AUGUSTA, Ga. — The cart picking up golf balls on the practice range at Augusta National can only go so far. Club members were swapping tales Tuesday about the staff who reached the end of the range and had to sort through azalea bushes more than 350 yards away to pick up a few more balls.
The culprit, of course, was Bryson DeChambeau.
Never mind that Tiger Woods is the defending champion at the Masters, and still emotional 19 months later talking about that fierce embrace he shared with his son. Or that the silence of not having spectators for the first time is just as eerie as the color of autumn in the trees.
DeChambeau has become a showstopper. He has everyone curious about whether his bulk and his behemoth tee shots can undress Augusta National.
"It's a substantially easier golf course for him than it is for everybody else," said Justin Thomas, who joined DeChambeau, Woods and Fred Couples for a practice round at the start of the week. "I think once he starts messing with that longer driver and has a little bit more free time, then as crazy as it is, he might be able to hit it further."
That longer driver is a half-inch short of 48 inches, the legal limit in competition, the type used by the World Long Drive competitors who turn the long ball into a spectacle. DeChambeau tried it out Monday after his practice round and liked how it reacted. He has not ruled out using it when the Masters begins Thursday.
"I got my swing speed up to 143, 144 (mph)," he said.
The average swing speed for a power player on the PGA Tour is around 120 mph.