Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Emergency 9: Fantasy tidbits from the first round of the Sony Open in Hawaii

Emergency 9: Fantasy tidbits from the first round of the Sony Open in Hawaii

Here are nine tidbits from the first round of the Sony Open in Hawaii at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu that gamers can use tomorrow, this weekend or down the road. Be looking for the Emergency 9 shortly after the close of play of each round of the tournament. Know Thy Enemy These were the top 10 picked golfers in the PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO. The decisions might have been a bit more difficult this week with a field of 144 instead of 34. Now you know who you’re up against! Lead Dawg Chris Kirk (Georgia Bulldogs) fired a bogey-free 63 in the morning wave to grab the lead. Kirk matched his opening-round 63 at The RSM Classic to wrap up the 2017 season (T4). This is the fifth time in the last six years that he’s posted 65 or lower at Waialae. He posted back-to-back finishes inside the top five in this event in 2013-14 with T5 and solo second. Co-Lead Dawg Zach Johnson (Drake Bulldogs) shares the lead also with a bogey-free 63. This Dawg didn’t have the pain and suffering as his friends from Athens after Georgia lost to Alabama in the College Football Playoff on Monday night. Johnson, similarly to Kirk, was posting low ones at the end of last year with a closing 64 at Mayakoba before a third round 64 at The RSM Classic (T8). The 2009 champ was late arriving because of the flu but he’s hit the ground running and looks to grab his fourth top 10 in the last five years. Hardy Har-Harman The way he’s been playing in recent weeks is no laughing matter. His 64 to open suggests he’s not satisfied collecting top 10s. Harman played in the final group the final three rounds last week and finished third, his fourth straight outing inside the top 10. Hop on that saddle and have both hands on the reigns! The Old Man and the Sea As I wrote about in The Confidence Factor, Waialae is Jerry Kelly’s happy place. Sure, he’s 51 but he’s also the second-highest earner in the history of this event. This is his 21st start and his opening round 66 will put him in a great position to make his 16th weekend. His MC last year broke up a streak of three in a row in the top 10. Think Fred Couples at Augusta if you need a comparison! Tide Rolling Defending champion Justin Thomas (67) posted his worst round in five trips as he didn’t sign for anything over 65 in setting the tournament scoring record last year. With Jim “Bones” McKay on the bag for the first time, Thomas didn’t square a bogey and made three birdies. The wind, as expected, was not a factor on Thursday so he’s in excellent shape for Friday morning to get even lower. With 59 and 61 to his name on this track already, I’m sticking him into the lineup tomorrow. Players who didn’t get in red figures today are going to have to get low on Friday as the top 98 are currently even or better. The cut last year was 3-under-par 137. Moon Rising Two-time winner Sangmoon Bae is back on TOUR after serving required military service in his native Korea. His two year duty has ended and he’s back and looking to recapture the form that made him valuable to gamers from 2012-2015. His final full season, 2015, saw him tee it up 30 times, win once and add four additional top 10s. At 31 he’s hardly past it as his 66 on Thursday suggests. I’ll also point out this is his first round in the 60s in 11 tries this season so I’m not jumping in just yet. Spieth’s ‘Snowman’ Those who stuck him in the starting lineup won’t be happy with his snowman in paradise on the penultimate hole of the day. The good news is that quadruple bogey was surrounded by eight birdies, including one on the final hole of the day that will make dinner for Spieth, and gamers, taste a little bit better. Last week, Spieth got off to a slow start yet rallied in Round 2. The brave (or trailing) will throw him out there tomorrow but those near the top can patiently bide their time. Study Hall Jimmy Walker (74) has a fantastic recent record at this event but he’s also battling Lyme disease and is nowhere near 100 percent physically or mentally, the television coverage reported … Luke Donald was hospitalized with chest pains at The RSM Classic in the first round leading to his withdrawal. He opened with 72 in his first event back … Morgan Hoffmann (69) disclosed in early December that he has been diagnosed with muscular dystrophy. … Ryan Palmer (71) returned to action after shoulder surgery knocked him out after the Wyndham Championship. He has six starts on his major medical exemption to keep his status.

