Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting PGA TOUR AR app to feature new “360° Tee Box� experience on holes 1 and 18 at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

PGA TOUR AR app to feature new “360° Tee Box� experience on holes 1 and 18 at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, FLORIDA – The PGA TOUR announced that PGA TOUR AR, an augmented reality (AR) app that rolled out in 2018, will add a “360° Tee Box presented by AT&T� experience on holes No. 1 and 18 on Pebble Beach Golf Links at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. The experience will bring live AR and 360° tournament coverage to life for fans in the United States on their Apple device. The AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am will also showcase live featured hole AR coverage on the PGA TOUR AR app from holes 1, 7 and 18 at Pebble Beach Golf Links. The AR experience will begin in conjunction with the opening round of the tournament on Thursday, February 7. The PGA TOUR AR app is available for free, exclusively in the App Store. After selecting the 360° Tee Box within the app, fans will be directed to scan the floor and tap to start the experience. Once they tap to start, an AR green with the Pebble Beach flag will appear and direct fans to walk toward the green. Once fans walk onto the virtual green, the 360° video from either the 1st or 18th tee box will appear, and they can move their phones around to view the video. The experience will go live one hour before the first tee time Thursday-Sunday at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. “The AT&T 360° Tee Box in the PGA TOUR AR app offers fans a unique and exclusive view of Pebble Beach Golf Links,� said Devon Fox, PGA TOUR Director, Digital Platform Innovation. “Fans will be able to see holes No. 1 and 18 in an entirely new way, getting them closer to the action than ever before. Collaborating with AT&T to bring fans this exclusive experience represents a new way for the TOUR to add value for sponsors and partners in the future.� PGA TOUR AR allows fans to interact with 3D featured holes and live 3D shot trails on any flat surface right in front of them. On featured holes throughout the season, fans will be able to select their favorite player on the golf course, compare shot trails from each round and compare the shots of different players. The 360° Tee Box presented by AT&T experience will only be available for the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am from February 7-10. The PGA TOUR AR app is available on iPhone 7 and above and iOS 11.3 and above and on iPad Pro. The “360° Tee Box presented by AT&T� experience will only be visible to users on the iPhone/iOS versions listed above. The 360° Tee Box experience was developed jointly by the PGA TOUR, AT&T, The Marketing Arm and Trigger Global. The development of the PGA TOUR AR app in collaboration with POSSIBLE Mobile, part of the creative agency POSSIBLE, was aided by existing data gathered by ShotLink powered by CDW, the TOUR’s longstanding state-of-the-art scoring system. ShotLink through CDW technology captures and reports real-time vital information on every shot, by every player, during tournament competition. Every shot is translated into thousands of statistics, changing the way fans watch – and now interact with – the PGA TOUR, bringing them closer to the action. ShotLink and CDW’s vision is to turn data into information, information into knowledge, and knowledge into entertainment. The upgraded PGA TOUR AR app was built using the latest versions of ARKit and Unity to provide fans with faster, more accurate surface detection and the ability to choose where they want to place the models.

