Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting PGA TOUR introduces new automated Chatbot

PGA TOUR introduces new automated Chatbot

Want to know when Justin Thomas tees off? Where the next PGA TOUR tournament will be held? Or where Jordan Spieth stands in the FedExCup? You can get immediate answers from the PGA TOUR’s new Chatbot. The automated bot will give responses to competition-related inquiries, providing information on topics like the current leaderboard and FedExCup standings. “A Chatbot represents another way for the TOUR to continue to reach our fans on any platform they may be using throughout the day,� said Scott Gutterman, the TOUR’s Vice President of Digital Operations. “The release of our Chatbot is part of the TOUR’s continuing commitment to innovation and reaching fans on new and emerging platforms.� While the bot, which was produced with the Microsoft Bot Framework and LUIS, currently answers questions about tournaments, the TOUR is committed to taking fan feedback to help improve their experience. To get started using the bot, fans can just type “main menu,� or try using one of the sample inquiries below that the TOUR’s bot can currently answer: •       “Who’s winning the tournament?� •       “How did Tiger Woods do today?� •       “When does Jason Day tee off?� •       “Who are the top 10 players in the FedExCup?� •       “Show me Dustin Johnson highlights from the TOUR Championship.� Fans also can type a player’s name to receive a card with links to the player’s profile, video highlights and scorecard, as well as the player’s tee time or standing in the current event. Fans can get help using the bot or provide feedback by typing ‘Help’ in the chat. The PGA TOUR encourages fans to send feedback to help improve the product in the future. Also, the bot will record questions that fans ask, even if the bot is unable to provide an answer. This will give the PGA TOUR guidance on what information to add to new versions of the bot. “The bot enables us to have a two-way conversation with fans,� Gutterman said. “Over time, we hope to learn from the bot what fans are asking for and continue to build out the capabilities of what questions it can respond to and how it responds.� The bot eventually may be able to help fans purchase tickets to tournaments or book tee times throughTeeOff.com, Gutterman said. It also could be developed to share biographical information on the TOUR’s players and answer historical questions about past tournaments and records. The bot is currently available on Skype and Slack and will soon be available on Facebook Messenger.

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Three moments that helped Justin Thomas win the PGA ChampionshipThree moments that helped Justin Thomas win the PGA Championship

