Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Paul Azinger looks forward to calling THE PLAYERS Championship

Paul Azinger looks forward to calling THE PLAYERS Championship

Paul Azinger didn’t win THE PLAYERS Championship in 1991, but he made an impression. After sleeping on the 54-hole lead at the end of a particularly windy week, he shot 74 to finish T3. Steve Elkington won the first of two PLAYERS titles, but in its recap, Sports Illustrated writer John Garrity called Azinger, “the Tour’s most personable and exciting young player.â€� In other words, he was good TV.  Azinger’s second career as a TV golf analyst got a turbo boost when he was named Monday as NBC’s successor to retiring Johnny Miller. Azinger has called golf for ABC, ESPN and Fox. Now, in taking on NBC, he inherits one of the network’s crown jewels, THE PLAYERS, where players try to quell their nerves with disaster looming off every tee box and near every green. “Well, I haven’t won there, unfortunately,â€� Azinger said Monday of the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass. “But I definitely have some last-group-on-Sunday experiences at TPC and I know what it’s like to sleep on the lead there. It’s different than most places because there’s a lot of water on that golf course and you can pay a heavy price on just about every hole. “But you can’t get past thinking about 17 at any point,â€� he added, “and you have to keep reminding yourself that you’re not there yet, you’re not there yet.â€� Monday was a happy occasion for Azinger, 58, who also will appear on Golf Channel’s Live From the Masters, contribute to instructional projects, and assist with Golf Films programming. A teleconference with the national media featured plenty of laughs between Azinger; NBC Golf Executive Vice President of Content Molly Solomon; and Lead Golf Producer Tommy Roy.  Alas, the frivolity will be short-lived, as there’s much work to be done.  In addition to continuing to call the U.S. Open and U.S. Women’s Open for Fox, and the Masters for the BBC, Azinger’s NBC dance card is full. He’ll start with the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship, February 21-24; call The Open Championship, which he’s done previously with ESPN; work the Ryder Cup, the tournament where he made his mark as a player and later as the winning U.S. captain in 2008; and decamp for the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.   He will call the action from places where he’s won, like Bay Hill (Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard) and Waialae Country Club (Sony Open in Hawaii), and places where he hasn’t. The first biggie, though, will be THE PLAYERS in March, it being a potential career-maker for players (Elkington, Davis Love III) and broadcasters (Gary Koch: “Better than most!â€�) alike. Azinger compiled four top-10s and seven top-20 finishes in 19 starts at TPC Sawgrass. He also made a memorable ace at the island 17th hole in 2000.  Now he gets to take on the iconic tournament in a whole new way: calling it like he sees it from the 18th tower.    “It’s a scary golf course and I haven’t won on it, but I respect anybody that does,â€� said Azinger. “And the magnitude of the event; the fact that it’s the strongest field of the year, year-in and year-out, is, you know, a big part of it.… I look forward to getting in this and sharing with the general public what that place is all about.â€� You can’t get past thinking about 17 at any point, and you have to keep reminding yourself that you’re not there yet, you’re not there yet. Azinger and Miller have similar styles; both are direct and unapologetic, and both are above all loyal to the viewers. Azinger said he will speak up when players thrive/wilt under pressure, but while maintaining respect for the game and its players. It would be “irresponsible,â€� he said, to call anyone a choker, and he wants to build up the game and its players. After all, he’s been there, standing on the tee as he eyes the flagstick bending in the breeze, whitecaps on the water, the tournament hanging in the balance. It’s an uneasy feeling, and one that Azinger expects will come flooding back to him at times as he begins his career with NBC. “You have to have butterflies to do a good job, I feel,â€� he said. “I remember teeing off at the Masters one year without butterflies, how shameful. I hate to even admit that. But I didn’t have any butterflies because I knew I wasn’t going to be any good. “I did have butterflies this morning,â€� he added.

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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
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Shane Lowry+3500
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Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
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USA-150
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DraftKings preview: WGC-Workday Championship at The ConcessionDraftKings preview: WGC-Workday Championship at The Concession

Due to COVID-19 precautions, the WGC-Mexico Championship will not be played in Mexico this season. Instead, the TOUR will start the Florida Swing one week early and add another course in the Sunshine State at the Concession Golf Club in Bradenton, Fla. The tournament's name will also change to the WGC-Workday Championship at The Concession, and the course will play as a par 72, measuring 7,474 yards and be putt on Bermuda greens. This week will be the first time Concession Golf Club will host a PGA TOUR event. This Jack Nicklaus design is aptly named after the famous 1969 Ryder Cup concession on the last hole of competition between him and Tony Jacklin, the first time the Ryder Cup ended in a tie. Set your DraftKings fantasy golf lineups here: PGA TOUR $1M Flop Shot [$250K to 1st] STRATEGY Paying homage to their Ryder Cup match, both Nicklaus and Jacklin teamed up to design this course, which opened back in 2006. 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There are a few par 4s over 450 yards and the same amount of par 5s between 550 and 600 yards, but three of the four par 3s are over 200 yards. Long iron proximity and Bermuda putting are a few additional statistics we should be looking closer at when figuring out who to roster. The field consists of a minimum of 72 players based on the Official World Golf Rankings and will be a no-cut event. With a smaller field and guaranteed four rounds of golf, roster percentage will concentrate on certain players, and it'll be necessary to "zig" when other rosters "zag." Every golfer will have some level of popularity with the reduced field, so trying to find a golfer you like with little-to-no roster percentage is probably not going to happen. GOLFERS TO CONSIDER Justin Thomas (+1850 to Win, $10,500 on DraftKings) Last week wasn't great from the World's No. 3-ranked golfer, whose mind was most likely elsewhere with the tragedy of his grandfather's passing. 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FedExCup update: People’s choice Hayden Buckley makes move at FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipFedExCup update: People’s choice Hayden Buckley makes move at FedEx St. Jude Championship

