Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Dissecting the FedExCup chances of Rickie Fowler, Tommy Fleetwood and others

Dissecting the FedExCup chances of Rickie Fowler, Tommy Fleetwood and others

With the season’s final major championship right around the corner, only seven PGA TOUR events remain before the beginning of the lucrative FedExCup Playoffs. Several postseason stalwarts find themselves in precarious spots with less than two months to go in the Regular Season. As marquee names jockey for position down the stretch, Twenty First Group ran more than 10,000 simulations of how the rest of the PGA TOUR regular season would play out to project the likelihood of different points scenarios unfolding. The projection gives newly-minted major winner Jon Rahm the best chance at leading the FedExCup race entering THE NORTHERN TRUST (36.3%), with current FedExCup leader Patrick Cantlay right behind him (32.8%). RELATED LINKS: Twenty First Group | FedExCup standings The math says that currently, 100 of 125 spots in the standings are projected to be taken. The most intrigue lies with the remaining 20 percent of the spots still up for grabs. Here are some of the more interesting probabilities the mathematical projections unearthed: Rickie Fowler Current FedExCup position: 114 Probability of reaching Playoffs: 73.3% Strong finishes at the PGA Championship (T8) and the Memorial Tournament (T11) moved Fowler from outside the playoff picture to firmly inside the top 125. Twenty First Group probability models now have Fowler at a better than 73 percent chance to reach the FedExCup Playoffs. Fowler’s marked recent improvement can’t just be tied to one particular statistic. Entering the PGA Championship, he was averaging +0.22 Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green per round, and -0.39 Strokes Gained: Putting per round. In his last four starts, he’s gaining more than half-a-stroke per round in both statistics. Fowler has qualified for the FedExCup Playoffs every full season he’s been on TOUR (since 2010). Chesson Hadley Current FedExCup position: 116 Probability of reaching Playoffs: 55.8% Hadley’s season is a perfect example of how one week can change the narrative of an entire season. The lanky TOUR veteran has missed 13 cuts in 21 starts entering this week’s John Deere Classic, but a runner-up finish at the Palmetto Championship in June has him in a great position to make the FedExCup Playoffs for the fifth time in his career. More than 42% of Hadley’s FedExCup points for the 2020-2021 PGA TOUR season came that week in South Carolina. With just a few events left, can he turn an up-and-down campaign into a spot in the Playoffs? Tommy Fleetwood Current FedExCup position: 125 Probability of reaching Playoffs: 71.1% The man currently in the final qualifying spot in the standings, Tommy Fleetwood, is not in that spot due to the nature of his global schedule. On the contrary, his 15 starts this season are his most entering the month of July in his PGA TOUR career. Currently, Twenty First Group has Fleetwood at about a 71% chance to reach the Playoffs. Fleetwood has just a single top-10 finish in a stroke play event this season, a far cry from the previous three PGA TOUR seasons, when he was tenth or better in 38% of his starts. Fleetwood has not been as proficient with his driver in 2021, ranking outside the top 150 in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee. Still, The Open Championship – where Fleetwood finished runner-up in 2019 – presents a great opportunity to accrue the points needed to lock up a playoff spot. Dylan Frittelli Current FedExCup position: 130 Probability of reaching Playoffs: 43.8% Sitting just outside the top 125 is this week’s defending champion, Dylan Frittelli. In his 2019 John Deere Classic victory, Frittelli was lights out on and around the greens, leading the field in scrambling percentage and ranking second in Strokes Gained: Putting. Those are two statistics Frittelli has struggled with in 2021, as he’s ranked 114th in scrambling percentage and 186th in putting. After seven missed cuts in his last nine starts, the friendly confines of Sylvis, Illinois, might be just what the South African needs to right the ship. Charles Howell III Current FedExCup position: 131 Probability of reaching Playoffs: 55.1% He is one of just nine players to qualify for the FedExCup Playoffs every season since its inception in 2007, but Charles Howell III has some work to do in the coming weeks if he wants to make it 15-for-15. This week’s John Deere Classic would be a good place to start a resurgence – he finished tied for sixth here in 2019 and has eight top-25 finishes in twelve previous career starts. Howell’s approach play, in particular, has betrayed him a bit this season, as he is on pace for a career-low finish in Strokes Gained: Approach (currently ranks 194th on TOUR). TPC Deere Run could be a place that turns around, through: In his last 16 rounds played at the John Deere Classic, he’s gained a strong four-tenths of a stroke on approach shots per round.

