Dustin Johnson Is Quietly Fading Away
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Dustin Johnson Is Quietly Fading Away

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Dustin Johnson Is Quietly Fading Away

Just about two years ago Dustin Johnson led a brigade of players to LIV Golf.

Johnson was critical to prove the talent coming to the league would be credible and his inclusion influenced others to follow. A 24-time PGA Tour winner. A two-time major champion. A bona-fide top player in the world who was No. 3 in the Official World Golf Ranking when 2022 began.

Two years later, Johnson is an afterthought.

He ranks No. 392 in the OWGR but that doesn’t include his play in LIV events. In Data Golf, which does include LIV play, he’s a pedestrian 62nd in the world—more than 50 spots south since the start of 2023.

His defenders will point to DJ winning LIV Las Vegas this past February but he’s been nothing in majors for a few years. Johnson has no top-five finishes in his last 13 majors, including five missed cuts in that stretch. It’s a large sample size of mediocrity.

It’s been getting worse as Johnson’s last five major rounds have been 74-81-78-79-73 for a 27-over total. It’s stunningly poor golf for someone who was recently the best player in golf.

All of this hit me watching Thursday morning when Johnson, 1-over through his first five holes, pulled his tee shot wildly into the trees on the par-4 15th. His ball only went about 180 yards and 40 yards left of the fairway. He chopped at it twice to get it back in play.

While he was punching out of those trees on 15, commentator John Maginnes made a stinging quip: “He will need a fifth ace to get out this mess,” referring to DJ’s Four Aces LIV squad.

By the time he tapped in for a double bogey six—on a day when red numbers were rampant—DJ was seven strokes behind leader Xander Schauffele. That gap would only grow throughout the next few hours, reaching 11 shots by lunch time.

His golf is sloppy. His ball speed, once exceeding 180 mph with ease every time he pulled driver out of the bag, has been slipping. It’s like watching a flamethrower pitcher suddenly struggle to consistently hit the mid-90s with his fastball. Rory McIlroy, in the same group as Johnson, looked like he was playing a different sport at times.

Some of this can be explained by age. Johnson will be 40 in June. He’s on the back nine of his career.

But some of this also feels like Johnson is the first truly great player to sail off into the sunset after taking an obscene amount of money to play on LIV.

I noted in my Netflix Full Swing review that Johnson admits how his priorities have changed. He called his 2023 U.S. Open prep “lazy.” He says he practices less and doesn’t consider competitive golf the most important thing in his life. He has two sons. Life has changed. He doesn’t owe anyone anything in terms of his golf.

There was nothing else left for him to prove on the course, unless he really wanted to push for more. He is a clear Hall of Fame player and one of the indelible golf characters of the 2000s.

At the same time, there is a biting symbolism where DJ represents the past two years in professional golf.

We like to see athletes battle. We like to see them genuinely care. We like to see them frustrated when they struggle. We like to see them cry out of joy, just like Johnson did when he won the Masters.

We want to see them get paid but not ahead of those other factors. And that is what professional golf has become—a place where people want to get paid more than they want to compete against the best players.

It is sad to watch. DJ is such an immense talent. Golf is a game of longevity. It’s heartbreaking to see his motivation apparently run out of gas.

For 15 years, there had been a path for him to win five or six majors and become one of the game’s legends. Unless we are in store for some kind of magical comeback, he’s not going to get there. His peers—McIlroy, Koepka, Spieth, Scheffler and others—have already surpassed, or will surpass, DJ’s major record.

As good as DJ has been, he left a lot on the table. That’s the level of talent he was. I think, if there is nothing else noteworthy coming for him, DJ’s legacy will be a guy with nearly unmatchable talent who only got part way to realizing all of it. He’ll be remembered for being a tremendous player but there will be people who also remember him as someone who would have gladly hung out on a boat all day if he still got his money.

Maybe the toughest part is that few people are talking about DJ now. He’s fading away while the conversation is about other things—money in golf, the game being divided, who is on the PGA Tour board, etc. When the talk is about the golf itself, Johnson isn’t even mentioned. It’s like he has disappeared completely.

When people ask why the current golf landscape actively hurts the game, this is the case study.

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Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 10 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife, Anja, and dog, Hogan.

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

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Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

 
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





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      Brent

      1 year ago

      The LIV players simply don’t have the visibility. Obviously we aren’t sure the specifics of the situation, but business common sense says it makes much more sense for the manufactures e.g. Taylormade to support PGA players vs LIV (as a compare) simply because of the visibility. i.e. it’s not about skill, popularity, etc. if the individual representing your brand isn’t seen, the sponsorship doesn’t make much sense.

