Day: October 5, 2020

Chicago Bears, Nick Foles look to gain rhythm on offenseChicago Bears, Nick Foles look to gain rhythm on offense

After Chicago Bears quarterback Nick Foles struggled to get into a rhythm with his receivers in Sunday’s 19-11 loss to the Indianapolis Colts, coach Matt Nagy saw a need to fine-tune the operation. It needs to occur quickly for the Bears (3-1) because Tampa Bay (3-1) comes to Soldier Field for a Thursday night game, and it won’t be easy to keep up with Tom Brady’s high-scoring offense. ”I talked this morning a little bit about calibrating us as an offense, Nick as a quarterback getting calibrated, myself with him getting calibrated in regards to working through this process,” Nagy said Monday.

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Power Rankings: Shriners Hospitals for Children OpenPower Rankings: Shriners Hospitals for Children Open

Don't call it a West Coast Swing - that'll come around again as usual in January and February - but the PGA TOUR will be spending the next three weeks in the Pacific Time Zone nonetheless. The stretch begins familiarly with the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, a fixture of the fall since 1990. Then, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, two of the three events on the canceled Asian Swing have been shifted temporarily to Nevada (THE CJ CUP @ SHADOW CREEK) and California (ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP @ SHERWOOD). Of the trio, only the Shriners boasts a full field of 144 and includes a cut. The next two are 78-man invitationals with no cut. Scroll past the projected contenders for a breakdown of Kevin Na's improbable formula here last year, how TPC Summerlin sets up and more. RELATED: Inside the Field | Preview the course, storylines POWER RANKINGS: SHRINERS HOSPITALS FOR CHILDREN OPEN Jason Day, Rickie Fowler, Francesco Molinari, Sungjae Im and Will Zalatoris will be among the notables reviewed in Tuesday's Fantasy Insider Conventional wisdom and empirical data often collide at TPC Summerlin. As one of the most vulnerable par 71s on the schedule - it was the easiest of 10 par 71s last season and its scoring average of 68.859 was a record low since its debuted in 1992 - the game plan to hit greens and sink putts is as true here as it is anywhere. However, every worthy course makes available the possibility for the winner to have lapped the field with the putter. Kevin Na proved it before outlasting Patrick Cantlay in a playoff a year ago. TPC Summerlin tips at just 7,255 yards and the greens are on the larger size due to winds that often blow in these parts, but when they don't, the tournament develops into a putting contest due to the preponderance of scoring opportunities. Consider that Na averaged 13.5 GIR per round last year (to rank T46), and he was a hair under the field average for the week. Cue the flat stick, Na's primary weapon. En route to 23-under 261, he ranked second in putting: birdies-or-better and led the field in Strokes Gained: Putting, putts per GIR, fewest putts, total distance of putts converted, one-putt percentage and highest conversion percentage from outside 10 feet. Nine of the other 11 who finished inside the top 10 on the leaderboard ranked inside the top 10 in green hit, but only three cracked the top 10 in Strokes Gained: Putting. Scoring conditions will be favorable during the first two rounds this week before a cooling pattern arrives on the weekend. With it, the breezes will intensify from a prevailing direction out of the southwest, and then shift to push in from the north. Daytime highs will tumble from right around 90 degrees on Thursday to about 80 for the finale. No rain will fall. For the third straight year, the primary rough will be limited to two inches. (It previously was three inches.) The bentgrass greens are prepped to run at about 11-and-a-half feet on the Stimpmeter, further favoring aggressive putting. ROB BOLTON'S SCHEDULE PGATOUR.COM's Fantasy Insider Rob Bolton recaps and previews every tournament from numerous angles. Look for his following contributions as scheduled. MONDAY: Qualifiers, Reshuffle, Medical Extensions, Rookie Watch, Power Rankings TUESDAY*: Sleepers, Fantasy Insider * – Rob is a member of the panel for PGATOUR.COM's Expert Picks for PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf, which also publishes on Tuesday.

