Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting PGA Championship 2018 live blog: Tiger Woods shoots best-ever final round in a major; Brooks Koepka captures his third major title

PGA Championship 2018 live blog: Tiger Woods shoots best-ever final round in a major; Brooks Koepka captures his third major title

This is the final round of the 100th PGA Championship. 6:59 p.m.: Brooks Koepka cozies his birdie putt to inside tap-in range to secure his victory at Bellerive. In all fairness to Koepka, he played LIGHTS OUT golf over this final major of the year.

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Zurich Classic of New Orleans
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All inAll in

Imagine you are 41. Or 71. Or 101. Now imagine life has lately felt like a 1,000-piece puzzle of white space. It’s not supposed to be white space; it’s supposed to be a vivid picture, bursting with color and texture. You’ve just got to see it in your mind’s eye, and so you keep working, piece by agonizing piece, because it’s there, somewhere, and you’ve still got something left to give. Much ink has been spilled on the appeal of Tiger Woods, who this week at the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas makes his first competitive start in 10 months. But the appeal of late-career Woods boils down to this: He thinks he still has something left to give, and who among us can’t relate? Regardless of age and circumstances, we ALL think we have something left to give. “I think Tiger will definitely win another tournament,� Hank Haney, one of his former coaches, said on his SiriusXM PGA TOUR Radio show on Monday. “I think he’s got a good shot at winning a major. If he practices part-time and he is healthy enough to play 15 to 18 tournaments and is not on pain-killer medication and is able to move freely like he is now, I think he can win golf tournaments.� Woods has 79 TOUR victories, including 14 majors, and we all know these numbers by heart because they have been frozen in time. But could there be more? Tom Brady and Peyton Manning won Super Bowls at 39, Manning after having undergone cervical neck fusion. Jack Nicklaus won the Masters and Johnny Miller the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am at 46, Miller after being chased into semi-retirement by the yips. “Handsome� Harry Gant was NASCAR’s oldest to take the checkered flag at 52, his left-turn signal no doubt blinking the whole way at the 1992 Champion Spark Plug 400. You think Woods has no chance? Consider: When he came back at least year’s Hero, his surgically repaired back still not quite surgically repaired (as we now know), he paced the field with 24 birdies. On Monday, news began trickling out of the Bahamas regarding his latest Hero-ics: Woods was outdriving his practice-round playing partner, Patrick Reed, by anywhere from 10-20 yards. Haney went on the air with praise for Woods’ latest swing, and Golf Channel analyst Brandel Chamblee took to Twitter with similarly positive reviews. The pessimist in us says to give it up, seeing as how Woods has made just one PGA TOUR start in the last two years, and he hasn’t won since 2013. The optimist reminds that he won five times that year. And the heart says that it’s better to dream. Always. That might sound preposterous, but then so did the idea that Nolan Ryan would pitch his sixth ho-hitter at age 43, and Sam Snead would win the Greater Greensboro Open at Sedgefield Country Club for the eighth time at 52, and, well, you get the idea. Doug Ferguson of Sports Betting News points out that this marks the 10th time Woods has returned from layoffs of 10 weeks or longer. All but two of those layoffs have been injury-related—balky knee; ruptured Achilles; bad back—and not all of the comebacks have gone well. Last year, despite making all those birdies at the Hero, and shooting a second-round 65, Woods finished 22 shots behind the winner, Hideki Matsuyama. Of the 17 players who finished (Justin Rose withdrew), Woods beat only Russell Knox and Emiliano Grillo. Still, Woods had big plans for 2017. Then he missed the cut at the Farmers Insurance Open, shot an opening 77 and withdrew from the Dubai Desert Classic a week later, pulled out of his next two scheduled starts, and had surgery in April. So here he comes again, and what are we to think? Should we decry our own stupidity for falling for this old ruse again? Nah. Today is a day to appeal to our better selves and remember that Hank Aaron hit his 715th home run at age 40, and Pablo Picasso painted “Guernica� at 55. To accept that Father Time is undefeated, yes, but to accept, too, that we all have something left to give, and the essence of life itself is finding out exactly what that is.

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How to watch the John Deere Classic, Round 3: Featured Groups, live scores, tee times, TV timesHow to watch the John Deere Classic, Round 3: Featured Groups, live scores, tee times, TV times

Round 3 of the John Deere Classic takes place Saturday from TPC Deere Run in Illinois. Luke List takes a one shot lead into the third round. Sebastián Muñoz sits a stroke back with many big names looking to move up the leaderboard. Here’s everything you need to know to follow the action, including Featured Groups for PGA TOUR LIVE. Leaderboard Full tee times HOW TO FOLLOW (All times ET) TELEVISION: Thursday-Friday, 3-6 p.m. ET (Golf Channel). Saturday-Sunday, 1-3 p.m. (Golf Channel), 3-6 p.m. (CBS). PGA TOUR LIVE: Thursday-Friday, 7:45 a.m.-6 p.m. ET (Featured Groups). Saturday-Sunday, 7:45 a.m.-3 p.m. (Featured Groups), 3-6 p.m. (Featured Holes). RADIO: Thursday-Friday, 12-6 p.m. ET Saturday-Sunday, 1-6 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com). TOURCast: Get shot-by-shot info in real time with shot tracks and video with TOURCast. TOUR Pulse: Get the PGA TOUR app to utilize TOUR Pulse, which provides users the ability to experience a mix of content, such as video highlights, written hole summaries and stat graphics on every player after every hole they complete. FEATURED GROUPS Zach Johnson, Patton Kizzire, Willie Mack III (tee times) Wes Roach, D.J. Trahan, Steve Stricker (tee times) MUST READS Luke List shoots second round 63 to lead John Deere Classic Man’s best friend serves as good luck for Adam Schenk With Mom and Dad outside the ropes, Smalley starts strong Insider: 50 years of memorable moments from the John Deere Classic Small town, big league: John Deere Classic turns 50 CALL OF THE DAY

