Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Wyndham Rewards Top 10 preview: THE PLAYERS Championship

Wyndham Rewards Top 10 preview: THE PLAYERS Championship

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. THIS WEEK: THE PLAYERS Championship Current Top 10 FedExCup players in the field 1. Sungjae Im 2. Justin Thomas 3. Rory McIlroy 4. Brendon Todd 5. Webb Simpson 6. Patrick Reed 7. Marc Leishman 8. Lanto Griffin 9. Sebastian Munoz 10. Hideki Matsuyama No. 1 watch: Sungjae Im ended Justin Thomas’ streak of nine consecutive weeks atop the Wyndham Rewards Top 10 standings, moving to No. 1 thanks to a third-place finish Sunday at the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard. Im, who won The Honda Classic the week before, is the second player this season under the age of 22 to be ranked No. 1 (Joaquin Niemann after 2019 A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier). Top 10 moves: Marc Leishman finished second at the Arnold Palmer Invitational and, as a result, moved from 13th to seventh in the standings. That knocked Kevin Na from 10th to 11th. Scenarios notes • The next nine players in the standings below Sungjae Im can overtake him at No. 1 with a win this week. In addition, Justin Thomas could move back to No. 1 with a top-10 finish (depending on Im’s result) and Rory McIlroy, defending PLAYERS champ, could move to No. 1 with a second-place finish. • There are 59 players outside the Wyndham Rewards Top 10 who could move inside the top 10 with a win at TPC Sawgrass (all the way down to No. 78 K.H. Lee). • Of the previous four PLAYERS champions prior to McIlroy’s win last season, only Webb Simpson (currently No. 5) is projected to be inside the top 10 after this week. The others are No. 170 Si Woo Kim (could move to 21st with a win); No. 91 Jason Day (could move to 11th with a win); and No. 94 Rickie Fowler (could also move to 11th with a win).

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Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Connor Syme-145
Joakim Lagergren+300
Francesco Laporta+1800
Ricardo Gouveia+2800
Richie Ramsay+2800
Fabrizio Zanotti+5000
Jayden Schaper+7000
Rafael Cabrera Bello+7000
David Ravetto+12500
Andy Sullivan+17500
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Final Round 3-Balls - P. Pineau / D. Ravetto / Z. Lombard
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
David Ravetto+120
Zander Lombard+185
Pierre Pineau+240
Final Round 3-Balls - G. De Leo / D. Frittelli / A. Pavan
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Andrea Pavan+130
Dylan Frittelli+185
Gregorio de Leo+220
Final Round 3-Balls - J. Schaper / D. Huizing / R. Cabrera Bello
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Jayden Schaper+105
Rafa Cabrera Bello+220
Daan Huizing+240
Final Round 3-Balls - S. Soderberg / C. Hill / M. Schneider
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Marcel Schneider+150
Sebastian Soderberg+170
Calum Hill+210
Final Round 3-Balls - F. Zanotti / R. Gouveia / R. Ramsay
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Fabrizio Zanotti+150
Ricardo Gouveia+185
Richie Ramsay+185
Final Round 3-Balls - O. Lindell / M. Kinhult / J. Moscatel
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Oliver Lindell+125
Marcus Kinhult+150
Joel Moscatel+300
Final Round 3-Balls - F. Laporta / J. Lagergren / C. Syme
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Francesco Laporta+125
Joakim Lagergren+200
Connor Syme+210
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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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Bruce Lietzke, 13-time TOUR winner, passes away at age 67Bruce Lietzke, 13-time TOUR winner, passes away at age 67

You see it under nearly every photo on every page in the PGA TOUR media guide – “fishingâ€� listed as a player’s special interest. Except, that is, for those days from the mid-70s to mid-90s when you got to Bruce Lietzke’s bio. He was into “serious fishing.â€� His friends will smile about that, because Lietzke – who died Saturday morning in his home outside of Dallas at the age of 67, after having battled an aggressive form of brain cancer called Glioblastoma – was indeed serious about his fishing. Just not as serious as he was about his family, of course, because in wife Rose and children Stephen and Christine, Lietzke felt blessed to have a world in which he wanted to immerse himself – and oh, how he succeeded. “To make it work like he did (a great family, a 628-acre Texas ranch, 13-win PGA TOUR career), anyone would have liked to have done it like Bruce,â€� said Bill Rogers, the 1981 Open champion who was Lietzke’s roommate at the University of Houston. “He did it the way he wanted to do it and in truth, he lived out his dream.