Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Monday Finish: Scott back in PGA TOUR win column

Monday Finish: Scott back in PGA TOUR win column

Three PGA TOUR veterans go into the final round with a share of the lead, but only one, Adam Scott (70), manages to shoot an under-par round as he salts away his 14th TOUR win by two over Matt Kuchar (72), Scott Brown (68) and Sung Kang (69) at The Genesis Invitational. In the process, the 39-year-old Scott shoots from 108th to 16th in the FedExCup. He also becomes the third Australian winner (Cameron Smith, Marc Leishman) in the last six weeks on TOUR, and moves into a tie for third behind only Greg Norman (20) and Jim Ferrier (18) on the list of most career wins by an Australian. Welcome to the Monday Finish. THREE KEYS TO SUCCESS 1. He minimized the damage. Scott and Rory McIlroy, one of his two fellow 54-hole co-leaders (Matt Kuchar), did not distinguish themselves at the par-4 fifth hole. They both missed the fairway off the tee, both hit fliers over the green, and both failed to get their third shots up and over the hill, which meant suffering the indignity of their golf balls briefly pausing before rolling back down the hill toward their feet. They played the fifth in a combined 5 over par. The big difference, though, was that McIlroy missed his double-bogey putt from inside three feet, while Scott limited the damage to a 6 and birdied the next hole. McIlroy bogeyed it. Strange fact: Scott made a third-round quadruple-bogey and won The Honda Classic in 2016, and now has four wins with a double or worse in the final round, trailing only Tiger Woods (7) and Phil Mickelson (5). 2. He capitalized on Aussie momentum. Cameron Smith won the Sony Open in Hawaii, and Marc Leishman prevailed at the Farmers Insurance Open. They were teammates of Scott’s at the recent Presidents Cup in Melbourne, where the U.S. Team stormed from behind to win after trailing all week. They decided then and there to use the gut-wrenching loss as motivation to toughen-up for the important 2020 TOUR season ahead. “I’ve seen it before with some guys off the back of an incredible Presidents Cup experience,� Scott said, “where there’s pressure out on the golf course and guys really learning and elevating their games and then putting that into practice the next time they’re in a pressure situation.� For more on how Scott, Smith and Leishman capitalized on the Presidents Cup and were fueled by the successes of one another, click here. 3. He saved the best for last. Through three rounds, Scott was in negative numbers in Strokes Gained: Putting (-0.41). You wouldn’t have known that Sunday, though. On a day that was so difficult there wasn’t a single bogey-free round, Scott made over 109 feet of putts and suddenly outperformed the field by 2.03 strokes on the greens. “The putting has always been something that’s temperamental with me, certainly mentally,� he said. “But I think I’ve found what works for me in the way that I practice my putting, and also in the type of putter that I’m using.� OBSERVATIONS  McIlroy is still hot. The bad news was he didn’t win. The good news was that Rory McIlroy, in his first start after being reinstalled as world No. 1, notched his fourth straight top-five finish on TOUR and must be considered one of the favorites at this week’s World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship. At The Genesis Invitational, which was in its first week as an elevated event, he was thwarted only by a shocking 4-over stretch at the fifth and sixth holes (triple-bogey, bogey). “Yeah, I caught it a little thin, so it came out a bit lower than I wanted it to,� McIlroy said of his third shot from behind the green at the fifth, which failed to climb the hill and came back toward him. He flopped his fourth onto the green but far from the pin, and three-putted. “Actually, apart from that, played pretty well,� McIlroy said. “Played the other holes in 1 under. So it was tough. Yeah, honestly, I didn’t expect it to be as difficult as it was, but everyone was finding it tough out there. Adam hung on well at the end.�       QUOTEBOARD “I’ve loved this place since day one.� – two-time Genesis Invitational winner Adam Scott (70), who broke a winless drought of 74 starts since his two-win season in 2016 “Definitely the toughest day of the week.� – Rory McIlroy (73, T5) on the wind and hole locations, after his fourth top-20 finish in as many starts at this event “I didn’t have my best stuff.� – Matt Kuchar (72, T2), who held the 54-hole lead/co-lead for the 10th time on TOUR but remained at four wins in those events  WYNDHAM REWARDS The Wyndham Rewards Top 10 is a season-long competition that offers a $10 million bonus for the 10 golfers who end the regular season at the Wyndham Championship inside the top 10 in FedExCup points. The player atop the standings will earn $2 million, with varying payoffs for the others through $500,000 for the 10th place finisher. There were no changes in the top four after The Genesis Invitational, with Justin Thomas still in pole position. Rory McIlroy (T5) moved from sixth to fifth, while Hideki Matsuyama (T5) was the biggest mover after a 64-69 weekend launched him onto the first page of the leaderboard at Riviera and from 15th all the way to seventh in the Wyndham Rewards Top 10. Here’s how the standings look heading into this week’s World Golf Championships – Mexico Championship. SOCIAL SNAPSHOT

