Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Joel Dahmen faced several challenges but this cancer survivor is now enjoying his best TOUR season

Joel Dahmen faced several challenges but this cancer survivor is now enjoying his best TOUR season

There he was. Sprawled out on the couch. Again. The TV was always on. The remote control was never far away. And curled up next to Joel Dahmen, almost always, was Murphy, his black lab puppy. Meanwhile, the dirty dishes hadn’t been washed. The laundry was still sitting in a pile. Of course, Dahmen was probably wearing the same clothes he’d worn the day before. And the day before that. And the day before that. Shoot, he likely hadn’t taken a shower in days. Dahmen was moping around after a string of three-putts over the final nine holes – “I choked, basically, and crumbled under the pressure,â€� he says — ended his PGA TOUR dream at the second stage of q-school in 2013. He was feeling sorry for himself. I thought that this might’ve been it for me. “I was going to give myself five years. And that was year four and winding down. You wonder if you’re ever going to make it basically. …  And so, when it didn’t happen, I was crushed, and I didn’t really know how to respond. “I was so devastated. I wasn’t practicing for final stage. I had nothing really to plan, so I just shut it down.â€� For his girlfriend Lona Skutt, it was like Groundhog Day, the same depressing scene every day when she came home from work. And it was starting to affect their relationship. Skutt loved Dahmen, dearly. She’d known he was the one within months of meeting him, standing in line for pizza after a festive evening in Old Scottsdale in the winter of 2012. She believed in him – maybe more than he believed in himself. But she was working two, and sometimes three, jobs to support the couple. She helped manage a nationally known clothing store during the day and worked as a cocktail waitress at night. Double shifts three times a week were taking a toll. Skutt had had enough. “There was one defining day where I came home and I had had a hell of a day at work, you know, a long day at work, and I was like ‘I can’t do all of this.â€� Lona recalls. “I can’t support us, come home and do the dishes and cook for you while you just sit there and do nothing.’ “I didn’t sign up to be dating the bum on the couch who doesn’t move for 12 hours a day. I think I reached my limit where I was, like, you’ve got to do something. “That was definitely the defining conversation, because I came home, and I was like, ‘All right, get it together, man. You can’t keep doing this. I let you throw your pity party for a couple of weeks, now you’re good. Come on, like let’s get it together.’â€� The couple had had the conversation before. But this particular night was different. This time Dahmen, who had quit paying his cell phone bill because he liked the isolation, really listened. “The laundry wasn’t done. The dishes weren’t done. The place was a mess,â€� he recalls. “I was in the same clothes and she’s like, ‘This is disgusting. You’re gross, and you need to figure this out because this isn’t working for me. This is unfair.’ “I knew I wanted to spend the rest of my life with her, and as soon as she turned it, like, ‘This isn’t fair to me,’ and that’s when it kind of switched for me and made sense.â€� Dahmen actually had thought about getting a job driving an Uber. He’d even considered swallowing his pride and working in the cart barn at some club. But he knew a 9-to-5 job wasn’t in his future. Instead, he borrowed $200 from Skutt and took a lesson. “And that was all I needed,â€� Dahmen said. “I just needed one little thing to kickstart me from there to where I’ve play pretty good golf.â€� Skutt remembers Dahmen being nervous when he asked her for the money. He didn’t need to be – she gave it willingly. She just wanted to see her boyfriend set a new goal for himself. Golf or no golf, she wanted him to find what was in his heart and made him happy. “That’s when he got back into the swing of things,â€� she says. “I think you always want the person you love to feel motivated and want to better themselves and all that stuff. “It was good to see him finally show interest again.