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Fantasy advice for AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Here are nine tidbits from the second round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am 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. PAIN OR GAIN These were the top-five picked golfers in the PGA TOUR Fantasy One & Done presented by SERVPRO: The top three above are currently in the top five. Pat Perez checks in safely at T23, but Brandt Snedeker will have to move up a few shots on Saturday to make the 54-hole cut. He’s currently two-under-par and tied for 70th. The top 60 and ties will play Pebble Beach on Sunday. The Great One Wayne Gretzky’s de facto son-in-law, Dustin Johnson, posted his 21st round in the 60’s from 40 chances on the Monterey Peninsula. His 64 Friday matches his second-best round ever and missed the best by a shot. His 63 at Pebble Beach in round one in 2012 is the best of the bunch. His rounds of 67-64 (-12) ties him with Beau Hossler for the lead, and he’ll play the weekend at Pebble Beach. If the wind blows tomorrow afternoon as predicted, he’ll be licking his chops. Merritt Badge Troy Merritt’s 67 at Pebble Beach yesterday included three bogeys, an eagle and six birdies. His 67 at Spyglass Hill Friday included zero bogeys or others and five birdies. He’ll begin Saturday 10-under-par on the Monterey Peninsula Country Club (Shore Course), the easiest of the three courses in play this week. Every shot and dollar counts this week as Merritt is playing out of the Web.com priority list. He’s MC in five of eight events and his biggest check cashed T51 money after Shriners. He’s never made the cut in six previous visits to this event, including the last four years in a row. Invitation Only Duke grad Julian Suri is ranked No. 66 in the OWGR and is in the field this week on a sponsor’s exemption. He won twice last year in Europe (one Challenge Tour, one European Tour) but his first two TOUR events this season saw him collect T63 at Torrey Pines and MC last week in Scottsdale. He’s made 13 birdies in two rounds this week and currently sits T3. This event is notoriously tough on rookies and first-time players. He’ll have two rounds this weekend at Pebble Beach to be an exception to that rule or just another statistic. Gamers should be aware of him regardless. Jordan Rules World No. 3 Jordan Spieth bounced back nicely today at MPCC as he birdied five of his first seven holes to get back into the fight. His 66 moved him up 75 spots to T23, and he’ll be one that will be begging for tough conditions Saturday so he can get back into his title defense. He hit less fairways and greens than he did yesterday, so it’s obvious which club started cooperating. Mr. Rodgers Neighborhood Stanford grad Patrick Rodgers is known for his 11 collegiate victories. but he hasn’t found the winner’s circle on TOUR just yet. His 65 at MPCC moved him up 42 spots to T11 after an opening 70 at Spyglass Hill. Rodgers ranks 195th in putting average this season but is leading the field this week after two rounds. Caution. Rory’s Retreat After six birdies to open with 68 at the usually more difficult Spyglass Hill, gamers who were riding the form of the 2016 FedExCup champion probably expected another low one today at MPCC. In fact, just the opposite rang true as Rory McIlroy had to absorb four bogeys and a double against only three birdies for 74. He’s T87 after dropping 71 spots and will have to take his frustrations out on Pebble Beach Saturday. He needed 25 putts on Thursday and 38 on Friday. Playing from Behind Last week’s winner Gary Woodland will also need a big, bad weekend on Pebble Beach, as he’s the eighth-most selected player in the PGA TOUR Fantasy One & Done presented by SERVPRO. I’ll remind gamers he made 10 birdies on Pebble Beach last year on Sunday to claim his first top 10 in three tries. He might need TWO rounds of that, bartender, to make noise this year. It’s not over, yet. Study Hall Angel Cabrera has WD from the professional competition but is sticking around for the Pro-Am portion.  Graeme McDowell, winner of the 2010 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, shot 71 at Pebble Beach yesterday but backed that up with 80 at Spyglass Hill today. … Beau Hossler, who is tied with Dustin Johnson for first, hasn’t made a bogey yet this week. … Jason Day, winner at the Farmers Insurance Open, lit up his card with 65 today at MPCC. He was joined on that number by Rodgers, Phil Mickelson and Steve Stricker. … Denny McCarthy signed for the lowest round of the day at Spyglass Hill with 66. Jon Rahm led the crew of three with 67 at Pebble Beach.      

