U.S. Open will return to Winged Foot Golf Club in 2028

The West Course, designed by A.W. Tillinghast, has been the site of six previous U.S. Opens.

Winged Foot is on the clock.

The USGA announced Monday the landmark golf club in Mamaroneck, New York, has been selected to host the 128th U.S. Open in 2028, which leaves the membership roughly five years to watch the grass grow on the famed West Course.

“Winged Foot has provided the backdrop for some of the most dramatic moments in the history of our sport, with many of golf’s legendary champions being crowned on the club’s iconic West Course,” USGA chief championships officer John Bodenhamer said in a statement. “We strive to provide players with the greatest stages on which to compete for a national championship, and there are few stages as grand as Winged Foot.”

The West Course, designed by A.W. Tillinghast, has been the site of six previous U.S. Opens, with Bob Jones (1929), Billy Casper (1959), Hale Irwin (1974), Fuzzy Zoeller (1984), Geoff Ogilvy (2006) and Bryson DeChambeau (2020) as past champions. The USGA moved the 2020 championship to September due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

In anticipation of the most recent U.S. Open visit, architects Gil Hanse and  Jim Wagner renovated the West Course in 2018. The layout ranks No. 5 on Golfweek’s Best list of top private clubs in New York, and it is No. 15 on Golfweek’s Best list of all classic courses built in the U.S. before 1960.

“Today is an incredible moment for all of us here at Winged Foot,” club president Rob Williams said. “Our club has a long history of hosting this nation’s greatest men’s and women’s championships and we look forward to helping write another chapter in the story of our great sport in 2028.”

Between the West and East Courses, the club has provided a worthy venue for eight other USGA championships – two U.S. Amateurs, two U.S. Women’s Opens, one U.S. Senior Open, one U.S. Amateur Four-Ball and one Walker Cup.

Davis Love III also won the 1997 PGA Championship at the club.

A muscled-up DeChambeau bombed and gouged his way to the championship in 2020. He was the lone competitor to finish under par, averaging 325 yards off the tee and hitting just 23 fairways. It was an unorthodox approach that inspired conversation and consternation. DeChambeau shot a final-round 67 to finish with a 6-under total of 274.

The lush ankle-deep rough was little more than an inconvenience for the STEM enthusiast, who is now a part of LIV Golf.

“As difficult as this golf course was presented, I played it beautifully,” he said before celebrating with slices from nearby Sal’s pizza. “So many times I relied on science, and it’s worked every single time.”

Due to COVID-19 restrictions, spectators were not allowed in 2020. The crowd noise came from the 400-plus members who filled volunteer positions and neighbors who erected makeshift grandstands in their yards. Everyone on site had to be tested in advance. There were also daily health and security screenings for the 2,000 or so essential workers on the grounds.

The Los Angeles Country Club will host the U.S. Open in June. The championship will be contested at Pinehurst No. 2 in 2024, Oakmont Country Club in 2025, Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in 2026 and Pebble Beach Golf Links in 2027.

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Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses 2022: From Pebble Beach to Pinehurst, the top 200 golf courses built before 1960

Golfweek’s raters have ranked the top 200 courses built in the United States before 1960, such as Augusta National, Pebble Beach and more

Welcome to the Golfweek’s Best 2022 list of the Top 200 Classic Courses before 1960 in the United States.

Each year we publish many lists, with this Top 200 Classic Courses list among the premium offerings. Also extremely popular and significant are the lists for Top 200 Modern Courses, the Best Courses You Can Play State by State and Best Private Courses State by State.

The hundreds of members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on 10 criteria on a points basis of 1 through 10. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings are averaged to produce these rankings. The top handful of courses in the world have an average rating of above 9, while many excellent layouts fall into the high-6 to the 8 range.

To ensure these lists are up-to-date, Golfweek’s Best in recent years has altered how the individual ratings are compiled into the rankings. Only ratings from rounds played in the past 10 years are included in the compilations. This helps ensure that any course in the rankings still measures up.

Courses also must have a minimum of 25 votes to qualify for the Top 200 Modern or the Top 200 Classic. Other Golfweek’s Best lists, such as Best Courses You Can Play or Best Private, do not require as many votes. This makes it possible that a course can show up on other lists but not on the premium Top 200 lists.