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Winning a major – winning any golf tournament for that matter – is a series of decisive moments. Three memorable back-nine moments Sunday at Quail Hollow helped turn Justin Thomas into the PGA Championship winner. THE 10-SECOND WAIT Thomas likes to talk to his golf ball. A lot. With his tee shot in the air at the par-5 10th – listed at 601 yards on Sunday, it was playing as the longest hole of the week – he made an urgent plea. He could see the ball drifting left toward the trees. He needed divine help. “Get lucky,â€� he requested. “Just spit it out for me, please.â€� Two days earlier, in Friday’s second round, Thomas had also pulled his drive at the 10th. He thought the ball would be OK, but instead it hit a tree and kicked 30 yards into trouble. He did not get lucky that time, although he did scramble for a birdie that day. Now here he was, starting the back nine of a major just one shot off the lead, and – wouldn’t you know it — his ball was headed for that very same tree. Thomas silently hoped fate would intervene. “I feel like that tree kind of owed me one,â€� he said. The debt was indeed paid. The ball bounced off the tree and into the fairway, niftily avoiding the fairway bunker. A huge break. Walking down the fairway toward his ball, Thomas turned to his caddie Jimmy Johnson and said, “That’s why you ask.â€� But the 10th wasn’t finished making Thomas sweat. With a birdie putt from 8 feet, 3 inches, Thomas faced what he called a “weirdâ€� read, with the grain in and from the right at the beginning of the putt, then switching to the left closer to the cup. He opted to play a straight line, expecting the grain to feed the ball back-and-forth into the hole. But the ball stayed left. It reached the cup … and then hung there, one half of the little white sphere suspended in mid-air. Thomas turned his back to the hole in disbelief. How had the ball not dropped? “It was acting like a child and threw a little tantrum,â€� he said. Johnson was also shocked. “Oh my gosh,â€� said the veteran caddie. “I didn’t see how there was any way it was staying out.â€� On the CBS broadcast, analyst Nick Faldo began to count. “1 … 2 … 3 … 4 … 5,â€� he said, ticking off the seconds. Thomas either had to mark – or in this case, tap in – once 10 seconds were reached. “6 … 7 … 8 … 9 …â€� That’s when gravity was restored at Quail Hollow. The ball dropped. The roars came. Thomas tipped his cap to the golf gods and gave a wry shrug. His caddie kept quiet. “I didn’t say anything,â€� Johnson revealed. “I didn’t say much all day except for the yardages and the clubs. I was just trying to survive.â€� But in that silence, Johnson processed the ramifications. Last month, Thomas’ good friend Jordan Spieth had won the Travelers Championship by holing a bunker shot. Perhaps the good breaks at 10 were a sign of things to come. “I thought it might be our day, like it was Jordan’s at Hartford,â€� Johnson said. “I thought that might be an omen. You have to have good things happen to you to win golf tournaments.â€� Thomas was 7 under. Soon he would be the solo leader. GOING BERSERK Less than 30 minutes after his birdie putt fell at 10, Justin Thomas was on the 12th green when he realized there was a five-way tie for the lead. His playing partner, Hideki Matsuyama, had just dropped a stroke. The twosome in the final group, Kevin Kisner and Chris Stroud, were each at 7 under. Well ahead, Francesco Molinari had just birdied 15 to also reach 7 under. “To see that was kind of crazy,â€� Thomas said. A few minutes, the craziness continued. After making par at 12, Thomas remained at 7 under – but everyone else had lost a stroke. He was now the solo leader. But he appeared in danger of giving that stroke away when his tee shot at the par-3 13th missed the green left. It left him in the rough, 39 feet, 7 inches from the pin. It was a tricky chip shot just to get the ball close to the pin. “That first cut is so tough to chip,â€� Thomas explained. “This entire course, it’s tough to chip out of the rough. But that first cut you get, you can really look stupid in a heartbeat because it’s all into the grain and it’s really to where you can just flub it.â€� Thomas said even if the play is to simply hit it in front, the ball could come out hot and run past the hole. This one did not come out hot. It came out perfect, rolling into the cup for an unexpected birdie. He thought the cheers at 10 were loud. The ones at 13 were louder. “Exactly like I saw,â€� Thomas said. “That was a roar like I’ve never experienced.â€� On the bag, Johnson began to believe. “He hit a lot of good shots today,â€� Johnson said, “but when he chipped in on 13, I thought it might be his day.â€� Thomas was now 8 under. His lead was two strokes with five holes to play. VISION IN HIS HEAD Thomas started the Green Mile – Quail Hollow’s last three holes, the toughest closing stretch on the PGA TOUR since 2003 – with a par at the 16th. Now he was at the par-3 17th, playing at 221 yards Sunday. Kisner was hot on his trail after consecutive birdies, cutting Thomas’ lead to one upon reaching the 16th. Patrick Reed also had been at 7 under but had just bogeyed the 18th. Thomas contemplated his tee shot. He just needed par on a hole with a “really brutalâ€� pin. Anything short of the green would fall off against the collar and likely result in a bogey. Anything long would also be a sure bogey. He just needed to land his shot at about 200 yards just past the false edge. He could pull the shot and still get away with it, albeit with a long putt. When he’s practicing at home, Thomas hits a 6-iron 200 yards. But 7-iron was the play now. He never considered another club. His adrenaline level had red-lined, so he figured a full 7 was better than a finesse 6. “You’re pumped up, you’re feeling it,â€� Thomas said. “You’re kind of not full bore, but you want to swing at something.â€� So he swung. Hard. Then he stared. A perfect shot. “I’ll never forget that vision in my head,â€� he said. Thomas’ shot landed 14 feet, 6 inches from the pin. He poured in the putt. It was his sixth and final birdie of the day – and it was all he needed. It allowed him breathing room to make bogey on the final hole and still win by two shots. It’s the first major for the 24-year-old Thomas … and also the first for his veteran caddie. Johnson began caddying in 1997 for Nick Price, who by then had already won his three majors. Johnson then caddied for Steve Stricker, annually one of the best players without a major during his prime. Johnson left Stricker’s bag two years ago to caddie for Thomas. “That was probably the hardest decision I ever made in my life, to be honest with you,â€� Johnson said. “Strick’s such a good guy, great player, quality guy. It was very tough.â€� But he had seen something in Thomas. “He’s got some of those special shots that some of the guys can’t hit,â€� Johnson said. And now Thomas has a major. Doubt it will be his only one.

