Month: August 2021

Top win probabilities entering the TOUR ChampionshipTop win probabilities entering the TOUR Championship

After 11 months, 49 events, and nearly 1.4 million shots hit, the PGA TOUR season concludes this week at the lucrative TOUR Championship at East Lake Golf Club. Merely making it to this point is a massive accomplishment on its own. This season, 641 players competed in at least one PGA TOUR event. That means that less than 4.7% of players to tee it up on TOUR in 2020-21 are in the field this week in Georgia, competing for the $15 million first-place prize. Twenty First Group’s pre-tournament win probability modeling considers player form, historic factors, course fit and more to deduce the chances each player in the 30-man field has at taking home the trophy this week. Of course, the Starting Strokes are factored in, too, providing another element of intrigue to the season-ending Championship. Here is a look at the six players with the highest pre-tournament win probabilities in Atlanta: 6. Jordan Spieth, -4 Win probability entering tournament: 1.9% Regardless of where he winds up finishing this week at East Lake, the resurgent season of Jordan Spieth has been of the game’s top storylines in 2021. While his return to the winner’s circle in San Antonio at the Valero Texas Open was the biggest highlight, the rediscovery of consistently good iron play should be what has Spieth fans bullish about the years to come. A common misconception about Spieth is that his putting has been the difference when he is at his best. While his short game has been exemplary in his young career, his approach play deserves more recognition. In 2015, when Spieth won PGA TOUR Player of the Year, he averaged more Strokes Gained: Approach per round (+0.62) than Strokes Gained: Putting (+0.57). Two years later, when Spieth won three times on TOUR, he ranked a solid 48th on TOUR in putting, but was 2nd in Strokes Gained: Approach. The 2020-21 season has seen the return of some really good iron play from Spieth. Jordan has ranked in the top-30 on TOUR in Strokes Gained: Approach every week since April, at one point getting as high as 16th. That’s an enormous leap for a player that ranked 148th in that statistic just two seasons ago. Since firing a second-round 62 at Liberty National, Spieth has struggled in the six Playoffs rounds since, losing more than 11.4 strokes to the field tee-to-green. He’s hit less than 60% of his greens in regulation in that stretch, as well. Even so, Spieth has a long history of lighting it up in Georgia, whether in April or September, and cannot be totally ignored at East Lake. He begins the week six shots off the pace, with the sixth-best pre-tournament win probability, according to Twenty First Group predictive modeling. 5. Cameron Smith, -5 Win probability entering tournament: 3.6% With a blonde mullet, wispy mustache and propensity for lighting it up from long distance, Cameron Smith has done a bang-up impression of mid-1980s Larry Bird this season. Kidding aside, Smith’s ascent into golf’s elite, earmarked with a sparkling T-2 finish at the 2020 Masters Tournament, has been exciting to watch unfold. How else would you describe a player who has catapulted from 72nd in birdie average a season ago to 2nd this season? Smith has taken advantage of his opportunities to shine this season, both from an anecdotal and analytical standpoint. From a surface level, half of his top-ten finishes this season have come in major championships, WGCs and a FedExCup Playoffs event. Analytically, Smith has the third-highest birdie-or-better rate when he chooses to go for the green under regulation this season (70.0%). He also ranks second on TOUR in birdie conversion rate (37.7%). Talk about seizing the moment. 4. Tony Finau, -8 Win probability entering tournament: 11.3% In a year of bounce-back and breakthrough victories, perhaps no win was more cathartic for golf fans than Tony Finau’s playoff victory at THE NORTHERN TRUST. In his 40th top-10 finish since his first win, Finau finally picked up a second PGA TOUR title, something he had come achingly close to so many times along the way. Now, Finau has an opportunity to pick up the biggest victory of his career to date this week in Atlanta. Twenty First Group gives Finau a better than 11% chance at victory, pre-tournament. After being a-just-about-average putter all season long (+0.01 Strokes Gained: Putting in the regular season), Tony is lighting it up in the Playoffs, averaging +1.25 per round. Finau shot 63 Sunday at the BMW Championship, the lowest final round score of his PGA TOUR career. 3. Bryson DeChambeau, -7 Win probability entering tournament: 12.6% East Lake has shown to statistically favor elite drivers of the golf ball more than players with great approach play. Three of the last five winners of the TOUR Championship led the field that week in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee. Meanwhile, none of the last five to win were ranked in the top-five that week in Strokes Gained: Approach. Since 2010, winners at East Lake have averaged more Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee per round (+0.69) than Strokes Gained: Approach (+0.41). It’s because of these factors that – despite a grueling finish in last week’s six-hole playoff classic at Caves Valley – Bryson backers should be enthusiastic about his chances to win the big prize. DeChambeau gained more than two full strokes on the field per round off-the-tee at the BMW Championship, the most for any player in a single 72-hole PGA TOUR event since Dustin Johnson at the 2018 Sentry Tournament of Champions. DeChambeau has racked up 57 birdies-or-better through two playoff events, six more than any other player. 2. Jon Rahm, -6 Win probability entering tournament: 20.2% Not just number one in the Official World Golf Ranking, Jon Rahm is number one this PGA TOUR season in scoring, birdie average, Strokes Gained: Total, Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green, total driving, par 3 scoring and par 5 scoring. In his last 24 worldwide rounds, Rahm has a scoring average of just under 67.4. He has made birdie (or eagle) on 30.1% of his holes played during that span. Rahm’s only finish outside the top-ten since May was at the Memorial Tournament, when he held a six-shot 54-hole lead before having to withdraw due to a positive COVID-19 test. Rahm can bury the Player of the Year debate – and bring a flood of momentum to the coming Ryder Cup – with a win this week in Atlanta. He finished in fourth place at the TOUR Championship in 2020. 1. Patrick Cantlay, -10 Win probability entering tournament: 37.9% Patrick Cantlay’s putting superlatives from last week are seemingly endless. He accumulated the most Strokes Gained: Putting in a single PGA TOUR event since tracking began in 2004 – despite losing strokes to the field putting in Round 3! The PGA TOUR make percentage for putts from 10 to 20 feet is 25.6%. Last week, Cantlay made 61% of his putts from that range (14-for-23). Now the question is, does that incredible flatstick form travel south to Atlanta? Consider this: over the last ten PGA TOUR seasons, there are only three instances of a player leading a PGA TOUR event in back-to-back weeks in Strokes Gained: Putting. The last time it happened was in 2019, when Jordan Spieth led the field at the PGA Championship, then did it the following week at Colonial. Cantlay enters the tournament with a two-shot lead. For some context, over the last 15 years, players who hold a two-stroke lead after round one of a PGA TOUR event go on to win about 15% of the time. That number is about 34% for a 36-hole, two-shot lead, and 40% for players with a two-shot advantage entering the final round. Twenty First Group gives Cantlay a 37.9% chance at winning the $15 million prize this week.