Each course is listed with its average rating next to the name, the location, the year it opened and the designers. The list also notes in parenthesis next to the name of each course where that course ranked in 2021. Also included with many courses are links to recent stories about that layout.

After the designers are several designations that note what type of facility it is:

• p: private
• d: daily fee
• r: resort course
• t: tour course
• u: university
• m: municipal
• re: real estate
• c: casino

* Indicates new to or returning to this list.

Editor’s note: The 2022 Golfweek’s Best Modern Courses list for the top 200 layouts built after 1960 in the U.S. was published Monday, May 23. The Best Courses You Can Play lists and the Best Private Courses lists will follow over the next two weeks. 

Peyton Manning and a Fox News anchor played in a tournament at Winged Foot. Here’s what happened.

Peyton Manning knew what he was up against when he came to Winged Foot this week.

MAMARONECK, N.Y. — Don’t mistake the pained expressions following each swing for pain and suffering.

Those are new game faces.

Peyton Manning knew what he was up against when he came to Winged Foot this week to play in the 84th Anderson Memorial Four-Ball Invitational, which includes some of the best amateur combinations in the country.

He enjoyed the golf. He enjoyed the experience. He needed a hug.

“I have no business playing on this level, but I actually kind of hung in there,” Manning said Friday after narrowly missing a putt for par on the West Course’s iconic 18th hole. “I birdied No. 1 today and birdied No. 10. I birdied the 13th on the East yesterday so I’ll go home with that. I had it all in perspective the whole time and I really enjoyed myself.”

He partnered with Fox News chief political analyst Bret Baier.

They were 7-over Thursday on the East Course and came back with another 77 Friday on the West Course. They were a long way from qualifying for match play.

“We’ve been friends for years and had an offer to come up and play,” said Baier, who played collegiately at DePauw and famously ended an interview with the Dalai Lama by asking if the spiritual leader had ever seen Caddyshack. “We came. We saw. We did not conquer. You have to keep it out of the rough here. This is the first time I’ve played Winged Foot. It’s awesome. Both courses are tough. Both are really unique and beautiful courses. The green complexes are really challenging. You have to putt your ball here.”

The invite came from Winged Foot member J.P. O’Hara.

“We played together here in 2006,” the Anderson Memorial tournament chairman said. “I’m a big Giants fan because of his brother, Eli, and the Maras, but we stayed in touch. I saw how well he played in the charity match with Tiger as his partner and told him that merited an invitation to play. It’s really special to have Peyton come. He is so humble and gracious. He’s gotta be one of the greatest athletes of all time.”

Peyton Manning lines up a putt on the fifth green of Winged Foot West during the second round of the Anderson Memorial Four-Ball Tournament on Aug. 20, 2021, as Dan Crockett looks on. (Mike Dougherty/The Journal News)

Manning did some homework on the championship and came anyway.

“I said, ‘J.P., I don’t think it does merit an invitation,’ ” he quipped. “It got canceled last year, so I came this year. I’m not qualified or worthy, but I sure have enjoyed myself. What a treat to play both these courses and meet some great people.”

The recent addition to the National Football Hall of Fame who played for the Indianapolis Colts and Denver Broncos uses a blue and orange bag with a Cherry Hills Country Club logo.

Manning says time for golf is limited to gaps between his kids’ sports and school events. He is down to a 4 handicap.

“He’s got a love for the game. He’s got the bug,” Baier added. “He plays as much as he can and now his brother, Eli, is really getting into it so I think there’s going to be a family competition, which will spur them on to greatness as it has in the past.”

They have played several rounds together on Long Island this season.

“Eli likes to play,” Manning said. “In the summers, they hang out in Long Island with the kids. We’ve gotten together a couple of times this summer. He’s active, but when he gets the opportunity he likes to play.”

The next opportunity to play might come next month when the Giants add Eli to the Ring of Honor on Sept. 26.

“Our whole family is excited for what the Giants are doing for Eli this fall,” Manning added. “That will be a special ceremony.”

Mike Dougherty covers golf for The Journal News/lohud.com. He can be reached at mdougher@lohud.com, or on Twitter @lohudgolf.

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Bryson DeChambeau pays first visit to Winged Foot since winning U.S. Open

Bryson DeChambeau conducted a clinic for the kids, shared a few memories from his win last September and signed everything in sight.

