer and a mentor to young children.

Powel’s path changed when the Long Drive Tour came to Hobe Sound in early 2022. A fellow competitor, Antony Livingston, asked Powel if she would help promote the competition with social media posts. She did.

But when Powel showed up at the competition, Livingston had another request: Having seen her hit before, he encouraged Powel to enter the competition.

She did, finishing second, and a new career was launched.

“I instantly fell in love with it.”

Gabi Powel of the United States watches her ball during the preliminary qualifying round of the World Long Drive Championship at Bobby Jones Golf Course on October 20, 2023, in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images)

The question is, how far could she take this new endeavor of hitting the long ball?

The first thing she had to do was secure the proper driver to smash the ball. Most long-driving competitors use clubs that are 3 inches longer (48) than traditional drivers. Then it was building up strength and working on her technique.

“A lot of people don’t think I can hit the ball that far because I have a very long swing that kind of wraps around my body,” she said.

The key, as it is for any golfer, is not the swing but where the club strikes the ball.

“Center-face contact is most important,” Powel said.

Whatever she’s been doing, it’s been working. Powel was fifth last year at a long-drive contest in Japan, second at this year’s competition in Denver, where she hit a career-long 367-yard drive, and she was again fifth at last month’s Long Drive Competition in Atlanta.

“It was an awesome year,” Powel said, “and I feel like I’m just getting started.”

Powel also made news earlier this year when she was dating PGA Tour winner Andy Svensson, which allowed her to caddy for him in the Par-3 Tournament at Augusta National. She became anxious when Svensson, as most players do, asked Powel to hit a shot on the ninth hole.

“I was actually really nervous, but because I do a lot of charity work, it wasn’t the first time I had hit a ball in front of a lot of people,” she said.

Alas, her wedge sailed far over the green, but she saw a positive with the result. “It was on brand for being a long driver,” she said, smiling.

The two are no longer dating, but Powel keeps busy these days with training and working on the Forward Tees Foundation she and her friend, Hannah Leiner, started that “advances career opportunities for women through golf and beyond.”

Gabi Powel holds the flag for her then-boyfriend, Adam Svensson, during the Par 3 Contest at The Masters golf tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Rob Schumacher-USA TODAY Network

“We have an online mentorship program where young girls can talk to women who have played college golf and know the ins and outs,” Powel said.

Helping the next generation is wonderful, but there’s no better feeling for a long-drive professional than to hit one pure.

“It’s such an adrenaline rush,” Powel said. “It’s a feeling of, ‘Let’s go!’ You get so much confidence from hitting one perfect.”

And watching it disappear into the blue sky.

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World Long Drive sold to GF Sports and Entertainment; competitions return to TV in 2023 with bigger purses

World Long Drive is coming back to TV.

World Long Drive is coming back in 2023 and will be bigger and stronger than before.

GF Sports & Entertainment has acquired the World Long Drive IP, and the sport is set to return to TV on the Golf Channel with bigger purses and excitement.

The last couple of years have been a slow stretch for the sport of long drive. It was not televised during the COVID-19 pandemic when Golf Channel postponed and then canceled the season for World Long Drive. The players decided to pick up the baton and host events at One Stop Power Shop in North Carolina, which blossomed into the Professional Long Drivers Association.

The PLDA faced challenges of travel during COVID and finding advertising dollars within pandemic budgets, but it had the goal of keeping the sport alive. There are a lot of new names in the sport since the last televised event in 2019, and they feel it’s important to get the athletes in the right light and fans on board with the growing sport.

The 2023 WLD season with be comprised of 12 events domestically and more than 30 events internationally. Players will tee it up to win more than $1.1 million in cash prizes. Competitors will have the opportunity to qualify for the World Long Drive Championship at eight qualifying North American events, equating to 128 total qualifying spots.

The tour tees off March 10-12, in Mesquite, Nevada. The Championship will be Oct. 18-22 at Bobby Jones Golf Course in Atlanta.

“World Long Drive is exciting, challenging and fun,” said professional golfer and 2022 PLDA Championship runner-up Bryson DeChambeau. “I started long drive to increase my swing speed, and then I got addicted to hitting it farther and farther. I’m looking forward to qualifying for Atlanta and competing on a national stage in 2023.”

