Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Live leaderboard: Round 2 of WM Phoenix Open

Live leaderboard: Round 2 of WM Phoenix Open

Justin Thomas, Rickie Fowler and Harold Varner III shared the first-round lead, but changes are happening quickly at the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

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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
Collin Morikawa+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Shane Lowry+3500
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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
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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First headcover snafu, then 72 for Tiger Woods at Dell Technologies ChampionshipFirst headcover snafu, then 72 for Tiger Woods at Dell Technologies Championship

NORTON, Mass. – Tiger Woods was about to pull the trigger on his opening tee shot at the Dell Technologies Championship when he backed off and broke into a smile. But the trademark grin would soon leave the 79-time PGA TOUR winners face. Onlookers assumed Woods was indecisive on what to use and had made an 11th hour strategy change – one they second guessed his choice when he hooked his ball well left and into a hazard. In fact decades of staring at the back of golf clubs had paid off just in time. Woods had grabbed what he thought was a 3-wood out of his bag but in fact was about to let fly with a 5-wood on the par-4 10th at TPC Boston, his opening hole. It wasn’t poor eyesight from the now 42-year-old, in fact his veteran caddie Joe LaCava had to take the blame. “That was pretty funny, actually, because I thought it was a 3-wood out. Joey had put the wrong head cover on from the range,â€� Woods revealed. “I had a 5-wood out, which I put down there, and I can’t hit it that far in the wind, I need a 3-wood. I went back to 3-wood, that’s why it looked like I switched, because I realized I had the wrong club in my hand.â€� Woods had sensed something a little different in his practice swings but it wasn’t until his head was over the ball he figured something wasn’t quite right. In the end he might have been better off sticking with what he had given the result. Woods would open with bogey and battle his way to a 1-over 72 to be five adrift of the early morning leaders. Through seven holes of his round he was languishing at 3-over and could have easily put his tournament under extreme threat. Instead he ground out some birdies to allow some hope for a better final three rounds and a move forward in the FedExCup. “I hung in there. And 18, 1, 2, 4, there’s some birdieable holes there, I thought if you could play those holes 4-under par, I’d turn this whole round around,â€� Woods said. “I made a few birdies there, which was nice. Couldn’t quite keep the momentum going throughout the front side, my back nine, and I felt if I felt momentum going, I could have finished under par today.â€� Woods sits 25th in the FedExCup, certain to advance to next week’s BMW Championship (top 70) but is certainly not locked into the TOUR Championship at East Lake in a few week’s time. If he is to hold on to a spot in the top 30 he will need to turn his fortunes around. “When I did miss it, I missed it in bad spots, didn’t have very good angles. But overall, no one is going low out there today,â€� Woods said somewhat optimistically. “It’s tricky with the wind blowing the way it is right now. Hopefully tomorrow I can miss in correct spots and make a few more birdies than I did today.â€� Despite an average day of ball-striking Woods took confidence from his new putter – which came after he ranked near last in the field for Strokes Gained: Putting at THE NORTHERN TRUST last week. Having used a mallet style putter for the last few months, Woods switched back to the Anser-style he won with for the majority of his career. Extensive work with TaylorMade had yielded a putter similar to the one he won 13 of his14 major championships. “I liked it,â€� Woods said of the TaylorMade TP Black Copper Juno he used just 26 times. “I putted beautifully today, I really did. I hit a lot of good putts, and just have to give myself more looks out of them. I didn’t hit the ball close enough today. “I felt good with it. We had to adjust the loft on it just a touch the other day. And I found that my feels came back, that releases something I’m very familiar with. And it felt good. “Trying to get a putter that looked exactly like my old putter, but it had the grooves in it to roll the ball better… And we finally got one.â€� 

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Paul Casey continues to shine at Travelers ChampionshipPaul Casey continues to shine at Travelers Championship

