Portrarian, Northern Ireland – Its’S’SSE Golf season links, which means that the best players in the world are obsessively thinking about course conditions. And very few players think more than Bryson Dechambeau.
“This will be wild, but imagine a scenario where you have a tent of 400 yards, and you can simply hit any sort of shot with all fans,” Dechambeau said on Tuesday at his open championship press conference. “That’s what I imagine, as in a hangar or something like that in a big stadium. That would be good to try.”
He was talking to better understand the wind: how to play it, how to try it. Dechambeau is a guy who likes to control variables; Wind gusts present a particularly vague challenge. This is partly the reason why he has fought more in this major than in others – his wind tests and his golf links are developing works.
Bryson Dechambeau ahead of the 2025 open championship
One thing Dechambeau has tried is to covet the ball against the wind than to ride it.
“If you are going to try to ride the wind once, how can I check it and make sure it doesn’t go to a crazy place?” He said. “Because after the ball gets into that wind, it’s Sayonara. This thing can go forever offline. “
In the press room- especially without the smell and without shirah- everything sounds relatively simple.
“Hitting him away, hitting him straight, how I can, and learn how to do better in these greens in wind and rain and everything. It is simply realizing it,” Dechambeau said. “It will simply take time and something I have never really experienced by growing up in California.”
His Hangar hypothetics raised another hypothetical. Wold what would they shoot if they just play in a genuine cube? Par-72, without wind, without rain, without trouble?
“Let’s see, I think you will have boys who shoot close to 60,” Dechambeau said. “You see Palm Springs, or not? This is a lot like a cube ever in the morning, so they play really well in La Quinta and Whatnot. That would be the same kind, I think you would have boys shooting close to 60 every day, some of them, and there were some 72 and 73, but if you are playing well, you can shoot 65 or less easily.”
This led to Dechambeau’s most interesting discovery, something he learned as a child playing public golf courses, but also recently at his concert as a content creator, where he visits public courses attending record records – and often falls short. We usually think of tournament courses as more challenging than public courses because they are longer, approximate is higher, greens are faster. That’s all true. But there is a unpredictability for your local mauni that may not exist in the Big Show.
“There are some golf courses that are almost more difficult because the greens are not that good,” Dechambeau said. “There are even more factors as well. If they are perfect greens, my gosh, we can shoot close to 60 (in the hypothetical) if it is a golf course with tournament. If it is not so conditioned, it becomes difficult for us to roll it into the hole just because of fate. Conditions, we are shooting below 65. “, so there are many factors. “
“In my series of public golf course, there are times when I literally shoot one or two under the first, because I just get some bad holidays and bad dances and I’m not doing well. Nice nice to bow myself a little.”
The beauty of golf is, of course, that it is not in a hangar nor cubes as – with forgiveness tgl – in an imitator. Most golf fans will root for the right weather open this week, a dash of wind and rain, so we get the right test open. Given that Royal Portrush is considered one of the most difficult connections in the world, we must take that test. But they can at least expect smooth greens.
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