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Breaking down the big-hitting group of DeChambeau, Champ and WolffBreaking down the big-hitting group of DeChambeau, Champ and Wolff

"It was crazy. It was nuts. It was unbelievable." That was Rory McIlroy's reaction when he played with Bryson DeChambeau in the first event after the PGA TOUR season resumed. McIlroy got a front-row seat to see the transformed DeChambeau in the final round of the Charles Schwab Challenge. McIlroy doesn't lack for length, but several of DeChambeau's tee shots caused McIlroy's jaw to drop. "He hit a couple drives on Sunday that Harry (Diamond, McIlroy's caddie) and I just looked at each other, and we're like, ‘Holy (expletive), that was unbelievable,'" McIlroy said that day. DeChambeau's driving will be on full display at this week's Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. Not only is this his first start since he became a major champion, but it was at last year's Shriners that DeChambeau announced his intention to bulk up in search of bigger drives. DeChambeau will be paired in the first two rounds with two of the TOUR's biggest hitters, as well. He will play Thursday and Friday with Cameron Champ and Matthew Wolff. The numbers say that DeChambeau is the longest hitter on TOUR. This week provides the opportunity to produce some eyewitness testimony. Champ is the man DeChambeau supplanted atop the PGA TOUR's driving distance ranking. Champ led that statistic in 2019 with an average measured drive of 317.9 yards before DeChambeau nipped him by one-tenth of a yard in 2020 (322.1 yards to 322.0). This is the first time DeChambeau and Champ have been paired in a PGA TOUR event. Champ and Wolff have never been paired together, either. DeChambeau and Wolff have faced each other on a pair of Sundays since the season resumed. They finished 1-2 in the Rocket Mortgage Classic - DeChambeau's first win after bulking up — and were in the final group of the recent U.S. Open. That Sunday at Winged Foot is the only time DeChambeau and Wolff have played together on the PGA TOUR. Though DeChambeau has the advantage in most driving statistics, Wolff showed that he is capable of getting it past the TOUR’s driving-distance leader. The most notable occurence came on Winged Foot’s ninth hole, where both players made eagle. DeChambeau’s tee shot went 375 yards but Wolff hit it 13 yards past him. Their contrasting styles and the friendship between their coaches that was formed on a short, scruffy public course in Southern California has created an interesting storyline. DeChambeau is a devotee of physics. Wolff creates speed with a unique, athletic move that is a carry-over from his baseball days. Their coaches, Chris Como and George Gankas, have become two of the game's hottest coaches after getting their start at the 5,000-yard Westlake Golf Course. Wolff, who last year became the first player since Tiger Woods to win the NCAA individual title and a PGA TOUR event in the same year, has finished in the top four in the last two majors as he's shown an increased consistency to go along with his incredible length. Before this trio slugs it out at TPC Summerlin, let's take a look at the tale of the tape. You’ll see that DeChambeau leads almost every distance-related stat, but now he gets to go toe-to-toe with two of his closest competitors and prove it on the course. First, let’s start with the traditional stats. Because this new season is so young, we used the final stats from the 2020 season to compare their performance off the tee. Average driving distance is calculated from the tee shots on two pre-determined holes per round; the two driving-distance holes often run in opposite directions, to mitigate the effect of wind, and are longer holes where players are expected to hit driver. Driving distance (all) measures every tee shot a player hits on a par-4 or par-5. Next, let’s look at what the launch monitors reveal about these players’ long drives. Despite using a 5-degree driver, DeChambeau hit the highest tee shots on TOUR last year. So, it should be no surprise that he also led the TOUR in carry distance. His average carry distance of 314.1 yards is 9.5 yards longer than the No. 2 player in that statistic, Ryan Brehm. Champ, meanwhile, hits low lasers that roll out. The average apex of his drives is 42 feet lower than DeChambeau’s. Champ could have the advantage if conditions are firm and fast this week, while DeChambeau’s high-flying tee shots could benefit from the dry desert air and the fact that TPC Summerlin is nearly 1,900 feet above sea level. Champ led the TOUR in both average clubhead speed and ball speed last season, but DeChambeau’s max effort in both stats was the highest on TOUR. For reference, the TOUR’s average clubhead speed was 114 mph last season and the average ball speed was 169.7 mph. ShotLink data also allows us to look at the percentage of tee shots that are hit a certain length. ‘Measured’ means tee shots that are hit on the two holes used to measure driving distance (see above) and ‘all’ means tee shots on every par-4 and par-5. ‘Percentage covered by tee shots’ measures what percentage of the length on par-4s and par-5s a player covered off the tee. For example, a player who hits a 300-yard tee shot on a 400-yard hole has covered 75% of the hole with his tee shot.

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