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2017 Travelers Championship, Round 3: Leaderboard, tee times, TV schedule2017 Travelers Championship, Round 3: Leaderboard, tee times, TV schedule

We enter Moving Day at the Travelers Championship with former FedExCup champion Jordan Spieth still atop the leaderboard. The 36-hole leader holds a slight edge on the field heading into the weekend. For more on Spieth’s stellar debut 36 holes at TPC River Highlands, check out the Upshot. For all the rest from Round 2, read the Daily Wrap-up. Round 3 tee times Round 3 leaderboard HOW TO WATCH PGA TOUR LIVE: Featured Holes (10:30 a.m. – 6 p.m. ET), CBS Simulcast (3 p.m. – 6 p.m. ET) Featured Holes: 1st (par-4, 434 yards), 15th (par-4, 296 yards), 16th (par-3, 171 yards)   Telecast: Golf Channel (1 p.m. – 2:30 p.m. ET), CBS (3 p.m. – 6 p.m. ET) Listen: SiriusXM PGA TOUR Radio (1 p.m. – 7 p.m. ET) Notable pairings Russell Knox, Retief Goosen, Alex Cejka 11:15 a.m. Eastern off 10th tee David Lingmerth., Tony Finau, Marc Leishman 11:35 a.m. Eastern off 1st tee Fabian Gomez, Paul Casey, Brian Harman 11:55 a.m. Eastern off 1st tee Smylie Kaufman, Padraig Harrington, Jim Furyk 12:25 p.m. Eastern off 1st tee Rory McIlroy, Robert Streb, K.J. Choi 12:35 p.m. Eastern off 10th tee Boo Weekley, Patrick Rodgers, Daniel Berger 12:45 p.m. Eastern off 1st tee Wesley Bryan, Daniel Summerhays, Chase Seiffert 12:55 p.m. Eastern off 1st tee Jordan Spieth, Patrick Reed, Troy Merritt 1:05 p.m. Eastern off 1st tee

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FedExCup: Cabrera Bello, Grillo, Cink crack Top 70FedExCup: Cabrera Bello, Grillo, Cink crack Top 70