Click here to read the full article

Horses for Courses: TOUR ChampionshipHorses for Courses: TOUR Championship

All of the gold at the end of the rainbow is up for grabs at East Lake Golf Club outside Atlanta as the FedExCup Playoffs will pay out $60 million in bonuses to close the 50-event 2020-2021 season. East Lake Golf Club, established in 1904, has served as the permanent host of the TOUR Championship since 2004. Tom Bendelow’s original design was updated in 1913 by Donald Ross so greens pitching back-to-front will again be in play this week. Rees Jones has handled the upkeep over the last 25 years to keep up with the best players on TOUR annually. The FedExCup Playoffs debuted in 2007 so course history is a very real angle this week. RELATED: Power Rankings | Expert Picks In 2008 East Lake changed their greens from Bentgrass to Bermuda so Zach Johnson’s course record of 60 set in 2007 can be taken with a grain of salt. Since the introduction of Bermuda, 63 has been the lowest round posted four times, last done by Henrik Stenson in 2015. Before 2016 the event concluded with a Par-3 hole. The nines were flipped in 2016 to add another layer of drama as the Par-5 18th, one of the easiest annually on the course, will provide the final act. Xander Schauffele holds the event (gross) record, set last year, on 15-under 265. Since the nines were reversed, the winning score has been double digits under par in every event. Zoysia fairways and Mini-Verde Ultradwarf Bermuda greens running around 13 feet are surrounded by almost three inches of Bermuda rough. The remnants of Hurricane Ida are dumping rain Tuesday on the area after a very abnormally wet July. The Par-70 (35-35) already stretches out to 7,346 yards and nothing about firm or fast will be on the cards this week. The two Par-5 holes annually play the easiest on the course so scoring on both of them will be required. Wet Bermuda rough won’t allow for much control off of the fairway and around the greens. The perfect Bermuda greens, just over 6,000 square feet on average, will see putts holed for both par and birdie. The formula this week will involve finding the most fairways to attack hole locations and saving pars when missing the fairway and greens. Like any big-time event, the full bag and the six inches between the ears should be in play and that is definitely the case this week. The 30 players involved will have four rounds (no cut) to try and chase down FedExCup leader Patrick Cantlay and his Starting Strokes of 10-under par. The player posting the lowest net total (Starting Strokes combined with the total of strokes accumulated after 72 holes) after 72 holes will take home the biggest bonus of them all, $15 million plus a five year exemption on TOUR. Dustin Johnson is back for the 13th time in this event and will look to repeat as FedExCup Playoff champion. The only multiple winner of this event (entered this week) is Rory McIlroy (2019, 2016) and nobody has ever defended the title of Playoff Champion or Event champion. Top 30 FedExCup bonus money distribution Recent Event Winners Stats Recent Winners 2020 – Dustin Johnson (-21 net, -11 gross) Fired a final round 68 to win by three. … Won his sixth FedExCup Playoff event and first FedExCup championship. … First No. 1 seed to win since Tiger Woods in 2009. … Led by five, an event record, after posting 64 in Round 3. … Final group off Round 3 after leading by one after 36 holes. … Opened with 67 to share the first round lead. … Would have finished T3 without Starting Strokes. … 17th win in start No. 274. … His six wins in the FedExCup Playoffs are the most in history. … Picked up his third win in his 10th tournament since the restart. … 64 tied the low round of the week (four others