Nicknamed ‘The Project’ in college, Kurt Kitayama blossomed into a PGA Tour winner at 2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational

Seeking his first PGA Tour victory, Kitayama couldn’t help wondering if, as he put it, “here we go again.”

Kurt Kitayama sensed his grip on the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard title slipping from his grasp. He had just hooked his tee shot out of bounds at the ninth hole at Bay Hill Lodge & Club in the final round on March 5, 2023, and suffered a triple bogey. The lead, which he had owned almost since the start, had evaporated and he suddenly trailed by a stroke.

“I thought I had lost it,” he recounted in late January.

Seeking his first PGA Tour victory, Kitayama couldn’t help wondering if, as he put it, “here we go again,” and in his head questioned, “Am I ever going to win out here?” But Kitayama silenced that negativity and righted the ship. He carded eight hard-earned pars and a clutch birdie at 17 on the back nine to shoot even-par 72 and outlast co-runner-ups Rory McIlroy and Harris English, among a star-studded leaderboard, by a single stroke to take home the biggest victory of his career.

“Look at him, look at his smile,” caddie Tim Tucker told reporters afterwards. “He got the monkey off his back, proving he can play with the big boys.”

2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational
Kurt Kitayama shakes hands with his caddie Tim Tucker after winning the 2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational in Orlando. (Photo: John Raoux/Associated Press)

A never-give-up attitude has been a key ingredient in Kitayama’s rise through the golf ranks. He first started playing golf at age 5, tagging along after his older brother, who would go on to play college golf at Hawaii-Hilo. “I just loved it,” he said, noting that what initially put him on the map was his success at the 2009 Junior Worlds at Torrey Pines in San Diego, where he shot 3 under in the third round to grab the lead.

“I got to the first tee for the final round and I looked around and saw all these college coaches watching me,” Kitayama recalled. “I was like, ‘Whoa.’ That was eye-opening.”

From Chico High in the northern Sacramento Valley, where he starred in both basketball and golf, Kitayama joined UNLV’s golf program. His game, however, was raw in comparison to his teammates when he showed up at UNLV in 2011, where they called Kitayama “The Project.”

“I don’t think he was very good at anything,” said J.C. Deacon, men’s golf coach at the University of Florida and Kitayama’s swing coach since 2017.

Back then, Deacon was an assistant at UNLV during Kitayama’s four years there and recalled that Kitayama could barely break 75 upon his arrival. Then-coach Dwaine Knight recognized his potential and loved his grit.

“He just worked so hard,” Deacon continued. “You tell him something to do and he’d be out there for 10 hours doing it. He always outworked whatever you asked of him.”

That tenacity and perseverance served Kitayama well when he struggled on the Korn Ferry Tour in 2017 and instead went seeking a place to play wherever that happened to take him. Fellow aspiring pro and current PGA Tour member David Lipsky suggested he give the Asian Tour a shot.

“I figured why not,” Kitayama said.

The 31-year-old Kitayama has taken the road less traveled to success in the professional ranks, playing tournaments on 14 different tours worldwide while steadily improving his game.

2018 AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open
Kurt Kitayama poses with the trophy after winning the 2018 AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open at the Four Seasons Golf Club. (Photo: Warren Little/Getty Images)

“Not finding success early here was, yeah, it’s disappointing, but it took me somewhere else to grow,” he said. “And it was growing more than just in golf, really. You get to experience the different cultures, travel. I mean, you find yourself in some interesting spots. Places that you probably wouldn’t ever go, so, I think just as a person I was able to grow.”

He won in far-flung locales such as an Asian Development Tour event in Malaysia and the AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open in December 2018 and the Oman Open in March 2019, becoming the fastest player to win twice in DP World Tour history (only 11 career starts). But the dream always was to get back to the PGA Tour. When Kitayama did, he finished second on three different occasions in 2022, getting pipped by three top-10 players in the world: Jon Rahm at the Mexico Open, Xander Schauffele at the Scottish Open and Rory McIlroy at the CJ Cup.

In the final round at Arnie’s Place, Kitayama buckled but refused to break.

