Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Fantasy Insider: The Open, Barbasol Championship

Fantasy Insider: The Open, Barbasol Championship

If you play PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO, there are two priorities for The Open Championship. First, remember that the event is in England. You laugh, but you haven’t received messages and laments like I have. The tournament is scheduled to begin at 1:35 a.m. ET on Thursday in the United States. That’s 10:35 p.m. on Wednesday on the West Coast. Turn back the clock even further for Alaska and Hawaii. One of the terrific functions of the game is that you can modify your lineup after the first tee ball has been struck. As long as you have at least one starter and one benchwarmer who haven’t started no matter their respective tee times, you can make the swap. The other component to your strategy involves the fantasy scoring. The Open Championship is the last event of the season to measure only actual scoring and bonus points. This means that overall fantasy scoring will be low, which in turn means that poor weeks won’t be penalized as much. With the PGA Championship and three tournaments with no cut among the remaining eight, all featuring ShotLink data, rationing your starts for the usual suspects is critical. It would be easier if The Open anchored the season, but you’ll be smart to adjust in advance. And if you competition happens to hit on the winner and his 300 bonus points, tip your cap. Just don’t bet on it. PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO My roster for The Open Championship (in alphabetical order): Paul Casey Sergio Garcia Matt Kuchar Francesco Molinari Charl Schwartzel Adam Scott You’ll find my starters in Expert Picks. Others to consider for each category (in alphabetical order): Scoring: Jason Day; Rickie Fowler; Brooks Koepka; Anirban Lahiri; Hideki Matsuyama; Phil Mickelson; Jon Rahm; Justin Rose; Jordan Spieth Driving: n/a Approach: n/a Short game: n/a Power Rankings Wild Card Ian Poulter … While the signs of a rebound were already there, he’s been a different player since sharing second place at THE PLAYERS. He added a T9 in Scotland last week and returns to Royal Birkdale where he was the outright runner-up in 2008. Now, our long-range expectations should be tempered as he’s 41 years of age, but that matters not on the links in Southport, England. He’s a fantastic complement in every format at The Open Championship. Draws Zach Johnson … On cue, he found his game at TPC Deere Run with a share of fifth place. While he led the field in both greens in regulation and strokes gained: tee-to-green, he was still a dismal 52nd in strokes gained: putting. That’s what bumped him from the Power Rankings for The Open Championship where he prevailed at St. Andrews in 2015 and has recorded top 20s in five of the last six editions. Patrick Reed … He remains one of the most interesting options. Never ignored in the mainstream, he often cruises under the radar in PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO. For that reason alone, it’s worth burning one of your three starts in Segment 4. Top 20s in the last two Opens support the maneuver. Marc Leishman … You want him in that wind. You need him in that wind. A no-brainer across the board and in form all year. Branden Grace … The 29-year-old is in his seventh appearance and he’s yet to miss a cut. His best finish was a T20 at St. Andrews in 2015, so he might go undetected by your competition. Feel free to swoop in with confidence based on that fact and his recent form. Four top 15s and another top 25 in his last seven starts worldwide. Remember, South Africans are often the threads that bind rosters in the majors. Most don’t turn in exceptionally busy schedules on the PGA TOUR, but just as many are reliable investments in the biggest events. Jason Day … Pouring faith into his 6-for-6 record at The Open Championship, but barely. The thing about his 2017 is that it’s disappointing relative to everyone’s expectations, but by no means is he ready to write it off to any degree. You’re aware of the familial distractions early and the playoff loss at the AT&T Byron Nelson, so your angle now is to let all of that dissuade your