â€� When word circulated a little more than a year ago about Lietzke’s cancer, it was a jolt to his friends, and one could make the case that few players of his era were as beloved as this big man who never took himself too seriously. He was once asked to compare his golf game to one of the many cars he kept at his farm. “An old El Camino,â€� he laughed. “Half ugly, half decent. It fits me more than anything.â€� “He was a classic, and that’s the right word,â€� said Rogers, who along with Jerry Pate – Lietzke’s brother-in-law – and two-time Masters champion Ben Crenshaw accompanied Lietzke for some early hospital appointments more than a year ago. Curtis Strange visited and kept in touch with Rogers, and the Wadkins boys – Lanny and Bobby – were part of the close circle, too. “In the end,â€� said Rogers, “the Good Lord felt 67 years was enough, that he was satisfied Bruce deserved eternal peace. It’s a good place to be.â€� For so many years, the place to be for Lietzke was his ranch in Athens, about 70 miles southeast of Dallas. That was home – for Rose and Stephen and Christine, and for Lietzke’s cars. But what shouldn’t be overlooked is that all of it was made possible by the man’s uncanny PGA TOUR success. In more than 500 tournaments between 1975 and 2001 (the bulk of which were played before he cut back on his schedule in his late 30s), he was a top-10 machine with 127, including 19 runner-ups to go with his 13 victories. From 1976 to 1995 he was inside the top 30 on the money list 11 times and within the top 70 all but one season. In his prime, Lietzke hit a lot of greens (he led the PGA TOUR in 1982, ’85 and ’86) and consistently ranked among the top drivers for distance and accuracy. There was enormous talent, “but what he really had,â€� said Rogers, “was great perspective.â€� PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan referenced that in a statement. “Our PGA TOUR family lost a treasured member with the death of Bruce Lietzke. He touched on parts of five decades as a player, competed in 700 tournaments as a member of the PGA TOUR and PGA TOUR Champions, and recorded a total of 20 victories,â€� said Monahan. “But to celebrate Bruce Lietzke’s life properly, we offer praise to the great family man and the cherished friend to many. Our deepest condolences to his wife, Rose, and his children, Stephen and Christine.â€� To make it work like he did, anyone would have liked to have done it like Bruce. He did it the way he wanted to do it and in truth, he lived out his dream. His desire for family time led to Lietzke’s unique schedule. He played a heavy dose of tournaments through May, a light summer, then the PGA Championship in August and a tournament here and there in the fall. It meant that the U.S. Open (just 11 appearances, none after the age of 34) and Open Championship (two trips) weren’t high priorities, and that was fodder for so many of those dinner conversations he had with Rogers and Crenshaw and Strange and the Wadkins boys and Jay Haas. “I used to get on him about (brushing off the U.S. Open) and not trying to qualify,â€� said Strange, who won back-to-back U.S. Opens in 1988-89 and knew Lietzke’s patented high fade was perfect for the national open. “He was a heck of a driver of the golf ball.â€� But Lietzke never wavered and all these years later, Strange admires him for that. “He did things how he wanted to, he raised a great family, and on top of it all, he was a good man.â€� In stark contrast to today’s world, where social media dictates so much and pushes into over-hype the attention on major golf championships, Lietzke had his own measurement. “The TOUR is fun, and the TOUR events still are more important to me than the majors,â€� Lietzke told the New York Times’ John Radosta in 1981. His best finish in the Masters was a sixth and he was runner-up to John Daly at the 1991 PGA Championship, but Lietzke had higher priorities and no regrets. A meeting with another Texan, the iconic Byron Nelson, convinced him he had it right, too. “I started having guilt feelings, skipping the majors, not going after Ryder Cups,â€� Lietzke once told veteran golf writer Art Spander. “(So), I caught (Nelson) one time and I looked him straight in those blue eyes – and he couldn’t tell a lie for his life – and asked if he ever did regret leaving the game in his prime. He told me, ‘Bruce, not one time did I regret it.’ That took a weight off my shoulder.â€� Rogers loves that story because he always felt his great friend was a modern-day Nelson, who walked away from pro golf at 34. “He had a dream, much like Byron – to build a home and raise a family.â€� Truth is, Lietzke played like a golfer who was at peace with himself, “a man utterly without flash who yearns not to be noticed,â€� is how Jaime Diaz described him in a Sports Illustrated feature in 1995. If there was an epiphany, Lietzke told Diaz that it came with the birth of Stephen, the oldest of his two children. The birth came Oct. 5, 1983, but Lietzke, then in his eighth year on TOUR, had stepped away from competition in August to be with Rose. He didn’t return until January, a five-month hiatus, but promptly tore a rib cartilage, took three more weeks off, came back to finish T-33 at Pebble Beach, then won the Honda Classic in a playoff over Andy Bean. “I remember thinking, ‘I can take five- and six-week breaks and not worry about losing my game,â€� he told Diaz. “Gosh, I’ve got this thing figured out.â€� From then on, he was true to his blueprint. Ten of his career wins came in the January-to-May stretch, two were in the June-to-August period, and his final one came in Las Vegas in October. That was in 1994, by which time Lietzke had become a legend thanks to a piece of fruit. Ah, yes, “The Banana Story,â€� laughed Strange. “And the best part of the story is, it’s true.â€� No one enjoyed it more than Lietzke himself and it’s likely he told it to every golf writer of the era. The story involved his longtime caddie, Al Hansen, who didn’t buy into his player’s contention that he wouldn’t touch his clubs during the winter of 1985-86. So, Hansen put a banana into a head cover and when Lietzke arrived to start the 1986 season at the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic, the caddie removed the head cover and nearly keeled over. The rotten banana stench was insufferable. A legend was born. “America’s finest recreational golfer,â€� quipped Bob Verdi of Golf World. Lietzke with his engaging personality was accommodating to the media and quite all right with all the stories about his lengthy hiatuses and those months when he wouldn’t touch a club. “I am what I am,â€� he would say, and Rose insisted her husband was true to his word. “When Bruce is home,â€� she told Diaz, “he is 100 percent home.â€� As for those summers when Lietzke put the clubs away to be dugout coach for Stephen’s Little League team, he told Verdi: “It’s not my fault that golf season conflicts with the baseball season, is it?â€� Not that a strong passion for golf didn’t run through the man’s body. It surely did. In fact, Lietzke – who was born July 18, 1951 in Kansas City, Missouri, but raised in Beaumont, Texas, where his father, Norman, worked as a manager for Mobil Oil – spent nearly every minute of his free time at a local public course as a kid. He was a standout junior player in the golf-mad state of Texas, playing against the likes of Crenshaw and Tom Kite. Lietzke won the 1968 Texas State Junior and added the Texas State Amateur in 1971, by which time he was playing alongside Rogers and John Mahaffey for legendary coach Dave Williams at the University of Houston. After his eligibility ran out at Houston, in 1973, Lietzke succumbed to “burn-outâ€� and put the clubs away for about five months. He returned to Beaumont where his father got him a job as a security guard. Reminiscing with Diaz, Lietzke said he was given a gun and bullets, but kept them locked in separate drawers to which he didn’t have keys. “Just like Barney,â€� he joked, a reference to the bumbling Don Knotts character on the Andy Griffith Show. His hunger for golf renewed, Lietzke headed out on the mini-tours where his famous left-to-right ball flight was born. He told Diaz that he realized the big, high towering draw that he had favored was ineffective in the wind and since he didn’t take lessons and eschewed mechanics, it became trial and error to make the change. He settled on a move whereby he would place the ball well forward in his stance, then “coverâ€� it with his right shoulder, a slight outside-in action that produced a consistent fade. You would be hard-pressed, in fact, to think of a player of that generation