Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Does Koepka have a point about no respect?

Does Koepka have a point about no respect?

ESPN The Magazine’s list of 20 most-dominant athletes of 2018 includes only one golfer, and it’s not the guy who won two majors this year.

Click here to read the full article

Do you like other ways of online gambling besides sports betting? Be sure to check out our partner site Hypercasinos.com for the best online casino reviews and bonus codes.

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
Rory McIlroy+650
Bryson DeChambeau+700
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

HBCU’s shine at Charlie Sifford Centennial Cup at Quail HollowHBCU’s shine at Charlie Sifford Centennial Cup at Quail Hollow

CHARLOTTE – Quail Hollow Club fell silent as Troy Stribling stood over his 3-foot putt on the 15th green on Monday. Well, except for the construction workers hammering nails into the plywood of the floor of a hospitality area behind the gleaming white clubhouse. Not that a little noise mattered to Stribling, a senior at Florida A&M. He was just focused on the birdie putt that would give him a 4-and-3 victory over Texas Southern’s Owen Walsh – and as it turned out, clinch at least a tie for the Charlie Sifford Centennial Cup. “This was something special,” Stribling says. “This is probably the best golf tournament I’ve ever been a part of … especially, to share with this group of guys for my last year.” The exhibition, which featured six of the top Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) programs in the country, was conceived by the organizers of The Presidents Cup, which will take center stage at Quail Hollow in three weeks. Hence, the last-minute preparations for the biennial team competition to be held Sept. 22-25. The Charlie Sifford Centennial Cup was part of a year-long celebration of what would have been the World Golf Hall of Famer’s 100th birthday on June 2. The Charlotte native, who was the first African American to earn his PGA TOUR card, died in 2015. “I knew he was a trailblazer, and I didn’t know every obstacle he went through to get to where he was,” Stribling says. “He went through a lot of hardships. … And he’s not really talked about like the Muhammad Alis or Malcolm X or MLK, and he should be. “So, he went through a lot to help us get to where we are and we’re just here to honor him.” The six schools were separated into two teams for Monday’s competition – FAMU, Alabama State and Livingstone College represented Charles Sifford Jr. while Howard, Texas Southern and the host Johnson C. Smith played for James Black, another Charlotte native and a mainstay of the United Golf Association during the days of segregation. The final score was 12-6, in favor of the team captained by Sifford Jr. But the chance to play a major championship-caliber course – Quail Hollow has hosted the 2017 PGA Championship, 18 Wells Fargo Championships and 11 Kemper Opens on TOUR – made it a win-win for the student-athletes, many of whom aspire to play professionally. “It’s just preparing for my future,” says Howard’s Greg Odom Jr., who won the MEAC title and played in the Wells Fargo Championship on a sponsor’s exemption earlier this year. “And for me – if you see it, you can be it. So, I’m just here just trying to play great golf and continue my legacy.” The massive grandstands and hospitality venue may have been empty on Monday but Stribling, who like Odom plans to turn pro after graduation, was able to get a sense of what the excitement might be like in late September. J.C. Smith coach William Watkins says the “small city” being built for 40,000 can make the game feel intimidating. “Even though there’s no spectators in the stands, I feel a little nervous,” he says. “I’m like, wow, just imagine all the eyeballs on you.” The teams played the same reconfigured routing that will be used in the Presidents Cup. Quail Hollow’s famous Green Mile, holes 16-18, will be played as holes 13-15 for the Presidents Cup in order to make sure those holes factor into the matches. In fact, while Monday’s morning Four-ball matches were taking place, several members of the International Team and Captain Trevor Immelman made a stealth reconnaissance appearance at the course. “I haven’t really played a course like this with this kind of atmosphere,” Stribling says. “Having the Presidents Cup be here in a couple weeks to (watch) on TV and say, ‘I played those holes’ is something special. I can’t wait to tell my friends and my family about it.” Sifford Jr., who hit the competition’s opening tee shot, felt his father would have approved. “He would be super happy about it,” Sifford Jr. says. “There are two things that he always wanted. He just wanted to be able to play the game of golf and have the kids of all ages to be able to have a chance, an equal chance, to play the game, be exposed to it and have an opportunity to play it because he really, he fell in love with the game when he was 10 years old. “So, he would’ve been jumping off the wall to see something like this.” The connections – some made and others renewed — at Quail Hollow were many. The grandfather of Andre Springs, who coaches the NCAA Division II-leading Livingstone College team, played Little League baseball with the late Sifford, and Springs has known Sifford’s son for decades. Robert Clark, the assistant coach at Alabama State, first met the pioneering