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topicnews · July 17, 2025

Why Bryson Dechambeau says her public course is behind

Why Bryson Dechambeau says her public course is behind


Portrush, Northern Ireland – it is the golf season with left, which means that the best golfers in the world are obsessed with the course conditions. And very few golfers think harder than Bryson Dechameau.

“This will be wild, but imagine a scenario in which you have a 400 yard tent, and you can hit every shot with every wind with all fans,” said Dechambeau on Tuesday in his press conference of the open championship before the tournament. “I imagine that in a hangar or something in a large stadium. That would be cool to test.”

He spoke of understanding the wind better: how to play it, how to test it. Dechameau is a type who likes to control variables. Wind gusts are a particularly moody challenge. This is partly the reason why he has more struggle for this main subject than with the others – his wind tests and its links are in the works.

Bryson Decimbeau in front of the Open Championship 2025

One thing that Dechameau has tried is to bend the ball against the wind instead of ride it.

“Once you try to drive the wind, how can I check and make sure that it is not possible to go to a crazy place?” he said. “Because as soon as the ball goes into this wind, it is Sayonara. The thing can go forever offline.”

In the press room- especially wind and rain-free- everything sounds relatively simple.

“Beat it far, do it just like that, and learn to learn how to do these greens under windy conditions and rain and all of this better. It only finds out,” said Dechameau. “It will only take time and something I have never really experienced when I grew up in California.”

His hangar hypothetically raised another hypothetics. What would professionals shoot if they only played in a literal dome? Par-72, no wind, no rain, no trouble?

“Let's see, I think they have boys who shoot almost 60,” said Decimbeau. “You look at Palm Springs, right? This is sometimes a dome in the morning, so they play very well with La Quinta and so on. That would be a bit the same.

This led to Dechambeau's most interesting revelation, what he learned as a child who played public golf courses, but also in recent times in his secondary district as a content creator where he visited public courses, and is often neglected. As a rule, we think of tour level courses than more demanding than public courses because they are longer that Rough is higher, the greens are faster. It's all true. But there is unpredictability for your local Muni, which may not exist in the big show.

“There are some golf courses that are almost more difficult because the greens are not so good,” said Dechambeau. “There are also more factors. If you are perfect, we can shoot with 40 [in that hypothetical] If it is a tour caliber golf course. If it is not so conditioned, it will be difficult for us to roll it into the hole because of happiness. So there are numerous factors that are played for the conditions in the conditions, but from the point of view of the execution we give ourselves a normal tour course under these conditions, and we shoot quite a lot under the age of 65. “

“In my public Golf Course series there are times when I literally shoot one or two under-pars because I only get a few bad breaks and bad hops and not say well. It is nice to humiliate me a little.”

The beauty of the Gulf is, of course, that it is neither in a hangar nor in a dome – and – with an excuse at TGL – in a simulator. Most golf fans will be a dash of wind and rain for proper open weather this week, so we get a real open test. In view of the toughest links tests in the world, since Royal Portrush is considered among the hardest links, we should receive this test. But at least you can expect smooth greens.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_3efoacru1c

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