Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting PGA TOUR statement by Commissioner Monahan on THE PLAYERS Championship and upcoming events as it pertains to the Coronavirus

PGA TOUR statement by Commissioner Monahan on THE PLAYERS Championship and upcoming events as it pertains to the Coronavirus

Let me preface my remarks by reinforcing that the health and safety of our players, employees, partners, volunteers, fans and everybody associated with the PGA TOUR is our top priority.  I’ve spoken to President Trump this morning, and I spoke to Governor Ron DeSantis a few hours ago as well. Our team is in constant communication with local health authorities in each market in which our tournaments are played, and we are tracking and monitoring the health information provided by the Centers for Disease Control and World Health Organization in addition to the travel advisories provided by the U.S. State Department. Both the White House and the Governor’s office have been and are supportive of the precautionary measures we have taken to this point. It goes without saying that this is an incredibly fluid and dynamic situation. We have been and are committed to being responsible, thoughtful and transparent with our decision process. With that as pretext, at this point in time, PGA TOUR events – across all Tours – will currently proceed as scheduled, but will do so without fans. This policy starts at THE PLAYERS Championship tomorrow (Friday) and continues through the Valero Texas Open. It’s important to note, that could change, but for the time being, this decision allows the PGA TOUR, our fans and constituents to plan, prepare and respond as events develop. Further, the recently announced travel advisories and potential logistical issues associated with players and staff traveling internationally limit our ability to successfully stage the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship. Therefore, we are going to postpone that event and will provide details in the coming weeks on a reschedule as this situation develops.  We will continue THE PLAYERS with essential personnel only, and we will be in direct conversations with those groups (vendors, broadcasters, media, player support groups, essential volunteers) to provide instructions. This is a difficult situation, one with consequences that impact our players, fans and the communities in which we play. As I said earlier this week, we’ve had a team in place that has been carefully monitoring and assessing the situation and its implications for several weeks. We’ve weighed all the options, and I appreciate the input and collaboration across the TOUR, our industry, our partners and our members that got us to this point. We’ll continue with that collaboration, and I want to thank our fans for supporting the PGA TOUR.

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Kisner sets a daunting target at PGA ChampionshipKisner sets a daunting target at PGA Championship

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — In the dozen times Kevin Kisner has played in majors, he has learned they are not much fun unless he’s playing well. He’s having a blast so far in the PGA Championship. Sticking to a simple plan on a challenging course at Quail Hollow, Kisner holed a 50-foot eagle putt from off the green that carried him to another 4-under 67. That gave him a five-shot lead among those who played in the Friday morning side of the draw. Kisner was at 8-under 134 as Jordan Spieth, Dustin Johnson and others headed out in the afternoon just as a light rain began to fall. That might be the worst thing that happened all day to Kisner. The notorious greens of Quail Hollow were slick as ever, keeping low scores at a minimum. “These guys going out in the afternoon, they break 70 they’ve done a hell of a job,” Rory McIlroy said after he suffered another bad stretch and shot 72. Kisner doesn’t have the length for this 7,600-yard course, but he has golf smarts, a reliable swing and a good putting stroke for the greens. He saw the changes to the course earlier this year on a soft, damp day and wondered how he would manage. The plan was to make birdie on the par 5s and the two short par 4s, and play for par everywhere else. It has worked to near perfection through two rounds, particularly on the par 5s: a wedge to 10 feet on No. 10; a wedge to 5 feet on No. 15; and the eagle putt on No. 7 that rolled against the pin and disappeared. Rickie Fowler tried to do his part. Playing conservative at times to be in the fairway, he avoided a big number early in his round when a 60-foot chip didn’t quite get up a ridge and rolled all the way back to his feet. He lagged the next shot up to 5 feet and escaped with bogey. Fowler picked up two birdies and then had to settle for pars the rest of the way for a 70 that put him at 3-under 139. No one else was closer to Kisner among the early starters, particularly not Phil Mickelson. He finally made a birdie on his 31st hole of the tournament, but by then it was much too late. Mickelson shot 74 and missed the cut for the first time in the PGA Championship since 1992. Ryan Fox of New Zealand posted the low round of the tournament at 66 to reach 1 under overall. McIlroy, meanwhile, made an amazing escape of his own with a shot that bounced so far down a cart path on the par-5 10th that it was pin-high, 100 yards away. He bounced a 6-iron from 110 yards up the cart path, through the bunker and onto the fringe about 40 feet away, and got up-and-down for par. That was the biggest excitement he had all day. Still lurking in range, McIlroy fell apart early on the front nine with four bogeys in five holes and had to rally with birdie on the two easiest holes on that side. “Obviously, Kiz is on fire right now,” McIlroy said. “But take him out of the equation, I feel like I’m still right there in the tournament.” That’s a practical way of thinking whenever most anyone has a big lead, and the fact it’s Kisner adds to the intrigue. He is tough to beat when he’s hitting it where he’s aiming because of his short game and his fortitude. Traveling the mini-tours toughened him, and he has won twice on the PGA TOUR. But he didn’t play his first major until the 2014 U.S. Open at Pinehurst, and his finishes have largely been in the middle of the pack. “I’ve been upset with how I’ve played in the majors so far in my career,” Kisner said. “I feel like I have the game to compete in majors, and tons of 30th to 40th, 50th-place finishes. That’s kind of been our goal for the year. We haven’t played well in them yet this year, but every year you learn more about the majors.” The biggest lesson? “They are really hard,” he said. “And they are not a whole lot of fun unless everything is working out for you.”

