Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Time isn’t on this legendary trio’s side

Time isn’t on this legendary trio’s side

Serena Williams, Tiger Woods and Roger Federer are closing in on the end of their careers. Enjoy whatever great moments they have left, because there aren’t many.

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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
Ludvig Aberg+400
Collin Morikawa+450
Jon Rahm+450
Justin Thomas+550
Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+450
Bryson DeChambeau+800
Justin Thomas+1600
Collin Morikawa+2200
Jon Rahm+2200
Xander Schauffele+2200
Ludvig Aberg+2500
Joaquin Niemann+3000
Brooks Koepka+4000
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AdventHealth Championship
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Kensei Hirata+2000
Mitchell Meissner+2200
SH Kim+2200
Neal Shipley+2500
Seungtaek Lee+2800
Hank Lebioda+3000
Chandler Blanchet+3500
Pierceson Coody+3500
Rick Lamb+3500
Trey Winstead+3500
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Regions Tradition
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Stewart Cink+550
Steve Stricker+650
Ernie Els+700
Steven Alker+750
Miguel Angel Jimenez+1200
Bernhard Langer+1400
Jerry Kelly+1600
Alex Cejka+1800
Retief Goosen+2500
Richard Green+2500
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Viktor Hovland+2000
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
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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Pros look forward to fun â€" and challenging — Seminole Golf ClubPros look forward to fun â€" and challenging — Seminole Golf Club

Rory McIlroy calls Seminole Golf Club the greatest course that famed designer Donald Ross ever created – and Ross designed a lot, nearly 430 courses. Dustin Johnson says he feels like he can tear it up every time he plays — only to be constantly put in his place. RELATED: Fans at home will be able to contribute to TaylorMade Driving Relief’s COVID-19 relief efforts thanks to PGA TOUR Charities’ online and Text-To-Give donation platforms powered by GoFundMe Charity. Click here to donate. MORE: How it works | Power Rankings | Expert Picks | Similarities run deep for Fowler, Wolff | Rory, DJ at the forefront of golf’s paradigm shift History and intrigue drips from the place. This is where Ben Hogan would unwind and also tune up for the Masters every year in his prime. “Seminoleâ€� is one of those words in the wider golf community that pricks up every ear. Those who have been and played have great stories and those who haven’t want to go. While other courses such as Augusta National and Cypress Point have a similar aura, people have at least been able to see those on television in the past. Meanwhile, Florida’s Seminole Golf Club has been hidden away from view and the legend grows with each tidbit of a story you hear. So while there is no doubt that anticipation for any live sport is about as high as possible thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic, the fact that Seminole is going on display in Sunday’s TaylorMade Driving Relief charity skins match has taken it to even greater heights. McIlroy and Johnson are preparing to take on Rickie Fowler and Matthew Wolff in support of COVID-19 relief efforts with all four combatants knowing the course itself brings as much intrigue as the competition. Fowler likens Seminole to another Ross gem – Pinehurst No. 2 – and knows that while the other pairing might have a power advantage, this course is more about precision on approach and a sharp short game. Each hole finds a way to work into a different wind, which given the close proximity to the Atlantic Ocean, can be a daunting prospect “I love Seminole. It’s just a fun golf course to play,â€� Fowler beams. “You’re going to see us having some fun off the tee and then from there is where things will get separated on approach shots and putting. “It’s very much a second-shot or approach-shot golf course. I’d say it’s fairly forgiving off the tee but how the greens are kind of designed, they’re pretty good-sized. But as far as where you can land the ball and keep the ball on the green … it’s kind of similar to a Pinehurst No. 2 in a way. “A lot of balls will roll and feed off, whether it’s back down through the fairway into bunkers, and that’s where it can get tough, especially if the wind is up.â€� Fowler’s partner, PGA TOUR young gun Wolff, has played the course just a handful times. But he saw enough to know he better bring his best short game. “The greens are extremely difficult. They’re very sloped, a lot of subtle breaks, and I’ve even heard that people putt the ball often off the green and into bunkers,â€� Wolff says. “I don’t think you’re going to see that from us, but it’s definitely something that I think putting is a huge advantage there.â€� In fact, McIlroy admits to putting off the green in a recent practice round. “I putted off the fifth green from about 30 feet,â€� the FedExCup champion says, proving even the best can be tamed by Seminole. “If the wind gets up and the greens are as fast as they were last Friday … birdies might be hard to come by, but there are going to be some chances. “Seminole is going to be a treat for everyone to see on TV. I think it’s Donald Ross’s greatest course he ever designed. He had a wonderful piece of land beside the Atlantic Ocean, and it has some of the best green complexes in the world in terms of the thought that needs to go into playing your second shots and then just how thoughtful you need to be on the greens and around the greens.â€� PGA TOUR senior tournament referee Stephen Cox says the setup on Sunday will be true to Seminole’s best features. While social distancing and other protocols will be in full effect to ensure the safest possible scenarios, Cox is confident the viewers will see Seminole in a great light. “We’re very, very lucky to have the likes of [head pro] Bob Ford on-site. He and I are going to work very closely to set up the golf course in a way befitting an event of this style and showcase some of the fun hole locations that Seminole has to offer,â€� Cox says. “There’s a genuine excitement about seeing Seminole. It’s not been broadcast to the worldwide audience before, so this is a new unique opportunity for people around the world to get a glimpse and to see such an American treasure.â€� Johnson is hoping he can finally get one over the course he says keeps enticing him back before finding ways to shut him down. “Seminole is a special place, and fortunately for us we live right down the street from it. I’ve gotten to play it quite a few times, and it’s a course you always enjoy playing. It’s got tons of history,â€� the 20-time PGA TOUR winner says. “When you first get there and you look at it, you think, OK, I should tear this place up, but then when you get done playing, you add your score up and it’s never very good, especially because the greens are always so fast, it’s a little windy … I always struggle there. “Obviously with no live sports really on right now, I think the world needs something to watch, so hopefully we can go out and put on a good show. We’re raising a lot of money for people who really need it, so it’s great to be a part of that, and I think we’re all really looking forward to it.”

