Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Wyndham Championship, Round 2: Leaderboard, tee times, TV times

Wyndham Championship, Round 2: Leaderboard, tee times, TV times

It was an historic day in Greensboro, N.C., as Brandt Snedeker became just the 10th TOUR player to card a sub-60 round. He is the first player to do so after being over par during his round and leads Ryan Moore and John Oda by four shots heading into Round 2. The final chance to make it into the top-125 of the FedExCup continues as players jockey for position heading into the weekend. Facebook Watch will offer streaming coverage of this weekend’s action from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. ET on Saturday and Sunday. Here’s everything you need to know for Round 2: Round 2 leaderboard Round 2 tee times HOW TO WATCH/LISTEN (ALL TIMES ET) PGA TOUR LIVE: 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. TELEVISION: 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. (Golf Channel) RADIO: 12 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. (PGA TOUR RADIO on Sirius XM or at PGATOUR.COM) NOTABLE GROUPINGS 7:40 a.m.: Daniel Berger, Jason Dufner, Bill Haas 7:50 a.m.: Henrik Stenson, Jhonattan Vegas, Ryan Moore 12:40 p.m.: Billy Horschel, Hideki Matsuyama, Brandt Snedeker 12:50 p.m.: Webb Simpson, Si Woo Kim, Sergio Garcia MUST-READS Brandt Snedeker cards 59 Jarrod Lyle honored on first tee Saving the best for last: Top performances to reach the FedExCup Playoffs Power Rankings

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Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
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Hideki Matsuyama+800
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Rory McIlroy+450
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Tiger Woods, the grinder is still quite a talent. Woods was perilously close to falling out of the year’s final major after a horrific first two holes, but he would rebound with four birdies to fire a respectable even-par 70 on Day 1 at the PGA Championship. When he reached the clubhouse at Bellerive, Woods was five back and in a tie for 28th. He will certainly take that considering how much worse this could’ve been. If there’s a blueprint for how not to start a major championship, Woods provided it with an opening triple bogey from the middle of the fairway at this year’s U.S. Open. LIVE LEADERBOARD: Check up on the latest scores He did a good job trying to emulate that at the PGA Championship.

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Featured Groups: The RSM ClassicFeatured Groups: The RSM Classic

The PGA TOUR visits scenic Sea Island Resort for The RSM Classic, and a star-studded field has made the trip south from Augusta. Players will be treated to ocean views and two classic Golden Age courses this week. Here's a look at the Featured Groups for the second-to-last PGA TOUR event of 2020. Related: Full tee times HOW TO FOLLOW Television: Thursday-Sunday, 1 p.m.-4 p.m. ET (Golf Channel) PGA TOUR LIVE: Thursday-Friday, 9:15 a.m.-4 p.m. ET (Featured Groups) Radio: Thursday-Friday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday-Sunday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio). FEATURED GROUPS Jason Kokrak, Stewart Cink, Webb Simpson • Kokrak recently picked up his first PGA TOUR victory at THE CJ CUP @ SHERWOOD. He also had a top-20 in this year's U.S. Open and ranks fifth in the FedExCup. • Cink, a Georgia Tech alum, recently won the Safeway Open and ranks third in the FedExCup. The 47-year-old also has a T4 in the Bermuda Championship and T12 in the Sanderson Farms Championship this season. • Simpson, a two-time winner in 2020, has finished third and second in the last two RSM Classics. Simpson has finished in the top 20 in all four of his starts this season, including top-10s in both majors. He is 32nd in the FedExCup. Hudson Swafford, Jason Day, Harris English • Swafford, a Sea Island resident, earned his second PGA TOUR title at the recent Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship. He is 12th in the FedExCup. • Day is 88th in the FedExCup as he tries to end a two-year winless drought. He recently finished T7 at the Vivint Houston Open. • English was teammates at the University of Georgia with Swafford and also lives in Sea Island. Swafford improved from 149th in the 2019 FedExCup to 12th in the 2020 standings. He finished fourth in this year's U.S. Open, as well. Tyler Duncan, Kevin Kisner, Charles Howell III • Duncan, the defending champion, leads this group of former RSM champions. Duncan defeated Simpson with a birdie in a sudden-death playoff last year. • Kisner, a University of Georgia alum, won The RSM in 2015. He's seeking his first win since the 2019 World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play. • Howell won the 2018 RSM to end an 11-year winless drought. Sungjae Im, Justin Rose, Matt Kuchar • Im, the 2019 PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year, is coming off a runner-up at the Masters. Im is the current leader in the RSM Birdies Fore Love competition. • Rose, the 2018 FedExCup champion, is seeking his first victory of the year. He has won at least one worldwide event every year since 2010. He has won 16 titles in that span. • Kuchar is a longtime Sea Island resident and Georgia Tech alum. He has four top-25 finishes in The RSM Classic.

