Day: January 19, 2021

DraftKings preview: The American ExpressDraftKings preview: The American Express

The PGA TOUR starts the West Coast swing with The American Express in La Quinta, California, located near Palm Springs. Due to COVID-19, the TOUR canceled the pro-am this year, resulting in the golfers playing across only two courses instead of the usual three — the Nicklaus Tournament Course and the Stadium Course on PGA West. The Nicklaus Tournament Course is a par 72, measuring 7,181. The Stadium Course measures 7,147 yards and will also play as a par 72. Both courses will be putt on Bermuda greens for the third straight week. The pro-am cancellation didn't just remove La Quinta CC from the course rotation this year; it also will result in the cut occurring after 36 holes instead of the usual 54 holes as in prior years. The Stadium Course has also been the only one to record ShotLink data in the past, which you should consider when looking at previous statistics. Set your DraftKings fantasy golf lineups here: PGA TOUR $600K Approach Shot [$200K to 1st] STRATEGY Both courses routinely play as some of the easiest in scoring relative to par with accessible par 5s and short par 4s. The Stadium Course, designed by Pete Dye, draws many comparisons to TPC Sawgrass, one being how often water hazards come into play. The Nicklaus Course was brought into the tournament rotation back in 2016 and should be the easier of the two, as three of the four par 5s play less than 550 yards. Recent Sony Open winner Kevin Na (+3500; $9.200) is tied for the course record (62) at the Nicklaus Course, which means guys like Cameron Champ (+4000; $8,900) aren't the only ones who should be able to score. This week will be the first of many Pete Dye courses the TOUR will play this season, and as with all Dye designs, position golf will be essential. Both courses don't sport a lot of rough, which means fairways hit in regulation matters less than having the correct angles into these undulation greens. The primary stat with all Pete Dye courses is Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green, and this week, golfers will need to have success on short par 4s. There is one under 350 yards and five between 350 to 400 yards. Like last week, we should be leaning toward golfers who've played in Hawai'i leading up to the tournament. Ten of the past 11 champions played in the week(s) before their win here. Last year's winner, Andrew Landry (+25000, $7,000), missed the cut at the Sony Open in Hawaii but would go on to shoot 26-under and win here by two strokes. The same thing happened to Adam Long (+7500, $8,500) in 2019. He missed the cut at Waialae CC and also shot 26-under, beating Phil Mickelson (+6600, $8,800) and Adam Hadwin (+7000, $8,000) by one. Lastly, players who rank high in par 5 scoring and birdie or better percentage should be in our lineups this week, with the average winning score finishing around 24-under over the past five years. GOLFERS TO CONSIDER Patrick Cantlay +1300 to Win | $11,100 on DraftKings Sticking with the golfers who've played competitive rounds early in the year, Cantlay is my favorite at the top of the salary range. Cantlay could be a popular play this week, with Jon Rahm withdrawing on Monday, but some people may not believe he deserves to be the betting favorite or the most expensive, keeping his roster percentage low. He lost 2.8 strokes with his irons at Kapalua, but we shouldn't be worried. There's only been one occasion over the past 18 months where Cantlay has lost strokes with his irons in back-to-back events (2020 Northern Trust/2020 BMW Championship). Cantlay loves playing in his home state with top finishes at the Genesis, AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and here, where he finished ninth back in 2019. Less than three months ago, Cantlay won the ZOZO Championship at Sherwood Country Club, another California course. Cameron Champ +4000 to Win | $8,900 on DraftKings Champ had a difficult start to his season, finishing 31st at the Sentry Tournament of Champions, but this shouldn't keep you from rostering him this week. He lost 4.4 strokes on the greens at the Plantation Course but left Kapalua positive in strokes tee-to-green. Routinely ranking at the top in driving distance, Champ will have a clear advantage with his length and ability to either come into these short par 4s with a wedge in hand or, better yet, with his putter on a few occasions. We should also consider Russell Knox (+900 Top 10, $7,200) in our lineups this week. He's much better on challenging courses where the winning score is closer to 12-under, but Knox has a good record here with a top 20 in 2019 and three straight cuts made over the past three years. In the past, we've seen golfers play well here and at other courses like the Mayakoba Classic, where Knox has made every cut dating back to 2013, has finished no worse than 37th and has a runner-up finish in 2015. Another correlated tournament is the Waste Management Pheonix Open, and Knox has finished inside the top 20 twice, along with a top 10 back in 2019. Tom Hoge +1100 Top 10 | $7,300 on DraftKings Another golfer who plays well during the West Coast swing, Hoge could fly under the radar this week after a missed cut last week. I've already mentioned the poor form both Landry and Long have coming into this tournament; Hoge could keep that streak alive this week. The +2.81 strokes gained through approach in Round 1 last week led to a 5-under start, but he quickly gave it back on Friday when his irons and putter went cold. An early departure from the Aloha State means an early arrival to Palm Springs, where he's played well in the past. Hoge finished sixth in last year's edition, gaining 10.3 strokes total, the fourth-highest mark dating back to 2014. Over the previous 24 rounds, Hoge ranks 30th in par 5 efficiency, 25th in birdies or better gained and 26th in Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green. Like Knox, Hoge has played well at correlated courses, with a third-place at the Mayakoba Classic last month, another top 5 at the Farmers Insurance Open and a top 25 at the Waste Management Phoenix Open last season. Set your DraftKings fantasy golf lineups here: PGA TOUR $600K Approach Shot [$200K to 1st] Put your knowledge to the test. Sign up for DraftKings and experience the game inside the game. 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Sleeper Picks: The American ExpressSleeper Picks: The American Express

