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Sleepers: Wyndham Championship

Martin Laird … Quite safe at 55th in the FedExCup standings, the Wyndham Championship rolls around at a good time as he could use a reversal of fortune after missing consecutive cuts at the Scottish Open, The Open Championship and the PGA Championship. The Scot doesn’t present as a horse for a course often, but he does at Sedgefield where he hasn’t missed a cut in six tries. He’s registered two top 15s and a scoring average of 68.04. Robert Streb … The 30-year-old was in danger of losing his card until a runner-up finish at The Greenbrier Classic in early July. He added a T22 at the PGA Championship where his greenside touch was on display. He ranked eighth in strokes gained: around-the-green at Quail Hollow and sits T29 in the stat for the season on the PGA TOUR. It’s the linchpin that has him 58th in adjusted scoring despite pedestrian ball-striking and putting metrics. He’s 3-for-3 at Sedgefield with a T18 in 2014 and a scoring average of 68.17. Kevin Streelman … Perfect in four previous visits but this is his first in five years, so consider the statue of limitations for converging trends having expired even though he’s survived his last seven consecutive cuts dating back to THE PLAYERS. The streak included a run of four straight top 20s. Off since a T44 at the John Deere Classic where he ranked T2 in par-5 scoring and fulfilled his profile as a ball-striker in finishing 12th in strokes gained: tee-to-green. Currently 46th on TOUR in the stat and T22 in ball-striking. John Huh … At 117th in the FedExCup standings and nearly 40 points inside the top 125, he likely doesn’t have to worry about falling outside, but it has to be reassuring for him to go into the finale of the PGA TOUR season without a stumble in five previous appearances at Sedgefield. He opened his ledger here with top 20s in 2012 and 2013, the latter featuring a career-low 62. His scoring average in 20 competitive rounds is 68.40. Uninspiring statistically save to his slot at 11th in scrambling. Brandon Hagy … After months inside and outside the bubble, the first-time PGA TOUR member locked up his job for 2017-18 with a T5 at the RBC Canadian Open. His calling card is muscle off the tee, but he ranked fourth in strokes gained: putting that week. With the primary objective achieved, a T18 at the Barracuda Championship followed. Ranks 24th in birdie-or-better percentage and T7 in par-5 scoring.

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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Justin Thomas+1100
Joaquin Niemann+1400
Shane Lowry+1600
Tommy Fleetwood+1800
Tyrrell Hatton+1800
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Bryson DeChambeau+700
Rory McIlroy+1000
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Shane Lowry+3500
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
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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Davis Love III’s focus turns to the Presidents CupDavis Love III’s focus turns to the Presidents Cup

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Midnight may have been a metaphor of sorts but judging from the raucous celebration after the United States scored a crushing 19-9 victory over Europe in the Ryder Cup, the conversation could easily have happened in real time. Over the next 24 hours, the team that Steve Stricker had created to take back the gold chalice would disband and go their separate ways. But at least one person in the United States’ team room was already looking ahead even as the champagne flowed. “We just got done with it on Sunday, and the guys said, ‘Are you going home? What are you doing?’” Davis Love III recalled. “And I go, ‘No, I’m going to Presidents Cup.’ Midnight it starts Presidents Cup year. So that’s the way our guys look at it. “They get to do it every year, they shift gears, but we are trying to build Team USA golf year-round.” True to his word, Love, who will captain the U.S. Team when it takes on the Internationals at Quail Hollow Club next year left Wisconsin and headed to Charlotte, North Carolina, for three days of Presidents Cup kickoff festivities. The biennial event will be held Sept. 19-25, 2022. Love was joined by International Captain Trevor Immelman in stops at venues downtown, as well as two evening events at Quail Hollow, a course that will be familiar to both teams after hosting the Wells Fargo Championship every year but once since. The one year it didn’t? Well, that was in 2017 when the United States’ Justin Thomas won the PGA Championship there. The two captains had a police escort as they drove their team golf carts to the NASCAR Hall of Fame where Jimmie Johnson, an 83-time winner, was a surprise tour guide, and Spectrum Center, where NBA legend Michael Jordan’s Charlotte Hornets play. At the HOF, Love and Immelman received fire-retardant suits with their names on the back, then tried their luck – very unsuccessfully – in the race simulator. “I know what my Halloween costume is now,” Immelman said. Love and Immelman also visited Bank of America Stadium and had