Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Patton Kizzire prevails in playoff to win Sony Open

Patton Kizzire prevails in playoff to win Sony Open

HONOLULU, Hawaii – Patton Kizzire craves being uncomfortable so it makes perfect sense he would win the Sony Open in Hawaii in a week where strange events were common place. With a false alarm for a missile strike, picketing television crews, a six-hole playoff and a good friend of the TOUR in the ICU in critical condition the week at Waialae Country Club was one for books. But ultimately it was Kizzire who claimed his second PGA TOUR win this season, outlasting James Hahn as the sun began to set in Honolulu. And he immediately put his mind forward towards a third. “I love trying to get better and putting myself in uncomfortable spots. That’s all I want to do is just to be somewhere that I’ve never been because that gets me uncomfortable. That’s when I know I’m doing something right,â€� Kizzire said after the wacky week. “I’m just going to keep working hard. I want to get the third win. The first win was big, and this one is even bigger.â€� Kizzire jumped to a huge lead in the FedExCup after becoming the first multiple winner this season. Having first won the OHL Classic at Mayakoba in the fall Kizzire now has 1,213 FedExCup points – a 452-point lead over second placed Pat Perez. He was already a lock to make the FedExCup Playoffs (it took just 365 points last season) and now appears a lock to make it all the way to the TOUR Championship. (It took 1322 points last season). “Our ultimate goal is to be No. 1 at the end of the year,â€� he said. “We’ve got a long way to go. A fast start is always a positive. I’m excited to be back on top and look forward to taking that Cup.â€� OBSERVATIONS HAHN HIT HARD BY LOSS: James Hahn was a dejected figure after falling to Patton Kizzire in the Sony Open playoff. A tournament low 8-under 62 catapulted the two-time PGA TOUR winner into extra holes but in the aftermath, he admitted finding positives in a loss is a trait he basically does not have. “I played good enough to win, but I didn’t. So for me, it’s not how many birdies I make, if I’m not coming out of the room with the trophy, it really feels like I was defeated out there,â€� Hahn said. “I’d rather lose by 100 than lose by 1. I’d rather miss the cut than lose in a playoff. It just doesn’t sit well with me. I feel really defeated right now.â€� Hahn admits he will replay the bad shots he hit in the final round over and over again in his head and that the loss will stick with him for some time. Most notably a putt to win the tournament on the first playoff hole and a putt to stay alive on the sixth playoff hole. He had a chance to win the AT&T Byron Nelson last season and fell away late – a loss that has stuck with him since. Now he has another painful memory to drive him forward. “You get to this level where you might only have two, three, four opportunities to win out on TOUR. These guys are really good,â€� he said. “So any time you have an opportunity to win and you don’t close the deal, I feel like it’s just one less opportunity for me. I’m sure a lot of the great competitors feel the same way. “Michael Jordan, he doesn’t shake hands at the end because he just hates losing so much, and that’s just me. Take it or leave it. I hate losing. It’s just one of those things where I feel like I’m 36 years old… only a handful of opportunities, and I’ve let one slip away today.â€� Hahn moved to 18th in the FedExCup. HOGE HURT BY LATE DOUBLE: Through 15 holes on Sunday Tom Hoge looked like becoming the latest first-time winner on the PGA TOUR but a double bogey on the 16th hole curtailed his charge. From the middle of the fairway just 156 yards from the pin Hoge pulled the ball left into the bunker and then failed to find the green with his third. He ultimately made a six, going from one in front to one behind. He still had a chance to make birdie on the 72nd hole to join a playoff but was unable to find the bottom of the cup. Despite the stumble it was an experience Hoge can build on going forward. “I was kind of in between yardages,â€� Hoge said of the fateful swing. “I was trying to play kind of a low draw to get to the back pins there and just kind of flipped to the bottom left. “It’s kind of just building on things. I played pretty well, and I felt like today I had pretty good beliefs in myself that I could get it done. Felt good the whole way. The next time you get back, it will make it a little easier.â€� Hoge moved to 19th in the FedExCup with his third-place finish. NOTABLES Justin Thomas – The defending champion shot 67-67-66-68 to finish in a tie for 14th. He was 15 shots behind his record breaking 253 of last season. “I played well this week. I’m pretty disappointed with where I’m going to end up finishing,â€� he said. “I played way better than this. I should have not only, I feel like, won the golf tournament, but I should have had a chance coming down the back nine.â€� Jordan Spieth – A final round 4-under 66 for the former FedExCup champion left him in a tie for 18th, six shots back of the playoff. Brian Harman – Brian Harman is now five for five in top-10 finishes this season so far but once again he fell short of victory. A final round 70 left him tied fourth, two shots out of the playoff. His 2017-18 results now read T5-8-T4-3-T4. QUOTABLES I’ve got a lot of work to do with the putter, it’s as simple as that. Everything else is plenty ready to win  I definitely had enough gas for the playoff. It’s just, God, I’m just hungryMy golf game is a roller coaster. It always has been. I easily, easily could have won this golf tournament by a pretty good amount of strokes. So that part’s a little upsetting. I went by this morning, and he’s responsive to the extent that he’s in pain, and he said his last name, asked about his friends, asked the nurse to pray for him. SUPERLATIVES Low round: 8-under 62 – James Hahn produced the round of the week with nine birdies and just one bogey. He also had two more birdies in the six-hole playoff. Longest drive: 359 yards – Corey Conners on the par-4 10th. He made birdie. Longest putt: 50 feet, six inches – Brandon Harkins on the par-4 15th for a birdie. Easiest hole: The par-5 9th played at 4.118 with six eagles, 55 birdies and 15 pars. Hardest hole: The par-4 13th played at 4.250 with five birdies, 47 pars and 24 bogeys.

