Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Live leaderboard: Round 1 of Sony Open

Live leaderboard: Round 1 of Sony Open

Jordan Spieth is among the early starters in Hawaii. See if he or Justin Thomas can start fast.

Click here to read the full article

Do you like other ways of online gambling besides sports betting? Be sure to check out our partner site Hypercasinos.com for the best online casino reviews and bonus codes.

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
Click here for more...
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
Click here for more...
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
Click here for more...
Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

Related Post

New rule will limit information players can use on greensNew rule will limit information players can use on greens

The PGA TOUR’s Player Advisory Council has approved a new rule that will dramatically impact how players and caddies read greens. Gone will be the highly-detailed books that use technology to reveal the secrets behind the smallest slope on a putting surface. Instead, players and caddies will be required to use approved yardage books that only provide general information about a green’s contours. A player or caddie can add additional notes to his or her yardage book, but those notes will be limited to information garnered from first-hand observations and experiences. Players were informed of the Local Rule, which will take effect Jan. 1, 2022, in a memo sent Monday by the PGA TOUR. “The purpose of this Local Rule is to return to a position where players and caddies use only their skill, judgment and feel along with any information gained through experience, preparation, and practice to read the line of play on the putting green,” the memo read. Beginning in the new year, players and caddies will not be allowed to use yardage books from 2021 and prior. The TOUR will work with yardage book providers to develop the parameters of the new, approved books, which will be marked “Committee Approved Book” on the cover. Players and caddies can continue to take handwritten notes that could aid with green-reading. Those notes can only be based on first-hand observations or experiences, including viewing of television broadcasts, however. Notes from old yardage book that meet these parameters may also be transferred into the new yardage books. No devices, levels or other technology may be used to gather notes about a green’s contours. No information may be copied from another source into the approved book, either. This eliminates players copying the notes from the old greens-reading books into the new book. In addition to this new Local Rule, a Tournament Regulation will be amended to extend the prohibition on using any device to test the conditions of the putting greens to include all practice greens, and during all official practice rounds and Pro-Ams. Based on the direction of the PAC, the Local Rule and new Tournament Regulation will be presented to the PGA TOUR Policy Board at the Nov. 8 meeting, for Jan. 1, 2022 implementation.

Click here to read the full article

Ryder Cup: Match recaps, Day 2Ryder Cup: Match recaps, Day 2

SATURDAY MORNING FOURSOMES SHEBOYGAN, Wis. – Facing a 6-2 deficit coming into Saturday’s play Padraig Harrington’s European team was looking to stop the bleeding and begin an attempted comeback while Steve Stricker’s Americans were hoping to show no mercy and increase a lead. It looked ugly early for Europe when the opening two Foursomes matches were 3 up leads after three holes to the U.S. duos, but the Spanish resistance of Jon Rahm and Sergio Garcia fought back hard to give the visiting team some hope to escape the session without further damage. Match 1: Jon Rahm/Sergio Garcia, EUR, def. Brooks Koepka/Daniel Berger USA, 3 and 1 Recap: An incredible lead off match where the Spanish resistance dropped the first three holes and things looked more than bleak for the European team in general before an incredible turnaround. Rahm and Garcia lifted their game exponentially and secured the sixth and eighth holes before Garcia chipped in expertly on the ninth to flip the script completely. The hole out came with the U.S. looking at a birdie putt, that Berger subsequently missed, and it was tied at the turn. A lovely wedge into the par-3 12th from Rahm set up a 7-foot birdie for Garcia and the Europeans grabbed a lead they wouldn’t relinquish. They doubled it at the 13th but the lead was just one soon after. A contentious ruling on the 15th hole went against the Americans before Rahm and Garcia produced two incredible shots on the par-5 16th that resulted in a conceded eagle and capped off an incredible comeback win. Score at match’s conclusion: USA 6, EUR 3 MATCH 2: Dustin Johnson/Collin Morikawa USA vs. Paul Casey/Tyrrell Hatton, EUR MATCH 3: Jordan Spieth/Justin Thomas USA vs. Viktor Hovland/Bernd Wiesberger, EUR MATCH 4: Patrick Cantlay/Xander Schauffele USA vs. Matt Fitzpatrick-Lee Westwood, EUR