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Final Round 2-Balls - E. Molinari / R. Langasque
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Romain Langasque-105
Edoardo Molinari+115
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - M. Southgate / M. Kinhult
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Marcus Kinhult+100
Matthew Southgate+110
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - T. Clements / T. Christensen
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Todd Clements-175
Tiger Christensen+190
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - E. Ferguson / J. Luiten
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Joost Luiten-110
Ewen Ferguson+120
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - M. Couvra / M. Lindberg
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Martin Couvra-135
Mikael Lindberg+150
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - M. Jordan / J. Smith
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Jordan Smith-110
Matthew Jordan+120
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - H. Li / R. Williams
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Haotong Li-175
Robin Williams+190
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - J. Campillo / B. Robinson
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Jorge Campillo+100
Brandon Robinson-Thompson+110
Tie+750
Mizuho Americas Open
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Jeeno Thitikul+100
Nelly Korda+335
Celine Boutier+400
Andrea Lee+850
Yealimi Noh+1400
Carlota Ciganda+3000
Rio Takeda+7000
Lydia Ko+17500
Kristen Gillman+30000
Somi Lee+35000
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Final Round 2-Balls - M. Katsu / J. Shin
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Minami Katsu+100
Jenny Shin+110
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - J. Bae / J. Kupcho
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Jennifer Kupcho-145
Jenny Bae+165
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - G. Higgo / S. Theegala
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Garrick Higgo+125
Sahith Theegala-115
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - M. Lee / H. Naveed
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Minjee Lee-180
Hira Naveed+200
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - M. Pavon / M. Greyserman
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Matthieu Pavon+130
Max Greyserman-120
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - S. Kyriacou / L. Duncan
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Lindy Duncan+105
Stephanie Kyriacou+105
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - L. Aberg / T. Pendrith
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Ludvig Aberg-120
Taylor Pendrith+135
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - P. Tavatanakit / A. Yubol
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Patty Tavatanakit-130
Arpichaya Yubol+145
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - C. Kirk / A. Hadwin
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Adam Hadwin+110
Chris Kirk+100
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - R. Yin / A. Kim
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Ruoning Yin-160
Auston Kim+180
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - W. Clark / L. Glover
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Lucas Glover+120
Wyndham Clark-110
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - L. Ko / S. Lee
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Lydia Ko-135
Somi Lee+150
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - A. Eckroat / R. Henley
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Austin Eckroat+150
Russell Henley-135
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - J. Lopez / E. Szokol
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Elizabeth Szokol-105
Julia Lopez Ramirez+115
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - M. Thorbjornsen / B. Harman
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Brian Harman-110
Michael Thorbjornsen+120
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - R. Takeda / K. Gillman
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Rio Takeda-200
Kristen Gillman+225
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - V. Hovland / N. Dunlap
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Nick Dunlap+185
Viktor Hovland-170
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - Y. Noh / C. Ciganda
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Yealimi Noh-105
Carlota Ciganda+115
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - D. McCarthy / T. Hoge
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Denny McCarthy+100
Tom Hoge+110
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - N. Korda / A. Lee
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Nelly Korda-145
Andrea Lee+160
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - M.W. Lee / M. McNealy
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Maverick McNealy-105
Min Woo Lee+115
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - J. Thitikul / C. Boutier
Type: Final Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Jeeno Thitikul-135