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Volvik World Long Drive Championship  (Photo by: Cy Cyr/Golf Channel)

Amateur level competitors from all over the world aspiring to join the tour will have the opportunity to qualify at various ranges to make it to the grand stage of the championship. This grows the sport in inclusivity, as it will give competitors from 18 different countries the opportunity to compete in the established league.

“To say I am thrilled for World Long Drive to be returning to television is an understatement,” said 2019 World Long Drive Champion Kyle Berkshire. “The sport and its athletes deserve to be showcased on this platform, and I am excited for all of us to deliver many memorable moments and storylines to the viewers over the years to come.”

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What’s it like battling for the largest purse in women’s long drive history? Our Averee Dovsek went to Japan to find out

The 2022 Ladies World Long Drive Championship event was held at Nasu Ogawa Golf Club in Japan with a $100,000 purse from Sept. 7-9.

I don’t find myself nervous often, but when I do it’s typically for a good reason.

In fact, it takes a lot to shake up my emotions, but at 4 o’clock in the morning just prior to the 2022 Ladies World Long Drive Championship, my thoughts were overwhelming.

I’ve competed in long drive events before, but nothing came close to the magnitude of this one. This was not a typical long drive competition format, but one to make it into an official list of the top 32 female long drive competitors in the world.

I had the honor of traveling to Japan this last week for the championship hosted by Professional Long Drivers Association and Japan Professional Dracon Association.

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The event was held at Nasu Ogawa Golf Club in Nakagawa-cho, Japan, from Sept. 7-9.

And the purse? It was a whopping $100,000 — the largest in women’s long drive history. Again, the nerves were justified.

Upon arrival, a shuttle picked us up and took us to the Nanpeidai Onset Hotel, near the course. The JPDA wanted us to experience the Japanese culture and each of our rooms had cushions on the floor to sleep on. Not the most ideal sleeping situation for athletes who weren’t used to the traditional accommodations, but we adjusted quickly. They fed us traditional Japanese cuisine and had kimonos for us to wear to dinner.

The format for the competition was a round-robin where each player had 2:30 to hit six golf balls. The goal was to get three out of the six balls in the 60-yard wide grid. Each player would get points based on how they finished within their games of four players.

This format put many players at a disadvantage. Long drive competitors train to hit the ball as fast and far as possible. Having to get three out of six balls in the grid had players changing their swings to hit in the grid every time. This dropped distances significantly,

For example, if a player were to hit two 300-yard drives but another competitor hit three 230-yard drives, the player with three drives in the grid would win. This format defeated past world champions such as Phillis Meti and Sandra Carlborg.

Top 3 of the 2022 Ladies World Long Drive Championship
Top 3 of the 2022 Ladies World Long Drive Championship. (JPDA)

Japanese competitor Sara Owada won the competition with an average of 258.7 yards in the final game. These numbers came as a disappointment to many long drive competitors as the format did not let the true nature of the sport shine.

I failed to make it to the second day, but the experience was incredible — the opportunity to compete in Japan and experience the wonderful culture and food was one I’ll never forget.

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Professional Long Drivers Association owner says Bryson DeChambeau to have surgery, according to report

After battling injuries for most of 2022, Bryson DeChambeau is reportedly going under the knife.

Bryson DeChambeau has battled injury for most of 2022. Before the WGC-Dell Match Play in March, the No. 19-ranked player in the world said he had suffered a fractured hamate bone in his left hand and a torn labrum in his left hip.

During his news conference before the 2022 Masters, he was asked about participating in this week’s Professional Long Drivers Association event in Florida.

“I’m reconsidering,” said DeChambeau, “I’m trying, but it may not be the smartest thing.”

Ultimately, he’s decided against it.

According to Bobby Peterson, one of the owners of the PLDA, the 28-year-old withdrew from the event due to an upcoming surgery.

“He’s going to have surgery on Thursday,’’ Peterson told SI.com. “It’s unfortunate more for him. I hate that he’s not going to the event. But I hate it more for him. Obviously, it’s not good or he wouldn’t be doing that. I know he was trying to avoid it, but I guess he felt it was something he had to do.’’

