Driving it better than ever, better than anyone, Bryson DeChambeau primed for PGA battle
CHARLOTTE, N.C. – It's unclear which drive Friday prompted the look of astonishment.
Maybe it was the 357-yard blast down the left side of the third hole that left his fellow playing competitors – neither of whom are short hitters – in the dust, some 40 yards back.
Or perhaps it was the 359-yard moon shot that flew over the edge of the fairway bunker on 16 and settled, oh, a few inches from the center stripe.
But at some point during the second round of the PGA Championship, caddie Brennan Little – who has been on a tour bag since 1999, through Tiger and DJ and Rory and all of the others – remarked to Bryson DeChambeau's looper, Greg Bodine: 'I'm not sure if I've seen someone driving it as well as he's driving it.'
And here's the thing: Little wasn't alone in his assessment.
'Legitimately, in my opinion, he's the best driver I've ever seen,' swing coach Dana Dahlquist said. 'He controls the launch, the spin, the curve, the distance. It's all good'
This is not exactly groundbreaking, of course.
DeChambeau has been one of the game's biggest boppers since his body transformation five or six years ago that turned par 4s into pitch-and-putts. But as powerful as he's appeared, he's never been quite as dominant as this. Not when he bomb-and-gouged his way to the U.S. Open at Winged Foot. Not when he hit towering shots over the waste areas last summer at Pinehurst.
This right here is Bryson, quite literally, in full flight.
DeChambeau is five shots back at this PGA Championship, but he's poised like no other to close the gap. He's leading the field in total driving distance, at 331.6 yards, and his advantage in that department is only expected to increase as the temperatures creep closer to 90 degrees, the fairways and greens firm up after four inches of rain, and the rough that hasn't been touched in six days continues to grow.
It hasn't been a flawless first two days at Quail Hollow. DeChambeau missed too many greens in the opening round and made three bogeys. Some of his bold lines over tall trees or long bunkers have taken bad bounces into the rough, forcing him to take more conservative lines into the greens. He acknowledged that his wedge play needs to be cleaned up; despite having significantly less club into the greens, he's outside the top 90 in proximity to the hole. But he's still right there, just outside the top 10, and with only Scottie Scheffler in front of him to fear.
'It was a weird day today, much like yesterday,' DeChambeau said. 'I felt like I was playing good. Just didn't get anything out of it.'
And yet he and his team are feeling good, really good, about what this weekend might hold.
Over the past few months, DeChambeau has continued to refine his equipment, the most significant change coming two years ago when he switched to the Krank driver head that gave him a tighter dispersion on off-center hits. Minor tweaks keep leading to more incremental gains.
'He's always been a phenomenal player, and he's driven it well at times, but once he got that level of comfortability with the face of the driver, it was knowing he could hit it off the toe and heel and still be in play,' Bodine said. 'He just had the margin of error that other guys have, where he always felt like he had a dime on the face that he had to hit. Now, even a little bit off the toe or heel, it can still go where he's looking.'
On the LIV circuit this year, DeChambeau is gaining nearly two shots per round on the field off the tee – by far the best of any player in the world. It's not a perfect comparison, because it's the same field every week and not as strong, top to bottom, as the PGA Tour, but for perspective, that's nearly a half-shot better driving than peak Rory McIlroy. Through seven LIV events, DeChambeau is leading in distance and ranks seventh in accuracy, hitting 66% of the fairways. So he's longer than everyone and as accurate as players such as Sepp Straka or Russell Henley, who are renowned for their precision. It's a staggering combination.
'The last month or two has just been a little bit better than normal,' Bodine said. 'It's taken a step up.'
DeChambeau's marathon practice always make for compelling TV viewing as he shuts down the range, but Dahlquist said their swing work now is actually quite simple and specific.
'The big thing for him is to make sure that he keeps trying to rotate left, trying to get his pressure to be proper and swing to the right,' he said. 'It's pretty linear at this point. It's been like that for a while now.'
