Words matter. These are the best Bryson DeChambeau Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I’m literally working out every single day as hard as I can.
When I got a stronger core, my hands weren’t able to keep up. They weren’t able to tolerate the force my core was generating.
I changed my body, changed my mindset in the game, and I was able to accomplish a win while playing a completely different style of golf. And it’s pretty amazing to see that. I hope it’s an inspiration to a lot of people.
I want to be the number one player in the world, right? But at the end of the day you have to go through each individual step and be able to execute each individual step to be able to get to that goal.
It’s good to try and learn how to adapt.
When people start talking to me about slow play and how I’m killing the game, I’m doing this and that to the game, that is complete and utter you-know-what.
As a kid, I liked building a lot of Legos and built houses and did some fun stuff with that.
I’m not worried about the Masters. I never worry about this tournament or that tournament.
I player my lower-lofted irons slightly higher-up in my stance. Not as much as variable-length, but a little further up can help golfers adapt to the lower-lofted irons.
Knowing that I can play with some of the best out there is definitely encouraging.
I make sure that I’m 100 percent ready to go before I put that tee into the ground.
Most people are afraid of failure. I love failure because it tells me where to go next.
I’m the one that’s used to being not normal.
I got some abs.
I feel like I’ve been able to bring an idea to the world stage and shine a light on a different way to play, an easier way. I want to change the game.
I was always a guy that would study for three hours and barely get an A on the test and you would have another guy next to me who would study for maybe 30 minutes and ace it.
Obviously, I’m trying to control the intake of sugars, but carbs are fine because I’m obviously sweating like crazy out here.
I’m not really smart, but I’m dedicated. I can be good at anything if I love it and dedicate myself. And I love history. I love science. I love music. I love golf. I love learning. I love life.
There’s a bunch of different ways to play the game of golf. You don’t need to play it one way. It doesn’t need to be one swing that’s perfect out there.
As much as we’re out here performing, I think it’s necessary that we have our times of privacy as well when things aren’t going our way.
I use the computers to maximize my efficiency and establish a baseline for my swing, but once I’m on the course, I don’t think about any of that. I just play.
I’m all about penalizing. I’ve got no issue with penalizing people who are taking over their allotted time.
It was funny, when I got to Australia to The Presidents Cup, I ate about 6,000 calories.
Sleeping hurt, everything hurt. But it’s pretty cool what you can do to the body by working out.
People would say you need to do stretches and all of that. I would be very careful with doing that. I, if anything, go on a rotary weight machine and try and go as far as you can both ways, rotate as far as you can both ways so that you can create strength through motion.
My posture is changing constantly with different length clubs. I have to. Whether it’s subconscious or not I’m still changing. That’s going to put another variable. I said, ‘Why can’t we make the lengths all the same?’
Pace of play has been an issue for golf at all levels for a long time and I’m committed to being a part of the solution, not the problem.
I’m very technical in everything I do. But one thing I don’t do is set goals. Goals are actually a hindrance to me, because they limit you.
In the mornings, I usually have four eggs, five pieces of bacon, some toast, and two protein shakes.
I have to chase down the most scientifically efficient way to get the golf ball in the hole.
For some people to say, ‘I just go up there and hit it,’ we’ll that’s good for you. If it works for you, it works for you. But I want to be as precise as possible heading into that shot.
If I wanted to learn Arabic or Russian, I could. Or tie my shoes in a new way, I could. Why? Dedication.
I always look at the worst situations and try and figure out how I can make them better. Let today’s garbage be better than yesterday’s, is my motto.
I’ve tried the keto diet and all these things, but what I’ve found is that as long as I’m keeping a 2:1 ratio of carbs to protein, that works for me.
I used to wake up every single morning feeling terrible because my abs weren’t working properly, and my back would hurt because it was overcompensating for them. So once I started training the body proportionally, it really showed me a new life.
Anything that helps shoot lower scores or makes golf more fun and grows the game, that’s what I’m all about.
I own up to the fact that I am slow on the greens.
I’ll never get to my target size or weight.
It’s literally I’ll be injured or hurt in some facet and I’ll go work out to heal it, to make it get better so I can hold that tolerance level.
If it’s not an easy shot, I’m going to take a little bit longer because that’s my job.
I am an extremely passionate player and I am always working on ways to be better.
I’m trying to provide entertainment, and I hope that people can realize that it takes more than just me playing a shot in 30 seconds or 40 seconds for us to call it slow play.
The search for information gives me more confidence, because confidence arises from understanding.
At the 2018 Hero World Challenge, I felt brittle. I felt like a gust of wind could push me over if I wasn’t careful.
I can’t tell you how many times I had opportunities to do other things and went and golfed because I wanted to be the best.
I use a system called Vector Green Reading, which applies science to the green reads.
I love trying to be the best at anything and everything.
On short courses I can still play good, even with my added length.
I’ve always had to work twice as hard as everybody, growing up.
I just listen to my body. If I get too full, OK, I’m done. If I feel like, man, I’ve got to eat. I just listen to my body.
I think it’s unfortunate because people don’t see what I do day-in and day-out, high-fiving the kids, saying thank you to the fans and volunteers out there, and they just look at all the negative stuff.
I want to gain as much weight as possible, and I want to see what I can do with that weight once I’m all done.
It’s funny, I hear people say I’m faking all this science stuff. That’s the furthest thing from the truth. It’s literally what I have to do to play and perform at this level.
Australia is a great place. It’s my second favorite country, other than the U.S., obviously.
I play golf, and then I see working out in the evening as my way of taking care of any aches or pains that need fixing.
You’ll find that one-length irons are far more versatile around the greens. You can vary the trajectory more, your distance control will improve because you can choke down more if you want.
That’s what I’ve always been about is trying to shine a light on the game of golf and not push people away, with developing the one-length irons, having a new way of swinging the golf club and doing all these different things that look weird, but have been a massive benefit to the game, that’s what I’m about.
If I could be like Happy Gilmore or Kyle Berkshire, hitting over 400 yards and hitting it straight? That is a massive, massive advantage. So I set out to do that, and I’ve been healthier and stronger ever since.
My core has gotten substantially bigger relative to the rest of my body.
I had debilitating back pain. Three years later, I’m 40 pounds heavier and generating 20 or 25 miles an hour more ball speed.
People call me slow. I call myself quick with the stuff I do.
I know I can play with the best of them. I can be one of the best in the world at one point in time.
People don’t realize all the stuff I gave up growing up. I could have gone to parties and had fun at adventure parks with friends on weekends and things like that. But I went out and worked my butt off for eight hours playing golf.
I’m a total nonconformist; for me, it’s about going down rabbit holes.
It’s fun to be able to play good golf not having your A game.
You don’t want to be passive through motion and then try to produce force. That’s very scary. That’s where you can injure yourself a lot of times.