Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting A closer look at the prototype driver Bryson DeChambeau is using for the World Long Drive Championship

A closer look at the prototype driver Bryson DeChambeau is using for the World Long Drive Championship

Bryson Dechambeau belted five drives in excess of 400 yards in Tuesday’s opening session of the Professional Long Drivers Association World Championships in Mesquite, Nevada. Dechambeau’s much ballyhooed bid to compete against the professional long drivers — and just a few days after the conclusion of the Ryder Cup — has captivated the gold world. Even casual fans of the Golfing Scientist have to admit they’re curious to see how the TOUR’s longest hitter stacks up against the guys who blast bombs for a living. Of course, at the Equipment Report, our interest is a tad more specific. Namely, how would Bryson switch up his driver setup to hit the golf ball as far as he possibly can — with only a modest concern for accuracy. According to Cobra’s Ben Schomin, DeChambeau is using a prototype Cobra RadSpeed driver with 5 degrees of loft for this week’s competition (he used a 2015 Cobra King LTD Pro driver for most of the 2021 season). We assume that, since the club is outfitted with a MyFly loft sleeve, the club is turned down a half-degree from the 5.5 degrees it is labeled as having. DeChambeau could dial the loft down even further — to as low as 4 degrees with the MyFly adjustability. “We chose to remove adjustable weights to lighten overall head weight and give us more discretionary internal weight movement,” Schomin told PGATOUR.COM. According to Schomin, along with the 190-gram head, Bryson is using a 48-inch version of the LA Golf Axis Blue 60 X shaft he plays on the PGA TOUR. Two interesting items here about the clubhead: the weight ports and hot melt. In a bid to maximize ball speed while still offering a measure of forgiveness, the retail Cobra RadSpeed driver has a 12-gram weight near the face and a two-gram weight near the rear of the club. Cobra’s RadSpeed driver uses radial weighting, by which engineers were able to maximize the distance between the front and back weights for greater stability. Built on a T-Bar Speed Chassis, RadSpeed drivers also feature a thin-ply carbon wrap crown for additional weight savings. While it looks similar at first glance, Bryson’s prototype driver doesn’t have those weights. Instead, it appears the spaces for the weights has been filled with a lightweight material. This provides Cobra’s team with an additional 13-14 grams of weight to position in the club in order to achieve Bryson’s preferred launch and feel. Rather than relying on the RadSpeed’s adjustable weighting, Schomin and Cobra’s team opted for a more old-school (yet still widely used) method of “internal weight movement”: hot melt. Also known as “rat glue” by gearheads — owing to the similarity between the properties of the substance and the material found in glue traps — hot melt is injected into clubheads via a hot glue gun with a long nosel. Hot melt is used for both objective and subjective reasons. Subjectively, injecting the thermoplastic adhesive into a driver can alter the sound and feel of a club to bring it more in line with a player’s preferences. On the more objective front, hot melt injected into the toe of a club will help promote a fade bias, into the heel will aid a draw, near the face of the club will lower spin and trajectory, and near the rear of the club will increase forgiveness and launch. It’s similar to how players use lead tape to alter a club’s center of gravity and change the ball flight it produces. It’s a complex recipe, and Bryson’s goals — high launch and low spin — dictate the formula for where exactly the “rat glue” has been placed. It’s unclear whether he favors a head that is more draw or fade-biased for long drive and if hot melt has been used to facilitate a particular ball flight, however. While Cobra didn’t share the spin nor launch numbers Bryson is targeting, we can safely assume he’s looking for low spin and high launch. A recent Instagram post had DeChambeau generating 2,144 rpm of spin and a launch angle of 8.8 degrees on a drive that carried 383.1 yards.

