Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Spieth’s putter stone cold in second round

Spieth’s putter stone cold in second round

Alex Malcolm is a Melbourne-based sports journalist and broadcaster. He has been a long-time contributor to ESPNcricinfo and reported for the AFL website for four seasons. He has also worked as a television commentator calling Australian Rules Football, Athletics and Tennis for a number of networks. SYDNEY, Australia — The sunshine warmed everything it touched on Friday, except Jordan Spieth’s putter. His magic wand was as cold as ice in the second round of the Australian Open. In glorious conditions with no wind to speak of he struck the ball well from tee to green but had 33 putts in an even par 71 to leave himself a long way off the pace in his title defence at one-under. “It just was a bad

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Haotong Li+450
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Ewen Ferguson+3500
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Carson Young+275
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Harry Higgs+600
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Danny Walker+1400
Victor Perez+1400
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Norman Xiong+2500
Davis Shore+2800
Ben Silverman+4500
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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
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Brooks Koepka+700
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Hideki Matsuyama+800
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PGA Championship 2025
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Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+450
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Ludvig Aberg+1800
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Xander Schauffele+2000
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Joaquin Niemann+3500
Brooks Koepka+4000
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US Open 2025
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Scottie Scheffler+500
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Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
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Ryder Cup 2025
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Simpson’s special Father’s Day victorySimpson’s special Father’s Day victory

HILTON HEAD, S.C. – The yellow shirt Webb Simpson wore on Sunday at the RBC Heritage wasn’t a casual fashion choice. He didn’t take it out of his closet because it would look good with that red tartan jacket that goes to the winner of the tournament, either. Of course, turns out that it did. RELATED: Final leaderboard | The clubs Simpson used to win No, Simpson wears yellow on Sundays because it was his late father Sam’s favorite color. And in an unusual quirk of scheduling due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the RBC Heritage, once canceled and later postponed, was concluding on Father’s Day. “This morning I thought about him, and when I was on the golf course, I thought about him,” Simpson would later say. “… So still feeling my dad all around me from memories. He loved golf. “He would have loved watching today.” Indeed. Sam’s son took control of the RBC Heritage on the back nine, making birdies on five of his last seven holes for a 64 to earn the seventh victory of his PGA TOUR career. With the win, Simpson climbed to the top of the FedExCup standings as well as to No. 5 in the world. Of course, the U.S. Open, which was postponed until September, usually is the tournament that ends on Father’s Day. So, this actually marks the second time Simpson has celebrated victory on that holiday – and Sam was still alive when his boy won the 2012 U.S. Open at the Olympic Club. “I’ll never forget calling my dad after on the way to the press conference, and when he picked up the phone, he just was laughing,” Simpson said. “That’s kind of what he did when he was happy, he would just laugh. So, I’m going to miss that laugh today for sure.” For Simpson, who lost his dad jn 2017, the ascent is part and parcel of the hard work he’s put in over the last three years after finding himself on the outside looking in when everyone else was playing in the TOUR Championship and making Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup teams like he used to do. “I really have a desire to be in that top 10 or 15 guys in the world ranking all the time and have chances to win, not just twice a year, but as many times as I can,” Simpson said. “So that led me to just look at every part of my game, whether it’s working out or the mental approach, and see if I can get better. “That was three years ago probably. So, yeah … it feels great to see the hard work pay off and see that the process I’ve put in place is working. But we’re nuts. We always think we can get better, and I think there’s room to grow.” Sunday’s final round was a roller coaster of emotions that featured as many as seven players tied for the lead. Turning up the heat, too, on this steamy afternoon was a different kind of race – this one to finish before darkness after a weather delay of two hours and 35 minutes. Simpson, who also won THE PLAYERS Championship in 2018 on Mother’s Day, had held at least a share of the second- and third-round leads. But he had to come from behind over the final nine holes, chasing Tyrrell Hatton, Abraham Ancer and Joaquin Neimann, among others to seal the win. “Honestly, the last kind of 10 holes were a blur because guys are making birdies, we’re trying to finish before night comes,” Simpson said. “And so, to finish with five birdies like that was really special, especially after going kind of yesterday and the first 10 holes, 11 holes today not making putts. “To see the putts go in when I needed them, that was really fun to see the ball going in the hole.” The feverish competition worked in Simpson’s favor, too. As he saw birdies being posted, he knew he had to be a little more aggressive after giving up ground on the front nine. He played the final nine holes with authority and confidence, and was rewarded at the end. “It’s typically not a golf course where you can force it, but today after the storm, it softened things out, not much wind, we could go attacking,” Simpson said. “Guys kept making birdies. I was blown away with the scores, but there I hit my run, 12 through 17, and ultimately that’s what made the difference.” And Simpson, who has five kids of his own, now has a new celebration for Father’s Day.

