Day: January 14, 2023

The case for and against contenders at the Sony Open in HawaiiThe case for and against contenders at the Sony Open in Hawaii

We've reached the halfway point (almost) of the Sony Open in Hawaii with plenty of contenders hoping to continue their groove over the weekend as they chase the lion's share of the 7.9million purse and 500 FedExCup points. Perhaps you've made the right selections thus far and are riding an in-form player at Waialae or maybe you're looking to rebound from seeing the likes of tournament favorites Tom Kim, Jordan Spieth and Sungjae Im missing the cut. Either way let's take a look at the players on top of the board at BetMGM Sportsbook and check the case FOR and the case AGAINST their chance to salute on Sunday. TAYLOR MONTGOMERY, -10, T2 (+450 to win) Case For: Has been arguably the form player of the season thus far without a win. At 12th in the FedExCup standings only Brian Harman ranks higher among players without victory. He now has 10 rounds of 66 or better this season, the most of any player. The rookie has made all seven cuts and has six top-15s, the most on TOUR. Leads the Sony Open in Hawaii field in Strokes Gained: Putting Case Against: The last player to win the Sony Open in Hawaii on their first attempt was Russell Henley in 2013. It is a rare occurrence for first-time winners and with a potential wind shift on Sunday Montgomery will be playing without experience in different conditions. Is 83rd in the field in Strokes Gained: Approach. CHRIS KIRK -11, 1st (+500 to win) Case For: Kirk has twice been runner up at Waialae and currently ranks first in the field in Proximity and sixth in Strokes Gained: Putting. Twelve of the last 13 winners at Waialae were inside the top 10 in SG: Putting on way to winning. Total 129 through 36-holes, career low on PGA TOUR. Is six under on holes 1-3, best of any player in the field and has 13 rounds of 65 or better at Waialae CC, most of any player since 2011. A four-time TOUR winner. Case Against: He needs to make the critical putts when the pressure ratchets up. Kirk has missed twice from 5-10 feet so far where he ranks 106th on TOUR so far this season. Hasn't won on TOUR since 2015 and holds the 36-hole lead/co-lead for first time in 925 days. (2020 Rocket Mortgage Classic). J.J. SPAUN, -10, T2 (+500 to win) Case For: Spaun is the highest player on the leaderboard who played last week in the Sentry Tournament of Champions. Eight of the last nine winners at the Sony Open in Hawaii were in the field the prior week at Kapalua. Ranks 11th in field in Strokes Gained: Putting, ninth in SG: Approach and 12th in SG: Around the Green. Has just one bogey for the week, coming on his last hole Friday. Case Against: Spaun has missed the cut in four of the five previous attempts at the Sony Open in Hawaii with previous best result of T47. He ranks 104th in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee and 123rd in Driving Accuracy. His final drive Friday missed way right into a penalty area. SLEEPERS While the top three on the board are in a favorable position as it stands don't sleep on a trio of players currently T9 just four off the lead. Denny McCarthy (+3000), Brendon Todd (+3500) and Maverick McNealy (+2200) all present viable considerations with 36 holes to play. McNealy ranks fourth on TOUR in Strokes Gained: Putting this season and need only improve his SG: Off-the-Tee a little from 100th this week to likely apply more pressure on the leaders. McCarthy is also a known putter and has holed over 183 feet of putts through two rounds. Todd, a proven TOUR winner, opened with a triple bogey seven on Friday yet found his way back inside the top 10 on the leaderboard. One bad hole is all that stands between him and second place. Has made over 229-feet of putts. CUT SWEAT First round co-leader Jordan Spieth made five bogeys in his last 11 holes and missed birdie putts at 17 and 18 to be heading home early after an 11-shot swing between rounds. He is just the fifth first round leader projected to miss the cut in the last five years on the PGA TOUR. Adam Svensson bogeyed the sixth hole, his 15th of the round, to drop to even for the tournament and two shots outside the cutline with three holes to play. But the Canadian found himself quickly back inside the weekend mark thanks to a sensational hole-in-one on the par-3 seventh from 175 yards. Adam Schenk birdied 17 and 18 to make the cut on the number while Ryan Brehm and Nick Taylor birdied eight and nine on the other side of the course to do the same. Austin Smotherman double bogeyed 13 and 15 to drop back to even par for the week before making eagle on the par-5 18th from just under six-feet to make it on the number. Ryan Armour, who aced the 17th hole on Thursday, bogeyed the easiest hole on the course (par-5 ninth) Friday to finish and miss the cut by one. Rory Sabbatini, playing his 25th straight Sony Open in Hawaii, made the turn in the lead at 7-under only to shoot 41 on his final nine holes to miss the cut by one.

