Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Bryson DeChambeau has adventure after thinking he missed cut

Bryson DeChambeau has adventure after thinking he missed cut

Bryson DeChambeau shot a third-round 68 on Saturday in the third round of the Wells Fargo Championship, but that’s not the story he’ll tell about this day years from now. Instead, he’ll talk about how he had to fly from Dallas back to Charlotte, N.C., to play the round at Quail Hollow Golf Club. “We did a lot of scrambling last night to get back,” DeChambeau, 27, said.

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3rd Round Score - Nick Taylor
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5+110
Under 68.5-145
3rd Round Score - Shane Lowry
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5-125
Under 67.5-105
3rd Round 2 Ball - S. Lowry v C. Del Solar
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Shane Lowry-240
Cristobal Del Solar+275
Tie+750
2nd Round 3 Balls - H. Shibuno / A. Valenzuela / A. Corpuz
Type: 2nd Round 3 Balls - Status: OPEN
Allisen Corpuz+140
Hinako Shibuno+170
Albane Valenzuela+225
3rd Round Score - Jake Knapp
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5-115
Under 68.5-115
3rd Round Six Shooter - T. Olesen / J. Knapp / A. Putnam / V. Perez / R. Lee / C. Champ
Type: 3rd Round Six Shooter - Status: OPEN
Thorbjorn Olesen+350
Jake Knapp+375
Andrew Putnam+400
Victor Perez+400
Richard Lee+500
Cameron Champ+600
3rd Round Match Up - A. Putnam v J. Knapp
Type: 3rd Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
Andrew Putnam-110
Jake Knapp-110
3rd Round Match Up - R. Fox v T. Olesen
Type: Request - Status: OPEN
Ryan Fox-130
Thorbjorn Olesen+110
3rd Round 2 Ball - R. Fox v J. Knapp
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Ryan Fox-110
Jake Knapp+120
Tie+750
2nd Round 3 Balls - J. Kupcho / J.H. Im / A. Buhai
Type: 2nd Round 3 Balls - Status: OPEN
Jin Hee Im+160
Ashleigh Buhai+165
Jennifer Kupcho+200
3rd Round Score - V. Perez
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5-130
Under 68.5+100
3rd Round 2 Ball - N. Taylor v V. Perez
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Nick Taylor-115
Victor Perez+125
Tie+750
3rd Round Score - Thorbjorn Olesen
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Under 68.5-130
Over 68.5+100
3rd Round Match Up - C. Champ v R. Lee
Type: 3rd Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
Richard Lee-115
Cameron Champ-105
3rd Round 2 Ball - T. Olesen v R. Lee
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Thorbjorn Olesen-130
Richard Lee+145
Tie+750
3rd Round Score - A. Putnam
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5-155
Under 68.5+120
3rd Round Score - Cameron Champ
Type: 3rd Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 69.5+115
Under 69.5-150
3rd Round 2 Ball - C. Champ v A. Putnam
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Andrew Putnam-115
Cameron Champ+125
Tie+750
Major Specials 2025
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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Chance meeting at pro-am leads to RSM Birdies for Love donationChance meeting at pro-am leads to RSM Birdies for Love donation