      Reply

      KJC

      2 years ago

      LIV golfers are like the baseball players going to Japan or the basketball players going to Europe. Only they care.

      Reply

      Timothy Secor

      2 years ago

      He couldnt care less…he is a party animal with 100 million dollars, a beautiful wife and a boat that makes most men jealous….he has no desire to be a legacy golfer…..

      Reply

      John

      2 years ago

      Johnson apparently said on the Netflix series that LIV golfers “took a risk” in going to LIV? Who’s he kidding? In accepting $100 million free dollars, what risk did he take? The only risk he took was in ruining his own reputation and legacy, and he deserves the criticism, for taking money from murderers, as do all LIV players. They were all multi-millionaires already, living terrific lives, and their desire for even more money has now put the game of golf in a mess. I don’t buy their argument about wanting to play less. The PGA Tour rules had required them to play in only 15 tournaments per year. Wouldn’t we all like to have to work only 15 weeks per year. They did it for the money, and they didn’t much care what kind of low-lifes they were climbing into bed with.

      Reply

      Barbara Wright

      2 years ago

      Im with Jason below dont watch games anymore. It was fantastic watching tournaments when DJ was still playing

      Reply

      Ritchie Rich

      2 years ago

      Word. They, DJ Mickelson & Now Rahm are just shallow human beings. Trashed their legacies. Especially Phil who likes to cheat when he can.

      Reply

      R. C. Mehta

      2 years ago

      I agree. Johnson should have kept away from LIV. So also Phil. They will be
      a and are punished by Almighty for their crime of joining LIV.

      Reply

      Jjgolf

      2 years ago

      DJ is not the hungriest golfer out there. The huge up front liv money just took whatever drive he had and drained it right out of him.

      Reply

      Timothy Markus

      2 years ago

      His best attribute by far is his wife. Sexy enough for you?

      Reply

      Jason

      2 years ago

      I don’t watch games anymore.

      Reply

      Bill

      2 years ago

      LIV fans are very defensive about their players..The players all disappeared in terms of relevance to the game of golf. I don’t know exactly what Norman and his Saudi backers were trying to accomplish, but it has ended up hurting the game with divisiveness.
      Watching players drop F Bombs with regularity, dressing like weekend 12 pack warriors and generally lowering the bar of civility in the name of being progressive seems like a negativep to many of us.
      Some find it fun and define it in terms of being more accessible and youthful.
      Just seems like 2nd rate product and format demanding obscene amounts of money while eating away at their own motivation.
      Maybe it’s the way of the future. But I’m not interested.

      Reply

      mattyice

      2 years ago

      Disappeared in Relevance? Bryson just took second in a Major by one stroke. Brooks won the PGA last year. Rahm had a rough go this past weekend but will continue to be relevant in majors for years to come. Is LIV unwatchable? Yes. But some of these guys who took the money still care and will be relevant in Majors for years to come.

      Reply

      Tony

      2 years ago

      I’m a big DJ fan & yes I was disappointed when he went to LIV. However, I get it and I don’t begrudge him one nickel. What this article missed out on is the incredibly poor way the PGA & USGA treated DJ, particularly in the majors & what if any influence that had on DJ’s move.

      It is time to bring everyone back together though!

      Reply

      PHDrunkards

      2 years ago

      DJ fought back and made the cut today, so sit in it and swivel you bigot.
      And 11 of the 16 LIV dudes made the cut. But why wouldn’t they? They are some of the BEST PLAYERS ON THE PLANET ON ANY GIVEN DAY EVENT TOURNAMENT OR FOREIGN COUNTRY!!!!
      So shut your face, SHAWWWWWN!!!
      You’re just a bigoted male KAREN.
      It’s your life and your choice to harbour such HATE and BIGOTRY, but look at the animosity directed at the Jews for the past 3000 years!!!! Why do you think that sort of PREJUDICE continues??? I ask, but you’re probably too hellbent and bigoted to have any kind of conscience or humility or forgiveness or kindness at all in any part of your ugly body, eh!

      Reply

      Someone

      2 years ago

      Quit drinking and go to bed.

      Reply

      PHDrunkards

      2 years ago

      DJ fought back and made the cut today, so sit in it and swivel you bigot.
      And 11 of the 16 LIV dudes made the cut. But why wouldn’t they? They are some of the BEST PLAYERS ON THE PLANET ON ANY GIVEN DAY EVENT TOURNAMENT OR FOREIGN COUNTRY!!!!