CROMWELL, Conn. – Geno Auriemma may deliver a more consistent annual product to this area, but he relies on a cast of players. Paul Casey depends on himself, with help from his trusty caddie with the long socks, Johnny McLaren. OK, maybe it’s not that fair a comparison. Auriemma’s University of Connecticut women’s basketball teams have, after all, won 11 national titles, while Casey has yet to prevail here at the Travelers Championship. But the point is, Casey on Thursday continued to produce with an uncanny consistency at TPC River Highlands, his 5-under 65 leaving him just a shot off the lead. Thus, did Casey’s running total at this par-70 golf course improve significantly: In 17 rounds, he has been in the 60s 15 times and he’s now a robust 52 under. No wonder he proclaimed that “it’s a joy to play this golf event.� For the record, that joy subsided for a few moments at the end of his round, for which Casey accepted full blame. Related: Featured Groups | Burgoon cards opening-round 64 | Cantlay stays positive, continues strong play | Rising stars take on Travelers “There was no reason to go at that pin,� he said of a front-left position at the par-4 18th. But from 148 yards away in the fairway, Casey indeed attacked, and he paid the price. Long and left, he failed to get it up-and-down from the rough, but even that hiccup – his only bogey of the day – helped tell the story of his brilliance at TPC River Highlands. Consider: In 306 holes of regulation, Casey has now made just 27 bogeys, two of them doubles. That’s an average of 1.58 per round and you’d be safe to say that’s a blueprint for affixing your name to the leaderboard. He’s just one off the lead, which is part of what is becoming an old story. Casey has been in the lead or within three after eight of his 17 rounds and never has he been more than six off the pace. “Some habits,� laughed Casey, “are good.� He would, of course, prefer to break one habit here. He hasn’t yet won. In his debut at the Travelers, in 2015, Casey shot 64-65 on the weekend, but lost in a playoff to Bubba Watson. He was joint fifth in 2017, then last year he took a four-stroke lead into Sunday but shot 72 and was passed by Watson’s 63. Brushing that frustration aside, Casey emphasizes the positive. He played late Thursday and through bursts of rain (“I don’t like the rain; that’s why I live in Arizona,� he laughed) and “even thought I finished with a bogey, I’m keen to get out there (Friday morning) and hopefully post a number for them to look at.� Considering his track record here, you’d have to think the odds are pretty good.

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Cameron Smith’s secrets to Masters successCameron Smith’s secrets to Masters success