If there's anything that's held DeChambeau back from going on a tear, it's been his approach play. Even from the most advantageous positions he can become indecisive as his unique golfing mind takes into account all of the variables. At the Masters, he was nearly last in the field with his irons as, Dahlquist said, he continued to learn the various slopes and lies at Augusta National. Here at the PGA he has not been as sharp as he'd like either, as he adapts to changing course conditions and how that affects his spin rates.
'Standard deviation off a flat lie, he's the best in the world,' Dahlquist said, 'because he's just hitting the same shot every time.'
But that's the next frontier, since he's already the best in one area – an area that, by the end of the weekend, should become the most significant. On every tipped-out tee box at Quail Hollow, he takes a deep breath, plunges his tee into the soggy turf, and lashes the longest and straightest drives of anyone at this level.
'The kid's good at golf,' Dahlquist said with a smile.
And only getting better.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
10 minutes ago
- USA Today
US Open live leaderboard updates: Friday tee times, pairings, where to watch
US Open live leaderboard updates: Friday tee times, pairings, where to watch Show Caption Hide Caption J.J. Spaun calls it his best putting day of the year J.J. Spaun navigated Oakmont's tough setup with sharp putting and gritty play in round one of the U.S. Open. USGA J.J. Spaun sits at the top of the US Open leaderboard after the first day of action on Thursday. He will return to Oakmont Country Club for the second round and build upon his early success. Spaun shot a 66 to finish 4-under-par and ahead of Thriston Lawrence, who finished second at 3-under-par. Spaun is scheduled to tee off at 12:52 p.m. ET, alongside Tom Kim and Taylor Pendrith. Lawrence will begin the second round at 2:20 p.m. with Noah Kent and Thorbjorn Olesen. The field remains competitive, with three different players vying for the top spot after finishing in third place. Si Woo Kim, Brooks Koepka and Sungjae Im all finished 2-under-par. Bryson DeChambeau, who won the event in 2024, is currently tied for 52nd place with a group of others. The defending champion finished 3-over-par. USA TODAY Sports will provide complete coverage of Friday's opening round. Follow along for live updates here: US Open 2025 leaderboard 1. J.J. Spaun -4 (F) T2. Thriston Lawrence -3 (F) T3. Si Woo Kim -2 (F) T3. Brooks Keopka -2 (F) T3. Sungjae Im -2 (17*) You can get latest leaderboard updates and tee times here. Where to watch the US Open: TV Channel, streaming Friday The 2025 U.S. Open will be broadcast by NBC and USA Network throughout all four rounds, with USA Network the sole home for first-round action on Thursday, June 12 and NBC and USA Network splitting coverage for the second, third and final rounds. All four rounds of the U.S. Open will be live streamed on Peacock, the USGA app and Fubo, which offers a free trial. Peacock will also broadcast U.S. Open All-Access, its whiparound-style offering, on all four days. Second round: Friday, June 13 6:30 a.m.-1 p.m. on Peacock 1-7 p.m. on NBC, Fubo 7-8 p.m. on Peacock Watch the 2025 US Open with Fubo US Open tee times today For a full list of tee times, you can find Thursday's starts here. All times Eastern; (a) amateur; (1 or 10) starting hole


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
How former Alabama golfers performed during first round of 2025 U.S. Open
How former Alabama golfers performed during first round of 2025 U.S. Open One of professional golf's premier annual events began Thursday morning in Oakmont, Pennsylvania, as countless players played their opening rounds at the 2025 U.S. Open from Oakmont Country Club. Included in that lengthy field of players were many of the world's greatest golfers, four of which played collegiately for the Alabama Crimson Tide before beginning their professional careers. Taking a deeper look at those four Alabama names as well, Thursday was simply a rough day for some at Oakmont, while one name in particular had an impressive day that positions himself well going into the second round Friday. Here is a look at how every former Alabama golfer