Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Jason Day’s clutch play clinches 12th TOUR title at the 2018 Wells Fargo Championship

Jason Day’s clutch play clinches 12th TOUR title at the 2018 Wells Fargo Championship

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Jason Day led by three shots just four holes earlier, but now his advantage was gone. Back-to-back bogeys at 13 and 14 dropped him into a tie with 21-year-old rookie Aaron Wise. Day had talked throughout the week about the confidence he’d regained after his difficult 2017 season, but now he was in danger of losing a comfortable lead on the back nine. He responded with some clutch play that should only increase his self-belief as he makes the short trip south to TPC Sawgrass, where he won THE PLAYERS Championship two years ago. Day turned the Green Mile red, playing the course’s trying closing holes in 2 under par, to finish two shots ahead of Wise and Nick Watney, who collected his best PGA TOUR finish in three years. A final-round 69 gave Day his second win of the season and moved him to No. 2 in the FedExCup standings. “I felt like I went 10 rounds out there, just fighting against myself,â€� Day said. “Aaron played tremendous golf coming in. … I didn’t have the best day off the tee and even into the greens, but I had a really good day on the greens and around the greens.â€� Day led the field in Strokes Gained: Around-the-Green and was second in Strokes Gained: Putting. He ranked 50th in Strokes Gained: Approach this week and lost strokes off the tee Sunday. Day, who began the day with a two-stroke lead, made his first birdie at the second hole. He made back-to-back bogeys at Nos. 5 and 6, but responded with birdies at three of the next four holes. After failing to get up-and-down on the par-3 13th, he pulled his tee shot into the lake left of the short 14th. The situation got more precarious when he missed an 11-foot birdie putt on the week’s easiest hole, the par-5 15th. That hole represents Quail Hollow’s last realistic birdie chance. Unless you’re Day, apparently. After a 380-yard tee shot on the downhill 16th hole, he hit his 114-yard approach to 11 feet and made the birdie putt. It was one of nine birdies on that hole Sunday. Then he arrived at the day’s most difficult hole and hit the shot that defined this tournament. Day’s 7-iron tee shot on the 223-yard, par-3 took a big hop when it landed in the middle of the green, and was still rolling speedily when it struck the center of the flagstick and stopped a couple feet away. “It was on a cracking line, it was beautiful,â€� Day said. “Things like that are what you need to win golf tournaments.â€� A par at the last gave the 30-year-old his 12th PGA TOUR victory. WISE GUY Aaron Wise used his short game to keep pressure on Jason Day on the back nine. His par saves on the final two holes resulted in the best finish of his career. Wise jumped from 105th to 51st in the FedExCup with his first top-10 of the season. He was alone in second place until Nick Watney, playing alongside Day in the final group, holed a 59-foot birdie putt on the last green. Wise got up-and-down from the downslope of a greenside bunker to birdie the 14th and saved par after missing right of the 17th and 18th greens. He holed par putts of 7 and 8 feet on the final two holes. “Casey (Martin, his coach at Oregon) told me that if you ever want to play the TOUR, you have to have a good short game,â€� Wise said. “Ever since then I’ve really worked on it.â€� Wise won the 2016 NCAA individual while at Oregon and helped the Ducks claim the team title. He turned pro that year and won his second start on the Mackenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada to finish fourth on the Order of Merit and graduate to the Web.com Tour. He won there last year to earn his PGA TOUR card. WOODS IS SHUT OUT Tiger Woods shot a final-round 74 after failing to make a birdie. It was just his 11th birdie-less round on the PGA TOUR as a professional. He finished T55 at 2-over 286 (71-73-68-74). “I didn’t putt well again,â€� said Woods, who lost 5.7 strokes on the greens. He finished in the top 15 in both Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee and Approach-the-Green. Woods said all week that he was befuddled by greens that were firm but slow. Woods, who won THE PLAYERS in both 2001 and 2013, now moves on to his first start at TPC Sawgrass since 2015. “I know the golf course, which is nice, and I know what to expect there,â€� Woods said. “I’m very pleased with the way I’m swinging. It’s just a matter of making sure I get the right speed for those greens because it’s going to be a little bit quicker than it was here.â€� NOTABLES Phil Mickelson got up-and-down from the hazard on the final hole to extend his streak of top-five finishes at Quail Hollow. He has finished in the top five in eight of his 15 trips to Quail Hollow for the Wells Fargo, including his last three. Mickelson made just six pars in his final-round 69. After making the cut with just a shot to spare, he shot 9-under 133 (64-69) on the weekend. Mickelson, who won THE PLAYERS in 2007, will be third in the FedExCup standings when he arrives at TPC Sawgrass. Bryson DeChambeau finished fourth despite making triple-bogey on his third hole of the week. He closed with three consecutive sub-par rounds (65-66-70) after shooting a first-round 75. It’s DeChambeau’s third top-four finish in his last four starts. He now ranks 17th in the FedExCup. One day after shooting 62, Peter Uihlein shot 71 to finish fifth. His third top-10 finish of the season moved the first-year TOUR member to 62nd in the FedExCup. Masters champion Patrick Reed, playing his first individual tournament since winning at Augusta National, shot a final-round 69 to finish eighth. It was Reed’s sixth consecutive top-10 finish. He is fifth in the FedExCup standings. Reed finished runner-up at the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow. SUPERLATIVES Longest drive: Wise’s 383-yard drive on 16 was the longest tee shot of the week by three yards. The week’s four longest tee shots all came at No. 16 on Sunday. Jason Day, Tony Finau and Charles Howell III hit 380-yard tee shots on 16 in the final round. Longest putt: Rickie Fowler’s eagle putt from 76 feet, 1 inch on the seventh hole was the longest putt of the day. He shot 73 and finished 21st. Fowler is 18th in the FedExCup. Lowest score: Tony Finau shot a bogey-free 66 to jump 45 spots and into a tie for 21st. It was the lowest round of the day by two shots. He is ninth in the FedExCup. Hardest hole: The 223-yard, par-3 17th played to a 3.57 scoring. There were an equal number of birdies (3) and ‘others’ on the hole Sunday. Easiest hole: The 346-yard, par-4 eighth hole played to a 3.49 scoring average. There were two eagles and 36 birdies on the hole. No one made bogey and only one player made double-bogey. SHOT OF THE DAY CALL OF THE DAY For play-by-play coverage of the PGA TOUR, listen Thursday – Sunday on PGATOUR.com.