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But it’s not easy. The siblings must share the same passion, for starters. A history-making 28 The big headline-maker in the Cantlay family this week has been not Patrick but Jack. The rising Long Beach State freshman started this week’s U.S. Junior by going out in 39, but responded with a 28 (four birdies, two eagles) for the lowest nine-hole score in the 74-year history of the championship. He went from outside the cut line to grabbing the No. 4 seed in the 64-man, match-play bracket after shooting a second-round 70. Observers noted that he is Patrick’s kid brother, and in true Patrick Cantlay style, Jack shrugged off that record-setting performance as just another good round. 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Nick was a basketball player and didn’t seriously pursue golf until he was well into high school. Caroline played for Cal Poly and was the 2019 Southern California Golf Association Match Play champion, but opted out of the life of a touring pro. “They’ve all grown up with a golf club like it’s a knife or a fork,” said Mulligan, a teaching professional and the CEO at Virginia Country Club in Long Beach, California, where he began teaching Patrick when the latter was 7. “They’ve been watching Patrick every shot, and I always say the best way to learn how to play great golf is to watch great golf.” Patrick, of course, is a generational talent, a golfing unicorn. Jack, who after making the turn birdied holes 10, 14 and 15 to close out his first-round U.S. Junior match against Williams, regards him as possibly the most influential person in his life. “I’ve always watched him play golf competitively,” Jack said, “…and I’ve wanted to do it, too, so it’s kind of led me down this path of playing competitively at a high level.” Strength in numbers The siblings have regular skull sessions on the game. Jack and Nick go back and forth about how to play certain shots. Jack and Caroline followed Patrick as he tied for eighth at the recent Open Championship at St. Andrews. Jack and Patrick have been in touch about the U.S. Junior. “We traded some texts (Tuesday) night after he finished up,” Patrick said. “I think he’s the four seed maybe, right around there going into match play, so we traded some texts on match play. “But he’s been working really hard on his game for a while now,” he continued, “and it’s really nice to see all the improvement that he’s had in his game. I know we played a number of years ago and we talked about really getting sharp around the greens and he’s improved that a lot.” Pat Neylan, the siblings’ maternal grandfather, was the family’s first golf nut. He and Mulligan used to sneak out for as many holes as they could get in after Mulligan closed the Virginia C.C. pro shop. Neylan, who built a short-game practice area in his backyard, brought young Patrick to the course. The Cantlay siblings are also connected to other legends – Mulligan and John Cook were taught by Ken Venturi, who learned from Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson. And they were influenced by the many TOUR pros (Cook, Paul Goydos, John Merrick, John Mallinger, etc.) who hung around Virginia C.C. Patrick has always had good players to watch, and so has Jack – starting with his oldest brother. “I used to watch him hole by hole,” Jack said. “Now if he has a good round, somebody might say something, and I’ll look into it. It’s more casual now. I do want to be my own person. “Eventually one day I want to play on the PGA TOUR, play at the highest level,” he added. He certainly has the blueprint for success, as do his next two oldest siblings. “Patrick is very talented,” Caroline said, “but what I’ve always noticed more than anything is that he works incredibly hard. His dedication and hard work is something that I’ve always admired and tried to emulate; I think Jack and Nick would agree with me in saying that he proved to us all that consistent hard work really pays off.”

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