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Angel Ayora+1200
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The First Look: THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGESThe First Look: THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES

• FIELD: See the entrants for the event • COURSE: The Club at Nine Bridges, 7,196 yards, par 72. Located on Jeju Island, a resort destination just south of the Korean mainland, Nine Bridges opened in 2001 and is the only Korean course ranked among the world’s top 100. Designers Ronald Fream and David Dale deftly incorporated the layout into rolling pineland beneath Mount Halla, a dormant volcano that formed Jeju Island. The club was one of the first Asian venues on the LPGA schedule, with Se Ri Pak capturing the first tournament in 2002. Nine Bridges also is the longtime host of the biannual World Club Championship, where champions from top-level clubs around the world gather to contest a global title. The course actually features eight bridges – the ninth is metaphorical as a link from the club to members and guests. • FEDEXCUP: Winner receives 500 points. • CHARITY: The CJ Welfare Foundation and CJ Culture Foundation, supporting a wide range of projects from aiding retirees to fostering up-and-coming young artists and athletes. Among the initiatives is the “Silver Deliveryâ€� project, which gives part-time delivery jobs to retired seniors and resulted in CJ’s recognition by Fortune magazine among 56 companies “changing the world.â€� A new joint effort with UNESCO aims to expand education among girls in underdeveloped nations. • FIELD WATCH: Justin Thomas, making the second start of his FedExCup defense, and THE PLAYERS titleholder Si Woo Kim headline a limited field of 78 players set to tee it up in the CJ Cup’s debut. … TOUR Championship winner Xander Schauffele is one of 17 entrants who were at East Lake last month by virtue of making the top 30 in last season’s FedExCup points race. … The event has attracted 10 of the top 30 players in the world rankings, with No. 4 Thomas and No. 9 Jason Day heading up that list. … Kim, Day and Adam Scott are among 10 members of the International squad that competed in the Presidents Cup at Liberty National. Thomas is one of three U.S. Team members, joined by Daniel Berger and Patrick Reed. … Thomas and World Golf Hall of Famer Ernie Els are among 10 major championship winners coming to Nine Bridges. • 72-HOLE RECORD: Debut event. • 18-HOLE RECORD: Debut event. • STORYLINES: The PGA TOUR expands its Asian outreach with its first standard event in South Korea, creating a three-week swing on that continent. The CJ Cup arrives just two years after a successful Presidents Cup near Seoul, where the International team nearly upended the favored Americans. … K.J. Choi, winner of eight TOUR titles, and Kim are among 16 Korean pros seeking to give the event a homegrown winner in its very first edition. The list also includes former U.S. Amateur champion Byeong Hun An and three-time European Tour winner Jeunghun Wang. … Also among the Korean faction is Sangmoon Bae, who tees it up for the third time since returning from mandatory military service in his homeland. He has missed the cut in both starts of his fledgling comeback, including the Safeway Open two weeks ago. • SHORT CHIPS: Two CJ Cup entrants have won debut events in the TOUR’s not-too-distant past – Scott (Dell Technologies Championship, 2003) and Choi (The National, 2007). … A total of 21 players will make their third start in as many events of the new 2017-18 season. Emiliano Grillo is playing a fourth consecutive week when you factor in the Presidents Cup. … Nine Bridges wound up serving as LPGA host for four years, with Korean pros winning all four editions. After Pak won the inaugural crown, Grace Park made it one of her six LPGA titles. • TELEVISION: Wednesday-Saturday, 10 p.m. – 2 a.m. ET (Golf Channel). • PGA TOUR LIVE: None. • RADIO: None.

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Barber takes flightBarber takes flight

Blayne Barber had two goals. He didn’t want to pass out. He didn’t want to have to dip into that canister of barf bags by his seat, either. “The people that (do these) throw up pretty regularly,â€� Barber explains. “So they have everything situated right there for you.â€� Turns out, he’s got a strong stomach. And Barber accomplished both goals that day in September when he went flying with the Blue Angels, the U.S. Navy’s acrobatic flight demonstration team. “It’s something I will never forget,â€� he says. Barber has always been interested in flying. His grandfather, Joe Shearer, served 27 years in the U.S. Air Force and Naval Reserve, retiring in 1975 as an E9 Master Sergeant. He enjoyed building and flying remote control airplanes, and Barber learned to love it, too. “I grew up being fascinated by airplanes and fighter planes,â€� he says. “I’ve seen the Thunderbirds (the Air Force’s demonstration squad) in person multiple times growing up and I think it’s just kind of something like, man that would be so cool to do. “I don’t really know if I actually thought I would ever get the chance. So to do that was definitely a dream fulfilled.