Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Justin Thomas defends J.B. Holmes on pace-of-play incident

Justin Thomas defends J.B. Holmes on pace-of-play incident

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – Reigning FedExCup champion Justin Thomas came to the defense Wednesday of his friend and fellow Kentuckian J.B. Holmes. Thomas, off the past two weeks since his last start in Hawaii, was watching on TV as Holmes deliberated over his second shot at the par-5 18th hole in Sunday’s final round at the Farmers Insurance Open. The wind was gusting at Torrey Pines, and Holmes strategized for four minutes and 10 seconds before deciding to lay up. The lengthy wait agitated fans around the 18th green and set off slow-play debates. But Thomas was having none of it. Both Thomas and Holmes are in the field at this week’s Waste Management Phoenix Open. “I have J.B.’s back all day on that situation,â€� said Thomas, who shares a coach with Holmes in Matt Killen. “It bothered me, and I hate it [bothering] him. I went up to him yesterday and told him it was a great week, first off. It was a great tournament for him. “But I have a hard time saying I wouldn’t do anything differently than he did. If you put me in 18 fairway and I need an eagle to win the golf tournament, or to have a chance to win the golf tournament, I mean, I knew the exact position he was in, and I would do the same thing.â€� Two shots behind playing partners Alex Noren and Ryan Palmer – with eventual champion Jason Day already in the clubhouse after finishing up his round — Holmes had 235 yards to carry the water. The wind had been tricky all day, and he found himself between a 5-wood and a 3-wood. He also lost track of time during the deliberations with his caddie, he told Golf Channel’s Tim Rosaforte. “If I messed him up, I apologize,â€� Holmes said of Noren, who needed a birdie at 18 to win the tournament but hit his second shot through a tunnel behind the green and could not get up and down. He settled for par before eventually losing a six-hole playoff to Day that extended to Monday. “He still made a good swing,â€� Holmes told Rosaforte about Noren’s second shot. “He smacked it.â€� “I don’t understand what all the big hoopla is about,â€� Holmes added. “I was just trying to give myself the best chance to win the tournament. I didn’t want to mess anybody up.â€� Asked afterwards if the wait affected his shot, Noren replied: “Not necessarily. … Just probably made me switch clubs.â€� Noren opted for 3-wood after contemplating a hybrid, but in retrospect said he probably should have laid up. The Holmes situation was the most visible slow-down of a slow day. At the par-3 third hole, C.T. Pan fell victim to the stiff breeze and twice hit his tee shot over the cliff behind the green, leading to a back-up in the field. Thomas said he would support efforts to speed up play, even to the point of players being dealt penalty strokes. “I think we should do it,â€� he said. “We’ve got to do something about the pace of play.â€� As for the specific situation with Holmes, though, he sees extenuating circumstances. He says he and Holmes have similar trajectories, and so he could imagine himself in the same situation. “I get it,â€� Thomas said. “Four minutes and 10 seconds is a long time, but nobody behind him, last hole, you need a three to win the golf tournament, you need to take as long as you can. “I mean obviously, there’s a point, you’re not going to sit there 10 minutes,â€� he added. “But it’s like, look: If I’m going to wait for the right wind, I’m going to wait for the right wind. I need to make a 3 here. And then people saying, ‘I can’t believe he wanted that long and laid it up into the rough.’ It’s like, do you think he was trying to lay it up into the rough? I mean, I think the bigger deal—and J.B., he’s gotten a lot better, and he’s trying to get a lot better with his pace of play — but it’s just the fact of the previous 17 holes.â€� Holmes told Rosaforte that while he was once too slow, he has improved. “I don’t get timed more than anybody else,â€� Holmes pointed out. Holmes eventually finished solo fourth at Torrey Pines, his best result since a solo third at the 2016 Open Championship. He comes to TPC Scottsdale as a two-time champion (2006, ’08). Said Thomas: “I hate it for him, how much he’s getting bashed and ridiculed.â€� 

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Emergency 9: Fantasy advice for the Waste Management Phoenix OpenEmergency 9: Fantasy advice for the Waste Management Phoenix Open

