
Every golfer knows how frustrating it is when your swing is off and you can’t pinpoint the problem. From consulting an instructor, to overanalyzing footage and even searching the internet for answers, nothing is off limits if it means getting your game back on track. As we’ve learned recently, this concept doesn’t just extend to amateurs.
In a press conference with Crushers GC after their team’s victory in LIV Golf Korea, Bryson DeChambeau revealed that he used Gemini, Google’s Artificial Intelligence assistant, before the final round as a last-minute tool to help identify flaws in his movement mechanics.
According to DeChambeau, his swing problems started to show at the end of his first round. He explained that it felt like his hands were coming out in front of his body, which made it difficult for him to swing the club.
“The start of the first round felt really good. The golf swing felt in sync and then it started to get out of sync,” he said.
“My hands felt like they were going forward like that and I couldn’t get the club back. Even if I tried to stop it here, it still wouldn’t come back,” DeChambeau continued.
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After dealing with swing issues for the next two rounds, he realized the problem wasn’t going to fix itself. So the Crushers GC Captain spent several hours on the range after Saturday’s third round to diagnose and correct faults in his swing mechanics – but his breakthrough never came.
“I didn’t actually get it in verse,” DeChambeau said.
At that point he turned to the Twins.
“I was talking to the AI quite a bit last night trying to go through some different principles of physics that make the club go back, having some alpha torque and gamma torque,” he said.
After working with the Twins, DeChambeau apparently identified the cause of his swing struggles — pointing to catch pressure and tension as two contributing factors.
“I came out here today with just a little bit of a looser hand, and I felt the club a lot better, and I felt like I could close the club a lot more effectively, and then I started to strip it,” DeChambeau said.
“I feel like I’m on the right track now,” he said.
With the US Open 2026, in Shinnecock Hillsjust a few weeks away, it will be interesting to see if DeChambeau can continue this momentum and get his game trending in the right direction — especially after a disappointing cut missed at 2026 PGA Championship.

