Bryson DeChambeau admits to turning to AI to help fix his swing after struggles at LIV Golf Korea
Pro-golfer Bryson DeChambeau detailed his vision for a family during an appearance on "The Katie Miller Podcast" on Tuesday, revealing he wants four kids.
Bryson DeChambeau may have finished third in LIV Golf's latest event in South Korea, but that doesn't mean he's pleased with his game.
DeChambeau, who won back-to-back LIV events in March, found himself one shot back of the lead after the opening two rounds in South Korea, but put together a disappointing third round at 1-over par. As is often the case for DeChambeau after what he deems to be a lackluster performance, it turned into a long night on the driving range searching for something.
The two-time U.S. Open champion has made it a habit of spending incredibly long hours on the practice tee surrounded by a handful of members on his support staff, which apparently has a new member nowadays, but one that isn't technically real.
Bryson DeChambeau of Crushers lines up a putt on the 18th green during day two of LIV Golf Korea at Asiad Country Club on May 29, 2026 in Busan, . (Photo by Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images) (Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images)
BRYSON DECHAMBEAU EXPLAINS WHY HE HIT NEARLY 400 GOLF BALLS ON AUGUSTA RANGE AFTER MASTERS PRACTICE ROUND
Speaking with reporters after his final-round 65 on Sunday, DeChambeau said he spent quite a while the previous night speaking with artificial intelligence, trying to improve his swing.
"I spent some long hours on the range trying to figure some stuff out and I was talking to AI quite a bit last night trying to go through some different physics principles that makes the club turn over, having some alpha torque and gamma torque put in there," DeChambeau shared. "I was like, what makes that possibly do that, and was talking


