Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Richy Werenski leads 3M Open after 8-under 63

Richy Werenski leads 3M Open after 8-under 63

BLAINE, Minn. – Richy Werenski made a short birdie putt on the par-5 18th for an 8-under 63 to take the first-round lead Thursday in the 3M Open. The 24-year-old Werenski is winless on the PGA TOUR. He broke a tie with Michael Thompson with his ninth and last birdie on the warm, windy afternoon at the TPC Twin Cities. Defending champion Matthew Wolff, Tony Finau, Nick Watney, Ryan Moore, Xinjun Zhang and Max Homa were tied for third at 65. RELATED: Full leaderboard | Finau parts ways with caddie, shoots first-round 65 | Dustin Johnson withdraws citing back injury Dustin Johnson withdrew because of a back injury after a 78. His victory at the Travelers Championship in Cromwell, Connecticut, last month did not spark a post-shutdown surge. After posting back-to-back 80s last week at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide for the highest 36-hole score of his pro career, Johnson’s first appearance at the 3M Open north of Minneapolis lasted just one round. At the end of his first nine, Johnson started the 599-yard, dog-leg 18th hole with a solid drive off the tee. With 209 yards to get to the flag, he used his 6-iron for a shot — “perfect,” he said — that was swallowed up in the pond just short of the rough. “Hit it right at it and never once did I think it was going to go in the water,” said Johnson, who did mention his back during a brief post-round interview. His next two tries met the same fate. Three penalty strokes later, Johnson finally landed his ball on the green for a tap-in putt and a quadruple-bogey nine on the scorecard. “Kind of the same last week. I just struggled with my iron play, and that makes it difficult,” he said. Watney, who was the first PGA TOUR player to test positive for the coronavirus, at the RBC Heritage on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, failed to make the cut two weeks ago at the Workday Charity Open in Dublin, Ohio, after a two-round score of 150. The 39-year-old Watney, who has five career PGA TOUR victories, went back to the basics in practice last week — aim, balance, posture — while most of his peers played the Memorial. “I’m trying to put that to bed, get past it and hopefully play some nice golf after coming down with that,” Watney said. “It’s great to be up here after playing a good round as opposed to just other things.”

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Johnson reminds why he’s No. 1 at THE PLAYERS ChampionshipJohnson reminds why he’s No. 1 at THE PLAYERS Championship

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – If Dustin Johnson started at No. 1; Jason Day, Rory McIlroy and Jordan Spieth want to get back to No. 1; and Jon Rahm, Justin Rose, Justin Thomas and Spieth actually could get to No. 1, then by the law of hypothetical syllogism and the transitive property… Oh, never mind. After copious No. 1 chatter at THE PLAYERS Championship, Thursday’s first round suggested the new No. 1 might end up being the same as the old No. 1. Johnson used a new putter and a new putting method to shoot 66 and seize the early lead with Sweden’s Alex Noren and 2012 U.S. Open champion Webb Simpson. “It was definitely a big deal to get there,â€� Johnson said of the top ranking, which he could lose to Thomas (73), Spieth (75), Rose (68) or Rahm this week. “And it’s a big deal to stay there, I think. Yeah, I mean, I like being No. 1, so I want to stay there.â€� Defending champion Si Woo Kim and late addition Keith Mitchell, who got into the field when Paul Casey withdrew, were part of a foursome at 67, one shot back after the morning wave. Johnson, though, was the talk of the morning. His 66 was his best by two at TPC Sawgrass, where he was averaging 72.43 coming into this week. He hit nine of 14 fairways, 17 of 18 greens in regulation, and made six birdies and no bogeys. It’s rare to categorize a world No. 1 as a surprise leader, but Johnson has looked wobbly here since he shot a second-round 80 to miss the cut in his first PLAYERS in 2008. His recent results on TOUR weren’t exactly encouraging, either. He looked lost in going 0-3 at the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play, and was never really in contention at the Masters (T10) and RBC Heritage (T16). The culprit, he said, was his inability to make anything on the greens, and indeed the fact that he holed over 111 feet of putts Thursday was a happy surprise. Using a new TaylorMade putter and the Aimpoint green-reading technique for the first time, he finally capitalized on his ball-striking. “I felt like at Augusta and Hilton Head I was hitting a lot of good putts that were not going in the hole,â€� Johnson said. “I needed to figure out something. I still feel like I read the greens really well. It’s helped with getting a definite spot to putt at, where I want the ball to start. I felt like today we read ’em all really well. There were no surprises.â€� As for all the talk about his tenuous position atop the Official World Golf Ranking, that was another matter. When Rickie Fowler won here in 2015, much of the buzz was around a player poll that tagged him as overrated. Fowler obliterated all that with his clubs. Did all the No. 1 chatter get to Johnson? Was his opening statement here a reminder not to write him off too soon? He said no. “I don’t care what people talk about,â€� Johnson said. “It doesn’t bother me. I want to play good golf.â€� Rory McIlroy (71) has been to No. 1, and said he’s been impressed with how long Johnson has held onto the top spot. “I think he’s done a great job because I feel it’s harder to stay there than it is to get there,â€� said McIlroy, who lost the No. 1 spot to Spieth in the summer of 2015. Rose, one of the four who could take over in pole position if everything breaks his way this week, found himself leaderboard-watching Thursday but quickly diverted his attention away from the No. 1 ranking as Johnson piled up the birdies. “I thought I better play well this week to not go miles behind him again,â€� Rose said. Johnson’s coach, Claude Harmon III, with whom Johnson worked at the Floridian last week, said that while Johnson may downplay it, the laconic, 33-year-old South Carolinian had heard the No. 1 speculation concerning himself, Thomas, Rahm, Rose and Spieth. “Absolutely,â€� Harmon said. “There are not a lot of people walking around who have gotten there, and if you’re lucky enough to get a chance to get to No. 1, then you always want to stay there. D.J. is far more competitive than people realize. “It’s certainly something that drives him,â€� Harmon added. “One of the weird things in golf right now is that he’s the No. 1 player in the world, and there are so many other stories right now that he doesn’t really get talked about. Sometimes that works in your favor; you can just do what you do and let your clubs do the talking.â€� So far, so good for Dustin Johnson, whose clubs said it all Thursday.