Celine Boutier+150
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - A. Novak / R. MacIntyre
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Andrew Novak+105
Robert MacIntyre+105
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - J. Highsmith / C. Bezuidenhout
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Christiaan Bezuidenhout+100
Joe Highsmith+110
Tie+750
Myrtle Beach Classic
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Carson Young+275
Mackenzie Hughes+425
Harry Higgs+550
Danny Walker+1200
Ryan Fox+1200
Victor Perez+1400
Alex Smalley+2200
Norman Xiong+2200
Davis Shore+2800
Ben Silverman+4500
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Final Round 2-Balls - E. Van Rooyen / W. Zalatoris
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Will Zalatoris-115
Erik Van Rooyen+125
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - A. Rai / B. Griffin
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Aaron Rai-110
Ben Griffin+120
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - C. Davis / A. Scott
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Adam Scott+100
Cam Davis+110
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - B. Campbell / P. Rodgers
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Brian Campbell+125
Patrick Rodgers-115
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - T. Detry / R. Gerard
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Ryan Gerard+100
Thomas Detry+110
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - R. Hojgaard / A. Noren
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Alex Noren+110
Rasmus Hojgaard+100
Tie+750
Final Round 3-Balls - J. Svensson / A. Svensson / M. Manassero
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Jesper Svensson+150
Adam Svensson+180
Matteo Manassero+200
Final Round Match-Ups - G. Woodland / R. Hojgaard
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Rasmus Hojgaard-125
Gary Woodland+105
Final Round 2-Balls - G. Woodland / D. Thompson
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Davis Thompson-125
Gary Woodland+140
Tie+750
Final Round Match-Ups - D. Thompson / M. Fitzpatrick
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Davis Thompson-120
Matt Fitzpatrick+100
Final Round 3-Balls - S. Fisk / J. Bramlett / A. Rozner
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Antoine Rozner+175
Joseph Bramlett+175
Steven Fisk+175
Final Round 3-Balls - T. Humphrey / M. McGreevy / H. Springer
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Max McGreevy+130
Hayden Springer+145
Theo Humphrey+300
Final Round Score - Jordan Spieth
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5-155
Under 67.5+120
Final Round 2-Balls - J. Spieth / J.J. Spaun
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
J J Spaun+130
Jordan Spieth-120
Tie+750
Final Round Match-Ups - B. Hun An / J.J. Spaun
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Byeong Hun An-110
J J Spaun-110
Final Round Match-Ups - D. Berger / J. Spieth
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Jordan Spieth-115
Daniel Berger-105
Final Round 3-Balls - C. Hadley / B. Silverman / W. Chandler
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Ben Silverman+130
Chesson Hadley+200
Will Chandler+210
Final Round 3-Balls - T. Kanaya / B. Haas / A. Albertson
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Takumi Kanaya+100
Anders Albertson+230
Bill Haas+240
Final Round 2-Balls - B. Hun An / M. Fitzpatrick
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Byeong Hun An+100
Matt Fitzpatrick+110
Tie+750
Final Round 3-Balls - F. Molinari / G. Duangmanee / L. List
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Luke List+130
Francesco Molinari+170
George Duangmanee+250
Final Round 3-Balls - N. Xiong / D. Walker / A. Smalley
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Alex Smalley+125
Danny Walker+185
Norman Xiong+230
Final Round Score - Collin Morikawa
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5+125
Under 67.5-165
Final Round 2-Balls - X. Schauffele / C. Morikawa
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Collin Morikawa+100
Xander Schauffele+110
Tie+750
Final Round 3-Balls - V. Perez / R. Fox / D. Shore
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Victor Perez+135
Ryan Fox+145
Davis Shore+280
Final Round 3-Balls - A. Putnam / A. Tosti / M. Feuerstein
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Alejandro Tosti+120
Andrew Putnam+140
Michael Feuerstein+350
Final Round Score - Daniel Berger
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5-145
Under 67.5+110
Final Round 2-Balls - S.W. Kim / D. Berger
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Daniel Berger-115
Si Woo Kim+125
Tie+750
Final Round Match-Ups - K. Bradley / S.W. Kim
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Keegan Bradley-120
Si Woo Kim+100
Final Round 3-Balls - C. Young / H. Higgs / M. Hughes
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Mackenzie Hughes+110
Carson Young+190
Harry Higgs+260
Final Round 2-Balls - M. Homa / A. Bhatia
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Akshay Bhatia-110
Max Homa+120
Tie+750
Final Round Match-Ups - A. Bhatia / S. Stevens