golfer when he came to support a junior clinic Clark was holding in Portland, Oregon. “I started talking to (Clark) about Charlie’s acceptance speech when Charlie received the Presidential Medal of Freedom,” says Adam Sperling, the executive director of the Presidents Cup. “And he said, oh, you don’t have to tell me. I was in the third row. “So gosh, there were five or six stories that hit us all over the last 48 hours that just make you appreciate how much those who made this possible persevered and how appreciative those that are out here today are of the efforts of those who came before them. And certainly, the feeling they have about the responsibility and quite frankly, the responsibility we all have.” One of those stories involves the Livingstone team, which has eight players from Uganda on its roster. The first to enroll was Titus Okwong, the oldest of 10 children who learned the game as a caddie. He was playing on his country’s national team and decided he wanted to come to the United States to play in college. He contacted more than 100 schools but couldn’t get enough scholarship aid – until he called Springs, that is. “I get this call out of the blue,” Springs recalls. “‘Hello coach. This is Titus calling you from Uganda, Africa. I would like to come to America to play for the Blue Bears.’” Figuring it was a prank call, Springs hung up. A few minutes later – it was 2 a.m. in Uganda – Okwong called back. Please don’t hang up the phone again, he told Springs. I want to be a champion and the Blue Bears are winning championships. Although he had no scholarship money, Springs was intrigued enough to ask whether Okwong could really play. The coach suggested he call back in a month, never really expecting to hear from him. But Okwong called. Springs told him to send his information to the admissions office and talked to the university president. They decided to give Okwong a chance. All Springs could offer was a partial academic scholarship. Okwong would need to raise $5,000 – which was nearly 2 million Ugandan shillings. He says he locked himself in his room for two days trying to figure out what to do. A friend suggested a fund-raising golf tournament, which netted nearly $3,000, and he raised more by putting fliers with his information at other courses. Finally, some of the people at his club who had been skeptical were willing to contribute, too. “They said, ‘Wow, this guy is serious,’” Okwong recalls. “Everybody started coming in. Everybody wants to be on a winning team.” Okwong came to Salisbury, North Carolina, in 2016. He played golf for the Blue Bears, captaining the team one year, and earned a degree in business administration with a 3.8 GPA. He is now Springs’ assistant coach and his quest serves as a blueprint for other Ugandans, including one of his brothers, who have played at schools like Catawba College and Howard, as well as Livingstone. “We all originally grew up together as caddies,” Okwong says. “And one thing we told ourselves is if one of us ever made it, we should never forget the others.” And he didn’t. “It’s a movie,” Springs says, shaking his head and smiling. “… We have eight on the team from Uganda right now. Now those kids would never have gotten the opportunity had not been for that phone call.” Springs says the Charlie Sifford Centennial Cup gives programs like his – which is ranked No. 1 nationally in NCAA Division II – much needed exposure. With that, comes growth. “It means a lot to our golf team,’ Springs says. “They are so excited about being here and being around the other players from other schools and meeting other players because of the relationships involved through this tournament. So, it’s been great.” The two-day event kicked off with practice rounds on Sunday. At the welcome reception that night, the Presidents Cup announced $25,000 donations to the golf programs at the six participating teams, as well as the Dr. Charles L. Sifford Scholarship, which helps defray expenses for HBCU students or minorities enrolled in golf management programs. Watkins says the donation exceeds his yearly operating budget. He sees the money helping with recruiting and travel expenses. It will also complete an endowed scholarship he started that was on a five-year plan and now can be realized well ahead of schedule. “So, I’m excited about that,” Watkins says. “That’s going to be something the team can take advantage of after I’m long gone and hopefully I can continue to get support to build on that structure.” The Charlie Sifford Centennial Cup was conceived as part of the PGA TOUR’s on-going mission to promote diversity, equity and inclusion. The Presidents Cup will also host a leadership summit during the week of the event featuring representatives from Bridgestone, City, Cognizant and Nucor, as well as presidents of HBCUs and other sports executives. Sperling says he’s extremely pleased with how the Centennial Cup unfolded. “I think our report card is measured in the looks on the faces of these 24 student-athletes, their coaches, their administrators, their families, from their arrival Saturday evening through yesterday’s welcome reception and practice rounds and in today’s competition,” he says. “… I’m not sure any of us knew how we would do it. We just knew it was something we needed to do. And we got a lot of the right people in the right positions to lead various areas and I couldn’t be happier with how it’s come out.”