opposition. When the best are down, that’s when you strike. Think Brooks Koepka at the U.S. Open. Lee Westwood … The PGA TOUR non-member is the perfect filler for a notable in any roster format. His confidence tee to green is worth consideration alone. That he makes most cuts is the clincher. Ross Fisher … The Englishman is worth a flier in DFS and PGA TOUR Fantasy Golfer presented by SERVPRO despite a lackluster record in The Open Championship (5-for-9, one top-35 finish). He’s been enjoying a career renaissance over the last 10 months and has six top 10s in his last 11 starts worldwide. One of the best on the European Tour on approach. Tom Lehman … Crafty sixth man for DFSers. Forget that he’s 58 years old. Royal Birkdale doesn’t discriminate against age. The 1996 champ sashays in with top-shelf form kept sharp on the PGA TOUR Champions. The newest generation of golf fans will never understand how gritty he was in his prime, but it’s not like that ever erodes. It’s the reason why he’s never ceremonial no matter the exemption. Fades Rory McIlroy … Relax. Indictments are relative. The tournament arrives at a bad time as he lacks any momentum and comfort. It’s as simple as that. No one should be expected to find his game at Royal Birkdale, including four-time major champions. And remember, since we’ll have multiple opportunities down the stretch to plug him in, we’ll still want him to perform this week. Even a cut made can spark something special. Justin Thomas … It doesn’t matter that he missed his last two cuts, but it doesn’t help, either. This is just his second Open appearance (T53, 2016), so give him another year to get comfy on the links. Daniel Berger … As he embarks on his second start in the Open (MC, 2015) and ninth major, it’s important to know when to remain patient even when current form would demand doubling down. In fact, the 24-year-old has just one top 25 in a major. In a field of this depth, there no reason to force the issue. Thomas Pieters … The long-hitting Belgian was among the surprises who missed the cut at Erin Hills, but he’s missed the cut in half of his last 10 starts. The flipside is that when he makes his way to the weekend, he’s usually on the leaderboard. Yet, as he gets set to tackle Royal Birkdale, we’re reminded that this is just his second appearance in the major and his strengths of power and putting are mitigated in favor of ball-striking and short game. Of course, no one would be surprised if he contends, but it’s a prime opportunity to observe only. Martin Kaymer … Seriously cooled since a T16 at the Masters, which ended a rare, extended stretch of fabulous form. Now, he’s 8-for-9 with three top 15s in The Open, and that aligns with his reputation as a threat when the lights are brightest, but valuate him accordingly in the absence of recent success. Chris Wood … Like fellow Englishman Justin Rose at Royal Birkdale in 1998, Wood recorded a top five here as an amateur in 2008. He improved on that with a T3 at Turnberry in 2009 and added a T23 at Royal Liverpool in 2014. However, the lanky 29-year-old has been slowed by a wrist injury of late and isn’t worth any risk. Louis Oosthuizen … Both his win in 2010 and T2 in 2015 occurred at St. Andrews. Elsewhere in The Open, he’s just 3-for-8 with one top-35 finish. His current form is encouraging, but that track record gives reason to pause. Bernd Wiesberger … Not that he can’t throttle back, but he’ll probably present more favorably at Quail Hollow next month. In four Open starts, he’s made two cuts, neither going for a top 60. Alex Noren … There’s quite a bit to be said of the fact that he’s won five times worldwide since last year’s Scottish Open on the eve of The Open Championship. Two of the victories occurred in England, but this week’s event is a different animal. He placed T19 in his Open debut here in 2008, but has only one other top-45 finish in five starts (T9, 2012) since. If you simply can’t resist, just do the responsible thing and surround him with more reliable pieces. Tyrrell Hatton … His T5 at Royal Troon in 2016 occurred amid a year-long heater that launched him into our consciousness, but the fantastic putter from England has gone nine starts worldwide without a top 