Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting After ‘timid’ start, Rory turns it around

After ‘timid’ start, Rory turns it around

SOUTHPORT, England – Rory McIlroy is the reigning FedExCup champ and owner of four major titles, but even he needs to be reminded of what he is capable of, especially after missing consecutive cuts. At his best, he can intimidate others by hitting tee shots where few can. His confidence was low, however, as he started the 146th Open Championship on Thursday. “I was nervous going out. I was a little anxious, timid,â€� he admitted. A tough start at Royal Birkdale didn’t help matters. He made bogey on four of his first five holes, which led caddie J.P. Fitzgerald to intervene. “You’re Rory McIlroy. What are you doing?â€� Fitzgerald implored his boss, according to McIlroy. McIlroy made another bogey at the sixth hole to fall to 5 over, but that was his last one of the day. Four back-nine birdies allowed McIlroy to salvage a 1-over 71. This has been a scattered season for McIlroy. Some distractions have been good, like his recent wedding. But there’s also been two injury-induced hiatuses, and equipment uncertainty that was finally resolved by his signing with TaylorMade in May. McIlroy missed the cut at the last major, the U.S. Open, before finishing T13 at the Travelers Championship, where he played putter roulette as his struggles on the greens reached a tipping point. He then missed the cut at the Irish Open, which he hosts, and last week’s Scottish Open. McIlroy’s turnaround was spurred by Fitzgerald’s pep talk and a decision to trust the swing he’d been practicing on the range. “I sort of felt I was caught in between (swings) on the first six holes,â€� he said. “I found a little swing thought or a little trigger that I think is going to help.â€� McIlroy, No. 75 in the FedExCup, can also draw inspiration from a victory that led to last season’s FedExCup triumph. “I was 4 over through three holes last year in Boston and won that tournament, so I’ve done it before,â€� he said, referring to his victory in last season’s Dell Technologies Championship. He shot a final-round 65 to win at TPC Boston on Labor Day, then won the TOUR Championship later that month to add the FedExCup to his major-laden resume. His hopes for a rally this week began with his first birdie of the day at the par-4 11th. He also birdied three of his final four holes, punctuating his comeback with a 20-foot birdie putt on the last hole. He’s six shots behind co-leaders Jordan Spieth, Brooks Koepka and Matt Kuchar. McIlroy wasn’t the only big name to shoot 71. FedExCup leader Dustin Johnson, Olympic gold medalist Justin Rose and FedExCup No. 6 Rickie Fowler also were 1 over par. McIlroy sits in 58th place after the first round, one shot inside the cut line. He’s trying to avoid a third missed cut in his past four majors, and missing consecutive major cuts for just the second time in his career (2010 Masters, U.S. Open). He isn’t thinking about the cut line, though. With tomorrow’s difficult afternoon forecast as an aid to his efforts, McIlroy is hoping he can begin his move up the leaderboard at 9:47 a.m. local time Friday. “With the weather we’re expecting tomorrow, I still feel I’m in the golf tournament,â€� he said. “If I can go out and play a good quality round of golf in the morning and try to get in the clubhouse somewhere around even par, under par, I’ll still be around for the weekend.â€�

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Snedeker ‘felt great’ before his second-round 60Snedeker ‘felt great’ before his second-round 60

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Game changer: PGA TOUR University creates pipeline for collegiate starsGame changer: PGA TOUR University creates pipeline for collegiate stars