DeChambeau played in the Masters despite being advised not to by his doctors. He went on to miss the cut just a week after missing the weekend at the Valero Texas Open.

An official announcement has yet to be made and his status for next month’s PGA Championship at Southern Hills is up in the air.

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Bryson DeChambeau blasts his way into final day of long-drive World Championship

The biggest hitter on the PGA Tour shows he can compete with anybody when it comes to the long ball.

Forget experience. Forget the faster hitters. Forget the social media naysayers.

All that matters: Bryson DeChambeau advanced to the final day of the Professional Long Drivers Association’s World Championship in Mesquite, Nevada Thursday. The same Bryson DeChambeau who four days earlier helped the U.S. team claim the Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin.

With gusty, erratic winds blowing into the players’ faces, the 2020 U.S. Open champion – at golf golf, not long-drive – won two of his first four sets against three other competitors to lock up one of 16 total spots on Friday’s final day of competition.

Players competed for points in five sets, with an early-afternoon group of 16 players competing for eight spots and a late-afternoon group of 16 competing for eight more spots in the final field. DeChambeau was in the late-afternoon group, and he finished tied for fourth among those 16 long-ball bashers to advance.

DeChambeau’s longest blasts in each of the five sets traveled 358, 338, 359, 333 and 333 yards. His drives of 358 and then 359 were among the top five balls hit by all 16 competitors in his group.

Those blasts into the wind were quite a bit shorter than on Day 1, when DeChambeau hit five balls past 400 yards. But long is relative in this muscled-up sport, and none of Thursday’s 32 competitors hit anything close to 400 into the breeze. After Tuesday’s favorable winds on Day 1, the 64 competitors who made it to Wednesday’s Day 2 also faced headwinds.

Those winds have proved favorable to DeChambeau, who doesn’t swing as fast as several of his competitors. But dead-solid contact with a controlled ball flight can pay off into the breeze. DeChambeau’s Trackman launch monitor numbers, when available, have been impressive – his best ball in his fifth set came with 144-mph clubhead speed, 213-mph ball speed, 227 yards of carry and a peak height of 121 feet to travel 333 yards total into the breeze off the right, as reported by the YouTube commentators during the livestream. The ball rolled considerably down the dryer right side of the landing grid.

None of DeChambeau’s long-ball success should be a total shock, even if the 28-year-old faced some social media criticism before the event that this is all a publicity stunt and he was going to be out of his league. He has proved those doubters wrong day after day in Mesquite in his first effort at elite long-drive competition, crushing the ball past much more experienced long-ball veterans.

DeChambeau led the PGA Tour in the recently concluded 2020-21 season with a 323.7-yard driving average, and his longest drive on Tour in that season was 414 yards. His average measured clubhead speed on drives was 132.25 mph, but he has said he can go faster in training and has backed that up at the World Championship. The top players in elite long-drive competitions frequently surpass 140 mph in clubhead speed, and DeChambeau showed he can get it past that 140 mark on the launch monitor in competition.

Keep in mind, all this is new to DeChambeau, winner of eight PGA Tour events. He even has a new club in his hands to max out his yardage. He’s swinging a 48-inch Cobra RADSpeed driver with an LA Golf Tour AXS Blue shaft – designed to create a low-spin, low-loft launch – that has been tipped an inch, making it even stiffer. On Tour he normally swings a Cobra driver that is less than 46 inches and much easier to control.

The longest drive of Day 2 came from Wes Patterson, who sent one 381 yards in the early-afternoon group. Colton Casto and Kyle Berkshire, the defending champion after winning the event in 2019 and with the 2020 competition having been canceled because of COVID-19, both hit balls 380 in that same Group A.

The longest drives in DeChambeau’s Group B came from Scottie Pearman and Martin Borgmeier, both of whom reached 367 yards. Ryan Steenberg hit one 361 in the same group.

The players who qualified out of Group A were Justin James, Casto, Bryce Verplank, Berkshire, Brandon Flynn, Patterson, Hyeon Jun Hong and Josh Koch. In Group B the players to advance were Ryan Steenberg, Borgmeier, Zack Holton, Nick Vorbeck, Ryan Gregnol, Pearman, DeChambeau and Taiga Tazawa of China, whose celebratory antics have gained fans on social media.