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Akshay Bhatia-110
Sam Stevens-110
Final Round Match-Ups - M. Homa / R. Fowler
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Rickie Fowler-115
Max Homa-105
Final Round Score - Sam Stevens
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5+105
Under 68.5-135
Final Round 2-Balls - S. Stevens / S. Jaeger
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Stephan Jaeger+110
Sam Stevens+100
Tie+750
Final Round Match-Ups - C. Conners / S. Jaeger
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Corey Conners-140
Stephan Jaeger+120
Final Round Score - Keegan Bradley
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5+135
Under 68.5-175
Final Round Six Shooter - P. Cantlay / SJ Im / S. Burns / K. Bradley / K. Mitchell / T. Finau
Type: Final Round Six Shooter - Status: OPEN
Patrick Cantlay+320
Sungjae Im+400
Keegan Bradley+425
Sam Burns+425
Keith Mitchell+500
Tony Finau+500
Final Round 2-Balls - K. Bradley / J.T. Poston
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
J.T. Poston+120
Keegan Bradley-110
Tie+750
Final Round Six Shooter - J. Bridgeman / H. English / E. Cole / N. Taylor / R. Fowler / C. Young
Type: Final Round Six Shooter - Status: OPEN
Jacob Bridgeman+375
Eric Cole+400
Harris English+400
Nick Taylor+425
Cameron Young+450
Rickie Fowler+475
Final Round 2-Balls - C. Young / E. Cole
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Cameron Young+110
Eric Cole+100
Tie+750
Final Round Score - Corey Conners
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5-155
Under 67.5+120
Final Round Score - Patrick Cantlay
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5+105
Under 67.5-135
Final Round 2-Balls - P. Cantlay / C. Conners
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Corey Conners+115
Patrick Cantlay-105
Tie+750
Final Round Score - Harris English
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5+115
Under 68.5-150
Final Round Score - Rickie Fowler
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5-110
Under 68.5-120
Final Round 2-Balls - H. English / R. Fowler
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Harris English-105
Rickie Fowler+115
Tie+750
Final Round Match-Ups - K. Mitchell / H. English
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Harris English-110
Keith Mitchell-110
Final Round Score - Tommy Fleetwood
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5-120
Under 67.5-110
Final Round Score - Jacob Bridgeman
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5+105
Under 68.5-135
Final Round Six Shooter - R. McIlroy / J. Thomas / T. Fleetwood / S. Straka / H. Matsuyama / S. Lowry
Type: Final Round Six Shooter - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+260
Justin Thomas+400
Tommy Fleetwood+475
Hideki Matsuyama+500
Sepp Straka+500
Shane Lowry+500
Final Round 2-Balls - J. Bridgeman / T. Fleetwood
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Jacob Bridgeman+145
Tommy Fleetwood-130
Tie+750
Final Round Match-Ups - N. Taylor / J. Bridgeman
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Jacob Bridgeman-110
Nick Taylor-110
Final Round Score - Rory McIlroy
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 66.5-120
Under 66.5-110
Final Round Score - Tony Finau
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5-145
Under 67.5+110
Final Round 2-Balls - T. Finau / R. McIIroy
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy-180
Tony Finau+200
Tie+750
Final Round Match-Ups - S. Burns / T. Finau
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Sam Burns-115
Tony Finau-105
Final Round Match-Ups - J. Thomas / R. McIIroy
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy-135
Justin Thomas+115
Final Round Score - Sungjae Im
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5-155
Under 67.5+120
Final Round Score - Sam Burns
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5-145
Under 67.5+110
Final Round 2-Balls - S. Burns / S. Im
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Sam Burns+110
Sungjae Im+100
Tie+750
Final Round Match-Ups - S. Straka / S. Im
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Sepp Straka-120
Sungjae Im+100
Final Round Score - Hideki Matsuyama
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5-130
Under 67.5+100
Final Round Score - Nick Taylor
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5+115
Under 68.5-150
Final Round 2-Balls - H. Matsuyama / N. Taylor
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Hideki Matsuyama-135
Nick Taylor+150
Tie+750
Final Round Match-Ups - H. Matsuyama / S. Lowry
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Hideki Matsuyama-110
Shane Lowry-110
Final Round Score - Justin Thomas
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5+135
Under 67.5-175
Final Round Score - Keith Mitchell
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5+105
Under 68.5-135
Final Round 2-Balls - J. Thomas / K. Mitchell
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Justin Thomas-150
Keith Mitchell+165
Tie+750
Final Round Score - Sepp Straka
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5-145
Under 67.5+110
Final Round Score - Shane Lowry
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5-130
Under 67.5+100
Final Round 2-Balls - S. Straka / S. Lowry