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Five things from THE CJ CUP @ SUMMITFive things from THE CJ CUP @ SUMMIT

What happens in Vegas, mostly stays in Vegas. For Rory McIlroy, he hopes what happened in Vegas stays with him throughout the season. The 2016 and 2019 FedEx Cup champion opened his 2021-22 PGA TOUR campaign with a one-shot victory over Collin Morikawa at THE CJ CUP @ SUMMIT. It was McIlroy’s 20th PGA TOUR victory, a significant benchmark in a great career. For much of the weekend, McIlroy found himself going shot-for-shot with Rickie Fowler, who was coming off his own sluggish season. Fowler held his first 54-hole lead in almost three years and may have turned a page on his game. While Fowler’s game dried out Sunday, it was a refreshing sight seeing orange again late on a Sunday. 1. Rory McIlroy Gets Win No. 20 Three weeks ago, Rory McIlroy was in tears, disappointed with his play at the Ryder Cup. This week, he celebrated winning the CJ CUP title over a loaded field in Las Vegas. McIlroy entered the weekend at 9 under, nine shots back of second-round leader Keith Mitchell. But McIlroy fired a bogey-free 62 on Saturday, capped off with an eagle on 18, to climb within two strokes of new leader Rickie Fowler. On the par-5 14th, McIlroy pulled out a Texas wedge from just inside 35 feet and knocked in an eagle to get to 25 under. Moments later, Collin Morikawa, a member at The Summit Club, made his own eagle on 18 to get into the clubhouse at 24 under. Morikawa shot 62 on Sunday, including a 29 on the front nine. McIlroy, who used less than driver on much of his back nine Sunday, made par on each of his final four holes to finish off a one-shot victory. “There was a lot of reflection the last couple weeks and this is what I need to do,” McIlroy says of his process since the Ryder Cup. “I just need to play golf, I need to simplify it, I need to just be me. I think for the last few months I was maybe trying to be someone else to try to get better and I sort of realized that being me is enough and being me, I can do things like this.” The CJ CUP is win No. 20 on the PGA TOUR for the 32-year-old McIlroy, making him the 39th player to accomplish the feat. He is now guaranteed lifetime membership on the PGA TOUR, beginning at the conclusion of his 15th season, the 2022-23 campaign. Per Justin Ray of Twenty First Group, McIlroy is the sixth player to win 20 PGA TOUR titles, including four majors, before age 33. The others: Byron Nelson, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson and Tiger Woods. “I didn’t know if it was going to be this week, but I knew if I just kept my head down and kept playing well and doing the right things, eventually I’d get there,” McIlroy says. “I’ve been close to starting my season with a win before. I think I finished second or third like eight times, so to get a win, it’s great. It feels really good, some validation of what I’ve done the last few weeks and just keep moving forward.” McIlroy was the No. 1 player in the world before the COVID-19 pandemic paused the golf world in March 2020. He’d recorded seven consecutive worldwide top-5s, was coming off his second FedExCup title season and was in the midst of defending his title at THE PLAYERS. Since the restart, McIlroy had only posted three top-5s on the PGA TOUR before this week, one of those being his title at the Wells Fargo Championship last year. He dropped to as low as No. 15 in the world rankings for the first time since 2009. But with a win to open up the 2021-22 season, maybe the tide is turning again for McIlroy. A new season brings a new Rory, and that player is now No. 4 in the FedExCup. 2. Rickie Returns To Form If McIlroy got out of a slump, fellow 32-year-old Rickie Fowler recovered from a two-season nightmare this week. Fowler recorded just one top-10 (T8 at this year’s PGA Championship) between the Farmers Insurance Open in January 2020 and the conclusion of the 2021 season. His world ranking dropped from as high as No. 7 in 2019 to as low as No. 128 after missing the cut at last week’s Shriners Children’s Open. He missed the FedExCup Playoffs for the first time in his career and needed a sponsor’s exemption to play the CJ CUP. For three rounds at The Summit Club, Fowler gave fans a glimpse of his old self. After opening with a pair of 66s, Fowler fired a bogey-free, 9-under 63 on Saturday to take the lead by two shots over McIlroy. The 54-hole lead was his first on the PGA TOUR since his last victory, at the 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open. He could only manage a 1-under 71 on a low-scoring Sunday, however, and finished T3 with Keith Mitchell. The finish was Fowler’s first top-3 since a T2 at the 2019 Honda Classic. “It felt good to finally hit the golf ball properly, at least most of the time, for 72 holes,” Fowler said. As noted by Golf Channel’s Will Gray, Fowler, who did not qualify for The Masters or the U.S. Open last season, still has to remain consistent to get into other high-profile events. The 2015 PLAYERS Championship winner is not currently