Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting It’s all in the claw for Finau at Colonial

It’s all in the claw for Finau at Colonial

FORT WORTH, Texas – It was Sunday afternoon, and Tony Finau was not happy. He had just ended a disappointing PGA Championship with a 9-over 79, tying the worst score in a single round in his PGA TOUR career. His T-64 finish was also surprising, given that he had top-10 results in four of the five previous majors. The critical issue was on the greens. Finau was frustrated with his putting at Bethpage Black, where he ranked 125th in Strokes Gained: Putting. It was the breaking point of a recent stretch of poor putting, and so Finau decided that night to make a seemingly drastic change. “I needed to switch something,� he said. Enter the claw grip. On Thursday, three holes into his opening round of the Charles Schwab Challenge, Finau stood over a birdie putt just under 20 feet. It was the start of Colonial’s Horrible Horseshoe, the three-hole stretch (Nos. 3, 4 and 5) that is among the toughest on TOUR. Finau drilled the putt. At the par-4 seventh, he rolled in a 19-footer. Then on consecutive holes after the turn, he made birdie from 24-1/2 feet (at the 12th) and 27 feet (at the 13th). Then, just for good measure, he saved par at the par-3 16th with a 20-foot putt from the fringe after a poor chip from the other side of the green. In all, he made just under 138 feet of putts with his flatstick Thursday, which explains why he shot a 6-under 64 to grab the early lead. Suffice to say, the change to the claw paid immediate dividends. “It’s something that I’ve kind of been thinking,� said Finau, who entered this week ranked T-100 in Strokes Gained: Putting this season. “It’s an itch I wanted to scratch … To me, it was just perfect time. … If I feel like something is better, I’m not afraid to change, no matter the results.� In truth, the move to the claw may not be as dramatic as it seemed. Finau said he often has practiced with the claw in order to make sure his left hand is in the proper position. “I’m left-hand dominant when I roll the stick,� he explained. “I used to putt cross-handed for about five years. Been putting conventionally now for a couple years. “But I just wanted to switch it up. I haven’t been putting great … Standing over the ball, the most important thing is, do you feel like you’re going to make the putt or not? Outside of everything else, do you believe you can make the putt? … “I wanted to try something difference, and it felt great out there today.� A tight shot-maker’s course like Colonial can sometimes be frustrating for bombers, but Finau was not about to dial back one of his most lethal clubs. He said he stayed with driver off most tees, hitting iron just once and 4-wood another time. Although he found just as many fairway bunkers as he did fairways (three of each), most of his misses were in the short cut. Left with some good lies, he hit 16 of 18 greens – and then took advantage with his putter. Of course, the question now is whether the claw grip will continue to work for him this week. If nothing else, his outlook is much brighter than it was a few days ago.

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Bryson DeChambeau embraces closer role during second victory of seasonBryson DeChambeau embraces closer role during second victory of season