listed below). … Notables in the field this week: 2017 FedExCup Playoff EVENT champion Xander Schauffele (2nd) posted the lowest 72 hole total since Bermuda was introduced in 2008. … 2017 FedExCup Playoff champion Justin Thomas (T2) picked up his fifth top 10 in his fifth visit. … Jon Rahm (4th) posted the second WORST round of the week with 74 in Round 2. … Debutant Scottie Scheffler (5th) posted 12-under (gross), second best on the week. … Debutant Collin Morikawa (6th) co-led the field with Schauffele with 21 birdies. … 2019 champion Rory McIlroy (T8) also posted 64 (Rd 1) but only made four birdies thru the middle two rounds. … Patrick Reed (T8) picked up his best finish in his seventh attempt as he led the field in Fairways and Pars. … Sungjae Im (11th) opened 68-64 to trail Johnson by one after 36 holes. … Harris English (T12) ranked third in Putts. … Daniel Berger (T14) joined the party with 64 in Round 3. … Abraham Ancer (T18) opened his second visit with 64 before cooling. … Viktor Hovland (T20) led the field in GIR. … Scoring average was 68.917. … Only five bogey-free rounds and Reed had 40 percent of them. 2019 – Rory McIlroy (18-under net, 13-under gross ) 2016 winner posted a final round 66 to become just the second player to win the FedExCup Playoffs and Event twice. … Began the final round one shot back of Brooks Koepka. … Only player to post all four rounds in the 60s as he won by four shots. … Posted 13-under gross, three better than Schauffele, for the best total of the week. … Led the field with 20 birdies. … Co-led the field in Bogey Avoidance. … Becomes the only winner to also win THE PLAYERS in the same season. … Third win of the season along with the RBC Canadian Open. … Hits the top 10 for the sixth time in seven visits. … 17th TOUR victory in start No. 268. Notables in the field this week: Xander Schauffele (T2) opened with the co-low round of the week, 64, posted 10-under (gross) and co-led the field in Bogey Avoidance. … Brooks Koepka (T3) tried to go wire to wire but his final round 72 saw him fall short. … 2017 FedExCup Playoff Champion Justin Thomas (T3) entered the week as the No. 1 seed. … Tony Finau (7th) posted all four rounds 70 or better. … Hideki Matsuyama (T9) matched McIlroy with two rounds of 66. … Patrick Reed (T9) cashed his first top 10 in six appearances. … Just eight players posted rounds of 60 on Sunday. … Scoring average 70.003. … Only three bogey free rounds for the week. 2018 – Tiger Woods (11-under, 259) Did not qualify this season (injury). … Woods won the Event but Justin Rose (did not qualify) won the FedExCup Playoff Championship. … Final edition before Starting Strokes. … Only player double digits under par. … Led by three after 54 holes. … Shared the 36 hole lead with Rose. … Opened with 65, co-low round of the week, to share the lead. … Becomes first player to win the FedExCup Playoff Event twice. … 80th win in 346th start. … First appearance since 2013. Notables in the field this week: 2014 champion Billy Horschel (2nd) led the field in Fairways and GIR. … Dustin Johnson (T3) picked up his best finish in his 10th appearance. … Hideki Matsuyama (T4) ranked T3 in Fairways, 3rd GIR and signed for the only bogey free round of the week. … Rory McIlroy (T7) played in the final group and co-led the field with 19 birdies. … 2017 champion Xander Schauffele (T7) picks up his only finish outside of the top two. … Justin Thomas (T7) was one of four players who posted all four rounds at 70 or better. … Jon Rahm (T11) joined McIlroy with 19 birdies. … 69.617 scoring average. Key stat leaders Top golfers in each statistic on the 2020-2021 PGA TOUR are listed only if they are scheduled to compete this week. Horses for Courses East Lake Gross 2019-2020