He built a two-stroke lead with three birdies in his first seven holes, including rolling in a 46-footer at seven. But on the ninth hole, he tugged his tee shot left and it stopped out of bounds by six inches, leading to a triple bogey. That knocked him down to 8 under for the tournament, behind new co-leaders Jordan Spieth and Tyrrell Hatton at 9 under. On the long walk to the 10th tee, Kitayama told Tucker, who was working for him for just his third event, that he didn’t feel rattled.

“You look good, and we’re gonna just keep chugging along and we’ll get it back,” said Tucker, who had been on the bag for Bryson DeChambeau when he won the API in 2021.

Trailing Kitayama by four shots at the start of the day, Spieth birdied four of his first five holes. He claimed the lead at 10-under-par with a birdie putt at the par-4 13th from just inside 15 feet, giving him 120 feet of made putts. But then the magic disappeared, and Spieth missed four straight putts inside 8 feet from the 14th through the 17th holes and made three bogeys in that four-hole span. He ended up signing for 70 and a tie for fourth.

“I wouldn’t have hit any of the putts differently,” Spieth said.

Hatton, winner of the API in 2020, blamed his putter, too, for his demise.

“I just didn’t have it today on the greens in the end when I kind of needed it most,” he said.

Scheffler, the defending champion, was one back with wedge in his hand from the fairway at 18 but made bogey to finish at 7-under and share fourth with Spieth.

McIlroy, who won this tournament in 2018, had an inauspicious start with two early bogeys but rallied with birdies at Nos. 12 and 13 to take the lead at 9 under. However, he still thought he trailed and tried an aggressive line at the par-3 14th. It backfired and he made the first of consecutive bogeys to slip back.

“As I was walking to the 14th green, I looked behind me at the scoreboard, and I was leading by one. And if I had known that I wouldn’t have tried to play the shot that I played on 14, which was unfortunate,” said McIlroy, who shot 70 and missed a 10-foot birdie putt that could have forced a playoff.

2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational
Kurt Kitayama putts on the 14th hole during the final round of the 2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational in Orlando. (Photo: Reinhold Matay-USA TODAY Sports)

When Kitayama arrived at 14 and eyed the leaderboard, he learned he was tied for the lead and had a very different response than McIlroy. “I’m still in this,” he thought. Galvanized, he stretched his par streak to seven in a row although the last of the bunch was a three-putt from 56 feet at the par-5 16th.
The API’s first year as a signature event lived up to the hype and seemed destined to be headed for a wild playoff with a five-way tie at the top with just three holes to play, until Kitayama took care of business. Tied for the lead, he stepped up at the 217-yard, par 3 17th and drilled a 6-iron to 14 feet like it was a Tuesday practice round.

“I just ripped it and it started leaking a little right, but I hit it good enough to cover and it was perfect,” said Kitayama, who finished with a 72-hole aggregate of 9-under 279.

He poured in the birdie putt and was tagged with his latest nickname, this time from TV analyst Paul Azinger, who described him as a junkyard dog feasting on a bone.

Kitayama had to grind out one more par at 18. As he walked off the tee after pulling his tee shot into the rough, he had the self-awareness to realize he was walking too fast.

“I was like, slow down,” he recalled. “J.C. was on the putting green earlier and he said, ‘You know, just relax and just make sure to take some deep breaths and walk slow.’ So I thought of that and I was able to recognize it, luckily, and just kind of calm down.”

From a jumper lie, Kitayama lofted an 8-iron safely on the left side of the green, 47 feet from the hole. On a day at Bay Hill where the greens became so baked that players complained of little friction, Kitayama needed two putts for the win and lagged his birdie effort inches short.

“I felt a huge relief because I couldn’t mess it up from there,” he said, cracking a smile.

Kitayama was a winner at last, slipping into the champion’s red cardigan sweater that he later framed and gave to his parents. As for the trophy?

Kitayama kept that for himself and has it positioned in his bedroom for maximum viewing.

“That way I can see it right before I go to bed and first thing in the morning,” he said.[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=1480]

Bryson DeChambeau’s former caddie back on bag at LIV Golf London

The band is back together this week.

