Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational, Round 2: Leaderboard, tee times, TV times

World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational, Round 2: Leaderboard, tee times, TV times

The second round of the World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational takes place on Friday from TPC Southwind. Here’s how to follow all the action. Round 2 leaderboard Round 2 tee times HOW TO FOLLOW TELEVISION: Thursday-Friday, 2-7 p.m. ET (Golf Channel). Saturday-Sunday, noon-1:45 p.m. (GC), 2-6 p.m. (CBS). PGA TOUR LIVE: Thursday-Friday, 12-7 p.m. ET (Featured Groups). Saturday-Sunday, 10:30 a.m.-2 p.m. ET (Featured Groups), 2 p.m.-6 p.m. ET (Featured Holes). International subscribers (via GOLF.tv): Thursday-Friday, 13:00 to 23:00 GMT. Saturday-Sunday, 13:30 to 22:00. RADIO: Thursday-Friday, 1-7 p.m.; Saturday-Sunday, 1-6 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com). FEATURED GROUPS Rory McIlroy, Brooks Koepka, Jason Day: 12:53 p.m. ET (off 10th tee) Matt Kuchar, Justin Rose, Jordan Spieth: 12:53 p.m. ET (off 10th tee) MUST READS Rested Rahm leads after opening-round 62 Smith, Imahira eye Presidents Cup Win probabilities Power Rankings Expert Picks News, notes on TPC Southwind The First Look CALL OF THE DAY

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Golf’s legends recollect memories from FirestoneGolf’s legends recollect memories from Firestone