PARAMUS, N.J. – Bryson DeChambeau takes a four-shot lead into the final round, then keeps his nerve for a 2-under 69 and a four-shot victory at THE NORTHERN TRUST at Ridgewood Country Club. Welcome to the Monday Finish, where DeChambeau picked up his third PGA TOUR victory and second this season, this one kicking him into first in the FedExCup. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1. Seeing is believing for DeChambeau. Bryson DeChambeau sat down before the press, the tournament and FedExCup trophies in front of him, and was asked what he likes most about his work. “It’s being able to step up to a shot like I did on 17 today, knowing it’s a difficult tee shot, and executing it exactly the way I wanted to,â€� said DeChambeau, who was T27 in driving accuracy. “That’s what brings me joy and that’s why I work so hard, and all this other stuff is fantastic and I wouldn’t trade it for anything, but the No. 1 thing that makes me happy is seeing a golf ball go exactly the way I felt it should go.â€� DeChambeau is a true original, but his work habits are reminiscent of Vijay Singh. What did DeChambeau do after his third-round 63 had staked him to a four-shot lead on Saturday night? The same thing he always does: He hit balls, closing down the range. Told that some guys wouldn’t have camped out for so long after such a round, he was quick with a response. “Well, it’s not a 54—it’s not birdieing every hole,â€� he said. He and his caddie have an inside joke that they repeat to one another when they find themselves logging the long hours on the range or practice green: Just another day at the office. “You could say what I do is crazy,â€� DeChambeau said, “but in the end, I’m the one with the trophy this week.â€� 2. Finau is a phenomenon. Hard to believe Tony Finau doesn’t have a win this year, given his consistency. The long-hitting Utah pro finished second to move from 12th to 4th in the FedExCup, the highest position among players without a win this season. He has nine top-10 finishes and 16 top-25 finishes in 25 starts so far this season. How’s that for week-in, week-out excellence? Finau played three of the four days alongside Phil Mickelson, and more than held his own as he collected his third runner-up finish on TOUR. If he can remain in the top five in the FedExCup going into the TOUR Championship, he will control his own destiny. “Yeah, great position to be in and that’s where I want to be,â€� said Finau, who qualified for his first TOUR Championship last season, when he ultimately finished 19th in the FedExCup. “When I do win, hopefully it means a lot and maybe even a FedExCup. … Bryson was extremely tough to catch. He didn’t really open a window for us.â€� 3. FedExCup movers were everywhere. Give credit to Danny Lee, who entered the week at 103rd in the FedExCup standings but birdied five straight holes (Nos. 10-14) on the way to a 4-under 67 that gave him a T34 finish and gave him just the boost he needed to 98th. That means he’s on to the next stop in the Playoffs, the top-100 Dell Technologies Championship at TPC Boston, starting Friday. It was a similar story for Nick Watney, who was making his 350th TOUR start and finished T11 to move from 102nd to 67th in the standings and on to Boston. The biggest leap was by Ryan Palmer, who was the Bubble Boy at No. 100 in the standings but carded a timely 65 in the final round to finish T5 and move up to 50th in the standings. That should get him not only to Boston but all the way to the BMW Championship in Philadelphia. “It’s huge,â€� Palmer said. 4. Woods not discouraged. Tiger Woods was coming off a runner-up finish at the PGA Championship two weeks prior, so his T40 at THE NORTHERN TRUST was slightly underwhelming. He never really made much happen at Ridgewood, where his putter remained cold all week, but now he heads to TPC Boston and the site of his win in 2006 and runner-up finishes in ’04 and ’07. “Well, welcome to golf,â€� Woods said of his suddenly dry birdie well. “I’m sure you guys are used to seeing me win five times a year or more. It’s not that easy to win out here. That’s what you’re seeing is that I’m close and just one shot here, one shot there, per day, flips momentum. “That’s what either I had been missing or I had gotten and I would lose it,â€� he added. “It’s just looking for one shot a day here and there, and you just never know when that shot may come, early in the front nine, late in the back nine, but it’s not that far.â€� 5. Mickelson taking nothing for granted. New York favorite Phil Mickelson (71, T15) got off to a good start at THE NORTHERN TRUST, his pair of 68s getting him at least within shouting distance of the lead. Alas, a third 68 didn’t do him much good, though, as DeChambeau began to run away, and Mickelson, 48, struggled in hitting just 5 of 14 fairways during an even-par final round Sunday. Now he heads to TPC Boston, where he won in 2007, for the Dell Technologies Championship. “I’m going to go down to Boston and build on that and get myself in contention,â€� he said. “I’ve played well there, I’ve won there, and my game’s comin’ around, and I’m gonna put it together.â€� Mickelson is 10th in the FedExCup, and while he’s won in Boston, and at East Lake, he’s never won the whole thing. Also on his mind: He has played on every Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup team since 1994, and is hoping to keep that streak going at the Ryder Cup in the fall. “I’m still fighting hard to get on that team,â€� he said. FIVE INSIGHTS 1. DeChambeau came into the week T67 in Strokes Gained: Putting, but was fifth in that statistic at Ridgewood; T116 in one-putt percentage, but was T12 at Ridgewood; T93 at putting inside 10 feet, but was T1 at Ridgewood; and 145th at putting from 4-8 feet, but was fifth at Ridgewood. All told, he made 65 of 68 putts from inside 10 feet. 2. Finau (68, solo second), the winner of the 2016 Puerto Rico Open led the field in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green (+12.562) and Strokes Gained: Around-the-Green (+7.8) in collecting the third runner-up finish of his career (2017 Safeway Open, 2018 Genesis Open). 3. Billy Horschel (68, T3) played his final 46 holes without a bogey and led the field in scrambling (14 of 17). He moves to 14th in the FedExCup as he tries to join Woods as the only player to win the FedExCup more than once. 4. Cameron Smith (69, T3) notched his fifth top-five finish this season and moved from 53rd all the way to 16th in the FedExCup. He had shot under par only four times in his last 20 rounds coming into THE NORTHERN TRUST, but shot in red numbers all four rounds at Ridgewood. 5. Adam Scott (69, T5), who came into the field outside the top 150 in Strokes Gained: Putting, led the field (+8.464) in that stat at Ridgewood. He made nearly 368 feet of putts, and all told it was his best performance on the greens since winning the 2004 Booz Allen Classic.

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