Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Rose leads by 1 shot at BMW Championship

Rose leads by 1 shot at BMW Championship

Justin Rose did his part on another day of low scoring at the BMW Championship and had a 6-under 64 for a one-shot lead over Rory McIlroy and Xander Schauffele.

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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Justin Thomas+1100
Joaquin Niemann+1400
Shane Lowry+1600
Tommy Fleetwood+1800
Tyrrell Hatton+1800
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Bryson DeChambeau+700
Rory McIlroy+1000
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Shane Lowry+3500
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Kisner holds the lead into Sunday At Quail HollowKisner holds the lead into Sunday At Quail Hollow

CHARLOTTE, North Carolina – News and notes from the third round of the PGA Championship at the Quail Hollow Club where Kevin Kisner leads by one stroke after a 72 on Saturday. For more coverage from Quail Hollow, click here for the Daily Wrap. KISNER KEEPS THE MOMENTUM The stoic Kisner promised to show some emotion on Sunday if he ends up winning the PGA Championship. “Don’t worry,â€� he said with a rare smile after the draining third round was finally over. But keeping his emotions in check has been the key to his play this week at Quail Hollow. The intensity in Kisner’s eyes reflects his focus, and even the worst of breaks – remember that approach that found the water on 16, for example – is met with an even keel. “I think I’ve been pretty good at that,â€� Kisner said. “This game will do it to you in my opinion. As soon as you think you’re on top of things, it finds a way to kick you right in the face. “So there’s no real reason for me getting mad or upset or showing y’all that I’m ticked off. I’m pretty good at keeping it all in, and the golf course here is so hard; if you get (ticked), you’re just going to throw away more shots. There’s no real reason to show that emotion.â€� Kisner, who has won twice on TOUR in less than a year, has never had a top-10 in a major championship. But he’s held at least a share of the lead since opening with a 67 at Quail Hollow, and while playing the Green Mile in 3 over has set up a dogfight, he’s eager for the challenge. “It’s a dream to win a major,â€� Kisner said. “That’s what I grew up practicing and playing, to play on the PGA TOUR and to have a chance in major championships. “The way my game’s progressed over my career, I like where I am, and I like having a chance tomorrow. It will be awesome to take home the Wanamaker Trophy and a lot of great names on that trophy.â€� JT MANAGES HIS GAME The way Justin Thomas saw it, he didn’t have his A game on Saturday. In fact, he probably didn’t have his B game, either. “I would definitely go C, more towards the C side than B side,â€� he said. Thomas still managed to shoot a 69 in the third round, though. As a result, he will start the final round of the PGA in a tie with Oosthuizen at 5 under just two strokes off the lead. The PGA is just Thomas’ 10th major championship. He got valuable experience at the U.S. Open earlier this year, though, when he shot 63, which tied what was then the major scoring record, in the third round to climb the leaderboard before falling to a tie for ninth with a closing 75. The key? Well, the 24-year-old Thomas, who has won three times already this year, feels like he’s learned to manage his game – even when he doesn’t have his best stuff.   “I think that’s why I feel like I’m ready to win a major championships now versus last year, I probably didn’t have that,â€� Thomas said. “Because you are going to have a day, usually at least a day in the tournament where you don’t have your best. You are not hitting it well. It’s what you can do with it. “That’s what Tiger did so well. He won tournaments by five or six with his B game or C game. It’s about managing it around here, trying to get it around. What I did today was definitely a confidence boost. It’s not the same as playing great. I’m definitely more tired than if I would have played great. I will definitely take it.