Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Tiger Woods grinds out 2-under 70 at Farmers Insurance Open

Tiger Woods grinds out 2-under 70 at Farmers Insurance Open

LA JOLLA, Calif. – The Farmers Insurance Open used to be an annual display of Tiger Woods’ dominance. Then early exits and questions about his health became the dominant theme. Thursday’s opening round at the Farmers Insurance Open served as confirmation. His 2-under 70 on Torrey Pines’ brutish South Course showed that Woods can pick up where he left off in his last official PGA TOUR event, the TOUR Championship. It’s been four months since he induced pandemonium at East Lake. He struggled in his handful of rounds since then, but on Thursday he erased questions that arose after poor performances at the Ryder Cup and Hero World Challenge. Given the opportunity to build back his strength in the offseason, Woods looks ready to resume his pursuit of Sam Snead’s victories record. Woods was understandably rusty, but there were plenty of promising signs. He accomplished something Thursday that he had not done in six years. This was the first time since 2013 that Woods shot under par in his opening round on the South Course. He won that week. The leaderboard will show that Woods sits outside the top 50, but that is deceptive because of the two courses in use this week. The South Course was more than two strokes harder than the shorter North on Thursday. “A couple under par on the South course is not something to sneeze at, but now I have to shoot a low one tomorrow,â€� Woods said. While Jon Rahm leads after shooting 62, no one shot lower than 66 on the South. Woods hit half of his fairways while hitting driver off most tees. Last season, the South Course had the hardest fairways to hit (48 percent). He hit 12 of 18 greens on Thursday, as well, but made just four putts longer than 3 feet Thursday. “I felt pretty comfortable with everything today,â€� Woods said. “I felt like I drove it halfway decent today and irons were good but not great. Playing at competitive speed again, I didn’t quite hit all my irons pin high like I normally do. That’s something hopefully I’ll have a better handle on tomorrow. It was nice to have some juice flow in the system again, it’s been a while.â€� All four came on the South Course’s par-5s, where he had to work hard to make birdie. All of his birdie putts on those holes were longer than 10 feet, including a 29-footer on the 13th hole. He had to lay up three times. His only other birdie came after he knocked his tee shot stiff on one of the South Course’s hardest holes. Woods hit a low, piercing iron to 3 feet on the 215-yard 11th hole. The average proximity on that hole was 36 feet. Only eight other players birdied the hole Thursday. Woods started his round by splitting the first fairway with a driver. He hit his approach shot to 25 feet and two-putted for par. He bogeyed the next hole, though, after missing both the fairway and the green. It was the first of three consecutive misses from 10-15 feet. The latter two were for birdie. He missed another makeable birdie putt, from 20 feet on the fifth hole. He got back to even par at the par-5 sixth hole, where he holed a 10-foot putt from the fringe to complete an up-and-down from the greenside bunker. He made birdie the hard way on the par-5 ninth to make the turn in 35. Woods was left with a 166-yard approach shot after driving into the rough. He reached 2 under par after his birdie at No. 11, but he missed a 6-foot par putt on the next hole. Woods hit the fairway on 13, but he laid up from 293 yards. His 100-yard approach went long and didn’t spin back after landing in the fringe. He made the long, downhill putt, though. He grinded out pars on 14 and 15 after missing the fairway. He made another bogey on 16 after pushing his tee shot into a bunker. He had to lay up on 18 after missing another fairway, but he wedged to 12 feet and curled in the putt to close with another birdie. He gained a half-stroke on the greens Thursday.

