Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Patrick Cantlay heeds Jack Nicklaus’ advice to win the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide

Patrick Cantlay heeds Jack Nicklaus’ advice to win the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide

DUBLIN, Ohio – Jack Nicklaus was watching for something intently in Patrick Cantlay’s final round at the Memorial Tournament Presented by Nationwide. It wasn’t the crisp irons under pressure. It wasn’t hip turn, or club head speed, face angle, or anything else Trackman might measure. It was a smile. “He did it at 15!,â€� Nicklaus interjected in Cantlay’s winners conference when it was suggested Cantlay hadn’t smiled until he putted out on 18 to all but secure his second PGA TOUR victory. The reason Nicklaus was looking for it was some advice he had passed on to Cantlay on Friday at Muirfield Village. You see Cantlay has always had a special relationship with Mr. Nicklaus. From the time he was awarded the Jack Nicklaus Award as the best collegiate player in America in 2011 the two have had a kinship. Nicklaus goes as far to say Cantlay, and all of the other previous winners of the award, are “in many ways my children.â€� But on Friday, having seen Cantlay not turn his stellar talent into more wins since he won in November 2017 at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in Las Vegas, Nicklaus seized an opportunity. “I was in there having lunch after the early morning round on Friday, and he grabbed me aside and said, you need to go out there, have a good time. Look around when you’re out there. Look at all the people having a great time. And then you need to have a great time and realize that that’s why you’re there and relax and go have fun and go win the golf tournament,â€� Cantlay recounted of Nicklaus’ advice. Related: Cantlay’s comeback from tragedy | Tiger cards final-round 67 | FedExCup standings | Final leaderboard “And I definitely said that to myself down the stretch today on the back nine. It put me a little more at ease, and I hit a lot of really nice quality shots with the lead, coming down the stretch.â€� It wasn’t the first time the two had conversed on golfing matters. In fact a few years ago Cantlay went to Nicklaus’ house and the two spent 90 minutes going over strategy for Muirfield Village. Clearly that was time well spent. But this week the 18-time major winner had something he really wanted to get across. “He reminds me a lot of me,â€� Nicklaus said. “I get so wrapped up in what I’m doing I forget about everything else that’s going on around me. And I sit there and say, you know, if I can help them, pass that along, maybe it will help them. And if it did, that’s great. If it didn’t, it didn’t make any difference, he won a golf tournament, either way.â€� The thing with Cantlay is whether he is aware of it or not, he always looks serious. Like Batman serious. He’s locked in. He’s all business. You never see the Phil Mickleson thumbs up to the masses or a Rickie Fowler selfie session. It’s just not his style. “I understand that’s my look. I try and be natural. So I try and be how I am all the time. And that’s kind of how I am all the time,â€� Cantlay shrugs. “I was walking in this morning and somebody said, ‘it can’t be that bad, can it?’ And I don’t even realize that’s the look on my face. I was in a great mood this morning. “But I feel like if I tried to be any way else, it wouldn’t be me. I’d be trying to force it. So I just try and be me out there. I definitely am focused and intent on what I’m doing. And I think that’s part of me and I think that’s part of why I have success.â€� And he had plenty of success on Sunday. His 8-under 64 is the best ever final round by a winner at the Memorial. It pushed him to 19-under 269. Only Tom Lehman (268 in 1994) has been lower over four rounds. He joined Tiger Woods as the only former Nicklaus award winner to win Nicklaus’ tournament. Cantlay is not surprised though. Well he is surprised … but only that he hasn’t won more. This was a guy who spent eons as the world’s best amateur and was touted as better than Jordan Spieth in the junior years. The delay was heavily due to a serious back injury that killed almost three years for him. But once he came back healthy and won, he thought he’d keep winning. “I definitely feel like I’ve had a lot of close calls since my last win. I’m a little surprised it’s taken me this long,â€� Cantlay said. “I really did (think the first win would open the floodgates). I’ve played a lot of really good golf, a lot of really solid golf. And so I think I was closer than it seems. So maybe this one will do it.â€� Maybe it will indeed. And if it does both Patrick and Jack will be smiling.