â€� And as an added bonus, Shearer was on hand at the Naval Air Station in Pensacola, Florida, to see his grandson take off. “He never had the opportunity to fly in a fighter jet because he was more in civil engineering and kind of did stuff on the ground moreso,â€� Barber says. “so he was living vicariously through me a little bit.â€� Barber found out he was going to be able to go up in a VIP flight about two weeks before it happened. He admits he was pretty stressed in the days leading up to the one-in-a-lifetime experience. He was anxious and didn’t sleep well. “I knew it was going to be really intense but I didn’t know what to expect,â€� Barber says. “So I can definitely say I was nervous.â€� The pre-flight briefing probably wasn’t all that reassuring, either. The F/A-18 Hornet that he would be flying in was, after all, an active military aircraft that was about to all but defy gravity with Barber strapped into the back seat. “You go through what happens in the event the jet goes down and your ejection seat deploys and your parachute goes out,â€� Barber recalls. “And here are probably three or four different gauges that if you click them something bad’s going to happen — and they are right there around me in the back seat.â€� Once he got up in the air, though, Barber was hooked. He didn’t flinch when the plane flew upside down. Ditto for when it pulled up and headed straight into the air. The full loops and barrel and aileron rolls were icing on the cake. “It was just very physically intense.â€� Barber says. “… I never had too much motion sickness problems so I wasn’t super concerned about throwing up. But obviously, I’ve never been twirled around in the air at 10,000 feet. So, I didn’t know what to expect on that front. “Just the G forces and the force that is exerts on your body is the most intense thing. When we got done, I just felt like I had worked out. It’s very taxing.â€� The jet cruised at between 400-500 miles an hour. At one point, the plane even broke the sound barrier, which means it was flying in excess of 767 mph. “That was pretty cool,â€� Barber says. Throughout the flight, the pilot was in constant communication with Barber, making him feel comfortable about what was about to happen and explaining maneuver the plane was about to attempt. And let’s face it, Barber wouldn’t have been up there if he wasn’t keen on the experience. “He was like, are you ready to do this and I’d say, yes,â€� Barber says. “… He wasn’t going to go up there and just try to make me miserable which I appreciated. “He was explaining avionics and different things that were probably above my head but it made me feel like I was understanding everything that was happening more. It was neat that he kept me engaged.â€� Barber says he would go on another flight in a “heartbeatâ€� although he’s not sure that fun is the right word to describe the experience. “If you’re OK with an adrenaline rush and some crazy movement, then, yes (it is),â€� Barber says. The sheer power of the jet was almost overwhelming at times. “When you’re flying on a commercial airline you can only move so fast because it’s so heavy and there are so many people,â€� Barber says. “So just to feel that much intensity and to be able to change direction or change speed so quickly was really cool.â€� And what about the next time he steps into plane to head to a PGA TOUR stop? Will flying with the Blue Angels make the jaunt to places like San Diego or Phoenix or San Antonio seem like a breeze? “It will probably just make it boring,â€� Barber says.

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Fantasy Insider: Fantasy golf advice for the RBC Canadian OpenFantasy Insider: Fantasy golf advice for the RBC Canadian Open

