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Bryson DeChambeau names the player he wants to team up with to take on Phil Mickelson and Grant Horvat as he issues challenge

Bryson DeChambeau and Phil Mickelson.
Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images
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Grant Horvat and Phil Mickelson will team up and compete in a brand new YouTube series in January 2025.

With Mickelson looking to grow his channel and Horvat one of the biggest names on the platform, the duo announced that a collaboration is scheduled.

YouTuber and former PGA Tour player Wesley Bryan has reacted to the news, and a match with the Bryan Bros is almost certainly on the cards.

Another prominent YouTube name who will more than likely get involved is Mickelson’s LIV Golf colleague, Bryson DeChambeau.

And, fresh off making a hole-in-one over his house, DeChambeau has confirmed he’s up for the challenge and also named which player he wants to team up with.

Bryson DeChambeau names YouTuber he wants to team up with

U.S. Open - Final Round
Photo by Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images

DeChambeau took to the comments section of Mickelson and Horvat’s announcement on Instagram and revealed he’s eager to take on the pair with the help of YouTuber Garrett Clark.

“Y’all would stand no chance against @gm_golf and I,” DeChambeau wrote.

Clark, better known as GM Golf, is part of the popular YouTube group Good Good. Clark was actually the first person to feature on DeChambeau’s Break 50, a series that has now seen the likes of Donald Trump, Tom Brady, and Tony Romo team up with the LIV Golf man.

How good is Garrett Clark?

Clark is a +5 handicap golfer and is the second-best player on Good Good behind former professional Brad Dalk.

Clark also led the Creator Classic at East Lake during the early part of the tournament before fading away and missing out on the playoff.

Despite being a low-handicap player, the American has had to clarify his ability with fans after scepticism emerged over whether his +5 handicap was legitimate.

“I wanna say for me, I have an 87, an 86 and multiple rounds in the 80s in my last 20 scores, but those are not getting counted towards my handicap,” Clark said in a recent YouTube video.

“It’s just my eight best scores. To show you the difference, my handicap right now is +5, which is because I’ve had some rounds like a 66, multiple rounds in the 60s and even with those rounds in the 80s, they don’t count, but my scoring average is 73.4. That goes to show the difference between a handicap and an average score. I think that’s the misconception there.”