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Five takeaways from the Payne's Valley CupFive takeaways from the Payne's Valley Cup

Bonus golf is always fun. Bonus golf with four former FedExCup champions including Tiger Woods at a course he designed with great charitable causes benefiting - now that's awesome. In case you missed the fun at Payne's Valley Cup - where Woods and Justin Thomas teamed up against Rory McIlroy and Justin Rose to open the first Woods designed public course - here are five takeaways to catch you up. 1. The Tiger Woods / Justin Thomas team won*. The event featured three separate formats with the first team to collect 2.5 points declared the winner. One point was available in team better ball, one point in alternate shot and two points in singles. In the end it was a 2-2 tie but a clutch Thomas shot on the final hole proved the difference in a tiebreaker scenario. The first six holes featured a team better ball format with the addition of the second ball counting if the low score was tied. Woods forgot that part of the format early when he snapped his opening drive over a cliff but didn't continue on the hole. It meant a par, bogey combo for the European's was enough to grab an early lead. The U.S. won the second but lost the third and fourth holes which helped the Euro's to a 2&1 win and the first point of the competition. The U.S. did manage to win the Closest to the Pin (Thomas) and Long Drive (Woods) challenges inside those six holes. Holes 7-12 were alternate shot. After the two teams were tied coming to the drivable 12th hole it was a lovely Woods pitch shot that secured a birdie and left McIlroy with a long putt to try to halve the match. It slipped by meaning a U.S. win and a 1-1 total. Rose picked up the straightest drive challenge while Thomas/Woods secured a drive the green challenge. Holes 13-19, yes 19, were singles and featured matches between Thomas and McIlroy and Woods and Rose. The 19th was revealed as a par-3 called "The Rock" where $1million for charity was at stake for a hole in one and $500,000 for closet to the pin. In the Woods/Rose contest Woods went 1 up on Rose with a nice birdie out of the gate but missed a golden opportunity to double the advantage a hole later from just six-feet. After matching each other on 15 Rose stepped up and nearly made an ace to tie things up on the 16th. He then took the lead when he was able to get up and down from the sand on the 18th, a feat Woods couldn't match, to take a 1 up lead to The Rock. In the Thomas/McIlroy match Thomas fell behind immediately with a bogey but then took advantage of a tough McIlroy lip out a hole later to tie things up. Then things really went against the Northern Irishman. He could only laugh when a chance to win the 15th also did a near 360 degree lip out and he dropped his club and threw his hands on his head in disbelief when a chip to win the 16th stopped hanging over the edge of the hole. To add insult to injury Thomas then drained a long birdie bomb on the 17th and McIlroy's effort to match burned the edge leaving Thomas 1 up with two to play. McIlroy was able to make a tester on the 18th to push things to The Rock. The final hole started with Aaron Stewart, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player afforded a shot for the million. Stewart was just a little wide right whereas the two legends both found the surface, Player a tad closer. Thomas then threw a dart in to eight-feet, seven-inches forcing McIlroy to take dead aim. He ended 13-feet, eight-inches under the hole. Given that in the event of a tie the match would be decided on who hit it closest to the pin it was a clutch shot from Thomas. Rose opened the door for Woods when he left it about 20-feet from the hole but the 82-time TOUR winner spun his attempt back to almost the same distance. With a chance to win it Rose slid his putt past giving Woods the stage to win it all. But his putt pulled left and wouldn't drop. That left McIlroy with a must make putt to have any chance given Thomas held the tiebreaker but luck certainly wasn't on his side and it slid past to hand the result to the Woods / Thomas combo despite a 2-2 overall score line. "I'm just so proud of everyone who came together to make this possible," Woods said. "It's awfully special for me." 2. Woods certainly has a knack for course design. The Payne's Valley Golf Course is Woods' first public course and it looks like some serious fun. Named as a tribute to the late Payne Stewart, the course is part of the magnificent Big Cedar Lodge property in Ridgedale, Missouri, which of course is not that far from where Stewart grew up in Springfield. The course is a par 72 of 7,370 yards with immaculate Meyer Zoysia fairways and Bentgrass greens. Elevation changes, large greens, beautiful mountain views and contours and wildlife sightings make this what appears to be a super fun course. The par does not include the 19th hole that was revealed in the match. The Big Rock is a fun island par-3 cut into the mountain that can presumably be used to settle any ties. "It's great, it is very player friendly which makes it fun. It's beautiful. It looks like a great place to have a golf trip with friends that's for sure. Everything is here." Thomas said. "The site itself was gorgeous. We had to do a little bit of earthwork, move a few things here and there, but overall this site is part of nature," Woods said. The addition to the Big Cedar Lodge complex is a good one and adds to the value of the destination for those looking for a getaway that features golf, but also much more. "This is a happy day, a very special day in my life," owner Johnny Morris said. "I grew up here in the Ozarks, I feel so blessed to have grown up here in these hills, in these mountains, fishing the rivers, and loving this land. "To have someone like Tiger to come and join us and work on this project... I can't tell you the countless enjoyable hours I've had walking around this land with him and to have him here to showcase this and share it with the whole world is great. It makes us extra happy that this is a public course and people can come here from all over and enjoy what Tiger has created." 