Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting The Upshot: Thomas Pieters, Thomas Detry carry Belgium to win at ISPS Handa Melbourne World Cup of Golf

The Upshot: Thomas Pieters, Thomas Detry carry Belgium to win at ISPS Handa Melbourne World Cup of Golf

MELBOURNE, Australia – Notes and observations from the fourth round of the ISPS Handa Melbourne World Cup of Golf where Belgium won their first World Cup title by three shots. LEADING LIGHTS Thomas Pieters and Thomas Detry admitted they could feel the groundswell of support for the host nation Australia as it got to gut-check time in the World Cup. Starting the day with a significant five-shot lead, Team Belgium knew it would take something special to beat the Aussies at Metropolitan Golf Club. As the locals swarmed around Marc Leishman and Cameron Smith and became more and more vocal in the group ahead, the pair knew a challenge was being issued. But with nerves of steel, the 26-year-old Pieters and 25-year-old Detry met every test and then capped off the win with a final-hole birdie to win by three shots. The final round, 4-under 68 was more than enough to stay ahead of Australia (65) and Mexico (66) – leaving them at 23 under for the week. “You can hear the “oi oi oi” chants going, so you know somebody made a birdie,â€� Pieters said. “We felt the guys coming right behind us and we answered it with a birdie, so I think we handled the situation very well.â€� It is the first win for Belgium in the World Cup. Belgium hadn’t had a result better than fourth since 1955. “Being able to put our name down the list when you see the amount of good players and all the big names that were actually on the Cup, it feels pretty special,â€� Detry said. Pieters burst onto the European Tour scene a few years ago, winning three times in a 12-month span in 2015-16. But he hasn’t been able to maintain the same form since, making this victory extra special. “It feels very good. It’s been a long time since I won and this feels as good as an individual title. I’m very, very happy,â€� Pieters said. “We’ll take a lot of confidence out of this. It’s a shame the season’s over for me now.â€� Detry is yet to win on the European Tour but he’s been knocking on the door with a handful of recent close calls. Pieters now thinks this will change. “His drive down the 18th … that’s a drive of somebody that’s going to win next year, for sure,â€� Pieters said of his partner. “To hit a drive like that, I can tell how much adrenaline was going through his body by how far it went. He’s going to take this forward for sure.â€� NOTABLES AUSTRALIA: Host nation Australia had the local crowds rocking down the back nine at Metropolitan after Marc Leishman and Cameron Smith caught fire and threatened to steal the Cup. But a short putt from 4 feet for birdie on the par-4 16th was pushed wide by Leishman, stalling the huge charge the locals had made. Starting the final round a distant six shots back of Belgium, the Aussies made the turn after four birdies thinking they could certainly make the leaders sweat with a few more. Smith buried birdie putts on the 12th and 13th holes and then, just as hopes looked dashed after Leishman left a bunker shot in the sand, he holed out for another birdie. But it was the last birdie they’d bank. The short miss on 16 sucked the life out of the charge and they would ultimately sign for a 7-under 65 to finish at 20 under. “Obviously that putt on 16 I would like to have made,â€� Leishman said. “I would love to have that again. “But Belgium was clearly the best team all week. When you come up against someone like that, we did what we had to do today to put the pressure on and they were just too good. When you get beat by someone who’s playing that well, there’s not much you can do.â€� MEXICO: It was an impressive couple of weeks in Australia for Abraham Ancer, who won the Australian Open before combining with Roberto Diaz to finish in a tie for second at the World Cup. A final round 6-under 66 on Sunday was highlighted by late birdies on 14, 16 and 17 giving them an outside shot at victory if they could make something happen on the last hole. But Belgium stayed rock solid. The runner-up result represented Mexico’s highest finish in the tournament, besting the seventh-place effort in 1953 from Al Escalante and Juan Neri. USA: Matt Kuchar and Kyle Stanley never really threatened to bring the USA a 25th World Cup title, shooting 66-79-66-68 to finish at 9 under and a tie for 16th. SHOT OF THE DAY QUOTABLES I haven’t heard a roar like that for a very long time. It was awesome. There’s nothing like representing your country on the other side of the world, it’s just amazing. It’s kind of a funny week, the weather was different, total different all the time. A little disadvantage having different balls … that’s why I struggled with the short game a little bit this week.  

Click here to read the full article

Having problems finding out how match bonuses work? Check this guide on match deposit bonuses at our partner site Hypercasinos.com!

