bubba watson swing, bubba watson, bubba watson golf

What happens when golf is stripped of numbers, coaches, and science… and left to pure imagination? You get Bubba Watson – a two-time Masters champion who cried openly in interviews, swung a pink driver, and never once had a coach telling him what to do.
In 2012, his wedge from the woods in Augusta became one of the most famous shots in golf history. It was impossible by textbook standards, but textbook golf was never Bubba’s game.
In today’s time, when players are raised on TrackMan numbers, swing coaches, and biomechanics, Bubba Watson’s brand of artistry doesn’t just feel rare, it feels extinct.
But how did a self-taught kid from Florida rise to the very top of the sport? And why might golf never see another player like him again?
Let’s rewind.

In today’s video we look at Why Golfers Like Bubba Watson Have Gone EXTINCT… … Keep watching to see bubba watson swing, bubba watson, bubba watson golf

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special to see that packed house like that. Um, obviously my wife played professional basketball, so to see where it is now, I mean that was early 2000s uh when she played. [Music] What happens when golf is stripped of numbers, coaches, and science and left to pure imagination? You get Bubba Watson, a two-time Mast’s champion who cried openly in interviews, swung a pink driver, and never once had a coach telling him what to do. In 2012, his wedge from the woods in Augusta became one of the most famous shots in golf history. It was impossible by textbook standard, but textbook golf was never Bubba’s game. In today’s time, when players are raised on Trackman numbers, wing coaches, and biomechanics, Bubba Watson’s brand of artistry doesn’t just feel rare, it feels extinct. But how did a self-taught kid from Florida rise to the very top of the sport? And why might golf never see another player like him again? Let’s rewind. Bubba Watson was born Jerry Lester Watson Jr. in 1978 in the tiny town of Baghdad, Florida, a workingclass community where his father Jerry Senior introduced him to golf. The nickname Bubba came before the golf. His father thought he looked like NFL defensive end Bubba Smith and the name stuck to the world. He would never be Jerry. He was Bubba. Unlike most future professionals, Bubba never had formal lessons. His father taught him the basic, and from there he taught himself. No instructors, no carefully measured grip changes, no high-tech data, just hours of swinging in the yard and on the local course, experimenting with shot shape and trusting his imagination. That imagination was already wild. Bubba was left-handed, and his swing quickly developed into something coaches would have called unorthodox. It was long, loopy, and capable of bending the ball in ways most juniors couldn’t even visualize. He played high school golf at Milton High School, then moved on to Faulner State Community College where he was recognized as a junior college all-American. His success there earned him a transfer to the University of Georgia, one of college golf’s powerhouse program. At Georgia, he competed for the Bulldog and further built his reputation as one of the longest hitters in college golf. By then, Bubba’s distance and creativity were already setting him apart. Turning professional in 2002, Bubba had to grind. He spent years on the nationwide tour, learning the realities of life as a pro. Long travel, inconsistent paycheck, constant pressure to perform. Finally, in 2005, he earned his PGA Tour card. But Bubba wasn’t just another rookie trying to survive. He was about to change the way fans thought about golf. By now, we know Bubba didn’t rely on numbers, didn’t have a swing coat or even a trainer breaking down his mechanic. Then, how did he excel? Bubba played entirely by feel. Where other pros would aim for the center of the fairway with a controlled fade, Bubba would hook the ball 40 yards around a tree just because he saw the shot in his mind. His creativity gave him access to angles no one else even considered. And then there was his distance. From his very first season on the PGA Tour, Bubba led the driving distance category. He could hit it past almost anyone and he did it without ever trying to copy a modern swing. His motto was simple, grip it and rip it. He wasn’t just different in the way he played. Bubba was emotional in a way that stood out in g. He cried after wins, wore his heart on his sleeve, and often let his frustration show. To fans, this rawness was fresh and relatable to see. Another thing was Bubba’s signature pink driver. His choice of a pink club head was partly playful, partly charitable. He used it to raise money for cancer research in honor of his father. It made him instantly recognizable, a player you could spot on the driving range from a mile away. Watching Bubba Watson was never boring. You didn’t know if you were about to see brilliance or disaster, but you knew you’d see something no one else would even attempt. Coming back to his pro career, Bubba’s first PGA Tour win came at the 2010 Travelers Championship. In the playoff, he beat Cory Pavin and Scott Verplank with a par on the second extra hole. When it was over, Bubba broke down in tears. On live television, he dedicated the victory to his father, who was battling throat cancer at the time. Just months later, his father would pass away. It would be the beginning of a career defined by both triumph and raw emotion. 