Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Emergency 9: Quicken Loans National, Round 1

Emergency 9: Quicken Loans National, Round 1

Here are nine tidbits from the first round of the Quicken Loans National that gamers can use tomorrow, this weekend or down the road. TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm hosts for the second time and measures 7,107 yards (Par-70).   KNOW THY ENEMY These were the top-10 selected golfers in the PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf game presented by SERVPRO. Perfect scoring conditions greeted the morning wave as Andrew Landry tied the professional course record with his bogey-free 63. The afternoon side wasn’t bad either, as another 63 by J.J. Spaun gave us co-leaders after the opening round. The weather will just be hotter tomorrow and the winds relatively similar, so there won’t be a tactical advantage on tee times. The afternoon folks will need to be properly hydrated! PEOPLE’S CHOICE J.B. Holmes isn’t a name we’ve seen at the top of the list or even on the list in recent memory. Gamers are riding the wave of hot, albeit deliberate, play from the big hitter from Kentucky as he’s hit the podium in his last two events. He found 10 fairways and 10 GIR but could only get up-and-down on four of the eight he missed. The ones he did hit left him 117th out of 120 players in proximity. His best round in five here is 71 so gamers will have a decision whether or not to use the bench in Round 2. This was only his second round in the black in his last 17 rounds. RECORD DUO Landry and Spaun both used seven birdies without squaring a bogey to set the first round pace. Since his victory at the Valero Texas Open, another difficult track, Landry has played just two of six weekends and his best payday is T65. He MC last week 81-67 but that was a distant memory today. Spaun popped up at Trinity Forest where he opened with 64 and closed with 63 to share third. Gamers hoping to ride that wave were smacked with MC, MC and T47 in his last three outings. Spaun led the field in Round 1 in SG: off the tee as he split 12-of-14 fairways (T1). He fired 73-78 here last year to MC. HOST WITH THE MOST Tiger Woods finally gets a chance to play at his own tournament, and he looked to create some momentum with a new putter in the bag. Gamers remember that he blistered Memorial tee-to-green but made absolutely nothing. The putter didn’t solve all of his problems as he lost over one shot on the greens but his tee-to-green game wasn’t on point either. The greatest part of Woods’ game is his ability to grind. He wiped out a double with a pair of birdies and added 15 pars to sign for 70 (E). An early start on fresh greens should kick-start the putter in Round 2.  HOOK ‘EM That sound you hear every Thursday is Beau Hossler. For the 10th event running his Round 1 scorecard is in red figures. For the third event in a row it has been 66 or better has his six birdies and one bogey added up to 65 (T5) today. Finishing the job is the next step as he’s only hit the top 10 in one of those three events, T2 last week at TPC River Highlands. He hasn’t MC in this stretch either so this isn’t smoke or mirrors. CIAO! Francesco Molinari made his way into the top 10, and rightfully so as gamers are paying attention. He enters the week in an excellent form as his last three worldwide paychecks have been for a win, second and T25. If the main requirement this week is navigating this track tee-to-green it shouldn’t be any surprise he opened with 67. BRAKES PUMPED While 71 (+1) didn’t knock Kyle Stanley out of contention, it surely wasn’t the start gamers were expecting from the defending champion. Driving wasn’t the issue as he found 12-of-14 fairways but his approach play saw him check in at No. 98. The good news is he’s third on TOUR in GIR so this goes down as an aberration for me and I’m expecting normal service to resume tomorrow.  WALK THE LINE Jimmy Walker has played great for almost three months, and that’s why his 74 in Round 1 was surprising. Marc Leishman only hit three fairways and shot 67, so scoring here can happen. Walker found just seven fairways but checked in at No. 111 in SG: putting and only saved par in three of seven chances missing GIR. He opened on No. 10 with an unplayable and a water ball for double-bogey seven so it could have been worse! He’ll need to make more than one birdie in Round 2. STUDY HALL The Round 1 scoring average was 69.992 (-0.008) as opposed to 71.203 in the inaugural year last year. The 18-hole lead last year was 65. No wind helps! There were eight bogey-free rounds all of last year as this course was the most difficult (non-major) on TOUR. There were five on Friday as red-hot Andrew Putnam (64), Seamus Power (66) and Joel Dahmen (66) joined Landry on Spaun in the clean card club.  C.T. Pan (67) broke his driver on No. 14, but still found a way to birdie that hole and the next two. His eight birdies for the round led the field. He gets to put in a new driver on Friday.