25. Bubba Watson … Just in case you haven’t visited this space almost every time he’s played in recent months, I remain skeptical that his change to a new golf ball at the start of the year was worth it. Could the annual crapshoot of The Open Championship somehow play into his hands? Unlikely. At this point, even full-season salary gamers are wringing their hands in uncertainty that they’ll pull the trigger in 2017-18. Matthew Southgate … Has been included in the conversation surrounding the future of the European Tour, but the hype we consume in the U.S. is overreaching on the 28-year-old Brit. A T12 at Royal Troon last year contributed to it, but a co-runner-up in Ireland two weeks ago was just his second top-30 finish in over eight months. Returning to Competition Ã�ngel Cabrera … Scheduled to compete at the Barbasol Championship. Called it quits during the second round of the John Deere Classic with a sore shoulder, which is nothing new for the Argentine. He’s 4-for-14 on the season and just 26 months from eligibility for the PGA TOUR Champions. Carl Pettersson … In the field at Grand National. Walked off TPC Deere Run during his first round last week with a wrist injury. Barely treading water in the FedExCup standings where he’s 198th. Burned a career earnings exemption this season and won’t turn 40 years of age until Aug. 29. Notable WDs The following four golfers withdrew from The Open Championship: Scott Piercy … Snuck in as an alternate via his Official World Golf Ranking, but declined the exemption. He missed the cut in both previous trips. Justin Leonard … It’s been 20 years since he first clutched the Claret Jug at Royal Troon. This will be just the second time he’s failed to appear as a former winner. He replied to an inquiry about it on Twitter as follows: “I don’t feel like trying to compete after playing one event in 11 months (T58, Valero), plus coming straight from African mission trip for 2 weeks.” The 45-year-old is on site, however, as a commentator and analyst for NBC and Golf Channel. Mark Calcavecchia … Having just turned 57 years of age, he knows the clock is ticking on his opportunities to play as a past champion, but he won’t be making the trip for either The Open Championship or the Senior Open Championship in two weeks. Ben Curtis … Since 2009, the 2003 champ is 1-for-8 at the Open with a T64 in 2013. The following five golfers were among the early withdrawals from the Barbasol Championship: Patrick Rodgers … Although he didn’t seal the deal after holding the outright lead after the second and third rounds of the John Deere Classic, he’s no longer in mild peril of needing a trip to the Web.com Tour Finals to retain his card. The second-year PGA TOUR member is now 52nd in the FedExCup standings after the solo second. Camilo Villegas … At 96th in the FedExCup standings, he’s headed back to the Playoffs. It’s always impressive when any golfer without fully exempt status converts, no matter what he’s achieved previously. The 35-year-old’s bounce-back season has feature four top 20s, the last a T19 on Sunday in the Quad Cities. Brett Stegmaier … Has survived his last four cuts, but his sophomore season has been forgettable thus far. Just 11-for-24 without a top-20 finish. He’s 173rd in FedExCup points. Will MacKenzie … This is the third consecutive week during which he’s pulled out between the commitment deadline and the opening round. No news has surfaced to explain it. He last pegged it at the Travelers Championship and placed T17, but has since dropped 10 spots to 174th in FedExCup points. Jeff Overton … He’s played just twice anywhere in the last 12 months due to a herniated disc in his back, including at The Honda Classic where he burned his only start on a medical extension. He then contracted an infection in his spine after a procedure to relieve pain in his back. His wife described it as “life-threatening” in a post on social media on his 34th birthday on May 28. It’s insignificant as compared to the big picture, but he has Veteran Membership on the PGA TOUR. Power Rankings Recap – John Deere Classic Power Ranking, Golfer, Result 1 Charley Hoffman T39 2 Daniel Berger T5 3 Brian Harman T10 4 Danny Lee WD 5 Kyle Stanley T55 6 Kevin Kisner T44 7 