guaranteed a spot in the 2022 field. Fowler gets right back at it in just a few days, as he is in the field for the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP in Japan. Fowler’s grandfather Yutaka Tanaka is Japanese and Fowler credits Yutaka for getting him into the game of golf. 3. Keith Mitchell’s Almost Flawless Week Keith Mitchell set The Summit Club ablaze through 36 holes. He was 18 under and held a 5-shot lead through two rounds, both tournament records. Through six holes on Saturday, Mitchell had three birdies and one bogey, reaching 20-under and seemed on cruise control. But sometimes, golf becomes golf, and Mitchell carded back-to-back double-bogeys on the 8th and 9th holes to drop out of the lead — a lead he would never again hold sole possession of. Only three players shot worse than Mitchell’s third-round 73. Mitchell rebounded with a 5-under 67 on Sunday to salvage a T3 and validate his play earlier in the week. The result follows up some strong play by Mitchell last season, as he earned top-10s at the Wells Fargo Championship, 3M Open and The Northern Trust. Before the tournament, McIlroy, who needed to come from behind to beat Mitchell at the Wells Fargo Championship, used Mitchell to illustrate the depth on the TOUR. Then Mitchell proved McIlroy’s point. “People wouldn’t maybe pick a Keith Mitchell to win a tournament at the start of a week, but you play with him in a final round on a Sunday, he stopped me in my tracks,” McIlroy says. “I was like, he is a hell of a player.” And it was more than just Mitchell this week. Talor Gooch, still seeking his first PGA TOUR win, slammed in a final-round 62 to finish at T5 and move to No. 8 in the Comcast Business Rewards TOUR TOP 10. He also is on the cusp of cracking the top 50 in the world ranking. Sam Burns, winner of the recent Sanderson Farms Championship, was right there with Gooch, posting four rounds of 68 or better for a T5, and 2018 PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year Aaron Wise also landed at T5. Harry Higgs, Mitchell’s famous playing partner against Phil Mickelson and Joel Dahmen at Liberty National, was nearby at T9. The next group of 20-something-year-olds is always on the way. 4. New And Old Korean Players Make Noise While the first three CJ Cup events were held at Nine Bridges in South Korea, the 2021 edition was the second straight held in the Las Vegas area due to the COVID-19 pandemic. With that said, the 78-player no-cut field included both familiar and unfamiliar Korean faces, both of which impressed at The Summit Club. SeongHyeon Kim is a name PGA TOUR fans should bookmark after this week. Kim opened with scores of 68 and 63, putting him in the final group on Saturday with Mitchell and Jordan Spieth. The 23-year-old caught the double-bogey bug with Mitchell, posting a six on the par-4 9th hole that day and faded from the pack, ultimately finishing T32. For Kim, who has three professional wins, including the 2021 Japan PGA Championship, this is only the beginning of his career in the U.S. Last month, Kim earned co-medalist honors with viral sensation Michael Visacki at the first stage of Korn Ferry Tour Q-School in Winter Garden, Florida. He will go right from playing with Spieth to playing for his Korn Ferry Tour card at second stage. Meanwhile, one week after his win at the Shriners Children’s Open, Sungjae Im notched top Korean honors at T9. Im posted scores of 67 and 64 on the weekend and has three top-10 finishes in his last five PGA TOUR events. Im was followed by K.H. Lee at T25, Kim at T32, Sung Kang at T32 and Joohyung Kim at T49 as the top five Koreans. Joohyung Kim is just 19 and already has six professional wins, including two on the Korean Tour and one on the Asian Tour. 5. Abraham Ancer Angles In Albatross After a 300-yard drive on the par-5 14th hole Friday, Abraham Ancer left himself 249 yards in…like, into the hole. “I was in between flying it there on the green with a longer club or just hitting that 4-iron just a little bit lower, make sure it lands somewhere short of the green and chases up there just because I know long was probably not a good spot to be there,” Ancer says. “Just throw it out there to the right, let it feed and just try to get lucky. Thankfully, I did. A lot of things have to go right for that ball to go in. You can leave it over there on the right side of the green and it’s a really tough two-putt from there.” The albatross was part of a 7-under 65 on Friday. Ancer only managed an eagle on No. 14 on Saturday, as he carded a 9-under 63 to get into the final group on Sunday with McIlroy and Fowler at 18 under. Ancer again managed to make eagle on Sunday – making him 7 under on the hole for the week — but a five-bogey day held him to a 71, and a T14 finish. COMCAST BUSINESS TOUR TOP 10 The Comcast Business TOUR TOP 10 highlights and rewards the extraordinary level of play required to earn a spot in the TOP 10 at the conclusion of the FedExCup Regular Season as determined by the FedExCup standings. The competition recognizes and awards the most elite in golf.

