Bryson DeChambeau: The 7 things I think about before every shot

Take a look inside the wonderful mind of The Scientist, Bryson DeChambeau.

Bryson DeChambeau routine
Bryson DeChambeau routine

Bryson DeChambeau certainly isn't your typical professional golfer. The American majored in physics at the Southern Methodist University and applies his scientific skills to his golf game every day. But what exactly does he think about before he addresses the ball?

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DeChambeau recently spoke to GOLF.com where he discussed his pre shot routine and why he started using his unique methods in the first place.

“It actually actually started when I missed 14 cuts in a row. I said to myself, ‘I need to find a way to get more consistent,” Bryson told GOLF.com. “This process is the the reason why I have confidence. If you ask any shooter or sniper or long-range shooter, they’ll tell you that all this stuff matters.”

So, sit down, dust off the cobwebs of your physics revision book, grab a notepad and pen and take a peak into the mind of Bryson DeChambeau as he stares down a 150 yard iron shot.

1. Air Density

“It’s number one because that’s how far the ball is going to fly at that point in time, at your local position. It’s what matters most because it’s literally how the ball is flying through the air. You can have two winds that are the same, but they’ll fly through that wind differently because of air density. So air density relates to literally every factor.”

2. Elevation Change

“Easy, how much the altitude affects the flight of the golf ball. Think about it: If I go out and play a tournament one week at 1,000 feet of elevation, and then the next week go play in 2,000 feet of elevation. If I hit a 150 shot from last week, and the next week it flies 156 — that’s not a correct adjustment by the way — it something you have to take into account.”

3. Wind Vector

“Vector is the magnitude and direction. It’s a physics term to say how hard it’s blowing and in which direction.”

4. Local Slope Adjustment

“That’s how much it’s statically changing loft. Wind vector and elevation change relate to each other, because if you hit off a downhill slope or an uphill slope, it’s going to affect how that shot is going to fly into the wind, so we have to relatively move that. Every degree of slope is going to change the launch angle a degree.”

5. Roll Out Number

“This is affected by our air density stuff. Basically, the total distance the ball will travel, both in the air and on the ground.”

6. Something Secret

“I’m not going over that one. Intuitively the top players in the world know it, but they don’t understand why it happens. I do.”

7. Shot Shape

“I don’t choose a shot shape and then take all that into account because if the wind is variable — let’s say we have a wind variability of X and it’s decreasing and increasing in magnitude a little bit, that influences the direction component of it. There’s a certain array of shots I can hit, and a certain number of shots I should hit, so we have to make the shot adjustment relative to everything else.”

 

Image credit: GOLF.com

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