who produced the sort of consistency that Lietzke did and thus the nickname – “Leakyâ€� – was a tribute to how every shot would leak to the right. “The man never did see much of the left side of the golf course,â€� laughed Rogers. The way he fine-tuned this action ignited Lietzke’s enthusiasm and while the “recreational golferâ€� tag would stick later in his career, he did play about 26 times a year from 1976-82. In his 47th start on the PGA TOUR, the 1977 Joe Garagiola Tucson Open, Lietzke beat Gene Littler in a playoff for his first win. He didn’t have to wait long for No. 2, because two tournaments later he closed with 67 – 273 to beat Don January by three at the Hawaiian Open. In the first seven years of his career, Lietzke made the cut in 154 of his 184 starts, or 84 percent, and produced nine of his wins. He also earned his only Ryder Cup berth. The Americans in 1981 compiled a rousing 18 ½ – 9 ½ win over Europe at the Walton Heath Club in England and while Lietzke lost two team matches with Rogers, he halved his singles contest with then 24-year-old Bernhard Langer and cherished being teammates with nine future Hall of Famers – Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino, Raymond Floyd, Hale Irwin, Tom Watson, Johnny Miller, Larry Nelson, Crenshaw and Kite. Rogers, a major winner; Pate, a major winner; and Lietzke rounded out the squad. The best Ryder Cup team ever? “Undoubtedly,â€� said Rogers. “And we played for the best captain (Dave Marr). It always put a smile on our faces, to talk about that team. We’d laugh and say, ‘How did we get to play with them?’ â€� Lietzke and Rogers were more than former college teammates and best friends. They were eerily similar in their embrace of life, willing to put their families before their golf. Rogers’ four-win 1981 season included the Claret Jug and he challenged deep into the 1982 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, but after winning his sixth and final PGA TOUR tournament in 1983, he felt he was a victim of burn-out. Like Lietzke, Rogers in his mid-to-late 30s cut back on his playing schedule, then he walked away completely, taking a job as Director of Golf at San Antonio Country Club. “We used to talk about our decisions,â€� said Rogers. “Bruce didn’t have any regrets and neither did I.â€� In explaining his choice to cut back, Lietzke told Diaz: “My first seven years on TOUR is when I fed my ego. I wanted to find out how good I was. I played all the majors, went overseas. I found out I was not a great player, but a good player. And that was enough for me.â€� Rogers insists Lietzke short-changes himself, that he had enormous talent. His nine wins in that 1976-82 window were more than what Crenshaw (seven) or Lanny Wadkins (seven) or Strange (three) compiled in that period “and let me tell you, you could be fooled by his nice, warm smile, but you couldn’t give in to him, because he had a fierce competitive streak,â€� said Rogers. Lietzke just didn’t have the desire to stick to the demanding travel schedule. Reflecting to Diaz in 1995, Pate – the 1975 U.S. Open champion whose wife, Soozi, is Rose’s older sister – said: “Fifteen years ago, I would have thought, ‘This guy is selling himself short,’ Now, I feel Bruce was the one who knew the right things, and I had it backward. Winning the U.S. Open is not more important than the things Bruce has accomplished.â€� Lietzke and Rogers were part of the historic U.S. rally to win the 1999 Ryder Cup, serving as vice-captains to Crenshaw. On his 50th birthday, in 2001, Lietzke joined the PGA TOUR Champions and through 2009 he played 20-plus tournaments a year, the highlight of his seven wins being the 2003 U.S. Senior Open when he clipped Tom Watson by two at Inverness. But by this phase of his life, what thrilled Lietzke more than the golf were the friendships he had made and retained. The pheasant-hunting trips with Rogers and Pate and Crenshaw and Strange and Bobby Wadkins, some of which included their sons, personified what he loved about his PGA TOUR career. And, of course, the dinners with his best friends. That is where Lietzke shined. “He was one of the best story-tellers ever,â€� said Strange. “If you got him going on one of his speeches, you just sat back and laughed.