Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Monday Finish: Justin Thomas finds ‘better headspace' at THE PLAYERS

Monday Finish: Justin Thomas finds ‘better headspace' at THE PLAYERS

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. - Justin Thomas was shaken. A hot mic in Hawaii picked up Thomas using insensitive language; he was horrified and contrite and vowed to do better. His grandfather, PGA professional Paul Thomas, died at 89; he was gutted but played on. Barely two weeks later, Tiger Woods, Thomas' friend and Presidents Cup partner, was seriously injured in a one-car accident in Los Angeles. Thomas struggled to process everything. "I did a lot of things," he said after going 5 under from holes 9-12 on the way to a final-round 68 and a one-stroke victory over Lee Westwood (72) before an appreciative but limited crowd at THE PLAYERS Championship at TPC Sawgrass. "I talked to people. I’ve reached out to people. "I mean, I’m not embarrassed to say that I reached out to talk to people to kind of let my feelings out and just discuss stuff with them," he continued. "I think it’s something, especially at our level, a lot of people probably think that they’re bigger and better than that, but some of the thoughts and things I was feeling, it wasn’t fair to myself, and I needed to do something, and my girlfriend Jill was very helpful with that and staying on me to make sure I was taking care of myself, like I would want to do for anyone else in my family." Here are five stories you may have missed from THE PLAYERS. 1. Thomas: a ball-striking ‘clinic'. With his head in a better place, Thomas weathered a frustrating first eight holes Sunday as he split fairways and pelted greens but battled an uncooperative putter. His towering 5-iron at the par-5 ninth set up a two-putt birdie, and that ignited a torrid run - birdie, birdie, eagle (again reaching the green in two at the 11th), birdie - to seize control. Thomas went 14 under on the par 5s, the best performance in the ShotLink era (since 1983) at THE PLAYERS. Jimmy Johnson, his caddie, called the 5-iron on nine the most impressive shot of a day full of them. It was "a ball-striking clinic," he said after his man had hit 17 greens in regulation, missing only the last when his approach stopped on the front collar, inches short. It was another close call just earlier, Thomas' final drive stopping mere feet from trickling over the bulkhead, that had him thinking of his late grandfather looking down and keeping him dry. His 132 (64-68) on the weekend matched a tournament record for low final 36, and he becomes the fourth player to win THE PLAYERS, a major championship, a World Golf Championships event and a FedExCup title, joining Tiger Woods, Henrik Stenson and Rory McIlroy. Read more about Thomas’ emotional victory here. 2. Westwood left in a good mood. Lee Westwood, the 54-hole leader, admittedly had only his C game Sunday, but said he was proud of himself for holding it together and making birdie on 18 for a solo second. It was his second straight runner-up finish after the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard. No, he didn't win, but as he reminded everyone, it's just golf. It's just a game. "It gets treated far too seriously occasionally," he said. "With what’s going on in the world, it’s fun to be doing a job that I love and that I’ve done for 28 years, and I’m still doing it." He and fiancé Helen Storey made for a fun storyline at TPC Sawgrass, just as they have in the U.K. tabloids (Sample headline: "Love Storey.") That Westwood, who will turn 48 next month, is enjoying a career resurgence owes largely to the influence of Storey, a health-and-fitness instructor whom even Bryson DeChambeau praised as Westwood's "secret weapon." After going from 153 to 22 in the FedExCup the last three weeks, Westwood joked about his age, adding, "It's just a joy to be involved and still playing well and being able to contend." 3. DeChambeau still FedExCup No. 1. It wasn't the best day for Bryson DeChambeau, who topped his tee shot 143 yards into a pond at the par-4 fourth hole. After taking a one-stroke penalty he cracked his 4-iron with his next effort and had to scramble from out of the pine straw just to salvage a double bogey. Still, DeChambeau didn't give up, grinding out a 71 to finish two back in a tie for third. That kept him at No. 1 in the FedExCup after his fifth top-10 finish in eight starts this season. "I can play on golf courses that don’t really suit me," DeChambeau said of his big takeaway from the week. "That’s a big lesson. I’d also say, no matter what happens, no matter if I pop a shot, no matter if I thin, whatever it was, and make a really good double or could have been triple or quad, I’m still never out of it for the most part. I know my game is good enough in most facets to get it back and compete with the best of them." 4. Harman saw positive signs. Brian Harman's 69 and T3 finish was his best on TOUR since he finished T3 at the 2019 A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier. Still, the result was somewhat bittersweet. Having birdied only one of the four par 5s, and bogeyed the third and sixth holes, it was easy to see where he might have made up the two shots that separated him and winner Thomas. "Just a couple swings I wish I could have back today," he said. "Just a couple sloppy bogeys on the front, but nice to make a run on the back nine. Yeah, I was trying to make birdies. I was aiming at flags, proud of the way I played 17 and 18, and just came up short." 5. Casey survived disaster at 17; Conners kept rolling. Paul Casey's chances looked grim after he hit two in the water and made a quadruple-bogey 7 at the 17th hole Thursday. Undaunted, he came all the way back and had a chance to win Sunday before signing for a 2-under 70. At 11 under he tied Talor Gooch (67) for fifth, three back. Casey was 13 under for his last 59 holes. Corey Conners (66, solo 7th), meanwhile, stayed hot after his third-place finish at the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard. He went 6-under for his first 13 holes to get within two of the lead at TPC Sawgrass on Sunday, made five closing pars, and tied Charles Howell III (T9), Sungjae Im (T17) and Collin Morikawa (T41) for the day's low round. "Yeah, I’m doing a lot of things really well," said Conners, who will play in next week's World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play for the first time. "I’d say I’m hitting the ball really solidly, hitting it well off the tee. Ball-striking is usually a strength of mine so that’s really solid right now. Getting some putts to fall, as well, is a nice added bonus." TOUR TOP 10