Ryan Moore MC 8 Steve Stricker T5 9 Charles Howell III T19 10 Chad Campbell T12 11 Zach Johnson T5 12 Johnson Wagner MC 13 Jamie Lovemark T25 14 Daniel Summerhays T12 15 Kevin Na MC Sleepers Recap – John Deere Classic Golfers, Result Scott Brown T25 Chesson Hadley T25 Trey Mullinax T19 Rory Sabbatini T19 Scott Stallings T5 Birthdays among active golfers on the PGA TOUR July 18 … Brendon de Jonge (38) July 19 … none July 20 … none July 21 … Robert Gamez (49); Paul Casey (40) July 22 … Brendon Todd (32); David Lingmerth (30) July 23 … Craig Barlow (45); Boo Weekley (44); Kevin Tway (29); Harris English (28) July 24 … Danny Lee (27)  

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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
Ludvig Aberg+400
Collin Morikawa+450
Jon Rahm+450
Justin Thomas+550
Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+450
Bryson DeChambeau+1100
Justin Thomas+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2000
Xander Schauffele+2000
Collin Morikawa+2200
Jon Rahm+2200
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Brooks Koepka+4000
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Viktor Hovland+2000
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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One & Done: the Memorial TournamentOne & Done: the Memorial Tournament

Thank you, Kevin Kisner. If you follow my musings in the discussion threads beneath my columns and contributions, you might recall that he’s been my white whale in the Roster game. Spotted and on the line, but never captured (due primarily to technical difficulties of my own); that is, until at Colonial in the One & Done last week. Kisner is my first win of the 2016-17 season. (Yes, I also had him starting in the finale of the Roster game. It’s not quite the recent end of another drought assigned to silly curses that lasted 108 years, but it still feels great.) Kisner’s 500 FedExCup points propelled me into a healthy lead over Jonathan Wall, who connected wins with Dustin Johnson at Riviera and Rickie Fowler at PGA National. I haven’t burned either juggernaut yet and won’t at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide. While I’m holstering DJ for the TOUR Championship, I have no need to burn him sooner, anyway. Given the available pieces on my board, my decision boiled down to three guys, two of whom I’m endorsing no matter where you rank in your league. Tony Finau is my pick. After Johnson at the top of my Power Rankings, Finau at No. 6 is next-highest who I haven’t burned. What Kisner delivered last week was a bonus because if Finau yields a top 10 at Muirfield Village, I’ll be happy. That’s always the goal. He’s finished a respective T8 and T11 in the last two editions of the Memorial, so all expectations align. Also note that this is the final event for Finau in Future Possibilities. The other dynamic value who has my attention is Byeong Hun An. It’s all coming together for the 25-year-old former U.S. Amateur champion. His devil-may-care philosophy off the tee is perfect in setting the table at Muirfield Village where he tied for 11th last year, but the investment is doubly supported by a strong run of form of late. While you may balk if you’re front-running, all two-man gamers need to be on board. Matt Kuchar rounds out the threesome in my focus. He’d be my pick if I was chasing, but I’ll probably keep him handy for the RBC Canadian Open at Glen Abbey where he’s hung up a T2 (2013), a T7 (2015) and a T9 (2016) in the last three editions on that course. Kuchar is also serviceable as a bridge, so I’ll hold that card because I’ve earned it. If you’re still sitting on your Jon Rahm chip, end the uncertainty and cash it in regardless of your position. You’re already enjoying watching him perform, but just wait until you’re emotionally invested. It doesn’t get any better. Hideki Matsuyama enters with mild concern, but Muirfield Village is as smart a site to plug him in as any other remaining. If hesitant, Adam Scott sets up wonderfully if you need a jolt. In fact, the Aussie would have been my first pick, but I already called his name for Riviera. While I’d almost never talk you out of Jordan Spieth, note that the Memorial isn’t among