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Cut Prediction: Travelers ChampionshipCut Prediction: Travelers Championship

2020 Travelers Championship, Round 1 Scoring Conditions: Overall: -1.47 strokes per round Morning wave: -2.04 Afternoon wave: -0.9 Current cutline (top 65 and ties): 78 players at -2 or better (T58) Top 3 projected cutline probabilities: 3 under par: 25.8% 4 under par: 24.7% 2 under par: 17.0% Top 10 win probabilities: Rory McIlroy (T2, -7, 20.7%) Xander Schauffele (T2, -7, 15.7%) Viktor Hovland (T2, -7, 10.1%) Bryson DeChambeau (T11, -5, 7.3%) Jon Rahm (T17, -4, 5.9%) Louis Oosthuizen (T5, -6, 3.7%) Mackenzie Hughes (1, -10, 3.2%) Sergio Garcia (T5, -6, 3.2%) Patrick Cantlay (T17, -4, 2.9%) Justin Rose (T33, -3, 1.4%) NOTE: These reports are based off the live predictive model run by @DataGolf. The model provides live “Make Cut”, “Top 20”, “Top 5”, and “Win” probabilities every 5 minutes from the opening tee shot to the final putt of every PGA TOUR event. Briefly, the model takes account of the current form of each golfer as well as the difficulty of their remaining holes, and probabilities are calculated from 20K simulations. To follow live finish probabilities throughout the remainder of the Travelers Championship, or to see how each golfer’s probabilities have evolved from the start of the event to the current time, click here for the model’s home page.

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