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No trespassing: Fleetwood enters hometown Open as a favoriteNo trespassing: Fleetwood enters hometown Open as a favorite

SOUTHPORT, England – Tommy Fleetwood’s presence at Royal Birkdale this week is well publicized, unlike his earlier trips to the Open Championship venue. Banners hanging around Southport bear the likeness of the hometown kid who also happens to be one of the pre-tournament favorites. Fleetwood grew up around the corner from the course, close enough that his father, Pete, could walk the family dog past the famed links. Tommy would sneak onto the course as a young boy and hit a few shots, undoubtedly dreaming of hoisting the Claret Jug in front of a legion of loved ones. “If you live five minutes away, you’re going to try to get on when you can,â€� he said. “We were very clever about it.â€� There’s no need for Tommy to be surreptitious this week. He’s been one of the best golfers in the world in 2017, rising to a career-high 14th in the world ranking. He beat FedExCup leader Dustin Johnson in Abu Dhabi in January, then finished second to Johnson at the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship. After finishing fourth at the U.S. Open, where he played with winner Brooks Koepka in Sunday’s second-to-last group, Tommy won again just three weeks ago at the French Open. Fleetwood has played well enough this year to earn Special Temporary Membership for the remainder of the 2016-17 season. He’s also earned enough non-member FedExCup points to be eligible for full membership next season. “I’d much rather be in this position where people might be talking about me as a contender than turning up and … being a no-show,â€� Tommy, 26, said. “I’ve thought about winning The Open since I was 5 years old, so I think thinking about it another few days isn’t going to make any difference to me.â€� A victory this week could stand alongside the hometown wins of Augusta native Larry Mize in the 1987 Masters and Francis Ouimet’s victory in the 1913 U.S. Open. Fleetwood may not be as large of an underdog as Mize or, especially, Ouimet, who was a caddie at the tournament venue, The Country Club of Brookline, but few players have won a major so close to home. Pete Fleetwood’s walking route took him past Royal Birkdale’s 18th green, down the 17th fairway to the back of the 16th green. Tommy said the fifth hole was the best spot to sneak on, though fences and bushes — perhaps inspired by a young Tommy’s clandestine visits — now keep intruders off the course. Tommy attended his first Open Championship at Royal Birkdale in 1998. His memories are few, though he does recall being impressed by the aura of Tiger Woods as the young star, who finished third that week, strode past him. The Open returned to Birkdale 10 years later, but Tommy was too heartbroken to even watch. He’d lost the final match of the British Amateur a few weeks earlier, missing out on his first opportunity to play The Open at Birkdale. “That one hit me hard,â€� he said. He became the No. 1 amateur in the world a year later. In 2011, at age 20, he became the youngest player to win the money list on the Challenge Tour (Europe’s version of the Web.com Tour). Two years later, he won his first European Tour title and he was No. 51 in the world by the end of 2014. But his game started to slip, and by last September he was down to 188th in the world ranking. A return to his childhood coach, Ian Thompson, and the help of longtime friend Ian Finnis, who left his job as an assistant pro at Formby Golf Club to become Fleetwood’s caddie, have helped Tommy’s career reach unprecedented levels. He will play the first two rounds this week with Koepka and U.S. Open runner-up Hideki Matsuyama. Being reminded of what happened last month at Erin Hills can only help his confidence. Fleetwood admits he didn’t have his best stuff on Sunday – his final-round 72 left him five shots behind Koepka, who shot 67 — but he was proud of the way he handled the nerves that come in a major championship. “I felt if the time comes again when I’m contending in a major, I know that I can do it,â€� Tommy said. “I felt fine. And I felt comfortable. Of course you’re nervous but I wasn’t out of control. I wasn’t fearful.â€� He’ll have plenty of eyes on him again this week. He now lives an hour away from Birkdale but said his parents’ home could come in handy if he has an early tee time one day. The local fans will hope that isn’t the case this weekend, preferring instead to see him play with the leaders late in the afternoon, but he also knows that, no matter the result, this will be a unique week. “The banners will be off in a couple weeks, so best not getting used to it too much,â€� Fleetwood said. Unless, of course, he wins the Claret Jug. Then his face, and photos of those flowing locks, undoubtedly will remain plastered all over town.

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Lowry to take three-shot Abu Dhabi lead into final roundLowry to take three-shot Abu Dhabi lead into final round

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