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Rory McIlroy / Shane Lowry+350
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Tournament Match-Ups - M. Fitzpatrick / A. Fitzpatrick vs S. Stevens / M. McGreevy
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The Open 2025
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Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
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Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
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Inside My Swing: Billy HorschelInside My Swing: Billy Horschel

In the last 15 months, Billy Horschel has won a World Golf Championship, one of the top tournaments in Europe and Jack Nicklaus’ event. Before that, he was best known for winning a FedExCup with one of the hottest of streaks. But Horschel’s game has reached even higher levels since the start of 2021, thanks to sustained consistency instead of a couple incredible weeks. It started last March with a win in the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play. Then he became the first American since Arnold Palmer to win the BMW PGA Championship, the flagship event on the DP World (formerly European) Tour. Horschel’s win Sunday in the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday vaulted him to a career-high 11th in the world ranking. With five top-10s this season, including a pair of runners-up to go along with his win, Horschel is 10th in the FedExCup. He’s missed just one cut in 15 starts and finished in the top 25 in nearly two-thirds of his starts. “It shows what we’re doing at home and what we’re doing on a weekly basis, we’re doing the right things,” he said Sunday after winning by four shots. Part of that preparation back in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, is work with the same swing coach he’s employed for 14 years, Todd Anderson, the Director of Instruction at the PGA TOUR’s Performance Center at TPC Sawgrass. In this edition of Inside My Swing, Horschel and Anderson will give a closer look at the swing of the seven-time TOUR winner and show what they’ve worked on during more than a decade as a teacher-student combination. “It’s not changing every day,” Horschel said. “It’s finding out what works, sticking with it and making tweaks here and there.” IN ALIGNMENT Some players overlook their setup because it’s the only static position in the golf swing. Not Horschel, who treats it with the utmost importance. “It’s probably 85 to 90% of my swing,” he said. “If I don’t feel correct in my setup, I’m not going to make a good swing.” Like many players, Horschel uses alignment sticks during his practice sessions. He lays one at his toes to ensure his body is properly aligned. But he also places one in front of his ball, pointing at his target (pictured above). This helps him visualize the line he wants his ball to travel on after impact and helps him get his clubface square to that target. “To be able to see where a straight line is from the clubface to the target is super important,” Horschel said. “I always align the clubface first and then align my body to that.” Horschel combats a tendency to get too “open” at address, which can occur when he’s also standing too far from the ball. He likes to feel that his arms are hanging straight down from his shoulders at address. To keep his body from pointing too far left of his target, Horschel will exaggerate the opposite of his flaw. He’ll set up to the ball with his right foot dropped back in a “closed” position, then place his right hand on the club while keeping his right shoulder back. “I’ll put my left hand on the club, … and then just try to deliver the right hand and the arm to the club without my right shoulder moving closer (to the ball),” Horschel said. “The bad times are when the right arm feels like it’s on top of the left arm. Then I feel like my right arm is really dominant.” When Horschel feels that he has his upper body properly aligned, he’ll then move his right foot into its proper position to achieve the correct setup. TAKEAWAY Horschel has been on TOUR more than a decade, but it’s never too late to make a change. Last year, he made a fade his predominant shot shape, hitting a shot that moves from left-to-right instead of the draw that was his stock shot for most of his career. In the past, Horschel fought a tendency to get the club too far “around” him. This can lead to inconsistency because it requires more face rotation