The game has changed. Monday’s announcement may be the most important acknowledgement yet. For the first time, players can earn status on PGA TOUR-sanctioned circuits based on their performance in amateur events. They can do so through PGA TOUR University, which will reward the top college seniors with status on the Korn Ferry Tour and the TOUR’s other international circuits (Mackenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada, PGA TOUR Latinoamerica, PGA TOUR China Series). RELATED: PGA TOUR U: How it works Before Monday, a player’s amateur resume was rendered moot the moment he turned pro. Sure, winning a U.S. Amateur or NCAA Championship may garner a few extra sponsor exemptions or allow a player to bypass one of Q-School’s many stages, but that was about it. Professionals were always slow to recognize amateur accomplishments because playing for money is a whole new ballgame. Some players shine when the stakes are highest. Others wilt when they need to make a putt to pay their mortgage. 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ShotLink and Strokes Gained allow players to better understand their games and how to approach courses they’ve never seen before. “What you had to figure out on your own took so much longer,� said 34-year-old Webb Simpson, once a top-ranked amateur and member of the vaunted 2007 Walker Cup team. “Now we have so much at our fingertips on our phone or on TrackMan. That’s one of the main reasons guys are improving a lot faster and they come out here and they’re ready to win. They understand their games more than I did even out of college.� Nothing illustrates college players’ increasing readiness to compete than the fact that PGA TOUR University was approved by the very men these new pros will be playing against. Pros would rather leave home without their putter than give up spots in tournament fields. And they wouldn’t make the path to a PGA TOUR card easier than the one they had to trod unless they knew that this new generation was deserving. The numbers speak for themselves, especially after last year’s unprecedented performance by the triumvirate of Matthew Wolff, Collin Morikawa and Viktor Hovland. No one can recall a trio of players in the modern era who won so quickly after turning pro. Add in Sungjae Im and Joaquin Niemann and we’ve had five players under the age of 23 win on TOUR since July. That’s one more than we had from 1985 to 2000. Only Morikawa would have been eligible for PGA TOUR University, and none of them would have needed the assistance that it offers. But they prove that today’s young players are up to the challenge. Here’s more proof: Of the nine members of the 2017 U.S. Walker Cup team who turned pro, six had a PGA TOUR card within two years of their dominant victory at Los Angeles Country Club. And two members of that team, Cameron Champ and Morikawa, are already TOUR winners. PGA TOUR University creates a pipeline to the pro game. Starting in 2021, the top five players on the PGA TOUR University rankings after the NCAA Division I Men’s Championship will earn Korn Ferry Tour status for the remainder of the regular season. This will give them starts into all open events. From there, they’ll try to play their way into the Korn Ferry Tour Finals and play for one of the 25 PGA TOUR cards up for grabs. Now a good summer means a college star can be on the PGA TOUR in a matter of months. And if he can’t make it to the big TOUR, his high standing on the PGA TOUR University Rankings will earn him an exemption straight into the final stage of Q-School, guaranteeing him Korn Ferry Tour status for the following season. Nos. 6-15 on the PGA TOUR University rankings can choose to take status on either the Mackenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada, PGA TOUR Latinoamerica or PGA TOUR China. Players must spend four years at a Division I university to be eligible for the benefits. This will encourage them to get an education, and help them develop the physical, emotional and mental skills necessary for the pro game. In today’s data-driven society, the words “sample size� are bandied about too often, but that’s the biggest benefit of PGA TOUR University. It gives the best college players more opportunities to prove themselves. Before PGA TOUR University, new pros cobbled together a schedule with sponsor exemptions and Monday qualifiers. Invitations into PGA TOUR events are always on short supply and often come at the last minute. The 18-hole Monday qualifiers offer little chance of success. So, unless a player caught lightning in a bottle, he was destined for Q-School, where one bad week would leave him empty-handed for an entire year. Take the case of Vanderbilt’s Will Gordon, the 2019 SEC Player of the Year. You can be forgiven if you don’t recognize the name. It’s a fairly standard one, the type that would return its fair share of listings in the phone book. It doesn’t quite leap off the page like the howl-inducing surname of Wolff or have the punchy pronunciation of Morikawa or even the Nordic mystique of Hovland. But Gordon has plenty of game. Top-25s in half his starts during this interrupted PGA TOUR season prove that. He turned pro last year, too, but there are only so many sponsor exemptions to go around. With 2019’s Big Three taking up most of them, he headed north of the border last year to play PGA TOUR Canada. He shot a 60 in his second event, started another one with back-to-back 64s and fired a 61 two weeks later. He finished 21st on the Mackenzie Tour’s Order of Merit, good for an exemption into Q-School’s second stage. That’s where, like so many young players, he hit a speed bump. There was no dramatic flame-out, one that would add to that tournament’s long and gory lore. Gordon broke par in all four rounds. He shot 8 under par. His scores just happened to be two strokes too high. Without Korn Ferry Tour status, Gordon has made just a half-dozen PGA TOUR starts via sponsor exemptions, Monday qualifiers and some strong play. He finished 10th at The RSM Classic. He tied Morikawa and Wolff for 21st place in the star-studded field that gathers annually at the Farmers Insurance Open. Then he earned his place in the Puerto Rico Open the hard way, making it through the Monday qualifier before finishing 20th. But now, he’s a man with no tour. And with the professional golf world thrown into flux, he doesn’t know where his next start will be. He would’ve had Korn Ferry Tour status if PGA TOUR University had been in place. It will also be helpful for the Class of 2021, which includes many players who returned to campus for a fifth season after coronavirus canceled the NCAA Championship. PGA TOUR University will help bring some security as a backlog of talented players turn pro next year. It’s about time. The game has been changed forever.

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