A few weeks shy of his 48th birthday and returning to his first PGA Championship in 12 years, Ben Hogan couldn’t find any magic in his golf game during his trip to Akron, Ohio, in the summer of 1960. Three days without a birdie left him outside the 54-hole cut. Hogan did, however, discover the magic formula for Firestone Country Club’s South Course.  “He told me, the winner will be the guy who averages no more than 10 (missed fairways and missed greens combined) a day,� Jay Hebert told reporters, recalling Hogan’s words. “If you don’t think (practice rounds) with Hogan are an education, try it sometime. It’s a master’s degree. No, it’s a doctor’s degree.� On a Firestone CC test that Jim Turnesa that week proclaimed “the toughest course I’ve ever seen,� the 37-year-old Hebert averaged less than nine missed fairways and greens combined per day – and won. What? You think Hogan would have misled him? Famous for suggesting that “the secret was in the dirt,� Hogan likely would have said that the challenge of Firestone CC was no mystery. It is a sentiment that has been shared by other greats throughout the years. From Bobby Jones, who was at Firestone right after it opened in 1929 for an exhibition against Jesse Sweetser and Watts Gunn; to Jack Nicklaus, who embraced Firestone CC when he first saw it as an 18-year-old amateur in 1958; to David Duval 40 years later who triumphed in the World Series of Golf and said: “It’s just long, hard and right in front of you. There are no tricks to it.� Perhaps none of them, however, were swept off their feet by Firestone CC quite like Nick Price. He arrived in Akron in the summer of 1983 still licking his wounds from having squandered the 1982 Open Championship. Quickly, though, the aura of Firestone put him at ease.  “I had seen it on TV before, but when I saw it in person, I loved it. What amazed me is how (the holes) went up and down, how except for two or three holes, everything was parallel,� said Price. “It made an impact on me because it was long and the greens were tiny for the length of the golf course.� A premier ball-striker, Price smiled. “If you were on with your irons, you’d always have a birdie putt on the small greens,� said Price. “I loved it.� He still does, and for good reason. The Zimbabwean shot 66-68-69-67 for a four-stroke victory and first PGA Tour win was timely. Not because of the $100,00 winner’s check, but for the 10-year exemption to the PGA TOUR.  “You could say Firestone gave me the key to my career,� said Price, then a struggling rookie on the PGA TOUR who was exempt into the 1983 WSOG for being the leading money-winner in South Africa. “It was a special time, such a confidence boost.� Where the pride swells is when Price scans the list of past winners at Firestone CC’s South Course. The rollcall should be accompanied by trumpets blaring “Royal Entrance� because it is top-to-bottom golf royalty. When you factor in the PGA TOUR tournaments held on Firestone’s South Course (Rubber City Open, American Golf Classic, World Series of Golf and World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational) and sprinkle in three PGA Championships, the list of winners across 75 tournaments includes 18 World Golf Hall of Fame members and a whopping 33 winners of major winners. Crunching further, those 18 Hall of Famers have won 38 of those 75 tournaments at Firestone, a stunning 50.6 percent. “An impressive stat, no doubt,� said Price. “It’s a testament to how great the golf course is.� It puts Firestone South right up there with Pebble Beach Golf Links (23 Hall of Famers and 32 major champions have won there) as the two PGA TOUR courses that have produced the richest pedigree of winners. “Firestone is a ball-striker’s golf course,� said Adam Scott, who won the 2011 WGC-Bridgestone Invitational. “If you miss fairways, usually you’re just pitching out. I’d hate to try and win a tournament there by scrambling.� When your club has hosted the best professional players every year since 1954, save for 2002 when the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational was staged in at Sahalee CC outside of Seattle, indelible memories stretch endlessly. There was the debut of the Rubber City Open in ’54 when Bolt said he was trying “to live down the reputation� he had as a hothead. His near-flawless victory helped, only one year later, Bolt ripped up his scorecard 16 holes into Round 3 and walked off. “I’m sick and tired of golf,� he vented. Palmer thrilled large crowds when he won the American Golf Classic in 1957, but at the ’60 PGA his mood swung as Robert Trent Jones Sr.’s re-design of Firestone, especially of the par-5 16th, left Palmer dismayed. “As far as I’m concerned, I think it’s ridiculous,� said Palmer, of the hole stretched to 667 yards. His chance to win the PGA collapsed with a third-round triple-bogey and years later, Palmer was asked if he remembered it. “I remember all eight shots,� he snapped. Mike Souchak was another who surveyed Jones’ re-do with a jaded view. “How about that?� he said. “They added lakes (two), traps (50), lengthened the tees and pushed the greens back (adding 500 yards), and what do they do – they cut par a stroke.� Indeed, Firestone CC in 1960 was a par 70 at 7,165 yards, beefier than it had been when it opened in 1929. Designed by Bert Way – an Englishman who apprenticed under Willie Dunn before emigrating to America in 1896 – Firestone measured 6,306 yards and was a par 71 back on the day Harvey Firestone struck the opening tee shot. But the back-and-forth routing and tree-lined holes remain pretty much as Way drew them up, which adds immeasurably to the joy of Firestone. Certainly, Jose Maria Olazabal felt comfortable at the 1990 World Series of Golf, so much so that in Round 1 he birdied the first, eagled the second, then birdied Nos. 3 and 4 en route to a course-record 61. He eventually won by 12, but years later said of that sizzling round: “What I really don’t understand is how the hell I shot 61.� Nicklaus did know why he played well at Firestone and it is why he became emotional in 2013 when honored at Firestone CC as “Ambassador of Golf� by the Northern Ohio Golf Charities. “I loved coming up here. I loved playing the golf course. It suited my eye. It suited my game,� said Nicklaus, who won seven tournaments on the South Course – five times in the World Series of Golf, once in the American Golf Classic, and, of course, the memorable 1975 PGA. That was the year Bruce Crampton finished second to Nicklaus for the fourth time in a major and famously said: “I’m not a machine. Jack’s the closest thing we have to a machine.� Years later, a leaner and meaner machine embraced Firestone. Tiger Woods first saw it as a teenager when he came over from doing a minority golf clinic in Cleveland. In 1997 as a 21-year-old professional in the WSOG, Woods told of his drive at 16 that barely reached the ladies’ tees. Reporters laughed, but Woods told them, “Hey, man, the ladies’ tees are way out there.� He would finish tied for third behind Greg Norman in ’97 and joint fifth behind Duval in ’98, but after that . . . well, it became his playground. Between 1999-2009, Woods won seven of the 10 Bridgestone Invitationals at Firestone. He added an eighth in 2013. “There’s Tiger and Tiger and Tiger . . . and Tiger,� said Scott, laughing when asked about Firestone winners. But growing serious, the Aussie noted that his idol, Norman, won twice there, and when you factored in Palmer, Nicklaus, Player, Price, Tom Watson, Lee Trevino and Phil Mickelson among all the Hall of Famers and major winners, Scott smiled. “You pay attention to past winners and when the list is that impressive, you take pride in being on it.� Price still savors his 1983 World Series of Golf win. Yes, for the 10-year exemption, but also because the next five names behind him on the leaderboard were Nicklaus, Johnny Miller, Raymond Floyd, Hale Irwin and Watson. “I had a four-shot lead walking to the 18th green,� said Price, “and I saw Jack standing behind the green. I had had all these great players breathing down my neck and when I saw Jack, I thought, ‘Maybe he thinks I’m going to four-putt.’ “But he came out because he wanted to congratulate me. It was so gracious of him.� Nicklaus knew reporters didn’t know much about the young man from Zimbabwe, but insisted, “You have players here you have never heard of, but they are not no-names, I can assure you.� Certainly, not when they win at Firestone CC.

