Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting ‘Beef’ opens up about mental health struggles 

‘Beef’ opens up about mental health struggles 

Andrew Johnston detailed in a blog post how he struggled during his quick rise to fame in the professional golf world.

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Fantasy Insider: Dell Technologies ChampionshipFantasy Insider: Dell Technologies Championship

As we embark on the final month of the 2016-17 season, there are a few fantasy checkpoints to memorize. • Friday, Sept. 1: The scheduled start of the Dell Technologies Championship. If you forget, that’s OK, for the alternative of forgetting if it were to start earlier, say on a Wednesday like the Dell Match Play, would sting. • Wednesday, Sept. 6: Special column for the PGA TOUR Champions One & Done presented by SERVPRO. Since the PGA TOUR has an off-week following the scheduled Monday finish of the DTC, the usual One & Done column won’t run. In its stead will be the customary grouping of notes and notables for the JAPAN AIRLINES Championship. • Tuesday, Sept. 12: The next edition of the FI due to the off-week, thus the additional week of birthdays at the bottom of this page. • Late September: First edition of Qualifiers for 2017-18. This will include all secured exemptions and remaining qualifying criteria into all of the majors, World Golf Championships and THE PLAYERS in 2018. It’s a must-read for any full-season gamer. • No later than Monday, Oct. 2: First edition of Medical Extensions for 2017-18. • Monday, Oct. 2: First edition of the Web.com Tour graduate reshuffle for 2017-18. The Web.com Tour Finals is scheduled to conclude on Sunday, Oct. 1. • Monday, Oct. 2: My annual full-membership fantasy ranking. Given the absence of even a week between the conclusion of the Web.com Tour Finals and the first event of the 2017-18 PGA TOUR season – the Safeway Open is scheduled for Oct. 5-8 – this year’s ranking will be abridged, but not at the cost of quality and depth. If that’s too much to commit to memory, bookmark this page and revisit when necessary or just check PGATOUR.com/Fantasy every now and then for everything you need. PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO My roster for the Dell Technologies Championship (in alphabetical order): Jason Day Rory McIlroy Louis Oosthuizen Jon Rahm Patrick Reed Justin Thomas You’ll find my starters in Expert Picks. Others to consider for each category (in alphabetical order): Scoring: Jason Dufner; Tony Finau; Rickie Fowler; Charley Hoffman; Dustin Johnson; Brooks Koepka; Hideki Matsuyama; Justin Rose; Charl Schwartzel; Adam Scott; Jordan Spieth Driving: Keegan Bradley; Paul Casey; Kevin Chappell; Graham DeLaet; Jason Dufner; Rickie Fowler; Sergio Garcia; Russell Henley; Jason Kokrak; Hideki Matsuyama; Francesco Molinari; Kyle Stanley; Gary Woodland Approach: Chad Campbell; Paul Casey; Graham DeLaet; Jason Dufner; Dustin Johnson; Hideki Matsuyama; Chez Reavie; Webb Simpson; Jordan Spieth; Kyle Stanley Short: Rafa Cabrera Bello; Graham DeLaet; Rickie Fowler; Russell Henley; Dustin Johnson; Brooks Koepka; Chez Reavie; Xander Schauffele; Charl Schwartzel; Jordan Spieth Power Rankings Wild Card Chez Reavie … Easily one of our stories of the season who would resonate in the mainstream if he can rise to victory. He nearly did just that at TPC Boston in 2011, losing to Webb Simpson in a playoff. Reavie arrives this time having survived nine consecutive cuts, five of which going for a top 25, including a T10 at THE NORTHERN TRUST. What he’s lacked in distance off the tee as compared to his peers, he’s overcome in precision on approach and putting. Draws Sergio Garcia … The year 2017 will go down as a life-changer for the Spaniard, both inside and outside the ropes, but he’s not done in the Playoffs. He’s 6-for-6 at TPC Boston with two top 10s and another pair of top 25s, including a T24 last year. Jason Dufner … Mixed results at TPC Boston