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International Team maintains healthy lead at Presidents CupInternational Team maintains healthy lead at Presidents Cup

MELBOURNE, Australia – Ernie Els was quick to act. The captain of the International team at the Presidents Cup sensed a flatness in the attitude of his squad for a brief moment or two after they allowed a minor fightback from the U.S. late Friday at Royal Melbourne. RELATED: Two winning putts – and a T.O. celebration – keeps U.S. close | Day 2 match recaps | Day 3 morning match previews At one point the Internationals were well on track to win their first Foursomes session since 2005, leading in all five matches on the back nine. But some clutch putts from the U.S. allowed a late reprieve as the two teams shared the session 2.5-2.5. Despite the momentum shift Els rallied his troops and reminded them of the overall score. A 6.5-3.5 lead is their first through two sessions since 2005 and their biggest through the same period since a four point advantage in 1998. This was no time for negativity. This was a time to embrace their strong position. “This (U.S. team) is the best. Sometimes it bites you. But you put a spear in it and bite back,â€� Els said. “It’s perspective, isn’t it. I’ve got to look at where we are. It’s easy to just look at where we could have been, because it was looking really unbelievable. But we’re in a very good position.â€� Els rammed home the message to his men. And in the end the flip might have been a timely reminder that when you count your chickens before they hatch you are asking for trouble. “My guys learnt a lot from this afternoon. We won’t make this happen again,â€� Els said. “I want my guys to play as good as they can and get as good a result as they can. They have put a lot of work into this and it’s been quite a week already. This was probably good for them, showing what can happen the last couple holes.â€� If Els sounds intense it is because he is. ‘The Big Easy’ as he is commonly known has put countless months and hours into this captaincy as he tries to produce the first International win since 1998. With 20 of the points still up for grabs his side needs nine more. Eight of them go on the line on Saturday with four morning Four-Ball matches and then four afternoon Foursomes battles. Els has continued to lean on his secret analytics and data when it comes to his pairings. Three of his victorious Four-Ball teams from Thursday reunite after being split on Friday. The only change is Haotong Li coming in to play for the first time this week – possibly a product of the rule where a player must play at least one team session before Sunday Singles. To those in the team, his steadfastness on his pre-tournament plan is not surprising. “It almost looks like he wants this more than when he’s out there playing,â€� fellow South African and team member Louis Oosthuizen says of Els. “You could see him; I love the passion. I think if you give him a club in his hand, he’ll hit the shot for you. He’s so into this week and he’s been a real good captain. “He’s been an unbelievable player, as well, but this means a lot for me seeing how he is as a captain and how involved he is. He’s brilliant.â€� For U.S. captain Tiger Woods the final hour or so is something he and his side are grasping with two hands. Staring down the barrel of a potential 9-1 deficit they now have the ability to wrestle the lead before the Saturday afternoon Foursomes should they come out hot in Four-Ball. Woods has sat himself out for the first time Saturday morning after going 2-0 with Justin Thomas over the first two sessions. The other 10 Americans have combined for just 1.5 points so far and will need to shoulder more of the load. As their best performer Woods could have once again sent himself out but the 82-time PGA TOUR winner is perhaps mindful of burnout before the Singles. Whether he plays Foursomes in the afternoon remains to be seen. He has replaced himself with Rickie Fowler who is 2-0-1 with Thomas as a partner having played together at the 2017 Presidents Cup. Thomas provided the big putt on Friday, making a 17-foot birdie on the final hole to win the match. “That was kind of the game plan. It would be hard for me to go all the sessions,â€� Woods said. “I’ve been fortunate enough to go out there with J.T. and we’ve gotten two points. J.T. played great and Rickie played awesome this afternoon. They have been looking forward to playing with one another. They have had success before and so I sent them back out.â€� The other American win Friday came in similar fashion as Patrick Cantlay came up clutch on the final hole to provide victory with Xander Schauffele over Adam Hadwin and Joaquin Niemann. Fowler and Gary Woodland also won two of the last three holes to steal a half point against Sungjae Im and Cameron Smith. “At one point … it looked pretty bleak, but the guys turned it around,â€� Woods said. “They played phenomenal coming in. It was important for us to end the way we did and it totally changed the last hour.â€� Marc Leishman, who combined with Oosthuizen for a 3 and 2 win over Dustin Johnson and Matt Kuchar, felt the jetlag and rust was wearing off the U.S. side who arrived on Monday from the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas. Woods said it was more about the conditions of Royal Melbourne – whose hard and fast greens are a stark contrast to most PGA TOUR events. “The energy has been there. These guys are all young and extremely excited about being a part of this team,â€� Woods said. “More than anything, it’s just getting a feel for this golf course. It is fast. It was faster today than it was yesterday. The guys have been able to go out there and get a feel for it. It’s amazing, I was telling the guys, the acceptance of a wedge shot to 20, 30, 40, feet is a good shot. That’s normally not the case, but it is this week.â€� Saturday becomes somewhat critical if history is a guide. The U.S. team has trailed only twice going to Singles in the history of the Presidents Cup. On those occasions they lost in 1998 and tied in 2003. The Internationals want to ensure they keep pace out front. “We are trying to not get ahead of ourselves at all. It’s a long way to go, but Ernie and his team of assistants have done a fantastic job of getting us prepared mentally and strategy-wise with the golf course,â€� International veteran Adam Scott said. “There’s a calmness, a calm confidence about our team here.â€�

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