Click here to read the full article

A look back at the biggest PGA TOUR season in historyA look back at the biggest PGA TOUR season in history

That loud, steady knocking you hear at the door? That’s the 2020-21 PGA TOUR season, or super season if you will, delivering some news: This is it. Last stop. We’ve reached our destination. As Sinatra might say, it’s the final curtain. Fifty events – six of them major championships – across the United States and beyond, giving us an overflowing bushelful of great storylines and winners. We had it all: some powerful resurgences, lots of bonus golf (playoffs), new faces hoisting trophies, and of course, history, like a 51-year-old winning the PGA Championship … all of it wrapped up with a bow and delivered to the front stoop at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta this week, where 30 elite golfers have made it to the finish line. Not since 1975 (51 events) had the TOUR staged so many tournaments in one season. The Covid-19 pandemic that halted the 2019-20 TOUR season for three months at THE PLAYERS Championship in March of 2020 would cancel some events and move others, and eventually spin us into a new season unlike any we have seen before. Golfers are creatures of habit, and the new jam-packed schedule threw some off their normal rhythm. Still, through it all, week to week, the golf delivered, from then-47-year-old Stewart Cink winning in Napa in September to Sunday’s stirring six-hole playoff between Bryson DeChambeau and Patrick Cantlay to decide the second leg of the Playoffs at the BMW Championship. We have witnessed indelible snapshots we will not forget. Hideki Matsuyama became the first male player from golf-rich Japan to win a major championship, donning a green jacket at the 2021 Masters. That was only five months removed from a Masters played in November, another first, in which Dustin Johnson won. Interestingly, Rahm and Johnson would tussle much of the season to be World No. 1. (Currently, Rahm is on top, with Johnson second.) “It’s hard to categorize the year, just because of how much has been going on, especially in the last two months,” Rahm said at last week’s BMW Championship, the second of two FedExCup Playoffs events, and the penultimate tournament of the season. “It’s been a lot.” Rahm’s year, in abbreviated Cliff’s Notes: He twice tested positive for Covid-19 (once when leading The Memorial by six shots through 54 holes), collected his first major championship (the first Spaniard to win a U.S. Open), and had to sit out the Olympics in Tokyo. Rahm was the last person to arrive to the Masters in April, for good reason: He and his wife, Kelley, had just become first-time parents to a son they named Kepa. That’s a lot to jam into a single calendar; Rahm will not soon forget his 26th year on the planet. The events most would consider to be the eight largest tournaments of the 2020-21 season – six majors, THE PLAYERS and the Olympic Games – were divided nicely amongst eight different champions, ranging from 51-year-old Phil Mickelson (2021 PGA Championship) to 24-year-old Collin Morikawa (2021 Open Championship). DeChambeau brought rugged Winged Foot to its knees at a delayed U.S. Open in September. Justin Thomas sizzled on the weekend (64-68) to win THE PLAYERS in March. Fortysomethings such as Cink, Sergio Garcia and Lee Westwood showed renewed vigor in their games. Cink won twice, opening his campaign by winning the Safeway Open with his son, Reagan, on his bag. It was his first TOUR victory in 11 years. Garcia won at Sanderson Farms, stiffing an 8-iron tight for a winning birdie at the 72nd hole. Westwood, who was fast closing in on his 48th birthday, camped near the top of the leaderboard for two weeks in March, running second in two huge events: the Arnold Palmer Invitational (to DeChambeau) and THE PLAYERS. We had new faces winning, victories posted by such exciting players on the rise as Jason Kokrak (twice a winner), Max Homa, and Mexico’s tandem of Carlos Ortiz and Abraham Ancer. Six majors in the season, along with a PLAYERS, three World Golf Championships and so many other marquee events … it gave us a never-ending drumbeat of big-time golf. Not that it was all was easy, especially for those hitting the shots. They did what they could, and rested when they found windows to do so, but few players ever rested for very long. Instead of making the short trek from the opening FedExCup Playoffs event