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Sepp Straka+105
Shane Lowry+105
Tie+750
Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
Ludvig Aberg+400
Collin Morikawa+450
Jon Rahm+450
Justin Thomas+550
Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+450
Bryson DeChambeau+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Xander Schauffele+2000
Collin Morikawa+2200
Jon Rahm+2200
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Brooks Koepka+4000
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Viktor Hovland+2000
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
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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Days worth cherishingDays worth cherishing

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Adenil “Dening” Day was not watching golf that Wednesday afternoon in mid-March. She had no idea her son Jason had just withdrawn from his first match at Austin Country Club. Nor did she see him explaining why during a hastily arranged news conference. Yet, it was because of her that he decided to open his heart and pour out his emotions, as raw a moment as you’ll see from a PGA TOUR player. “She has lung cancer,” Jason told the media, unable to fight back the tears. “At the start of the year, she was diagnosed with 12 months to live.” Jason, the defending champion of the World Golf Championships–Dell Technologies Match Play, could no longer focus enough to compete. Torn between his desire to do as his mother wished – to fight on – and what his instinct told him – to be by her side – he finally cracked on national television. So he walked off the course, then fronted the media and revealed his mother’s tumor, the dire initial fears, and the new hope that surgery later that week might extend her life. Having lost his father to cancer when he was 12, Jason could not fathom it was happening again. He doggedly explored all options. Thus, he had flown his mother from Australia to his current home in Columbus, Ohio, to seek further opinions and care in the United States. Now he needed to be with her for the surgery. He needed to be there for his mother — as she had always been there for him. While there are plenty of people to thank for Jason’s rise to the top of the golf world, Dening is certainly a huge part of the journey. And though they now live some 9,150 miles apart in different continents, the bond remains strong. When all was revealed in Austin, it was certainly emotional. It was gripping. Plenty in the room were choked up. Afterward, Jason phoned his mother, telling her what had transpired and letting her know he was on his way to her. Only then did she know about the press conference. Eventually, Dening found video clips and saw the pain on her son’s tear-swollen face as he finally succumbed to the enormity of her plight. Then Dening — the ultra-tough mom who raised a champion — did what she rarely does. Like Jason earlier that afternoon, she started to cry. So much so that her daughter Yanna would joke later, “That’s her tears quota for the year.” But Dening’s tears were not of fear for what lay ahead. She wasn’t worried for her very existence like most of us would be. The tears stemmed from guilt. She never wanted her son to worry, even after being initially diagnosed with just a year left on earth. She never wanted him to stress. She never even wanted him to know. ‘She doesn’t talk much’ Yanna, age 32, is Jason’s eldest sister, who joined her mother on the trip to the U.S. for treatment. He has another, Kim, 31, who is back in Australia with kids of her own. Kim lives across the street from Dening, Yanna a few hours away. Jason, 29, obviously is a significant distance from Brisbane. Dening does not like to burden others with her problems. That’s why she was coughing up blood for three months before Kim noticed and alerted the other siblings, who then sprang into action as a team to make things happen. They weren’t taking chances – and with good reason. Dening had already kept one cancer scare from her children years earlier. “I didn’t want to worry them,” she says. She had a lumpectomy to remove what turned out to be a benign tumor in her breast, only telling the kids well after the event. Jason still shakes his head at the revelation. “She doesn’t talk much,” he says dryly. She does, however, write poetry. After that first cancer scare, she penned one for her kids, hoping to leave behind some wisdom for them. Now she’s had to battle cancer for a second time. Thankfully, surgery to remove the most recent tumor was a complete success and fears the lung cancer had spread were allayed. Some pesky cysts that clouded the initial diagnosis were removed from the liver. Dening must maintain regular checkups, but it appears she is out of the woods. She can pass on her wisdom in person, rather than on paper. It is, of course, a welcome relief for all involved. This family doesn’t need more rough times. They’ve seen enough struggle to fill 30 lifetimes – and no one in the family has fought more battles than Dening. It is no secret that Jason’s father Alvyn was an abusive alcoholic. He ruled with “iron fists,” as Yanna puts it, before he died. He insisted on controlling everything. This included his wife. Search