a corn-hole chipping contest with a pair of retired Carolina Panthers, five-time Pro Bowl tight end Wesley Walls and linebacker Thomas Davis, who was the Walter Payton Man of the Year in 2014. Later they appeared almost in miniature as they looked at a gigantic mural painted on two sides of the Duke Energy Center which features, among other things, their faces and the logo of the Presidents Cup. “I got to my room yesterday, opened the curtains and I saw Davis’ head,” Immelman said, laughing. “I had to shut it straightaway. I was like, what is this? He’s already playing mind games over here.” For Love, this will mark the third time he has served as captain of a U.S. team, each time on home soil. He is 1-1 as a Ryder Cup skipper, losing in 2012 to Europe’s “Miracle at Medinah” and returning four years later to lead a victorious U.S. side at Hazeltine. Love earned the rare shot at Ryder Cup redemption thanks to the task force that was formed amidst the fallout from the Americans’ loss two years earlier in Scotland. Being given a second chance was testament to his popularity with the players. The 57-year-old Charlotte native and World Golf Hall of Famer also has been an assistant on three Presidents Cup and two Ryder Cup teams, including the one that trounced the Europeans last weekend at Whistling Straits. Love calls the most recent U.S. Team, which included eight of the top 10 players in the world and likely will form the nucleus of his team at Quail Hollow – and many more American squads to come, “really, really confident.” The average age of the Americans was 29.1, with Dustin Johnson, at 37, the old man of the team. “These guys just think they’re going to win every time they go play,” Love said. “You’ve probably been around Patrick Cantlay a little bit; he’s a very confident young man. And so is Dustin. And so is (Collin) Morikawa. He’s very quiet, but he’s a quiet 50-year-old. He’s just so steady and so good.” Love credited the experience gained in junior golf, as well as exceptional coaching and training, with the poise and determination he saw on offer last week. He said he was surprised by how many people the players had on their personal support teams. “Even though it was the pandemic, I saw more coaches at a Ryder Cup than I’ve ever seen,” Love noted. “We didn’t have that in 1993. Nobody had a coach with him. Nobody had a trainer with them. Nobody even knew what a bodywork person was. We had eight or nine people at the hotel or at the club taking care of guys. So, it’s a different generation.” To Stricker’s credit, Love said, he noticed that shift and made accommodations for it. Formal dinners and rah-rah speeches were kept to a minimum – “Maybe it makes them nervous,” Love reasoned — so the players could keep to a more normal schedule. Forget the epic ping-pong battles of yore. These guys wanted to rest so they could be at their best the next day. “I mean, literally one night there was only X-Man (Xander Schauffle) and Brooks (Koepka) still up,” Love noted. “One night it was Brooks who was the only one up, working out. “And Dustin, Sunday morning, now he’s down there at 6:30 and he’s bopping around and he goes, ‘Hey, I was in bed at nine o’clock.’ People wouldn’t believe that — if you would see Dustin Johnson, the celebrity, you would think, oh, it’s party, party, party, party, party. He does … on Sunday.” In a word, Love was impressed by the discipline he saw on the team. He remembers Cantlay coming to him and telling him he’d finished practicing and working out, but he needed to get his bodywork – a form of therapy that helps realign and reposition the body – done. That meant he’d be 45 minutes late for dinner. “That’s how disciplined they are,” Love said. Cantlay also needed three or four hours to warm up and prepare for a match. That meant 7:05 a.m. tee times were a non-starter. “It’s just different, and Steve just had it dialed in,” Love said. “Freddie and I are just sitting back, holy cow, we’re old. They do it differently than we did. “So, we have to adapt to give them what they need to get ready.” Often, team meetings, if you will, were held in a room upstairs at the Whistling Straits clubhouse while they waited for the traffic to thin. Stricker would tell the players who was practicing together and what format to play. Grab dinner in the team room and you could go to bed. “I remember (Tom) Watson coming in late one night when we were playing Pass the Pigs and Jenga and all the games that somebody brought in ‘93 and he goes, ‘You guys have to go to bed. You have to play golf tomorrow,’” Love laughed. “This is the opposite with these guys like, where is everybody? We had this big, gorgeous team room and I’d walk in and go, where is everybody? “And we knew they weren’t anywhere else because you couldn’t go anywhere else. They weren’t allowed to go. … One night, they had a family thing of people that were in the bubble. And they got to go to the little restaurant, right beside the parking garage, The Horse & Plow and say hi to their parents. And that was it, the only thing they were allowed to do. “It was a weird Ryder Cup for the veterans like us. Where’s the