GERMANTOWN, Tenn. – The drive between Memphis, Tennessee, home of Graceland, and Tupelo, Mississippi, birthplace of Elvis Presley, is an hour and 27 minutes. Hayden Buckley knows all about it. He was born in Chattanooga but raised in Tupelo. RELATED: Leaderboard | Projected FedExCup standings “We would come to Memphis a lot,” said Buckley, who shot a third-round 65 at the FedEx St. Jude Championship and is projected to move from 95th to 59th in the FedExCup, inside the cutoff for next week’s top-70 BMW Championship. “I would fly out of Memphis every time I left home or fly back in to come home. I feel like it’s home a little bit.” He said he had played TPC Southwind several times, and while he has since moved to South Florida, he estimated he had 50 or so friends and family following him Saturday. He was one of the biggest FedExCup movers thanks to good gallery mojo and even better putting. The 26-year-old rookie came into the FedEx St. Jude ranked 178th in Strokes Gained: Putting but was first in that statistic at TPC Southwind on Saturday, needing just 23 putts in his seven-birdie, two-bogey effort. He’s 9-under par and four behind leader J.J. Spaun (68). “Yeah, it’s not only for next week, but next year,” Buckley said of the stakes this weekend. “I know every little spot or every birdie I make really does matter for, you know, if I get in next week that’s great, but even for next year I’m going to have opportunities that I wouldn’t have.” Buckley started strong this season with a T4 at the Sanderson Farms Championship and T8 at the Shriners Children’s Open but had missed four straight cuts when he teed it up at a U.S. Open qualifier. Not only did he get through, but he also finished T14 at the U.S. Open. He hasn’t missed a cut since. “I remember qualifying for the U.S. Open and saying this is kind of my first good thing that’s happened in almost two months,” Buckley said. “… I wasn’t sure in that little seven-week stretch of missing six cuts, I wasn’t sure if I was going to be here. I knew being close to home, I wanted to be here. It was a tough two months. I made some changes and I think they paid off.” The biggest of these, he said, came after he’d missed the cut at the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial, when he began working with course management specialist Scott Fawcett. “Went out with him on Saturday to play golf and just talked to him and kind of dove all into it,” Buckley said, “and after that, good things started happening. I think I’m getting stronger as well. My game’s maturing a little bit, my putting’s gotten better.” “I was really struggling with putting for a while,” he added. “I made the changes. I think it’s a mix of everything, but Scott really helped out a lot.” The only time Buckley has missed the weekend rounds since June came at the Wyndham Championship last week, when he made the cut but withdrew with pain in his right hand. He thinks he may have aggravated it on the firm turf at the 3M Open (T26) and/or Rocket Mortgage Classic (T24). This also marks his 30th start of the season, which he said has been too much. Alas, he added, he felt he had to play in whatever he could get into as a rookie. In retrospect, his Wyndham weekend that wasn’t might have been the best thing for him. 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The top 70 will advance to the second event of the Playoffs, the BMW Championship at Wilmington (Del.) Country Club. PROJECTED IN Wyndham Clark (No. 79, projected to 51): Coming off a T8 at the Rocket Mortgage Classic, Clark was 4-under for the first four holes Saturday on the way to his third straight 67. He’s 9-under and will go into the final round four behind leader J.J. Spaun (68). Andrew Putnam (No. 87, projected to 55): Shot 67 to join a large group tied for 6th place at 9-under, four back. Endured a stretch of seven missed cuts in eight starts in the spring but has found something with T11 at 3M Open and T27 at Wyndham Championship. Hayden Buckley (No. 95, projected to 59): Enjoying some good mojo close to home, and much improved putting as he was first in strokes gained on the greens Saturday. Adam Scott (No. 77, projected to 64): Signed for a 70 to hang around at 7-under, six back going into Sunday. Scott holds the eighth and final spot in the International Presidents Cup Team standings. The top eight after the BMW qualify for the team, and if he doesn’t make it on points, International Captain Trevor Immelman will have to use a captain’s pick on him. Tyler Duncan (No. 118, projected to 57): Shot 67 to reach 10-under, three back. RSM Classic winner two seasons ago doesn’t have a top-10 finish this season. “Obviously, the results haven’t been there,” he said. “I feel like the game has been moving in the right direction and I feel like I’ve made a lot of improvements that I needed to make, and they just haven’t paid off yet.” PROJECTED OUT Alex Smalley (No. 61, projected to 72): Duke product and PGA TOUR rookie missed the cut at the FedEx St. Jude. Anirban Lahiri (No. 63, projected to 73): International Presidents Cup Team veteran missed the cut at FedEx St. Jude. Brendon Todd (No. 68, projected to 74): Won twice and finished a career-best 20th in the FedExCup two seasons ago but will have to do better than his even-par 70 in third round. John Huh (No. 67, projected to 75): Wyndham Championship runner-up withdrew with a lower-back injury after shooting 40 on his first nine holes Friday. Lanto Griffin (No. 69, projected to 79): Not in field after recent back surgery.

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