3. Players hooked up with microphones really adds value. The telecast featured all four players mic'd up and it provided some great insight. Hearing both the banter between the players and also some great stories was a lot of fun. Of course the stakes here weren't what they all face on a regular basis. But it did show how the technology could be used. We heard some great lines and learned some things we might not have otherwise. Here are a few snippets: • Thomas let us know about a huge raccoon head on the wall of his cabin... "It's staring down and I'm thinking, I am not sleeping in this room," he laughed. "I'd wake up in the middle of the night and be terrified." Rose, who was put in the Tiger Woods themed cabin quipped, "Mine is worse, I had pictures of Tiger over my bed." Thomas had to concede, "That would give me worse nightmares for sure," he laughed. • There was some interesting serious chat also. Woods quizzed Rose about playing a longer driver as he thinks about trying to gain more distance and McIlroy and Thomas talked putting lines and a few trade secrets. • We were given the treat of hearing from legends Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player about course design. Both also have courses at Big Cedar Lodge and Player used the platform to urge designers to be more environmentally conscious. Thomas also expressed an interest to design later in life. • We heard about new fatherhood from McIlroy. "It's probably even better than I imagined. I knew it was going to be a life changer and pretty cool but it’s just so nice to get home and leave all this here... I think it’s been good for me as well, I spent all my life focusing on myself and then to go home and just have this little girl that relies on you for almost everything... it’s a pretty cool feeling. It’s a lot of responsibility but we’re having a lot of fun and thankfully Poppy is healthy, Erica is healthy... it's all good." • McIlroy is a fan of Domino's pizza. "We are on this big Domino's kick at the moment. If you don't know what the really good local pizza place is, Domino's is solid," he said to Thomas. • Woods is not used to playing in shorts. At one point he instinctively wiped his putter blade on his pant less leg and could only laugh at himself. • Thomas is not afraid to have fun at Woods' expense, lightheartedly of course. During alternate shot he was returning the ball to the mark on the green only to say, "I went to go move this over like normal and I forgot dumb dumb has got his name on the ball. I can't look at that while I'm trying to putt." • Woods thinks Rose is the best bunker player of the four. • Gary Player thinks Tiger and Bobby Locke are the two best putters in history, primarily because they let the toe of the putter move. 4. Tiger had some rust but seemed to be moving well. These days whenever Woods has a hit we all want to make sure his back holds up. With the 82-time PGA TOUR winner playing a limited schedule these days any glimpse of him feels special. Coming off a missed cut at the U.S. Open Woods is hoping to get some form back. He potentially has title defenses at the ZOZO Championship and Masters in the coming months. Things looked a little worrisome when his first shot was a huge hook into trouble but outside of that he was solid but not spectacular in team play. A few chances on the greens for holes slipped by in the early formats which in his heyday would've all dropped. He did pick up the long drive title with a 348-yard bomb. In singles he showed a little more fire. Woods started with a clutch birdie to get the early advantage over Rose but then was unable to secure the other chances presented his way. Just like in the earlier team play when Woods had a putt of consequence he'd make in his sleep in the glory years, it would slide by. The good news is he has plenty of time to get some practice in now. 5. It is great to see Payne Stewart's legacy live on. We heard some fun stories about the legendary Stewart who sadly lost his life in a plane crash almost 21 years ago. After Aaron Stewart hit the first ceremonial tee shot the anecdotes came thick and fast. Paul Azinger spoke of how Stewart met Woods before his first pro start and tried to cheekily convince him to stay in school, knowing the young Woods was going to change the game. David Feherty recounted a story about a planted groundhog in his hotel room and some glued shoes, reminiscing fondly for Stewart's prankster style of humor. Rose recounted being a spectator as a child at the Open Championship. "I was with group of kids hoping to get a golf ball from one of the pros. Payne pointed to me, threw me a ball... from that moment on I was always rooting for Payne." And then Johnny Morris, the owner and creator of Big Cedar Lodge, spoke of his pride to add to the legacy. "It is actually a pretty emotional day today to have his wife Tracey here and her son Aaron who looks just like his dad," Morris said. "Payne grew up Springfield about half an hour north of here and his father Bill was, as far as I know, his only coach in golf, so to just see that father son experience and see Payne from our hometown go on and compete and win the U.S. Open was incredible. "And not just what he achieved as an athlete but also what he achieved as an inspirational human being... just a wonderful person, great dad and husband. When we had the opportunity to name this golf course Payne's Valley in his honor with him being from right here in the Ozarks... it was really special." Aaron Stewart added, "It is a huge honor just for us to be involved. What Johnny and Tiger have done to this place is just amazing. I think everyone should come out and see it."