his Future Possibilities. Yes, that’s a subjective smattering, but I loosened the reins for that section this season, and this tournament still didn’t resonate. Patrick Reed and Jason Day will get their turns, but later. Use Reed as a bridge, if necessary. Meanwhile, in the Fantasy Insider for the AT&T Byron Nelson, I wrote that if Day “converts on something special, he’ll be poised for a mammoth summer.” He lost in a playoff, so that qualifies as something special. I have him penciled in for the BMW Championship, but might be persuaded to reconsider if he stays hot. It’s funny how perspective changes when you take the lead! In addition to An, two-man gamers should look at Marc Leishman, Patrick Cantlay, Bud Cauley and Steve Stricker. If you’re thinking about Stricker for the John Deere Classic, he’s going to be facing a tough decision since the Constellation SENIOR PLAYERS Championship will be contested the same week (July 13-16). It’s the fourth of five majors on the PGA TOUR Champions. It already wouldn’t be unprecedented for him to choose the PGA TOUR over a major on the 50-and-over circuit. It was just last week when he placed T7 at Colonial instead of trying his luck at the KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship. FUTURE POSSIBILITIES NOTE: Select golfers committed to the tournament are listed alphabetically. Future tournaments are sorted chronologically and reflect previous success on the courses on which the tournaments will be held in 2016-17. All are pending golfer commitment. Keegan Bradley … Memorial; WGC-Bridgestone; Dell Technologies Kevin Chappell … Dell Technologies Jason Day … U.S. Open; Canadian; WGC-Bridgestone; PGA Championship; Dell Technologies; TOUR Championship Luke Donald … Wyndham; TOUR Championship Jason Dufner … U.S. Open; TOUR Championship Tony Finau … Memorial Rickie Fowler … WGC-Bridgestone Jim Furyk … Memorial; U.S. Open; Canadian; WGC-Bridgestone; TOUR Championship Bill Haas … Wyndham Charley Hoffman … Travelers; Canadian Billy Horschel … St. Jude; TOUR Championship Dustin Johnson … Memorial; St. Jude; U.S. Open (defending); Canadian; TOUR Championship Zach Johnson … John Deere; Open Championship; WGC-Bridgestone; TOUR Championship Kevin Kisner … Wyndham Russell Knox … Travelers (defending); Dell Technologies Brooks Koepka … St. Jude; U.S. Open; PGA Championship Matt Kuchar … Memorial; Canadian; WGC-Bridgestone Martin Laird … Barracuda Marc Leishman … Memorial; Travelers; Open Championship Hideki Matsuyama … Memorial; PGA Championship; BMW William McGirt … Memorial (defending); Wyndham Phil Mickelson … St. Jude; Open Championship; PGA Championship Ryan Moore … Travelers; John Deere (defending); TOUR Championship Scott Piercy … John Deere; BMW Patrick Reed … Wyndham; Dell Technologies Charl Schwartzel … Memorial; U.S. Open; Open Championship; WGC-Bridgestone Adam Scott … Memorial; U.S. Open; Open Championship; WGC-Bridgestone; Dell Technologies; TOUR Championship Webb Simpson … Greenbrier; Wyndham Jordan Spieth … John Deere; WGC-Bridgestone; PGA Championship; TOUR Championship Brendan Steele … Travelers; Barracuda (already eligible for concurrent WGC-Bridgestone) Kevin Streelman … Memorial Bubba Watson … Travelers; Greenbrier; WGC-Bridgestone; TOUR Championship Gary Woodland … Barracuda; PGA Championship; Dell Technologies; TOUR Championship

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Tiger Woods tracking towards record-tying 82nd PGA TOUR win at ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIPTiger Woods tracking towards record-tying 82nd PGA TOUR win at ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP

It was the calm before the storm that came after a mega storm. Returning to Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club Saturday after almost 10-inches of rain saturated the area on Friday and caused the postponement of the second round, Tiger Woods calmly took control at a quiet ZOZO Championship.  RELATED: Leaderboard | Tiger chases Snead’s record | Monday finish determined for ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP His second straight 6-under 64 pushed the 43-year-old to 12 under par through 36 holes, good enough for a two-shot lead over current U.S. Open champion Gary Woodland. Woods is of course now well and truly on track to join Sam Snead with a record-tying 82nd PGA TOUR win, a fact that will send returning spectators into a frenzy of epic proportions. The odds may be in his favor when you take into account the fact Woods has turned 38 of 49 halfway leads/co-leads to victory and on the 33 occasions he was an outright leader, 28 of them ended with wins. It is incredible considering this is his first tournament of the new 2019-20 season after a nine-week break that included knee surgery. While the two-time FedExCup champion is accustomed to feeding off huge galleries that create roars at every turn, it was a far different vibe on this occasion. Safety concerns after the previous days deluge meant PGA TOUR officials kept spectators off the grounds for the second round leaving an eerie silence around the golf course. Just days after thousands were 20-deep at seemingly every turn the place was a virtual ghost town save for the diehard fans who climbed trees and peered through fences just for a glimpse of their hero. Woods played as if the crowds were still there. As if on auto pilot he still waved after his seven birdies and provided a little showmanship when walking in some putts. When he encountered those people in the trees behind the fences he couldn’t help but flash them his trademark grin. “I made a couple putts today and I went to put my hand up and I’m like, don’t put your hand up, there’s no one clapping, so just move on about your business and just go ahead and keep trying to plug my way up the board, and I was able to do that,â€� Woods admitted. “I’m surprised that I was able to score as well as I have; usually that takes a little bit of time. But this golf course is a little bit on the softer side. I’ve been able to strike my irons pretty well this week so far and that’s been nice. “I left a lot of my approach shots below the hole and I was able to be pretty aggressive, and the greens are a little bit slower than they were yesterday. I had a good feel on the putting green, which was nice. Hit a lot of putts from below the hole and making sure that I put a lot of right hand into it and released it and it felt good all day.â€� The third round is scheduled to begin at 6:30 a.m. local time Sunday (5:30 p.m. ET Saturday) with Woods in the last group at 8:30 a.m. (7:30 p.m. ET) along with Woodland and Keegan Bradley (four back). The crowds will be allowed back in and are expected to be at capacity. The players will not be regrouped after the round and will continue into the fourth round, playing until darkness before the tournament will then conclude on Monday morning. The prospect of extra holes in one day will put more pressure on Woods recently repaired knee and his surgically fused back. It’s a different kind of storm he needs to weather … fatigue and stiffness. At one point during the round there was a long wait on the par-5 14th hole forcing some precautionary stretching and ultimately the addition of a vest. All part of the management needed in his game these days. “It’s just going to be a long day,â€� Woods said of Sunday. “Eat a lot of food tonight and then tomorrow, same thing, make sure that I eat enough and feel good about my warm‑up session. “I felt like I hit it a little bit better today … that’s nice going into a long day like tomorrow because it’s going to be a bit of a test physically and mentally to play for, what, up to 10 hours. Hopefully I can play well and get myself right there.â€�

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From 250/1 to PGA champion: Behind the odds of Justin Thomas’ seven-stroke comebackFrom 250/1 to PGA champion: Behind the odds of Justin Thomas’ seven-stroke comeback