Friday’s final will progress from group play to a head-to-head match between two players to lock up the title. The finals begin at 6:45 p.m. ET (3:45 local time) and will be livestreamed on the PLDA YouTube channel.

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Bryson DeChambeau thrives in gusty winds to advance to Day 3 of long-drive World Championship

The PGA Tour’s longest hitter lives to bash another day, finishing second in his group to advance to Thursday’s round of 32.

After blasting five balls beyond 400 yards on Tuesday’s opening day of the Professional Long Drivers Association’s World Championship, Bryson DeChambeau ran into a mean headwind Wednesday.

Didn’t matter. Long is relative, and all 64 players struggled on Day 2 as gusts blew across the grid in Mesquite, Nevada, keeping every player in the field under 385 yards.

And despite it being just his second day of long-drive competition, DeChambeau managed to finish in second place in points in his group to advance to Thursday’s round of 32. The top eight players in each of the four groups moved on.

Next up: Those 32 who advanced will keep swinging Thursday, with the top 16 making it to Friday’s final round, when a world champion will be crowned. Players will compete for points in three groups Thursday, with the top 5 in each group advancing, as well as one player not in the top 5 in his group but who survives a wild-card round.

DeChambeau – the 2020 U.S. Open champion – saw his longest drive Wednesday sail 355 yards into the gusty headwinds, 57 yards shorter than his longest blast of 412 yards Tuesday. But that kind of wind might give the PGA Tour star and seventh-ranked player in the world – at golf golf, not long-ball – a bit of an advantage in his quest to make Friday’s final 16.

Relatively speaking in comparison to much of the long-drive field, DeChambeau is accustomed to playing shots, not just bashing balls. If a player swings slightly slower and produces less speed than his rivals but manages to control the spin on the ball and nail the perfect trajectory, his shots might bound past his competitors’. And in a weird twist of the universe, in this long-ball field DeChambeau is actually one of the more accurate drivers, landing most of his shots on the grid.

All this could play to DeChambeau’s strengths as the competition moves into Day 3. If the wind blows into the players again and the fastest swingers struggle to keep balls from spinning too much and missing the grid, DeChambeau could continue to pass dedicated long-ball specialists with much more experience.

Keep in mind, all this is new to DeChambeau, winner of eight PGA Tour events. He even has a new club in his hands to max out his yardage. He’s swinging a 48-inch Cobra RADSpeed driver with an LA Golf Tour AXS Blue shaft – designed to create a low-spin, low-loft launch – that has been tipped an inch, making it even stiffer. On Tour he normally swings a Cobra driver that is less than 46 inches and much easier to control.

43rd Ryder Cup
Bryson DeChambeau helped the American team win the Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin on Sunday before switching modes for the Professional Long Drivers Association’s World Championship in Nevada. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

Win or lose, or even fail to qualify for Friday’s final round, the longest player on the PGA Tour in the recently concluded 2020-21 season seemed to be enjoying the basher-fest. He kept pumping up the crowd as his group kept slashing, waving his arms for the crowd to make some noise. It was reminiscent of the high-energy workout videos DeChambeau has posted to social media, trying to build as much energy as possible with a boost of noise.

It’s worth noting, this is the same DeChambeau who helped the U.S. team lock up a victory in the Ryder Cup on Sunday at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin. Again, that was real golf. Long-ball is entirely different – instead of laying his putter down in complaint about a putt that isn’t conceded in match play, the 28-year-old can leave the flatstick at home.

It’s no surprise, of course, that DeChambeau is long. He led the PGA Tour in the 2021 season with a 323.7-yard driving average. His longest drive on Tour in that season was 414 yards. His average measured clubhead speed on drives was 132.25 mph, but he has said he can go faster in training. The top players in elite long-drive competitions frequently surpass 140 mph in clubhead speed.

The best ball Wednesday came from Jim Waldron, who blasted one 384 yards when the wind slowed just a bit for Group C during the early afternoon. It was a far cry from Tuesday when dozens of balls sailed past 400 yards.