â€� OOSTHUIZEN OVERCOMES RUSTY START Louis Oosthuizen had a bit of a scare early in his round when he hit the root of a tree as he attempted a dicey approach at the second hole. Oosthuizen reached the green with a brilliant shot but immediately started shaking his hand to try to loosen his right arm. His physical therapist slipped under the ropes and started working on the South African, stretching out his forearm as they walked down the fairway. Oosthuizen finished his round of even par with a strip of kinesio tape on his arm. He’ll start the final round trailing by two at 5 under and although it’s a little tight at the top, he expects no lingering effects. “It’s fine. You know, I wasn’t it wasn’t hurting at all,â€� Oosthuizen said. “I didn’t feel like it was painful or anything. It was just it got tight really quickly. “Sort of when you close your hand like that, I could feel it all over. I thought it would be good to get the physio and release it. He just did a proper release of it. There was no pain. I could hit my shots no worries.â€� And Oosthuizen’s 8-iron took the brunt of the blow anyway. He said he saw something – although he didn’t know it was a root – as he was pondering the shot. “It was very close to my ball,â€� Oosthuizen said. “I didn’t want to go and feel or do anything. The top, I was going pretty steep on it. Took a big chunk out of it. Bent my 8-iron properly.â€� The next time Oosthuizen needed the club was on the ninth hole. He saw that it was bent right at the hozzle and tried to straighten it out. “I tried to fix it, but obviously I’m not good at that,â€� he said with a smile. “I didn’t it a very good shot. … Ping is already building me a new one and getting it to me.â€� That’s a good thing, too. Oosthuizen had yardage for a full 8-iron at the 16th and 17th holes. But he had already given his club to a Ping rep and ended up dropping down to a 7-iron. While he did manage a birdie at No. 17, Oosthuizen said “those aren’t holes you want to go with different clubs.â€� PLAYERS BEAT THE HEAT At sundown on Friday, players were sprinting down fairways to finish as many holes as possible due to a lengthy weather delay. But on Saturday, the same players came in drained and dragging with rounds averaging in the five-and-a-half-hour range. Threesomes off one tee didn’t speed things along and Quail Hollow would have been challenging even on the best of days. But Saturday was marked by stifling humidity that nearly sent the “feels-likeâ€� temperature into triple digits. “I thought it was super hot,â€� Kisner said. “Standing around in 105 probably heat index is not a whole lot of fun. It’s difficult on your mental game, I think as much as anything, as the heat. “I’m pretty used to slow play; you watch us every week.â€� Rory McIlroy, who has won two PGAs and is a two-time champion at Quail Hollow, agreed. He shot 73 on Saturday but is well back at 4 over. “I think we’re used to slow rounds on the TOUR these days,â€� McIlroy said. “Hopefully we go to twos tomorrow if the weather is decent. That will get the guys around a little bit quicker. “Five hours 20 minutes out there in that heat was a little too long for my liking.â€� ODDS AND ENDS This has been a week of positives and negatives for Webb Simpson, who lives at Quail Hollow. He’s been grateful for the support of family, friends and fans but he hasn’t played as well as he’d like. Simpson will start the final round well off the pace at 5 over. He says he’s been surprised at how difficult the course has played – and it’s not just due to the changes made under Tom Fazio’s guidance. Simpson says the set-up has been “too toughâ€� for a PGA Championship. “I told the scorer in there I felt like really all week, but especially today with some of the pins and tees and length of the course, it feels like a U.S. Open,â€� Simpson said. “We are dealing with a long golf course, tons of rough, and crazy fast greens. “I don’t think that’s the stereotype of a PGA Championship. I feel like I’m out there trying to survive. Similar feelings to how when I play a U.S. Open. You shoot even par you have done really well.â€� Graham DeLaet had a three-hole stretch worth bragging about – a birdie at the par-3 13th, followed by back-to-back eagles at the par-4 14th and par-5 15th. That leaves the Canadian at 2 under and just five stroke off the pace. “That would be a cool run, you know, at any PGA TOUR event,â€� DeLaet said. “But to do that at the PGA Championship is pretty special. It’s something I’ll probably always remember, you know, when I look back at my career. And the nice thing about it was it put me in a position where something really special tomorrow can — you never know.â€� …   Of the top 15 players on the leaderboard, 14 of them have never won a major. The exception: Louis Oosthuizen, the 2010 Open champ, who’s two shots back. His gameplan Sunday: “Just patience and play yourself in a position with four or five holes to go and take it from there.â€� SHOT OF THE DAY BEST OF SOCIAL MEDIA