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Wyndham Rewards Top 10 update: Rickie Fowler joins the partyWyndham Rewards Top 10 update: Rickie Fowler joins the party

Rickie Fowler’s brilliant mental toughness that allowed him to bounce back from severe adversity during the final round to win the Waste Management Phoenix Open has seen the popular star make a big move into the top 10 of the Wyndham Rewards standings.  Fowler went from 65th to 7th in the FedExCup standings with his fifth PGA TOUR title. The top 10 in the standings after the Wyndham Championship — the final event of the PGA TOUR’s regular season — will receive a portion of the $10 million bonus in the new Wyndham Rewards Top 10 competition. First place after the Wyndham Championship will receive $2 million, followed by $1.5 million for second, all the way to $500,000 for 10th place, the final spot eligible for a bonus. “Winning takes care of a lot. Obviously, it’s nice to be back up in FedExCup points because when you don’t play much in the fall you kind of start the calendar year pretty far behind the eight ball and playing catch up,â€� Fowler said. “This is a nice start to get back kind of in the race for that and of course the new Wyndham Rewards at the end of the regular season … and we get to go to Kapalua next year so that’s never terrible.â€� Fowler’s jump of 58 spots in the standings wasn’t the biggest of the week at TPC Scottsdale … that honor went to Branden Grace as he moved a whopping 138 spots. Here are the top 10 biggest moves (tournament result in parentheses) in the FedExCup standings: 138 – Branden Grace (2), 169 to 31 92 – Bubba Watson (T4), 174 to 82 83 – Chris Stroud (T7), 198 to 115 58 – Rickie Fowler (Won), 65 to 7 47 – Jhonattan Vegas (T10), 147 to 100 46 – Russell Knox (T10), 135 to 89 40 – Russell Henley (T15), 172 to 132 36 – Trey Mullinax (T15), 140 to 104 36 – Charley Hoffman (T20), 183 to 147 36 – Max Homa (T26), 210 to 174 LOOKING AHEAD Going into this week’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am just two of the top 10 players in the Wyndham Rewards Top 10 are in the field. No. 2 Matt Kuchar has a chance to take over top spot given he’s just 28 points behind leader Xander Schauffele. No. 10 Cameron Champ is the other top 10 player in the field. Click here for full coverage of the Wyndham Rewards Top 10

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