Click here to read the full article

Tiger Woods shares early clubhouse lead at ValsparTiger Woods shares early clubhouse lead at Valspar

PALM HARBOR, Fla. — Tiger Woods put his name on the leaderboard again, and this time it stayed there. Woods looked sharper as the gallery got louder. He made four birdies, got a few good bounces and kept a clean card at Innisbrook until the last hole for a 3-under 68 that gave him a share of the early lead Friday at the Valspar Championship. Paul Casey and Brandt Snedeker also had 68s, while Ryan Palmer had a 66 to share the lead at 4-under 138. “I don’t think this will be leading, but at least I’m there with a chance going into the weekend,” Woods said. “Today was a good day.” Masters champion Sergio Garcia and Rory McIlroy were among those playing in the afternoon. Woods also got his name high on the leaderboard when he first returned from his fourth back surgery in the Bahamas, an unofficial event with an 18-man field before as sparse of a gallery as will ever see him play. That didn’t last long. This looked as though it could. Woods has been slowed my mistakes, some leading to big numbers the last time he played at the Honda Classic. The second round at Innisbrook was all about control of his shots that rarely put him out of position off the tee and especially on the green, where he could attack putts from below the hole. He took the lead with a drive that was heading left, struck a cart path and caromed back into the fairway on his 14th hole, the par-5 fifth. That set up a long iron into the front right bunker, and a delicate shot from the sand to about 5 feet for his fourth birdie of the round. He gained even more momentum with a 12-foot par putt from the collar of the fringe at No. 7, and Woods was heading toward a bogey-free round until his wedge on the par-5 ninth rode the shifting wind to the right and into the gallery, his ball on a woman’s bag. After getting a drop, his chip came out too strong and hit the flag, leaving it only 6 feet away. He missed the putt and didn’t seem all that bothered. Just over five months ago, Woods still didn’t have the clearance to begin hitting full shots, much less playing without restrictions. In his fourth PGA TOUR event in seven weeks, he looks like a contender. “I’ve come a long way in that span of time,” Woods said. What’s changed is the energy of the gallery, enormous for the Valspar Championship, all of them looking for any reason to cheer. “The roars are a little louder, and there’s certainly an energy about the gallery that you don’t have anywhere else,” Jordan Spieth said. Spieth missed the cut for the second time this year. He is still trying to rediscover his putting touch, and his iron game left him in the opening round of 76. He didn’t fare much better on Friday with two birdies, two bogeys, a 71 and a phone call to get back to Dallas sooner than he wanted. Henrik Stenson, the other major champion in the group, had another 74 and missed the cut. “I’ve played with Tiger many times. It’s nothing new,” Spieth said. “It kind of feels like you’re playing in a major championship in a normal round, which if anything should bring out better golf for me. I just got way off on my iron play, with putting not improving either. That’s how you shoot over par.” Casey holed a 15-foot birdie putt on the 18th for his 68, putting him in good shape going into the weekend. Casey has gone nearly four years since his last victory. He was on the opposite side of the course as Woods, though he could hear him. “Feels like the old days,” Casey said. Snedeker holed a 35-foot birdie putt on the par-3 13th and took care the par 5s on the front nine for his 68. Sean O’Hair, a past winner at Innisbrook who lost in a playoff to Spieth here in 2015, had a 68 and was at 3-under 139. Former PGA champion Jimmy Walker reached 6 under with four birdies on his first five holes, only to lose ground the rest of the way for a 71. He was at 2-under 140. Woods never really saw his name on the board. Whenever he glanced at the video board, it was showing Spieth or Stenson putting and their statistics. But he could sense from the crowd that everything was going his way. These last two days have given his comeback some momentum. “To play myself into contention this early into it was nice, and on top of that, to build on what I did a week ago,” he said, referring to the Honda Classic when he was on the fringe of contention going to the back nine. “I feel comfortable out there.”

