Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Leaderboard: Phil pulling away from Brooks at PGA

Leaderboard: Phil pulling away from Brooks at PGA

Phil Mickelson hit a miraculous birdie from the bunker on No. 5 Sunday to take a 2-stroke lead on Brooks Koepka, and he’s keeping Koepka at arm’s length.

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KLM Open
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Connor Syme-145
Joakim Lagergren+300
Francesco Laporta+1800
Ricardo Gouveia+2800
Richie Ramsay+2800
Fabrizio Zanotti+5000
Jayden Schaper+7000
Rafael Cabrera Bello+7000
David Ravetto+12500
Andy Sullivan+17500
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Final Round 3-Balls - P. Pineau / D. Ravetto / Z. Lombard
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
David Ravetto+120
Zander Lombard+185
Pierre Pineau+240
Final Round 3-Balls - G. De Leo / D. Frittelli / A. Pavan
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Andrea Pavan+130
Dylan Frittelli+185
Gregorio de Leo+220
Final Round 3-Balls - J. Schaper / D. Huizing / R. Cabrera Bello
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Jayden Schaper+105
Rafa Cabrera Bello+220
Daan Huizing+240
Final Round 3-Balls - S. Soderberg / C. Hill / M. Schneider
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Marcel Schneider+150
Sebastian Soderberg+170
Calum Hill+210
Final Round 3-Balls - F. Zanotti / R. Gouveia / R. Ramsay
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Fabrizio Zanotti+150
Ricardo Gouveia+185
Richie Ramsay+185
Final Round 3-Balls - O. Lindell / M. Kinhult / J. Moscatel
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Oliver Lindell+125
Marcus Kinhult+150
Joel Moscatel+300
Final Round 3-Balls - F. Laporta / J. Lagergren / C. Syme
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Francesco Laporta+125
Joakim Lagergren+200
Connor Syme+210
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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Henrik Stenson rides putting to the top at Arnold Palmer InvitationalHenrik Stenson rides putting to the top at Arnold Palmer Invitational

ORLANDO, Fla. — Henrik Stenson had a hot putter, a much quieter crowd and a one-shot lead in the Arnold Palmer Invitational. One week after Stenson returned from his winter break and spent two days with Tiger Woods and his raucous crowds, he made birdie on half of the holes at Bay Hill for an 8-under 64, his lowest round ever on the course Arnold built. PGA TOUR rookies Aaron Wise and Talor Gooch each had 65. Wise missed a 6-foot birdie putt on the final hole. Woods again brought out big crowds in the unseasonable chill Thursday morning and gave them quite a show. He hit a tee shot that was out of bounds by inches. He atoned for that with a 71-foot birdie putt. And he wound up with a 68, his best opening round since he returned this year from a fourth back surgery. “I feel like I’m not really thinking as much around the golf course,” Woods said. “I can just see and feel it and go.” Each week is a little better for Woods, and Stenson saw the progress last week. The 41-year-old Swede typically takes a month off between the Middle East swing and the Florida swing, and he returned last week to a grouping of Woods and Jordan Spieth. That didn’t bother him as much as his poor putting. Bay Hill provided a change in both areas. “It’s great to see him back competing, but it was a little loud out there last