but chuffing along with enough steam right now to warrant consideration in every format. Top 20s in his last two starts and led the field at Glen Oaks in strokes gained: putting of all things. Of note, as a devout fan of the Cleveland Cavaliers, you know he won’t be without endless, um, support this week. OK, so at least he should have some fun with that. Gary Woodland … Not losing faith despite last week’s missed cut. There’s been enough of an uptick since the birth of his first child to warrant patience. Also 5-for-5 at TPC Boston with top 15s the last two years. Tony Finau … Back for revenge after slipping from T7 to T24 in the final round of last year’s edition. Fantasy gold in every format because he’s 14th in greens in regulation, T19 in birdie-or-better percentage, inside the top 10 in both par-4 and par-5 scoring, and 18th in adjusted scoring. Oh, and he’s survived 10 consecutive cuts with four top 20s sprinkled in. Charl Schwartzel … Remains one of the strongest complementary pieces on the board. No reason to suggest he won’t continue to fill that role. Perfect in five tries at TPC Boston. Russell Henley … At this time of year with the depth of the fields in the Playoffs, there aren’t many potential potent surprises, but he’s one of them. Enjoying arguably his best season at age 28, he returns for his fifth appearance at TPC Boston (personal-best T2 in 2014) having survived seven consecutive cuts, the most recent a T25 at Glen Oaks where he was the first-round leader. Keegan Bradley … Back at TPC Boston and among his native New Englanders for the first time in two years, he connected top 25s here from 2012-2015. Since the U.S. Open this summer, he’s 8-for-8 with three top 15s. And at 47th in FedExCup points, the pressure is off to advance, thus allowing him to get to work to build similar insurance for a return to East Lake. Francesco Molinari … Ah, fantasy golf. No matter our most confident decisions, we’re forever at the mercy of the reality. It’s one of the reason why we love it. Fellow renown ball-strikers Kevin Chappell (T6) and Justin Rose (T10) converted at Glen Oaks as their profile projected. Not so much for the Italian who missed the cut by two. Although Molinari is making his debut at TPC Boston, he hasn’t missed consecutive cuts on U.S. soil in 30 months. He’s not afraid to go low, either. So, treat last week’s failure as a deterrent for your opposition. Xander Schauffele … Since that head-turning T5 at the U.S. Open, he’s performed like a stable veteran instead of an unsure rookie. Last week’s T17 at Glen Oaks was his sixth top 20 in eight starts. Ranks 23rd on TOUR in greens in regulation and 32nd in strokes gained: putting. Fades Phil Mickelson … No matter how you want to spin motivation for any golfer, it doesn’t guarantee anything. Because of that, as I’ve reiterated to you for years, you can’t size up motivation as being more valuable than another when building a fantasy team. His run of competing in every Presidents Cup will come to an end at some point, and we might be arriving at it. No top 35s in his current 2-for-4 slump and without a top 40 at TPC Boston since 2012. Kevin Kisner … No change from last week’s message. His T54 at Glen Oaks extended his run without a top 25 in the Playoffs to seven consecutive starts. That includes two at the 30-man TOUR Championship. Putting on bentgrass this week, too. Billy Horschel … It’s been three years now since he closed out his FedExCup title T2-Win-Win. Since the close call at TPC Boston, he finished 72nd in 2015 and missed last year’s cut, which was surprising given solid form upon arrival and his proven profile as streaky. This time, it’s been anything but since a T4 in June as he’s manufactured only one top-45 finish in seven starts (T26, Quicken Loans). Kyle Stanley … Slow-playing the hand here on his fit alone, or lack thereof since he’s not a strong option in shootouts even when they’re borderline like this one. At 19th in