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Dow Finsterwald, 11-time PGA TOUR winner, dies at age 93Dow Finsterwald, 11-time PGA TOUR winner, dies at age 93

Dow Finsterwald, a long-time PGA TOUR professional who won the 1958 PGA Championship and captained the winning 1977 U.S. Ryder Cup team, died November 4. He was 93. As a young man growing up in Athens, Ohio, born in 1929, Finsterwald played numerous sports but gravitated toward golf even though his father, Russ, was the head basketball and football coach at Ohio University. The younger Finsterwald joined his father as a Bobcat but as a member of the golf team. It was at Ohio University where Finsterwald realized he could make a living playing golf. “Dow was destined to a career in sports because of his father’s influence, and golf was fortunate to have him as a player, teacher and administrator,” said PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan. “His contributions to our sport were significant, and we take time today to remember Dow and all of his accomplishments in a well-lived life.” Finsterwald joined the PGA TOUR in 1952 after playing in eight TOUR tournaments in 1950 and 1951 as an amateur. Finsterwald made his TOUR debut while still an amateur, at the 1950 North and South Open at Pinehurst Resort in North Carolina, where he tied for 33rd. He played on TOUR as a professional for the first time at the National Celebrities Open, tying for 35th. Finsterwald’s first of 12 PGA TOUR victories came at the 1955 Fort Wayne Invitational. Six weeks later, he won again – at the British Columbia Open in Canada. He enjoyed 10 top-10s in his 28 made cuts that season and finished 14th on the money list. Those 1955 victories began a streak of six years where he won at least one tournament. Finsterwald’s top season came in 1959. That year, he won three times – the Greater Greensboro Open, the Carling Open and the Kansas City Open – and finished second five additional times. A year earlier, Finsterwald earned his only major championship, winning the PGA Championship at Pennsylvania’s Llanerch Country Club. In the first year the PGA of America contested the tournament at stroke play, Finsterwald shot rounds of 67-72-70-67 to defeat Billy Casper by two strokes. He added the Utah Open title to his resume later in the season and went on to earn PGA Player of the Year honors, a year after capturing his only Vardon Trophy for the lowest stroke average on TOUR. Of his 28 second-place TOUR finishes, the most excruciating was his playoff loss – with Gary Player – to Arnold Palmer at the Masters Tournament. The trio finished regulation at Augusta National tied at 8-under 280, with Palmer eventually rolling to a three-shot playoff victory over Player and a nine-stroke win over Finsterwald in the 18-hole extra session. Taking away some of the sting from that loss was the fact Palmer was Finsterwald’s closest friend on TOUR. Theirs was a friendship that endured until Palmer’s death in 2016. While playing the TOUR, Finsterwald also was the Director of Golf at The Broadmoor in Colorado Springs, Colo., a position he held for 28 years. He also served a three-year term as Vice President of the PGA of America. As his PGA TOUR career wound down, he enjoyed a career highlight, captaining the U.S. Ryder Cup team against the Great Britain and Ireland team led by Captain Brian Huggett at Royal Lytham & St Annes Golf Club. Led by Ryder Cup veterans Jack Nicklaus and Raymond Floyd and rookie team members Tom Watson and Lanny Wadkins, the Americans coasted to a five-point triumph. After his PGA TOUR playing career, Finsterwald enjoyed a busy PGA TOUR Champions schedule, seeing action in 189 career tournaments, including two in the Tour’s inaugural season of 1980. His best performance came in 1982, when he finished second to Don January at the Michelob Senior Classic in Tampa, Florida. Four years after his father’s induction into the Ohio University Athletics Hall of Fame, Finsterwald followed him for his golf exploits. In 2008, the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame also inducted him. Finsterwald is survived by three sons and a daughter. His wife, Linda, predeceased him in 2015. The couple’s middle son, Dow Finsterwald, Jr., was the long-time head pro at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, before retiring in 2021.