in New Jersey (THE NORTHERN TRUST) directly to the BMW Championship in Baltimore, Rory McIlroy, a new father himself, stole a day to fly home to Florida to see his wife and baby daughter. It helped him to refresh and recharge. From the start of the post-pandemic schedule in summer 2020 through this week’s TOUR Championship, McIlroy said he will have played in 34 events, which included his first Olympics start in Japan. (McIroy, playing for Ireland, fell short of a bronze medal in a wild seven-man playoff; C.T. Pan of Chinese Tapai took bronze.) The Ryder Cup (McIlroy’s 35th event) in Wisconsin awaits in a few weeks. McIlroy did manage to collect his first PGA TOUR trophy since late 2019 when he captured the Wells Fargo Championship in Charlotte, N.C. That was a nice moment. “All that in a space of 15 months, it’s a lot of golf,” McIlroy said at last week’s BMW. “It’s probably too much for me. I’ve played more than I probably should have and feel like it’s just sort of all caught up with me.” For international players on the PGA TOUR, attempting to travel in the era of Covid has proved very challenging. Adam Scott and his family (he has three young children) are based in Switzerland. At the conclusion of the Open Championship at England’s Royal St. George’s, Scott was unable to travel home, as the United Kingdom resided on Switzerland’s “red” list for travelers. So Scott spent his off-week week in Spain instead, his seventh consecutive week away from home. He said travel restrictions made it difficult to spend time in person with his coach in 2021. He didn’t even bother to try to get with his physical trainer. “I’m not complaining about anything,” Scott said at the Wyndham Championship, noting that not many of his fellow pros are playing the PGA TOUR out of Switzerland. “I’ve made a lot of these decisions and I’ll live with whatever it is, but yeah, from a golf side of things, if I just lowered my expectations a bit, I think the frustration levels would have been down. “I missed the boat on finding the right cadence for the ‘super season.’ It certainly feels like here in the States that a lot of things are returning to a bit more normal, you would say, and hopefully as we go into next season, (we can) fall back into so many old rhythms.” There was one player whose World Ranking qualified him to compete at the Olympic Games in Tokyo, but he was leaning against going in the months beforehand. With a major championship right in front of the Olympics and a World Golf Championships event (FedEx St. Jude) and FedExCup Playoffs lurking shortly afterward, going all the way to Tokyo might not be the most prudent move in pacing himself. In the end, however, that player opted to go; he simply didn’t want to live with the regrets he might harbor in his heart if he didn’t. Xander Schauffele was glad he went. He left Tokyo with an Olympic gold medal around his neck, fulfilling a dream he shared with his father, Stefan. It was one more big performance, big moment, inside a season that gave us so many. Yes, it has been a season like no other. And we still have one more big finish to go.

Click here to read the full article

Expert Picks: TOUR ChampionshipExpert Picks: TOUR Championship

How it works: Each week, our experts from PGATOUR.COM will make their selections in PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf. Each lineup consists of four starters and two bench players that can be rotated after each round. Adding to the challenge is that every golfer can be used only three times per each of four Segments. The first fantasy golf game to utilize live ShotLink data, PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf allows you to see scores update live during competition. Aside from the experts below, Fantasy Insider Rob Bolton breaks down the field at this year’s TOUR Championship in this week’s edition of the Power Rankings. For more fantasy, check out Rookie Watch, Qualifiers and Reshuffle. THINK YOU’RE BETTER THAN OUR EXPERTS? The PGA TOUR Experts league is once again open to the public. You can play our free fantasy game and see how you measure up against our experts below. Joining the league is simple. Just click here to sign up or log in. Once you create your team, click the “Leagues” tab and search for “PGA TOUR Experts.” After that? Pick your players and start talking smack. Want to represent the fans against our experts? SEASON SEGMENT

Click here to read the full article