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TOUR Insider: Grading bold predictions

As we hit the last event of the regular season and get ready to ride the rollercoaster of the FedExCup Playoffs, it seems an apropos time to check in on our bold predictions that came way back from last October. It has been another brilliant season full of highlight moments. We’ve seen the resurgence of some stars like THE PLAYERS champion Webb Simpson. We’ve seen Brooks Koepka become a major force. We’ve seen some newcomers emerge with the likes of Austin Cook, Aaron Wise and Satoshi Kodaira leading the rookie race. We’ve seen T.J. Vogel become a Monday king – getting through qualifying an incredible eight times. And we’ve seen some bigger names slide. But they’ve still got time to round back into form. Were we able to predict it all? Let’s see. 18. THE PLAYERS champion Si Woo Kim finds his consistency and becomes a regular threat on the PGA TOUR. Last season Kim shocked the world with his dominant PLAYERS win because for the remainder of the season he was virtually irrelevant. He made 14 cuts in 30 starts with six WDs. While he has certainly been much better this season with 20 made cuts and five top-10s from 27 starts it would be a stretch to claim he’s been a regular threat. We’ll be generous and give ourselves half a point here. 0.5/1 17. Phil Mickelson breaks his win drought. Mickelson arrived at the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship having not tasted victory since 2013. But he was able to hold off a red-hot Justin Thomas to finally return to the winner’s circle. Thomas holed out for a dramatic eagle in regulation play to be part of a playoff but Mickelson held his nerve. 1.5/2 16. Three players will have a taste at World No. 1. Oh we were so close. And it could still come true during the last five weeks of the season. Dustin Johnson has continued to be a pretty good mainstay at the top, holding court for all but four weeks of 2018 so far. Justin Thomas was given his first view from the top in May. Justin Rose had a handful of chances to get to the top and still might, and Brooks Koepka is now breathing down Johnson’s neck. 1.5/3 15. Rose will bloom, and win, among the azaleas. As mentioned above Justin Rose has had a couple of chances to climb to No.1 in the world in what has been a pretty decent season. Wins at the World Golf Championships–HSBC Champions and the Fort Worth Invitational. He also won the Turkish Airlines Open and Indonesian Masters and was inside the top 25 of all four majors and THE PLAYERS. But he did not go one better than his 2017 runner-up at the Masters, finishing T12. Half a point. 2/4 14. Hideki Matsuyama wins a major. Can’t hide behind it. This one was wrong. After winning plenty of tournaments in 2016-17 it seemed a decent gamble on Japan finally getting a major champion. But instead, Matsuyama has seen a significant drop in form. He has just two top-10 results on the PGA TOUR this season. His best major result was T16 at the U.S. Open. Perhaps we should have seen it coming. Most players have a small dip in results after the birth of a first child. But they also bounce back the season after so let’s watch this space. 2/5 13. Rookie of the Year Xander Schauffele will keep on going. This kid is the real deal, so we were right about that. But we also said he’d win again this season, and so far, the trophies have eluded him. Two runner-up finishers. A third. A total of five top-10s and just four missed cuts from 23 starts. Who knows, he may just defend his TOUR Championship title and prove us fully right yet. 2.5/6 12. Tiger Woods plays again on TOUR. What a difference a year makes. This was considered a BOLD prediction last October. We had no idea if Woods would ever return to competitive golf as he recovered from a fourth back surgery, this time a fusion. Of course he has and he’s been amazing. His recent runner-up finish at the PGA Championship was his second of the season. Five top-10s in just 12 starts. Not only has Woods played, he could win this season. If he doesn’t get a trophy, you can be sure the prediction next season will be about claiming an 80th title. And some. 3.5/7 11. Someone will play late Sunday with the career Grand Slam on the line. This was true at the first major of the season as Rory McIlroy moved into the final group behind Patrick Reed at Augusta National. The problem for Rory was he never really threatened from there with a final-round 74 dropping him into a tie for fifth. Phil Mickelson was never a threat at the U.S. Open, and Jordan Spieth needed a late Sunday charge at the PGA Championship to finish T12. 