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Improvements inside 125 yards fuel Rory McIlroy’s FedExCup winImprovements inside 125 yards fuel Rory McIlroy’s FedExCup win

There was no other way to cap off a PGA TOUR season this dramatic, was there? Trailing World No.1 Scottie Scheffler by six strokes entering the final round, Rory McIlroy staged a historic Sunday charge to become the first player to win three FedExCup titles. McIlroy’s win at East Lake marked the 12th time he has won on the PGA TOUR when trailing entering the final round. Since 2010, that is four more such wins than any other player. McIlroy’s three-win 2021-22 campaign won’t be remembered as the most prolific season of his career in terms of victories, but statistically it may wind up among his best ever. Rory won his fourth scoring average title, posting an adjusting average of 68.67. He joined Vijay Singh (2003) and Tiger Woods (eight different seasons) as the only players in PGA TOUR history with a single season average better than 68.7. Let’s examine some of the most interesting numbers regarding McIlroy’s FedExCup winning season. • One of the most significant improvements in McIlroy’s game over the past few seasons has been on the greens. Yes, there were moments where his putting let him down – namely the final round of The Open, where he languished through 18 two-putts – but the totality of his body of work over the last 36 months reveals a tremendous increase in overall performance. Two seasons ago, McIlroy ranked 122nd of 193 qualified players on the PGA TOUR in Strokes Gained: Putting per round. That ranking climbed to 66th in 2021 – and another 50 spots, to 16th – in this recently concluded 2021-22 campaign. McIlroy’s differential from two seasons ago to now is 0.57 Strokes Gained: Putting per round – a difference of more than two full strokes per 72 holes. From 10 to 15 feet, McIlroy is a completely different player than just a couple of years ago – he’s gone from 153rd in make percentage from that range to 6th this season. After missing 6 putts from 3 feet and in two seasons ago, McIlroy has made 1,193 of 1,194 from that short range over the last 2 seasons on TOUR, and didn’t miss a single one in 2022. All of these improvements seemed to perfectly crystalize over the weekend at East Lake. In the final round, McIlroy led the field in both total distance of putts made (115 feet, 10 inches) and Strokes Gained: Putting (3.92), fueling the largest final round comeback to win in TOUR Championship history. • Another facet of McIlroy’s game that has historically received some public scorn is his approach play from inside 150 yards. This represented another piece of McIlroy’s arsenal that went from weakness to strength, and it happened within the course of the same PGA TOUR season. After the Masters, McIlroy was ranked 208th of 209 players on the PGA TOUR this season in average proximity from 50- to 125 yards away (24 feet, 1 inch). His turnaround in this category since that point is nothing short of remarkable. Since the Wells Fargo Championship began, McIlroy is a staggering 10 feet better, on average, from that range. His mark of 14 feet, 1 inch is the best average among all players on TOUR with 30 or more attempts in that span. • McIlroy ended the season ranked inside the top-50 in all four key Strokes Gained disciplines: Off-the-Tee, Approach the Green, Around the Green and Putting. This is just the second time in McIlroy’s PGA TOUR career he has done that, having also achieved that balanced profile in 2018-19. Only four other players ranked in the top-50 in each of those statistics this season: Patrick Cantlay, Matt Fitzpatrick, Sungjae Im and Xander Schauffele. A season ago, McIlroy’s poorest ranking in the Strokes Gained categories came on shots around the green, where he ranked 71st. It’s been one of the more unheralded improvements in his game over the past 12 months: in the 2020-21 season, McIlroy ranked 131st on the PGA TOUR in scrambling percentage. That leapt up more than 100 spots in 2022, to 30th. He also improved more than 50 spots from this season to last in sand save percentage. • These other improvements allowed McIlroy to maximize his ability to capitalize on being one of the best drivers of the golf ball in the world. Rory has never ranked worse than 6th in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee in any single, full season of his PGA TOUR career. Since 2012, there are more than 360 different players with 100 or more rounds played on the PGA TOUR. McIlroy leads all of them in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee per round, with 0.94. At East Lake, McIlroy pounded 31 drives 320 yards or longer, 10 more than any other player in the field (Cameron Young ranked second, with 21). On all drives for the week, he averaged 315.8 yards, five more than anyone else. McIlroy’s ability with driver consistently gives him an advantage over the competition – but his balanced brilliance in 2022 made him a FedExCup champion.

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