Day: November 2, 2021

Inside the stats of Viktor Hovland’s most impressive strengthsInside the stats of Viktor Hovland’s most impressive strengths

Already a multiple PGA TOUR winner, Ryder Cupper and U.S. Amateur champion, Viktor Hovland is undoubtedly one of the most exciting young players in the game today. When Hovland won last year’s World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba, he became just the fifth European player since World War II to win multiple times on the PGA TOUR before the age of 24. The other four – Seve Ballesteros, Sergio Garcia, Rory McIlroy and Jon Rahm – have all gone on to win major championships, and three of the four reached No. 1 in the world. Hovland, who has qualified for the TOUR Championship in each of his first two seasons, has a tremendous opportunity to become Norway’s first male major champion. RELATED: Twenty First Group The former Oklahoma State star has not only flashed explosive ability, but has shown the tee-to-green consistency of a TOUR veteran in his 56 career starts on the circuit. Unwavering Elite Ball Striking Since the beginning of the 2019-20 PGA TOUR season, there are 208 players with at least 50 rounds measured by ShotLink. Hovland is one of just 17 players in that group – 8.2% of the overall collection – to average at least 1 full stroke gained tee-to-green per round. Players on the PGA TOUR gain 2 or more strokes on the field tee-to-green in about 19% of rounds played. Hovland has done this a whopping 33.8% of the time over the last 3 seasons, the 13th-highest rate of any player. But Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green incorporates short game shots, like chips and blasts from greenside bunkers. When you isolate just performance off the tee and on approach, his numbers are even more impressive. Hovland has averaged 1.22 Strokes Gained: Ball-Striking (off-the-tee plus approach) per round over the last three seasons. In that span, only three players have averaged more: Collin Morikawa (+1.39), Jon Rahm (+1.30) and Justin Thomas (+1.25). In 75% of his rounds played during that span, Hovland had a positive number in the Strokes Gained: Ball-Striking category. Only six other players can make that claim among that group (with 50 or more rounds in that span). Hovland averages 0.64 Strokes Gained: Approach per round since the beginning of the 2019-20 season, tied for seventh-most of any player. He has registered a positive strokes gained number on his approach shots in 70.6% of his rounds in that span, the fifth-highest rate on TOUR. In each of the last two PGA TOUR seasons, Hovland ranked in the top 20 in both Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee and Strokes Gained: Approach. Only one other player was able to do that: Corey Conners. Improved Short Game While it still isn’t quite a strength of his game, Hovland has made notable strides in his short game since turning professional. Hovland jumped 44 spots in Strokes Gained: Around-the-Green last season, from 168th to 124th. When scrambling from the rough, Hovland got up-and-down just 51.9% of the time in 2019-20. Last season, that number climbed to 61.0%, an improvement worth more than 120 spots in the standings. Hovland has also cut down on the frequency of costly performances around the green. In 2019-20, he had 12 rounds where he lost at least 1 stroke to the field around the green. That number was cut to eight last season. Birdies in Bunches Last season, Hovland skyrocketed from 40th to sixth in birdie average. Since the 2019-20 season began, Hovland has recorded six birdies-or-better in a round 43 times, tied for 10th-most of any player during that stretch. Since the start of last season, Hovland has put a circle on his card six-plus times in about 28% of his rounds played. The average PGA TOUR player does that in about 16% of his rounds. Hovland made a career-best nine birdies in the third round at El Camaleon Golf Club last year on his way to victory. This ability has been no more evident than in Hovland’s two victories, both of which came with a winning score of 20 under par. Hovland is one of just five players to have multiple PGA TOUR victories at -20 or lower since the beginning of the 2019-20 season, along with Dustin Johnson, Patrick Cantlay, Kevin Na and Brendon Todd. With the average winning score right around 20 under at El Camaleon over the last decade, Hovland will need another prolific scoring week to become the first two-time winner of this event.

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New rule will limit information players can use on greensNew rule will limit information players can use on greens

