Bryson DeChambeau says he got weird.

He’d practice at weird distances, or among weird obstacles, or on top of weird surfaces, or all of the above. He got weirded out.

The point was practical.

The revelation came Wednesday, ahead of LIV Golf’s Virginia event , where DeChambeau answered a few questions on his preparation. One reporter, while noting DeChambeau’s well-documented range time, had wondered how his work ethic formed, and the two-time major winner said it came from a belief that he wasn’t as talented as other players, and that that developed an “obsession” to improve. At times, he said his hands bled from hitting balls.

“Hopefully I don’t have to do that as much anymore,” DeChambeau said, “but that work ethic remains from as a kid growing up realizing I wasn’t as good as ot

See Full Page