Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Inside the Field: The Honda Classic

Inside the Field: The Honda Classic

Winner – PGA/U.S. Open Championship Jason Dufner Martin Kaymer Rory McIlroy Justin Thomas Jimmy Walker Winner – THE PLAYERS Championship Rickie Fowler Si Woo Kim Tiger Woods Winner – The Masters Sergio Garcia Adam Scott Winner – World Golf Championship Event Russell Knox Shane Lowry Winners of the Arnold Palmer Inv. & the Memorial (Last 3 Years) Matt Every David Lingmerth William McGirt Winner – FedExCup – Last Five Seasons Billy Horschel Tournament Winner in Past Two Seasons Ryan Armour Daniel Berger Wesley Bryan Greg Chalmers Austin Cook Bryson DeChambeau Fabián Gómez Cody Gribble Emiliano Grillo Brian Harman Russell Henley Mackenzie Hughes Billy Hurley III Smylie Kaufman Chris Kirk Kevin Kisner Patton Kizzire Peter Malnati Graeme McDowell Ryan Moore Grayson Murray D.A. Points Ted Potter, Jr. Patrick Reed Webb Simpson Brandt Snedeker Chris Stroud Brian Stuard Hudson Swafford Vaughn Taylor Jhonattan Vegas Gary Woodland Career Money Exemption Retief Goosen Sponsors Exemptions – Members not otherwise exempt Ben Crane Jim Furyk Sponsors Exemptions – Unrestricted Kiradech Aphibarnrat Sam Burns Dylan Frittelli Bernd Wiesberger PGA Section Champion\Player of the Year Andrew Filbert Past Champion of Respective Event Padraig Harrington Michael Thompson Life Member Vijay Singh Top 125 on Prior Season’s FedEx Cup Points List Louis Oosthuizen Charles Howell III Lucas Glover Keegan Bradley Luke List Anirban Lahiri Ian Poulter Stewart Cink Scott Brown Jamie Lovemark Sung Kang Ollie Schniederjans Rafa Cabrera Bello Sean O’Hair Robert Streb Bud Cauley Kevin Tway Danny Lee Kelly Kraft Patrick Rodgers Morgan Hoffmann Chad Campbell Cheng Tsung Pan Harold Varner III J.B. Holmes Camilo Villegas J.J. Spaun Scott Piercy Michael Kim Scott Stallings Byeong Hun An Martin Flores Luke Donald Richy Werenski Ryan Blaum Robert Garrigus Brian Gay Derek Fathauer Tyrone Van Aswegen Harris English Dominic Bozzelli Nick Watney John Huh Blayne Barber Ben Martin Rory Sabbatini J.J. Henry Top 125 (Prior Season Nonmember) Thomas Pieters Tommy Fleetwood Tyrrell Hatton Alex Noren Major Medical Extension Ryan Palmer Sangmoon Bae Jon Curran Bob Estes John Peterson Leading Money Winner from Web.com Tour & Web.com Tour Finals Chesson Hadley Top Finishers from Web.com Tour Prior Season (reordered) Alex Cejka Andrew Landry Peter Uihlein Tyler Duncan Ben Silverman Tom Hoge Martin Piller Nicholas Lindheim Jonathan Randolph Brice Garnett Aaron Wise Abraham Ancer Stephan Jaeger Talor Gooch Shawn Stefani Xinjun Zhang Adam Schenk Joel Dahmen Rob Oppenheim Corey Conners Bronson Burgoon Cameron Tringale

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3rd Round Score - A. Putnam
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5-155
Under 68.5+120
3rd Round Score - Cameron Champ
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 69.5+115
Under 69.5-150
3rd Round 2 Ball - C. Champ v A. Putnam
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Andrew Putnam-115
Cameron Champ+125
Tie+750
Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Justin Thomas+1100
Joaquin Niemann+1400
Shane Lowry+1600
Tommy Fleetwood+1800
Tyrrell Hatton+1800
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Bryson DeChambeau+700
Rory McIlroy+1000
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Shane Lowry+3500
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Martin Contini goes from Monday qualifier to inside top 10 at The Honda ClassicMartin Contini goes from Monday qualifier to inside top 10 at The Honda Classic