Newly crowned PGA Championship winner Justin Thomas sat eight strokes out of the lead and +25000 (250 to 1) with BetMGM Sportsbook with 10 holes to play at Southern Hills before becoming the centerpiece of one of the greatest comebacks in major championship golf. After two ultra-impressive 3-under 67s to open the tournament on the tough side of the draw, Thomas stumbled in Saturday’s third round with a 74, leaving him seven strokes back of the lead with 18 holes to play. He fell eight behind after some early errors including a stone-cold shank on the par-3 sixth hole that led to a bogey, not the type of shot typically seen from a major champion. Thomas opened as a +1200 chance with BetMGM but was +3300 to start the final round after dropping into a tie for seventh. “Someone told me he was 15 to 1 before today, which is crazy. I would have taken the other side of that,” Thomas’ father Mike laughed after the odds-defying victory. “There were just too many people in front of him; he was 12th on the leaderboard at one point, but he’s got a lot of guts and he’s got a lot of heart, and he had a good putting week to make things up.” Indeed, Thomas was second in the field in Strokes Gained: Putting (+6.314) and also ranked inside the top 16 in the field in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee (+2.638), Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green (+8.000) and Strokes Gained: Around-the-Green (+3.257). We’ve gone behind the numbers and tracked Thomas’ live odds from last Sunday’s final round to see just how miraculous the result turned out to be for the man who now owns a FedExCup, a PLAYERS Championship and two majors. ODDS TIMELINE – Justin Thomas to win PGA Championship (via BetMGM) +3300 – Overnight odds have Thomas at 33 to 1, sitting seven shots back of leader Mito Pereira, before he gets underway on Sunday. +4000 – After opening with two pars, Thomas finds himself short of the green in two on the par-4 third hole. His chip comes up 10 feet short of the hole. +6600 – Thomas misses his 10-foot par putt on the third hole, dropping to 1-under for the tournament, eight shots off the lead. +12500 – Coming off a birdie at the fifth hole and with 5-iron in hand on the par-3 sixth tee, Thomas catches the ball on the hosel, sending a wicked shank out to the right side. While by some miracle he misses a creek, he is still 120 yards from the hole. +15000 – As if the shank wasn’t embarrassment enough, Thomas hits his second shot into a tree and it rebounds into a bunker from the wrong hole, still 100 yards from the pin. He ends up making a great bogey to go back to 1-under. +25000 – Despite a great shot into the par-4 seventh with the same 5-iron he shanked moments earlier, Thomas misses birdie and gets through the par-3 eighth still eight shots off the lead and now running out of holes. +10000 – A lovely approach shot to the par-4 ninth hole, leaving just under 12 feet for birdie, has put some belief back into the bettors. +8000 – Thomas makes his birdie on the ninth hole, sitting seven shots back as he makes the turn. +6600 – A very accurate tee shot down the 10th hole brings with it more faith at BetMGM. +5000 – An even better approach shot to 11 feet on the 10th allows some folks to start dreaming. +6600 – When the birdie try on 10 goes by, there is a sense that so too may have Thomas’ chances at Southern Hills. +2500 – An incredible 64-foot, 7-inch birdie drops for Thomas on the par-3 11th, slashing his odds all the way back to 25 to 1 as the leaders start to stumble. Thomas is now just five back. +2200 – The odds tighten for Thomas a little more at Pereira bogeys the eighth and he sits just four off the pace. +2000 – Pereira’s drive down the ninth hole is bleeding into trouble. Thomas comes in again. +900 – Is this really happening? The 2017 FedExCup champion drains another birdie on the 12th hole and suddenly is headed to a par-5 within just three shots of the lead. +850 – Pereira’s approach on the ninth finds a bunker. +1100 – Pereira makes a great par save on the ninth hole, sending Thomas’ odds drifting again. +900 – The roller coaster begins again as Pereira gets unlucky to miss the 10th green in regulation. +1000 – Pereira hits an incredible chip shot to help secure a par on the par-4 10th. +1200 – Thomas lays up on the par-5 13th. +1100 – Thomas hits a decent wedge to create another chance at birdie. +1000 – One of the challengers, Matt Fitzpatrick, bogeys the 10th, while another in Will Zalatoris has left himself a 16-foot par putt on the 12th hole. +1600 – Thomas misses his chance at birdie on the par-5, and the sportsbooks think that might be costly. +2000 – Thomas sends his tee shot on the par-4 14th into a bunker. +2200 – Pereira secures par on