4.5/8 10. Sangmoon Bae makes the FedExCup Playoffs – and so does a Chinese player. Well, we were off the mark with Bae as he returned to the TOUR from his Korean military duty. In 16 starts he has just one top-25 finish and ranks 201st in the FedExCup. And our history-making Chinese players haven’t fared much better. Zinjun Zhang sits 165th in the standings and Marty Dou is way back in 227th. 4.5/9 9. Justin Thomas will keep narrowing the gap between himself and Jordan Spieth. This has certainly happened, but just as much for Thomas’ great play as Spieth’s lack of it. The FedExCup champion has a huge chance to the be the first player to go back-to-back and win the FedExCup again after three wins already. His career win total sits at nine, while Spieth has stalled on 11 after a winless season to this point. Spieth has five top 10s – it certainly has not been a terrible season – but by his own standards he has dipped. The good news? There is still time to turn it around in the Playoffs. 5.5/10 8. Expect two or three wins from among this quartet: Maverick McNealy, Beau Hossler, Aaron Wise and Cameron Champ. Well, Wise held up his end of the bargain with an impressive win at the AT&T Byron Nelson, showing great poise down the stretch on Sunday. He’d been runner-up his previous start. Hossler has threatened often, twice a runner-up including a playoff loss at the Houston Open are part of five top 10s. Champ and McNealy have spent the majority of their time on the Web.com Tour where Champ has a win and a locked-up TOUR card for next season. McNealy has been fair without being great but will have a chance to advance from the Web.com Tour Finals. 5.5/11 7. Anirban Lahiri will use the Presidents Cup as a springboard to win on TOUR. Not yet he hasn’t. The Indian national has four top-10 finishes this season without being a serious threat. Still has the potential to be a superstar. 5.5/12 6. Jason Day and Adam Scott return to winning form. This one is already half true and might become full reality. Both players had been winless last season but Day certainly has returned as a TOUR threat. Wins at the Farmers Insurance Open and Wells Fargo Championship proved it. Scott, however, appeared to be heading for a long-term funk until lately. Scott led the PGA Championship with four holes to play before Brooks Koepka stepped up. His third-place finish was just his second top-10 of the season. Maybe he can push through the FedExCup Playoffs with a win. 6/13 5. U.S. Team will win the Ryder Cup in France. This seemed an obvious statement after their demolition of the International Team in the 2017 Presidents Cup, but as we head toward the contest, the European Team looks very strong. Players like Francesco Molinari and Tommy Fleetwood bring fresh form and Ian Poulter has his fire back. It should be an epic contest. 4. We will have a three-peat winner. Nope. Justin Thomas missed his chance at the CIMB Classic (T17). Hideki Matsuyama was a WD in his dual title defense in Phoenix, and Daniel Berger couldn’t keep pace with a dominant Dustin Johnson at the FedEx St. Jude Classic. 6/14 3. Justin Thomas will win THE PLAYERS Championship. Not this time. Instead he settled for T11. No one really competed with the resurgent Webb Simpson, who lapped the field with an incredible putting performance over four rounds. 6/15 2. There will be another first-time major winner along with Matsuyama. We did get two first-timers at the majors with Patrick Reed winning the Masters and Francesco Molinari taking Italy’s first major title at The Open Championship. But as Matsuyama was not one of them, we can only claim a half point. 6.5/16 1. The 25-and-under brigade will equal if not better their numbers from 2017. While Justin Thomas has kept winning and others like Aaron Wise and Jon Rahm have helped him out, reaching the incredible 18-win total from last season has remained out of reach. 6.5/17. Final Verdict: Currently 6.5/17. Bold predictions are meant to be just that. But we were still hoping for a better than 50 percent record! With that in mind…we’re hoping to earn more points with win from the U.S. Team at the Ryder Cup, and wish Scott, Hossler, Schauffele, Lahiri and Koepka the best in coming weeks.