2 years later, Bubba’s name was etched into golf history. At the 2012 Masters, he found himself in a playoff against Louisisen. On the second playoff hole, Bubba hooked a wedge 40 yards from the pine straw around the trees and onto the green. It was a shot that broke the laws of geometry. Commentators and fans were stunned in real time, calling it one of the boldest and most imaginative shots ever struck under pressure at Augusta. The media reaction the next day hailed it as a shot for the ages. With analysts noting how rarely anyone could even attempt, let alone pull off such a curve. It instantly became one of the most iconic shots in Master’s history. There he was moments later slipping on the green jacket. A self-taught artist had conquered Augusta National. That same year, Bubba and his wife Angie adopted their first child, a son named Caleb. 2014 was Bubba’s peak, a season where everything seemed to click. He captured his second master’s title in style, outlasting Jordan Speath and Jonas Blick by three stroke, once again flipping on the green jacket. Earlier that year, he won the Northern Trust Open at Riviera, one of golf’s most prestigious stop. And in November, he captured the WGC HSBC champions in Shanghai, holding a bunker shot for Eagle on the 72nd hole to force a playoff and then making a 20ft birdie to win. His season placed him second on the 2013 to4 PGA Tour money list and fifth in the FedEx Cup and he rose as high as world number two in early 2015. This was his career bet. Off the course, his family life grew too as he and his wife Angie welcomed their adopted daughter Dakota later that year. Between 2010 and 2018, Bubba played in multiple RDER Cups and President’s Cup. His won 12 PGA Tour events in total, though, including the Travelers Championship three times. By the time the 2020s arrived, his focus had turned more toward family, his charitable project, and life beyond the week-to-eek grind of the PGA Tour. In 2022, he resigned from the PGA Tour and joined LIIV Golf, taking on a captain’s role. In doing so, he stepped away from the spotlight that had defined his career, choosing to prioritize family time and new opportunities. Modern golf looks nothing like the world Bubba thrived in. Today’s juniors start working with swing coaches before they’re teenagers. Their swings are analyzed on Trackman, dissected with biomechanic, and optimized for repeatability. Everything is measured. Launch angle, spin rate, ball speed. There’s nothing wrong with this system. It produces precision, but it leaves little room for artistry. And that’s why Bubba feels like the last of his kind. He was the last true field player to conquer golf at the highest

16 Comments

  1. He faded into obscurity like everyone else on LIV. The upside to joining LIV is they have the freedom to do YouTube content, which is more popular than both tours.

  2. Once this clown left the PGA tour, he became extinct!!!! Just like the others, can't remember any of them or even miss them. PGA has gotten better once they all left. Didn't watch video since this guy is a nothing.

  3. I guess it’s good that guys like him are going extinct. I was a volunteer walking scorer and had the occasion to score for him in a tournament. He was the biggest, most arrogant jackass I’ve ever run across, in golf or any other walk of life. This was years ago and I still remember vividly how rude he was to the fans, volunteers and even his playing competitors. What a prick!

  4. Because little beach decided to go to the bone saw tour, back stab the tour that made him, I dislike all those fuks that went there, you left stay gone, now they want back in ,

  5. Could have been a good video if you just talked to us. I had to shut it off with that AI bs

  6. Trusting his imagination! Thousands of hours of practice, and developing a feeling for the game as opposed to a science side of the game… this is shared with Tiger Woods!

  7. The cookie cutter PGA tour is dead to me. Bubba was a magician at his peak. He joined LIV and got paid, just like the rest of them. Good for him.

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