Kevin Lynch had come to TPC River Highlands to have a few laughs with his old Navy buddy, Tony Davison, and play in the Monday pro-am at the Travelers Championship last year. Back in the day, the two had served together on the USS Boston, a nuclear-powered attack submarine. Davison was a torpedoman and Lynch ran the food service operation. Even then, the two loved golf, storing clubs under their bunks just in case a course was nearby when they weren't out to sea. RELATED: RSM Birdies Fore Love "We were kids," Lynch says, laughing. "We were silly enough to think that if we took our clubs with us on board that if we pulled into Scotland, we’d be able to go play St. Andrews. What did we know?" On this Monday, Lynch and Davison were paired with Dylan Frittelli, a South African in his first full season on the PGA TOUR. He was drawn to the good-natured banter and barbs between the two old friends, as well as their shared military background. "I was quizzing them on how it all worked and the Navy because my sports psychologist, Jay Brunza, was a Navy psychologist," Frittelli says. "… So, a lot of the stories I’ve heard from Jay about going down to Antarctica and serving in Desert Storm and stuff." On Wednesday before the tournament started, Frittelli met Lynch and Davison at the Naval Submarine Base New London in Groton, Connecticut. Davison, who works for a global defense contractor with offices there, had arranged for a tour of the USS South Dakota. Weapons, sonar, navigation and intelligence were just a few of the departments they explored on the massive boat. "Now I had at this point been out since my gosh, 25 years," Lynch recalls. "So, everything was different. … It was shocking to me. And Dylan was just mesmerized." "It was so cool," agrees Frittelli, who Lynch remembers peppering the SMEs or, the ship's Subject Matter Experts, with thought-provoking questions about things like oxygen displacement and hydrogen storage on the submarine. But Frittelli and Lynch bonded over something else, too. Something much less visible, but just as powerful - their shared interest in mental health. Lynch runs a non-profit called the Quell Foundation which awards college scholarships to students who have a mental health diagnosis or have lost a close family member or caregiver to suicide. The foundation has distributed more than $1.8 million to students in 49 states at over 450 universities since its inception in 2015. Lynch had given a book about the organization to Frittelli, who was intrigued and went to Google to learn more. So, three months later, when the 30-year-old led the field with 24 birdies at last year's Sanderson Farms Championship he knew just what to do with the $50,000 he won in the RSM Birdies Fore Love competition. He gave it all to the Quell Foundation, which Lynch started in response to his son's struggle with managing his bi-polar disorder and kicking a heroin addiction that led to two incarcerations. "What Dylan did is something that really shocked me to my core because it was just a very, it was very kind and thoughtful thing," Lynch says. "… It really was all part of a chance meeting and a discussion. We were walking down the fairway just talking — everybody knows somebody, you have 63 million Americans that live with a mental health illness. "That’s kind of the connection we were talking about. It went back and forth. And obviously, he was listening." For Frittelli, it was personal in so many ways. His father Ray has struggled with mental illness over the last decade or so, although he currently is in a good place. "Obviously being away from him playing golf and being at Texas is it’s kind of been tough for me to figure that stuff out," Frittelli says. "But he’s done well now, and we’ve managed to get him back on track and he’s totally healthy and functional now. … "And I just think it’s something that very few people and men, especially, it’s a really tough thing for men to talk about." When Frittelli was in college at Texas, he encountered another kind of mental health issue. A friend on the women's soccer team, Kylie Doniak was nearly run over by a drunk driver as she was leaving downtown Austin one night. She had numerous broken bones and was in a coma for weeks. "And the main thing was the head injury she sustained," Frittelli recalls. "So, in that sense, obviously it was a traumatic thing, but the recovery she made from that accident was amazing for me to see firsthand." Just last week, Frittelli had a friend back home in Austin commit suicide. Plus, the South African has extended family in that college town, and a friend of those relatives came back from serving in Afghanistan with PTSD. So, Frittelli knows better than most that taking care of a person's mental health is as important to life as the good nutrition he practices and the exercise he makes sure to get each day. "I always try and tell people there are like three or four facets of your life," Frittelli says. "You've got to exercise, stay fit, stay healthy there. You’re got to have a good diet. And then you also got to have good mental health and people don’t see that as a facet of life. They just think that’s something that’ll take care of itself. Like if you’re happy, you’ll be well adjusted and fine. "But through my work with my sports psychologist, I’ve realized that no, it’s just like your physical side. You have to go to the gym, you have to work on it. And the mental side too, you got to feed your brain with the right chemicals. You’ve got to eat well, you’ve got to meditate, and you’ve got to find things that give you the advantage there and not to go down the negative path." Frittelli's donation provided Quell Foundation scholarships for 40 students, giving them a different kind of advantage in life. The scholarships are broken into three areas - the Survivor, the Fighter and the Bridge The Gap, which go to students pursuing a degree related to the provision of mental health services. Part of the application process is writing an essay, and Lynch says those words are powerful. "If you can imagine reading 300 essays of people talking some of the worst times in their life," Lynch says. "You know, sexual assault or losing a parent, finding a parent who committed suicide, having depression, having been hospitalized for two years — all of them are really traumatic stories. "And yet, I’m looking at their GPA and they’re 3.9, 3.5. And these are people who are going on to some of the best colleges in our country and you just want to freaking hug them and say, ‘I don’t know how you did it, but Holy smokes, let me help you.'" Four of the Fighter grants Frittelli's donation funded went to student athletes, a new scholarship category created in part because of his gift. Three have a primary diagnosis of anxiety, the other of depression. Two of them have PTSD. But they are succeeding in life — two are premed, one is a psychology major and the other one is a nursing major. "I say this all the time, there are people out there who impact lives that they will never know," Lynch said. "Dylan will never meet these 40 kids. He will never know who they are and what they go on to do, but he made a difference in their life. That's a huge, huge thing.”