Kyle Berkshire, the defending champion after winning the event in 2019 and the 2020 competition having been canceled because of COVID-19, had the longest drive in Group A on Wednesday, sending a ball 328 yards into a stiff breeze across the morning’s relatively damp grid. For comparison’s sake, Berkshire hit the longest ball Tuesday, a 455-yarder. That’s a 127-yard difference based mainly on wind direction.

And despite his recent dominance of long-drive, Berkshire took time during Wednesday’s livestream of the event on Youtube to praise DeChambeau.

“What he’s doing is obviously wonderful for the sport,” Berkshire said, as reported by PGATour.com. “He’s a good guy. He has a very altruistic desire to help the sport out. It’s great to have someone appreciate what the guys can do out here. He took a big leap of faith and put himself in a vulnerable position to compete out here, and he’s backed it up with his performance. He’s doing the PGA Tour really proud. …

“If he comes out and wins a set or two tomorrow, which I think he can do especially getting so many balls in play, he absolutely has a great chance to advance further.”

Watch: Bryson DeChambeau opens long-drive eyes with 412-yard blast in World Championship

The PGA Tour’s longest driver advances through first-day round play at Professional Long Drivers Association’s top event in Mesquite.

How far can Bryson DeChambeau take the long ball? Maybe longer than many considered possible for a legit PGA Tour player, as he repeatedly blew past 400 yards Tuesday at the Professional Long Drivers Association’s World Championship.

Fresh off the United States’ victory Sunday in the Ryder Cup, where DeChambeau flexed by driving the green on the par-4 opener in his singles match en route to accumulating a 2-0-1 record at Whistling Straits, the PGA Tour’s longest hitter showed even more power at the Professional Long Drivers Association’s World Championship.

DeChambeau, who received a special invitation to the World Championship in Mesquite, Nevada, advanced out of the first round of group qualifying with a longest blast of 412 yards. With each competitor swinging away in five sets of six balls each, DeChambeau finished second in his group to advance.

Despite some criticism on social media about this being a publicity stunt, DeChambeau showed Tuesday that he’s legit against the long-ball game’s best. Most players in the event didn’t sniff 400 yards Tuesday.

Sixteen players made up each of five groups of qualifying hopefuls, with 12 players advancing to Wednesday’s rounds of competition. Those 60 players will combine with four more from a round-robin to make up Wednesday’s 64-man field, which will compete in four groups to try to make it to Thursday and eventually Friday’s final round.

With his 30 total shots spread across five sets, DeChambeau hit five balls past 400 yards, with the longest of 412 coming in his fourth set. His shortest drive that counted went 355, and 21 of his shots found the grid that players must hit for the shot to count.

DeChambeau led the PGA Tour in the recently completed 2021 season with a 323.7-yard driving average. His longest drive on Tour in that season was 414 yards. His average measured clubhead speed on drives was 132.25 mph, but he has said he can go faster in training when he doesn’t have to worry about where the ball might land. The top players in elite long-drive competitions frequently surpass 140 mph in clubhead speed.

DeChambeau’s most impressive drive of 2021 might have come at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, where he cleared a lake with a 377-yard tee shot on the par-5 sixth hole at Bay Hill.

And all those stats came with a driver made for Tour use. It’s likely he’s using a maxed-out driver at 48 inches long for the World Championship, where balls off the landing grid don’t lead to double bogeys. Details on his long-drive clubs were not yet available.

In DeChambeau’s group of 16 players Tuesday, only four other players managed to send a ball past 400 yards, with Josh Cassaday leading the way with a 417-yard blast. DeChambeau managed to hit four of the group’s 11 total balls that traveled more than 400 yards in finishing second in the points for the group, trailing in points only Scottie Pearman, whose longest shot went 413 yards.

With the final two groups still swinging away and the day’s results not complete, Zack Holton had the longest drive of the day, a 419-yarder in a different group than DeChambeau. Kyle Berkshire, the defending champion after winning the event in 2019 and the 2020 competition having been canceled because of COVID-19, hit a shot of 409 yards in the first set and had 24 balls left at the time of this report.

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