      So shut your face, SHAWWWWWN!!!
      You’re just a bigoted male KAREN.
      It’s your life and your choice to harbour such HATE and BIGOTRY, but look at the animosity directed at the Jews for the past 3000 years!!!! Why do you think that sort of PREJUDICE continues??? I ask, but you’re probably too hellbent and bigoted to have any kind of conscience or humility or forgiveness or kindness at all in any part of your ugly body, eh!

      Reply

      Bob K

      2 years ago

      Cool, he made it exactly on the number, 11 strokes back. Better give him $5 mill just for that!!

      Reply

      Doug

      2 years ago

      Waiting for the article on how preposterous it is for tiger to get all that PIP money every year even though he’s been irrelevant since 2020.

      Reply

      Chuck

      2 years ago

      Fairholm at best you are a mediocre stenographer for your overlords. It shows and it’s sad.

      Reply

      Richard Ashley

      2 years ago

      He gets the last laugh! About 100 million reasons why!
      Quit sowing hate between the two groups!

      Reply

      Mike M

      2 years ago

      Another anti LIV take from this guy. I mean we get it, you don’t like LIV. But jumping on DJ as an unmotivated golfer because he’s got millions is rich. No pun intended. He has had millions and enough to make this argument long before he joined LIV. He just won in February and calling it “exhibition golf” or “resort golf” is a nice try at insulting the guy but only like minded haters of LIV will agree with you. I fir one am sick of all of the attacks on these guys. You could easily have written the same hit piece on JT or Spieth or Ricky etc…Being blocked from getting owgr points is the reason for his drop in those rankings. Not his poor play. Write a real golf story for once Sean.

      Reply

      NubNavarre

      2 years ago

      Sean is actually right on. DJ has become lazy, his perogative, but a waste of talent nonetheless. And for sure, LIV is exhibition golf

      Reply

      Steve Paxton

      2 years ago

      It’s all about the money 💰 sad to say if I was given $100 million – $ 250 million I would not give a shit where I finished either. I’ve already cashed my check. The really sad part is that it’s not about competition for the LIV guys & they already have a ton of cash F all LIV golfers

      Bill

      2 years ago

      You are correct a hit piece there’s probably five or six guys that all these writers were touting as the superstars of the future and they haven’t done crap in the last three or four years I think every guy on the tour right now wishes that they could accomplish what he did in the last 14 years ..24 wins only Rory has one more nobody’s close… 14 years in a row with a win only tiger can say that in the modern era ..two major championships ..the scoring record at Augusta ..may never be broken …more top five more top tens more top 20s…fed ex cup championship .. only guy ever to win all of the world golf championship series tiger one more but never won them all…5-0 in the rider cup only two other guys can say that …number three or four on the all-time money list and yes he has two growing children and that should be way more important than the game itself and saying that he’s not really competing against people..hmmm Brooks number one in the world… John ram number one in the world.. Phil Mickelson top player for 20 years on the tour and probably four or five other guys that were in the top 20 in the world when they left for live golf.. automatically a Hall of famer.. number three or four on the all-time money list in the history of golf… Of all the guys on the PGA tour right now maybe there is one maybe two guys that will be able to accomplish what he did in 13 or 14 years…. And isn’t it funny that after he left and Brooks left and Phil left it suddenly seems like the PGA tour is all about the money now and boy those purses really grew by over four five six million per tournament… I guess when he made those birdies on the last five holes in the second round he wasn’t really trying one of them being a 260 yard par 3 that he stuck to 5 ft… I guess with that list of accolades all the tour guys wish they were just fading

      Reply

      Mike

      2 years ago

      I think your column really covers it well, although as you say in your column, DJ does not owe you, me or anyone a damn thing. He’s at a point in life where he can kick back, enjoy his family, enjoy his hot wife (whose family has money also). Would he have surpassed tiger in terms of wins or majors? Absolutely not. The man is in a enviable position of choosing to live his life exactly the way he wants. Shouldn’t that be the goal for all of us?

      And for all the haters, remember, he does not give one crap about you.

      Reply

      David B

      2 years ago

      Thanks for reminding us that the players don’t care about the fans because they don’t. You seem to think that’s just fine and go as far to defend these multimillionaire golfers who don’t care about you either. I don’t know about anyone else but I don’t defend people who are the last people on earth that need to be defended and wouldn’t even consider defending anyone who took money on top of money at my expense as a fan. Why in the world would I or anyone else be happy about that? Unfortunately LIV has made fans irrelevant and that’s the reason I despise the whole operation. Go ahead and keep defending multimillionaires at your own expense, or maybe your experience as a fan is better with the best players not competing against each other and making more money to play less at lower levels.