MAMARONECK, N.Y. – The offer to launch a few balls across the East Course delighted the youngsters who stood along a rope line with phones aimed skyward to document the 2020 U.S. Open champion’s return to Winged Foot Golf Club.

And when Bryson DeChambeau reached for a wedge Monday, the disappointment was audible.

“I have to warm up like everybody else,” the longest hitter on the PGA Tour said with a laugh before rushing to get loose.

The membership here extended the invitation months ago and DeChambeau accepted, making time before heading to Liberty National, site of the Northern Trust. He rolled in behind a police and fire department escort, conducted a clinic for the kids, shared a few memories from his win last September and signed everything in sight.

“You’re one of our own and welcome to come back any time,” Winged Foot president Brendan Boyle said.

There was time for a slice, as well – the good kind.

“We all know the secret to Bryson winning here was Sal’s Pizza,” Winged Foot general manager Colin Burns said of the Mamaroneck Ave. landmark. “There’s a box right behind you.”

DeChambeau was typically outgoing and hungry.

“Coming back here brings back some amazing memories,” said the 27-year-old who has eight PGA Tour wins. “Seeing the people here, the clubhouse, the golf course, the emotions just come back quite quickly. It’s definitely a place I will hold near and dear to my heart the rest of my life.”

Nobody inquired about the state of his equipment. His stance on COVID-19 vaccinations never came up. There was one mention of Brooks Koepka in response to a question about the Ryder Cup.

And the members played along, responding with a burst of laughter.

“Shoot, I love the Ryder Cup,” DeChambeau said. “I’d love to be paired with Brooks. We’d kill it out there. It’d be awesome. We’d get in their heads so much.”

DeChambeau was a captain’s pick in 2018, acknowledging the Europeans played better in Paris. He expects a reversal next month at Whistling Straits.

“We’re the better team,” he said.

And who is the player DeChambeau would most like to see in singles?

“To be honest, I love to go up against the best, so Jon Rahm would be fun,” DeChambeau said, noting the head-to-head meeting he wished for on the way to a U.S. Amateur title in 2015 never came to be. “Now he’s No. 1 in the world and I want to take him down.”

DeChambeau eventually got around to swinging the driver Monday in between questions from the kids. He did not disappoint.

The juicy rough was supposed to keep the bombers in check here last fall.

Even though DeChambeau found only 23 fairways on the iconic West Course, he closed with an eye-popping 67 while the other contenders backpedaled to finish with a 6-under total of 274.

He won by six shots.

That prompted a question about his approach to playing at Winged Foot.

“I would say the best way to attack this golf course is you just gotta drive every green,” DeChambeau said, only half kidding. “I didn’t have that game plan coming in here. The Sunday before, I played a practice round with Tiger (Woods) and I was trying to bomb it everywhere. We got done playing nine holes and Tiger was like, ‘Man, you’re just hitting driver everywhere.’ And I was like, ‘Yeah, seems like it’s the game plan so far.’ He was like, ‘That’s right.’ I went and played the front nine the next day with a different group of guys, same thing. I hit the ball as far as I possibly could, hit out of the rough and rolled it up onto the greens. Everyone was like, ‘Man, that’s pretty unique, but it’s working.’ I tried laying up on a few holes the next 18 that I played, and was like, ‘I’m not doing myself any service.’ ”

He got back up to full speed immediately, figuring it was easier to power wedges out of the rough.

The amount of practice time DeChambeau currently devotes to driving the ball since 2019 inspired a surprised reaction from the members. He estimated spending 75% of his time on the range with the driver in hand.

“My putting, I found a great system and I just keep moving on to different facets of my game that need a lot of work,” he said. “Once I figure out the driving component, I’ll move on to the wedging component, hopefully in the next year.”

Mike Dougherty covers golf for The Journal News/lohud.com. He can be reached at mdougher@lohud.com, or on Twitter @lohudgolf.

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U.S. Open: Behind Bryson DeChambeau’s power and bulk? Hours-long, sweat-filled speed-training sessions.

Members of Bryson DeChambeau’s team detail his exhausting quest to build strength and speed, and how it took his game to new heights.

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

Just before noon on a February Friday north of Los Angeles, Bryson DeChambeau signed off on his missed cut in the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club and immediately dialed some digits.

“I want to come down, I want to do some work,” he said into his iPhone.

