Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Dustin Johnson withdraws from 3M Open citing back injury

Dustin Johnson withdraws from 3M Open citing back injury

BLAINE, Minn. – Dustin Johnson withdrew from the 3M Open on Thursday, citing a back injury, after shooting 78 in the first round. The round of 7 over followed a pair of 80s and a missed cut at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide last week for the world No. 4, who won the Travelers Championship last month. Johnson started on the back nine Thursday and actually was 1 under through his first six holes. But his troubles began when he bogeyed No. 16 and hit his tee shot at the par-3 17th into the water on the way to a double bogey. “I just hit a poor shot on 17,” Johnson said. “I hit it a little heavy in the water, made 5 there.” The 18th was a disaster, though. A good drive on the curving, dogleg-right par 5 left him 208 yards from the flag – a “perfect” 6-iron, Johnson later said – but that went into the water. So did two more balls, and suddenly he was signing for a quadruple bogey. “Hit it right at it and never once did I think it was going to go in the water,” Johnson said. “That never crossed my mind when it was in the air. Just went in the water and I hit two more shots in the water, then I hit a good one, made a tap-in for a 9.” Johnson made two more bogeys on the front nine before sinking a 19-foot birdie putt on No. 9 to finish off his round. Johnson placed the blame for his recent spate of poor play on his iron game. He hit 9 of 14 fairways on Thursday but just 13 of 18 greens in regulation. “I feel like I’m driving it well, but the iron play, first six or seven holes hit it close and then the rest of the day kind of struggled a little bit with iron play,” Johnson said. “Kind of the same last week, I just struggled with my iron play and makes it difficult.” At Muirfield Village, Johnson was similarly beset by big numbers. He had two doubles and three triples, along with nine bogeys, in two rounds at the Memorial.

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Koepka hopes to catch a ‘w’ at THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGESKoepka hopes to catch a ‘w’ at THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES

JEJU ISLAND, South Korea –  Brooks Koepka likes what he has seen so far at $9.5 million THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES. The powerful American went on a fishing trip off Jeju island on Monday, enjoyed local delicacies in town and liked what he saw at The Club @ Nine Bridges during the tournament’s pro-am.  With this week’s venue being a true bomber’s paradise, Koepke fancies his chances of a winning debut in what is his first appearance in the 2018-19 PGA TOUR season. “Definitely a ball striker’s golf course. I do think I’ll be grabbing driver a bit. Felt like the fairways are wide enough where I can really take advantage of my length. I think anytime the rough’s down, so even if you are in the rough, you can stop it. It’s not as penalizing if you’re missing the fairways. You want to be as close as you can to the hole and give yourself the best look,â€� said Koepka. He will need to contend against the likes of title holder and 2017 FedExCup champion Justin Thomas, Marc Leishman, who was victorious at the CIMB Classic in Malaysia on Sunday, Jason Day, Hideki Matsuyama and Billy Horschel in South Korea’s only PGA TOUR tournament which is celebrating its second edition. Si Woo Kim, the 2017 PLAYERS winner, spearheads the Korean challenge alongside other leading local players including Byeonghun An, Whee Kim and Sungjae Im, the recent Web.com Tour money list winner. A total of 13 players from the top 30 of the 2017-18 FedExCup points standing will headline the field in Jeju. Koepka has enjoyed a tremendous season with two wins at the U.S. Open and PGA Championship, which led him to be voted as the 2018 PGA TOUR Player of the Year. He received the award from golf legend Jack Nicklaus.  “To have Mr. Nicklaus there was incredible. That was something neat. I didn’t know he was going to be there.  Anytime you can be around him and just kind of pick his brain and talk to him is always fun,â€� he said. Thomas won last year’s inaugural CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES in a playoff against Leishman. He arrives on the back of a T5 at the CIMB Classic following a closing 64. “I played well on Sunday. I really didn’t play very well Thursday, Friday or Saturday, so to get a quality top-five finish in a good tournament like that with far from my best stuff is sometimes just as much as a positive as it is winning.  So hopefully I’m kind of able to feed off of that a little bit here,â€� said Thomas Day also gets his 2018-19 PGA TOUR season off the ground this week and made clear his intent to challenge for a win. “I set myself goals of winning three times last year (2017-18 Season) and I only won twice. I finished 11th here last year and 11th in China the next week. If I can try and improve on that, get myself in contention and possibly win, it sets up the whole year. That’s why I’ve come back to play,â€� said the Australian. Asia’s challenge will be carried by Matsuyama who returns to action after pulling out of Malaysia due to a wrist injury. He ended the 2017-18 season with three straight top-5s in the FedExCup Playoffs. The 26-year-old knows he must tame the Jeju winds which posed a stern challenge last year. “It’s a very difficult golf course, a lot of blind holes. The wind makes it play very, very difficult. I’m going to really have to be on the top of my game and hit quality shots,â€� said the five-time PGA TOUR winner. Si Woo Kim, 23, is amongst the new generation of Korean rising stars. He is counting on a Korean victory which he believes can accelerate further the growth of golf in his country and Asia. “If a Korean player wins here, it’s like winning a major. The PGA TOUR is now in Korea and it can help raise the popularity. If we have a local winner, we’ll certainly attract more fans and golfers into the game,â€� said Kim.