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Two years ago this week, Tim Tucker quit working for his boss, Bryson DeChambeau, the night before the 2021 Rocket Mortgage Classic, a tournament where DeChambeau was the defending champion.

However, the tandem is back together this week.

Tucker is back on the bag for DeChambeau at this week’s LIV Golf event in London at Centurion Club, DeChambeau’s agent, Brett Falkoff, confirmed to Golfweek. Tucker caddied for DeChambeau in all eight of his PGA Tour victories and was on the bag for Kurt Kitayama’s first Tour win this spring at the 2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational.

DeChambeau’s caddie, Greg Bodine, is attending to a personal matter this week, which is why Tucker and DeChambeau are back together. No Laying Up first reported the pair joining up in London.

Bodine plans to return to DeChambeau’s bag at the Open Championship in two weeks at Royal Liverpool in Hoylake, and Tucker will caddie for Kitayama next week in the Genesis Scottish Open.

Early in DeChambeau’s career, he went through a slew of caddies, including a previous break with Tucker, before making him his steady bagman in 2018.

DeChambeau hasn’t won in 14 LIV events, his best finish coming last week at LIV Golf Andalucia where he placed second. The 2020 U.S. Open champion last won at the 2021 Arnold Palmer Invitational.

This year, he placed T-4 at the PGA Championship and T-20 at the U.S. Open while missing the cut at the Masters.

Why Kurt Kitayama fired his caddie of more than 4 years and how he hired former Bryson DeChambeau caddie Tim Tucker

Spoiler alert: It has to do with Bandon Dunes.

ORLANDO – It can be hard to measure a caddie’s role in victory. Some simply carry the bag, while others seem to perform an endless array of duties just short of hitting the shot. For Kurt Kitayama, who won his first PGA Tour title at the Arnold Palmer Invitational on Sunday, veteran looper Tim Tucker was the calming influence when Kitayama needed him most.

But let’s first rewind to last month, at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, where Kitayama said he fumed inside. In the final round at Pebble Beach Golf Links, his caddie at the time, Bryan Martin, misclubbed him on the second hole and his shot airmailed the green, leading to a double bogey. He subsequently tumbled 27 spots on payday after shooting 76 (T-29). Another legitimate shot at winning for the first time fell by the wayside.

“That one was very disappointing,” Kitayama said in his winner’s press conference on Sunday. “I felt like I was comfortable enough in that situation and that things just didn’t go my way early and I was more probably mad than anything. It just happens. Just try not to think about it too much.”

Did Kitayama punch a wall or kick his golf bag? He laughed at the thought. “Like, internally, you kind of, you’re fuming,” Kitayama said.

Arnold Palmer Invitational: Winner’s bag | Prize money

But Kitayama did make one drastic decision while he was fuming. He fired Martin, his caddie of four years.

When asked to confirm the reason for the dismissal, Kitayama didn’t want to throw someone he still counts as a friend under the bus, but he didn’t refute the story either. “I just felt like it was time, a couple of bad things had happened and tough situations I feel like,” Kitayama said in explaining his caddie change. “We had a really good run.”

Kurt Kitayama fired his caddie of four years Bryan Martin after the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and replaced him with veteran Tim Tucker. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

Seeking a replacement, Kitayama reached out to his brother, Danny, a longtime caddie at Bandon Dunes in Oregon, who had built a relationship with Tucker. Best known in golf circles as Bryson DeChambeau’s bagman for eight Tour victories, including the 2020 U.S. Open at Winged Foot and the 2021 Arnold Palmer Invitational, Tucker has caddied at Bandon and runs a transportation business at the golf resort.

“They have always stayed in contact, and this was just an opportunity that happened to arise,” Kitayama said.

After parting ways with his caddie at Pebble, Kitayama played the following week at the WM Phoenix Open and Tucker happened to be there for some work associated with the ballmarker he has designed and markets. They decided to work together that week.

Tucker made headlines in July 2021 when he fired DeChambeau on the eve of the Rocket Mortgage Classic. He’s not the first caddie to fire a player but it’s not often a caddie gives up a bag that had made him a rich man with a player seemingly just reaching the prime of his career. Tucker had filled in on occasion for Tour pros Adam Svensson and Chesson Hadley, but this time would be different.