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Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
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Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1400
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All-time Power Rankings: RBC HeritageAll-time Power Rankings: RBC Heritage

For many over time, the physical withdrawal from the first major of the year has presented itself in the form of a 143-mile road trip to the Lowcountry of South Carolina. The RBC Heritage has followed the Masters all but once (2011) since Seve Ballesteros slipped on the green jacket a second time in 1983. Of all tournaments on the PGA TOUR schedule, no other pair contested consecutively at singular host sites have as long history as the duo occupying this familiar fortnight, but the world was robbed of both this year. The fanfare of the parade and cannon blast along the Calibogue Sound was silenced at the latter this week. The RBC Heritage launched four months after the United States landed on the moon for the first time in 1969. There have been 51 champions, 10 of whom are multiple-time winners. In the era as the soft landing after the Masters, 11 winners at Augusta National Golf Club have gone on to compete at Harbour Town Golf Links on Hilton Head Island. Given their success, it’s fair to wonder why more haven’t wanted to keep the rally rolling. Beginning with Bernhard Langer’s victory in 1985, as a group they’ve made 10 cuts with three top-10s and another six top-25s. With such a rich history of success, this all-time Power Rankings slots the top 15 and acknowledges five more who deserve attention. And yet, winners Jack Nicklaus (1975) and David Edwards (1993) didn’t make the cut. Craig Stadler also was omitted despite eight top-10s, including a T2 and three T5s. Gil Morgan and Ernie Els each posted seven top -0s with three podium finishes apiece. Even three-time runner-up David Frost (1988, 1993, 1995), his five top-10s and course-record 61 in 1994 didn’t generate enough consideration. ALL-TIME POWER RANKINGS: RBC HERITAGE 15. Tom Kite He was Luke Donald at Harbour Town before Luke Donald was Luke Donald at Harbour Town. Kite made 22 starts at Harbour Town and didn’t win, but he finished second (1984), T3, fourth and T5 (twice). Ten of his 17 career cuts made here were top-10s. 14. Luke Donald Five times the groomsman, including a playoff loss in 2011, and still not the groom. He also has a pair of T3s and sits second in all-time earnings at Harbour Town. 13. Nick Price Ekes into the ranking portion as the 1997 champion. Beginning with a solo third in 1992, he rung up all five of his top-10s in the span of six appearances. Cashed in each of his last 14 ending in 2006. 12. Bernhard Langer In addition to becoming the only Masters champion to capture victory at Harbour Town in consecutive weeks, he finished T3 twice and fourth once en route to 12 cuts made in 14 appearances. 11. Matt Kuchar It took him 11 starts to secure a plaid jacket in 2014, but he already had shown a liking to the course with two top-10s among four top-25s in the lead-up. Since, he’s added three top-10s, including a runner-up finish last year. 10. Greg Norman The 1988 champion also was a two-time runner-up (1986, 1994). Totaled five top-10s among 12 cuts made in 17 trips. Finished T22 the week after settling for second at the 1996 Masters. 9. Boo Weekley The most recent to successfully defend a title (2008) also has a T6 and another three top-25s. All told, he’s 12-for-12. He’s the only winner in tournament history who hasn’t missed a cut in at least seven appearances. 8. Hubert Green In 26 years on the PGA TOUR, he missed only three editions and picked off two victories (1976, 1978). He also banked a T9 and another four top-25s among 19 cuts made. 7. Stewart Cink Hasn’t missed an edition since winning as a tournament debutant in 2000, but he front-loaded his 15-for-20 record with another victory in 2004 and three more top-10s through 2008. 6. Fuzzy Zoeller Ten times a champion on the PGA TOUR, Harbour Town is the only site where he won more than once. Victories here in 1983 and 1986 headlined five top-10s. Added a T4-T3 burst in 1992-1993. 5. 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His last of 16 top-25s was a T24 in his title defense and last appearance in 1995. Missed only two cuts in 26 career trips. 1. Davis Love III He’s done it all at Harbour Town, including successfully defending one of his five titles (1992) spanning 1987-2003. Also finished T2, T3, fourth and T5. Eleven top-10s among 23 cuts made in 30 trips. HONORABLE MENTIONS Johnny Miller Really? The Desert Fox? Yes, indeed. The regionally charged moniker disrespects his career as a whole. Piled onto the mountain of evidence is the fact that he was a two-time champion at Harbour Town (1972, 1974). Alas, he didn’t register another top-20 in another 11 trips. Arnold Palmer The first winner of the RBC Heritage (in 1969), and the only under par in that edition at 1-under 283, didn’t trail after any round. After a T3 in his title defense, he went 5th-T10-T14-T23 through 1975. Doug Tewell Prevailed here in 1980 for his first of four PGA TOUR titles. 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DeChambeau (63) bests ‘childhood idol’ WoodsDeChambeau (63) bests ‘childhood idol’ Woods

Bryson DeChambeau got the edge over Tiger Woods during the third round of the Dell Technologies Championship, but even he knows better than to like his theoretical chances against Woods in his prime. Woods put up a solid 3-under 68, but he was no match for DeChambeau who closed with two birdies and an eagle to post an 8-under 63 and vault into contention for his second win in as many weeks. DeChambeau referred to Woods as his “childhood idol,� and he admitted that the jitters generated by the pairing didn’t settle down fully until he birdied No. 7 – his fourth birdie of the day.

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