â€� But this wasn’t the first time that Dahmen — who would earn his PGA TOUR card four years later and enters this week’s John Deere Classic in the midst of a career season — had to overcome adversity. Dahmen grew up in Clarkston, Washington, a town of about 7,500 situated on the Snake River across from Lewiston, Idaho. The two towns were named after the explorers Merriwether Lewis and William Clark, who led the first expedition to cross the western part of the United States in the early 1800s. Dahmen’s father Ed introduced him to the game of golf almost as soon as he could walk and coached him as a junior. His mother Jolyn taught school, so she had the summers off to travel with her son to tournaments, even caddying for him sometimes. “She was my best friend,â€� Dahmen says simply. In the fall of 2004, Jolyn was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and died the following spring. Dahmen, the self-proclaimed “mama’s boy,â€� was a junior in high school. He was devastated. In fact, he thinks it took him about five years before he properly grieved her death. “That was tough for me and tough for my family, obviously,â€� he says. “She was a rock. She held our whole family together.â€� Four years after Jolyn died, Dahmen’s older brother Zach discovered he had testicular cancer. Unlike with their mother’s cancer, though, there was a clear path of treatment and a successful outcome. “There was no like, ‘Oh, you’re diagnosed with cancer, but we don’t know what’s next,â€� Dahmen recalls. “Fortunately, they said, we can remove it. You won’t have to do chemo and you’re going to make a full recovery from that. So, there was no time to be scared really with that one.â€� Even so, it’s still cancer. And then it happened again. In March of 2011, when Dahmen was 23 years old and just starting to play golf professionally, he felt a lump in his scrotum. Here we go again, he thought. Dahmen called his brother, who told him that was the same thing that had sent him to the doctor. “And I’m like, no way,â€� Dahmen remembers. “Like, this can’t possibly happen to me. I was in denial for a couple of days. I mean, most people would run to the doctor. I was in denial about the whole thing and didn’t tell anybody, didn’t act any different … I was just hoping it would go away.â€� But it didn’t. And two weeks later, as the size of the lump increased, Dahmen finally went to see a doctor. Before the physician could open his mouth, Dahmen matter-of-factly told the doctor he had testicular cancer. “He just kind of laughed at me, but it turns out I was correct,â€� Dahmen says. Luckily, Dahmen, who had no health insurance, had a sponsor in Bob Yosaitis who paid for his treatment. The two had met the previous summer during a practice round at the Washington State Amateur. Dahmen was playing; Yosaitis — a successful jet-fuel trader who founded Bradley Pacific Aviation, an FBO based in the Hawaiian islands — was caddying for his son. They quickly became friends. “I was looking at Joel like another one of my kids,â€� Yosaitis said in the book, “Walking with Tigers.â€� “He called me one day on the phone and was crying. I thought he had some golf problems. I asked, ‘What’s wrong, and he said, ‘I have cancer.’ I told him, ‘Don’t worry. I’ll pay for the treatment. You’re getting the surgery.â€� Doctors removed his testicle, and Dahmen spent several weeks undergoing roughly eight hours a day of chemotherapy. He was weak and nauseous but eager to play golf again. He returned to the Mackenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada later that year. “So, for me, it was important to get it removed, to have the chemo and just get healthy again to where they said I was going to be OK,â€� Dahmen says. “And I truly believe that. I think there’s two stories — there is, the doctor tells you, but then truly believing in yourself. “So, my motivation was to just to get healthy and to play golf again for sure.â€� Skutt met her future husband the following January. Dahmen had the gift of gab, and she thought he was cute, particularly the “really curly froâ€� he had when his hair first grew back after the chemo. She gave him her phone number – never expecting to hear from him – but he called several days later to asked her out. Two months later, the couple shocked each other with their first “I love yous.â€� When Skutt realized a job in New York City wasn’t going to be in her future, she returned to Scottsdale … and the two moved in together. After a seven-year courtship, they were married in January of this year. Skutt didn’t know Dahmen when he was undergoing his cancer treatment. But she thinks it has affected his outlook on life that – with the exception of that month or so where he vegetated on their couch – is overwhelmingly positive. “He had to endure things that are unimaginable to me,â€� Skutt says. “I still have both of my grandparents and nobody in my family has been sick. My great grandma lived until she was 95. So, for me, when I met him, I was like holy hell, I can’t complain to this kid about anything because he’s already been through so much that people shouldn’t have to go through. “I think in hindsight it’s something that’s pushed him further in the sense that I can have fun doing this, and I can actually enjoy my career, because this isn’t all that life’s about. It doesn’t have to consume me, but it can be just a fun kind of what I’m doing, and I think he takes that outlook. “If anything, it has guided him in a positive and it’s allowed him to be able to have fun and allow him to not take it as life or death. Because there is actual life or death.