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Tiger Woods updates, Masters, Round 4Tiger Woods updates, Masters, Round 4

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Final round of the Masters and Tiger Woods is in the final group, just two shots off the lead. Even with the early wake-up call Sunday due to an ominous weather forecast (final tee time is 9:20 a.m. ET), Augusta National should be crazy. But can Tiger catch Francesco Molonari? Check this file often for hole-by-hole updates. Tiger pre-round notes A few fun facts entering Sunday’s final round: Woods enters his round at 11 under. Each time he’s been 11 under or better through 54 holes at Augusta National, he’s won (2005/-11, 2002/-11, 2001/-12, 1997/-15) His 205 score (11 under) marks his best opening 54-hole total since 2005 (74-66-65—205), his last of four Masters wins. Seeks his fifth Masters title and 15th major championship victory while chasing Jack Nicklaus’ record in both (Masters/6, Majors/18). A win Sunday would be his 81st on the PGA TOUR, one shy of Sam Snead’s all-time record. At No. 12 in the Official World Golf Ranking, he’s the highest-ranked former champion in the field At 43 years, 3 months, 14 days on Sunday, would become the second-oldest winner: Jack Nicklaus/1986 (46 years, 2 months, 23 days) Would become the seventh player in his 40s to win the Masters (Jack Nicklaus/46/1986, Ben Crenshaw/43/1995, Gary Player/42/1978, Sam Snead/41/1954, Mark O’Meara/41/1998, Ben Hogan/40/1953) Ranks T2 in Greens in Regulation with 43/54 behind Thorbjorn Olesen (45/54). Best finish in five starts this season came in last start – T5/WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play.  

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Team of rivals Harman, Kizzire win QBE ShootoutTeam of rivals Harman, Kizzire win QBE Shootout

NAPLES, Fla. – Brian Harman and Patton Kizzire had played plenty of golf together before joining forces for the 30th QBE Shootout. That doesn’t mean they’re used to cheering for each other. “We’re normally trying to get into each other’s heads,â€� Kizzire said after the St. Simons Island, Georgia duo shot a best-ball, final-round 61 in blustery weather to reach 30-under and win the unofficial QBE at Tiburón Golf Club. “And this week he was nice to me, which was kind of weird.â€� Added Harman: “I was hoping I wasn’t going to throw him for a loop.â€� For the second straight year Graeme McDowell finished second, this time with a new partner, Emiliano Grillo. They made par on 18 to finish 29-under, one back. Three teams shared third, two back: Charles Howell III and Luke List, who was 9-under on his own ball over the last nine holes as they shot 61; Kevin Na and Bryson DeChambeau (62); and Charley Hoffman and Gary Woodland (63), their highlight coming when Woodland aced the 202-yard 5th hole. Tony Finau and Lexi Thompson, the only LPGA player, shot a final-round 65 to finish seven off the lead and seventh in the 12-team field. At first glance, Harman and Kizzire seemed like a Mutt-and-Jeff team. They made for a funny team picture, as the 6-foot-5 Kizzire is almost a foot taller than his left-handed teammate. They weren’t even slated to play together. Harman was a late add to the field after Davis Love III pulled out to be with his ailing mother. Still, there were plenty of reasons why Harman and Kizzire worked. For starters, they’ve known each other since they were 12, when they began to clash in junior events. Harman, from Savannah, Georgia, and Kizzire, who grew up in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, took turns beating each other at AJGA, Southeastern Junior Golf Tour and other regional and national tournaments. “I think there’s a picture of him holding the first‑place trophy and me holding the second‑place trophy,â€� Harman said, “but he was short and pudgy then.â€� Kizzire did not dispute this.   “At a young age I think I got him a few times,â€� Kizzire said. “But there in our teens he had my number. We had a lot of good matches.â€� The second reason why they worked nicely as a team: They’re not only used to competing against one another, largely in practice rounds back home, they’re also fishing buddies. Harman, an avid outdoorsman, provides the boat. “He bought a boat,â€� Kizzire said, “and I called him and I said, ‘I heard I won a boat.’ No need to buy one if your buddy has got one.â€� Added Harman: “He’s only got to help me clean it afterwards.â€� Who is the better angler? “Freshwater, he’s probably got my number,â€� Harman said, “but saltwater, it’s not a competition.â€� Added Kizzire: “I grew up inland in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, so we didn’t have a lot of saltwater around. He grew up in the marsh, out on the ocean, he’s diving for lobsters and catching all kinds of fish. I have to pick his brain a little bit.â€� The biggest reason why this team made sense: They both love this time of year. Harman logged six top-10 finishes, five of them top-5s, in his first six starts last season, a spectacular run that encompassed late 2017 and early ’18. Kizzire nabbed his first two wins, at the Mayakoba Golf Classic and the Sony Open in Hawaii, over the same period. ’Tis the season to be jolly? For them it is. Both, alas, cooled off considerably the rest of the way, with Kizzire sweating it out to nab the 30th and final spot in the TOUR Championship and Harman missing the season-ending tournament at East Lake as he finished 48th in the FedExCup.  “All of a sudden I found myself in contention to make the Ryder Cup,â€� said Harman, also a two-time TOUR winner. “All that stuff just kind of overwhelmed me just a little bit, and I just started pressing towards the end of the year.â€� Well, the end of the season, anyway. The end of the calendar year has been good to him, and Kizzire. It continued to be in Naples. The winning stroke came when Kizzire reached the green with a 7-iron at the par-5 17th and rolled in the eagle putt. Harman, who had hit his second shot inside 10 feet, didn’t even need to putt. Asked why he loves this time of the year, Kizzire shook his head, as did his partner. “Golf is such a personal journey,â€� Harman said. True enough—except when you play with a friend.

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