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. – Argentina’s Martin Contini never had played in a PGA TOUR event before this week’s Honda Classic at PGA National. What better way to introduce himself to thousands of fans than to climb into the middle of the bleachers next to the 18th green at the Champion Course after hitting his second shot up there? Contini sat down, said hello, even waved to an NBC camera, the well-served fans loving every moment. He did so with a smile on his face, and why not? Having survived a longshot Monday qualifier – 130 players, four spots – just to get here, the 27-year-old is playing on house money. He shot 2-under 68 on Saturday, and finds himself tied for seventh heading into Sunday. Contini is one of a handful of dreamers and new faces who have made the most of a great opportunity this week at The Honda Classic, a $8 million PGA TOUR stop in its 50th year. Three of the four players who made it through qualifying at West Palm’s Banyon Cay are still playing, including left-hander Rick Lamb, who survived a 16-for-1 spot playoff early Tuesday morning. Lamb is 31, a pro for nearly a decade, and has played a season on the PGA TOUR, so he is not as caught up in the bright lights as some others. He has Korn Ferry Tour membership as a past champion (2016 LECOM Health Challenge, where he also was a Monday qualifier), but he is not expecting to get any starts from that. So he’ll chase the PGA TOUR and try to get into events via the Monday route. It may be easier hitting all the numbers in Saturday’s PowerBall. Lamb, who shot 70 and is in the middle of the pack (T-35) at 2-over 212, had to summon some heroics not once, but twice this week. First came the 16-for-1 playoff at Banyon Cay that spilled into Tuesday. The playoff began on a reachable par 5, and Lamb knew somebody was going to do something special. He wanted to make sure it was him. He hit driver and 4-iron to 40 feet and rolled in the eagle putt. Nobody matched it. On Friday, Lamb stood in the ninth fairway (his 36th hole) at PGA National’s Champion on the wrong side of the cut line. He needed birdie, hit an approach to 10 feet, and ran in the putt to finish at 2-over 142 and earn a weekend time. In golf, there is nothing given. “Pretty much every other professional athlete has a guaranteed contract, they know what they’re making (salary-wise),” Lamb said Saturday. “They just go out and try to perform their best. For us, there’s another layer of pressure that, if you don’t make the cut, you’re not making any money that week.” Andrew Kozan is a young local professional playing the Korn Ferry Tour who grew up playing PGA National (he was a member from age 7 to 15), attending The Honda with his parents each year. He, too, had planned to participate in Monday qualifying, but a phone call on Sunday night from tournament co-chair Gary Nicklaus would alter those plans. Kozan was given the tournament’s final sponsor exemption. Shortly after sun broke Saturday morning, Kozan, 23, stood on the 18th fairway, the only player on the golf course. Facing 258 yards into the green at the par-5 18th hole, he was given the option not to finish his second round in darkness Friday evening, so chose to return first thing Saturday morning. (The other two players in the group, who were missing the cut, decided to finish and depart). Kozan made a safe par to complete his second-round 75, making the cut on the number, then went off alone as the first player out in the third round, shooting 68. There would be only 13 scores all day in the 60s. He had his feet up before lunch, which is one effective way to climb the leaderboard at Honda. The Champion Course took its pound of flesh on Saturday, the field averaging more than two shots over par. The Bear Trap alone (holes 15-17) accounted for 13 double bogeys and five “others.” By day’s end, Kozan was inside the top 20, and with a good round on Sunday, he can collect his largest paycheck as a professional. (Previously, it was the $30,000 he earned at Korn Ferry Q-School. How long has Kozan pictured himself inside the ropes, playing the Honda? “Every day since I was probably 7,” he said. “Honda’s in what, February, March? They started putting the stands up in December. You always want to go out and play as close to the event as you can, putt with the stands up, just to feel like you’re playing the event. I mean … it’s a dream come true this week.” Same for Contini. He likely has the best shot from the Dreamer Division to potentially make something big happen on Sunday. “The cut was great, but I didn’t want it to stop there, so I’m going to try to reach the top 5 tomorrow,” he said. Such a finish (any top 10) would get Contini into the PGA TOUR’s Puerto Rico Open next week. Walking along with him on Saturday he had his brother and his uncle, who hopped on a plane once Contini surprised them with a phone call telling them he had earned his way into the event. Contini treated his relatives to a wild finish at 18. He drove it into the left rough, 250 yards from the flagstick. With water short and right, he tried to get his second shot somewhere in or around the left greenside bunker. But the ball jumped on him, flying midway into the stands like a home run ball the Florida Marlins would envy. He went into the stands to fetch it, his ball resting under a spectator’s feet in the middle of the crowd. What to do? He took a seat next to the fan. It was pure fun up there. “I should go find him and give him the ball,” Contini said after he had signed his scorecard. “I’m going to do that.” So much at stake in the final round. At Honda, it will be about more than the man who will leave with the trophy on Sunday. Contini was asked what a high finish would mean to him. After all, with the Korn Ferry Tour on a three-week hiatus, he expected to be off this week, and getting some rest. He smiled. “It would mean the world,” he said.