points, he’ll advance regardless of this week’s result. Shared 25th place at THE NORTHERN TRUST where it made sense on unfamiliar greens. Now returning to TPC Boston for the first time since 2013. Bubba Watson … Love his carefree approach entering the Playoffs, although we did learn that he’s likely taillights until 2018 when (if?) he’s eliminated. After climbing inside the top 100 in points, the pressure is back on as the new 72-seed. He lands here based entirely on pedestrian course history. Zero top 25s among three cuts made in his last five appearances. Bill Haas … Faded terribly in the last two months. TPC Boston doesn’t present the prospect that he’ll find his game, either. No better than a T60 in his last two appearances. Kevin Na … Reconnected with some form at Sedgefield for a T4 and end-loaded a T29 at Glen Oaks with 69s on the weekend, but has no better than a T60 (2015) in his last four tries at TPC Boston. Eleven of his last 13 scores on the course were over par. Returning to Competition Michael Thompson … Sidelined the last two months with a shoulder injury. He’s slated to return at the Web.com Tour Finals this week. Even if he doesn’t snag one of the 25 PGA TOUR cards up for grabs, he’d open the 2017-18 season with conditional status for finishing 148th in FedExCup points. It might be tagged with a medical extension, too. Will MacKenzie … Hasn’t competed since a T17 at the Travelers Championship in late June. No news has surfaced to explain why. At the time he left TPC River Highlands, he was 164th in the FedExCup standings. The PGA TOUR season completed with him slotted 183rd, so he’s in the Web.com Tour Finals on merit. Steve Wheatcroft … Withdrew early in the week of the Wyndham Championship due to a torn TFCC in his wrist. Finished 179th in the FedExCup standings, so he enters the Web.com Tour Finals with some suspense. S.J. Park … Try as he might, he wasn’t up for the task after several commitments since withdrawing during the FedEx St. Jude Classic with a sore shoulder. He’s in the Web.com Tour Finals via a medical exemption. Notable WDs Henrik Stenson … Resting his right knee. At 22nd in the FedExCup standings, he can afford to. Brandt Snedeker … Alerted the world before the Playoffs that he wasn’t going to compete due to a slow recovery from soreness in his sternum joint. This will be his last entry in this section this season as he’s 68th in FedExCup points. J.B. Holmes … The only mystery among this foursome. He missed the cut at THE NORTHERN TRUST to fall to 88th in points. Until an explanation surfaces for his decision not to give it a go at TPC Boston, full-season salary gamers should jot him down at $1.353 million for 2017-18 with a pencil, not a pen. Scott Piercy … Has not pegged it since the Travelers Championship due to a sore shoulder. Currently 94th in the FedExCup standings and cannot advance. Power Rankings Recap – THE NORTHERN TRUST Power Ranking  Golfer  Result 1  Hideki Matsuyama  MC 2  Brooks Koepka  T49 3  Henrik Stenson  T17 4  Justin Thomas  T6 5  Jordan Spieth  P2 6  Rickie Fowler  T20 7  Rory McIlroy  T34 8  Dustin Johnson  Win 9  Patrick Reed  T20 10  Paul Casey  5th 11  Matt Kuchar  T10 12  Francesco Molinari  MC 13  Louis Oosthuizen  T10 14  Jason Day  T6 15  Charley Hoffman  T17 16  Brian Harman  MC 17  Jason Dufner  T20 18  Jon Rahm  T3 19  Kevin Chappell  T6 20  Justin Rose  T10 Wild Card  Ian Poulter  66th Sleepers Recap – THE NORTHERN TRUST Golfer  Result David Lingmerth  T29 Rory Sabbatini  MC Steve Stricker  MC Jimmy Walker  MC Richy Werenski  T49 Birthdays among active golfers on the PGA TOUR August 29 … Carl Pettersson (40) August 30 … none August 31 … Padraig Harrington (46); Charl Schwartzel (33) September 1 … none September 2 … Tyler Aldridge (33) September 3 … none September 4 … none September 5 … none September 6 … none September 7 … Tag Ridings (43) September 8 … none September 9 … Hudson Swafford (30) September 10 … none September 11 … none