for a better life Dening was born in a small village in the Philippines as one of 11 children. There was no electricity and no running water. While it was an extremely impoverished existence, she never felt wanting and modestly says, “We managed three meals a day.” Jason tells of having his own baths heated by kettle, and his mother cutting the lawn with a knife and scissors when he was a child. That was their economic hardship in Australia. “But we had luxury compared to where she grew up,” he says. Late last year, Jason was scheduled to play an exhibition match against Rory McIlroy in the Philippines before a back injury curtailed his trip. It was to be his first visit to his mother’s homeland and they would have raised money for locals who are still rebuilding from Typhoon Haiyan in 2013, where eight members of Dening’s family, including her mother and brother, were killed. That kind of tragedy is one reason why her homeland was a place most wanted to trade up from. “It’s what Filipinos do,” Dening says. She took the first step of escaping many years ago when she moved to the big city – Manilla – for her higher education. The idea at the time was to ultimately find a way to the United States. She started down a path toward a nursing degree, but upon seeing a newspaper article that revealed how in demand medical secretaries were in the U.S., she shifted her focus. Having passed college, she spent seven years working in Manilla “wearing high heels and nice clothes” but still dreamt of finding a way out of a third world country and into better circumstance. And then one came. A letter from Alvyn Day arrived at the boarding house where Dening lived. It was for her landlady’s sister who had registered with a marital agency in Australia. But the sister had since left for Italy and the letter was passed along to Dening. On a whim, she decided to reply. Australia sounded like paradise. Here she would live a charmed life, perhaps of luxury, with a handsome, rugged Australian man. After enough correspondence, it was agreed Alvyn would come to the Philippines, marry Dening, and the two would return to Australia to start a life together. Seemed a fairytale … but instead it was a nightmare. Not as advertised Rural Queensland can be a beautiful place, but in all fairness, it is far from the glistening coast and sandy beaches that are Australia’s primary drawing cards. While the coastline wasn’t that far away from Beaudesert, and later Rockhampton, Dening wasn’t seeing any of it. “I got taken to the meat works (where Alvyn had work) or I got taken to the farm,” she says of her introduction to Australia. “The grass was as tall as your knees, and you’d walk, and it’s so itchy on your feet and on your legs when it touches. “I couldn’t believe we were staying in this little caravan in the middle of nowhere.” Add to this the struggles of having a very limited English vocabulary and the revelation Alvyn would drink a lot and become violent … well, it was not the existence she had anticipated. Alvyn had already been through two failed marriages and the reasons began to surface When Yanna was a toddler, a line was drawn in the sand when a drunk Alvyn put his daughter into the caravan wall just because she was trying to climb all over her daddy. “At the time, I took him to court. I said, ‘You might hurt me but you’re not doing that to my kids,’ ” Dening recalls. The resolution was rehab and no more drinking. It was only temporary. He eventually slipped back into the bottle. By the time Kim and Jason were added to the family, Dening was surviving, but barely, as her mind and spirit continued to die. “It was very tough, and I had in the back of my mind, I can’t live like this. I have to do something about it,” she says. “It was so very hard because I was so new (to Australia), it was very hard to find anyone to turn to, and I kept thinking I didn’t go to school just to be like this.” Spending her days in front of a television and doing sewing jobs to help make ends meet was not enough. The feelings of inadequacy had grown to the point that she asked Alvyn if she, too, could get a job at the meat works. “He said, ‘You can get a job, but all your money will go straight to my bank,’ and I said, it doesn’t matter. At least I am out and I am active,’ ” she recalls. When not working, Alvyn would make many trips to the local landfill, looking for things that could be repurposed and sold. Dening was the upholsterer on reclamation projects. Jason’s first golf club came from the garbage dump, the story now part of his lore. And so Dening would work as a secretary and continued to do her sewing on the side, settling for about an hour of sleep most nights. Work till 4 a.m., back up at 5 a.m. to prepare breakfasts and lunches for Alvyn and the kids. The $1,000 promise As Jason began to show promise in golf, Dening saw the chance of an escape for her son. She might not have had her fairytale. But perhaps he could. She was already chaperoning his tournaments on occasions after coming across more of Alvyn’s abuse. Helping her pre-teen change shirts one day, she noticed bruises all over his chest. When she asked where they came from, the reply was “dad.” Jason has revealed there was numerous physical beatings at the