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Monday Finish: Holmes’ short game work paid off at RivieraMonday Finish: Holmes’ short game work paid off at Riviera

In temperatures that dipped to 45 degrees and winds of up to 34 mph, J.B. Holmes grinds out a 1-under 70 in the final round for a one-shot win over fellow Kentuckian Justin Thomas at the Genesis Open. Welcome to the Monday Finish, where Holmes made crucial par saves on 13 and 16, enjoyed his career-best putting week, and picked up his fifth PGA TOUR win. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1. Kentucky won J.B. Holmes is from Campbellsville, Justin Thomas from Louisville.  One way or the other, the Bluegrass State was going to win. It’s just that it always looked like it would be Thomas, who took a four-shot lead into the final round. “Yeah, it was great being able to go out and play with him and battle it out,â€� said Holmes, who at the end of a 34-hole slog Sunday and played a steadier back nine (36) while Thomas struggled (38). “He’s such a great player, so it was fun being out there, talking and just battling it out.â€� Holmes recalls playing golf with Thomas for the first time when Thomas was 12 or 13.  “It was in Kentucky and I knew he had a chance,â€� Holmes said. “At that age, you’ve still got a lot of stuff to go through, but he was definitely a talent and I thought he would get out here and he’s done that and some.â€� Thomas remembers being “7 or 8 or 9â€� when Holmes first pulled him inside the ropes at the PGA Championship. “I just never thought, you know, 15 years later he would beat my ass at Riviera,â€� Thomas said. “That was a bummer.â€� 2. Hard work paid off You’d never have thought so in watching him play at the Genesis, but on the season Holmes had just one top-10 finish, a 9th at the season-opening Safeway Open.  The reason: Shoddy work on the greens. “Really bad putting is an understatement the last few weeks,â€� he said.  Buckling down with his coach, Matt Killen, Holmes went to work at Riviera. “We spent a lot of time this week with the coach and getting on the green and trying to find the right ball position and how it set up and putting through some gates, making sure I was starting the ball online,â€� Holmes said. “I putted for several hours throughout the week. In the morning, we changed our routine and we had a string and a mirror and just made sure that everything was dialed in, and then I could trust it and go out there and make confident strokes.â€� None were bigger than his 12-foot par save at the 13th hole (while Thomas was four-putting) and 11-foot save at the 16th. 3. Wind frustrated Thomas It has not been a Chamber of Commerce West Coast Swing, what with the rainy final round at the Waste Management Phoenix Open, plus the delays at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and the Genesis. The challenging conditions got the better of Thomas on the final day at Riviera. “I really struggled putting in that wind out there,â€� he said. “It’s something that I’ve needed to get better at and it unfortunately just kind of showed a flaw in my game.â€� There was a lot that stood out between the four-putt double-bogey on 13, and the three-putts at 10 and 14, but Thomas was still irritated by one mistake in particular. He tried to jam his third putt on 13 into the back of the cup, and the ball took a hard lip-out. “I’ve got to stop going that,â€� he said. “That’s not the speed that I hit putts at when I’m putting well.â€�    4. Woods spoke for many Tournament host Tiger Woods had an outside chance to finally win at Riviera, but after he got to 10-under he bogeyed four of his last 10 holes to take himself out of it. “Yeah, I got tired,â€� he said after a week full of interruptions and early alarms and freezing-cold hands. “I don’t know if I’m the only one, but I definitely felt it today. Wind, cold. I was at 10 and I slipped four shots coming in. That’s the way it goes.â€� The good news was he saw far more good shots come off his clubs than he did at Riviera last year, and he now heads to the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship for his first TOUR start in Mexico. 5. Riviera was brutal It was cold. Wet. And windy. How hard was it? Jordan Spieth shot 81, failing to break 80 for just the third time in his PGA TOUR career after a round that included a double-, triple- and quadruple-bogey. No one went bogey-free in the third round, and only two people (Vaughn Taylor, 67; Carlos Ortiz, 69) did so in the fourth. And Justin Thomas had a four-putt and two three-putts in a span of five holes. “It’s hard to tell you how extreme it is,â€� said Adam Scott (76). At the fact that Scott, Thomas and Holmes were playing 34 holes in a single day after another pre-dawn wake-up call and Sunday became a battle of endurance and will power.    FIVE INSIGHTS 1. Holmes has never been hotter with the putter He was first in Stokes Gained: Putting at +2.043 per round, which was statistically the best performance of his career. He ranked +1.727 in finishing T4 at the 2015 BMW Championship and +1.727 in winning the 2006 Waste Management Phoenix Open. Coming into the Genesis, Holmes was languishing at 202nd in SG: Putting, but worked hard and saw it pay off. Of his total Strokes Gained at the Genesis, 54 percent came on the greens. 2. The winner also crushed the par-3s Holmes was 6-under on the par-3s, including an ace, four birdies, and 11 pars. That was his best score to par on the par-3s in any single tournament in his career, and the best by a Genesis winner at Riviera. No par was bigger than his sand save from the bunker at the par-3 16th on Sunday, with playing partner Thomas looking at a likely birdie. 3. Thomas still statistically a closer Justin Thomas became the first player since Paul Casey at the 2018 Travelers Championship to take at least a four-shot lead into the final round and not win. Still, Thomas, who has four top-5 finishes in six starts this season, is still a better-than-average 6-for-9 at converting with at least a share of the 54-hole lead. He’s 5-for-9 at converting with at least a share of the 36-hole lead.  4. McIlroy (69, T4) stumbled at the start Without his A game, Rory McIlroy notched his third straight top-5 finish. You could fault his failure to birdie the par-5 17th and his bogey on 18 in the final round, but the bigger culprit was his slow start to the week, a slugging, 1-over 72. Of the top 24 finishers at the Genesis, only Dustin Johnson (opening 73, T9) and Xander Schauffele (opening 74, T15) started worse.  5. Woods (72, T15) neared a weird personal record Tiger Woods had three eagles, which was just one shy of his career best set at the 1996 Shriners Hospitals for Children Open (a five-round tournament) and 2010 Masters Tournament. The other good news was that this marked his seventh top-15 finish in 13 starts at the Genesis. The bad news was he made four late bogeys in the challenging conditions, and the Genesis remains the only tournament where he has double-digit starts and hasn’t won. 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. There was another flip-flop at the top after the Genesis Open, with Xander Schauffele and Matt Kuchar changing places yet again. In battling through extreme cold and gusting winds, Genesis champion J.B. Holmes was the week’s biggest mover, going from 61st to 9th. 