â€� In the spring of 2017, Lietzke started getting groggy and had a constant headache. He and Rose visited the doctor, underwent two CAT scans, then got the shocking news. “Just a bolt of lightning,â€� he told Tim Rosaforte of Golf Digest. Within days, Pate, Rogers and Crenshaw – along with their wives – visited with Rose and Bruce, who was at the University of Texas Southwest Medical Center. The ensuing months brought more visits and phone calls from countless friends, most of whom appreciated that Lietzke was a special talent with a keen sense of what’s important in life. Rose had accompanied the Pates to the Hawaii Open in 1979, primarily to help babysit Soozi’s and Jerry’s first child, when she watched the golf one day and was interested in this young golfer named Bruce Lietzke. Until Bruce and Rose met, he had favored trips from tournament to tournament in his low-slung Pontiac Trans-Am, glitzy white, fully stocked, a pure racing machine that burned 103-octane gasoline. Crenshaw once squeezed into the back seat, took a five-minute ride and couldn’t wait to get out. That was OK with Lietzke, who loved the solitude of long drives as much as the ferocity of the car’s engine. “I’m not a powerful guy,â€� he told Radosta. “But I do let my cars speak for me.â€� When he married Rose in 1981, then had children, Lietzke let his family commitment speak for him. It did so emphatically and beautifully. “He was my best friend and the most strong-minded person I have ever been around,â€� said Rogers. “He also understood that the best of life comes from relationships – family and friends. I will miss him terribly.â€�

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The stats that told the story of the 2021-22 PGA TOUR seasonThe stats that told the story of the 2021-22 PGA TOUR season

The 2021-22 PGA TOUR season was unforgettable for many reasons. A season that began with one budding star picking up his third win (Max Homa at the Fortinet Championship) was capped off 11 months later by the biggest final-round comeback in TOUR Championship history (Rory McIlroy, 6 back). What happened in between was unforgettable, too. These are the stats and notes that best tell the story of the 2021-22 PGA TOUR season. The breakout superstar Scottie Scheffler began the year as the highest-ranked player without a PGA TOUR win. Less than five months later, he was a major champion, the FedExCup leader, and the No. 1 player in the world. On Super Bowl Sunday in Phoenix, he beat reigning FedExCup champ Patrick Cantlay in a playoff for his first PGA TOUR win. When he won the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play just 42 days later, he was tops in the OWGR. It’s by far the fastest a player has gone from winless on the PGA TOUR or DP World Tour to world number one – the previous-fastest sprint to the top came from Tiger Woods, who did it in 252 days. Scheffler made his first start as No. 1 at the Masters, the first player to do that since Ian Woosnam in 1991, and like Woosnam, Scheffler won. It was his first major title and fourth win in six PGA TOUR starts – the first time anyone had gone four-for-six since Jason Day in 2015. (Day’s run also included his first major win, at the PGA Championship at Whistling Straits, and an ascent to world number one.) The most recent player, before Scheffler, to collect his fourth win of the season at the Masters: Arnold Palmer in 1960. The scoring records Before the Sentry Tournament of Champions, there had never been a 72-hole PGA TOUR event where two players finished regulation at 30 under par or lower. The week of the Sentry, there were three. Jon Rahm made 32 birdies, tying the record for a 72-hole tournament, and he didn’t even win. At the Sony Open in Hawaii the following week Hideki Matsuyama and Russell Henley were tied through four rounds with a total score of 257. When Matsuyama won the playoff, Henley received the dubious honor of lowest 72-hole total in PGA TOUR history for a player who did not win. Sebastian Muñoz became the first player in TOUR history to record two rounds of 60 in the same season – he got his first at The RSM Classic, and second at the AT&T Byron Nelson. At the PGA Championship at Southern Hills, Justin Thomas played his last 13 holes (including the playoff against Will Zalatoris) in 6 under to win. He was seven shots off the lead to start the day. The comeback tied the largest by a winner in PGA Championship history (John Mahaffey in 1978), and was the biggest in a men’s major since Paul Lawrie was 10 back at the 1999 Open Championship. Thomas’ win was not just his second major, but also his 15th PGA TOUR title. Since World War II, only five other players have won 15 PGA TOUR