Click here to read the full article

Matthew Wolff: In-depth ‘What’s in the bag?’ and one of the coolest headcovers in golfMatthew Wolff: In-depth ‘What’s in the bag?’ and one of the coolest headcovers in golf

CROMWELL, Conn. – As previously reported by PGATOUR.COM, amateur standout Matthew Wolff announced that he joined Team TaylorMade ahead of his professional debut at the 2019 Travelers Championship. TaylorMade officially confirmed today that the company and Wolff have started a multi-year equipment deal. For more information about the TaylorMade clubs Wolff is using at the Travelers Championship, PGATOUR.COM caught up with the person who knows his equipment best: Ryan Ressa. Ressa, Manager of Product Development at TaylorMade, works with junior and collegiate golfers, helping them with their equipment needs. Wolff and Ressa first started working together around 2013, and Wolff has been playing TaylorMade products ever since, according to Ressa. “He was a really good player, a really solid athlete,â€� Ressa said of Wolff when he was around 14 years old. “A lot of juniors came to the Kingdom (TaylorMade’s fitting center) at that time, but when he came through, that’s when the light clicked on… the guy is just a natural talent. When you see some of the things he does with the golf club and the golf ball, that hasn’t changed since he was 13. Like the sound he creates now, that was the one thing that stood out back then.â€� When it comes to equipment, Ressa says he’s not one to tinker a lot. Back when Wolff was a junior golfer and into his collegiate years at Oklahoma State University, he’d go to the Kingdom once in January to get fit into the new product, and he wouldn’t change much all year after that, except for an occasional loft tweak. “He likes what he likes, but he’s also not hesitant to try or put new stuff in,â€� Ressa said. “He’ll come in January when we have the new product. He’ll hit it and we’ll get him into it and he’ll get comfortable with it over the next couple weeks and then he’ll go with it. He doesn’t tinker much.â€� As for his current equipment, Wolff has made a few recent changes. Ressa takes PGATOUR.COM through his equipment at the Travelers Championship (as of Wednesday’s practice session) below. Driver: TaylorMade M6 (8 degrees) Shaft: Graphite Design AD-TP 7TX Ressa says: “He’s got the M6 8-degree driver in the bag, and we just made that adjustment a couple weeks ago. He had an M5 9-degree that he used that through college. He was probably spinning it a little too much throughout the course of March and April, but we didn’t want to tinker much as he was going down the stretch of the National Championship. Then we went to a different head model last week, and lowered the loft, just to give him something different to try. He loved the feel and the sensation of the weight being in the back of that head. He felt like it gave him a bit more workability, so that’s what he’s been going with the last couple weeks and all indications are that he loves it. It has a little less spin, probably 300 rpm less spin, and he likes the control. He likes to work it both ways, depending on how he’s feeling. The M6 is giving him that flexibility.â€� As for the driver shaft, Ressa says: “He’s probably had this shaft for 3 or 4 years, and honestly the Graphite Design feel is very unique. It’s very smooth through impact, and he always identifies with that. He might test a shaft here or there, but he always comes back to that. The launch fits his eye; it probably takes off a little higher than most guys like, but he likes the higher launch and the window that comes out in. He’s always been comfortable with that, so we haven’t tinkered much with it. We tested some other Graphite Design driver shafts a couple years ago that were maybe a little stronger, but he always came back to that TP. “He’s hanging out at D4 swing weight. His stuff is a little bit shorter, so he plays his driver at 45 inches, which is just a touch shorter than where most of my guys are. He likes the shorter length because his arms seem to hang a bit lower. So that seems to be consistent throughout his bag. He plays his stuff a little shorter all the way through.