After discretely being added to the USGA's list of conforming driver heads on Feb. 17, the TaylorMade SLDR MiniDriver arrived in its PGA Tour van this week at the WGC-Cadillac Championship.
This is where you can keep up to date with the Bryson DeChambeau schedule. Which tournaments will he play next? As soon as any changes are made, you will be able to read about them right here… ALSO: What’s in Bryson DeChambeau’s bag? DeChambeau is entering his fourth season as a LIV Golf League player, and now as a two-time major winner after his second US Open victory came at Pinehurst last year. Although he is yet to win the LIV Golf League Individual Title, he will be gunning for that this year, along with the Team Title with Crushers GC. ALSO: Bryson DeChambeau’s £100 million LIV deal: What is his net worth? ALSO: Inside Bryson DeChambeau’s Golf Wardrobe Below we take you through the Bryson DeChambeau schedule… Bryson DeChambeau next tournament: Bryson DeChambeau schedule and results 2025: Jan 30-Feb 2: International Series India (DLF G&CC) February 6-8: LIV Golf Riyadh (Riyadh GC) February 14-16: LIV Golf Australia (The Grange) March 7-9: LIV Golf Hong Kong (Hong Kong GC) Mar...
A non-conforming, or "high-COR" driver, is a golf club designed to maximize distance by exceeding the Coefficient of Restitution (COR) limits set by the rules of golf. Here's a more detailed explanation in English 1. Coefficient of Restitution (COR): The COR measures the "bounciness" or energy transfer between two objects after a collision. In golf, it specifically refers to the energy transfer between the driver's clubface and the golf ball at impact. A COR of 1 represents a perfectly elastic collision where no energy is lost. Imagine dropping a ball from 1 meter; with a COR of 1, it would bounce back up to 1 meter. The rules of golf, as governed by the USGA and R&A, limit the COR of driver heads to 0.83. This means that if a ball were dropped onto the clubface from 1 meter, it could not rebound higher than 0.83 meters. 2. Characteristics of Non-Conforming (High-COR) Drivers: Non-conforming drivers are manufactured to exceed this 0.83 COR limit, maxi...
By Alex Myers On Sunday, the U.S. celebrated the 50th anniversary of The Beatles' famed first appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show . It got us thinking about some of the band's best-known songs and the true* golf meaning behind them. Here are 10 we picked out: Related: Golf Digest's ranking of the best musician golfers (*By true, we mean totally made up. Despite the pictures below, it appears The Beatles weren't big fans of the game . But we can imagine, right? It's easy if you try.) "Eight Days A Week": In an ideal world, wouldn't we all play golf this much? "We Can Work It Out": Penned when Paul took John under his wing to help him with his struggling short game. "Here, There and Everywhere": Written by John during a phase in which he had no clue where his driver was going. "Here Comes the Sun": This song came to an optimistic George while waiting out yet another rain delay in Liverpool. "Drive My Car": Lit...
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