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This year marks the 30th anniversary of Tiger Woods’ PGA TOUR debut at Riviera Country Club. The 16-year-old needed permission from his school principal to play, and he called it a “life-changing moment for me” after shooting 72-75 to miss the cut. Little did we know what the next three decades would hold. Woods went on to amass a record-tying 82 TOUR wins, including 15 majors. He’s back at Riviera this week as the host of the tournament now known as The Genesis Invitational. Much has changed in the world of golf, as well. Most notably for our Equipment Report, there have been huge advancements in club technology since 1992. To celebrate Woods’ 30-year anniversary of his PGA TOUR debut, we wanted to take a closer look at the driver the 16-year-old Woods used that week (Want to read more on Tiger’s historic gear? Click here for more on Tiger’s famed Scotty Cameron Newport 2 putter). As a TaylorMade representative has confirmed, young Woods used a TaylorMade Tour Preferred Burner Plus driver equipped with a “Tour Gold From TaylorMade” shaft. Woods averaged 263.3 yards off the tee in his two rounds at Riviera, slightly below the field average (263.9 yards) for those two days and 25 yards between the leader in that category (Joey Sindelar, 288.0 yards). Fred Couples, who went on to win that week, averaged 282.5 yards in the first two rounds, while Davis Love III, the 36-hole leader who eventually fell in a playoff to Couples, averaged 283.8. Woods ranked 77th in the 144-player field in that statistic. TaylorMade was a pioneer in the metalwood space, releasing the first metal driver, the Pittsburgh Persimmon, in 1979. The Burner Plus model that Woods used in 1992 was part of a series of TaylorMade drivers that were available in the late 1980s and early 1990s. According to a TaylorMade catalog from 1989, the Tour Preferred drivers were made with stronger-than-usual lofts, but the designs utilized “tri-dimensional weighting” to move the center of gravity lower and farther back in the heads. The combination of strong lofts and rearward weighting allowed TaylorMade to enhance both distance and accuracy. The drivers also were designed with thinner hosels to reduce drag throughout the swing, and the reduction in weight allowed TaylorMade to increase perimeter weighting in the clubheads for increased forgiveness. If you read up about new golf club technology in the year 2022, golf club companies are still trying to achieve similar engineering improvements. The typical goal is to reposition weight in a head to enhance forgiveness and increase speed. Woods’ Burner Plus was made of stainless steel, which was a common material that drivers used in the era between persimmon and the introduction of titanium in the early 90s. As you’ll notice, Woods’ driver had in 1992 a significantly smaller head than the drivers of today. Drivers have gotten significantly bigger as materials have gotten lighter, and companies have gotten smarter through the years. In his most recent appearance, at the 2021 PNC Championship, Woods used a TaylorMade Stealth Plus driver that debuted TaylorMade’s new carbonwood technology. The club’s black-and-red face is made of 60 layers of carbon, has sole-weight and hosel adjustability, and a crown made of carbon. The Stealth Plus is a far technological cry from the driver Woods used in his PGA TOUR debut 30 years ago. Just for kicks, if you’re interested in owning a Tour Preferred Burner Plus for yourself (if you don’t have one in the garage already), they’re readily available on third-party websites for less than $20. Pick one up and give it a try: Our guess is you won’t hit it nearly as far or as straight as a 16-year-old Woods!

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Scott, UNIQLO donate 150,000 medical masksScott, UNIQLO donate 150,000 medical masks

Adam Scott has announced UNIQLO will donate 150,000 medical masks to the Australian Royal Flying Doctor Service as part of COVID-19 pandemic relief efforts. The 14-time PGA TOUR winner is a UNIQLO global ambassador and made the announcement that is set to help around 2,000 healthcare workers, particularly in remote areas of Australia, via Instagram. The Royal Flying Doctor Service is a non-profit organization that provides emergency and primary health care services over an area just shy of three million square miles. This effort comes as UNIQLO’s parent company, Fast Retailing, has enlisted the support of its manufacturing partners to supply 10 million masks to high-priority medical facilities worldwide. “After the golf season was suspended in March, I came home to Australia and watching the news and seeing the spread of the virus I wondered if there’s anything I can do,â€� Scott said. “I reached out to my partners at UNIQLO and they were only too happy to help. Over the past weeks we’ve been working together in sourcing personal protective equipment and today I’m pleased to announce UNIQLO Australia and I will be donating 150,000 medical marks to the Royal Flying Doctor Service. “With a global shortage of masks this donation will help the Royal Flying Doctors team of 2,000 health care staff continue in their role in overcoming COVID-19. These masks will also assist the team in providing much needed medical services to those in remote areas across Australia.â€� Scott also revealed UNIQLO will be providing the team with Ultra Light Down jackets to keep them warm on the job as the Southern Hemisphere approaches winter and colder weather. “I hope you are all staying safe as we continue to fight the coronavirus. I’m so proud of our efforts as Aussies so far but we must keep going and together we could knock this virus for six,â€� Scott added. “I’d like to recognize those working tirelessly to protect our health and safety at this time and thank you for your immense sacrifice. On behalf of UNIQLO we wish you and your families stay healthy and safe.â€�

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Officials will greatly vary distances on short 12th hole at THE PLAYERSOfficials will greatly vary distances on short 12th hole at THE PLAYERS

PONTE VEDRA BEACH - PGA TOUR officials have made the biggest adjustment to the drivable 12th hole at TPC Sawgrass since its complete renovation in 2017, setting a plan to play it both long and short at the 2021 PLAYERS Championship. The short 302-yard par-4 was renovated in 2017 from Pete Dye's original design, creating a risk-reward drivable scenario with water flanking the left side of the green and a sand hazard doing the same in the layup zone. A back tee was retained to mirror the length of the longer original hole but to date hadn't been utilized at THE PLAYERS. In the three full THE PLAYERS Championships prior to this year's 2021 edition, the hole played anywhere between 281 and 317 yards but now it is set to top out around 369 yards. The back tee was in play in Tuesday's practice round at TPC Sawgrass at 364 yards. In 2019 the hole played to a scoring average of 3.533 - the easiest hole on the course. It also played under par in 2018 (3.621, fourth-easiest hole) and 2017 (3.827, fourth-easiest hole). Officials have made the change to preserve Pete Dye's initial design thoughts and to help facilitate a swifter pace of play over the opening rounds given the 154-man field size. Dye originally designed both sides of TPC Sawgrass to start in a similar fashion as he recognized tournament play often starts off the first and 10th holes. Now both sides have two similar length par 4s, a par 3 and a par 5 over the first four holes. Fans can expect the drama of the shorter tee on No. 12 to ramp back up again over the weekend rounds once the cut to the top 65 players and ties is made. "What triggered this more than anything was the increased field size and the move to March which brings the north wind into play," PGA TOUR Rules Official Stephen Cox explained. "The more we looked into it the more we felt this year is a good year to trial it and get player feedback. If you do get that north wind then the 11th hole tends to be reachable downwind and then you turn around for a drivable par 4 which often doesn't aid pace of play from a flow perspective. "This year, more than any, pace of play will be a focus for us given the increase in field size. The final piece to this was the strategic element in starting rounds one and two. It's a similar start across the two nines now, much like Pete Dye intended." TOUR driving distance leader Bryson DeChambeau, who won at Bay Hill last week, would be one of just a few players who can consider the maxed-out length still legitimately drivable. While he hadn't been out to test the new spot when asked, he said he'd likely still be going after the green. "Wow, that’s cool. If they want to do that, that’s great. Hopefully the length should still be an advantage," DeChambeau said. "If it’s downwind, yeah, I’m sure I will (go for it). Even if I can hit it up next to the green and chip it on." DeChambeau prefers the hole in its shorter format - where he says he can reach with a 5-wood - as while he may now be one of a few who can reach, the risk has been taken away from a large portion of the field. "Putting it all the way back there is going to take a lot of people out of the equation from trying to drive it," DeChambeau said. "And it may make the hole easier for some people because then they aren’t going for it and taking that risk-reward on and making a mistake. Now they’re hitting 3-wood or whatever down the right center and then hitting a wedge on the green and making birdie one or two days, where they would be going for it every single day and maybe they make a mistake." Having been uncomfortable on the hole in the past, former FedExCup champion Justin Thomas says laying up doesn't make things all that much easier. "It’s not a comfortable yardage or shot shape for me, but that being said, I’ve made plenty of birdies," Thomas said. "If you lay it up, it’s extremely narrow and then you’ve got a green that all falls away from you or some tough pins, so you just have to commit to whatever you’re doing is what I’ve learned on that hole." Defending PLAYERS champion Rory McIlroy expects he will also still swing away for the fences even if the green isn't his target. "You’ve almost got a bigger area to hit into when you’re going for the green than you do when you’re laying up. I think that’s the hard thing. I’ve always found that lay-up more difficult than actually going for the green," McIlroy said. "If you can cover that long bunker that runs up the left side you’ve got quite a wide landing area to hit into there. I think you’re still going to see a lot of guys hitting driver from that back tee."

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