Doc Redman ... He ignited a phenomenal fall for Sleepers as a whole with a T3 at the Safeway Open. It occurred a month after the same finish at the Wyndham Championship. He'd follow with a T4 at the Bermuda Championship. Needless to say, the Clemson product is unafraid of the top of the leaderboard. The American Express is his first start since turning 23 during the holiday break, and it wouldn't be surprising if he contended yet again for his breakthrough victory on the PGA TOUR. Flashing experience-laden confidence beyond his years off the tee and with his irons, PGA WEST is the kind of stage where his skill set can really shine. He carded a trio of 68s and a 70 en route to a T28 in his tournament debut last year. Sepp Straka ... With a T33 (Corales) and a T5 (Houston) as a Sleeper for each of those tournaments, the 27-year-old also did his part in delivering on elevated expectations in the fall. He's poised to do it again in the Coachella Valley where he finished T4 last year while ranking T2 in greens hit and third in scrambling. Fresh off a T25 at Waialae for his fourth top 25 of the season, he's already just one short of his total in each of first two seasons on the PGA TOUR. Wyndham Clark ... Although he's logged six starts this season, he's evidence as to why statistics are golfer-specific and skewed. Five his 20 rounds haven't been lasered by ShotLink, so his Strokes Gained analytics are misleading. Not that he cares. He put four of them together at the Bermuda Championship where he lost in the playoff to Brian Gay. With a smaller sample size contributing to his stats, the terrific putter slots an uncharacteristically low 174th on the PGA TOUR in Strokes Gained: Putting. Assuming he improves on that, which is all but guaranteed, what's intriguing is that he's T78 in hitting greens in regulation and a reflection of all rounds played. If he can sustain even an average rank among his peers, he'd headed to a breakout season. Bermuda's close call is one of three top 25s already. A T18 in his debut at PGA WEST in 2019 is further reason why another is imminent. Harry Hall ... The first time that the Englishman appeared on the PGA TOUR, he was a Sleeper for the 2020 Farmers Insurance Open for which he was the medalist in open qualifying. He missed the cut in the tournament proper. The American Express is his second TOUR appearance. Lo and behold, here he is on this page again and he's even more deserving of the attention this time. He had connected top-15 finishes in South African immediately prior to the Farmers a year ago. Since, he's gone on to record a T2 and another pair of top 10s on the Korn Ferry Tour where he's positioned 68th in points in the combined season of 2020-21. The 23-year-old product out of UNLV is like a magnet for the hole on the greens. He's currently second on the KFT in putts per GIR, first in putting: birdies-or-better and third in scoring average. John Augenstein ... The American Express marks his debut as a professional. He concluded his decorated amateur career with a T55 at the November Masters for which he was eligible as the runner-up of the 2019 U.S. Amateur. Formerly teammates at Vanderbilt with the likes of Will Gordon and Matthias Schwab, Augenstein blazed his own trail that generated Freshman of the Year honors in 2016-17 and recognition as the Southeastern Conference Player of the Year in 2020. He also scaled as high as No. 4 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. Because of the timing of his decision to join the play-for-pay contingent, his sponsor exemption to compete at PGA WEST projects to be the first of a handful this season. NOTE: Sleeper is a relative term, so Rob uses unofficial criteria to determine who qualifies. Each of the following usually is determined to be ineligible for this weekly staple: Winners of the tournament on the current host course; winners in the same season; recent major champions; top 50 in the Official World Golf Ranking; recent participants of team competitions.

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