DeChambeau hopped into his car, drove some 115 miles southward and about two hours later was at the Cobra Puma Golf headquarters in Carlsbad.

Meeting him there was Ben Schomin, director of Tour Operations for Cobra Puma Golf who has worked with DeChambeau his entire pro career.

“He was at the indoor hitting bay from 2 until 10,” Schomin said. “Delivered in some pizza for the night, and the next day we did the same thing all over again from 11 to about 9:30 Saturday night. And it was non-stop – tweaking things, moving weight around, testing different heads, theorizing about certain things.

“It got deep.”

DeChambeau knows no other way when pursuing a goal. He stretches his limits as far as he can and leaves himself, as nearly every member of Team DeChambeau will tell you, in a pile of sweat. Be it in the gym, during speed drills where he swings full bore until he can’t go anymore or on the putting green honing his stroke for hours on end, he puts his boundaries to a strenuous test.

“Stopping is not in his personality,” Schomin said. “In speed training sessions where he’s just swinging out of his shoes for an hour, he’s sweating profusely. One time, he said he was starting to get lightheaded, so he said, ‘If I pass out, you’re going to have to catch me.’ ‘Catch you? How am I supposed to catch you when you’re swinging a driver at 142 mph? What do you want me to do?’ So, there was a point where he literally had to get down on a knee because he was getting lightheaded. What he’s doing is different and it’s working.”

Since DeChambeau became Bison Bryson by adding 40 pounds to his already large mass last spring – with most of the poundage piling up during the 13-week quarantine the PGA Tour was forced to take because of the global pandemic – he’s turned golf on its head and won three PGA Tour titles, including the 2020 U.S. Open and the 2021 Arnold Palmer Invitational two weeks after he missed the cut in LA.

Much has been made about his ball speed, swing speed, single-length irons. But his work ethic involving both his body and mind deserves equal notice.

“His work ethic is not forced. It’s super natural to him. He wants to be out there working as long as he does,” said Chris Como, DeChambeau’s swing coach. “I don’t know how you stop someone with that energy. Now, there are times I’m in his ear, ‘You’re good, you’re good,’ and sometimes he’ll listen to me.

“But he’ll go, sometimes, ‘OK, one more ball.’ And we’ll go another hour.

“I really enjoy trying to figure something out, so to partner with someone as talented as he is and has the work ethic he does and we share the same amount of curiosity, willing to explore things to get better, allows me to channel my talents and go down rabbit holes with him.”

Still, DeChambeau had to take his work ethic up a notch or two or three when he befriended Kyle Berkshire, the long-drive king who can make DeChambeau feel small on the course. This guy’s stock yardages include 360 yards for his driver, 315 yards for his 3-iron, 240 yards for his 6-iron, 205 yards for his 8-iron, 165 yards for his pitching wedge.

There’s long and then there’s Berkshire long.

“Bryson’s probably the only person I ran into who is willing to push to where I would push my speed sessions,” Berkshire said. “He can typically hit 300 balls in one speed session, and he’d hit a number, let’s just say, 138 clubhead speed after 100 balls. After that I would tell him I want him to hit 144 and the next two hours would be filled with doing everything we can trying to get him riled up and get him into a good head space where he’s really pushing himself.

“Every single session ends with him in a puddle of sweat.”

Berkshire was the one who talked DeChambeau into taking himself to the edge, pushing himself to the brink of blacking out. And Berkshire said there’s a lot left in DeChambeau’s tank to tap into.

“I was a little scared to do it,” DeChambeau said. “First time I tried it I was very cautious with it. I was dead tired and he told me I was only 50 percent done. He kept pushing me. And when I nearly passed out, he said, ‘OK, you’re done.’

“But that was when I hit my max ball speed.”

Taking his body to the max comes with its aches and pains, which DeChambeau knows all too well. Just watching him violently swing or go all out in a workout can make you hurt.

“I hope we continue to see a healthy Bryson,” said Dottie Pepper, former LPGA Tour star and one of the game’s best on-course analysts. “It takes a lot of effort and he’s hitting so many balls so hard the ground eventually hits back.”

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DeChambeau has talked about how painfully sore he’s felt after brutal workouts and admitted he has to go easier on his body, thus he’s working on different ways to inherently have a faster motion without huge speed-training sessions.