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Mickelson targets Presidents Cup pushMickelson targets Presidents Cup push

WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, WV. – Phil Mickelson has his sights firmly set on breaking his winning drought and surging into Team USA for the Presidents Cup over the next two months. Starting this week at The Greenbrier Classic, where Mickelson will be without long time caddy Jim “Bonesâ€� Mackay for the first time since 1992, the 47-year-old says he’s driven to make his season count. Currently sitting a respectable 40th in the FedExCup thanks to four top-10s, Mickelson has loftier goals. He is approaching the four-year anniversary since his 42nd, and last, PGA TOUR win at the 2013 Open Championship. “It is a big goal of mine to make it on that Presidents Cup team. I’m a member at Liberty National. I love the golf course. I love playing golf in the metropolitan area and would love nothing more than to be on that team and continue the streak,â€� Mickelson, who has played in all 11 Presidents Cups, and every Ryder Cup since 1994, said. “After having received a captain’s pick last time, I feel it’s important I make it on my own. I’ve got six events to make this team. I’ve been working hard with my instructor to make be sure I’m swinging the way I need to. “So I’ve got six good tournaments, and I am going to be putting everything I can into it to get on that team.â€� With five of the 10 players currently in the automatic pick slots for Team USA having no experience in either Presidents Cups or Ryder Cups, a veteran like Mickelson could be extremely valuable. He currently sits 15th on the points list. “We have a lot of really good young talent, a lot of really great personalities that bring out the best in each other, and I would love to be a part of that,â€� he added. Mickelson is now an ambassador for The Greenbrier, but has not yet turned his love for the course and area into results. In three previous attempts from 2011-2013, he missed the cut at The Old White TPC but feels this year can be different. “My record here has not been stellar, but I’ve really gotten some good work in these last couple days in the one area I had struggled in the past, which is distance control with my irons,â€� he said. “Given the altitude being significantly higher than sea level, getting dialed in with the altitude and how different the ball flies for different trajectories (has been the key). “I’ve had a chance the last two days getting adjusted to that, and I believe that’s going to make a difference. “I feel like my game is at the level that I’ve been playing well enough to win, but I haven’t had those results and put myself in contention the way I would like to. It would mean a lot to me if I were able to get it done.â€� As for playing without Mackay for the first time, Mickelson preferred to focus on who he does have on the bag – brother Tim. He will work with him throughout the remainder of 2017, but as yet has no long-term plans for a new bagman. “I’m so appreciative of the time I have had with Bones for 25 years that anything I say positively about what I’m looking forward to with Tim and so forth I feel would be taken as a shot at Bones. I don’t want to do that. I have too much respect for him and our time together over the years,â€� Mickelson explained. “The thing I would say is Tim is one of my favorite people. I love being around him. He’s one of the people I respect the most, and throughout my career he’s been so supportive of me. “After having not won for four years, knowing that my game is at a level that is good enough to win but not having done it, I think the one thing is an element of maybe being comfortable with my brother and maybe he gets me a little bit more relaxed and takes pressure off me and maybe I’ll play my best that way. “We’re going to have fun the last half of the season, and I play my best when I’m having fun.â€�

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Winner’s Bag: Max Homa, Wells Fargo ChampionshipWinner’s Bag: Max Homa, Wells Fargo Championship

Max Homa claimed his second Wells Fargo Championship after withstanding the conditions at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm. Check out the clubs he used to get it done. RELATED: Final leaderboard Driver: Titleist TSi3 (10 degrees) Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black 6 X 3-wood: Titleist TSi2 (15 degrees) Shaft: Aldila Rogue Silver 130 MSI 80 TX 5-wood: Titleist TSi2 (21 degrees) Shaft: Graphite Design Tour AD XC 9 TX Irons: Titleist T100S (4), Titleist T100 (5), Titleist 620MB (6-9) Shafts: KBS $ Taper 130 X Wedges: Titleist Vokey Design SM9 (46-10F, 50-12F, 56-14F, 60-04L) Shafts: KBS $ Taper 130 X (46), KBS Hi Rev 2.0 125 S (50-60) Putter: Scotty Cameron Phantom X T5.5 Prototype Ball: Titleist Pro V1 Grips: Golf Pride Tour Velvet

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