â€� Skutt is one of several people Dahmen has leaned on in the years since his mother died. His family, of course, and Yosaitis. Then there’s Jon Reehoorn, who was an assistant coach at Washington during Dahmen’s brief Huskies career and now guides the program at Oregon State. “He’s a great life coach,â€� says Dahmen, who admits he lacked direction in college and dropped out after a year of going to too many parties and not enough classes. “He would nudge me in the right direction. He always says he wishes he were more firm with me back then, but Horn always helped me.â€� The same goes for another former Huskie, Rob Rashell, the director of instruction at TPC Scottsdale, who Dahmen says “took me in like a little brother and taught me everything he’s ever known.â€� Dahmen sought him out because the man who gave him the $200 tip – telling him to clear his left hip – seemed more interested in making money than making him a better player. “I needed the support. I didn’t need any lessons,â€� Dahmen explains. “I didn’t need any help. I needed something to get me off the couch. I needed something to look forward to. I needed something to work on because I didn’t know. “I knew I was good, but I obviously had flaws. … I just needed refining and understanding and some growing up to do, obviously.â€� Enter Dahmen’s long-time friend and caddie, Geno Bonnalie, who let his buddy live at his house after he dropped out of the University of Washington. Bonnalie even officiated at the wedding of Dahmen and Skutt in January. “They let me make mistakes, but they’d beat me up pretty good too about it,â€� Dahmen recalls. “And so that was huge. Just let me take over their spare room and find my way there. That was big. “Geno — he’s been here every step of the way. And Geno’s always believed in me. He’s always seen the golf talent, and he’s always known I was going to do it and he’s believed in me way more than I have.â€� Dahmen goes into the John Deere Classic ranked 48th in the FedExCup standings. In the last 17 months, he’s moved from 570th in the world rankings to his current position at 81st. He’s made more than $3.6 million in three seasons on the PGA TOUR, yet, as Dahmen puts it “we don’t have fancy.â€� The couple owns one car, a used Ford Explorer, and live with Murphy in a home they remodeled from top-to-bottom. “I don’t know if I’ve had as much fun as being at home with my wife and my dog and realizing what we’ve built and what we’ve accomplished,â€� a satisfied Dahmen says after a recent two-week break. “And I know it’s not, we don’t have wins yet. “We don’t have retirement money, but it’s really fun to look up because we worked really hard for what we have.â€� Dahmen has also become acutely aware of the platform he has as a member of the PGA TOUR. So, it was no surprise to find him last week in Minneapolis filming a public service announcement about preventing skin cancer for MD Anderson – doling out sunglasses and that distinctive wide-brimmed white bucket hat he wears to unsuspecting players at a local municipal course.  “Cancer in young people is a real thing,â€� Dahmen says, explaining his motivation. “We think we’re invisible. We think it only happens to my grandparents and only happens to my parents. But cancer affects everybody.â€� Dahmen knows that better than most, of course. But he also knows what it means to overcome loss, reassess your life and realize your dream.   The 31-year-old will tell you that he’s tougher than he ever believed he could be because “I’ve picked myself up off the floor a couple of times.â€� Dahmen thinks he’s a better friend now, and certainly a better husband, and he has no doubt that he has a better outlook on life. “If you told that kid sitting there on the couch with the dog doing nothing, if you told me I’d be doing this, I’d have said, ‘Well, who kidnapped me and put me back on the golf course?” Dahmen says with a smile. “I necessarily wouldn’t be stunned, maybe physically on golf sense that I could do it, but I was nowhere mentally. I didn’t believe in myself at the time. I was pretty down, so physically, I always thought I could get it done. “I always had the belief, but it takes a lot more than that to get out of here and be successful. I think I’d be pretty proud of myself that the guy now back then would be pretty excited about the whole thing.â€�

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3rd Round Score - Nick Taylor
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5+110
Under 68.5-145
2nd Round 3 Balls - J. Thitikul / M. Sagstrom / L. Strom
Type: 2nd Round 3 Balls - Status: OPEN
Jeeno Thitikul-160
Madelene Sagstrom+240
Linnea Strom+450
2nd Round 3-Balls - B. DeChambeau / P. Mickelson / M. Kaymer
Type: Outright - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau-225
Phil Mickelson+320
Martin Kaymer+475
2nd Round 3-Balls - T. Hatton / L. Oosthuizen / B. Campbell
Type: Outright - Status: OPEN
Tyrell Hatton+105
Louis Oosthuizen+200
Ben Campbell+275
2nd Round 3-Balls - D. Johnson / A. Ancer / D. Lee
Type: Outright - Status: OPEN
Dustin Johnson+120
Abraham Ancer+165
Danny Lee+300
2nd Round 3-Balls - J. Rahm / J. Niemann / A. Lahiri
Type: Outright - Status: OPEN
Jon Rahm+115
Joaquin Niemann+135
Anirban Lahiri+400
2nd Round 3-Balls - M. Leishman / T. Pieters / G. McDowell
Type: Outright - Status: OPEN
Marc Leishman+135
Thomas Pieters+160
Graeme McDowell+250
2nd Round 3-Balls - P. Reed / B. Watson / P. Uihlein
Type: Outright - Status: OPEN
Patrick Reed+110
Bubba Watson+220
Peter Uihlein+240
3rd Round Score - Shane Lowry
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5-125
Under 67.5-105
3rd Round 2 Ball - S. Lowry v C. Del Solar
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Shane Lowry-240
Cristobal Del Solar+275
Tie+750
2nd Round 3 Balls - H. Shibuno / A. Valenzuela / A. Corpuz
Type: 2nd Round 3 Balls - Status: OPEN
Allisen Corpuz+140
Hinako Shibuno+170
Albane Valenzuela+225
3rd Round Score - Jake Knapp
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5-115
Under 68.5-115
3rd Round Six Shooter - T. Olesen / J. Knapp / A. Putnam / V. Perez / R. Lee / C. Champ
Type: 3rd Round Six Shooter - Status: OPEN
Thorbjorn Olesen+350
Jake Knapp+375
Andrew Putnam+400
Victor Perez+400
Richard Lee+500
Cameron Champ+600
3rd Round Match Up - A. Putnam v J. Knapp
Type: 3rd Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
Andrew Putnam-110
Jake Knapp-110
3rd Round Match Up - R. Fox v T. Olesen
Type: Request - Status: OPEN
Ryan Fox-130
Thorbjorn Olesen+110
3rd Round 2 Ball - R. Fox v J. Knapp
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Ryan Fox-110
Jake Knapp+120
Tie+750
2nd Round 3 Balls - J. Kupcho / J.H. Im / A. Buhai
Type: 2nd Round 3 Balls - Status: OPEN
Jin Hee Im+160
Ashleigh Buhai+165
Jennifer Kupcho+200
3rd Round Score - V. Perez
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5-130
Under 68.5+100
3rd Round 2 Ball - N. Taylor v V. Perez
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Nick Taylor-115
Victor Perez+125
Tie+750
3rd Round Score - Thorbjorn Olesen
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Under 68.5-130
Over 68.5+100
3rd Round Match Up - C. Champ v R. Lee
Type: 3rd Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
Richard Lee-115
Cameron Champ-105
3rd Round 2 Ball - T. Olesen v R. Lee
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Thorbjorn Olesen-130
Richard Lee+145
Tie+750
3rd Round Score - A. Putnam
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5-155
Under 68.5+120
3rd Round Score - Cameron Champ
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 69.5+115
Under 69.5-150
3rd Round 2 Ball - C. Champ v A. Putnam
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Andrew Putnam-115
Cameron Champ+125
Tie+750
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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How to watch VR experience at Waste Management Phoenix Open 16th holeHow to watch VR experience at Waste Management Phoenix Open 16th hole

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How to watch: Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, Round 4, leaderboard, tee times, TV timesHow to watch: Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, Round 4, leaderboard, tee times, TV times

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Ten stats that defined the PGA TOUR seasonTen stats that defined the PGA TOUR season