pomp and circumstance? But it was also weird that they were always ready to go — and they played unbelievable.” Love said he knew after the U.S. won the first session, 3-1, that the Americans would retake the Ryder Cup. It wasn’t at all like three years ago in Paris when the U.S. took the opening Four-balls by a similar margin but didn’t win a Foursomes match in the afternoon. “We had issues,” Love said of Paris. “We were jumbling pairings in afternoon. We didn’t know what we were going to do for Saturday. You know, Phil and Tiger weren’t playing good, and Patrick was not playing great. We didn’t know what was going on. “This team — all you had to do is shoot them to their tee times and they were going to roll.” Love said there will be debriefings in the coming months, as has been the case with every U.S. Team event since the task force was formed, to zero in on what worked and what didn’t. He plans to work on strengthening his relationships with some of the younger Americans – there were six rookies, for example, on this year’s team. “I got to know Patrick Cantlay so well, and I got to know X-Man a lot better,” Love said. “Morikawa, I don’t know. It’s a hard egg to crack in one week. He’s still a young, shy kid, even though he’s a major champion. So, I’ve got some work to do on getting to know guys, but Brooks and the Dustin and those guys — they’re tired of me.” The International Team, on the other hand, is at a crossroads similar to where the U.S. found itself after the 2013 Ryder Cup. It’s only win in the competition came in 1998, although the two teams famously tied in 2003 in Immelman’s native South African. Ernie Els captained the 2019 team at Royal Melbourne and the match was competitive, with the U.S. winning by just two points thanks to a comeback in Singles. He created a shield for a logo and a sense of identity for a team that draws its members from countries across the globe outside of Europe. “They’re catching up and that’s a problem,” Love said. “I’m going to remind our guys and say, ‘Hey, look what they did in Australia.’ Now they’re going to be kind of an easier place for them to play. And they’re going to have three years of preparation. “They’re not just sitting back going I hope we win. They’re planning on how they can win. … Obviously on paper, it’s pretty even. We have a slight advantage right now on paper, but you can see in the Ryder Cup, we always have a huge advantage in Ryder Cup and we lose it a lot. “So, it can happen very easily.” Love actually was serving on the PGA TOUR’s Policy Board in 1993 when former PGA TOUR Commissioner Tim Finchem proposed the matches to be played in opposite years from the Ryder Cup. Within a year, the event became reality. “Luckily it grew,” said Love, who played in the first six Presidents Cups and owns a 16-8-4 record overall. “Next thing you know, we’re in Canada and Korea and South Africa and Australia, and it’s become one of our favorite events. “Obviously we’re kind of partial to it because we win it a lot more than the Ryder Cup, but it’s incredible how much it’s grown since 1993, and it’s become a favorite of our fans and of our players, and it’s a big goal for our players to make these teams. “I’m just glad that I saw the start of it, and now I’m — hopefully this ends my Presidents Cup career. I’ve been at it a long time. … But what an honor to see it come this far since 1993.”

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Monday Finish: Patrick Cantlay’s focus is key to winningMonday Finish: Patrick Cantlay’s focus is key to winning

Patrick Cantlay winning tournaments was never supposed to be a surprise given the seemingly limitless talent he showed at the junior and collegiate levels, but injuries and such conspired against him. That was then. This is now. Welcome to the Monday Finish where Cantlay’s incredible poise and guts under pressure was there for all to see, particularly for tournament host Jack Nicklaus, as he surged home to win at Muirfield Village. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1. Cantlay is an extremely good compartmentalizer. That means he is able to separate things in his mind with ease. And in golf, this is a very important skill. Cantlay does not get bogged down by outside distractions. He is basically all business, all the time. Something not right at home? Doesn’t matter on the course It doesn’t enter his thinking. Something weird happening in the crowd or with another player in his group? It doesn’t matter to Cantlay. He’s like a machine. And so when the pressure was applied down the stretch at Muirfield Village, it was as if it wasn’t there. All that was there was the next shot. And all he had to do was execute his golf swing. He did that and produced a brilliant 8-under 64 final round. The lowest ever by a Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide winner. 