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
Click here for more...
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
Click here for more...
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
Click here for more...
Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

Related Post

George H.W. Bush, 41st President of the United States, dies at age 94George H.W. Bush, 41st President of the United States, dies at age 94

Golf has been a common recreational thread among leaders of the United States, and George H.W. Bush, the 41st President, enthusiastically embraced the game most of his life. Bush endeared himself to fellow golfers with his brisk pace of play and contributed to golf in a variety of ways after leaving the White House. Bush, who died Friday evening at age 94, was inducted into the World Golf Hall in 2011 through the Lifetime Achievement category. Three years earlier he received the Bob Jones Award, the USGA’s highest honor, that recognizes the spirit and ideals of the nine-time USGA champion. “Golf has meant a lot to me,â€� Bush said in 2008. “It means friendship, integrity and character. I grew up in a family that was lucky enough to have golf at the heart of it for a while. My father was a scratch player, and my mother was also a good golfer. It’s a very special game.â€� Current PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan and previous Commissioner Tim Finchem each issued statements upon hearing the news. “We are all saddened by the news of President Bush’s death,” Monahan said. “While I had the privilege of knowing him through various golf activities and initiatives that he supported, Tim Finchem worked very closely with President Bush during his tenure as PGA TOUR Commissioner.” “As we join the world in mourning President Bush’s passing, the PGA TOUR and entire golf community share a deep appreciation for all that he meant to our sport,” Finchem said. “From his love of playing to his selfless dedication and support, golf held a special place for President Bush. … “Add it all up, and we truly are fortunate to have had such an esteemed and compassionate individual serve as a strong advocate for golf and be so generous with his time and skills to promote the game he loved. We owe him a great debt for shaping what golf is all about today. President Bush will be greatly missed.” For Bush, golf fit into a wide range of sporting pursuits. He played baseball at Yale, jogged, played tennis, liked to skipper a powerboat at high speed and hunted and fished. As President from 1989-93, he had an artificial-turf putting green and horseshoes pit installed outside the White House. “Sports are good for the soul,â€� Bush said to Forbes.com in 2010, “good for life.â€� Between his election in November 1988 and when he took the oath of office three months later, he mixed in many athletic activities at his retreat in Kennebunkport, Maine, as he prepared for the presidency. “It’s not a transition,â€� a Bush staff member joked to The New York Times. “It’s ‘The Wide World of Sports.’ â€� Former President George H.W. Bush and wife Barbara pose with the Presidents Cup in 2015. (Stan Badz/PGA TOUR) Although Bush didn’t play golf until he was in high school, his family was deeply rooted in the sport. His grandfather, George H. Walker, was USGA president in 1920 and the man for whom the Walker Cup—the biennial amateur competition between males golfers in the United States and Great Britain—is named. Bush’s father, Prescott, was USGA president in 1935. Like George Walker, Prescott Bush was a skilled golfer, an eight-time club champion at Cape Arundel Golf Club in Kennebunkport, Me., where he had the course record, 66, for many years. George H.W. Bush’s athleticism made him a capable player—he gave himself the self-deprecating nickname “Mr. Smoothâ€�—and he would have been much better if not for his putting woes. The longtime Cape Arundel professional and a frequent Bush golf companion, Ken Raynor, described Bush’s play to Sports Illustrated in 1988: “He’d rather face Congress than a three-foot putt. The rest of his game is very strong. His best score on the course is 76. He’d be an easy 11 handicap if he could get his putting under control.â€� Bush fought the yips, for which he found relief in the late 1980s from a long putter, a 52-inch model called a Pole-Kat that had an immediate impact on his game in the summer of 1989. “His first putt on the first hole was a 20-footer, and he putt it right in the jar,â€� Raynor told the Orlando Sentinel. “He got the big smile on his face, and for the rest of the day he sank putts from all over the place. He was delirious. He wound up shooting an 81, which was his best score in a long, long time. He came back out and played on Sunday and Monday. All of a sudden, he enjoys golf again.