hand of his dad in his youth. “Dad tried to drive me with the driver,” he says of another time in his early years. According to Jason, Alvyn would punish him after events in the parking lot, with closed fists. “Nothing was ever good enough, even winning,” he says. Yanna recalls Jason being yelled at after victories for things like not hitting putts aggressive enough, or falling short of some score target Alvyn had set. “[Jason] would beat much older kids, even grown men,” she says. “It wasn’t enough for Dad.” And so Dening insisted on being around more. Then Alvyn died of cancer, and 12-year-old Jason went off the rails, began drinking and getting in fights. Kim ran away from home for years. But it was a seminal moment for the Day family — while it was hard to lose a parent, they gained their freedom. Their independence. All three admit the chances of Jason making it in the sport if his father had not passed away would have been slim. The control would still have existed. Maybe Jason could have made it through like some tennis stars have under parent dictatorship, but more likely Jason would have come to resent the game. So Alvyn’s passing was where Dening knew sacrifice had to be made to give Jason a chance. His local coaches had said there wasn’t much else they could do until Jason grew up, and became stronger and longer off the tee. At the rate he was spiraling out of control, she feared his talent would go wasted. Worse still, so would his life. And Dening wanted so much more for her children. At a crossroads, she borrowed money from Jason’s uncle and then sold the house to get him into a boarding school with a golf program. It is there, at Kooralbyn, he met Colin Swatton, his current coach, caddie and father figure and his raw talent began getting the nurturing it needed. Jason, with the realization of how much his mum and sisters had sacrificed, became a dedicated worker. Early mornings, late nights. Whatever it took. Just like mum. As Jason continued his rise in the game, Dening put her son first, no matter the sacrifice. He had always practiced his craft with secondhand equipment. His first pair of golf shoes were an old ladies pair. He fished for golf balls in the swamp at his course. His clubs were a mismatched hodgepodge kindly given from a neighbor. It wasn’t until his late teens he got something brand new. A driver. Dening told him if he could get to scratch he could have it. She assumed it was going to stretch her budget at around $250 Australian. When Jason met her terms, she found out it was $1,000 at the golf club pro shop. (Brand new drivers routinely cost around $700 Australian, but at the time the Australian dollar was underperforming compared to the U.S. dollar, inflating the cost.) “But I made a promise, so I got it for him,” she recalls. Kind but firm To be fair, nurture on the golf course was never a strength of Dening’s. Still isn’t. While never crossing the line like Alvyn so often did, nevertheless she maintained the strict side of Jason’s golfing life. She didn’t want him to have girlfriends. Or distractions. Her methods certainly weren’t all kisses and hugs and everyone gets a trophy. With Alvyn gone, Dening felt she needed to keep things somewhat firm to keep her boy on task. Keep him fighting to be the best. “One time she came at me all spider monkey-like with an umbrella during a tournament,” Day says. Indeed, Dening had whacked her son on the backside with a golf umbrella, during a tournament. But it wasn’t for poor play. “It was for swearing and a bad attitude,” she says. A playing partner was reacting poorly to his own play and Jason had fallen into the same trap. Dening was having none of that. “Ironically, she swore when telling me not to swear,” Jason laughs. To this day, her expectations remain high. She struggles to watch him on television without getting worked up and when she does make it to watch an event live, those that know Jason well can sense her presence through his play. He still wants to prove he’s doing his best, trying his hardest. He’s pushing for mum. Early in his career, when he had several near-misses in big events (Jason had nine top-10s in majors before his major breakthrough at the 2015 PGA Championship), she had to remove herself from the coverage often. “It was very hard. If my television could speak, that television would have sworn back at me so many times,” she says. “I would swear and go back to the garden, 20 minutes, go back in and watch, and so on. “You just want him to succeed and you know he can do better… so it’s hard.” During the Australian Open in 2011, when Jason was contending heavily but falling back from the lead, he made a birdie after a rut of holes. “It’s about time, Jason,” came the loud and disguisable voice of Dening between green and tee box — much to the amazement of many spectators. Before the end of the tournament, where he would finish fourth, Dening had walked off. “He could do better,” she defiantly says now. It is why when Day was leading into the final round of the PGA Championship at Whistling Straits in 2015, Dening did not stay home to watch it on the television. In Australia, it was already Monday morning as he was coming down the stretch and trying to hold off Jordan Spieth. Dening went