Bryson DeChambeau’s relationship with Cobra Golf seems to have somewhat ended on a sour note with the brand’s PGA Tour rep claiming “he’s looking for a unicorn” after his latest comments about searching for a new driver.
DeChambeau’s contract with Cobra expired at the end of last year and he was recently spotted putting the new TaylorMade Stealth 2 Plus driver in the bag in Saudi Arabia.
Although not allowed to play at the WM Phoenix Open this week, DeChambeau has been in Scottsdale reportedly hanging around the Ping headquarters and testing out their motion-capture facility in search of some answers.
Ping spokesman Pete Samuels confirmed to Golfweek that DeChambeau was hitting Ping products in the latest round of testing he did in Arizona with his swing coach Chris Como.
“Chris (Como) often brings his players into our Lab to analyze swing dynamics from a coaching standpoint,” Samuels is quoted as saying by Golfweek.
“Our engineering team also observes and learns from visits like this as we capture useful swing data. That was the primary reason for the visit, but Bryson did test Ping product as well.”
Ping may find out that DeChambeau is not the easiest client to work with though, according to Cobra’s PGA Tour rep Ben Schomin.
“I wish him all the best,” said Schomin. “But it’s going to be a struggle just because of what he wants to do.”
Cobra, who supplied DeChambeau with his one-length irons, have arguably done more for one player than any other manufacturer has, given his unique style and the way he goes about the game in meticulous detail.
And Cobra were not too pleased with DeChambeau’s latest comments on golf technology, with his quest to find a new driver that can do everything looking a bit like wishful thinking on his behalf.
“Technology is not up to par with the way golfers can perform at high speeds,” DeChambeau told LIV Golf in an interview. “Anything over 185 mph – good luck trying to control it right now.
“We’re still on a pursuit to who can make a driver that can work it at 200 anywhere and everywhere on the face and still goes in the fairway.”
While we’d all like a drive that can send it straight down the middle regardless of where we hit it on the face, it was a notable comment from a player right at the very top of the game, and it seems that it went down pretty poorly at Cobra HQ.
“It was such an asinine statement, especially for a guy who is perceived to be all-knowing when it comes to science…
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