Summertime presents numerous opportunities for all walks of PGA TOUR membership. As some rank-and-filers moonlight on the Web.com Tour and others even deeper in the trenches break into fields on the PGA TOUR Champions, the movement for playing time in standard TOUR stops can be dizzying. This is one of the reasons why I always tweet all field changes. Even if you already know that you don’t have to register for Twitter to read my page (like any website), you may not know that all of my tweets that aren’t replies to others appear on the FANTASY page at PGATOUR.com. The format of my TWITTERFEED truncates for length, but you can view entire messages by clicking on my avatar, the left arrow or the heart. I almost always tweet the updated Qualifiers, but that page will be appointment reading next week. At the conclusion of this week’s RBC Canadian Open, the top 70 on the year-long special money list will earn exemptions into the PGA Championship. To complete the field of 156 at Bellerive Country Club on Aug. 9-12, the PGA of America then will use a combination of the golfers outside the top 70 with those outside the top 100 (traditionally) in the Official World Golf Ranking. This is why the field is annually considered the deepest in professional golf. Whichever resource(s) you choose to use, you’re covered. PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO My roster for the RBC Canadian Open (in alphabetical order): Tony Finau Charley Hoffman Dustin Johnson Brooks Koepka Matt Kuchar Joaquin Niemann You’ll find my starters in Expert Picks. Others to consider for each category (in alphabetical order): Scoring: Tommy Fleetwood; Martin Laird; Keith Mitchell; J.J. Spaun; Jimmy Walker Driving: Keegan Bradley; Joel Dahmen; Tommy Fleetwood; Billy Horschel; Martin Laird; Keith Mitchell; Sam Ryder; J.J. Spaun; Gary Woodland Approach: Keegan Bradley; Stewart Cink; Joel Dahmen; Chris Kirk; Chez Reavie; Sam Ryder; J.J. Spaun; Steve Stricker Short: Billy Horschel; Kevin Kisner; Martin Laird; Brandt Snedeker; Jimmy Walker Power Rankings Wild Card Billy Horschel … Loyal readers understand how this pick can oscillate between something of a sleeper to an up-and-comer to a talent who should be in the Power Rankings but has been demoted. It’s also served the role as an extension of the Monday column. That’s where the co-runner-up at the Barbasol Championship fits in. Notoriously streaky, our confidence should remain high given he finished T17 at the Quicken Loans National in his previous start. The T2 at Keene Trace wasn’t unexpected inasmuch as it didn’t align with his usual preference for tough tracks. From strokes gained: off-the-tee (16th), greens in regulation (34th) and par-5 scoring (T14), he checks every box that projects success at Glen Abbey, and he’s 23rd in strokes gained: putting for good measure. Draws Chez Reavie … Celebrating the 10th anniversary of his breakthrough title at Glen Abbey this week. It’s rolled around at a great time because he needs a reversal of fortune as he arrives on an 0-for-4 skid. He’s survived the cut in the last four editions of the RBC Canadian Open at Glen Abbey, posting top 25s in the last two. The success and experience here should lay the foundation for confidence to let his skill as a sharpshooter to shine once again. Stewart Cink … Still lacing it tee to green. He followed consecutive top fives with consecutive top 25s, including a T24 at Carnoustie. Tied for fifth at Glen Abbey in 2015 and makes his fourth straight visit. Adam Hadwin … At 55th in the Official World Golf Ranking, he’s tops among Canadians, but that still represents a mild slide in recent months. He’s overcome below-average putting compared to his reputation. Still, as one of the most reliable to make any cut and with experience and some success at Glen Abbey (a T7 in 2015 most notably), he’s a safe own no matter your format. Ben Silverman … The rookie from Canada is getting his first look at Glen Abbey in competition, but he carries the buoying effects of a T12 at the Barbasol with him. Going to come cheap in DFS, so give him a chance. Jimmy Walker … I’m buying for at least one more week, but he’s probably overvalued in DFS. No stranger to Glen Abbey having placed T14 in his last visit in 2016 and still among the better scorers on TOUR. Gary Woodland … Glen Abbey is the kind of yard where Gary can get his groove back. Since his playoff victory at TPC Scottsdale in early February, he’s connected for only one top 25 (T23, Memorial). After a similarly quiet lead-in to last year’s RBC Canadian Open due in part to a personally challenging few months, he rose to a fourth-place finish. J.J. Spaun … It’s impossible for gamers in particular not to love how he plays the game and how he carries himself. His profile as an attack artist is ideal for Glen Abbey. Only short-sighted course history buffs who can’t look away from a pedestrian 1-for-2 record (with a T41 in 2015) will ignore that he’s still a talent on the rise. Slot him into your DFS lineup without hesitation. Steve Stricker … Forgoing the last major on the PGA TOUR Champions for his first trip to Glen Abbey since a T63 in 2015. With this and one more start on the PGA TOUR this season, he’ll retain his voting privileges as a member, but he’s 141st in the FedExCup standings, so the greater urgency is to kick it into gear to make the FedExCup Playoffs. Worth the price tag in DFS, especially. Keegan Bradley (all) Tyler Duncan (DFS) Jim Furyk (DFS) J.B. Holmes (DFS) Chris Kirk (all) Jamie Lovemark (all) Patrick Rodgers (SERVPRO) Fades Troy Merritt … While victory is always a bonus, he trended toward something special before emerging with the title at the Barbasol Championship on Monday. Now, because he converted instead of, say, merely recording a top 10, we have to guard against a letdown even though this isn’t his first rodeo. His 1-for-3 record at Glen Abbey doesn’t help (or hurt, depending on your perspective), but it doesn’t matter, either. Sergio Garcia … Just his 12th start of the season and he’s 132nd in the FedExCup. Teased gamers with a T12-T8 ramp into The Open Championship, a tournament for which he’s a perennial short-lister, but he missed the cut at Carnoustie. Now he’s getting his first look at Glen Abbey since his debut in 2000, but even contrarians have to shop elsewhere based on a primarily lackluster 2018 that includes MCs in all three majors and a 70th at THE PLAYERS. John Huh … Erased the last shred of doubt to get into the Playoffs with a T7 at the John Deere Classic. Now 95th in FedExCup points, it’s entirely about building, but it would be the first time for that to happen in five appearances at Glen Abbey. He’s never made the cut and his scoring average is 73.625 in eight rounds. Bill Haas Si Woo Kim Shane Lowry Ryan Palmer Andrew Putnam Returning to Competition Rory Sabbatini … Withdrew after a first-round 72 at the John Deere Classic. An explanation wasn’t released. The short week extended his drought without a top-35 finish to five straight starts. He’s enjoyed success at Glen Abbey over the years, most recently in the forms of a T11 in 2015 and a faded T23 last year. So, there’s merit to fractional ownership in DFS. Notable WDs Austin Cook … With starts at Firestone and Bellerive lined up the next two weeks, and after going T5-T34-T28 the last three weeks, this is the perfect time for a breather. Beau Hossler … The first-time PGA TOUR member has enjoyed a phenomenal season. While short of a victory, he’s finished second twice and banked over $2.3 million and sits 32nd in the FedExCup standings. He’ll qualify for the PGA Championship at the end of the week. Chesson Hadley … Currently 18th in the FedExCup standings. He’ll gain entry into the PGA Championship at the conclusion of the RBC Canadian Open. Martin Kaymer … This would have marked his 11th start of the season. Positioned 216th in the FedExCup standings, he’d need to contend at the PGA Championship to trigger more playing time in the Playoffs. Short of that, he won’t reach the membership minimum of 15 starts for the second time in four seasons, which means that he wouldn’t be fully exempt in 2018-19 during what is the last season of his five-year exemption for winning the 2014 U.S. Open. Derek Fathauer … Easily the most surprising of all of this week’s early withdrawals. He’s 136th in the FedExCup standings. Interestingly, the last time he withdrew after a commitment deadline and before an opening round was at last year’s RBC Canadian Open. Denny McCarthy … Withdrew early from last week’s Barbasol Championship as well. No news has surfaced to help explain why and he’s inactive on social media. Sits 146th in the FedExCup. Nate Lashley … In his return from knee surgery, he missed the cut on the Web.com Tour last week. The rookie is taking this week off. Power Rankings Recap – The Open Championship Power Ranking  Golfer  Result 1  Dustin Johnson  MC 2  Rickie Fowler  T28 3  Justin Rose  T2 4  Brooks Koepka  T39 5  Alex Noren  T17 6  Jon Rahm  MC 7  Tommy Fleetwood  T12 8  Francesco Molinari  Win 9  Patrick Reed  T28 10  Paul Casey  T51 11  Zach Johnson  T17 12  Rory McIlroy  T2 13  Marc Leishman  60th 14  Tyrrell Hatton  T51 15  Branden Grace  MC 16  Sergio Garcia  MC 17  Jason Day  T17 18  Phil Mickelson  T24 19  Justin Thomas  MC 20  Hideki Matsuyama  MC Wild Card  Jordan Spieth  T9 Sleepers Recap – The Open Championship Golfer  Result Byeong Hun An  T51 Alexander Björk  MC Nicolas Colsaerts  MC Jason Dufner  T51 Paul Dunne  T67 Grant Forrest  MC Ryan Fox  T39 Dylan Frittelli  MC Emiliano Grillo  MC Russell Henley  MC Jazz Janewattananond  MC Anirban Lahiri  MC Hao Tong Li  T39 Thorbjørn Olesen  T12 Thomas Pieters  T28 Matthew Southgate  T67 Julian Suri  T28 Peter Uihlein  MC Matt Wallace  MC Chris Wood  T28 Power Rankings Recap – Barbasol Championship Power Ranking  Golfer  Result 1  Chris Kirk  T40 2  Joel Dahmen  T15 3  Brian Gay  6th 4  Tyler Duncan  T49 5  Billy Horschel  T2 6  Corey Conners  MC 7  Sam Ryder  T7 8  Whee Kim  T66 9  Scott Brown  T21 10  Andres Romero  T21 Birthdays among active golfers on the PGA TOUR July 24 … Danny Lee (29) July 25 … none July 26 … none July 27 … Jordan Spieth (25) July 28 … Frank Lickliter II (49) July 29 … Harrison Frazar (47) July 30 … Graeme McDowell (39); Justin Rose (38); Sam Saunders (31)

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