Tyrrell Hatton and Jon Rahm arrived early. Maybe this was the first lesson they taught me: to be a right professional, if you are in time, you are late. But at the time I would take their place in the Maridoe GC direction in Dallas, the two players had already had wedges in their hand, their heat. And so our last episode BY Heating – Interpreting Hatton and Rahm – started in real time.
Here are the 10 things I have learned.
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1. Both start with their highest degree wedges.
“I mainly start trying to hit it around 50-60 yards and I just get used to the club to be back in my hands for the day,” Hatton told his 60 stairs. Any shape of the shot he has in mind? “I don’t think about it, I just hit him,” he said. “Golf is quite complicated.”
2. But they would already start in the gym.
It was not always the case, Hatton confessed. But at this point he must take his engine before hitting the range.
“Obviously not,” he said. “But as I grew older and stronger and stronger, I need to start doing a little more in the gym to prepare the cloak ready to try and rotate.”
3. Hatton has a “double syllable” he uses to remove distance.
“I’ve always struggled to remove distance by slowing my swing, it confuses me,” he said. “So I started catching up and then with 54 (-degree) I have a double check, so it goes even shorter. So I can still swing my.”
He tells me the small “V” signs in his control he uses to monitor the extension of his syllables. How many yards is that strategy removed?
“From a full shot? The double network would normally remove near 12 yards,” he said. “So it’s enough. It feels terrible, but I’ve done it enough to enjoy it.”
4. Rahm likes to play with other fiery competitors.
“One of the things we get together is that we tend to have some similar reactions in the Golf Course,” Rahm told Hatton, who has been his teammate Ryder Cup and is now his Liv team friend at Legion XIII. How does this affect, playing with another Hothead?
“Whenever I play with someone who can go a little more in the golf course, not just (Turrell), everyone, because I see myself in it, I laugh. So there is a little joy that comes with it. And many times they will see me laughing and then they laugh. Because they fully understand.”
5. Rahm is a gentle giant.
Asking Hatton how it is rahm away from the course led to probably my favorite day exchange:
Envelope: “Well, he looks scary, doesn’t he? But he’s like a big teddy bear.”
Rahm: “Why do people say I look scary?”
Envelope: “Probably is probably something that has to do with being units of AF – and being like six feet three. When you are five feet eight hobbit is unclear.”
Hatton: “Well, he looks scary, doesn’t he? But he’s like a big teddy bear.”
Rahm: “Why do people say I look scary?”
Hatton: “Probably probably something that has to do with being a unit and being like, 6-foot-3 when you are a 5-foot-8 hobby.Pic.twitter.com/7fgkocccx6v– Dylan dethier (@dylan_Dethier) 9 July 2025
6. Hatton is as funny as you would think.
“Tyrrell is one of the most beloved people you will ever meet,” Rahm said. “He does not like to do it, but I think he should be mictated for one of our practice rounds. Because he simply releases gems. As, any summary you’ve seen from him saying that funny things is very gentle compared to what we usually hear.”
7. But he is not much for positive self-talked about.
I asked Hatton when he feels like he was first doing so good. I thought this was a very safe territory; Depending on who you ask that he is considered one of the 10 or 15 best players in the world at the moment. That means, if you don’t ask.
“That’s a strange question. I don’t think I’m (so good),” he said. “I say to myself I’m s-.”
Then he called line by an English comedian.
“What Micky Flanagan says: Positivity drains you.”
8. Rahm, on the other hand, is more positive than sounds.
“I am, like, irrationally positive in my mind,” he said. “Never lose hope, always hoping for the best in the other purpose in any situation – though my mouth can say other things, I believe strongly.
In other words, he is never short in self -esteem.
“No, no, no.”
9. Hatton hits the ball wildly straight.
Only during our session did he hit several shots that were recorded in an unheard of “0” in side rotation-including in a car holding 318 yards.
“How complicated the game is and how much we try to simplify it, (Tyrrell’s) only thought is to hit a straight, which is probably the impossible game,” Rahm said. “That’s the strangest part to me, but how good is it in it, right? I mean, you are seeing it. To get a zero spin with so many clubs, it is clearly good in it.”
Hatton confirmed that he does not think specifically about tracking speed.
“I feel like I can hit him so far as to be able to compete,” he said. “Of course, there are boys here who send them absolutely and will never beat them in a long car competition, but hitting it does not mean you will win every week. There are other ways to reach the course.”
10. Rahm was hitting more draws.
I asked Rahm if he hit 100 disks as they would fade against the draws. That number, he said, has changed dramatically.
“If you were to ask me this five years ago, I would say 99 pallor and an accidental draw,” he said. “If we’re including 3-Dru away, I would say that I would probably reach 30 percent draws.”
Rahm showed what it looks like when it strikes its faded shares – choose a reference point a few inches in front of the ball, line up to it, approximating its target slightly, and swinging its purpose line, knowing the ball will fall to the right.
When he hits a draw, on the other hand, he will close his attitude a little, but will move the ball up to his stance – everyone as he left his club in the same place.
“I’m just letting an extra foot for the club to close,” he said. “I don’t change anything in my swinging. And when I’m swinging well. The worst case is right. If you draw, it attracts a little.”
Good news: There is much more where it came from! To hear the favorite part of Rahm in Golf, whether Hatton “loves” the game and what he sees “disgusting”, watch the full video on youtube here or below.
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Dylan dethier
Golfit.com editor
Dylan Dothier is an elderly writer for Golf Magazine/Golf.com. Native Williamstown, Mass. Dothier is a graduate of Williams College, where he graduated in English, and he is the author of 18 in Americawhich details last year as an 18-year-old living out of his car and playing a round of golf in every state.