“There was a point in time when I started this early on and I tried to get to 190 ball speed, I remember, there were times where I’m swinging literally out of my butt, and I was like, ‘Man, this is not good for my body. I can’t do this,’” he said. “I remember waking up of the next day, I’m like, dude, my hands, everything hurt. What am I doing? There were numerous times I felt like I had to backtrack for a bit.”

But as dangerous as what DeChambeau is doing looks to be, he’s confident all is safe.

That’s where conditioning coach Greg Roskopf comes in. The founder of Muscle Activation Techniques (MAT) based in Denver, who has consulted with various professional sports teams including the NFL’s Denver Broncos and the NBA’s Denver Nuggets and Utah Jazz, has worked with DeChambeau for four years to improve his mechanics and optimize his muscle function.

“The MAT process and methods look at the neuromuscular system specifically and how it is designed to relieve pain and improve mobility,” Roskopf said. “The foundational concepts behind MAT recognize that whenever you have stress, trauma or overuse to the muscles, the resultant inflammation alters the communication between the nervous system and the muscular system.

“It’s like having loose battery cables, with the brain as the battery, the nervous system as the cables and the muscles as the engine. The nervous system sends the information to the muscles, but the information does not get to the muscles as efficiently as it should. As a result, this altered communication impedes the ability for the muscles to contract efficiently. When muscles can’t contract efficiently, they can’t do their job to stabilize joints and protect the body from injury. And when the muscles can’t shorten effectively, the opposite muscles tighten up as a protective mechanism.

“We identify where the altered communication pathways are within the body and through a very specific hands-on stimulation technique, we ‘tighten the battery cables.’ This activation technique improves the communication between the nervous system and the muscle system. Through the improvement of the communication pathways, the muscles are able to contract more efficiently and then are better equipped to stabilize joints and protect the body from injury.

“The muscles actually get stronger on the spot.”

The goal of DeChambeau’s exercise program developed by Roskopf is to increase his strength throughout his body, movement by movement, muscle by muscle.

“All of this, working off the concept that when we put great amounts of force on the body, like Bryson does in his golf swing, we’re only as strong as our weakest link,” Roskopf said. “It is those weak links that eventually set us up for injury.

“But Bryson has not only gotten stronger but has actually been able to double his force output capabilities in all of the muscles in his body.”

Golf Channel analyst Brandel Chamblee doesn’t think DeChambeau’s swing will lead to injury.

“Hardly. The people who injure themselves, like Brooks Koepka and Jason Day, are resisters with the lower body. And because they resist, they have to be explosive in transition,” Chamblee said. “Bryson doesn’t generate power like that. He turns his hips fully and releases fully. He’s not likely to hurt himself.

“Bryson didn’t metaphorically reach higher, he literally reached higher. He got his hands farther up, he extended his right leg, and he drew down in transition. He let his hands fall down close to his shoulder, thereby creating more moment of inertia. Like a skater when they draw their arms in, they spin faster. If they leave their arms out, they will spin slower. Bryson incorporated nearly every power principle you can imagine. He was willing take the risk and he’s reaping the rewards through science and hard work.”

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‘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.

PGA: U.S. Open - Final Round
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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Rick Pitino invited a Sweet 16 coach to Winged Foot — who didn’t know its prominence

Pitino invited a certain Sweet 16 coach to come to Winged Foot Golf Club, but the coach didn’t know of the course’s importance.

Alabama men’s basketball head coach Nate Oats and Iona men’s basketball head coach Rick Pitino talked on the phone after their teams played in the NCAA Tournament first round.

Oats said they talked mostly about basketball. He wanted feedback from the hall of fame coach after Alabama beat Iona 68-55.

But during an interview with WJOX-FM 94.5, Oats said something else came up.

Pitino invited Oats to come to Winged Foot Golf Club in Westchester County, New York. Winged Foot’s West Course hosted the 2020 U.S. Open golf tournament.

The Iona College men’s basketball coach was photographed watching the U.S. Open from a perch behind the third green with assistant coaches Tom Abatemarco and Ricky Johns.

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The Hall-of-Fame coach, who surprised the college basketball world when he was hired by Iona in March, is a Winged Foot member. Pitino tweeted a photo of himself teeing off on the same hole earlier this month.

Although Oats appreciated the invitation, he seemed oblivious.