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Mind over muscle matterMind over muscle matter

DUBLIN, Ohio – To find the Buckeye State’s epicenter of artisanal ice cream and Wendy’s hamburgers, fly to Columbus and drive north. It is here that the PGA TOUR will be anchored through Sunday, and it was here that fitness-and-nutrition minded Patrick Rodgers began his work week with resistance bands and barbells, lunges and squats, and his trainer Troy Van Biezen overseeing all of it at the gym at Muirfield Village on Tuesday morning. Jordan Spieth, going through his paces nearby, stopped occasionally to grab a new barbell, mindful to duck his head so as not to hinder a CBS camera crew filming the action. Ollie Schniederjans, Jason Dufner, Kevin Kisner were there working out, too, making the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide of a piece with the rest of the PGA TOUR. 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Especially after a win and a couple cocktails, it helps to sweat it out. “Fitness is a huge part of it,â€� Kisner added, turning serious. “It’s a grind to play 30 weeks a year, 35 weeks a year. What most people don’t understand is how grinding the travel is. The golf is difficult but [so is] the flying and the toting of bags, carrying the families, loading the car seats and everything else.â€� THE GENERATIONAL DIVIDE This week’s Memorial boasts 10 of the top 10 players in the current FedExCup standings, but tournament host Jack Nicklaus, in his long press conference Tuesday, expressed a modicum of disappointment over the absence of four-time major winner Rory McIlroy. The two have struck up a friendship in recent years, and McIlroy called Nicklaus last week to say he would regrettably be withdrawing from the Memorial with a lingering back/rib injury. Nicklaus said he understood, but the subject of injuries was still on his mind. “We played through it,â€� he said of his generation of golfers, adding that they didn’t get injured as much in the first place. Why not? Because they played other sports, which “develop your body better, and it wards off injury betterâ€� than just playing golf and doing golf-specific exercises, Nicklaus said. It sounded plausible—until someone brought up Gary Player. “He kept very supple,â€� Nicklaus said. “Look at him today. He’s still supple. He never built himself to be muscular. He built himself to be strong.â€� There may not be as much of a generation gap as Nicklaus thinks, because that’s what many of today’s players are doing, too. Rodgers is 6 feet, 2 inches tall and 180 pounds, and to look at him you wouldn’t know how much time he spends in the gym. You wouldn’t know he started lifting weights when he was in the seventh grade at Avon Middle School, on the west side of Indianapolis, or that he has transformed his body by adhering especially closely to his fitness regimen over the last six-plus months. He’s no cartoon superhero. If he were a baseball player, he’d be Pittsburgh Pirates star Barry Bonds, not San Francisco Giants star Barry Bonds.     “The biggest thing is preventing injury,â€� says Rodgers, who at 110th in the FedExCup points standings is looking to jump-start his season at the Memorial. “If you don’t do anything, your hips get tight, your butt gets tight, your posture gets sloppy, you lose mobility in your shoulders. It just happens over time if you don’t take care of yourself. I’m more flexible than I’ve been, I’m stronger than I’ve been. I’ve learned more. I’m always learning more. “The interesting thing is I’ve probably been as disciplined and diligent as I’ve ever been for the last six or seven months, and I’ve gained no weight. It’s just I’ve gotten rid of fat. I’ve leaned out and strengthened up quite a bit. I’ve changed the composition of my body.â€� This week marks the 28th PGA TOUR event of the 44-week season. It’s a long road, and some would even call it a grind. Where would Rodgers be if he didn’t go to the gym every morning? Where would he be if he did none of his daily exercises at all? “I would be hurting and aching in a lot of different areas,â€� he said. “I would have lost a lot of weight. I would be weak.â€� THE BRAIN GAME Rodgers has many interests. He played the Big Three sports as a kid, and attended last weekend’s Indianapolis 500. 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Their work between the mirrored walls lets them keep shining on smaller screens on the long, televised grind of the TOUR, which alone is more than enough to be pumped about.     

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