WATCH: Bryson DeChambeau shows off his impressive wide range of ball flight techniques
Bryson DeChambeau has long been one of golf's best with a driver. His ability to hit the ball off the tee and send it further than most of the players he's competing with has been well-documented over the years. Now, he's showcasing a new skill, the ability to dominate with two different ball flights.
DeChambeau began by quickly blasting a ball high into the night sky. His next shot, once again with his trusty driver, was much lower. It was a line drive that rose as it went but never reached any sort of height.
And as if he wanted to prove to his audience that he could do them whenever he wanted, he repeated each one. DeChambeau sent another one deep into the night sky and followed it up with a low shot that could have been dangerous for anyone in its flight path. Watch the video below:
These could each be useful in different scenarios. If there's a tree line somewhere, DeChambeau might prefer to go over it with a blast high into the sky. If the wind is proving troublesome, then the low shot would prevent the wind from truly impacting his shot.
DeChambeau has a lot of different options on the golf course, and he just showed off a weapon that not every golfer has in his golf bag.
Bryson DeChambeau takes a dig at OWGR rankings ahead of The Match-like tournament
In December, Bryson DeChambeau will team up with Brooks Koepka for this year's version of a charity golf outing from the creator of The Match. Opposite the two LIV Golf stars will be Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy.
It is a matchup of two titans of each respective tour in golf right now. Scheffler is the world number one and McIlroy is ranked third, a point DeChambeau brought up with a laugh on X.
Koepka is ranked 65th, which is solely due to a PGA Championship win last year and otherwise decent performances in the Majors this year. DeChambeau just slots into the top 10 because of his win at the US Open and two brilliant showings in the Masters and PGA Championship.
LIV events do not get OWGR points, so LIV golfers can only dip in rankings until they play something that does, like a Major or the rare DP World Tour tournament they can work their way into.
If and when they do well in those events, they climb back up the rankings only to slide again until the next time. When it comes to comparing the two sides, though hardly anyone can compare to Scheffler now, it's difficult to determine which side is better since only one actually gets ranked accurately on the world rankings. That's exactly what Bryson DeChambeau is poking fun at in his post.