to square the clubface. Switching to a fade has lessened the costly left misses that Horschel would occasionally fight. He ranks 10th in driving accuracy this season and 28th in greens in regulation. An improper setup would set Horschel’s swing off kilter from the start. When his shoulders were aimed too far left at address, his left side would be overactive at the start of the swing to “get back to square,” Horschel said. This led to him rolling his arms and the clubface, and the clubhead getting too far behind his hands. Anderson said Horschel wants his left side to be “more of a follower than a leader.” Adds Horschel: “When I get in that good setup with the right arm just below the left, that allows me to feel like my first move is my right shoulder turning back behind me and the club staying out in front of me. From there, I can just complete the backswing.” After a proper takeaway, Anderson said Horschel simply “folds” the club up to get it to the top of the swing. His hands are now higher at the top of the swing than they were when he was hitting a draw and the club no longer gets “laid off,” i.e. pointing left of the target, at the top. PUMP IT UP Horschel uses the “pump drill” to rehearse his transition from the backswing to the downswing. After completing his backswing, Horschel does this drill by bringing his hands down to chest-high and then “pumping” the club between these two positions two or three times, swinging through the ball on the final one. When Horschel would get laid off at the top of his backswing, he felt like he’d start his downswing by “pulling” the club down in an attempt to get the club in front of his hands. His downswing would get too narrow and his upper body opened up too soon. The “pump drill” helps him maintain width in his downswing and keeps his upper body from turning too early in the downswing. The “pump” comes from the movement of the right arm as it extends and then bends back up to the top of the swing. The shoulders stay relatively still during this drill. “It feels like I’m throwing or tossing the club,” Horschel said. “The left arm is staying quiet and the right arm is extending.” After completing the drill, Horschel simply feels like he can turn through impact. Horschel said this drill helps him have a shallow angle of attack, something he sees in many of the best iron players, like Collin Morikawa, Justin Thomas and, especially, Tiger Woods. “Tiger had a very wide release,” Anderson said, referring especially to those years from 1999-2002 when he won seven of 11 majors in one stretch. “He didn’t get real narrow with his arms. His arms stayed wide, the club kind of moved away as he came down.” CROSS HANDED Horschel is particular about his alignment on the putting greens, as well. So much so that he doesn’t make practice strokes. It’s a unique approach that pays off, as Horschel ranks 11th in Strokes Gained: Putting this season. “It takes him a little bit to get his hands on the club the way he wants, so once he does, he just slides in and hits it,” Anderson says. Horschel returned to the left-hand low grip about three years ago. Players who use that grip have to fight the tendency to get “closed” at address, the opposite of Horschel’s tendency in the full swing. But like his pre-shot routine for full shots, Horschel lets his arms hang freely to get the feel for proper alignment. He’ll also address the ball by putting his right foot in position first (pictured above) to keep him from getting too closed, the opposite of what he does on his full swing. He switched to the left-hand low putting grip, also known as cross-handed, in part because he hates to pull putts. That’s also why he stands very close to the ball when he is putting and has a forward press, where the grip is ahead of the putterhead at address. “He gets his hands high at address with his left arm hanging down under his left shoulder so that the putter sits a little bit on the toe,” Anderson says. “From there he pushes the putter back with his left hand/shoulder and then drives it through with his right arm. He wants to feel very little arm or face rotation during the stroke. It’s very straight back, straight through. His left side keeps the putter in line and the right side delivers the hit.” He also uses a chalk line (pictured) on the green to ensure he’s starting the ball on line, the same reason he places two tees little more than a ball-width apart on his target line. An off-line putt will strike one of the tees.