â€� 3 Wood: TaylorMade M6 (15 degrees) Shaft: Project X HZRDUS Smoke 6.5TX 80 grams Ressa says: “Three wood is a tough club for him because he hits it so far. So he will kind of alternate that one based on the course and based on what he needs that week. He goes between a 15 degree and probably a 16-degree. I would say most of the time he’ll carry a 16-degree — something that doesn’t fly so far, maybe 275-280 yards. When he gets that 15-degree, and he’s feeling it and it’s warm outside, that carries about 285 yards and goes out to 300, which is not super playable for him. I think this week he’s gone back to a lower loft, but traditionally he plays a 16-degree.â€� While Wolff doesn’t tinker much with shafts, he changed this week – at least, as of Wednesday — from a Graphite Design BB shaft to a Project X HZRDUS Smoke. Driving Iron: TaylorMade P760 (2 and 3-iron) Shafts: Nippon N.S. Pro Tour 130X Wolff has two different long-iron options in the bag this week ahead of the Travelers Championship. With 15 clubs in the bag, it’s likely that he’ll choose just one of these driving iron options. Ressa says: “He’s got a 760 3-iron that’s bent down to 18 degrees, so technically it’s a 2-iron. That’s been a great club for him off the tee at some of these tighter courses throughout the spring. After that, he transitions into the P750’s, 4-PW. He’s played that Nippon 130X shaft for I think 2.5 years now, since we got him into the 750s.â€� Irons: TaylorMade P750 Tour Proto (4-PW) Shafts: Nippon N.S. Pro Tour 130X Ressa says: “We’ve tested some smaller blade irons, but he always comes back to the 750s. He likes the shape and the forgiveness and the workability of those.â€� Wedges: TaylorMade Milled Grind (52, 56 and 60 bent to 62 degrees) Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 Ressa says: “He’s played Milled Grind wedges since we’ve had those, so a couple years. He goes 52, 56 and 62. He has a 60 that we’ve bent up to 62 for him, and that has little heel and toe relief grind on it. He’s just recently put that 62 degree in, just to have a little more height around the greens as he’s got into these tougher courses like the National Championship, which was pretty difficult, and he kind of anticipates that difficulty as he goes through this summer. That’ll be consistent in his bag.â€� Putter: TaylorMade Spider X Tour Shaft: KBS CT Tour putter shaft Ressa says: “He’s always had kind of a half mallet putter… he felt he didn’t putt great during the Waste Management and that was right around the time we introduced the Spider X. So we got him a few models of that and he put it in play the following week in Hawaii, and he won that tournament going away. He was off and running with that putter. He loves the look and the stability and everything about it, so he’s been in that since probably early February. It’s face-balanced, single bend, 33 inches, 1.5 degrees of loft. Pretty standard. No special insert.â€� Special made for Wolff after he turned pro is this “Wolffieâ€� headcover that features a wolf logo stitched with Oklahoma State University colors. The headcover, which may just be one of the best headcovers on TOUR, was designed by Cameron Bosson and the design team at TaylorMade. Wolff is also currently using a 2019 Titleist Pro V1 golf ball; TaylorMade is giving him an extended period of time to make the switch into TP5x (similar to Jon Rahm in 2016), according to a company representative. Related: Matthew Wolff bringing unique game to PGA TOUR

Click here to read the full article