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Matthew Wolff shoots 65, takes 54-hole lead at U.S. OpenMatthew Wolff shoots 65, takes 54-hole lead at U.S. Open

MAMARONECK, N.Y. — Matthew Wolff might be too young to realize he’s supposed to hit fairways to have a chance to win the U.S. Open. Or maybe he’s so good it doesn’t matter. Wolff hit only two fairways Saturday and still matched the lowest score ever at Winged Foot in a major, a 5-under 65 that gave the 21-year-old Californian a two-shot lead over Bryson DeChambeau going into the final round. Whether it was the first cut or the nasty rough, Wolff kept giving those hips one last swivel before blasting away and giving himself birdie chances. He made enough of them to seize control, and then let so many others crumble. Patrick Reed, tied for the lead at the turn, couldn’t find the fairway and paid dearly with a 43 on the back nine. Reed had a three-shot lead after two holes. He walked off the 18th green with a 77 and was eight shots behind. Collin Morikawa won the PGA Championship last month in his first try at age 23. Wolff is playing his first U.S. Open at age 21. Is he next? “I’m probably going to be a little antsy. It’s the U.S. Open, and I have a lead,” Wolff said. “I’m going to try to keep my nerves as calm as they can be. I put myself in a really good spot. I did everything that I could do up until this point, and tomorrow I’m going to go out there, I promise you I’m going to try my best.” He was at 5-under 205. Not since Francis Ouimet in 1913 — also the last time the U.S. Open was played in September — has a player won the U.S. Open in his debut. DeChambeau could easily have gone the same route as Reed, missing left and right, gouging his way out of the grass. But after opening with two bogeys, he kept scrambling away — 15 straight holes with nothing worse than par. He rallied with two late birdies until missing a short par putt on the 18th for a 70. He will be in the final group for the first time in a major, another quiet affair with no spectators on the course. The U.S. Open began with 21 players under par. There were six going into the weekend. Now it’s down to three, with Louis Oosthuizen efficiently putting together a 68 to finish at 1-under 209. Hideki Matsuyama (70), Xander Schauffele (70) and Harris English (72) were at even-par 210. Another shot back was Rory McIlroy, who posted his 68 some three hours before the leaders finished. “It doesn’t take much around here … and all of a sudden you’re right in the thick of things,” McIlroy said. “No matter where I am at the end of the day, I feel like I’ve got a pretty good shot.” It all depends on Wolff, an NCAA champion at Oklahoma State who won on the PGA TOUR in his third event as a pro last summer in the 3M Open in Minnesota. From the first cut of rough on the opening hole, he hit it to right level of the contoured green for a 15-foot birdie. From the right rough on No. 4, he wound up with another 15-foot birdie putt. And then he really poured it on. He drove next to the green on the short par-4 sixth, getting up-and-down from a bunker for birdie. He holed a 12-foot birdie on the par-3 seventh. And when he finally hit his first fairway on No. 8, he missed a 6-foot birdie attempt. His lone bogey came on the 16th when he was in such a bad lie in the rough he couldn’t reach the green. And he finished with a most fortuitous hop. His iron off the tee hopped into the thick rough and back out to the first cut. He ripped 7-iron to 10 feet for one last birdie. “If I don’t hit fairways tomorrow, I know I can play well,” Wolff said with a smile. “Even when I was in the rough, I had a bunch of good numbers and a bunch of good lies.” And he played a lot of good golf, so good that even at his age, he looked to be a daunting figure to catch. “I don’t think there’s any `chasing’ out here,” Schauffele said, adding that if Wolff had another good round Sunday it would be “impossible to catch him.” DeChambeau gave himself hope, among five players within five of the lead on a course where anything goes. Think back to the last U.S. Open at Winged Foot in 2006, when Geoff Ogilvy hit a superb pitch to 6 feet for par that he thought was only good for second place until Phil Mickelson and Colin Montgomerie closed with double bogeys. “I feel like I’m ready to win out here and win a major,” Wolff said. “It is a major. It’s really important and yes, it is really early in my career. But I feel like I have the game to win. Collin won at 23. I’m 21. And I’m not saying that it’s going to happen. But I put myself in a really good spot, and obviously I’m feeling really good with my game.”

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Dustin Johnson surges at Sentry Tournament of ChampionsDustin Johnson surges at Sentry Tournament of Champions

