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Marcus Hayes: Masters leader Bryson DeChambeau remains a massively talented walking contradiction

Marcus Hayes, The Philadelphia Inquirer on

Published in Golf

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Bryson DeChambeau, now 30 and mellowed, remains golf’s greatest living paradox.

He shot a career-best 65 at the Masters on Thursday and led by one stroke over Scottie Scheffler when play, delayed 2 hours, 30 minutes by morning storms, was suspended because of darkness.

He birdied his first three holes, then birdied five of the last seven. He hit his tee shots on the par-5 13th and 15th holes into the trees on the right but still reached the green in two. He drained a 31-foot, right-to-left putt form the right of the pin on No. 17 that everyone else under-read and under-hit. He found the fairway bunker on No. 18 but smoked his second shot 177 yards uphill, pin-high and right, then two-putted.

Then it was showtime.

Asked how he developed the patience to manage Augusta National in wind gusts up to 30 mph, he replied: “It’s more just getting older. You know, I’m 30 now, and I’m not old.”

Once a rabid experimenter, DeChambeau repeatedly referenced a newfound routine that he has leaned on for the last few months which, he said, depends on the lighter demands of the 54-hole LIV Tour events.

 

“I feel like that sort of schedule that LIV has provided me good, ample time to get ready for tournaments like this,” he said. Then, he said, “Look, it would be fine either way.”

He spent a couple of years bulking up and chasing distance, and, in the middle of that phase, he said Augusta National was a “par-67″ for him.

“The comment was definitely misinterpreted,” he said Thursday. He then quickly said it was not misinterpreted: “I have a level of respect for this golf course that’s a little bit different than a couple years ago. ... Regarding the 67 comment, you know, you mess up.”

DeChambeau shot 61 and 58 on the LIV tour last August at The Greenbriar in West Virginia, one of professional golf’s easiest tracks. Afterward, he said it was “probably the greatest moment in my golf career.”

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