      Reply

      ChristianR

      2 years ago

      What makes me mad is how people still not admit that not only DJ but all those LIVrs are following same path. Play for nothing (money is assured, no WR, no cut, no card, no glory) on resort courses is endangering their game in terms of being able to compete at high level, mostly mentally speaking, as I’m sure they still have the game. They are no more hungry, whatever they say. Making the cut or a top ten in a major means nothing, when you were constantly into world top ten like Bryson, Cam, DJ, Rahm, with the possibility to get a title every time you were in the field.
      Yes Koepka won, ok, I think also Bryson can win again a major, but there’s a negative bias out there and who don’t see it must be blind.

      Reply

      Scott Smith

      2 years ago

      I thought finally someone had the nuts to write this article about tigger

      Reply

      PHDrunkards

      2 years ago

      Dude, he won in Las Vegas earlier this year, when it was really cold in the low 50s lol
      He’s doing perfectly fine.
      He’s enjoying the nice life on LIV with loads of cash, a nice team, and the party atmosphere, and he gets to travel and fly around the world and see many countries while doing it, and play a few less events.
      What’s wrong with that? He was never liked by the PGA Tour or the USGA. They’ve always made sure he never won with stupid rules thrown in his face

      Reply

      Will

      2 years ago

      I really only know this guy as “the dude on the box my putting mat came in.” And I didn’t even know that when I bought it online.

      Reply

      Mike

      2 years ago

      OK, you just started playing last week, who really cares about your opinion on the subject here.

      Reply

      BJ Johnson

      2 years ago

      Dustin Johnson is a golf ledgend.. 135 weeks as a world number 1.(Owgr #1 is still meaningful in my book just not 20-200) Both of his majors have come since Rory last won one..
      Let’s stop acting like the number of majors won is the only meaningful stat in golf.
      DJ owned the PGA tour for a while much like Scottie is now.
      To insinuate that Speith is going to surpass DJ’s legacy is a joke. And a bad one at that.

      Reply

      Garrett

      2 years ago

      Jordan has 3 majors though, he kind of did surpass him…

      Reply

      Jamie Katz

      2 years ago

      Sadly for professional golf and fans, if not for DJ and Paula, you nailed it.

      Reply

      Dan

      2 years ago

      I fully agree, his earlier attitude of “I’m so good , look at me a really don’t care” was always a bit annoying since he clearly never realized how fleeting talent and ability are. Clearly thought he’s be good forever and now he’s old, washed and nothing more than a recognizable face

      Reply

      MarkM

      2 years ago

      Paulina got what she wanted, lots of $$$ and at this point Dustin doesn’t GAF about the golf. He was never driven to win, he’ll just play out his contract and mosey on into the sunset.
      And likewise, doesn’t register on my do I care scale at all.

      Reply

      Vito

      2 years ago

      Do I care? Not really. DJ was never the brightest bulb in the bunch. Maybe he’s figured his family is more important than chasing tournament wins. He has all the money he’ll ever need. How many of us would keep working at a high level after gaining “generational wealth”? I suspect very few.

      Reply

      Steve

      2 years ago

      Well, Vito. Bryce Harper of the Phillies would like a word. His 10 year contract is worth in the neighborhood of $ 300 MM. Sure, he has a history of injuries, but when he is on the field, he gives it his all and can almost single-handedly, carry the team as he has shown. But yes, what happened with DJ is not unusual. And in his case, not a surprise. If it happens over time with Rahm or Koepka, then you can consider me surprised.

      Reply

      PHDrunkards

      2 years ago

      Baseball is NOT the same, as a player, because they can’t continue to keep playing after their body quits on them in their 30s or early 40s (if they can survive that long).
      Golf is different, as you know, they can keep playing if they want, all the way until their 70s if they want, if their bodies are OK.
      He is the CAPTAIN of his LIV team. He’s not just dillydallying on LIV or with his game. He won in Vegas this year, and he’s not going to just be a useless captain when he has to look after his team, and run the team with his whole squad of team managers, coaches, sponsors, financiers, physios, marketers, etc – and can’t look stupid in front of the families of the team members, they are all looking up to him and need him, he is the leader.

      David B

      2 years ago

      Please stop with the “would you take the money” questions with the answer “yes you would” or most likely you would because you haven’t a clue about what you would do much less anyone else.

      Reply

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