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Brandel Chamblee Masters Q&A: Why golfers are overly sensitive, Rory’s main course issue at Augusta, and will Niemann flop at another major?

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With the 2025 Masters right around the corner, golf’s leading analyst, Brandel Chamblee, discussed some of the big talking points heading into the year’s first major with GolfWRX Managing Editor, Gianni Magliocco.

Within the discussion, Chamblee revealed why he believes Augusta National isn’t a great fit for Rory McIlroy, how he thinks Jon Rahm sold out at a discount when he moved to LIV, and why golfers seem to be the most sensitive of all athletes when it comes to any sort of criticism.

Check out the full Q&A below.

Gianni: Last week on the Dan on Golf Show, you said Scottie Scheffler was your second favorite for the Masters despite being way off his game compared to where he has been over the last 2 or 3 years. Has his performance in Houston shown you enough to make you feel he will defend his title at Augusta, or do you think he’s a very vulnerable betting favorite this week?

Brandel: Scottie putted beautifully in Houston and finished second on a course that is the ultimate bombers party, and he is the furthest one could get from the stereotypical bomber, so that certainly betokens great form headed into Augusta.

Having said that, he is not as sharp as he was heading into last year’s Masters, where he is enough off his form around the greens that I wouldn’t make him the overwhelming favorite as he was last year. But Augusta National is the perfect fit for his game, as he is one of very few, if not the only one in the field, who can easily work the ball in every direction to find the right corridors and eliminate risk. 

Gianni: Most of the hype at the Masters this year is surrounding Rory McIlroy, and it feels justified this time. The consensus is that Augusta National is a course that suits his game given that he can bomb it out there with his draw off the tee and he can land his towering irons softly into the greens. But he’s only shot 70 or better here once since 2020. Does Augusta National even suit him? 

Brandel: I couldn’t disagree more with the consensus. Augusta National is not a great fit for Rory, and his results bear this out. It was his worst major in 2024, 2023, and 2021, namely because he struggles to hit his irons well enough on the hilly terrain to play his best golf there. Over the course of his career at Augusta, he averages hitting 42.6 greens in regulation, which is under his average on the PGA Tour and almost 10 greens in regulation less per week than the winner’s average. 

Gianni: This is the first time Rory has ever headed into the Masters with two wins on the PGA Tour under his belt for the season. It took Sergio Garcia 19 attempts to win his first and only Masters, this year will be McIlroy’s 17th attempt. If not now for Rory, then when?

Brandel: Well, Rory still has plenty of time. Fully one-third of Masters winners have been 35 years of age or older, and Rory is the rarest of “red wine” athletes in that he keeps getting better with age, much in the Roger Federer and Tom Brady vein.

There are quite a few positives working in Rory’s favor heading into this Masters. First, he has never come into a Masters in better form, thanks in large part I believe, because he is using a softer ball which allows him to work the ball easier and necessitates him hitting more partial shots to keep it down and take some speed off, which has the effect of keeping him on top of the ball and helps to mitigate the pulls with short irons. Second, of those obvious players who could challenge prominently, all of them are either off their games to some degree or the course doesn’t fit their games perfectly — with the caveat that we don’t really know the state of LIV player’s games — and finally, he has become a very good wind and poor weather player, so he is ready for whatever mother nature throws at him.

Gianni: You caught some heat from the LIV brigade when you said Joaquin Niemann is not as good as LIV says he is, and you backed that up pretty emphatically by dropping the fact that he’s played in 22 majors and never even finished in the top 15, including seven missed cuts. Since then, he’s won again on LIV, and Phil Mickelson raised plenty of eyebrows by calling him the current best player in the world. In your view, does Niemann contend or flop at Augusta this year? And who is the biggest LIV threat this year?

Brandel: There is no doubt that Joaquin Niemann is heck of a talent, and at 26 years of age, he is just coming into his physiological prime. The reason he hasn’t played his best golf in majors is because the greens tend to be more severe in that they are firmer and faster, and he has a lot of right side bend at impact, and this produces a lower ball flight that makes it harder to hit it close on firm and fast greens. The forecast is for a fair bit of rain early in the week at this Masters, which will definitely work in Joaquin’s favor.