The PGA TOUR’s Player Advisory Council has approved a new rule that will dramatically impact how players and caddies read greens. Gone will be the highly-detailed books that use technology to reveal the secrets behind the smallest slope on a putting surface. Instead, players and caddies will be required to use approved yardage books that only provide general information about a green’s contours. A player or caddie can add additional notes to his or her yardage book, but those notes will be limited to information garnered from first-hand observations and experiences. Players were informed of the Local Rule, which will take effect Jan. 1, 2022, in a memo sent Monday by the PGA TOUR. “The purpose of this Local Rule is to return to a position where players and caddies use only their skill, judgment and feel along with any information gained through experience, preparation, and practice to read the line of play on the putting green,” the memo read. Beginning in the new year, players and caddies will not be allowed to use yardage books from 2021 and prior. The TOUR will work with yardage book providers to develop the parameters of the new, approved books, which will be marked “Committee Approved Book” on the cover. Players and caddies can continue to take handwritten notes that could aid with green-reading. Those notes can only be based on first-hand observations or experiences, including viewing of television broadcasts, however. Notes from old yardage book that meet these parameters may also be transferred into the new yardage books. No devices, levels or other technology may be used to gather notes about a green’s contours. No information may be copied from another source into the approved book, either. This eliminates players copying the notes from the old greens-reading books into the new book. In addition to this new Local Rule, a Tournament Regulation will be amended to extend the prohibition on using any device to test the conditions of the putting greens to include all practice greens, and during all official practice rounds and Pro-Ams. Based on the direction of the PAC, the Local Rule and new Tournament Regulation will be presented to the PGA TOUR Policy Board at the Nov. 8 meeting, for Jan. 1, 2022 implementation.

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Expert Picks: World Wide Technology Championship at MayakobaExpert Picks: World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba

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. Aside from the experts below, Fantasy Insider Rob Bolton breaks down the field at this year’s World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba in this week’s edition of the Power Rankings. For more fantasy, check out Rookie Ranking, 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 a team, click the “LEAGUES” tab. Then click on “FEATURED,” and then on the PGA TOUR Experts league that populates. SEASON SEGMENT

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Sleeper Picks: World Wide Technology Championship at MayakobaSleeper Picks: World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba

Maverick McNealy (+450 for a Top 10) … He’s a little longer off the tee than TOUR average but he’s made the most noise on shorter tracks where the entirety of his tool box has sharpened his game. Backdrops for his success stories have included familiar places like Pebble Beach and Silverado, but also sites like Harbour Town, Colonial and El Camaleón. In the two editions at Mayakoba since he debuted in 2019, he’s finished a respective T26 and T12, the latter primarily on the strength of lights-out putting. Meanwhile, it was taut ball-striking that yielded a T25 in his last start at Narashino. The icing on the cake, literally, would be for him to capture his maiden title on Sunday. It’ll be his 26th birthday. Russell Henley (+160 for a Top 20) … The veteran of 224 PGA TOUR starts as a professional has some understanding of what Lucas Herbert experienced on Sunday. The 25-year-old Aussie was in his third start as a TOUR member; Henley broke through in his membership debut in 2013, also on a small island beside the sea – at Waialae. Now grizzled with 154 paydays on the board, the 32-year-old has been peppering leaderboards regularly since just before the pandemic shut down competition for three months in 2020. He has a pair of top 25s in as many starts to open this season, and while it’s ridiculously early, no one has a higher percentage of fairways hit (76.79) and greens in regulation (84.03) through six events. To be fair to him, his ball-striking was tiptop throughout last season, so he hasn’t relented. Brice Garnett (+350 for a Top 20) … As a Sleeper for this tournament in 2019, he delivered a T11, yet it’s just his fourth-best performance in seven appearances. His comfort in these climes has extended to Corales where he broke through on the PGA TOUR in 2018 and finished T8 in March of 2021. He’s also capitalized on the paspalum in Puerto Rico with a 5-for-5 record punctuated by a T5, also earlier this year. All present as evidence for how and where he picks his spots; he doesn’t profile as streaky. The comparatively short-hitting 38-year-old ranked sixth on TOUR in fairways hit last season, 43rd in greens in regulation and 31st in Strokes Gained: Putting. James Hahn (+550 for a Top 20) … It’s been over a year now since he strung together three top 10s that lopped off chunks of the target to fulfill his Major Medical Extension, which he did later en route to a return to the FedExCup Playoffs, but he hasn’t connected as much as a pair of top 40s since. The drought is poised to end at Mayakoba where he finished T28 in 2018 and his skill set can shine. Finished T15 in his last start at Narashino and concluded last season ranked T15 on TOUR in ball-striking. Turns 40 today, Nov. 2. Sam Ryder (+700 for a Top 20) … The fifth-season product out of Stetson University took last week off after rising for a T7 at the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP. It was his fifth top 10 of 2021. His quietly balance attack has yielded four consecutive season-ending FedExCup rankings from 101st-112th and five podium finishes with at least one every season. With the momentum of his last start and rest since returning from Japan, and that he’s positioned to parlay the experience of four previous trips to Mayakoba into another payday, it’s all but a gimme that he’ll record his first top 50 on the course, but the prop for a top 20 is aggressive. Odds were sourced on Tuesday, Nov. 2, 2021. For live odds, visit betmgm.

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