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Kuchar rebounds from difficult loss at The OpenKuchar rebounds from difficult loss at The Open

OAKVILLE, Ont. – Matt Kuchar was the victim of Jordan Spieth doing Jordan Spieth-type things Sunday at The Open Championship, losing to the 23-year-old by three shots after bogeying the 72nd hole of the championship. But you wouldn’t know it to see him early this week at the RBC Canadian Open. Kuchar, ever affable, has been smiling that classic Kuchar smile, signing every autograph thrust upon him, and acknowledging the early-week cheers of ‘Kuuuuuch.’  And, of course, he’s been putting in some prep work for this year’s Canadian Open, a tournament he’s been feasting on the last few years, notching four straight top-10 finishes. However, he admitted Wednesday this week has a new set of challenges. “It is one of the great things about the game of golf… it’s pretty easy to leave the past the past when Thursday gets here. It’s a whole new week and no one cares what you did last week. It’s a fresh start,â€� he said. There was a buzz the first few days of the RBC Canadian Open week at Glen Abbey about the performance of Spieth, not so much the crumbling of Kuchar. “Matt Kuchar didn’t lose the tournament, Jordan won it,â€� said Jack Nicklaus, who was on site Tuesday as part of the Canadian Golf Hall of Fame induction ceremony for this year. Nicklaus said he and Kuchar saw each other earlier in the week and they chatted about his result. Certainly Nicklaus knows what it’s like to fall just short at majors (despite his 18 victories, he also was runner-up or tied for second 19 times), and he said he and Kuchar chatted about his result. “He just ran into a buzzsaw the last few holes. That’s what it amounted to,â€� said Nicklaus. Kuchar holds no hard feelings to Spieth for how things shook out Sunday, and he accepted he just got beat by one of the best players in the world. “I did all I could last week and I had one guy out play me,â€� said Kuchar. “To win a major championship… it’s really exciting. To be so close and not win the event is a little bittersweet but I’m definitely going to take as many positives as possible. Our goal when we start playing as a little kid is to etch our names into those trophies, but playing against the best in the world, you realize it’s a challenging task.â€� And if you ask any other TOUR pro about what happened Sunday, they’d said that Spieth just has something not a lot of TOUR pros have. “Jordan has something special, man,â€� said Graham DeLaet. “Everybody knows it but nobody knows what it is, and he’s got it. He’s got that ‘it’ factor that special athletes in every sport, generationally, have.â€� Ian Poulter, who is playing his first RBC Canadian Open, said he saw Kuchar Tuesday and congratulated him on a great finish. But, he said second place at the Open Championship is a bit of a bittersweet feeling. “Remarkable from Jordan. Obviously you feel a bit sorry for Matt,â€� said Poulter. “Matt would have thought at that time, had he finished 2-under for the last five, perhaps he could have been holding the (Claret) Jug, but as it turned out, Jordan did his thing.â€� It’s a new week though, and Kuchar has refocused himself on the task at hand, especially considering Glen Abbey is playing – after record rainfall in the Greater Toronto Area in 2017 – much different than in year’s past. He’s looking for his first win on TOUR since 2014, but is feeling good returning to a place he’s had success before. “I’ve enjoyed coming to Glen Abbey, I enjoy the course and I feel like I can manage my way around it pretty well,â€� he said. “It’s great to carry any momentum you can, but when you peg the tee into the ground Thursday, it doesn’t matter what you did last week. Everyone starts at even par and you need to make the most out of this week that you can.â€� 

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DraftKings preview: The American ExpressDraftKings preview: The American Express

The PGA TOUR starts the West Coast swing with The American Express in La Quinta, California, located near Palm Springs. Due to COVID-19, the TOUR canceled the pro-am this year, resulting in the golfers playing across only two courses instead of the usual three — the Nicklaus Tournament Course and the Stadium Course on PGA West. The Nicklaus Tournament Course is a par 72, measuring 7,181. The Stadium Course measures 7,147 yards and will also play as a par 72. Both courses will be putt on Bermuda greens for the third straight week. The pro-am cancellation didn't just remove La Quinta CC from the course rotation this year; it also will result in the cut occurring after 36 holes instead of the usual 54 holes as in prior years. The Stadium Course has also been the only one to record ShotLink data in the past, which you should consider when looking at previous statistics. 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If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisis counseling and referral services can be accessed by calling 1-800-GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) (IL). Gambling problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER (NJ/WV/PA), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 (NH/CO), 1-800-BETS OFF (IA) or TN REDLINE: 800-889-9789. 21+ (18+ NH). NJ/PA/WV/NH/IN/NH/IA/CO/IL/TN only. Eligibility restrictions apply. See draftkings.com/sportsbook for full terms and conditions. I am a promoter at DraftKings and am also an avid fan and user (my username is reidtfowler) and may sometimes play on my personal account in the games that I offer advice on. Although I have expressed my personal view on the games and strategies above, they do not necessarily reflect the view(s) of DraftKings and I may also deploy different players and strategies than what I recommend above. I am not an employee of DraftKings and do not have access to any non-public information.

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