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Shriners Children’s Open payouts and points: Tom Kim claims $1.44 million and 500 FedExCup pointsShriners Children’s Open payouts and points: Tom Kim claims $1.44 million and 500 FedExCup points

Tom Kim won the Shriners Children’s Open on Sunday at TPC Summerlin in Las Vegas, collecting $1.440 million in official earnings and picking up 500 FedExCup points to move to third place in the season-long standings. South Korea’s Kim, who was +2800 on BetMGM Sportsbook pre-tournament, claimed his second PGA TOUR win in his last four starts and became the first player to win twice on TOUR before turning 21 since Tiger Woods in 1996. Kim outlasted former FedExCup winner Patrick Cantlay, who settled for a tie for second with Matthew NeSmith. Cantlay was tied with Kim with one hole to play, only to pull his drive into the desert and card a triple bogey. A winner at TPC Summerlin in 2017, Cantlay now has three runner-up finishes in the tournament. Both Cantlay and NeSmith picked up $712,000 and 245 FedExCup points. NeSmith now sits fourth on the points list, with Cantlay eighth. Max Homa’s T20 in Las Vegas was enough to put the Fortinet Championship winner back on top of the standings. Here’s a breakdown of the purse and FedExCup points for the Shriners Children’s Open:

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Catch and release, DeLaet’s getawayCatch and release, DeLaet’s getaway

Talk about beginner’s luck. The first time Graham DeLaet ever went fishing in Alaska, he caught a 55-pound king salmon. How do you put that in perspective? Well, consider this. A PGA TOUR pro’s fully-loaded golf bag weighs roughly 40 pounds — and there wasn’t a caddy in sight on the river that day. As big as DeLaet’s salmon was, though, it wasn’t near the record. According to the Alaska Sports Hall of Fame, that chinook weighed in at 97 pounds, four ounces. DeLaet was 3 years old when the late Les Anderson caught the fish on the Kenai River on May 17, 1985. Fast forward about two decades or so. Delaet, who is an avid outdoorsman, had gone to Alaska after the RBC Canadian Open several years ago for some much-needed rest and relaxation. He was using fish eggs for bait and hooked the salmon about 4 or 5 feet directly below the boat. The water was so murky, though, that DeLaet couldn’t see how big the fish was initially. “As soon as I hooked into him, they have a counter on the reel, he was 90 feet out before I even had the chance to think about what was happening,â€� the Canadian said. The battle with the stubborn fish was a challenge. And DeLaet said it felt like he fought to the salmon for a lot longer than the 15 or 20 minutes it probably took. “I almost gave the rod to my buddy,â€� DeLaet recalled. “He was like, man, you’ve got to pull this thing in. “When you are fishing the rivers there and they get into the rapids, it can get away from you so fast. It was kind of fight, fight, fight, fight, get to the boat, gone again, fight, fight, fight. It was fun.â€� DeLaet didn’t get to bring any salmon steaks home with him to Boise, Idaho, though. There were no fleshy pink filets to smoke, either. “It wasn’t the season for chinook, the kings, so I had to release him,â€� he said. Don’t worry. DeLaet says there is photographic evidence, so everyone knows this isn’t a fish story. DeLaet has been back to Alaska several times to see if he could catch another whopper like that one. He’s also fished for salmon in northern Washington with his wife, Ruby, and her family. The Boise State product initially started fishing to help him wind down from the rigors of playing golf for a living. He’s also a hunter and has sought big game in places as far away as Zimbabwe. “But I didn’t really start enjoying (fishing) until probably like 2010, something like that,â€� he said. “Kind of like my rookie year out here, I almost needed something to do to get away from golf, and that was it.â€� DeLaet’s twins, Lyla and Roscoe, now provide that release. When the two, who were born in 2015, get a little older, he hopes they’ll learn to enjoy fishing, too. “It would be a fun thing to share,â€� DeLaet said. That salmon remains the largest freshwater fish DeLaet has ever caught “by a mile,â€� he says. He did land a 40-inch barracuda earlier this year when he was fishing in the Atlantic Ocean near Fort Lauderdale, though. And this time he didn’t have to settle for a photograph. “I got that one mounted, so it’s coming,â€� DeLaet said. “It’s being delivered to Idaho to put up in my garage. It was a pretty nice barracuda.â€� Just in the garage? “Yeah. My wife won’t let me put it in the house, I’m sure,â€� DeLaet said. “Maybe if I get a cabin someday, I can put it in there.â€�

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