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Five Things to Know: Mito PereiraFive Things to Know: Mito Pereira

TULSA, Okla. – After opening the PGA Championship with rounds of 68 and 64, Mito Pereira has taken the lead early in the third round at the PGA Championship. The 27-year-old from Chile is playing his first full season as a TOUR member and looking to make a major his first PGA TOUR victory. Here’s Five Things to Know about the leader at the PGA Championship: 1. THREE’S COMPANY Pereira earned his first PGA TOUR card by winning three times on the Korn Ferry Tour during the extended 2020-21 season, becoming the 12th player to earn a three-win promotion from that circuit and the first since 2016. His first win came at the Country Club de Bogota in February 2020. Sixteen months later, he won back-to-back starts to graduate to the PGA TOUR. In those last two events, he was 48 under par and had a 65.1 scoring average. His highest score in that span was 67. “This is crazy, man,” Pereira said after the win. “This is by far the best thing that I’ve done in my life. … It’s been a long ride. There’s been tough moments, good moments, but it’s all worth it.” It didn’t take him long to have success on the PGA TOUR. He had back-to-back top-6 finishes in July before finishing fourth at the Olympics, falling in the seven-man playoff for the bronze medal. 2. STANDING ROOM Pereira entered this week ranked 46th in the FedExCup and 100th in the world ranking. A third-place finish in the season-opening Fortinet Championship is his lone top-10 of the season. He entered the week with four consecutive top-30 finishes in individual tournaments, though, including a T17 at last week’s AT&T Byron Nelson. The stats show that ballstriking is Pereira’s strength, which is paying off this week. He’s fourth this season in greens in regulation (71.4%), 13th in Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green (+0.67) and 30th in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee (+0.45). He ranks outside the top 100 in both Strokes Gained metrics that measure short-game performance (Putting and Around-the-Green), however. He’s also 16th in the standings for this year’s International Presidents Cup team. 3. PHENOM-ENAL Pereira was something of a junior phenom in his native Chile. He was runner-up in the boys 10-11 division of the 2006 Optimist International Junior Golf Championship and won the 12-13 division two years later (Beau Hossler finished third, one stroke back). Pereira enrolled at the prestigious IMG Academy in Florida when he was 14 but was burnt out after six months and quit the game for two years. When he decided to start playing again, he quickly picked up where he left off, however. “I took the two years off but when I came back I knew I could do it, I knew I could get to here,” he said Friday, “and I just kept the confidence, and obviously there were some up and downs but (I’m) really happy to be here.” He won on the Chilean Professional Tour when he was 17 and embarked for Lubbock, Texas, to play one season at Texas Tech, reaching as high as No. 5 in the world amateur world ranking before turning pro in 2015 after his freshman season. The Big 12 Championship was played at Southern Hills for Pereira’s lone season with the Red Raiders. He finished eighth, nine shots back of winner Scottie Scheffler. Pereira finished third on the PGA TOUR Latinoamerica Order of Merit in 2016, racking up a win and three-other top-3 finishes, to earn Korn Ferry Tour status. He finished a solid 76th on the Korn Ferry Tour money list the next year before losing his card in 2018. He returned to Latinoamerica for one season before making it back to the KFT. 4. RISING STARS Pereira is the third Chilean to earn a PGA TOUR card, after Benjamin Alvarado and Joaquin Niemann. Pereira and Niemann, 23, have been friends since they were kids. They used to practice together daily and shared a coach, Eduardo Miguel, who still coaches both of them. Pereira also resided in Niemann’s South Florida home after the COVID-19 pandemic made international travel impossible, and had his Korn Ferry Tour trophies sent to Niemann’s home. Niemann was known in their younger days for wearing a lot of yellow. “He looked like a bee,” said Pereira. Niemann also looked up to the older Pereira. “We all grew up together,” said Carlos Bustos, another Chilean who played college golf at Florida. “Mito was always better because he was older than us. He was on another level at that age, when we were like 13, 14, I mean he was an unbelievable golfer.” Niemann went on to become the No. 1 amateur in the world before winning twice on the PGA TOUR. He and Pereira were teammates at last year’s Olympics and now look to team together again at this year’s Presidents Cup. 5. ADRENALINE JUNKY Pereira is known as a bit of an adrenaline junkie, which could help him cope with the stress of a major championship. He’s a fan of motocross and MotoGP (Grand Prix motorcycle racing). After enduring a difficult season on the Korn Ferry Tour in 2018 and failing to regain his status at Q-School, Pereira broke his collarbone when he fell off his bike. The injury may have been a blessing in disguise. “Obviously in that moment it was terrible,” he said. “But if I look back, it probably helped me a little bit. It was a month that I didn’t play. I cooled down and took all the bad things out.” He also discovered a mental coach, Eugenio Lisama, who works with Formula 1 racers and soccer players. Pereira says working with sensors on his brain and analyzing the data was “like going to the gym for your brain.” “He showed me some data of those guys and it’s unbelievable,” Pereira said about the athletes who engage their brain much quicker than he does playing golf. “But we all need our minds to be blank. That’s what he teaches and trains with me on.”

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