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Vegas stops show town popular with TOUR prosVegas stops show town popular with TOUR pros

What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. Not until now has that old chestnut meant back-to-back PGA TOUR events. This week it's the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open at TPC Summerlin, where past Shriners champ Bryson DeChambeau will be the headliner as Vegas resident Kevin Na defends on home turf. Next week, due to some rejiggering amid the coronavirus pandemic, it's THE CJ CUP @ SHADOW CREEK - yep, also in Las Vegas. Although the double-header recalls the back-to-back tournaments at Ohio's Muirfield Village last July, it is unusual. It's also fitting, given Vegas' popularity among TOUR pros as a place to set down roots. Great weather, courses, airports, and no state income tax - what's not to like? Xander Schauffele says he'll likely be moving there. Collin Morikawa already calls it home, as do Maverick McNealy, Na, and several other world-class players. RELATED: Inside the Field | Preview the course, storylines "My coach Butch Harmon is out there in Henderson (a 20-minute drive south)," says McNealy, who finished a career-best 68th in the FedExCup last season. "And there’s actually an incredible amount of young players that are out there now. They’re calling it the Jupiter of the West - lots of PGA TOUR, LPGA, Korn Ferry, Canada, Latin America, high school players, college players. "It’s pretty motivating to be out there," McNealy adds. "Everybody is working hard, and I know there’s a lot of people out there trying to get my job, too." Las Vegas is where Tiger Woods notched the first of his 82 (and counting) TOUR wins in 1996, beating Davis Love III in a playoff. It's where Chip Beck shot 13-under 59 at the 1991 Las Vegas Invitational at Sunrise Golf Club. It's the home of UNLV, which has helped hone the skills of future TOUR pros like Adam Scott, Charley Hoffman and Ryan Moore. And, yes, it's the home base for Harmon, who advised seemingly every No. 1 player for some 30-odd years. No, Vegas isn't the center of the golf universe, but it's certainly a major planet. "Yeah, who knows what’s in that Vegas water out there," says Morikawa, who grew up in Southern California and played collegiately for Cal. "I’ll keep drinking it." If you can imagine each victory for Vegas as one of those geysers that goes off periodically at the Bellagio, then last summer was geyser-palooza. It was hard to pick a favorite. Morikawa won the Workday Charity Open in a wild playoff against Justin Thomas at Muirfield Village. Danielle Kang, who dates McNealy, won the LPGA's first two events back after a break of four-plus months, and finished T5 in a bid for three straight. "That's Tiger-esque stuff," Morikawa says. Then it was Morikawa again, driving the 16th green and winning the PGA Championship at San Francisco's TPC Harding Park to cement his status as the game's hottest new talent. That was pretty Tiger-esque in its own right. But wait! Lost amid the excitement, almost, was fellow Las Vegan David Lipsky's win at the Korn Ferry Tour's TPC San Antonio Challenge at the Canyons, July 9-12, the same weekend Morikawa was holding off Thomas at the Workday. "We were texting Saturday night," Morikawa says, "telling each other, ‘Finish this off, let’s not screw anything up and do anything stupid.' That was pretty cool. "But I think for us as professional golfers," Morikawa continues, "and what a lot of amateurs don’t realize, is where we move and why we move to certain places is to have these games and to compete against other players because that’s what keeps us going ... to keep things sharp." Schauffele, who grew up in San Diego, where he played for San Diego State University and still resides, is leaning toward buying a house in Vegas for more personal reasons. He considered Florida, Texas (Dallas) and Arizona (Scottsdale), but Vegas is just a one-hour flight from San Diego. His girlfriend's parents live there. And the lack of state income tax doesn't hurt. He is, he says, "strongly considering" a move in the not-too-distant future. California Bay Area transplant McNealy could head up the Chamber of Commerce; so smitten is he with his adopted home, he's like a human version of the famous sign: Welcome to fabulous Las Vegas, Nevada. "There’s two TPCs, TPC Summerlin and TPC Las Vegas," McNealy says, ticking off the benefits of this glitzy desert destination. "TPC Summerlin hosts the Shriners event every fall. Just an incredible staff and fantastic host for all the professional golfers out in Vegas. "The weather is good but not too good," he adds, "which is important, because we know what it’s like to play in heat, cold, wind, and just about every day is playable but it doesn’t mean it’s always easy." Whom does he call for a game when he's home? Fellow Stanford product Joseph Bramlett, who happens to be his roommate? Morikawa? "All of the above," he says. "There’s always a game out at TPC Summerlin. The people I see out there most are Alex and Danielle Kang, John Oda, Shintaro Ban, Aaron Wise is out there a bunch, even Scott Piercy, Ryan Moore, Kevin Na. There’s so many guys. Inbee Park is out there. "Lots of great players, and a lot of people to try and win 10 or 20 bucks off of." With a rare two-week homestand at the Shriners and CJ CUP, McNealy and company will be playing for a lot more than that, and, pocket aces, they'll be sleeping in their own beds. Welcome to fabulous Las Vegas, Nevada, indeed.

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