On the PGA TOUR, the average approach shot from 200 to 225 yards out in the fairway finishes 42 feet from the pin. With Jon Rahm applying pressure and the FedExCup on the line, Patrick Cantlay hit his approach at 18 on Sunday at East Lake – from 218 yards away – to a cozy 11 feet, 4 inches. Those statistics help contextualize how good Cantlay’s approach was in the biggest moment so far in his PGA TOUR career. In a season loaded with big moments, there is no shortage of remarkable numbers to help accent the sport we all love. These are the 10 statistics that best defined the 2020-2021 PGA TOUR season. 1. Bryson DeChambeau breaks own season driving distance record (323.7 yards) In 2020, with a rebuilt frame and power-focused approach, Bryson DeChambeau set the PGA TOUR single-season driving distance average record, at 322.0 yards. In 2021, he shattered his own mark, averaging 323.7 yards off the tee – and more importantly – won multiple big tournaments along the way. 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Johnson had +13.82 Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee + Approach for the Tournament, the most of any player by five full strokes. Cameron Champ ranked second, at +8.81. 3. Sungjae Im makes most birdies-or-better (513) in a single PGA TOUR season In a season of 50 tournaments, spanning 360 days, the prolific achievements of Sungjae Im can help sum up the sheer size of 2020-21 on the PGA TOUR. Im, who played 17 more rounds this PGA TOUR season than anyone else, finished with 513 birdies-or-better, the most in a single season on the PGA TOUR since at least 1980. The previous mark was held by Steve Flesch, who made 509 in the 2000 campaign. Im had a good season – he reached the TOUR Championship and had 5 top-10 finishes – but his birdie-making rate wasn’t close to the best on TOUR. Im ranked 29th in par-breaker percentage (23.36%), well behind TOUR leader Bryson DeChambeau (26.32%). Yet, because Im played 42 more rounds (756 more holes) than DeChambeau, he was the man to play his way into the record books. Using a baseball analogy, think of it as Im setting the single-season hits record while DeChambeau led the league in batting average. 4. Justin Thomas ties lowest closing 36-hole score ever at TPC Sawgrass (-12) Friday evening at THE PLAYERS Championship, Justin Thomas was a tournament afterthought. Eight shots behind Lee Westwood, Thomas would need a truly remarkable performance to get into contention on the weekend and possibly win against the toughest field in all of golf. That’s exactly what he did. Thomas was 12-under on the weekend, tying the lowest closing 36-hole score in the history of THE PLAYERS (Fred Couples and Rocco Mediate each shot -12 on the weekend in 1996). His ball-striking numbers were through the roof: Thomas gained 11.2 strokes tee-to-green over the last 36 holes, the most by any player in a single weekend since tracking began in 2004. His 17 greens in regulation in the final round were the most by any player in the final round of a Players Championship win since Hal Sutton in 2000. With the win, Thomas joined Tiger Woods as the only players with a PLAYERS, major championship and double-digit PGA TOUR victories before age 28. 5. Phil Mickelson becomes oldest major champion in golf history (age 50) In May, a new generation of golf fans got familiar with the name Julius Boros – the man who previously held the title of ‘oldest player to win a major.’ Boros was 48 when he won the 1968 PGA Championship at Pecan Valley. Less than a month shy of his 51st birthday, Phil Mickelson took that title with a timeless victory at Kiawah Island. Mickelson was spectacular from a ball striking perspective, leading the tournament in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green. He gained more than 2 full strokes per round with his approach play, and tied for the best par 5 scoring average in the field. Mickelson truly captured lightning in a bottle that week: it was his only top-10 finish of the 2020-21 PGA TOUR season. 6. Playoffs: Longest and Largest The quantity of playoffs on the PGA TOUR this season – 14 – is not particularly historic. Ten years ago, the 2011 season yielded 18 playoffs, most ever in a single season. In 2015, we nearly eclipsed that total, with 17 playoffs. The size and length of the playoffs we did see, though, were another story. At the Wyndham Championship, six players were tied through 72 holes, tying the largest sudden-death playoff in PGA TOUR history (done twice previously). At the Travelers Championship, Harris English and Kramer Hickok needed 8 extra holes to decide a winner. Only one sudden-death playoff, the 1949 Motor City Open, has ever lasted longer in PGA TOUR history. In that instance, Cary Middlecoff and Lloyd Mangrum were declared co-winners by after 11 holes due to darkness. Three other playoffs this season went at least 5 holes: the Rocket Mortgage Classic, Barbasol Championship and BMW Championship. It made for a summer full of sunset-backed drama and Sunday evening flight itinerary changes. 