events, including multiple majors, before the age of 30: Jack Nicklaus, Johnny Miller, Tom Watson, Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy. All four men’s major winners in 2022 were under 30, the first time that’s happened since the inception of the Masters in 1934. Players in their 20s had previously won three of the four majors 17 different times. The right mix of man and tournament/golf course After two years of cancelations due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the fans at the RBC Canadian Open were primed for a thrilling week. The players delivered. In the final round, Justin Rose flirted with 59 but settled for 60, becoming the first European player in PGA TOUR history with multiple rounds of 60 or better in his career. Thomas, McIlroy and Tony Finau were electric, shooting a combined 20 under par. When McIlroy came out on top, it marked the first time in his PGA TOUR career he had successfully defended a title. Nine years after winning the U.S. Amateur with his little brother on the bag at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts, Matt Fitzpatrick returned to claim his first career major victory. It marked just the second time in men’s golf history that a player won the U.S. Amateur and the U.S. Open at the same course – Nicklaus also did it at Pebble Beach. Fitzpatrick hit 17 greens in regulation in the final round at Brookline, becoming just the third major winner in the last 30 years to hit 17 or more GIR on Sunday of a major win. The breakout rookie Cameron Young’s seven top-three finishes on the season included the PGA Championship (T-3) and The Open Championship (2nd). As well as he played all season, though, it did not include a victory. Young is the first player to have seven or more top-three finishes but no wins in a single PGA TOUR season since Payne Stewart in 1993. Young wound up with more than $6.5M in official earnings – the most in TOUR history for a rookie and the most for a player in a season without a win. Sahith Theegala, the other rookie to make the TOUR Championship, shot the most rounds in the 60s on TOUR (55). Davis Riley (6 top-10 finishes), Chad Ramey (won Corales Puntacana Championship) and Tom Kim (both winners this season), help make this rookie class one of the strongest in years. Feel-good win of the season Arguably the most cathartic win was by perpetual major contender Will Zalatoris in a playoff at the FedEx St. Jude Championship. By outlasting Sepp Straka, Zalatoris banked his first PGA TOUR title in the first stop of the three-week FedExCup Playoffs. His incredible consistency in the majors early in his career doesn’t happen often: at the U.S. Open, he picked up his sixth top-10 finish in just his ninth major start. The last player to do that was Antonio Cerda, an Open Championship fixture in the 1950s. When Zalatoris got the win at TPC Southwind he was 14th in the Official World Golf Ranking. That marked the highest World Ranking by any American player at the time of his first TOUR win, just ahead of Scheffler at TPC Scottsdale earlier in the year (15th). The winners who overcame calamity The PGA TOUR has been tracking hole-by-hole scoring data for 40 seasons. From 1983 through July of this year there were more than 1,700 official stroke play events contested, and never was a tournament won by a player who started the week with triple bogey or worse. Then it happened twice in August. At the Wyndham Championship, Tom Kim began his week with a quadruple bogey. His long, incredible climb back up the leaderboard – which included a front nine 27 in the final round – ended in a runaway five-stroke victory. Three weeks later in Atlanta, Rory McIlroy – who was already ceding six “Starting Strokes” to Scheffler – opened his tournament with triple bogey and went on to win. The sneakiest, most dramatic improvement The most impressive turnaround for McIlroy didn’t come at the TOUR Championship, or not just there, anyway. It was a facet of his game that went from burden to brilliant over just a few months. Through the Masters, McIlroy was struggling with his wedges: From 50 to 125 yards away, he ranked 208th of 209 qualified players in proximity to the hole (24 feet, 1 inch). From his next start – the Wells Fargo Championship – through the end of the year, he completely turned that around. His average of 14 feet, 1 inch from that point through the end of the season was tops on the PGA TOUR.

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