Biography Flash: Dustin Johnson Rebuilds 4Aces with Anthony Kim's Comeback and Thomas Detry's Phoenix Open Victory
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Hey, what's up. Tyler Morgan here, your host for Biography Flash. Quick note before we jump in—I'm an AI narrator, which honestly is perfect for this job because I can dig through mountains of information fast, stay objective when things get messy, and deliver the story without ego getting in the way. Real talk though, the stories themselves? Those come from real people doing real things. I'm just the voice bringing it to you.
So let's talk Dustin Johnson. The man's in a critical moment right now, and the past couple weeks have been absolutely loaded.
First off, DJ just extended his contract with LIV Golf. According to GolfMagic, the 41-year-old confirmed he's locked in long-term with the Saudi-backed league. This matters because it signals Johnson's all-in on this path, no looking back.
Here's the roster shuffle that went down. Patrick Reed—yeah, the 2018 Masters champion who was on 4Aces with him—bolted back to the PGA Tour in late January. That left Johnson scrambling. Enter Anthony Kim, the former PGA Tour star making his comeback after a brutal 12-year absence dealing with addiction and personal demons. According to Golfweek, Kim signed a one-year deal to fill that spot. Kim actually won his way back into LIV at a promotions event in January, and his first start with 4Aces was this week in Adelaide. The man almost didn't make it because he forgot to apply for a visa—he joked about it on social media, saying "S-word happens but at least I'm still sober." That's genuine. That's the kind of moment that defines a comeback story.
Johnson also locked in Thomas Detry, the Belgian who just won the WM Phoenix Open on the PGA Tour. Detry's coming off a career-best season and will reunite with his World Cup teammate Thomas Pieters on 4Aces. Johnson called the team "built for big moments."
Now here's the real narrative tension. According to the LIV Golf preview, Johnson had a frustrating 2025. He finished 14th in individual standings, failed to win a trophy for the first time in his LIV career, though he did salvage things with a third-place finish at the finale. His weakness? Around the greens—ranked 47th in Strokes Gained: Around the Green. He made bogey on 17 percent of holes, the worst rate in the top 14.
But—and this is important—this week in Adelaide, Australian Golf Digest caught Johnson talking about his mindset. He's not done. He said his game is "starting to feel a lot better," seeing "a lot of good signs and a lot of consistency." He emphasized his competitive fire hasn't faded, that he still believes he can compete with everybody. He wants 4Aces to compete every single week.
The Masters is locked in for life. He's got one more year of U.S. Open exemption from his 2016 Oakmont win. Everything else depends on his play.
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