week,” Stenson said. “But that comes with the excitement of having him back and seeing him play well, so I thought it was great. … I guess it’s nice to get a little bit of a breather at times, though.” It really helps to be putting well, especially on pure greens at Bay Hill that already had a yellow hue to them. He spent the weekend at home in Orlando working with Phil Kenyon, his putting coach, and it seemed to help. Stenson took only 20 putts, tying his personal best for fewest putts in a round on the PGA TOUR. He ran off five straight birdies around the turn, and he followed his lone bogey at the par-3 14th with two birdies and a 10-foot par save. Woods had no complaints, and about the only thing that went wrong — except for the tee shot on No. 3 that went OB — was his prediction before he left Bay Hill. He was happy with anything in the 60s and said, “There won’t be a lot of rounds out there that will be in the 60s. The golf course is playing difficult.” There were 13 more rounds in the 60s in the afternoon, including Ernie Els and Rory McIlroy at 69. Only one of them was pleased with it. Els, who has gone more than a year since his last finish in the top 30, dropped only one shot, on the opening hole. McIlroy had five birdies through 10 holes and then hit out of bounds on the 18th hole for a double bogey. Coming off a runner-up finish at the Valspar Championship that raised expectations of a victory being closer than ever, Woods started and finished strong, with one mishap in the middle. His drive on No. 3, his 12th hole of the round, sailed to the right and went off a cart path and toward the houses. Only when he reached the ball did Woods find it had rolled into the bottom of a mesh fence. It looked like it was in play, except the poles on the waist-high fence were the boundaries, and his ball was inches outside of them. He went back to the tee, sprayed the next tee shot under a tree and made double bogey. And then came the big finish — two birdies on the par 5s, including a bold flop shot from a tight lie over a bunker at No. 6, and the 71-foot putt he was hoping would be close. Woods immediately pressed his hand down, asking for the ball to slow down, and then watched it drop for a most unlikely birdie. “I was trying to lag it down there and just make my par and get out of here,” he said. “It had to crash at the hole — which I’m not complaining — and it went in.” He closed with a 12-foot putt to save par from the bunker. Former PGA champion Jimmy Walker, Rickie Fowler and Bryson DeChambeau were at 67. Walker was on the other side of the golf course finishing up at the same time as Woods. He holed a wedge from 132 yards on the 18th for an eagle, matching his best score at Bay Hill. It was especially gratifying because he wasn’t even planning to play this week. He had a trip to Augusta National planned with some friends and club members and thought it was this weekend. Instead, it was meant to be Monday and Tuesday. Walker’s wife, Erin, has a horse-jumping show in West Palm Beach. The kids are with their grandparents skiing in Utah. “I figured I might as well play,” Walker said. He had two days at Augusta National, didn’t have a practice round at Bay Hill and felt right at home. “It’s just golf,” he shrugged. “Just hit the shots. I’ve done so many Monday qualifiers earlier in my career where you never see the golf course. Sometimes it helps because you’re not overdoing it.”