“I just thought he was world class,’’ Tucker told a cloud of reporters on Sunday after claiming the caddie trophy, the flag at 18. “I told him you’re world class in three areas. Clean up the driver and you can beat these guys. He’s elite chipping the ball and striking it.”

Kitayama tied for first in driving accuracy at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, but on Sunday the driver let him down on the ninth hole when he pulled his ball out of bounds and he made a triple bogey to drop out of the lead. On the long walk from the ninth green to the 10th tee at Bay Hill, Tucker provided a master class in how to keep a player from spiraling out of control.

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“I still felt comfortable. I didn’t feel out of place. It was just one bad swing,” Kitayama said. “He kind of backed me up. He said that, he goes, ‘I know, you look fine.’ And that helped.”

Just three tournaments into the job, Tucker helped guide the 30-year-old Kitayama to the winner’s circle. Asked earlier in the week how much having Tucker on the bag has helped him, Kitayama said, “he’s got a lot of knowledge, a lot of experience. I think that’s definitely helped a lot. It’s been great just kind of seeing his side and how he works and just kind of getting used to it, really.”

With his right knee in a brace and a noticeable limp, Tucker had helped lift another player to victory at Arnie’s Place and would only say of DeChambeau that they are still friends and he’d bought him a Christmas present he still needed to deliver. He was reluctant to speak to the press all week and preferred to shine the light on his current boss.

“Look at him, look at his smile,” Tucker told reporters afterwards. “He got the monkey off his back, proving he can play with the big boys.”

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Caddie, businessman, inventor: Catching up with Bryson DeChambeau’s old looper Tim Tucker, who’s working this week in Las Vegas for Chesson Hadley

Tucker knows how to stay busy when he’s not carrying a bag.

LAS VEGAS — Tim Tucker just can’t stay away.

The veteran PGA Tour caddie is back on a bag this week, looping for Chesson Hadley at the Shriners Children’s Open in Las Vegas.

Why would Tucker, who owns a successful shuttle operation at Bandon Dunes and who has invented a putting alignment device and who loves to dive into with data, go back to his old gig?

“Because Chesson’s a great guy,” Tucker said after monitoring Hadley’s Tuesday range session. “He asked me a year ago to caddie here and I didn’t. I told him I wished I would have because, you know, it’s fun to get around different players and see what they’re doing. You learn more, you can help them in some of a different way. So it’s awesome. And he’s a great guy.”

Tucker, who has invented a putting aid called True Aim, has long been a tinkerer.

True Aim putting marker
True Aim putting marker is an aid designed by veteran PGA Tour caddie Tim Tucker. (Photo: Todd Kelly/Golfweek)

On Tuesday, he was watching Hadley hit iron shot after iron shot while calculating data from a Trackman as well as a Foresight launch monitor. Some of the discussion involved altitude, temperature, wind speed and even barometric pressure.

SHRINERS: Thursday tee times | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

“I was in the military, I was on a rifle team. And we used anemometers for long range,” he said as he explained how back in 2016 he and DeChambeau really started to explore metrics. “We started to apply that to golf ball density, temperature and barometric pressure, all that mattered determines how far the ball is going, temperature and altitude in time, then it’s quantifiable. So we started with that, when we started working into green density and understanding with angle of descent of an iron shot with a certain spin rate leading into a certain slope, then the run out was predictable. And so we started doing that, and we just kept on and we never stopped.”

Tucker was alongside DeChambeau for all eight of his PGA Tour victories, including the 2020 U.S. Open but it was their breakup in July 2021 on the eve of the Rocket Mortgage Classic in Detroit that made headlines in the golf world.

“It’s just one of those things that just happened. For better or for worse,” Tucker said. “Bryson doesn’t need me to play great golf, and he’s proven that. The kid is amazing athlete.

“He turned me into what people would say is a reliable, good caddie. Whether I am or not, that’s the perception because of him, right? And, you know, he helped me make a lot of money. Help me get my kids through college. You know, and so I’m forever in his debt.”