7. Collin Morikawa wins 2nd major in 8th career start Collin Morikawa’s brilliant performance at Royal St George’s was worthy of inclusion in this series of notes on its own. He didn’t miss many greens in regulation (he hit 75% for the week), but when he did, he scrambled efficiently (78%, T-3rd in the field). Morikawa needed less than 28 putts per round for the week, tied for fewest of anyone. There are only three instances since 2000 where a player shot a bogey-free final round of 66 or lower to win a major championship. Rory McIlroy has one of them (2012 PGA at Kiawah Island) – Morikawa has the other two, at the 2020 PGA Championship and 2021 Open. It’s the pace at which Morikawa claimed his first two major wins, though, that puts him in an unprecedented place in men’s golf history. Morikawa has won two major championships in just eight career starts, the fewest of any player since the Masters was first held in 1934. Only two players in the last century won their 2nd professional major in fewer starts: Walter Hagen (6th start, 1919 U.S. Open) and Gene Sarazen (4th start, 1922 PGA). 8. Fourteen consecutive PGA TOUR winners trailed entering the final round Closing out a PGA TOUR victory is difficult any given week. Over the last 15 seasons, players with the 54-hole lead or co-lead have gone on to win the tournament just 34.6% of the time. Players with a 1-shot lead have a win percentage just over 30%. Even a lead as big as 4 strokes isn’t completely safe – more than 22% of those tournaments end up won by a someone trailing through 54 holes. For 14 consecutive PGA TOUR events this summer, closing with the 54-hole lead was impossible. From the Charles Schwab Challenge (won by Jason Kokrak, who entered the final round 1 shot back) through THE NORTHERN TRUST (won by Tony Finau, who entered the day 2 off the lead) not a single PGA TOUR event was won by a player who held the 54-hole lead or co-lead. The run of 14 consecutive comeback wins on the TOUR was the longest such streak in at least the last 30 seasons. The leaders didn’t always simply fall flat on those particular Sundays (or Mondays). Usually, they were just caught by a particularly hot chaser. Excluding the Memorial (Jon Rahm was the 54-hole leader before his WD) and the Barracuda Championship (modified Stableford Scoring), there were 19 players during that run who held the 54-hole lead or co-lead. Their scoring average in those final rounds was 71.4. Those who won in that stretch had a final round scoring average of 66.7. 9. Patrick Cantlay sets Strokes Gained: Putting record at BMW Championship (+14.58) Before taking on Bryson DeChambeau in an epic 6-hole playoff, Patrick Cantlay wrapped up the most impressive putting performance of the ShotLink era at Caves Valley. Cantlay wound up with +14.58 Strokes Gained: Putting for the week, the most by any player in a single tournament since detailed tracking began in 2004. Perhaps even more remarkable is that he set the record despite having negative Strokes Gained: Putting the 3rd round. Cantlay made 21 putts longer than 10 feet, the most ever in a single tournament tracked by ShotLink. No other player that week made more than 16 putts of 10 feet or more. Cantlay finished the season with 15 straight rounds in the 60s, the most to finish a PGA TOUR season since Charles Howell III ended the 2002 campaign with 16 in a row. 10. Jon Rahm has 15 top-10 finishes, 6 more than any other player No player in the 2020-21 PGA TOUR season was more consistently great than Jon Rahm. His victory at the U.S. Open came during a summer flurry that featured almost exclusively high finishes. Since May, Rahm has only 1 result outside the top-10: his withdrawal from the Memorial Tournament when he led by 6 shots after 54 holes. In his last 28 rounds worldwide, Rahm has made birdie-or-better on 30% of his holes played, and shot in the 70s just 6 times. Rahm finished the season leading the PGA TOUR in scoring average, Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green, total driving and Strokes Gained: Total. Rahm is just the fourth player since 1980 to have 15 or more top-10 finishes in a season with 22 starts or fewer. The others to do it are Tiger Woods (twice, 1999 and 2000), Tom Watson (1980) and Dustin Johnson (2015-16).

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