Brandel Chamblee Just Took A Brutal Shot At Bryson DeChambeau

With criticism swirling and his major championship form under scrutiny, Bryson DeChambeau faces a pivotal moment at the British Open amid accusations that his focus is straying from the course to social media fame.

Bryson DeChambeau heads into the 2026 British Open with plenty of eyes on him before he even tees off Thursday morning at Royal Birkdale. He’ll go out early alongside Scottie Scheffler and Tyrrell Hatton, and the spotlight is only brighter because he hasn’t made a cut at a major yet this year. Another quick exit would sting for a two-time major winner.

The noise around DeChambeau has already been loud this week, and much of it started with Brandel Chamblee. Golf Channel’s lead analyst, never one to soften his opinions, took a sharp swipe at DeChambeau on Tuesday’s Live From the British Open show, and the line spread fast.

"It's almost like he went from chasing Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy to chasing Grant Horvat," Chamblee said. Horvat, an amateur golfer, is arguably the second biggest name in YouTube golf behind DeChambeau . "It's like he wants to outdo every YouTuber in the game of golf instead of outplay everybody in the game of golf."

That was a brutal shot, but it misses the mark. DeChambeau’s major results this year have been disappointing, sure.

He’s missed all three cuts. But that doesn’t mean the reason is some sudden obsession with YouTube golf.

The Masters was the first setback. DeChambeau was still inside the cut line when he reached the 18th tee on Friday at Augusta National, only to make a triple bogey that sent him home.

A par there would have given him a one-under 71. Instead, he finished with a two-over 74 after opening with a 76, and he missed the cut by two shots.

That wasn’t a case of him disappearing from the tournament early or wandering in with no chance. He was right there until the final hole. The idea that time spent making YouTube content was the reason he missed the weekend doesn’t really hold up.

The PGA Championship at Aronimink Golf Club followed a similar script. DeChambeau opened with a six-over 76, then steadied himself with a one-over 71.

He still finished four shots outside the cut, but he wasn’t alone. Wyndham Clark, Russell Henley, Tommy Fleetwood and Viktor Hovland also missed the weekend.

Then came the U.S. Open in June, where DeChambeau again looked as if he might be in the mix.

He was two-under midway through his opening round before a pair of late bogeys dropped him back to even par. A five-over 75 in the second round wasn’t enough to recover, and he missed the cut by one shot.

That’s the bigger picture here: he’s been close at all three majors, not collapsing with rounds in the 80s. For someone with two U.S.

Open titles and a track record as one of the game’s best, that still isn’t good enough. But golf is a brutal game, and a couple of bad holes can wreck a week.

DeChambeau does invite attention. He makes the kind of goofy YouTube videos that rack up millions of views, and he keeps tinkering with clubs that are all the same size, which has fueled plenty of debate about whether a more conventional setup would help him, especially on short approaches and around the greens.

Still, it’s a leap to say he cares more about being the top YouTube golfer than the top professional golfer. He clearly works on his game, and he clearly spends a lot of time - for better or worse - trying to engineer equipment changes that can give him an edge. He’s not showing up at majors and winging it.

Now he gets one more shot to silence the criticism and put himself in the hunt for a major. It wouldn’t be a shock if he does exactly that at Royal Birkdale.

If he doesn’t, and he misses the cut again, the noise will only get louder. That still won’t make Chamblee right.

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