However, predicting what a player will do in the majors based upon their LIV finishes is somewhat of a dubious exercise. Jon Rahm finished in the top 10 in every single LIV event he played in 2024, and finished 45th in the Masters last year, and missed the cut at the PGA Championship.  

Gianni: Some pros have been very salty in reaction to your critical takes in the past, and with recent incidents like players not wanting to talk to the media because things haven’t gone their way on the course. Do you think professional golfers are overly sensitive in comparison to athletes in other sports?

Brandel: I can say this because I was one, but professional golfers tend to be the most sensitive of all athletes, because unlike athletes in other sports, who get criticized from an early age on by coaches, media and the spectators, sometimes to ridiculous degrees, if you are a good enough player to make it to the PGA Tour, there is a chance no one has ever criticized your game. Professional golfers don’t answer to anyone, not to coaches — indeed, coaches answer to them — not to caddies, not to agents, not to PGA tour executives, not to sponsors…they answer to no one. So yes, they are overly sensitive.

Having said that though, most PGA Tour players are very accommodating with the media. Tiger Woods always talked, and though he may not have given the media the sound bites they were looking for, he talked when he played bad, good, or indifferent, as did Phil Mickelson.

What Collin Morikawa did at the Arnold Palmer Invitational does happen from time to time, as the players are not contracted to talk to the media, although I would argue the huge media rights fees that NBC and CBS pay tacitly obligate them to speak. It was what Collin said at The Players, that he didn’t owe the media anything, that sounded so out of touch, especially so given that the elite players have never had so many lucrative and closed shop concessions conceded to them and as a result are viewed more disfavourably amongst the public. It is certainly his prerogative to say that, but given how good a player he is and how bright he appears to be, it is a poor long-term strategy, in my view. 

Gianni: A few years ago Bryson DeChambeau was the butt of many jokes in the golf world. From calling Augusta National a par-67 to his feud with Brooks Koepka, he was about as unpopular as could be. He then took the Saudi money and has somehow built himself into a people’s champion of some sort. Contrarily, Jon Rahm was one of the best players in the world and popular amongst golf fans. Since his move, he’s become somewhat of an afterthought and it looks as if his decision weighs heavy on him and his golf game, the total opposite of Bryson.

What do you make of their contrasting trajectories in recent times?

Brandel: I think Jon Rahm is suffering from being viewed as a turncoat having in the past so clearly denounced what LIV was and stated that he wanted to play for the history and legacy of the PGA Tour. Indeed, to that point, the whole LIV scene seems to be incongruent with what Rahm was on the cusp of doing in professional golf. He looks like he sold out, and I would add, given what he was likely to do in the game, he sold his business at a discount.

But fans are fickle, and he could change the way he is viewed by having the kind of year in the majors that Bryson had in 2024. 

Gianni: Finally, if you could make any course changes to Augusta National, what would they be and why?

Brandel: Augusta National, more than any other golf course that I can think of, has made the necessary changes year after year to keep up with the obvious changes in the way the professional game is played.

To that point, in 1984 Augusta National played to a scoring average of 72.89, in 1994: 74.20, 2004: 73.97, 2014: 73.94, and last year the scoring average was 73.90.  There is no doubt golf course architect aficionados will find fault with some of the changes that the course has gone through but I would argue they have been necessary and have added to the continued enjoyment that we all have, at what is the most popular golf tournament in the world. 

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19th Hole

‘Don’t think I’ll sleep well tonight’ – LPGA pro offers candid take following rough AIG Women’s Open finish

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An opening round of 77 left LPGA pro Jenny Shin with a mountain to climb at last week’s AIG Women’s Open.

However, fighting back with rounds of 69 and 67, Shin found herself six shots off the lead and just outside the top 10 heading into Sunday as she went in search of her first major victory.

Shin, who won the US Girls’ Junior at just 13, couldn’t back those rounds up on Sunday, though, and after playing her opening nine holes of the final round in level par, she then bogeyed three holes coming home to slip down the leaderboard and eventually finish T23.

