Day: June 12, 2018

Fantasy Insider: Fantasy golf advice for the U.S. OpenFantasy Insider: Fantasy golf advice for the U.S. Open

Segment 3 of PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO hasn’t been as challenging as it seemed in terms of rationing starts despite it consisting of 14 tournaments, including the first two majors and THE PLAYERS. The ebb and flow of personal scheduling aside, our positive experience is an indication of the strong competitive balance among the elite. Anecdotally, I’ve discussed where to exhaust three starts for any golfer far less than even a year ago. This is sure to change in Segment 4 what with the last two majors, the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational and four FedExCup Playoffs events among only nine tournaments, but we’ll cross that bridge at The Open Championship in July. This week’s U.S. Open is the 10th event of Segment 3. Of the remaining five, it’s the only stop at which ShotLink is not in use. This means that overall fantasy scoring will be lower as bonus points are multiplied. And that means that you want to focus solely on leaderboard finish. Actual scoring by round will not resonate, but you still need to get four to the finish line. Even if you’re somehow dry on starts for golfers you’d like to play, because overall scoring will be lower, you won’t lose as much ground if you struggle. This reality leaves any noticeable movement to gamers in pursuit who can slingshot by with the proper combination of contenders. In response, front-runners should focus on playing defense. Go for the stymies and leave the good luck to another week. You’re not going to miss most of the guys for whom you have one start remaining. PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO My roster for the U.S. Open (in alphabetical order): Jason Day Rickie Fowler Dustin Johnson Rory McIlroy Jon Rahm Justin Rose You’ll find my starters in Expert Picks. Others to consider for each category (in alphabetical order): Scoring: Bryson DeChambeau; Tommy Fleetwood; Marc Leishman; Phil Mickelson; Patrick Reed; Justin Thomas Driving: n/a Approach: n/a Short: n/a Returning to Competition Scott Piercy Walked off TPC Southwind after nine holes of his second round last week. An explanation wasn’t released. It marked the conclusion of a week that started stronger at the U.S. Open sectional qualifier in Memphis. He settled for the position of first alternate, and then gained entry into the major when alternates from four sites filled the remaining vacancies in the field of 156 at Shinnecock Hills. It was just two years ago when he shared runner-up honors at Oakmont, but it’s his only top 50 among two paydays in six appearances. Kevin Stadler It was easy to miss that he returned to competition at last week’s Rust-Oleum Championship on the Web.com Tour outside Chicago. Unlike last year’s abbreviated attempt at a comeback, the 38-year-old not only made the cut but he placed T22. After years sidelined for what was a misdiagnosis of a hand injury, he had surgery for a stress fracture in his palm in 2017. Lo and behold, he’s pain-free and bullish about the future. For a detailed recap of last week’s success, click here. Barring a setback, with 26 starts remaining on his Major Medical Extension on the PGA TOUR, he’s going to be an automatic buy in full-season salary games in 2018-19. Notable WDs None Power Rankings Recap – FedEx St. Jude Classic Power Ranking  Golfer  Result 1  Brooks Koepka  T30 2  Dustin Johnson  Win 3  Phil Mickelson  T12 4  Henrik Stenson  T26 5  Billy Horschel  T51 6  Tony Finau  MC 7  Daniel Berger  MC 8  Luke List  T56 9  Peter Uihlein  T43 10  Charl Schwartzel  72nd 11  Joaquin Niemann  MC 12  Adam Scott  DNP 13  Ben Crane  MC 14  Kiradech Aphibarnrat  MC 15  T.J. Vogel  MC Wild Card  Steve Stricker  T18 Sleepers Recap – FedEx St. Jude Classic Golfer  Result Chad Campbell  T45 James Hahn  T45 Matt Jones  T51 Chez Reavie  T6 Braden Thornberry  T26 Birthdays among active golfers on the PGA TOUR June 12 … none June 13 … Peter Malnati (31) June 14 … none June 15 … Lanto Griffin (30); Ollie Schniederjans (25) June 16 … Phil Mickelson (48) June 17 … David Hearn (39) June 18 … none

Click here to read the full article

Doug Pederson: Nick Foles would start at QB over Carson Wentz if Eagles’ season started nowDoug Pederson: Nick Foles would start at QB over Carson Wentz if Eagles’ season started now

Eagles safety Malcolm Jenkins, asked repeatedly about the canceled White House visit, uses signs to point out social injustices. PHILADELPHIA – It wasn’t exactly breaking news, but there has been some hope from fans that Nick Foles should be the starting quarterback for the Eagles’ opener even