Click here to read the full article

Chris Kirk leads by one at Sony Open in HawaiiChris Kirk leads by one at Sony Open in Hawaii

HONOLULU — Chris Kirk in the lead might have been the only shred of normalcy in the Sony Open in Hawaii. Jordan Spieth started Friday with a share of the lead. He walked off the 18th green at Waialae in a minor state of shock after missing the cut. “I felt I had a really bad deck of cards today,” said Spieth, the first player since Matt Every at Bay Hill in 2020 to go from a share of the 18-hole lead to an early exit. “It was a weird, weird day.” He had a 5-over 75 after opening with a 64. Rory Sabbatini birdied the 18th hole in the morning and was within one shot of the lead as he headed to the front nine. He hit his tee shot out-of-bounds. Double bogey. He pulled his drive into the water on No. 2. Double bogey. He pulled his second shot on No. 3 into the same water and got the same score. He shot 41 on the final nine for a 74 and missed the cut by one. J.J. Spaun had a happier time until the end, when one bad swing sent his tee shot into the canal on the par-5 ninth, leading to a bogey on the easiest hole at Waialae. He still shot 64 and was one shot behind. But imagine showing up on the first tee on a PGA TOUR event located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean and seeing your high school principal watching. Rita Kear, retired from San Dimas High School, happened to be on vacation with her husband. “I saw her on the first tee and I was like, `Oh my God, is that Mrs. Kear?’ Sure enough was,” Spaun said. “Small world.” A strange world Friday, at least down the shore from wild, wacky Waikiki. Kirk dropped only one shot in his round of 5-under 65, putting him at 11-under 129 for a one-shot lead over Spaun and Taylor Montgomery, the PGA TOUR rookie who is playing his eighth tournament of the season and only once has finished out of the top 15. He is polite to a fault, so to hear Montgomery talk about his teenage years in Las Vegas and the time he caddied at Shadow Creek and was trash talking Michael Jordan (it didn’t end well for Montgomery), it was hard to imagine. Then again, that was par for the course on Friday at Waialae. Kirk was one of the feel-good stories from the Sony Open two years ago. He had stepped away from golf to seek help for alcoholism and depression. He received a medical extension, and the Sony Open was his last chance to keep his full card. He did that by closing with a 65 to tie for second. Kirk was among those tied for the lead when he began the second round. He birdied the first three holes and, aside from a bogey on No. 6, didn’t have too much press. But he can appreciate the difficulty of trying to maintain good form from one day to the next. “It’s so difficult to be great at this game professionally in the mental side,” he said. “I don’t know if I did a good job today or not, but thankfully did on the back nine. I always remind myself that pressure is a privilege when you start feeling a little bit of nerves.” Spieth wasn’t sure what he was feeling. He was even for the day, right in the mix, when he went from the rough to a funky lie in the bunker. Next up was the par-5 ninth that is the easiest birdie on the course until the ball is sailing right toward the canal. He took a drop close to the red hazard line with his left foot on the cart path. To take further relief would have brought a tree into play, but then he worried about his left foot slipping and his ball didn’t fade the way he wanted. It was a mess, and he had to make a 10-foot putt for bogey. It felt like that happened all day. “I’ve never led a tournament and missed the cut before,” Spieth said. “Just got the ball in the wrong spots at the wrong places.” The cut won’t officially be made until Saturday morning because darkness again kept everyone from finishing. But it will be at 2-under 138. Davis Thompson was 2 under and facing an eagle putt from just inside 60 feet. As long as he doesn’t four-putt, he’ll be around for the weekend. Given how Friday went, it was probably a good idea to wait.

Click here to read the full article