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Masters 2019: Estranged family still causing issues for Patrick Reed, according to NYT reportMasters 2019: Estranged family still causing issues for Patrick Reed, according to NYT report

Reed’s father and sister showed up to the Tour Championship in Atlanta last September and a week later went to the Ryder Cup outside of Paris. Although unaware of their presence while competing outside of Paris at Le Golf National, their appearance at East Lake startled Reed. Though Reed had his family thrown out of the 2014 U.S. Open, the PGA Tour has explained to Patrick that his family is allowed to be on site of the tournament, only facing prospect of ejection if they say or do anything that would constitute a threat.

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Justin Thomas would make FedExCup history with TOUR Championship winJustin Thomas would make FedExCup history with TOUR Championship win

ATLANTA – Justin Thomas stands on the precipice of history at the TOUR Championship. Tiger Woods, the only two-time winner of the FedExCup, never won it back-to-back. And nine of 11 FedExCup champions haven’t even come close, failing to advance to the season-ending TOUR Championship at East Lake one year after hoisting the FedExCup trophy. “Yeah, I’m excited to have an opportunity to do something that no one has ever done, which is pretty cool,â€� said Thomas, who is nursing what he calls a minor wrist injury and wasn’t feeling his best Tuesday, when he curtailed his range work in the stifling heat. “I’m not sure if it was true or not, but I heard that no one had been in the top 5 (entering the TOUR Championship) after winning the FedExCup, so I take a lot of pride and a lot of honor in that.â€� It is true. Of the two FedExCup champions who made it back to the TOUR Championship the next year, Brandt Snedeker (won in ’12) finished 12th in the FedExCup in ’13, and Jordan Spieth (won in ’15) got back to Atlanta in ’16, finishing 9th in the FedExCup. Two for 11 is not very good, and while that statistic is partly the result of Woods’ injuries, not even Snedeker or Spieth came to the TOUR Championship looking as good as Thomas. At No. 5 in the FedExCup, he controls his own destiny — the top 5 automatically win the FedExCup with a win at the TOUR Championship — and is in the best shape of any FedExCup winner to repeat. “I don’t have as many wins and I didn’t win a major,â€� Thomas said of this season, “but statistically I think I’ve improved in about every category, which is huge.â€� Indeed, he’s gone from five wins to three, most recently at the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational, but Thomas has improved in almost all statistical categories. He’s gone from 6th to 3rd in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green; 45th to 38th in Strokes Gained: Putting; and 5th to 3rd in Strokes Gained: Total. He has held the top spot in the FedExCup for eight weeks, and apart from the first week of the season, he’s never dropped below ninth. Now he’s got to finish it off at the TOUR Championship a year after he finished second to Xander Schauffele by a shot. Thomas has said more than once that the tournament loss still rankles him, and when asked if he could have any shot back from that week, he doesn’t hesitate. “Yeah, my tee shot on 18, for sure,â€� he said. “I thought I hit the fairway there. I’m probably not going to make worse than birdie (if I hit the fairway).â€� Five back going into the final round, Thomas nearly came all the way back, his 25-foot birdie try on 18 curling across the front edge of the hole and barely staying out. He signed for a 66. Schauffele, playing well behind him, nearly reached the 18th green in two and birdied the hole when his three-foot birdie putt barely caught the edge of the cup and tumbled in. “Yeah, it still bothers me—18 is not a very hard par-5,â€� Thomas said. “And I hit such a great putt on 18 that I still don’t know how it didn’t go in. The par-5s are something that I’m able to use my strength and my advantage with my length, and to not birdie a par-5 to close a tournament when I had a chance to win was and still is upsetting. “But yeah, at the end of the day, winning the FedExCup is a huge deal and a life-changer,â€� he added, “but to have six wins in a season would have been pretty sweet.â€� Adding to the intrigue this week, Thomas did his pre-tournament press conference with his right wrist wrapped in medical tape. He said he injured it while hitting a shot on the 13th hole of the final round of the BMW Championship at Aronimink, where he finished T12. “I’d never had an injury before,â€� he said. “… I took last week off, didn’t hit a ball. I chipped and putted a lot, so my short game feels pretty good.â€� Never had an injury? Well, OK. Thomas is making history already. As for making FedExCup history, time will tell.

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