Golf
Bob Harig, ESPN Senior Writer 3y

Bryson DeChambeau takes early-morning flight back to Wells Fargo Championship after surprise of making cut

PGA Tour, Golf

CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Bryson DeChambeau had an early wake-up alarm set for Saturday morning. Very early. Even by the standards of an 8:10 a.m. tee time.

That's because DeChambeau began the day in Dallas -- where he went Friday afternoon after believing he had missed the 36-hole cut at the Wells Fargo Championship.

DeChambeau returned in the wee hours Saturday morning via a private jet, had less than an hour to get ready for the third round at Quail Hollow Golf Club and shot a 3-under-par 68, which included a double bogey on the final hole.

"I am very tired," DeChambeau said afterward.

DeChambeau admitted the issues were of his own making. After making a triple-bogey 8 on the seventh hole Friday and missing a birdie putt on the ninth hole -- his last -- the reigning U.S. Open champion believed he would miss the 36-hole cut. He was in about 90th place, and only the top 65 and ties qualify for the weekend.

But the conditions became windier, and a number of players started backing up. DeChambeau, who had finished at 2-over-par 144 early in the afternoon, didn't realize that he was going to make cut the cut until he had already landed in Dallas, where he lives.

"We did a lot of scrambling last night to get back," DeChambeau said. "One of the scenarios was turning right back around, but the crew couldn't do it. So we had to get a new crew, and we were like, 'Well, let's just go in the morning.'

"So I left at 2:45 [a.m.] on a flight, and I got here at 6:20 a.m. Drove 30 minutes to the golf course, put on my clothes in the locker room and headed out to the putting green. I did get a workout last night, though."

DeChambeau said he spent the night at his home, went to bed at 8 p.m. and then got up early for the return trip.

"This morning was not easy," he said. "But for whatever reason, I just feel like the more weird things happen to me, the greater my resolve sometimes can be, and today was a case of that. And got a little unlucky on 18, but other than that, you know, I played a great round of golf today. I'm very pleased."

DeChambeau had five birdies Saturday before his final-hole double bogey, which saw him leave a shot in a greenside bunker. And he had moved up into a tie for 28th.

The mistake was an expensive one. DeChambeau has a timeshare agreement with NetJets, which requires six hours' notice to schedule and for the three-hour trip back to Charlotte was "way too expensive," he said. "But we were very fortunate.

"But the thing is, I have a chance to go make a good check this week, and I think that would offset it," DeChambeau added. "So if I was to not come back, and withdraw, lose world ranking points and all of that. ... I had to incur the cost. It's my fault."

DeChambeau said he learned a lesson as it relates to the cut. But at the time, he figured he had no chance. He wanted to get home to begin preparing for next week's AT&T Byron Nelson.

"Sure enough, conditions kept getting worse, and by the time I landed I was in 64 or 63rd or whatever," he said. "So I looked at Connor [Olson, a member of his team], 'Well, whoops, that was a mistake.'"

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