â€� In a letter the following spring to his friend Dan Jenkins, the author and sportswriter, Bush confirmed how the club invigorated his golf. “The long putter paved the way,â€� Bush wrote. “I don’t sink putts now but the long one has given me confidence to follow through, thus avoiding the automatic 4 putt greens. Now there is light at the end of the short-game tunnel. [But] I’m not ready for a guy that shoots 77 or ever shot 77.â€� Bush was a convivial but competitive on the course. “He would never give a putt. He makes you putt them out,â€� former Defense Secretary and Bush golf partner told The New York Times after Bush was elected President. “But a lot of people will be giving him putts from now on …â€� Although playing in front of galleries made him nervous, Bush did so a number of times. When he was President, he played in the Doug Sanders Kingwood Celebrity Classic pro-am in May 1990 in a group consisting of Sanders, then-PGA TOUR Commissioner Deane Beman and Bush’s oldest son, George W. Before he teed off, Bush told the spectators: “I would have but one request: Keep on being the points of light, keep on with the concept that it really is right for one American to help another, and please don’t laugh at the drive off the first tee.â€� John O’Connor, who caddied that day for Beman, recalled how Bush’s genuine, down-to-earth character was revealed. “Everyone else was uptight, but he made us feel loose,â€� O’Connor said to the Philadelphia Inquirer. “At one point, on the 15th tee, Beman asked him where he was going after Houston. Bush said, ‘Of course, I have that Gorbachev thing next week’ like it was nothing at all. Here he is talking about that ‘Gorbachev thing’ like he’s having a load of lumber brought in to fix his house or something.â€� After playing golf with Bush in 1990, Jenkins described the First Golfer in a Golf Digest article: “The prez played extremely fast but enjoyed himself,â€� Jenkins wrote, “ “even when he flubbed a chip shot, three-putted and heard an onlooker on the other side of a fence holler, ‘Does your husband play golf, too?’ He laughed.â€� One of Bush’s most notable rounds was at the pro-am for the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic in 1995. Bush played with President Bill Clinton, former President Gerald Ford, Bob Hope and the tournament’s defending champion, Scott Hoch. It was reported that Bush turned the tables on the 1992 presidential election, shooting a 92 to Clinton’s 93. If Bush’s golf wasn’t always exemplary, the pace at which he went at the game was. Slow play was anathema to Bush, for whom 18 holes that took more than three hours would have been worse than dental surgery. “It’s not what you make on a hole but how many ticks on the stopwatch it’s taken you to hole out,â€� Raynor told Sports Illustrated. “Cart polo, we call it. We’ve done 18 holes in two hours and 20 minutes.â€� “You put your track shoes on when you’re playing with him,â€� said Hale Irwin. Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor and 2016 presidential contender, takes after his father, telling the Miami Herald that his fastest round (one hour, 36 minutes) was, no surprise, in the company of his father. “You can’t get much faster than that,â€� Jeb Bush said. The Bush family’s golf mantra, as the 41st President he told Don Van Natta Jr., author of First Off the Tee, was simple: “We’re not good, but we’re fast.â€� Bush’s involvement with golf extended well beyond his own rounds, particularly after he left the White House. He was the first Honorary Chairman of The First Tee—the youth outreach program that uses golf to teach life lessons—and promoted The First Tee when it launched in late 1997. “I’m very enthusiastic about The First Tee,â€� Bush said then, “and I believe it will expand interest in the game. We’ll be uplifting the lives of a lot of kids.â€� George W. Bush, the 43rd President, succeeded his father as Honorary Chairman in 2011. Bush was honorary chairman of The Presidents Cup in 1996 and attended each of the biennial competitions through 2009, the same year he was awarded the PGA TOUR’s Lifetime Achievement Award for outstanding contributions to the TOUR. “Working with Tim Finchem and getting to know so many of the TOUR’s members has been one of the great joys of my post-White House life,â€� Bush said, “and my gratitude goes to all who were fully aware of my skills on the course and yet chose to support this welcome decision anyway.â€� The recipient of the PGA of America’s Distinguished Service Award in 1997, Bush received a distinction dear to his heart in 2011 when Cape Arundel Golf Club renamed its clubhouse “41 Houseâ€� in honor of one of its longtime members. “This golf course has meant a great deal to my family over the years,â€� Bush said, “and we all have many happy memories of golf games won and lost.â€�

Click here to read the full article

Top 30 Players to Watch in 2019: No. 11 Rickie FowlerTop 30 Players to Watch in 2019: No. 11 Rickie Fowler

OVERVIEW It seems every year we expect more from Rickie Fowler. The standards we hold for him are far and above many others but the reality is a body of work that has four PGA TOUR titles — including THE PLAYERS Championship — along with four additional worldwide wins is nothing to sneeze at. We can also judge Fowler away from the course where he is clearly a class above most. Always at the forefront of how to treat fans and charities, Fowler has been nothing but great for the game of golf. So if we are to expect more from Fowler, where will it come from? Consistency? Well, he’s made the FedExCup Playoffs in all nine of his PGA TOUR seasons, with 43rd his worst finish. He’s made the TOUR Championship five times. The majors? Perhaps this is what we crave given Fowler has nine top 10s (13 top 14s) in the majors during his career without a win. He was runner-up last year at the Masters where he’s had four top-12 finishes in the last five seasons … perhaps this will be the year. Now 30, Fowler has hit the meat of his career. He is no longer part of the youth brigade on TOUR. We expect it will kick start another impressive chapter for the former young gun – much like what was seen from Adam Scott. Scott spent his 20s winning tournaments, including the PLAYERS, but when the new decade hit, his intensity lifted and a major win and trip to world no.1 followed. Last season, Fowler was winless on the TOUR (albeit he did win the 2017 Hero World Challenge) but did have two runner-ups and he had to deal with an oblique injury. The fall series provided decent results in Las Vegas (T4) and Mexico (T16) and he was fifth in his title defense in the Bahamas, meaning he hits the new year with some form. — By Ben Everill Click here to see who else made the Top 30 list. BY THE NUMBERS FEDEXCUP UPDATE Current 2018-19 position: 39th Playoff appearances: 9 TOUR Championship appearances: 5 Best FedExCup result: 4th in the 2014-15 season SHOTLINK FUN FACT Rickie Fowler has recorded two rounds of 63 in his last 24 rounds played — after recording two rounds of 63 or better in his first 730 rounds played on the PGA TOUR. INSIDER INSIGHTS PGATOUR.COM’s Insiders offer their expert views on what to expect from Rickie Fowler in 2019. TOUR INSIDER: Plenty of players would kill for Fowler’s resume but yet still we constantly expect more from this prodigious talent. Now in his 30s, the time has come for a renewed focus on the big events. With comfort in his life, he needs to feel some discomfort with his results and double down on his commitment. We expect he will. — By Ben Everill FANTASY INSIDER: He’s so fine, he blows our minds. Every draft leaguer would salivate if he fell to this position in his or her draft. The knocks are obvious – “only” four PGA TOUR victories and still without a title in a major – but let the mainstream narrative criticize him for that. You know better. You understand that he’s going to antagonize the top of the leaderboard often enough to warrant one plunge after another. His consistently strong record speaks for itself and he’s been bettered in the all-around ranking by only four golfers in the last two completed seasons combined. — By Rob Bolton EQUIPMENT INSIDER: Fowler recently made equipment headlines by putting a game-improvement long iron into play at the 2018 Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, where he finished T4. The 4-iron is Cobra’s new King F9 Speedback iron, made for maximum forgiveness and distance. Fowler says he uses the iron as a weapon off the tee. As for the rest of his irons, Fowler employs a custom set of King MB Forged irons with tungsten weights added to the sole and toe of the club; his custom irons are so popular that Cobra recently released a retail version of the irons in a mixed set of CB/MB irons. Fowler also has switched into the new King F9 Speedback driver; he plays it at 43.5 inches, with a Graphite Design Tour AD-IZ shaft. — By Andrew Tursky STYLE INSIDER: Nobody can shake up the golf fashion scene quite like Fowler. He has the unique ability to go outside the box with fresh and creative looks while also possessing the thoughtfulness to respect the traditions of the game. He continues to use his style and modern take on golf apparel to bring a new generation of players to the fairways. At this point, we should expect the unexpected from Fowler. Let’s sit back and enjoy his fashion statements in the new year. — By Greg Monteforte

Click here to read the full article

Greller on 13th hole: ‘Just absolute chaos’Greller on 13th hole: ‘Just absolute chaos’

The 29-minute scene that unfolded on the 13th hole Sunday at Royal Birkdale played a pivotal role in deciding the outcome of The Open, and it’s a scene that will be replayed for years to come. But what was it like inside the ropes with the claret jug hanging in the balance? “Just absolute chaos,” said Jordan Spieth’s caddie, Michael Greller. Greller shared some of the emotions he experienced in the moment during a recent interview with Sirius XM PGA Tour Radio. Greller explained that the biggest battle intially was simply finding the ball, which had bounded off a spectator even farther right than he expected. “I was forearm shivving guys in the crowd there initially,” Greller said. “And then

Click here to read the full article