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Even if you’re someone who isn’t interested in golf at all, chances are if you’ve been on Instagram at all in the last two weeks, you’ve seen a video of Bryson DeChambeau above his very large house in Texas Hits golf balls.

The two-time US Open champion launched a challenge earlier this month in which he attempts to make a hole-in-one by hitting shots from his driveway, across his house, which is mostly made of glass, and into the Chipping green cut hole punches in his back yard.

Every day, DeChambeau gets to add another golf ball to the mix. On the first day he only had one shot, on the second day he had two shots, and so on.

Tuesday marked the 15th day of the challenge, and while DeChambeau has had some close calls over the past two weeks, none of them compare to how close the 31-year-old came to his last filmed attempt on his 15th day of the series.

While his wedge shot landed on the fringe just short of the green, DeChambeau’s ball bounced off the hole absolutely perfectly, actually falling into the cup, but traveling at a little too much speed and bouncing out.

Some people seem to disagree with DeChambeau’s series, claiming that there is no way he filmed all of these videos on actual consecutive days and that he edits each clip to be as dramatic as possible.

I have two things to say to these people. First of all, who cares? Second, touch grass.

READ: Bryson DeChambeau watching the SpaceX spacecraft launch while standing next to Donald Trump could be the video of the year

DeChambeau has quickly become the most entertaining golfer in the world as he has somehow managed to find the perfect balance between professional golfer and golf personality on the internet. While DeChambeau won this year’s US Open and enjoyed a strong season on LIV Golf, he has attacked the YouTube golf world head-on, amassing 1.6 million followers on the platform since he started posting regularly about a year ago.

Every single one of his Hole in One Challenge videos has garnered well over 1 million views per video, many of which attracted over 5 million viewers.

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