Click here to read the full article

Confidence Factor: Fantasy golf advice for the U.S. OpenConfidence Factor: Fantasy golf advice for the U.S. Open

For the fifth time in its illustrious history, Shinnecock Hills Golf Club will crown the champion of the United States Open. Playing 7,440 yards to Par-70 the 118th edition will more than test the 156 players who qualified to compete for our country’s national championship, as it should. It will also test the commitment, strategy and nerves of fantasy players as they enter the busy stretch-run of the season. Shinnecock Hills, located on Long Island just miles from Belmont Race Track, saw a Triple Crown winner in Justify just last weekend. Those folks could witness history again if Phil Mickelson completes the career grand slam this weekend. The second major of the year kicks off a two-month stretch that will include three major championships and a World Golf Championship event before the FedExCup Playoffs even begin. Preparation needs to be complete and the rest needs to have been taken as the events on both sides of the pond will come fast and furious once summer arrives next week. When the best-of-the-best say they schedule around the majors this is what they are preparing for as the calendar compresses. This week’s champion collects 600 FedExCup points and a five-year exemption on TOUR. If that’s not enough, the winner will also be included in the field of the other three majors for the next five years plus a 10-year exemption at the U.S. Open. Shinnecock’s previous four winners include James Foulis (1896), Raymond Floyd (1986), Corey Pavin (1996) and Retief Goosen (2004). 2017 champion Brooks Koepka will look to join an exclusive club of champions who defended their trophy. Curtis Strange was the last to accomplish this feat in 1988 and 1989. Usually in this section I’ll include the “Tales of the Tape” to identify winning characteristics of the previous champions but that goes out the window this week as, obviously, the USGA rotates the course. It’s also fruitless to point out the keys to victory from Goosen’s victory in 2004 as the course has been reworked by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw to capture the routing and angles from William Flynn’s original design from the late 1920s. While it’s not the evolution of Pinehurst No. 2 from 2014, the difference will be noticeable in multiple facets. NOTE: Golfers inside the top 25 in each statistic on the 2017-18 PGA TOUR are listed only if they are scheduled to compete this week. * – Finished inside the top 10 since 2010 or is a former winner. SG: Tee to Green Rank  Golfer  1  *Dustin Johnson  2  *Justin Thomas  3  *Henrik Stenson  4  *Jordan Spieth  5   Luke List  6  *Tiger Woods  7  *Adam Scott  8  *Justin Rose  9  *Keegan Bradley 10 Paul Casey 11 Patrick Cantlay 12 *Tommy Fleetwood 13 Ryan Moore 14 Bryson DeChambeau 15 Francesco Molinari 16 Scott Piercy 17 Byeong-Hun An 18 Tony Finau 19 Rafael Cabrera-Bello 20 Jon Rahm 21 *Rory McIlroy 22 Brendan Steele 23 Patrick Reed 24 *Steve Stricker 25 *Sergio Garcia Greens in Regulation Rank  Golfer  1  *Henrik Stenson  2  *Jordan Spieth  3  *Adam Scott  4  Kyle Stanley  5  Gary Woodland  7  Russell Knox  9  Rafael Cabrera-Bello 10 Brendan Steele 11 Bubba Watson 12 Jon Rahm 15 Scott Piercy 16 *Keegan Bradley 17 *Rickie Fowler 18 Emiliano Grillo 19 Bryson DeChambeau 20 *Justin Rose 20 *Dustin Johnson 22 *Brian Harman 24 Pat Perez 24 *Justin Thomas 24 Patrick Cantlay SG: Putting Rank  Golfer  1  *Jason Day  2  *Phil Mickelson  4  Sam Burns  5  *Webb Simpson  8  Kevin Kisner 10 *Justin Rose 12 Alex Noren 13 Emiliano Grillo 14 Patrick Rodgers 15 *Branden Grace 20 *Dustin Johnson 21 Kiradech Aphibarnrat 22 *Brian Harman 23 Chesson Hadley 25 *Graeme McDowell Scrambling Rank  Golfer  1  *Louis Oosthuizen  2  *Webb Simpson    4  *Jason Day  6  *Henrik Stenson  7  *Rickie Fowler  8  *Dustin Johnson  9  *Justin Thomas 10 Ryan Moore 11 *Jordan Spieth 12 Chez Reavie 13 Paul Casey 14 Patrick Reed 16 *Steve Stricker 18 *Justin Rose 19 *Brandt Snedeker 20 Aaron Baddeley 21 Brian Gay 22 *Tiger Woods 23 Charles Howell III 24 *Jim Furyk 24 Scott Stallings 26 *Rory McIlroy Shinnecock Hills presents a massive and new test of 7,440 yards playing to par-70. The only club to host the championship in three centuries, Shinnecock Hills has been changed and groomed over the last six years under the watchful eyes of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw and will play strikingly different from the previous challenge of 2004, the last time it hosted the U.S. Open. The old card played just a tad over 6,940 yards but with the addition of nine new tee boxes that’s no longer the case as the modern game comes to town. Fairways of Rye