Today, the two are still friends.

U.S. Open
Bryson DeChambeau talks with his caddie Tim Tucker on the fourth green during the final round of the 2021 U.S. Open at Torrey Pines. (Photo: Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports)

“We’re good. Yeah, absolutely. I’ve talked to him probably once every two weeks, you know?,” Tucker said. “And we don’t really necessarily talk about golf. We just talked about, he’s building his dream house and talk to him about that, or talk to him about long drive.”

DeChambeau recently finished second in the World Long Drive Championships, about 90 miles northwest of TPC Summerlin in Mesquite, Nevada. That performance didn’t surprise Tucker.

“He’s the hardest working guy I’ve ever seen. And like, dedicated to his intensity level, his dedication is second to none. He is laser focused. When he when he gets it in his head, he’s gonna do something he gets it done.”

So when he’s not working as a part-time caddie or pitching his True Aim putting device, Tucker’s putting as much time and energy into Loop Golf Transportation, a high-end shuttle service that gets golfers to and from Bandon Dunes in Oregon. Tucker used to caddie at Bandon and knows the lay of the land of the remote location. Looping on the Tour from time to time gives him the chance to let more people know about it.

“It’s great being out here because you know, we get a lot of exposure,” he said. “Players are always helping me out. Stewart Cink asked me ‘What was the name of your business in Bandon again? I know people going there all the time. I’ll tell them.’  Yeah, I mean, how nice is that?”

Tucker said he’s not trying to overload Hadley this week with numbers and Hadley himself said he doesn’t want too much of the deep data. But everyone who Tucker caddies for knows that he knows what he’s talking about.

“I worked for Lexi [Thompson] in the Women’s Open and there was an article that came out, like they tried to make Lexi seem like she wasn’t wasn’t able to handle the information that Bryson is. And of course she she’s smartest can be. I mean, these are pro golfers. This is what they do. They look at his stuff. Some of the stuff they may not pay attention to. But once you show it to him, if they get it, they understand it, this is what they do.

“And I hated that for her that they did that, you know, and it was unfair because she’s a very intelligent woman.”

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Bryson DeChambeau’s former caddie on their untimely split: ‘Bryson is very demanding’

The former caddie for Bryson DeChambeau said his longtime employer is constantly pushing the envelope, even with support staff.

After a split they both insist was not at all acrimonious, the former caddie for Bryson DeChambeau said on a podcast this week that his longtime employer is constantly pushing the envelope, even with support staff.

“Bryson is very demanding. I think that’s a great attribute from an employer because it makes you get better,” caddie Tim Tucker said on the Subpar podcast, hosted by former Tour player Colt Knost and Drew Stoltz. “If you’re not getting better and learning and pushing everything you’re doing, then you become complacent and start making mistakes and you’re not continuing to grow.

“He makes you do that, and it’s unbelievable. He demands it from everybody.”

Tucker quit working for DeChambeau, who sits No. 6 in the Official World Golf Ranking and No. 12 in the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings, just ahead of his title defense at the Rocket Mortgage Classic.

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Tucker caddied for DeChambeau in the practice rounds that week, including Wednesday’s pro-am. Tucker has been on the bag for DeChambeau for all of his eight PGA Tour victories, including the 2020 U.S. Open. DeChambeau went through a slew of caddies early in his career, including a previous break with Tucker, before making him his steady bagman in 2018.

The two met when DeChambeau was 15 at Dragonfly Golf Club in Fresno, California, where Tucker was teaching green reading. He said by the end of the week, DeChambeau was helping to teach the course.

“He wrapped his head around it so fast,” Tucker said. “I’m asking, hey Bryson, what do you do? He said, ‘Well, I don’t watch TV, but I love science, I love physics.’ He was telling me that he believes in time travel, but it’s possible that we’ll never figure it out, and he’s probably right.

“He’s rarely wrong about the things that he’s pushing.”

DeChambeau was scheduled to be participating in the Tokyo Olympics, but as part of the final testing protocol before he left the United States for Japan, he tested positive for COVID-19.