2. Cantlay is a very intelligent individual. When Jack Nicklaus gives you advice, you listen. Almost all people would pay the legend that courtesy. But then you have to decide if you use it. Cantlay has been close to Nicklaus since being awarded the Jack Nicklaus award in 2011. Two years ago when he came to Muirfield Village he sounded out the 18-time major winner for a 90-minute strategy session on how to play the course. This year Nicklaus found him and had some different advice for Cantlay. He told him enjoy the moment more. Take it all in. Maybe even smile. Those who have watched Cantlay a lot know he’s not much of a smiler. He’s all business. But he did heed Jack’s words. And he did win. For more on their special relationship, click here. 3. Adam Scott has to win again soon. It has been over three years since Adam Scott went 2-1-1 in three straight tournaments in early 2016, the last of his 13 PGA TOUR titles. At times, the Australian has looked like he may not scale the heights again at all. In fact a year ago he was scratching his way through a U.S. Open sectional qualifier. But since then he has clawed back to some of his best golf. He contended heavily in the 2018 PGA Championship (third) and THE NORTHERN TRUST (T5) near the end of last season. This season he was T10 at THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES, runner up at the Farmers Insurance Open, T7 at the Genesis Open, T8 at the PGA Championship and now runner up to Cantlay this week. At Torrey Pines his 19-under total would have won the event most years. His 17-under this week would have been enough to win the last eight Memorial Tournaments. Sometime soon Scott will salute again. Read more about Scott’s near miss, as well as Martin Kaymer and Jordan Spieth’s efforts here. 4. Martin Kaymer is a great thinker as well as golfer. For most of the weekend it appeared Kaymer would end a near five-year win drought before a tough final nine holes took away that opportunity. But while he play at Muirfield Village was eye opening for some, it was his talk and demeanor that was the biggest positive takeaway. Kaymer has won a PGA Championship, THE PLAYERS Championship and a U.S. Open. He has a throng of European Tour wins. But of course it has been a long time between drinks. His straight talking about it was very refreshing. The German star has ditched distractions from his life. “Just getting away from so many things, social media, watching TV, reading stuff that is not important. What do you really gain from social media during tournament days? There’s so much gossip, so much talk, so much distraction,â€� he explained. “And I just got out of that. I just didn’t want to read that because there’s nothing really to gain from it. And that was a big one for me … It’s just distraction, stimulation for your brain, just not thinking, not being there. So I tried to get away from that. And that automatically makes you more aware, makes me more conscious, and I think leads to more calmness, I guess. It helped me.â€� That calmness continued Sunday despite three late bogeys relegating him to third place. Kaymer fronted up to the media to talk about it all and when done actually asked if there was any more he could do. A true class act. 5. Tiger Woods can win the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach. Well duh … He did win the U.S. Open there by 15 shots in 2000. But there was some lingering doubt Woods might not be at his best heading there this time after he missed the cut at the PGA Championship. After his amazing Masters win, Woods was clearly down on energy at Bethpage Black, a symptom of some illness and also lack of competitive rounds since Augusta. But at Muirfield Village there were enough signs to show he can be in the mix at the U.S. Open. Woods scraped his way to a top-10 finish this week despite not having his best stuff. Some crucial double bogeys just as he was on a run stopped any hope of a sixth Memorial title. He will need to keep those mistakes from his game at Pebble Beach. But on Sunday he showed that he has the ability to be deadly accurate. He hit the first 12 greens in regulation and finished with 12 of 14 fairways. If he brings that to the U.S. Open then look out. Click here to read more about Woods. FOUR INSIGHTS 1. In the last three seasons, only five players have won with a bogey-free final round of 64 or better. It’s quite a group: Patrick Cantlay, Francesco Molinari (twice), Rory McIlroy, Hideki Matsuyama and Justin Thomas. 2. Cantlay shot 19-under at the Memorial without holing a shot longer than 20 feet. He holed just two shots from outside 15 feet. He moved to sixth in the FedExCup. 3. Cantlay played the par 5s a combined 12-under par, tying his career-best Par-5 Performance in an event on TOUR. Since 2017, Cantlay has the best Par-5 scoring of any player at the Memorial Tournament, playing them a combined 30-under par. WYNDHAM REWARDS The Wyndham Rewards Top 10 is in its first season and adds another layer of excitement to the FedExCup Regular Season. The top 10 players at the end of the FedExCup Regular Season will earn bonus payouts from the Wyndham Rewards Top 10. Patrick Cantlay surged into the Top 10, at sixth, following his win at Muirfield Village. The man to drop out of the reward zone at his expense is Jon Rahm. He slides from ninth to 12th. Marc Leishman moved from 14th to 11th, just outside.

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