KAPALUA, Hawaii – Dustin Johnson gave up his last 54-hole lead but he has no intentions of repeating the story this time around. After producing a sublime 7-under 66 on Saturday – his 20th round in the 60s at the Plantation Course – Johnson surged to 16-under for the week, two clear of Brian Harman (69) and four ahead of Jon Rahm (66). It appears the Sentry Tournament of Champions is his to lose given he’s clearly the most experienced player in the field – making his eighth trip to Kapalua. No one else here has more than four. But wait – we’ve seen this story not so long ago. The world No.1 Johnson took a seemingly insurmountable six-shot lead through three rounds at the World Golf Championships – HSBC Champions in late October only to shoot a 5-over 77 on Sunday to lose by two strokes to Justin Rose. Rickie Fowler, who will be one of the chasers on Sunday from five strokes back, playfully suggested Johnson wouldn’t remember his collapse in China. “I don’t expect him to necessarily do that again. All the times that he’s been in a position to win and having a lead, he’s taken care of that pretty well,â€� Fowler said. “D.J.’s a guy that forgets pretty quickly. I don’t think he remembers China. So that’s one of the reasons why he is the best player in the world right now. He quickly forgets, moves on. “There’s not necessarily a weak part of his game, so I’m going to have to go play well if I want to go chase him down.â€� When Johnson was asked if he had indeed forgotten – he claimed he had – until reminded of it by media as he finished his round. “It was a long time ago. It’s a completely different golf course. It was, what, two months ago or something,â€� Johnson said. “I’m going to try not to think about it tomorrow, hopefully I won’t. But I just need to go out and play my game and just see what happens.â€� For the record this is Johnson’s 14th lead/co-lead through 54 holes on the PGA TOUR. He has converted seven to victory, most recently at the Genesis Open in 2017. CALL OF THE DAY OBSERVATIONS BULLDOG HARMAN READY FOR FIGHT: Brian Harman has beaten Dustin Johnson before on Sunday – but he was the man in front. This time he will have to hunt the world No.1 down from behind. At the 2017 Wells Fargo Championship Harman overtook Patrick Reed, Alex Noren and Jon Rahm on Sunday for his second PGA TOUR win but it was a fast finishing Johnson, who had won his previous three starts, who was catching his attention. Johnson had started two back of Harman but had posted a nine-under total in the clubhouse. Harman knew he would prefer not to be in a playoff with the big bomber and had birdied the 17th to tie. He then nailed a 30-footer on the 18th for victory. “I’m just going to keep doing the same thing I’ve been doing and I’m going to try to put as much pressure on the golf course as I can,â€� Harman said Saturday. “I’m going to try to do the best I can on every shot. I can’t control what Dustin does, he’s a fabulous player, he’s going to be really hard to beat tomorrow, but trying to do something I’m not capable of is not the way to do it.â€� RAHM WANTS REVERSE RESULT: Jon Rahm remembers his battles with Dustin Johnson well. And they’re not all fond memories. Rahm had chances to win the World Golf Championships – Mexico Championship and THE NORTHERN TRUST last season only to be bested by Johnson. There was also their battle in the final round of the World Golf Championships – Dell Match Play that went the way of the American. He has another chance to best him in Maui, albeit a tough ask starting four shots back. “I do enjoy (going head-to-head with Johnson), but the outcome hasn’t been great for me,â€� Rahm said. “Hopefully I can play good down the stretch like I’ve been doing. Just start a little better on the front nine. If I can make a birdie before I get to the 5th I’ll be happy.â€� BONES RETURNS: FedExCup champion and defending Sentry Tournament of Champions winner Justin Thomas shot another disappointing 2-over 75 on Saturday to be 2-over and in 30th place. He tackled the Plantation Course without regular caddie Jimmy Johnson who succumbed to plantar fasciitis and has returned home for treatment. Thomas’ father Mike took over bag duties at Kapalua and will do the same on Sunday. Word is however that Jim “Bonesâ€� Mackay will make a cameo for Thomas when he defends the Sony Open next week. Mackay hasn’t caddied on the PGA TOUR since parting ways with Phil Mickelson. NOTABLES Jordan Spieth – A 3-under 70 on Saturday leaves Spieth sitting in a tie for ninth at 8-under, a distant eight shots back of the lead. Marc Leishman – The first and second round leader had a round to forget, posting a 3-over 76 to drop to 7-under and a tie for 12th. Hideki Matsuyama – The world No.5 and runner up last year could only muster a 72 on Saturday to sit 7-under and tied 12th. Patton Kizzire – Rounds of 72-72-69 have the current FedExCup leader at 6-under and tied 17th.  QUOTABLES Seventh place doesn’t really do a whole lot for me at the end of the day, so the idea is to fire at flags and just putt aggressively. It’s one thing to say it, it’s another to be out there and then all of a sudden you just feel so uncomfortable trying to hit that hard and I struggled with that this week. So, I’ve just got to be really aggressive on the greensI don’t think there’s two guys that speak to the ball more than we do. It’s true. It’s fun because we both react similarly when we hit a shot. It’s great.It was tough. The putter was cold and if I putted half decent I’d be right up there.Coming off of getting that win a few weeks back (at the Hero World Challenge) I think we were seven shots back and we’re not that far back going into tomorrow. But it won’t be easy. No.1, someone’s going to have to earn it tomorrow, whether it’s DJ or anyone coming from behind. SUPERLATIVES Low round: 7-under 66 – Dustin Johnson and Jon Rahm positioned themselves nicely. Longest drive: 430 yards – Hudson Swafford on the par-4 7th. He then overshot the green and got up and down for par. Longest putt: 68 feet, 8 inches – Wesley Bryan drained a massive effort for par on the par-4 4th. Easiest hole: Par-5 5th – The reachable hole played at 4.235 with three eagles, 23 birdies, six pars, one bogey and one double bogey. Hardest holes: Par-4 10th – Uphill and into the wind it played at 4.412 with not a single birdie. There were eight bogeys and three double bogeys.

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