NORTON, Mass. – Rafa Cabrera Bello once played an amateur event in Chicago. But since turning pro in 2011, he’s never played a single round in the Windy City. That will change with his next start. Cabrera Bello, ranked 80th entering the week, was one of three players to move inside the top 70 in points and advance to the third leg of the FedExCup Playoffs, the BMW Championship at Conway Farms in two weeks. Thanks to a bogey-free 65, Cabrera Bello moved to 62nd in the standings after his tie for 18th Monday at the Dell Technologies Championship. Emiliano Grillo and Stewart Cink were the other two bubble-busters moving on to Chicago. Cink, who moved from 81 to 57 with a solo 12th, will make his first start at the BMW since 2010. Grillo, moving from 77 to 62nd with a solo 22nd, will make his second consecutive BMW start; he played last year at Crooked Stick in Carmel, Indiana. Dropping outside the top 70 and ending their season were Russell Knox, Brandt Snedeker and Kelly Kraft. Only Knox played on Monday, finishing tied for 61st. Kraft withdrew earlier this week and Snedeker has been sidelined with an injury. Cabrera Bello has spent most of his career on the European Tour, but began splitting time on the PGA TOUR last season. The Spaniard has three top-four finishes on TOUR this season – the last one at The Open Championship. Since then, he’s felt mentally tired, and admits it has impacted his concentration on the course. Faced with a do-or-die situation with his season this week, Cabrera Bello figured he needed to finish inside the top 35 on the leaderboard to advance. “I knew this week I needed to step it up,� he said after his 65, which tied Bill Haas for the low round of the day. “It was either play good or go home.� The added pressure, he added, “definitely helmped me focus some more.� Grillo also needed a similar finish and shot 66, overcoming two late bogeys with birdies at 16 and 18 to keep him inside the top 70. He said he was looking at the projections his entire round Monday. “I like knowing where I’m at,� said Grillo, the Argentine who’s hoping his performance at TPC Boston is enough to get a Presidents Cup pick from International captain Nick Price. “If I didn’t know, maybe I should have played more aggressive or maybe not. It’s good knowing where you’re at.� Cink had entered this week having missed two of his last three cuts, but he strung together three consecutive 68s to end the week on a high note. It puts him one step closer to playing the TOUR Championship at East Lake, where he is a member. Cink will be in Atlanta receiving the Payne Stewart Award that week. He’d dearly love to add four rounds to his schedule. “It’s really satisfying,� Cink said after his top-70 spot was confirmed. “ … I’ve been on the other side of that result a lot of times, too, and it doesn’t feel good at all. It does feel really good to put that together.� TWAY’S BUNKER SHOT For a crisp four-hour stroll, Harold Varner and Kevin Tway were side-by-side, playing competitors in the final round of the Dell Technologies Championship. When the 18 holes were done, their divergent paths capsulized the story of these FedExCup Playoffs. “Great job today. Have fun in Chicago. I tried to join you,� Varner said to Tway, who didn’t need the sentence translated. Tway, who fired a final-round 5-under 66 to finish in a share of 40th, was going to advance to the BMW Championship. Having entered the week 69th in points, he needed every drop of magic this week to remain inside the top 70 – and oh, how he got it. There was the bunker shot he holed for birdie at the 71st hole Monday. There were the four par-saves of at least 6 feet in the final seven holes. There was the nail-biting moments late Saturday as he was inside the cut (at 3-over), then outside, then in on the number. Heck, go back to Round 1 on Friday when Tway aced one of the toughest par-3s on TOUR, the 231-yard 11th. Any of those moments could have gone the other way and Tway would have been eliminated, but as he bid Varner goodbye, he wore a smile. So, too, did Varner, even though his Playoffs were over. He had birdied seven of the first 10 holes and “I thought I had a chance to be top 20 and (sneak into the BMW Championship), but I choked.� Then, he smiled. “Well, I didn’t choke, but I didn’t do a good job of finishing.� With bogeys down the stretch at 14, 15 and 16, Varner settled for 4-under 67. Good stuff, just not good enough to sweep him into the top 70. He had come into the week 91st in the FedExCup standings and needed a more than his tie for 47th to advance, but no worries with the young man who wears a perpetual smile. “Gosh, it was good just being there,� said Varner, who was 138th into the regular-season finale and threw down a T-10 at Wyndham just to get into the Playoffs. He is still proud of that, as he should be, and knocking in seven birdies in 10 holes Monday was another big deal to him. “I’ve got to keep seeing the positives.� – By Jim McCabe 18 PLAYERS ELIMINATED The list of players whose seasons officially ended Monday: Russell Knox Rod Pampling Bubba Watson Graham DeLaet Jason Kokrak Patrick Rodgers Branden Grace Morgan Hoffmann Jonas Blixt William McGirt Kevin Streelman Cody Gribble C.T. Pan Harold Varner III Jim Herman Chris Kirk Vaughn Taylor J.J. Spaun BUBBLE WATCH Here are the players who moved inside and outside the top 70 following Monday’s final round of the Dell Technologies Championship. The top 70 will advance to the BMW Championship. QUOTE OF THE DAY Every shot I gained this week is one less shot I need next week. TOP 5 WATCH The Top 5 players entering the TOUR Championship will control their own destiny at East Lake. Here’s a look at how the current top 5 fared in the final round of the Dell Technologies Championship. 1. Jordan Spieth (67). Incredible start with an eagle and three birdies, but lost the momentum on the back nine. Solo second at 14 under. Was second. 2. Justin Thomas (66). Key birdies at 13 and 15 allowed him to take control and finish at 17 under. Wins for fifth time this season. Was third. 3. Dustin Johnson (73). Struggled on the front nine with three bogeys and was never a factor in the final round. Tied for 18th at 7 under. Was first. 4. Hideki Matsuyama (66). Had his best round of the week but was never a factor. Tied for 23rd at 5 under. Remained fourth. 5. Jon Rahm (68). Three early birdies had him in position, but shot 2-over during 10-hole stretch in middle of his round. Tied for fourth at 12 under. Remained fifth.

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