the 11th with a nice two-putt from long distance. +1600 – Pereira’s drive on the 12th ends up in a horrible spot, forcing a chip out back to the fairway. +1400 – Thomas gets up and down for par from the sand on 14. +1600 – Pereira is still in trouble on 12, and has left just under 8 feet for his par. +1100 – Pereira’s par putt won’t drop. His gap over Thomas is now just two shots. +700 – Thomas hits a beautiful approach into the 15th, leaving just 8 feet for birdie. +1000 – As many have done before him Sunday, Thomas misreads the putt on 15 and settles for par. +2000 – Pereira hits a brilliant second shot into the par-5 13th, setting up an 18-foot eagle attempt. +2500 – Thomas loses his tee shot on the 16th hole to the right. +3300 – Pereira misses his eagle but taps in for birdie on 13, while Thomas hits his approach to 16 into a greenside bunker. He trails by three again. +2000 – Pereira sends his tee shot to the par-3 14th long and left. +1400 – Thomas almost holes his long bunker shot on 16. +1200 – Pereira fails to get up and down and bogeys the 14th, leaving Thomas two behind with two to play. +1100 – Zalatoris misses his birdie attempt on 15 from close range. +900 – Thomas sends his tee shot on the drivable par-4 17th into a greenside bunker. +1600 – Pereira rebounds from his bogey with a laser approach inside 10 feet on 15. +1100 – Pereira, like Thomas before him, misreads the putt on 15 and fails to convert his birdie. +800 – Thomas secures a birdie at 17. He’s just one back of the lead. +700 – After a debate with his caddie Jim “Bones” Mackay, Thomas pulls driver out of his bag. +500 – Thomas hits a near perfect drive down the last hole. +300 – Pereira comes up short on his approach to 16. +200 – Pereira’s third shot into the 16th leaves him with a tricky 11-footer to save par. +150 – Thomas takes dead aim on approach at the 72nd hole and flies it next to the pin. It rolls out, leaving just under 11 feet to post another birdie and join the lead. +225 – Pereira makes a clutch par putt at 16 to maintain his one-shot lead. +350 – With seemingly it all on the line, Thomas fails to nudge the birdie home on the 18th and now must wait after a beautiful 3-under 67 leaves him in the clubhouse lead at 5-under. +600 – Zalatoris birdies the 17th. +500 – Fitzpatrick finds the creek off the tee on 17 and Pereira’s drive doesn’t reach the putting surface. +350 – Pereira hits a great putt for his birdie on the 17th but it stops a revolution short of the hole. He settles for par and a one-shot lead heading to the last hole. -154 – Pereira produces a wild tee shot that slices hard right and finds its way into the water. +110 – Zalatoris makes a clutch up-and-down from in front of the 18th green to join Thomas in the clubhouse at 5-under. -125 – After hitting his third shot long and left of the green, Pereira faces a tricky up-and-down to join a playoff. His chip shot trickles off the front of the green and he’s unable to hole out from there. -137 – The double bogey from Pereira leaves Thomas fighting Zalatoris over a three-hole aggregate playoff. Thomas is the favorite before they begin. +120 – Starting on the par-5 13th, Thomas sends his drive into the rough while Zalatoris is in the fairway. -118 – Thomas hits a lovely wedge inside 10 feet after a forced lay-up, leaving him with a very likely birdie. He secures the birdie, but so too does Zalatoris. -200 – Thomas hits perhaps one of the shots of the week by driving the second playoff hole (the par-4 17th). -303 – Zalatoris can’t match Thomas and is short of the putting surface. -222 – Zalatoris chips up to close range, leaving him a chance to match Thomas with birdies after Thomas misses his eagle attempt. -500 – Zalatoris watches his birdie try from inside 10 feet slide by, leaving Thomas a shot ahead with one to play. -1000 – Thomas pumps his drive perfectly down the final hole. -2500 – Zalatoris hits a decent drive but doesn’t match Thomas for distance or optimal angle. His approach finds the green but sucks back and sits against the fringe, some 45 feet away. -10000 – Thomas sends his 9-iron approach to 25 feet, from where he two-putts to win his second PGA Championship.

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