performed during the first round of the U.S. Open on Thursday. Betting odds are according to BetMGM as of Thursday night, June 12 Justin Thomas Round 1 Score: 76 (+6) 76 (+6) Tournament Score: +6 (T-98) +6 (T-98) Current Odds: +35000 +35000 Round 2 Tee Time: 7:18 a.m. ET Thomas had a rough showing Thursday at the U.S. Open, shooting a 76 to now sit at six-over for the tournament as we enter Friday. Because of this, the former Alabama star will likely need a big day Friday in order to make it to the weekend. Davis Riley Round 1 Score: 78 (+8) 78 (+8) Tournament Score: +8 (T-124) +8 (T-124) Current Odds: N/A N/A Round 2 Tee Time: 2:09 p.m. ET Coming off what was his best-ever performance at a major by finishing tied-second at the PGA Championship, Riley had a rough first round at Oakmont on Thursday in which he shot a 78 (+8). Riley will likely need a big second round Friday in order to make it to the weekend. Nick Dunlap Round 1 Score: 77 (+7) 77 (+7) Tournament Score: +7 (T-119) +7 (T-119) Current Odds: N/A N/A Round 2 Tee Time: 8:13 a.m. ET Similar to both Thomas and Riley, Dunlap also struggled Thursday at Oakmont, shooting a 77 to sit at seven-over for the tournament entering Friday. Dunlap also needs a big Friday in order to make the cut. Bud Cauley Round 1 Score: 70 (E) 70 (E) Tournament Score: E (T-11) E (T-11) Current Odds: +6600 +6600 Round 2 Tee Time: 8:02 a.m. ET Alabama's top performer during the first round was undoubtedly Cauley, who shot an even 70 on Thursday to now sit at T-11 entering Friday. Cauley is only four shots behind the leader J.J. Spaun entering the second round, and is certainly a name to watch for Friday. Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion. Get more betting analysis and predictions at Sportsbook Wire.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
U.S. Open 2025 live updates: Leaderboard, best pairings for the second round at Oakmont
USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article. Pricing and availability subject to change. How's that for an opener? The U.S. Open 2025 is underway with 18 holes in the books after Thursday's first round at Oakmont Country Club, the highest-ranked private course on the Golfweek's Best state-by-state list. Now it's on to Round 2. If you want leaderboard updates, scores, tee times, highlights and more from the first round, you've come to the right spot. U.S. Open 2025 leaderboard Keep tabs on the U.S. leaderboard, scores and tee times here. Here's what the top of the leaderboard looked like after the first round. These are the only golfers under par after 18 holes. Pos. Golfer Score 1 J.J. Spaun -4 2 Thriston Lawrence -3 T3 Si Woo Kim -2 T3 Brooks Koepka -2 T3 Sungjae Im -2 T6 Ben Griffin -1 T6 Thomas Detry -1 T6 Jon Rahm -1 T6 Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen -1 T6 James Nicholas -1 A view of a golf club on the second tee box during a practice round ahead of the 2025 U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club. Where and how to watch the U.S. Open Second round, 6:30 a.m. ET to 5 p.m. ET, Peacock Second round featured groups, 7 a.m. ET to 1 p.m., USGA App, DirecTV, YouTube TV Second round, 1 p.m. ET to 7 p.m. ET, NBC, Peacock Second round, 7 p.m. ET to 8 p.m. ET, Peacock Second round, 3 p.m. ET to 8 p.m., Sirius XM Radio Live from the U.S. Open, 8 p.m. ET to 10 p.m. ET, Golf Channel Advertisement See the complete TV and streaming lineup for the entire week here. What's the projected cutline at the U.S. Open? The USGA, which runs the championship, set the cut for the low 60 and ties. After Thursday's first round, that would make the projected cutline 3 over. That would put these guys in jeopardy with 18 holes to play Friday. Pos. Golfer Score T49 Hideki Matsuyama 4 over T49 Matt Fitzpatrick 4 over T49 Wyndham Clark 4 over T49 Rory McIlroy 4 over T79 Joaquin Niemann 5 over T98 Patrick Cantlay 6 over T98 Justin Thomas 6 over T98 Jason Day 6 over T119 Justin Rose 7 over T133 Shane Lowry 9 over Who won the U.S. Open the last time it was at Oakmont? That would be Dustin Johnson in 2016. This is the 10th U.S. Open at Oakmont, the most of any golf course. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: US Open leaderboard live updates: Tee times, TV channel today, odds