Meanwhile, Tucker — a former Bandon Dunes caddie — is set to open a new Bandon Dunes-based luxury bus transportation business in August and had been working on that venture.

“I’ve been very fortunate to be able to caddie for this guy,” Tucker added. “He is the hardest-working guy I’ve ever seen. He sacrifices everything for this game.”

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Report: Bryson DeChambeau, former caddie Tim Tucker speak on split and replacement looper

In a recent report, both Bryson DeChambeau and former caddie Tim Tucker denied that a falling out led to their split.

Bryson DeChambeau’s replacement caddie has been identified.

In a one-on-one interview with Golf.com’s Luke Kerr-Dineen published this week DeChambeau identified Brian Ziegler as the next man for the job and also shed light on his split with former longtime caddie Tim Tucker, who also participated in the interview.

When DeChambeau and Tucker stopped working together mid-week at the Rocket Mortgage Classic, it drew much speculation and commentary from the golf world. Ben Schomin, Cobra-Puma’s director of tour operations, stepped in to pick up the back for DeChambeau in what would only be two rounds at the Rocket Mortgage Classic before the big bomber missed the cut and went home early, declining to answer media questions on the way out the door.

Both men denied a falling out. Tucker, a former Bandon Dunes caddie is set to open a new Bandon Dunes-based luxury bus transportation business in August and had been working on that venture.

Tucker explained the split this way to Golf.com: “We were really tired. The season; the tour schedule was grinding on us, grinding on me. I knew I was working on this business on the side; we’ve had a very intense relationship where he works a lot of hours. It was a little bit of me not being 100 percent healthy and happy…we made the best decision for the both of us.”

Tucker also said he had begun to prepare Dechambeau at the end of 2020 for the day he wouldn’t be caddying anymore. Still, that that day came mid-week at Rocket Mortgage was something DeChambeau called a “curveball.” Tucker said he later regretted the timing.

As for the new guy? Ziegler is a lead instructor at Dallas National (DeChambeau’s home course) and also serves as coach Chris Como’s right-hand man.

DeChambeau told Golf.com that Ziegler had been “a big part of my life for a while now” and they’ll make their player-caddie debut at next week’s British Open.

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Bryson DeChambeau dodges questions, misses the cut at Rocket Mortgage Classic

It wasn’t a pretty week in Detroit for Bryson DeChambeau for reasons ranging from his play to his lack of a caddie.

DETROIT – When Bryson DeChambeau tugged his tee shot at the par-3 fifth hole on Friday at Detroit Golf Club, the ball bounced hard left and buried in a cavernous bunker.

Was it another case of the “bad luck” DeChambeau said had doomed him on the back nine of the final round of the U.S. Open? We don’t know because he declined to speak to the press for the second straight day after his round at the Rocket Mortgage Classic.

But this we do know: DeChambeau vented after short-siding himself and making bogey. “Ugh, I hate golf,” he moaned.

Does he really “hate golf?” Well, don’t we all a little bit when we miss a shot. But we can’t say for sure because he refused to answer questions after his round.

For the record, DeChambeau shot an uneven round of 1-under 71 on Friday morning and his 36-hole total of 1-under 143 will surely miss the 36-hole cut. It’s not unusual for a player to decline to speak after a poor round, but DeChambeau is one of Rocket Mortgage’s paid ambassadors. As defending champion, he’s the face of the tournament and as the top-ranked player in the field and one of the most popular players in golf, he has a responsibility to answer questions even when the topic doesn’t suit him.

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Of course, the reason he declined to speak is obvious. He got blindsided late on Wednesday when Tim Tucker, his caddie for all eight of his PGA Tour victories, quit him. DeChambeau’s agent released a statement that they “mutually agreed to go their separate ways.” But, c’mon, no breakups are mutual, especially when they happen on the eve of a tournament, just weeks before his pursuit of another major and appearances in the Olympics and Ryder Cup are on the horizon.

His caddie, Tim Tucker, took the high road, telling Golfweek via text before DeChambeau teed off on Thursday that he “wouldn’t be surprised to see him win Rocket Mortgage. He is hitting it great.” So, what went wrong for DeChambeau this week? If only we could have asked him.

