That's what she said...I have to believe he's carrying another wood in the bag. So there should be at least one more shaft length in there.
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That's what she said...I have to believe he's carrying another wood in the bag. So there should be at least one more shaft length in there.
That applies to all pro sports. That’s why they do it for a living.
I don’t understand your point. You point to competition as an example for other sports. There are plenty of tour pros that have length. Maybe not driver 9i but driver 7i. Pros are not supposed to take shots that amateurs have. That’s what makes it fun to watch. I’m not paying to see guys hit it to the parking lot, punching out or laying up. I want to see bombs off the tee and sweeping shape shots around trees. I want to be entertained.Not really. No amateur hits a 9I as a second (and approach) shot to most any par five.
In baseball, football, basketball the opponents are playing against a D roughly at the same level making the game play the same for all levels.
Pro golfers for 25 years now rarely are forced to take the shots on the course most amateurs are.
If you don't see that either you're not a golfer or you're not seeing the point.
Roid rage?Bryson running hot?
https://www.golfchannel.com/news/br...onts-cameraman-potentially-damaging-his-brand
DeChambeau fired his club angrily into the sand shortly after impact, and he ultimately made bogey. While he described his reaction to the shot as “dumb,” he took issue with the cameraman subsequently following him closely as he approached the green and marked his ball.
“He was literally watching me the whole entire way up after getting out of the bunker, walking up next to the green. And I just was like, ‘Sir, what is the need to watch me that long?’” DeChambeau said. “I mean, I understand it’s his job to video me, but at the same point, I think we need to start protecting our players out here compared to showing a potential vulnerability and hurting someone’s image. I just don’t think that’s necessarily the right thing to do.”
This is his primary issue right now and the difference between a bunch of T10 finishes versus a few Ws. Between the ears and a temper that runs hot and carries over into the next few shots. Not the first guy who has to figure that out, especially in golf. The mad scientist could use a little help from a sports psychiatrist.Bryson running hot?
https://www.golfchannel.com/news/br...onts-cameraman-potentially-damaging-his-brand
DeChambeau fired his club angrily into the sand shortly after impact, and he ultimately made bogey. While he described his reaction to the shot as “dumb,” he took issue with the cameraman subsequently following him closely as he approached the green and marked his ball.
“He was literally watching me the whole entire way up after getting out of the bunker, walking up next to the green. And I just was like, ‘Sir, what is the need to watch me that long?’” DeChambeau said. “I mean, I understand it’s his job to video me, but at the same point, I think we need to start protecting our players out here compared to showing a potential vulnerability and hurting someone’s image. I just don’t think that’s necessarily the right thing to do.”
I don’t see them practicing their drives much either. Frankly, for whatever practice I do see, I see guys on the putting greens at least as much as on the range. And only part of the time spent on the range is spent driving the ball.. . . As I heard Fred Couples say that's what the public never sees, the hours upon hours they spend practicing around the green.
I don’t see them practicing their drives much either. Frankly, for whatever practice I do see, I see guys on the putting greens at least as much as on the range. And only part of the time spent on the range is spent driving the ball.
As far as the tournament itself, TV coverage generally shows everything, from tee to green. In fact, if it has to skip anything, it’s the drive. It never skips the play around and on the green. It can’t.
A lot of these guys spend as much time, if not more, in the gym vs on the rangeHe wasn't talking about on the range before a round. He was talking overall. He said regular golfers should spend more of their time practicing around the green than spending most on the range.
Wolf gave that away. Look at scoring avg for Sunday. Bryson is one of the top players but not the top IMO.Pretty dominating performance by Bryson.
He is the top player in the world right now imo.
Man you sure have an axe to grind with this dude. That article is from a year ago. He’s sped up.'SINGLE-MINDED TWIT' - BRYSON DECHAMBEAU FEELS WRATH OF FELLOW GOLFERS OVER SLOW PLAY" :
https://www.otbsports.com/sport/sin...u-feels-wrath-fellow-golfers-slow-play-892704
If he works his wedge game out like he has with his putter and driver, no one is going to stop him. This is a monumental shift. Dude hit a 238 yard 8 iron lol.Wolfe had a chance to put some heat on him the last 4-5 holes but lipped a few.
18 was a thing of beauty for DeChambeau. Like it when the winner doesn't back in or have a ho-hum finish.
Feel free to make a different point now.He wasn't talking about on the range before a round. He was talking overall. He said regular golfers should spend more of their time practicing around the green than spending most on the range.
I’d say so too. He’s intimidating other players now, almost forcing them to do what they can’t.Pretty dominating performance by Bryson.
He is the top player in the world right now imo.
He was never a great wedge player. A game is your best, not what you hope to be. Big difference. I think he’ll be on the 1st page of the leader board often but won’t win often because it all comes down to feet of putts made.I’d say so too. He’s intimidating other players now, almost forcing them to do what they can’t.
This wasn’t even his A game. Those wedges get better and it’s lights out for the other players.
I don’t see them practicing their drives much either. Frankly, for whatever practice I do see, I see guys on the putting greens at least as much as on the range. And only part of the time spent on the range is spent driving the ball.
As far as the tournament itself, TV coverage generally shows everything, from tee to green. In fact, if it has to skip anything, it’s the drive. It never skips the play around and on the green. It can’t.
https://www.golfchannel.com/video/lee-trevino-wedge-most-important-partDrive for Show, Putt for Dough.
I think he will be on the "missing tournament x due to injury board" often.He was never a great wedge player. A game is your best, not what you hope to be. Big difference. I think he’ll be on the 1st page of the leader board often but won’t win often because it all comes down to feet of putts made.
I’m starting my lat pull downs tomorrow.
Feel free to make a different point now.
But your post addressed your preference for watching the professionals’ mastery around the greens, not their long drives, and quoted Fred Couples noting that the public doesn’t see how much the professionals work on their short game. My reply was dead responsive.
if you’d like to change the discussion and talk about the play of amateurs, how they can prepare better, and how the Fred Couple quote was made in a different context than the one in which you used it, have at it.
I guess I could call him. But when he asks me what you’ve been saying about him, I’d have to admit that I have no clue at this point.I told you what Fred said about practice. If you have a problem with it talk to him.
. . . .
"At Detroit Golf Club, it turned out his driver wasn’t DeChambeau’s most valuable club—which should be a cringeworthy thought for every other golfer on the PGA Tour. Yes, Brawny Bryson led the field in strokes gained/off the tee (6.672 cumulative) with a driving distance average of 350.6 yards. But arguably more impressive was the fact he picked up 7.831 strokes gained with his putter over 72 holes, including 2.62 on Sunday. DeChambeau wound up leading the field in that category, too, which led to this gem of a stat from the PGA Tour."Drive for Show, Putt for Dough.
That old saying “ Drive for Show: Putt for Dough” still holds true.It’s golf— so what. Not everyone that drives a ball a mile is a good golfer
https://www.golfchannel.com/video/lee-trevino-wedge-most-important-part
I happen to agree with Lee. When Dustin Johnson worked on his wedge game a few years back he went from a very good player to world #1. During that time he never was much of a putter but he was #1 on tour with a wedge and one of the best drivers as always. Wedge, Driver, Putter