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Tournaments within the tournamentTournaments within the tournament

SILVAS, Ill. – Francesco Molinari is keen to represent Italy in the next Olympics, Tokyo 2020, and he can take the first steps at this week’s John Deere Classic. Hard to believe, but this week marks the start of the two-year Men’s Qualification period. Not that he’s thinking about it. “If I focus on Ryder Cup, Olympics, majors and stuff like that, it’s harder to do the day-to-day things properly,â€� said Molinari, whose world ranking has soared after recent victories at the Quicken Loans National (by eight shots) and the European Tour’s BMW Championship. The start of the Men’s Qualification period, which was news to every player asked about it Tuesday, underlines one of the big truths of the PGA TOUR, which is that in any given week players are competing with different agendas. They want to get to Tokyo, eventually, but also the majors, the World Golf Championships, and, most crucially with just six weeks (and eight events) remaining, the four-tournament FedExCup Playoffs. “We didn’t have all this stuff,â€� said Bob Tway, 59, an eight-time PGA TOUR winner who is at TPC Deere Run this week with his TOUR pro son, Kevin. “We didn’t have The Playoffs. And how you got into the majors was totally different. Normally if you won, you got into everything; that’s not always the case now. Now it’s all about getting into the top 30.â€� Here’s what they’re playing for at the Deere: Their livelihoods Knowing your FedExCup number is like scoreboard-watching. You don’t want to obsess about it, but you want to know where you stand, just the same. Cracking the top 30 qualifies players for the season-ending TOUR Championship, but to make it to the end, you’ve got to reach the start. The top 125 six weeks from now will reach the Playoffs opener, THE NORTHERN TRUST at Ridgewood (N.J.) Country Club, Aug. 23-26, and maintain full TOUR status for 2018-’19. “I’m 128 now,â€� said Canada’s Nick Taylor, who is coming off a T56 finish at A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier last week. “If you go into each week with the goal to win, it takes care of itself, but I’m on the bubble for keeping my card, so it’s kind of on my mind.â€� He’s not alone. “I’m 127,â€� said Troy Merritt, who not only knew his number, he knew which players jumped ahead of him in the standings (Sam Saunders, Harold Varner III, Joel Dahmen and Talor Gooch) while he attended his brother’s wedding in Minneapolis in lieu of playing the Greenbrier. “Summers are a grind,â€� Merritt added. “I spent two days at home in June. Another 80 FedExCup points would put me at 380, and I think I would be safe to take next week off.â€� Ryan Palmer said his priorities, and most everyone else’s priorities, are clear-cut. “It’s about getting in the Playoffs, because if you don’t make the Playoffs, you don’t have a card next year,â€� he said. TOUR Championship Molinari knew he was a lock for the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational, Aug. 2-5, after winning the BMW, which put his world ranking well inside the top 50. (He’s 15th.) But on this side of the Atlantic? That was a concern, as the 35-year-old Italian was languishing at 123 in FedExCup. Then he won the Quicken Loans, rocketing up the standings. Now up to 43rd, he’s in the best shape of his career to finally make the season-ending TOUR Championship. “I was right on the bubble so the main thing was to get some FedEx points and make sure I was in The Playoffs,â€� said Molinari, who played in the 2010 and 2012 Ryder Cups. “Hopefully, if I keep playing like this, I’ll play my way to East Lake. I’ve never been there. I’ve watched it on TV lots of times and I would love to play there. People have told me it should suit my game. “It’s one of those things to kind of tick off the list if you get there,â€� he added. “At least once in my career I’d like to qualify for it, and hopefully it’s this year.â€� The last WGC in Akron Zach Johnson, the 2012 Deere winner, is a native Iowan with the dual role of player and host this week. He’s got a lot on his plate. Big picture, he’s trying to get to East Lake while also getting into position to make his sixth U.S. Ryder Cup team. But the 12-time TOUR winner has become aware of something else: At 51st in the world, he’s one ranking spot away from cracking the field for the final WGC-Bridgestone at Firestone South. (It moves to Memphis next year.) “I haven’t missed one of those since I’ve been on TOUR,â€� said Johnson. “I really like that golf course.â€� (He should; he finished second to Hideki Matsuyama at Firestone South last year.) Tiger Woods, the eight-time WGC-Bridgestone champion, is 69th in the world and also has made no secret of his desire to crack the top 50 and get back to Akron. When it comes to golf’s magic numbers, there’s 59 (on the scorecard), there’s 125, 100, 70 and 30 (FedExCup Playoffs), and then there’s 50 (Official World Golf Ranking). “After you make the Playoffs, the second priority is getting in the top 50 in the world,â€� said Palmer, who is 131st. “I was in there for three or four years, and I’d like to get back there.â€� The majors Molinari’s win at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm not only has him in great shape to make a run at East Lake, it gave him a berth in the 2019 Masters. (He was T20 at Augusta this year.) Kelly Kraft said there was no mistaking what he’d done with his second-place finish at The Greenbrier. He’d booked a trip to The Open, his first, at Carnoustie. His wife, Tia, will bring the passports to the John Deere, and they’ll head across the pond on the tournament’s charter. “They had the trophy out there on the first tee, the Claret Jug,â€� Kraft said of the Greenbrier. There’s one spot left at the Deere for the highest top-five finisher (and ties) not already qualified. Last year it went to winner Bryson DeChambeau, who was typical of last-minute entries. Asked if he was packed for The Open, he said, “I hope so. My agent is helping me out with that. I don’t know.â€� After The Open, it’s on to the PGA Championship, which has its own qualification criteria. Welcome to late-season life on TOUR. It’s a whirlwind.

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