“He talked to me about where he’s living up there — what’s that Winwood?” Oats said. “What’s the big-time golf course up there?”

One of the show’s hosts asked if Oats meant Winged Foot.

“Winged Foot, sorry yeah, I’m not a big golfer,” Oats said. “He lives up there on Winged Foot. He was telling me I’ll have to come by.”

Winged Foot Golf Club hosted the first U.S. Open in 1929 and the 1997 PGA Championship.

“Apparently, those that are really into golf, that’s a big-time spot,” Oats said. “So maybe, I’ll take him up on it and get up there once.”

Oats explained that he has known Rick Pitino’s son Richard Pitino for several years. Richard Pitino recently became the New Mexico men’s basketball head coach after being the Minnesota head coach from 2013-21.

The connection to Richard Pitino is how Oats said he got the elder Pitino’s phone number.

Oats and the Alabama men’s basketball team are scheduled to continue their season against UCLA in the Sweet 16 on Sunday, March 28.

No. 2 seed Alabama comes into the matchup 26-6 overall. On Monday, Alabama beat Maryland 96-77 in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.

No. 11-seeded UCLA enters the game 20-9 overall. UCLA beat Abilene Christian 67-47 in the NCAA Tournament second round on Monday.

Entering Sunday, UCLA leads the all-time series 3-2 vs. Alabama.

Erik Hall is the lead digital producer for sports with the USA Today Network. You can find him on Twitter @HallErik.

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Coaches vs. Cancer golf auction features rounds with college legends at Pinehurst, Winged Foot and more

The Member for a Day Coaches vs. Cancer Auction presented by MGM Resorts is loaded with rounds of golf at incredible courses.

Coaches vs. Cancer has been uniting college basketball coaches and fans nationwide in the battle to cure cancer for more than 25 years.

This year, 102 college basketball coaches, personalities, and even a few celebrities are getting involved with the Member for a Day Coaches vs. Cancer Auction presented by MGM Resorts, a charity golf auction involving exclusive MGM Resort packages and rounds at some of the best golf courses the United States has to offer.

One of those involved is Oklahoma coach Lon Kruger, who has two items available: A round with Lon Kruger at Shadow Creek in Las Vegas, the No. 11-ranked course in Golfweek’s Top 200 Modern) + MGM Package, and a round with Lon Kruger at Southern Hills in Tulsa, Oklahoma, ranked No. 36 in Golfweek’s Top 200 Classic.

“We see this being hugely successful in year one, but imagining where it can go in year two and year three is really exciting,” said Kruger, who was the head coach at UNLV for seven years prior to going to the Sooners. He is the founder and chairman of the Coaches vs. Cancer Las Vegas Golf Classic, which has raised more $3.5 million over the last 11 years. “People like contributing to the fight against cancer. Everyone’s been touched by cancer. It’s a good team effort.

“It’s always important to donate, but especially now with the pandemic. Whether it be the American Cancer Society, or heart association, or any of the really significant causes, they’re struggling. This auction event came about because the ACS needs more funds because cancer keeps attacking and we need to generate addition funds especially at this time.”

Here are some of the other high-profile rounds up for auction:

  • Roy Williams at Pinehurst No. 2 or Biltmore Forest
  • Bobby Hurley at Country Club at DC Ranch
  • Rick Pitino at Winged Foot
  • Ken Griffey Jr. at Michael Jordan’s Grove XXIII
  • Jim Boeheim at Onondaga Country Club
  • Bruce Pearl at Willow Point
  • Bob Stoops at Jimmie Austin Golf Club
  • Pat Perez at Shadow Creek + MGM package
  • Jim Calhoun at Point Judith Country Club
  • Bill Raftery at Baltusrol Golf Course
  • Jay Bilas at Charlotte Country Club
  • Tim Miles and Larry the Cable Guy at ArborLinks Golf Club

According to Eric Sedransk, founder of Member for a Day, a nonprofit fundraising platform focused on once in a lifetime rounds of golf, more than $80,000 was raised for cancer research in the first 24 hours. Six months ago, Sedransk launched his first charity golf auction in support of hospital frontline workers affected by COVID-19.

Find out more about Coaches vs. Cancer here and check out all the items available here. Bidding will end on Friday, Nov. 27, 2020, at 9 p.m. ET.

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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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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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