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Last call at NBC for old pals Roger Maltbie and Gary KochLast call at NBC for old pals Roger Maltbie and Gary Koch

ORLANDO, Fla. – Roger Maltbie and Gary Koch have done a lot of things together through the years. Born a little more than a year apart, they competed on the PGA TOUR in the same era, combining to win 11 times. They partnered in the Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf, with considerable success, winning their division on three occasions. For 26 years, the two men have served together as significant players in NBC telecasts that bring golf to fans around the world. It was announced recently that NBC would not be renewing their contracts in 2023. Sunday’s final round of the PNC Championship will be their last call as teammates. “It’s bittersweet, obviously,” Koch, 70, said on Saturday morning as he and Maltbie walked the range at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club, talking to players and doing their homework for the event’s opening round. “If I have to go out, I can’t think of anyone I’d rather go out with than Roger. We’ve been together for a long time.” Maltbie, 71, was part of two NBC golf telecasts in 1991 (Bob Hope Desert Classic and the Ryder Cup at Kiawah Island) and joined the NBC team full-time the next season. The PNC wraps up his 31st season with the network. He has worked mostly as a roving reporter, walking alongside the leaders, sharing his insights on their strategy and performance. Maltbie knows the game astutely. He was a five-time winner on the PGA TOUR, his biggest triumph being the inaugural Memorial Tournament presented by Workday in 1976. “I still remember the first time you came and followed my group, and I realized I was in a good position if Roger Maltbie is coming to follow me,” Webb Simpson said in a NBC/Golf Channel tribute that aired following Saturday’s opening round at the PNC. Maltbie has signed on to do a handful of tournaments for Golf Channel in 2023, including the U.S. Senior Open and KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship. Depending on how the fall schedule sorts out, he may work five or six events. “I wake up one day and say, ‘Why would I do that?’” Maltbie said. “And the next day I wake up and say, ‘I still really like doing this. It’s fun.’ So I’m going to do a few.” Koch was offered a similar deal for 2023, but turned down the offer. Koch was a six-time winner on the PGA TOUR, among his victories the 1984 Bay Hill Classic at Arnold Palmer’s Bay Hill Club. After his playing career, he took a broadcasting job at ESPN, working there for six years before joining NBC in 1997. Koch works mostly in the tower calling shots at holes, but also has been an on-course reporter and has spent time in the lead analyst’s chair. His timing in covering the game was pretty fortunate; at ESPN, he was part of the broadcast covering Tiger Woods’ first of 82 PGA TOUR victories, in Las Vegas, in 1996. “Fortunately, in the fall of ’96 when my contract was up at ESPN, Tommy Roy from NBC called and said we’d like to have you join the team. He said, ‘We’re going to try to build the best team that we possibly can, and we’d like for you to be a part of that.’ Twenty-six years for me.” Both men have too many great moments to share just a few, but both pointed to the 1999 Ryder Cup, in which the U.S. team came back from a four-point deficit to win on Sunday, as an outstanding highlight of their broadcast careers. “I was there at the 17th green when Justin Leonard holed the putt (against Jose Maria Olazabal, to eventually seal the comeback),” Maltbie said. “I wasn’t 25 feet from the hole, standing right behind it. That was great. And I would throw in there Tiger’s win at Pebble Beach by 15 shots in 2000 (at the U.S. Open). That was remarkable to watch.” Koch was walking with the match behind Maltbie that electric afternoon at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts, at the 1999 Ryder Cup. “I was with Payne Stewart and Colin Montgomerie, that was my last match I was with, and did an interview with Payne on the green after he conceded that putt to Colin to end the matches. (With Montgomerie dealing with catcalls and heckling from a partisan Boston crowd, Stewart, in an act of great sportsmanship, conceded a long putt which gave Montgomerie the point.) “It was one of the last interviews that Payne would do, because he perished in that plane crash not long after that,” Koch said. “And then of course for me, there was the Tiger moment at THE PLAYERS that I happened to be involved with. (Koch is referring to his “Better than most …” call on a long, snaking Woods’ birdie putt from the back of the green at TPC Sawgrass Stadium Course’s famed island 17th in 2001.) Said Koch, “Still, to this day, people will come up to me and say, ‘What a great call!’ And I will say, ‘Yeah, but what if Johnny (Miller) hadn’t popped out with ‘How’s that look, Gary?’ Then “better than most” would have never come out.” Woods was among those at the PNC this week paying tribute to and thanking both broadcasters for their contributions. When Maltbie pulled up in a cart as Woods strode to the fourth tee on Saturday, Woods smiled broadly, gave him a big “Raaaj!!” and the two bumped fists. “How you doing, baby?” Woods asked Maltbie. Of Koch, Woods said this on NBC: “You understood us players. You understand how hard certain shots were and could not have been more descriptive of shots. … We’re going to miss that side of your commentating, your ability to understand us. You get it. Not too many commentators really, truly get it, but you do.” Koch said he isn’t sure of what lies ahead for him. His wife, who is an attorney in Tampa, will retire this spring, and the two want to do some traveling. Koch said golf has taken him all over the world, but he has not spent much time in the western part of the U.S., so he’d like to see national landmarks such as the Grand Canyon and Mount Rushmore. Peter Jacobsen, sitting in the lead analyst chair this week at PNC, said Sunday’s final-round telecast at the PNC will be a tough one. Like Maltbie, Jacobsen will work a trimmed schedule at NBC in 2023. And though he does not know what is ahead for Koch, he believes that viewers may not have heard the last of his voice, and his knowledge. “Abrupt change is hard,” Jacobsen said on Saturday. “This is in Gary’s blood, and this is what he does, and he does it better than anybody else.” Both Maltbie and Koch will sign off one final time at NBC today unhappy that their exit will not be on their own terms, but filled witih gratitude for such a long and successful run. They have been lucky enough to have two good careers. And it’s nice that the longtime friends and teammates will go out together. One for the road. “It’s been a long, wonderful ride,” Maltbie said. “Neither one of want it to end, but that decision was made, and so be it. It’ll be a sad afternoon when it’s all done.”

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