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underpants

(182,613 posts)
Sat Apr 9, 2016, 04:26 PM Apr 2016

The "Mad Scientist" (SMU Physics major actually) at The Masters - golf

Videos here

DeChambeau is a U.S. Amateur champion – like Jones was once – and the 22-year-old rookie's debut may be the most anticipated since Jordan Spieth's a couple years ago. DeChambeau also won the NCAA title last year, a double accomplished previously by only Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and Ryan Moore.

What makes his entry more tantalizing still is his unique iron set. Unlike a traditional set, where each club from the 3-iron through the wedges gets shorter and more lofted, all 10 of DeChambeau's irons measure 37 1/2 inches, the length of a typical 6-iron.

DeChambeau became intrigued by the idea of equal-length clubs in 2009, not long after his golf coach, Mike Schy, introduced him to an esoteric swing manual called "The Golfing Machine." The book was written by Homer Kelley, a Seattle aircraft mechanic determined to lay out the engineering specs of the golf swing on a page. It offers students a chance to build their own swings by choosing between 24 different components, each offering between three and 11 variations.

DeChambeau settled on a swing that keeps the club on a single plane from start to finish, and that his interest in physics led him to conclude the easiest way to accomplish that was to use a set of irons all of the same length. That concept was tested and employed by Jones, but it never caught on with golfers or the big equipment companies.


PGA. com

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The "Mad Scientist" (SMU Physics major actually) at The Masters - golf (Original Post) underpants Apr 2016 OP
He was 3rd yesterday. Is plus, 6 strokes behind leader today jehop61 Apr 2016 #1
Yeah but everyone is struggling today underpants Apr 2016 #2

jehop61

(1,735 posts)
1. He was 3rd yesterday. Is plus, 6 strokes behind leader today
Sat Apr 9, 2016, 05:05 PM
Apr 2016

Guess real life is getting in the way of theory.

underpants

(182,613 posts)
2. Yeah but everyone is struggling today
Sat Apr 9, 2016, 05:08 PM
Apr 2016

It always comes down to putting. He obviously can putt given his record. The Masters is like putting on ice

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