One Membership. Four Times the Value.

InsideGOLF Premium
News

Here’s proof that Bryson DeChambeau’s U.S. Open final round was historically great

bryson dechambeau walks with scoreboard

Bryson DeChambeau's U.S. Open victory broke a nearly 50-year-old record.

Getty Images

Bryson DeChambeau posited his name into golf history on Sunday by winning the U.S. Open, his first major championship. The 27-year-old capped off a remarkable week at Winged Foot with a final-round 67 to finish the week at six under.

The victory was impressive in itself, and even more so when put in the proper historical context. DeChambeau shot the only under-par round in the field on Sunday en route to becoming the sixth golfer ever to win both the U.S. Amateur and the U.S. Open. He won by six strokes despite hitting only 23 of 56 fairways for the week, the fewest by a U.S. Open champion since 1981, yet still managed to hit 64 percent of greens in regulation.

But while he played remarkably well, it felt strange to hear NBC lead golf analyst Paul Azinger look at Bryson’s Sunday performance through the lens of history. Historic distance? Sure. But did we really witness Bryson complete one of the great all-time final-round performances at the West Course this week?

One stat says the answer to the question is an emphatic yes, and it comes courtesy of the 15th Club’s Justin Ray.

With the win, Bryson logged the fourth-most strokes gained: total in the final round by a U.S. Open champion in the last 80 years. His three-under 67 might have only featured six fairways hit, but it earned the most strokes gained: total by a winner in a final round since Johnny Miller’s 1973 national championship victory at Oakmont, some 47 years (!!!) ago.

DeChambeau’s strokes-gained performance is nearly as remarkable as the circumstances that led to his victory. The near 40-pound weight gain and complete recreation of his body and swing. The 20-plus yard increase in driving distance from a year ago. The U.S. Open final round. The U.S. Open victory. All of it improbable, and all of it equally historic.

Miller, Palmer, Nicklaus and now, DeChambeau.

Related Articles

News
Bryson DeChambeau wows with persimmon in surprise showing at U.S. Amateur
By: Josh Berhow
News
‘Not sure what’s worse:’ Shane Lowry shreds Bryson DeChambeau over rope spoof
By: Nick Piastowski
News
Bryson DeChambeau shaken after bizarre gallery-rope incident
By: Jack Hirsh
News
WATCH: Bryson DeChambeau threw out first pitch at White Sox game (and didn't embarrass himself)
By: Kevin Cunningham
Celebrities
This U.S. Open (tennis) contender has a golf Instagram and it's pretty impressive
By: Jack Hirsh
Instruction
How Bryson DeChambeau added game-changing distance — and how you can, too
By: Bryson DeChambeau, with Luke Kerr-Dineen
Gear
Bryson DeChambeau, after LIV move, wasn’t surprised Bridgestone ended deal
By: Nick Piastowski
News
The John Daly and Bryson DeChambeau Show was a blast to watch (pun intended)
By: Alan Bastable
Balls
Bridgestone severs ties with Bryson DeChambeau at Open Championship
By: Jonathan Wall
was:
Exit mobile version