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Earlier this year, a set of irons purported to be used by Tiger Woods during his famous ‘Tiger Slam’ sold for more than $5 million. Now a Scotty Cameron putter signed by Woods is on the auction block. Golden Age Auctions, the same company that sold the ‘Tiger Slam’ irons, is auctioning the putter as part of a lot that includes clubs from Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer and Ben Hogan, as well as a 58-degree wedge that is said to have once belonged to Woods. The signed Scotty Cameron ‘Red Dot’ Newport 2 is the same model as the putter Woods used to win 14 of his 15 majors. This putter is said to have been made as a backup for Woods’ gamer around 2005. Woods usually tested the backups to ensure they were to his liking, but confirming that he used them is difficult because he did so in private. This putter, which comes with a certificate of authenticity from Scotty Cameron confirming the putter is an authentic Cameron, is said to have been signed by Woods during a 2005 auction for the Tiger Woods Learning Center. “When it comes to Tiger Woods backup putters, the dream is to somehow put that putter into Tiger Woods’ hands – almost always an impossible feat,” reads the putter’s description on the Golden Age Auctions website. “Well, we know that the offered putter was handled by Tiger Woods himself – as Tiger beautifully autographed the face. “Then, on October 1, 2005, Tiger auctioned this putter at a fundraiser called The Tiger Woods Learning Center Block Party, which was held at The Grove in Anaheim. The event raised money for the foundation’s first TGR Learning Lab campus. Our consignor’s parents were early supporters of Tiger’s charities. They attended that 2005 event at The Grove in Anaheim, CA, and being transfixed by Tiger Woods up on stage and in the giving spirit, our consignor’s father kept outbidding anyone who bid against him for this legendary putter when Tiger Woods put it up for auction. The putter was then put into a shadowbox, where it has lived for the past 17 years until it finally surfaces again in this auction.” The putter started with an opening bid of $5,000 and was nearing $50,000 as of midday Thursday. Bidding concludes Sunday, Sept. 18 on GoldenAgeAuctions.com. Ryan Carey, owner and founder of Golden Age Auctions, estimates the putter will sell for “well into the six figures.” Another Scotty Cameron made for Woods is also among the items Golden Age is currently auctioning, as is a Nike wedge that once belonged to Woods. Other items in this lot include Arnold Palmer’s putter, clubs belonging to President Dwight Eisenhower (along with his Augusta National Golf Club headcovers) and personally-used clubs from players like Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Ben Hogan, Sam Snead and Byron Nelson.

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