Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Justin Rose not expecting usual wilt at Torrey Pines

Justin Rose not expecting usual wilt at Torrey Pines

SAN DIEGO – FedExCup champion Justin Rose is going to take some catching at Torrey Pines. The world’s top ranked player methodically picked apart Torrey Pines with his irons for the second day running, posting a 6-under 66 on the tougher South Course. The nine-time PGA TOUR winner moved to a Farmers Insurance Open record equaling 15-under 129 at the halfway point. He sits three clear of his nearest competitor Hideki Matsuyama and five clear of Jon Rahm (72), Ryan Palmer (67) and Bill Horschel (68) who share third. Traditionally things get tough on weekends at the South Course that has hosted and will again host the U.S. Open (2008, 2021). Many players have come back to the field and folded from in front. Trouble lurks amongst the deep rough and tricky wind gusts. Last season the 36-hole lead was 11-under but 10-under entered a playoff Sunday. Three years ago 9-under was the halfway mark but 6-under won. Four and five years ago the lead at halfway was 10-under but 9-under was a playoff or win … you get the drift. At the end of the day Rose loves this trend. Because he loves it tough. He is a former U.S. Open winner. Even Friday when a few of his opening drives found their way to fairway sand traps Rose was able to step up with his irons and make birdies. MUST READS: Round 2, Farmers Insurance Open Tiger fails to take advantage of easier North Course McIlroy, Scott in contention in first starts at Farmers Matsuyama in solo second after back-to-back 66s Rose has hit 16 of 18 greens in regulation each round so far and leads the field in Strokes Gained: Approach at 5.025. He does not intend to take his foot off the gas either. “Listen, it’s the halfway point. If I had a three-shot lead going into Sunday, then it would be worth kind of thinking about game plan and strategy, but as of now I’ll just keep doing what I’m doing,â€� Rose said of his mindset. “If you can go out and make four, five birdies a day, you’re going to maybe drop the odd shot around here, it doesn’t take much to do that, so if you can stay positive and make your birdies, then it becomes harder to catch someone. “I’ll just pick my moments really and if I’m feeling good and I’ve got good numbers, go at it. If not, par’s never a bad score here.â€� Rose has finished T4 and T8 at Torrey Pines the last two seasons after failing to finish in the top-10 in his first seven Farmers Insurance Open attempts. Knocking some rust off last week at the Desert Classic, a tournament more suited to great putting rather than premium ball-striking, has him in great shape. He knew it would be an educational effort to prime him going forward. “Mentally I learned a lot last week,â€� he said of his T34 finish. “I got a good read on my game, what I had to work on coming into this week. Torrey sort of does fit my profile, and statistically, driving, iron play over the years, those have been strong elements of my game.â€� If they continue to be strong elements over the weekend Rose will hit double digit TOUR wins for sure.

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Now for the encore: After making history last year, the Drew Charter School golf team is ready for its title defenseNow for the encore: After making history last year, the Drew Charter School golf team is ready for its title defense