Taking to X following the final round, Shin offered a frustrated and honest take on how she was feeling, posting: “Don’t think I’ll sleep well tonight. What a crappy way to finish.”

Shin has made 11 cuts in 13 starts on the LPGA Tour this season, but has been plagued by frustrating Sunday finishes throughout the year. Shin ranks 102nd on tour this year out of 155 for Round 4 scoring in 2025.

Miyu Yamashita won the 2025 AIG Women’s Open with a composed final round of 70 to win her first major of her career by two strokes.

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How a late golf ball change helped Cameron Young win for first time on PGA Tour

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Cameron Young won the Wyndham Championship on Sunday for his first victory on the PGA Tour.

Young dominated all weekend at TPC Sedgefield, running away from the pack to win by six strokes and put himself in contention for a Ryder Cup pick in September.

Ahead of the event, the 28-year-old switched to a Pro V1x prototype golf ball for the first time, following recent testing sessions with the Titleist Golf Ball R&D team.

Interestingly, Young played a practice round accompanied by Fordie Pitts, Titleist’s Director of Tour Research & Validation, at TPC Schedule early last week with both his usual Pro V1 Left Dot ball and the new Pro V1x prototype.

Per Titleist, by the second hole Young was exclusively hitting shots with the Pro V1x prototype.

“We weren’t sure if he was going to test it this week, but as he was warming up, he asked to hit a couple on the range,” Pitts said. “He was then curious to see some shots out on the course.  Performance-wise, he was hitting tight draws everywhere. His misses were staying more in play. He hit some, what he would call ‘11 o’clock shots,’ where again he’s taking a little something off it. He had great control there.”

According to Titleist, the main validation came on Tuesday on the seventh hole of his practice round. The par 3 that played between 184 and 225 yards during the tournament called for a 5-iron from Young, or so he thought. Believing there was “no way” he could get a 6-iron to the flag with his Left Dot, Young struck a 5-iron with the Pro V1x prototype and was stunned to see the ball land right by the hole.

“He then hits this 6-iron [with the Pro V1x prototype] absolutely dead at the flag, and it lands right next to the pin, ending up just past it,” Pitts said. “And his response was, ‘remarkable.’ He couldn’t believe that he got that club there.”

Following nine holes on Tuesday and a further nine on Wednesday, Young asked the Titleist team to put the ProV1x balls in his locker. The rest, as they say, is history.

Check out Young’s winning WITB here.

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Rickie Fowler makes equipment change to ‘something that’s a little easier on the body’

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Rickie Fowler fired an opening round of one-under par on Thursday at the Wyndham Championship, as the Californian looks to make a FedEx Cup playoff push.

Fowler is currently 61st in the standings, so will need a strong couple of weeks to extend his season until the BMW Championship, where only the top 50 in the standings will tee it up.

Heading into the final stretch of the season, Fowler has made an equipment switch of note, changing into new iron shafts, as well as making a switch to his driver shaft.

The 36-year-old revealed this week that he has switched from his usual KBS Tour C-Taper 125-gram steel shafts to the graphite Aerotech SteelFiber 125cw shafts in his Cobra King Tour irons, a change he first put into play at last month’s Travelers Championship.

Speaking on the change to reporters this week, Fowler made note that the graphite shafts offer “something that’s a little easier on the body.”

“I mean, went to the week of Travelers, so been in for, I guess that’s a little over a month now. Something that’s a little easier on the body and seemed to get very similar numbers to where I was at. Yeah, it’s gone well so far.”

Fowler has also made a driver shaft change, switching out his Mitsubishi Diamana WB 73 TX for a UST Mamiya Lin-Q Proto V1 6 TX driver shaft in his Cobra DS-Adapt X, which he first implemented a couple of weeks ago at the John Deere Classic.

However, according to Fowler himself, the testing and potential changes are not done yet.

“Probably do some more testing in some different weight configurations with them once I get some time. Yeah, I feel like we’re always trying to search, one, to get better but are there ways to make things easier, whether that’s physically, mentally, whatever it may be. So yeah, I thought they were good enough to obviously put into play and looking forward to doing some more testing.”

Fowler gets his second round at TPC Sedgefield underway at 7.23 a.m ET on Friday.

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