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Q&A: David Feherty talks Tiger WoodsQ&A: David Feherty talks Tiger Woods

David Feherty was announced Tuesday as the emcee of next month’s World Golf Hall of Fame induction ceremony for Tiger Woods, former PGA TOUR Commissioner Tim Finchem, four-time LPGA Tour major winner Susie Maxwell Berning, and trailblazing golf course designer Marion Hollins. The ceremony is set for March 9 — the eve of THE PLAYERS Championship — at PGA TOUR Headquarters in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. Feherty spoke to PGATOUR.COM by phone from his farm, about 90 minutes south of Dallas, about his long career covering the headliner of the next WGHOF class, 82-time TOUR winner and 15-time major winner Woods. PGATOUR.COM: How much of your career did you spend covering Tiger? DAVID FEHERTY: Yeah, well, 20 years with CBS, and it’s been seven now with NBC. He turned pro and I became a broadcaster within a month of each other, and I was assigned his group, it seemed, every time he was on our air. It was the most amazing thing. He made me look like an idiot on several occasions, saying he had to punch out or whatever when he didn’t. I had a front-row seat for the greatest golfer in history. PGATOUR.COM: One of those times when he proved you wrong, he was in gnarly rough at the last at Firestone South, about 190 out, and you said he couldn’t reach the green. He took a mighty lash with a wedge and knocked it 10 or 15 feet from the pin. You’d left your mic open when Ernie Els, who was playing with him, said something that only later got bleeped out. What did he say? DAVID FEHERTY: He said, “F— me.” I campaigned for a long time that we don’t need to show Tiger’s reaction to these shots he hits. It’s the guy he’s playing with, that’s the relevant reaction. That was when Ernie was the second-best player in the world, so you can’t get a more relevant reaction than that. PGATOUR.COM: You once called Tiger a loser because he hadn’t won, and he went along with it and said he wasn’t even the first loser. At another tournament, this one he did win, you said he played the last three holes “like a $3 violin.” Did he appreciate that you gave him the needle because he was so feared that no one else would? DAVID FEHERTY: He appreciated when someone gave him the opportunity to be self-deprecating, because he was so much better than everybody else. I think it was difficult for him to talk about it at times because it’s like a broken record. He would make birdie, they would make bogey, the gap would just get wider. Hell, he won a U.S. Open by 15 shots. I remember writing somewhere that the last person to do that was Old Tom Morris and he was playing with a badger’s testicle stuffed with seagull feathers. PGATOUR.COM: Tiger was obviously great, but from the ground, you probably saw that he was even better than everybody thought. DAVID FEHERTY: That was often the hardest part of my job, giving the viewer a realistic sense of just how difficult it was, how impossible it would be for anybody to do it in that situation. He was the yardstick by which all others measured their inferiority. PGATOUR.COM: You guys did a set piece in which he was pretending to be annoyed by you, and you were dragged away by security hollering, “I crocheted you a headcover!” Did you have a knack for cracking him up over the years? DAVID FEHERTY: Yeah, I think so, especially in the early years when he wasn’t so serious. I think the media piled on him so much that as the years went by, he was liable to give less and less, until recently where he’s kind of started to soften again. When you’re that good and nobody else has been that good — people always talk about the comparison between Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods. Jack Nicklaus told me nobody has ever played golf like Tiger Woods. 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