grass have been removed and expanded fescue fairways are back in fashion. The graduated fescue rough will give players a chance to hit recovery shots. Over 500 trees that were in play have been removed as sightlines and angles have improved but will bring the bunkers back into the thought process. The greens have also been increased to the original drawings and will provide additional pin placements while the bulky rough surrounding them has been shaved dramatically down. As I’ve shown below, there aren’t many players who have dealt with the routing, rough and green speeds so the playing field is somewhat level this week and that favors premium players. Toss in the design changes and the advantages lessen even more. When a “new” venue hosts, the fundamentals for putting together a roster shouldn’t change. The same adage is true for selecting players in a major championship as the rules usually outweigh the exceptions. The players who keep their ball in play and find greens in regulation will have the most chances to score and avoid bogey. Par is a fantastic score this week so finding players who can get up-and-down and have no problem grinding won’t hurt either. The USGA intends to test EVERY facet of the game, every club in the bag and all of the decision making that goes along with it. This beast of a layout isn’t going to roll over and have its belly rubbed so find players who have survived before and are ready for more. Remember, this is NOT a standard TOUR event and in my opinion, major experience matters even more this week. There will be bogeys. There will be doubles. There will be bad, horrible, terrible breaks and unfair, calamitous lies. Dealing with it is part of the challenge. The course is routed similarly to TPC Sawgrass where consecutive holes do not play in the same direction (minus No. 9 and No. 10). It’s uncomfortable to continuously recalculate the wind and just as mentally strenuous, as they implement their strategy. The USGA won’t set this place up to favor one style over another. Guys who hit it a mile better not hit it offline as the graduated rough will gobble up poor shots. Players who aren’t as long off the tee will have extra clubs in their hands with tough greens to hold. Once on the greens the Poa annua will wobble, bobble and wiggle enough that every putt of any length will demand full concentration. The greens will be “Stimped” at the classical “tournament speed” for the week. A couple of thoughts for this week and selecting lineups: This isn’t the event or venue to get back on track. If pros aren’t playing to their expectation so far this season I don’t believe the switch flips on a track like this in an event of this magnitude. If players are off, I’ll gladly move on to those who are on. I know that nobody has won the week before the U.S. Open and gone on to win it the following week. I’m also not daft enough to think that eliminates Dustin Johnson from the word go. Records are meant to be broken! I’ve included for you below recent majors history because I believe guys who handle these tests for frequently have a better chance of handling this test this week. There are always exceptions to the rules, I get it, but this will give you an idea of who has played the last nine majors well (if not listed already in the chart). I firmly believe that guys who do not play the U.S. Open well are not going to all of a sudden show up this week. This classic track doesn’t have four par-5 holes to pass out birdies to clean bogeys off the card. The rough this week isn’t going to be difficult to find and the greens more difficult to hit. I would lean on the results of Oakmont and even Merion before those of Chambers Bay or Erin Hills. Keep the classics with the classics and the moderns with the moderns! When the dust settles, I don’t think it will be surprising at all to see a veteran hoisting the trophy on Father’s Day. Good luck! Rob Bolton’s Power Rankings will give you more juice for the week so make sure you stop by. It’s also who I trust with the weather each week so pay attention!  NOTE: The groups below are comprehensive to assist in data mining. Inclusion doesn’t imply automatic endorsement in every fantasy game as all decisions are specific to your situation.  

Click here to read the full article

Washington ‘rocks the red’ at parade for NHL champion CapitalsWashington ‘rocks the red’ at parade for NHL champion Capitals

The US capital was a sea of red on Tuesday as tens of thousands of ice hockey fans lined the streets to celebrate the city’s first major championship team in 26 years — the Stanley Cup-winning Washington Capitals. Under sunny skies, the National Hockey League (NHL) champions paraded down Constitution

Click here to read the full article