Cameron Smith of Australia is seeking to join an exclusive club this week. Only Tiger Woods has won THE PLAYERS and the Masters in the same year, and it happened when Woods was at the height of his powers. Woods’ first PLAYERS win came in 2001, just two weeks before he completed the Tiger Slam by making the Masters his fourth consecutive major victory. Smith has already won THE PLAYERS this year – in addition to his record-setting victory at the Sentry Tournament of Champions in January – and all signs point to him as a favorite this week at Augusta National. Smith, who’s third in the FedExCup and sixth in the world ranking, has finished in the top 10 in three of his last four Masters appearances, including a runner-up in 2020 when he became the first player in Masters history to break 70 in all four rounds. And while four of the last five champions at Augusta National were in at least their 10th Masters start, Smith feels he’s banked up the experience necessary to become just the second Australian to win at Augusta National. We sat down with Smith to pick his brain and find five keys to preparing and playing well at the Masters. 1. Tap into your creative side Smith missed 25 greens at the 2020 Masters but made just nine bogeys on his way to an impressive 15-under total and runner-up finish. He produced incredible par saves on his final three holes in the third round to stay within four of Dustin Johnson, and Smith pulled within two Sunday after two incredible birdies from tough spots on the first nine. One of those, on the par-4 seventh hole, appeared set to be a certain punch out to, at best, a greenside bunker after his drive leaked right into the trees. But Smith saw a tiny window up through the branches. He decided to gamble. Swinging as hard as he could, he launched the ball into orbit from 120 yards out. It sailed through the trees unscathed and onto the putting surface, coming to rest 10 feet from the hole. “I wasn’t here to finish second,” Smith said of his aggressive play. It was the vision to even see the shot that makes Smith the type of player who can win a Green Jacket. Smith says: “When it comes to playing well at Augusta National you need to be able to see a variety of shots from a variety of places and have the ability to recover from wherever you might end up. If you are not able to see a handful of ways to play shots, or the right way to play them, you can get into trouble quickly. So, for me, it is important to really get that creative mindset ready to go in the lead up. I play that way most of the time, but at Augusta you find slopes and quadrants on the greens you need to use, and elevation changes across the course that mean you might need to play in the air, along the ground, or even a combination of both. Not only do you need to open your mind to different options, but you need to be confident when executing them also. I actually usually use the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play to help dial this attitude in, as Austin Country Club has a lot of imaginative ways to play shots. This year, I’ve had to replicate it on my own at home (Smith withdrew from the Match Play to spend more time with family visiting from Australia). Sometimes when I’m playing with mates in practice, I’ll make bets that I can get up and down from tough spots to help get my mind locked in. Obviously the practice rounds of tournament week are important here also.” 2. Dial in your irons, especially from 130-140 yards With Augusta National being somewhat generous off the tee, it becomes important to have your approach game in a good place that week. For Smith, who’s eighth in Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green this season, it is about extra effort, particularly on the wedge game, as the Masters nears. Last season, Smith was best on TOUR from 100-125 yards and eighth from 125-150 yards. This season, he’s on point again from 100-125 yards, ranked seventh, but has slipped a little from 125-150 and ranks 133rd. So that is his focus. Smith says: “Augusta is a second-shot golf course so you really have to have your approach game on point. You really need to hit it into certain spots on the greens to score well because it is a tricky golf course. In simple terms, you just have to hit good quality shots if you want to win. It’s not just a simple cliche like leaving it below the hole because there are certain pins, for example the pin on the top tier at the back-right of the sixth green, you don’t want to be below the pin there because you’ll have 30-40 feet uphill. Sometimes you need to remember par is a really good score and if you get away with a birdie you’ve had a win. You need to keep that mentality and patience. “Your wedge game is a really big key. Particularly around 130-140 because the course is so tough and the pins are so tight you really have to get those dialed in if you want to play well and contend. In the lead up, I try to spend a lot more time with the wedges in hand and try to get a few competitive games going as I look to get those numbers in sync. I’ll grab TrackMan and call the yardage I thinks shots will carry and then check to see how close I am. I want to be very accurate in this space. That way you can stand over any shot and feel comfortable that you can get to the spot you need to get to.” 3. Get ready for grain and tight lies Smith’s short game is among the best in the game, and it needs to be at the Masters. He ranks 20th on TOUR in Strokes Gained: Around the Green and has been inside the top 40 in five of the last six seasons. An ability to nip the ball off of tight lies around the greens gives players a leg up, but Smith cheekily says it takes “23 years of practice,” to get it just right more often than not. Smith says: “Chipping is very important. The reality is it gets really grainy at Augusta National. It’s the way they mow it. … They mow it all going away from you so you’re constantly chipping into the grain. It seems like you always need to nip it perfectly to get a good result from your shots. I definitely practice a lot more around the greens, especially trying to use slopes in a variety of ways. Again, this is where your creative mind must be used. You need to see the options in your mind and make the right decision. I use the practice rounds each year to mess around a bit with trying things around the greens. You never know what you might be faced with and you need confidence to find, and execute, a way to get the ball to the hole.” 4. Bend it both ways Smith won the PLAYERS despite ranking last in the field in driving accuracy. The driver has never been Smith’s best club and he’s always ranked outside the top in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee. He makes up for it with his iron play, short game and putting. He points out he’s improved his driving accuracy at the last two Masters, however, hitting 64% of fairways in 2020 and almost 68% in 2021. His focus though, is on shaping shots. Smith says: “The key to driving at the Masters is the ability to shape it both ways off the tee. I know people say you need to hit a draw – and there are a lot of shots where right-to-left is the shot – but you definitely still need to hit a fade. This idea that it’s only a draw course, I don’t buy that. You obviously want to hit the fairways, especially on the par-5s where you need to make your moves or get left behind. And the more fairways you hit the better, but that isn’t the be-all and end-all. “I’ll spend extra time trying to get my shape correct off the tee – and I do spend effort on the draw because I find it harder to hit driver right-to-left naturally – but I’ll also spend time with my 3-wood for that shot. It’s easier for me to turn a 3-wood over from right to left, so I’ll use that where appropriate in the spots where driver is a bit awkward for me. I definitely use the 3-wood a little more at the Masters than other weeks.” 5. The need for speed (control) Smith was 10th in Strokes Gained: Putting last season and ranks third this year. His flatstick work at the PLAYERS was incredible, particularly in the final round where he one-putted his way to victory. When it comes to recent champions at the Masters, six of the last seven ranked inside the top 20 in total putts and four of those were in the top 10. In his last four Masters, Smith ranked 13th, ninth, second and 33rd in number of putts. The 28-year-old says speed is the key to his putting at the sloping greens of Augusta National. Smith says: “For the most part, putting is about where to leave yourself on the Augusta greens. Speed is where you really have to put your efforts. In the practice rounds I tend to hit longer, curling putts from all spots as I work to get my speed as dialed in as possible. You can get in some (crazy) situations and, like I’ve said a few times now, you will need to creatively use slopes to get close to some holes and avoid three-putts. You want your lag speed to be near perfect because three-putts are killers most weeks, especially at majors. The course changes from early in the week to the tournament days, also, so you have to be able to adjust with the speed – and that is where prior experience can help – as can your warmup each day on the practice greens.”

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