Here are nine tidbits from the first round of the Waste Management Phoenix Open 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. I’m trying to figure out why the rest of the people didn’t play Matsuyama this week. I would love to hear the reasons why he was omitted from lineups based on his last four years on the TPC Scottsdale Stadium Course. He was 59-under-par in those events entering this week. Bill-ding a Lead Bill Haas has provided nothing but frustration to weekly and season-long fantasy owners in the 2018 season. His T17 to open the new season at the Safeway Open was followed by a five-event stretch that included three missed cuts and nothing better than T54. He had success on the “old” TPC Scottsdale but he didn’t break par in his only visit to the redesign in 2015. Haas was selected on less than one percent of rosters this week in the PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO. He hit 16 of 18 greens, circled five birdies and an eagle against zero bogeys for 64 (-7) but I’m not getting out the ink pen just yet. Billy Clubs Another renowned ball-striker is just two back as Billy Horschel stalks the lead. Horschel’s last few months are very similar to the leader but he at least has three consecutive top-30 finishes at TPC Scottsdale the last three seasons. Bogey avoidance was one of the keys this week in The Confidence Factor and Horschel’s card (66) didn’t have any either. He painted 10 of 14 fairways, three more than Haas and hit just one less green. It’s his first, bogey-free round since last year’s Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard on Sunday. Automatic for the People Bubba Watson used to be one of the first names on the team sheet annually at the WMPO. From 11 starts prior to this year he accumulated seven top-25 and four top-10 finishes from nine weekends. He rattled off a stretch from 2012 to 2016 where he didn’t finish worse than 15th before a MC last year. Watson only had three top-10 finishes in the entire 2017 portion of the season. Don’t Do Me Like That Here comes Jon Rahm, again! This week we heard defending his first title on TOUR, plus his win the week before at CareerBuilder Challenge mixed in with some poor ball-striking and putting was the reason he couldn’t get over the finish line at the Farmers Insurance Open. Well, that’s fixed. He led the field in strokes-gained: off-the-tee and in fairways hit (12/14) plus found 14 of 18 GIR. I’m back on board in the desert! Caution Chris Kirk opened with 66 Thursday and that’s the fifth time in seven trips to Scottsdale that he’s posted 67 or lower in the opening round. The biggest check he’s collected from these five events has been T24. Where’s Webb? The fifth-most picked player in the PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO is toiling with Jordan Spieth, J.B. Holmes and others at 1-over-par (T83). Every week I point out some bizarre stat or quandary that gamers scratch their heads about and Simpson covers me tonight. In his previous seven starts here he’s played his first round under par. That streak was broken. The last three events here he hasn’t broken par on Friday. Gamers will hope down is up this year but there wasn’t much on Simpson’s scorecard that suggested an anomaly. Gulp. Spaun and Done I’ll have the PGA TOUR Fantasy One & Done presented by SERVPRO stats for you tomorrow but that won’t do you any good if you went with J.J. Spaun this week. He withdrew after 10 holes on Thursday so if he’s in your PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO, he needs to be subbed out. Study Hall Interesting reading from Rob Bolton, who is on site this week, that Billy Horschel suggested that pins were tough on Thursday. The weather is non-existent this week so your lineup will reflect how aggressive you choose to be with your six-man teams. I’m still shocked that almost half of you did not roster Matsuyama this week. WHAT ARE YOU SAVING HIM FOR??? Rant over. … Playoff participants Alex Noren and Ryan Palmer both shot even-par 71 today and will need a response tomorrow. … Tom Hoge was featured at PGATOUR.COM earlier in the week. He carded a 73. There’s not a jinx for this, right? RIGHT? … Monday qualifier John Oda couldn’t continue his Monday magic as he shot a 76. … Martin Laird, who led after 36 and 54 holes last year, is back at it again after opening with a 68 (-3).

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Maturity, accountability fueling Patton KizzireMaturity, accountability fueling Patton Kizzire

On Tuesday afternoon in the locker room of the CareerBuilder Challenge, Zach Johnson made an observation aloud to no one in particular. “I’ll tell you what’s crazy,â€� Johnson said. “A lot of guys I’ve been paired with on Thursday and Friday have gone on to win that week. Either I’m incredibly motivating or they’re just incredibly good.â€� In Rounds 1 and 2 of last week’s Sony Open in Hawaii, Johnson was paired with Patton Kizzire. On the sixth hole of sudden death, the longest in Sony Open in Hawaii history, Kizzire emerged victorious over James Hahn. The win at Waialae Country Club, his second on the PGA TOUR, came in his 66th start and came just three starts after his maiden victory at the OHL Classic at Mayakoba. As such, Kizzire became the season’s first two-time winner and jumped to No. 1 in the FedExCup standings. 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After graduating from Auburn University with a business degree in 2008, Kizzire lacked the tenacity and discipline a career in professional golf requires. “Yeah, I was a little bit stuck in college, but I think that was all part of the deal,â€� Kizzire said. “I kind of got a little bit of that out of my system and was able to move on and start being a little bit more serious about the profession and I think it all kind of just gelled together at the right time.â€� In order to resurrect the fire he displayed in college that resulted in top honors at the 2007 SEC Championship, Kizzire relocated to Georgia to place serious focus on his game. “I guess it was just maturity kind of coming into play there,â€� Kizzire said. “I was living in Auburn and decided to move to St. Simons and really take it seriously and take advantage of the resources we have down there. I have my management group, great coaches, Davis Love III, Zach Johnson and Jonathan Byrd and all the other guys down there. 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I try to stay in golf shape, I’m no physical specimen or anything, but my coaches and managers really hold me accountable. There’s also my wife. She’s a planner. I was never much of a planner, but I’ve learned that you’ve got to make a plan and execute it, and that’s been big for me.â€� That season, Kizzire advanced through the first two of four events in the FedExCup Playoffs, before finishing 82nd in the FedExCup standings. Kizzire began his sophomore season on the PGA TOUR in 2016-17 as he did his rookie year. At the Safeway Open, he finished just one stroke back of Brendan Steele at 17-under 271, good for solo second place. He would again advance through the first two FedExCup Playoffs events, before finishing 99th in the final FedExCup standings. Even though he finished lower in the FedExCup standings his second year on the PGA TOUR than his first, he knew he was burning. 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With ensuing rounds of 70-66-67 to finish at 19-under 265, Kizzire held off a hard-charging Rickie Fowler to claim his first PGA TOUR title. “Yeah, to win in that fashion, with Rickie Fowler breathing down my neck, gave me a nice big head. It was pretty cool,â€� Kizzire said. “He’s obviously a world-class player, so to have it come down to he and I was what I’ve always wanted to do. I’ve always wanted to beat the best.â€� Three starts later, second- and third-round, 6-under 64s resulted in the eventual win in Honolulu. The Mexico win gave me the confidence to do it again at Sony,â€� Kizzire said. “The first win was like a big hurdle for me and the second win was a little bit more validation. I don’t really think anybody deserves wins, I think you just have to work for it and it just happens. 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