He mentioned in his pre-tournament interview that his wedge game would be key and it clearly let him down. He ranked 152nd in the field in proximity to the hole. He led the field in Strokes Gained: Off the Tee in the first round (second overall) and driving distance, but failed to take advantage of it. He ranked 148th out of 156 in Strokes Gained: Approach the Green, losing nearly 3.5 strokes.

Shooting even par on Thursday, with preferred lies, left DeChambeau needing to make up ground on Friday and he played a clean card on the back nine, his first nine holes of the day, making two birdies at the par 5s and the rest pars. He was poised to make a run, but his best efforts backfired. A sloppy chip that raced 18 feet past the hole led to a bogey at the first and he had to work hard to salvage par at the second.

DeChambeau did an interesting thing at the third hole, which was listed at 398 yards on Friday. He waited for the green to clear. “I’ve never seen that happen on the PGA Tour, where you’re waiting for par-4 greens to clear of that length,” said Kramer Hickok, who played in DeChambeau’s group.

DeChambeau gave the crowd what they waited for, belting a 347-yard blast – “I missed it,” he said with a smile – and it sent the crowd into a frenzy. But it was all for naught as from 50 yards, he wedged 23 feet below the hole and made par.

“Great drive, though,” a fan said as DeChambeau walked to the next tee with his head down.

He made a birdie at the par-5 fourth and things were looking up again, but that’s when he hit his “I hate golf” shot and made bogeys at Nos. 5 and 6 to go back to even par.

“No wonder he looks so pissed,” one fan said to another when they discovered he’d dropped another stroke.

DeChambeau looked dejected and it’s easy to guess – he didn’t speak to the media so we can’t say for sure – that the loss of his caddie or perhaps being trolled yet again by Brooks Koepka, who declared July 1 to be Caddie Appreciation Day, distracted DeChambeau from the task at hand.

He made one final run at making the cut, holing a 7-foot birdie at the par-5 seventh hole. And so when it was his turn to hit at the 361-yard eighth hole, the easiest hole on the course which had already surrendered 28 birdies to the field on the day, DeChambeau, the big bopper, waited again for the green to clear. He even joked at one point, “Did I fake you out?” when the crowd thought he might hit.

“I try not to watch,” said Hickock, who beat DeChambeau by four strokes over 36 holes despite averaging nearly 40 yards less off the tee.

DeChambeau crushed his drive 343 yards into the left rough, pitched to 7 feet and had to have the putt to keep alive his chances of making the cut. He missed.

Last year, he left Detroit with a trophy and the validation that his Incredible Bulk experiment was working. This time, he left without a caddie, with question marks about his game and without saying a word.

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Breaking: Bryson DeChambeau’s caddie quits ahead of Rocket Mortgage Classic

Bryson DeChambeau will have a different caddie on the bag this week, and not by choice, as Tim Tucker has reportedly quit.

DETROIT – Bryson DeChambeau will have a different caddie on the bag this week – and not by choice.

PGA Tour caddie Tim Tucker reportedly has quit working for DeChambeau, the World No. 6 golfer, ahead of his title defense at the Rocket Mortgage Classic.

Tucker caddied for DeChambeau in the practice rounds this week, including yesterday’s pro-am.

Tucker has been on the bag for DeChambeau for all of his eight PGA Tour victories, including the 2020 U.S. Open. DeChambeau went through a slew of caddies early in his career before settling on Tucker in 2018.

Rocket Mortgage Classic: Odds | Fantasy | Tee times

DeChambeau’s agent told Golf Channel’s Ryan Lavner, “In any relationship, they run their course, and that’s what happened here.”

Cobra equipment representative Ben Schomin confirmed to Golfweek that he will serve as DeChambeau’s caddie this week. Schomin’s only previous caddying experience on the PGA Tour was for former Golf Channel personality Holly Sonders.

DeChambeau is scheduled to tee off at 1:10 p.m., in one of the featured groups. Play is currently suspended at the Rocket Mortgage Classic due to inclement weather.

The news of Tucker parting ways with DeChambeau was first reported by No Laying Up.

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