Click here to read the full article

How Lanto Griffin’s healthy diet got its startHow Lanto Griffin’s healthy diet got its start

For the record, Lanto Griffin is 30 years old and he has never eaten red meat. Well, he did have some pepperoni on a pizza at his hotel in Las Vegas during the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open last year. But that was the only thing on the menu. Griffin has never chowed down on a hamburger or eaten a crispy piece of bacon, though. And as for savoring a thick, juicy ribeye steak, cooked perfectly medium rare? Nope. He’s been tempted, to be sure.  “That’s why I went for pepperoni,â€� Griffin admits. “It looks so good on pizza. But a burger and a steak? A filet looks appetizing, but a burger, to my eye, I’m sure it tastes amazing but it doesn’t do a whole lot for me. “I did eat one bite of steak on New Year’s one year and it was fine. So I might down the road go for a filet or something. But the problem is then I might start wanting it all the time. “So maybe it’s better just to hold off.â€� Griffin’s brother and sister, Mitra and Allian, don’t eat red meat, either. Their parents, Julie and Michael, were “big hippies and very healthy,â€� he explains. His father, who died when Griffin was 12, ran a health food store and his mom tended to her organic garden. “I wouldn’t call her a tree-hugger but she’s very conscious of the recycling and growing the garden and all that stuff,â€� he says. Griffin, who recently completed his rookie year on the PGA TOUR, remembers his mom adding chicken and fish to his diet when he was 12 or 13. So what did Griffin eat before he became a teenager? “Tofu and a bunch of stuff nobody would want to eat,â€� Griffin said, chuckling. “We ate a lot out of my mom’s garden. So at least I was lucky to learn that from a young age and now I know what is healthy and what’s not healthy. But I’ve started to cheat a little bit once I got to make my own decisions.â€� Griffin says one of his mother’s specialties was Mexican pizzas — tortillas with refried beans, cheese, pineapple,  black olives and hot sauce. “I still make that now,â€� he says. “That was really good. We’d eat a lot of salad. We were fine. It wasn’t like we were malnourished or anything. We just stayed away from the red meat.â€� When he’s home in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, Griffin likes to cook salmon, tuna and buffalo chicken, the spicier the better — “hot sauce on everything,â€� he says. But as a kid who didn’t eat meat, now that was a source of amazement to his buddies. “My best friend growing up would always be eating cheeseburger, and say, hey man, it’s really good, you should have a bite of it,â€� Griffin recalls. “But it you’ve never eaten something you don’t really miss it. “Just like smoking a cigarette. I’ve never smoked a cigarette so if you’ve never done it, you don’t really know what it’s like so you can’t miss it.â€� Griffin was born in California but moved to Blacksburg, Virginia, when he was 4-years old. He learned to play golf at a 2,700-yard nine hole course called “The Hillâ€� where he used to play 45 holes a day for just $9. “It definitely wasn’t the country club kid growing up with wealthy parents but I wouldn’t change it for the world,â€� says Griffin, who played collegiately at Virginia Commonwealth. He says he always knew his parents were a little different from his friends’ folks – and it wasn’t just because they were so health conscious. They also meditated and practiced muscle testing, or applied kinesiology, that is based on the belief that muscles are linked to different organs and glands in the body. “Personality wise, they’re not different,â€� Griffin says. “It’s more their beliefs. So all my friends were welcome. They always had a great time. They loved us to death so we had a great childhood. “It wasn’t like we were going out on the weekends and meditating in the woods. We were playing soccer, baseball — I got to do everything I wanted to do. It’s just when they came to the house we weren’t eating cheeseburgers and soda. We were eating popcorn and lemonade.â€� Of course, then there’s also the matter of his name. Griffin was named after Lord Lanto, who is an ancient ascended spiritual master. “My dad was meditating when it came to him,â€� Griffin says. “Lord Lanto for some reason, I have no idea, maybe he read something? I know. It’s crazy I’ve never heard of anybody named it, first or last name. “They were just very, I guess, spiritual. We weren’t super-religious growing up. It was more of a spiritual, you know, live off the earth-type, harmony. It’s hard to explain. They’re just good people.â€� Who didn’t happen to eat red meat.

Click here to read the full article