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Phil Mickelson heading to Winged Foot in search of accuracy tune-upPhil Mickelson heading to Winged Foot in search of accuracy tune-up

NAPA, Calif. - If Phil Mickelson wants to produce a fairytale career grand slam win at the U.S. Open he will need to find some accuracy off the tee in rapid time. Mickelson heads to Winged Foot - the site of his best chance to win a U.S. Open during his storied career - coming off a dismal week off the tee at the Safeway Open. The veteran closed his efforts at Silverado Resort and Spa with a 2-under 70 to finish at 10 under for the week, well off the pace of victory. RELATED: Full Safeway Open leaderboard | Mickelson wasn't the only one to make a mess of Winged Foot's 18th His last seven holes featured four birdies to give some momentum but the biggest concern remains his driving statistics. The 50-year-old managed to hit just 12 of 56 fairways over his four rounds, including a third round that saw just one fairway hit and a final round with just two. He ranked a clear last of the 73 players to make the cut and was -3.363 in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee when he signed his card. "It’s not a complete mess, but I’m not striking it the way I’ve been striking it the last few months ... it’s got to click in the next few days," Mickelson said. To be fair, the set up this week included very tight fairways, perhaps even tighter than might be seen at the national championship next week. But the U.S. Open shortgrass will likely be firmer and harder to hold, plus the rough will be infinitely more penal. "This is the worst I’ve played in the last three months," Mickelson added. "I’ve got some work to do ... I need to strike it better ... But heading into this week or the last three, four weeks, I was playing really well, so hopefully it’s not far away. "I’m not discouraged because I’m fresh and I’m not worn out, so I can put in the time and the effort and the work to hopefully get it fixed ... There was some positives, too, so it’s not that far off." Of extra concern is the fact he missed the majority of his fairways to the left, something he had rid his game of in recent months. It is the left miss he fears most and the miss that wreaks havoc on confidence for the left hander. "The last couple of months I’ve been missing it more to the right and not worried about the left and the left crept in again," Mickelson said. "For years I missed it left. I haven’t been fearing that at all lately, but this week I missed it left, which is not good. I can deal with missing it right, now, but not left." Mickelson is a 44-time PGA TOUR winner and has captured five major championships. He is only missing the U.S. Open, where he has been runner up six times. In 2006, the last time the tournament was held at Winged Foot, Mickelson stood on the 72nd tee with a one shot lead in the final group. But he made a tough double bogey to lose by one to Geoff Ogilvy and has been asked about it constantly since. "It doesn’t bother me at all. It’s part of the deal. I’m to the point where I can laugh at it now," he said. "It’s just part of playing golf. You’re going to have a lot more failures than successes, but I’ve had a number of successes that I tend to focus more on. I have selective memory. "I would like to at least be competitive and give myself a reasonable chance (next week). I drove it very poorly all week at Winged Foot in ’06 and my short game was phenomenal, it was the best short game week of my career ... I think I can be competitive and that’s what I would like to do, is have one or two more good chances at it. "I’ve won a major winning the week before, I’ve won a major missing the cut the week before. You just don’t know how it’s going to be. Right now I’m right in between. I’ve got a little bit of work to do, but again, it doesn’t feel far off. And I actually have had some nice breakthroughs in the last year and I feel like I’m on the precipice of playing really well, but I’ve got to get it to click."

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