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Ryder Cup and Presidents Cup rescheduled for 2021 and 2022, respectivelyRyder Cup and Presidents Cup rescheduled for 2021 and 2022, respectively

The PGA of America, Ryder Cup Europe and the PGA TOUR jointly announced today that both the Ryder Cup and Presidents Cup have been rescheduled and will now be played one year later than originally planned. The 43rd Ryder Cup, scheduled for Sept. 22-27, at Whistling Straits in Kohler, Wisconsin, has been rescheduled for Sept. 21-26, 2021. Likewise, the Presidents Cup, initially slated for Sept. 30-Oct. 3, 2021, at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina, will now be played Sept. 19-25, 2022. 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We are confident the move will give us even more runway as we bring the Presidents Cup to Charlotte in 2022.” Additionally, as a result of the Presidents Cup date change, the Wells Fargo Championship will be played at its traditional venue at Quail Hollow Club in 2021, at TPC Potomac in 2022 during the Presidents Cup year and will return to Quail Hollow in 2023. Presidents Cup 2022 qualifying will be determined at a later date. The Ryder Cup, which began in 1927, brings together the finest tour professionals from the United States and Europe. “While it is disappointing that the Ryder Cup won’t be played this year, the decision to reschedule is the right thing to do under the circumstances,” said U.S. Ryder Cup Captain Steve Stricker. “At the end of the day, we want to stage a Ryder Cup that will rival all other Ryder Cups in my home state of Wisconsin, and now we have the opportunity to showcase the event as it was meant to be seen.” Pádraig Harrington, Captain of the European Ryder Cup Team, said: “Rescheduling the Ryder Cup was never going to be an easy decision given the many factors to take into consideration. But I believe it is the right assessment given the unprecedented circumstances we are facing at this time. “When you think of the Ryder Cup you think of the distinctive atmosphere generated by the spectators, such as around the first tee at Le Golf National two years ago. If that cannot be responsibly recreated at Whistling Straits in September, then it is correct that we all wait until it can be. “I know, right now, that September 2021 feels like a long time away. But it will come around quickly and I guarantee that the European players and I will be ready when it does.” For Ryder Cup qualifying, both the United States and European teams will revisit their respective selection processes in the near future. Tickets purchased for the 2020 Ryder Cup via rydercup.com will be automatically valid for the corresponding day(s) in 2021. In the coming weeks, the PGA of America will contact those who secured tickets via rydercup.com to facilitate refunds for those unable to attend in 2021. Further details regarding this process are available on the Ryder Cup website. Those who have purchased tickets and hospitality packages on the secondary market must contact that specific site directly. The PGA of America will be unable to process refunds for those purchases. In a corresponding decision, the PGA of America and Ryder Cup Europe also announced that the Junior Ryder Cup will be rescheduled for Sept. 20-21, 2021 at Blue Mound Golf & Country Club in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin. It was originally scheduled for Sept. 21-22, 2020.

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2021-22 Qualifiers for THE PLAYERS and the majors2021-22 Qualifiers for THE PLAYERS and the majors