They’ve had a while to let it sink in. The historic significance. The bond they’ll always share. Charles R. Drew Charter School in Southeast Atlanta, which last May became the first all-black high school team and first public school in the city to win the Georgia (public-school) state boys’ golf championship, opens defense of its title as the season begins this month. Optimism abounds. “We’re looking strong,� says Nyre Williams, a Director at The First Tee of Metro Atlanta and an assistant coach at Drew. “We lost three seniors, but we’ve got a pipeline here.� He would know; Williams also coaches Drew Charter’s middle school golfers. After taking state last May, the Drew high boys basked in their accomplishment and filed off the bus and into the embrace of joyous and proud family members. They received rings they helped design themselves at a ceremony in November. “Seeing the kids just so happy,� fifth-year head coach Joe Weems says of his personal highlight. “Coming back to the school and seeing the families, seeing everybody so overjoyed and relieved that we had won. Putting on that championship ring was an amazing experience.� The whole world, it seemed, took notice. The Drew kids were recognized by the government of DeKalb County, and were practically celebrities at the TOUR Championship in August, meeting stars such as Tony Finau and Kevin Kisner. Attending the ceremony for 2019 Calvin Peete Award recipient Harold Varner III in October, their jaws dropped when Varner’s manager told them the HV3 Foundation would be donating $5,000 to the program. “This is just the beginning of my relationship with those kids and coaches,� Varner told Golfweek. “… I can’t wait to create a bond with them.� It’s heady stuff, but this week they open the new season, and everyone starts at zero. Anthony Ford, Drew’s No. 1 last year and one of 78 members of The First Tee to play in the PGA TOUR Champions PURE Insurance Championship in September – which, like this week’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, uses Pebble Beach Golf Links as the host course – returns for his senior year. He recently signed for a full scholarship to play golf at North Carolina A&T. Sophomore Miles Richardson returns, as do senior Connor Mason, who can play both lefthanded and righthanded, and others. Enough team members shoot in the 70s and 80s to fuel hopes of a repeat. “I really like our chances again this year,� Williams says. Weems doesn’t disagree. “That’s the attitude I definitely would want us to have,� he says. Starting from scratch Not long ago, the Drew Charter School couldn’t field a full team of players who could compete over 18 holes, and other schools sometimes balked at the idea of scheduling a match. Now look at them. “We are like pioneers,� Mason told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution last summer. Indeed, the Drew Eagles beat the two-time defending state champions by an audacious 15 strokes. From there, they represented Georgia at the High School Golf National Invitational at Orlando’s Disney World in June, when they finished 20th. Solomon Dobbs, who now plays golf for Morehouse College, says being a member of the state-title-winning team last year has forever changed his life. “I think about the power of connections,� says Dobbs, who hit the ceremonial first tee shot at the TOUR Championship last summer and imagines returning to Drew one day to coach golf. “I’ll get calls from my teammates asking if I want to go play somewhere, and I still talk to Coach Nyre and Coach Joe. How’s it going? Do you need any help? The bond is so strong.� Weems marvels at all the things that fell into place to make it happen, starting with the photo of himself with his arms around his first bag of clubs when he was 8. His late father, Joe Sr., who drove 18-wheelers and owned his own trucking company, gave the clubs to him out of the blue. “I was so new to it I didn’t even know how to hold them,� Weems says with a laugh. He sometimes shows the photo to Drew parents in order to cultivate buy-in. Look what can happen when you put your child into golf. In 1980, Weems’ great uncle, Miles Craddick, then a caddie at Athens (Georgia) Country Club, taught the boy how to build a nine-hole backyard course using Styrofoam cups with the bottoms carved out. It was the year that gave us PAC-MAN, the Rubik’s Cube and Atlanta-born CNN. No one was shouting the praises of East Lake, then a go-at-your-own-risk type of area, but that began to change in the mid-1990s when the East Lake Foundation started revitalizing the neighborhood. Golf was central to the effort, and when Drew opened in 2000, it was conveniently located within walking distance of East Lake Golf Club – former home of Bobby Jones and host course for the TOUR Championship – and the nine-hole, par-30 Charlie Yates Golf Course. Drew began offering the sport in P.E. classes through The First Tee – there are now three certified instructors at the school – and Dobbs started taking golf in the second grade. Ford, who broke the back window of his family’s Jeep Cherokee with one of his first swings, started the same way. Kids continue to learn the fundamentals, plus etiquette and caddie protocol. (If you play East Lake, you just might get a Drew player on your bag.) Success didn’t happen overnight, but some kids took to it and pulled their peers up with them. “We try to mentor these kids, too,� Weems says. “It’s not just golf, it’s about having someone they can go to throughout the day just in general. I’m real big on culture and climate. The culture is having a winning attitude, but the climate is about family and taking care of one another.� The pipeline was born. Looking ahead Could this be a dynasty? Perhaps. Although African American representation in golf has been historically low, Drew continues to make the most of some unique advantages. “Having two golf courses in between our school has helped,� Weems says. “Charlie Yates being our home, kids can walk right to the course. And East Lake, these kids have access to see things that a lot of kids don’t, and that’s a real advantage.� Things like the annual TOUR Championship, with 30 of the best golfers on the planet. “Every kid in our program either volunteered or was out in the course with their parents,� Weems says. “We make sure the conversation about golf is happening year-round, with clinics and tournaments and workouts. I want them to be around it as much as they can.� How’s this for golf immersion? Williams once took four First Tee kids to Scotland, where they stayed on the University of St. Andrews campus and played some of the game’s most famous courses. The highlight: a surprise tee time at the Old Course. Not a bad field trip. What Drew has accomplished continues to resonate on TOUR and beyond, no place more loudly than the hallways of the school itself, where the state championship hardware lives in a trophy case. Not surprisingly, interest is up. “I expect more than 35 kids to try out this year,� Weems says. “We started out with 21 my first year, and we’ve been growing ever since.� For the boys’ team, the differences going into this season would seem to be small. Two local chapters of The First Tee merged to form The First Tee of Metro Atlanta last summer. There will be a dedicated junior varsity team this year. And one of Drew’s returning players, senior Mason, has decided to go back to lefthanded this season after one season as a righty.     “I kept telling him I thought his scores were better as a lefty when he was a sophomore, when he shot in the mid-80s,� Weems says. “Last year he was in the 90s as a righty.� Historic. Dynastic. Ambidextrous. There seems to be no limit to what Drew can do. Oh, there’s one other big difference now that Drew is the reigning state champ. Weems has no more trouble scheduling other teams to play his own. (Go figure.) “We try to play the programs who were always willing to play us, which we didn’t always have,� he says. “We want programs like Maynard Jackson (a nearby high school named after the city’s first black mayor) to keep growing because it’s better for all of us, so we invest into those other programs in the community and make sure they’re doing great, too.� Can Drew repeat? Maybe, but that’s not the point. Maybe it’s more about access and opportunity. Maybe it’s about that bond and getting into a game you can play for a lifetime. Weems, who began his coaching career in football – Drew has no football team – sometimes thinks about Joe Sr., who died about 10 years ago. What would he say? “He loved to watch Calvin Peete on TV, and Tiger, of course,� Weems says. “He said, ‘Son, there are a lot of things that happen out on the golf course. You’ve got to be able to interact with people.’ He would always say to me as a football coach, ‘One day you’re going to coach a champion.’ Little did I know that he could see that far ahead.�

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Rory McIlroy takes early lead with 62 at Travelers ChampionshipRory McIlroy takes early lead with 62 at Travelers Championship

CROMWELL, Conn. – Rory McIlroy is fighting a cold. You can understand why. After carding a final-round 69 to finish T5 at the U.S. Open, he flew home to South Florida to see his wife, Erica, and their daughter, Poppy. He slept in his own bed, flew back to Connecticut, attended a five-hour meeting Tuesday – he’s one of four player directors on the PGA TOUR policy board – and played in the Travelers Championship’s Wednesday pro-am in the rain. And after all of that, he shot an 8-under 62 Thursday to take the early first-round lead. “Energy levels are OK,” McIlroy said after his eight-birdie, no-bogey round, which was one better than fellow morning-wave finishers Martin Laird and Xander Schauffele. “I’m feeling a little under the weather, but it’s just concentration at this point. “I’ve got three more rounds left until I have a couple of weeks off and prepare for the Open Championship,” he continued. “I’m going to put everything into those three rounds.” It’s been a busy stretch for McIlroy, who is teeing it up for the fourth week in a row. He won the RBC Canadian Open for his 21st TOUR title two weeks ago, and was in contention until the bitter end at the U.S. Open at The Country Club, where he had hoped to break a dry spell in the majors that dates back to 2014. Despite falling short in Boston, he’s playing well and is up to second in the Official World Golf Ranking. He and Erica have been laughing about how they’re losing their voices; they think Poppy brought something home from daycare. Unlike the weekend at the U.S. Open, and pro-am day at the Travelers, McIlroy found much more agreeable conditions for the opening round at TPC River Highlands. In partly-cloudy skies and warm temperatures, he and the others in his group, Webb Simpson (64) and Kevin Kisner (67), took advantage of a course softened by rain. “We had a great group,” said Simpson, who also didn’t make any bogeys. “Rory played great, Kevin played great. We kind of fed off each other. I think the holes started looking bigger and bigger to us. A lot of putts were made.” In three previous Travelers starts, McIlroy, who leads the TOUR in scoring average (68.657), has never finished in the top 10. The two-time FedExCup champion, No. 3 in the current standings, couldn’t ask for a better start to rectify that. “It’s like U.S. Open rehab coming here,” he said. “You’re like, oh, I can actually make some birdies. This is nice.” Three more solid rounds and his 22nd TOUR title would be even nicer, but it’s early. In his fourth straight week of competition, nursing a cold, McIlroy is taking it one birdie at a time.

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