Bryson DeChambeau - the 'golf scientist' - unveils bizarre new putting technique on PGA Tour... where he stands FACING the hole

  • Bryson DeChambeau showed off his latest attempt at revolutionising golf
  • The American is a physics graduate and uses science to improve his game
  • DeChambeau has started putting facing the target rather than side-on 
  • He used the technique at the Franklin Templeton Shootout on the PGA Tour 

Bryson DeChambeau, the self-styled golf scientist, has unveiled his latest innovation on the PGA Tour: putting ‘side-saddle’.

The rough translation? Standing face-on to the target, rather than perpendicular to the line of the putt.

The 23-year-old American majored in physics at Southern Methodist University in Dallas and has set out to revolutionise golf with the application of science.

Bryson DeChambeau shows off his unorthodox new putting style on Thursday 

The American stands facing the target, rather than side-on, and swings like a croquet player

DeChambeau watches his ball travel towards the target at the Franklin Templeton Shootout

And the strange new technique clearly has its benefits as he picks the ball out after holing it

DeChambeau showed off his bizarre-looking new putting technique in competition at the Franklin-Templeton Shootout in Florida on Thursday, and used it to good effect, including sinking one birdie putt from long range.

He and playing partner Lexi Thompson shot a 10-under-par score in the scramble format to sit eighth on the 12-team leaderboard.

Broken down, DeChambeau’s new technique involves standing facing his target, with his ball slightly outside his right foot, and gripping the club in an unorthodox fashion, with his right hand extended halfway down the shaft and pointing downwards, while his left hand grips both the club and all of his left wrist.

He then swings the putter in a similar way how to a croquet player might use his mallet, swinging straight back and then through the line of the putt.

The method appears odd and challenges putting convention but it breaks no laws of the game. Sam Snead, who won seven majors in the 1940s and 50s, was known to putt side-saddle.

‘I think it's an easier way to putt and could be another game-changer like the one-length [irons],’ he told Golf Digest in October.

DeChambeau made a name for himself last year when he became only the fifth player ever to win both of America’s most prestigious amateur tournaments - the US Amateur and the NCAA Division 1 Championship – in the same year.

DeChambeau has set out to revolutionise golf by applying science - he is a physics major

He professed an ambition to win the Masters as an amateur, and then briefly contended at Augusta but faded away to finish 21st. The Californian turned pro straight afterwards but did not manage another top-10 all year. He earned his PGA Tour card for 2016-17 by winning on the second-tier Web.com Tour, but has had two missed cuts at the start of the wraparound season.

DeChambeau’s other quirks include using clubs with exactly the same length shaft – 37.5in. A conventional set of irons has shafts which decrease in length as the lofts on the club-face increase (so a 3-iron’s shaft length is longer than a 4-iron, for example, and so on.) Unlike most players he keeps the club on the same ‘plane’ during the swing, and does not activate his wrists, as most do for power.

 

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