At long last, the R&A has released the qualifying criteria for the 150th edition of The Open Championship in 2022. Although it feels like it was delayed, it actually wasn’t long ago when the R&A confirmed the criteria right around the second week of December regularly. After the considerable, painstaking attention was required weekly to customize the 2021 field (because the 2020 edition was canceled), this season’s bonus is a return to the procedure of revealing all criteria at once. All familiar (read: expected) criteria has been renewed since the last pre-pandemic staging in 2019. The Open Qualifying Series underwent a few adjustments, but it’s always been fluid given how tours’ schedules change every season. The only notable pivot concerns the automatic qualifier from the Asian Tour. In place of its season-ending Order of Merit leader (that will not be granted an exemption with just eight tournaments contributing to a combined 2020-21-22 season), the winner of the Asia-Pacific Open Diamond Cup Golf will receive it instead. As noted in the section dedicated to The Open in REMAINING QUALIFYING CRITERIA below, the date for that tournament is “TBD.” Like all projections for which the exact date to fulfill exemptions is unknown, it’s slotted in the area of when it’s expected to be contested, which is its most recent regular date in May. More than six dozen golfers have been added to the alphabetical list. Because former Open winners who remain eligible but who haven’t appeared in recent editions have been known to give it one more go at St. Andrews specifically, it wouldn’t be surprising if 1997 champion Justin Leonard returned to the event for the first time in six years, but he and Ben Curtis (2003) remain omitted. The last exemptions to be distributed in 2021 will be determined by the final edition of the Official World Golf Ranking. Once it’s released, the top 50 will qualify for the Masters. Currently, the following 10 golfers are not yet exempt into the major: Tyrrell Hatton (22nd in the OWGR), Matt Fitzpatrick (24th), Matthew Wolff (31st), Lee Westwood (38th), Mackenzie Hughes (39th), Tommy Fleetwood (40th), Ryan Palmer (47th), Christiaan Bezuidenhout (48th), Takumi Kanaya (49th), Min Woo Lee (50th). The first three in order outside the top 50 and not yet exempt into the Masters are Ian Poulter (53rd), Cameron Tringale (54th) and Carlos Ortiz (55th). NOTE: Golfers are omitted if they recently haven’t competed in majors for which they are eligible (e.g. The Open Championship=Justin Leonard). TPC = THE PLAYERS Championship MAS = Masters PGA = PGA Championship US = U.S. Open OPEN = The Open Championship Recent Additions TPC — none MAS — none PGA — none US — none OPEN — (all currently exempt have been added below) REMAINING QUALIFYING CRITERIA Criteria are listed in chronological order where possible. Best estimates are given but all are subject to change. THE PLAYERS CHAMPIONSHIP (TPC) @ TPC Sawgrass (Stadium) – March 10-13 • Winners of PGA TOUR events thru the final week before THE PLAYERS. • Top 10 in the FedExCup at the conclusion of The Honda Classic (Feb. 27). • Top 50 of Official World Golf Ranking (Feb. 28). • If necessary to complete the field of 144, golfers outside the Top 10 in the FedExCup at the conclusion of the Honda Classic on Feb. 27 will gain entry in order of position. MASTERS (MAS) @ Augusta National Golf Club – April 7-10 • Winners of PGA TOUR events that award full FedExCup points allocation for the TOUR Championship. • Top 50 of Official World Golf Ranking (Dec. 31). • Winner of the Latin America Amateur Championship, if still an amateur (Jan. 23). • Top 50 of Official World Golf Ranking (March 28). • Special invitations to international players per Masters Tournament Committee as its discretion. PGA CHAMPIONSHIP (PGA) @ Southern Hills Country Club – May 19-22 • Winners of PGA TOUR events through the final week before the 2022 PGA Championship. • Top 20 from PGA Professional National Championship (April 20). • Top 70 from special money list (i.e., “PGA Championship Points”) on PGA TOUR from 2021 AT&T Byron Nelson thru 2022 Wells Fargo Championship (May 8). • *All 2021 Ryder Cup members inside Top 100 of Official World Golf Ranking (May 9). • Special exemptions per PGA of America. (This likely will include all golfers from Top 100 of Official World Golf Ranking on May 9.) • If necessary to complete the field of 156, golfers outside Top 70 from special money list (three lines above) will gain entry in order of position. U.S. OPEN (US) @ The Country Club – June 16-19 • Winners of multiple PGA TOUR events that award full FedExCup points allocation since the 2021 U.S. Open. • Winner of THE PLAYERS (March 13). • Winner of the Masters (April 10). • Winner of the PGA Championship (May 22). • Top 60 of Official World Golf Ranking (May 23). • Sectional qualifying (late May-early June). • Top 60 of Official World Golf Ranking (June 6). • Special exemptions per the USGA. THE OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP (OPEN) @ St. Andrews Links (Old Course) – July 14-17 • Top 4, not otherwise exempt, inside the top 12 at the SMBC Singapore Open (Jan. 23). • Winner of the Latin America Amateur Championship, if still an amateur (Jan. 23). • Money leader on the 2021-22 Sunshine Tour (TBD). • Top 3, not otherwise exempt, inside the top 10 at the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard (March 6). • Winner of THE PLAYERS (March 13). • Top 3, not otherwise exempt, inside the top 10 at the New Zealand Open (April 3). • Winner of the Masters (April 10). • Money leader on the 2021-22 Australasian Tour (TBD). • Winner of the Asia-Pacific Open Diamond Cup Golf (TBD). • Winner of the PGA Championship (May 22). • Top 4, not otherwise exempt, inside the top 12 at the Mizuno Open (May 29). • Top 3, not otherwise exempt, inside the top 10 at the Dutch Open (May 29). • Highest-ranked, not otherwise exempt, from the Order of Merit on the Japan Golf Tour at the conclusion of the Japan Golf Tour Championship (TBD). • Top 50 of Official World Golf Ranking (TBD). • Top 2, not otherwise exempt, inside the top 8 at the RBC Canadian Open (June 12). • Winner of the British Amateur, if still an amateur (June 18). • Winner of the U.S. Open (June 19). • Winner of the European Amateur Championship, if still an amateur (June 25). • Top 2, not otherwise exempt, inside the top 8 at the KOLON Korea Open (June 26). • Top 5 and ties, not otherwise exempt, inside the top 20 in the DP World Tour Rankings at the conclusion of the BMW International Open (June 26). • Top 5 and ties, not otherwise exempt, inside the top 20 in the FedExCup at the conclusion of the Travelers Championship (June 26). • Final Qualifying. 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