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Nick Jones honoring father’s legacy at Butterfield Bermuda ChampionshipNick Jones honoring father’s legacy at Butterfield Bermuda Championship

SOUTHAMPTON, Bermuda – Here was the lead in a wire services story 53 years ago: “Postman Eardley Jones in Warwick, Parish, Bermuda, is a father, a golfer – and more recently, a hero.” The story detailed how Jones jumped out of his mailman’s outfit and dove into rough water on Bermuda’s south shore to save a drowning man. After medics took the man to the hospital, the story goes that Jones nonchalantly slipped back into his work clothes and continued on with his route. “I have a picture somewhere, of my father that day standing in his skivvies,” says Nick Jones, the youngest of Eardley’s six children. It is that segment of the slideshow memory that makes him laugh. The next slide, however, brings a somber, yet respectful reflection. “I’ve met the man (my father) saved,” Nick says. “He’s still alive. It’s that connection that helps me remember my dad fondly. I miss him every day. He believed in me and was the driving force behind me. “There was no shaking his faith in me.” When Eardley Jones died at 73 in 2012, he was praised as “the Arthur Ashe of Bermuda golf,” a Black man who helped end segregation policies on this island. Until 1967, Black golfers could only play Ocean View, but Eardley Jones helped break down that barrier and open the door for Frankie Rabaid, Llewelyn Tucker, Keith Pearman, and so many others. Including, of course, Nick Jones, now 33 and beaming with pride as he prepares to play in this week’s Butterfield Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course. He earned one of three spots in a local qualifier (fellow Bermudians Michael Sims and Jarryd Dillas also got in) and embraces the opportunity before him. “I love that I’m here,” he says. “I love the chance to show what I’ve got.” What Nick Jones has is a story that is equal parts adventure, passion, and pride, with golf being the common denominator. The game took him from Bermuda to high school in Florida. He turned pro at a young age and showed immediate promise with victory in the 2011 Daytona Beach Open, then flew to England to chase minitours while living with extended family. “I can’t be in the United States for three months at a time because of visa (restrictions),” Jones, who has a British passport, says by way of explaining his allegiance to competitive golf in the U.K. By now it’s likely you have heard of those who were stranded somewhere during the beginnings of the COVID pandemic. But Jones can likely top them all. “I was stuck in Palau for almost two years,” he says. Palau is in the Western Pacific, part of an archipelago of hundreds of islands in the Micronesia region. Indonesia is to the south, the Philippines to the north, but Jones, whose wife’s job had moved them to Palau in late 2019, couldn’t leave once the lock-down began in the spring of 2020. “There was a range with a big net where I could hit balls, but during lock-down they down took the net,” Jones says, laughing at the memory. “I could chip and putt, but that’s it. I didn’t touch my clubs for more than a year. I just did a lot of diving and a lot of fishing.” When the lock-down was lifted in the fall of 2021, Jones followed his heart. “Bermuda is home,” he says, “and it’s the golf community here that I love.” Beyond rusty, Jones didn’t get through the local qualifier for the Butterfield Bermuda Championship in ’21. But he was so determined to be a part of the tournament that he caddied for a competitor in a Monday qualifier, then stuck around Port Royal to wash dishes at night and even tend bar. The sense of adventure still burns for Jones, who placed fourth in the Trinidad and Tobago Open in the spring and is signed on for the upcoming Jamaica Open. But his time back in Bermuda has returned him to his roots. It’s where he learned the game, and where his father’s legacy still is rich. “My ideal goal is to spend six-to-eight months here,” he says, “teaching kids and rebuilding and developing the junior program, which my father started years ago. Then spend a few months traveling to play in golf tournaments.” He has a soft spot for Spain, has family in the U.K., and says, not surprisingly, “I love all the islands.” His father and other Black golfers from Bermuda were trailblazers who overcame long odds. Rabaid played in the 1971 Open Championship. Eardley played in the Canadian Amateur and once brought Nick, then a young teenager, to caddie for him in the British Senior Open. “My father didn’t have much money, but he had a big heart,” says Nick, whose father played at an elite level while juggling two jobs, as a mailman and a maître d’ at that onetime bustling hot spot in Hamilton called Forty Thieves. On top of that, Eardley Jones led the fight against segregation. “He had to fight for his sport,” Nick adds. That battle won, Eardley Jones then brought kids, Nick Jones prominent among them, into his junior program right here at Port Royal. “He didn’t force me to play, but he made sure I wanted to play,” Jones says. “He gave me the freedom to fall in love with the game.” Mission accomplished, Eardley. Mission accomplished.

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