to work like she always does. “I would’ve had a heart attack if I was watching it live,” she says. She checked in on the scores online occasionally but couldn’t bear to watch. Finally, a co-worker confirmed he had won and she could watch his celebrations. “I was very thankful that it happened because he’s been aiming for it a long time, working so hard for a long time. And for it to happen, it’s sort of a culmination. I gave a big sigh of relief. Kimmy was crying,” she recalls. Yanna says the final putt going in was when it seemed every struggle they had ever had seemed justified. “Every hardship, every bad word we endured, punch, kick, whatever, the moment he did that, we all felt the same,” she says. “All of a sudden the family just had this weight taken off our shoulders, and we were at peace then. There was a purpose. There was a reason.” A fresh start This peace they earned had been missing in 2017. But as the two siblings and their mother sit in Jason’s Columbus home — just hours before Dening will be heading back to Australia with a clean bill of health — it is evident the mood has swung severely over the last few weeks. The emotional rollercoaster ride has thrown them for loops, tossed them up and down, but ultimately, they enter the station feeling better for the ride. “It’s definitely made us more aware of our family, brought us definitely closer,” Yanna says as Jason nods. From a depth of despair that had Jason breaking down in tears during his basic activities – the morning shower, a gym workout, a video game session – a new hope has emerged. Jason is free again. The stress that plagued him has lifted. His focus is returning. Dening can return to her own loves in Australia. To her garden, to her poetry, and working has long made her happy. She will head back to her office job where she too feels free. At age 59, she shows no signs of retirement; in fact, it is the last thing she wants. Jason has offered to have her stay in luxury in Ohio but the simple freedoms of home have her in a good place mentally and she fiercely wants to continue making her own way. “I just like to make decisions without worrying, without be bothered by someone else,” she says. “You’re free to go somewhere else. You’re free to do with your own time. You’re free to do everything.” Jason jokes he can hire her as his maid. If she won’t come as a gesture of goodwill, perhaps she’ll come to work. But also, back in Brisbane, Kim’s son Cooper has taken up golf. He’s showing promise now as a pre-teen. He’s heading to the same golfing academy Jason and Swatton finished at (the pair moved to Hills International College after Kooralbyn shut down for a while) before they turned to the pro life. And Dening is back in her element, helping a young boy maintain the straight and narrow path and maximize his potential. “You get a rush, mum,” Yanna says. “If you saw how it was when Jason was little, it’s just like on repeat.” She’s back on the sidelines, not getting spider monkey-style with umbrellas, but yelling out encouragement, driving him forward. As for her first golfing prodigy, Dening says her boy still has great things to achieve. Things she’s grateful she’ll now be around to see. And just as she did throughout his upbringing, she starts putting a little heat on him. She starts to stoke his competitive fires. As he heads towards defending his title at THE PLAYERS Championship — which he won emphatically in wire-to-wire fashion in 2016 to make it an incredible seven wins in 17 starts at the time — she attempts to get him back into that dominant headspace. “Before the end of the year and beyond,” she says of a timeline for seeing the best of Jason Day again. “He still has to win. To get more wins. And one major is not enough.” Jason agrees saying, “No, it’s not enough,” and then the conversation turns into a true family moment, as the women try to infuse more belief into Jason. It is seamless chatter, as if it has happened many times before. In the early years, there were multiple times where Jason exhibited just the slightest lack of self-belief and it bit him hard. When it came to the crunch, he wasn’t sure he belonged, and he would almost subconsciously take himself out of the mix. “People would say, man, look at this guy, he’s a ball striker, he’s got good touch, all that stuff. But, and I think it stems back to my dad, I was like, I can’t feel or see that,” Jason says. While his father may have beaten the belief out of him, the women in his life, including American wife Ellie, are part of a big team always trying to pump it back in. Ellie has taken over the day to day support role and helps Jason immensely but on this occasion it’s the old guard at it again. “You haven’t reached your full potential,” Yanna says. “Jason – you really have all the skills. You can do more,” Dening adds. “I don’t think I have reached my full potential yet,” Jason admits. “It comes down to mentally – how much you want it more than anything else.” Dening nods, looks him in the eye and adds, “Yes, it’s the hunger, as well. It’s not only mental. Always keep pushing. Keep working.” Yanna jumps back in. “I think you’re going to have some things manifest in the next couple of years, I really do think that the best is yet to come,” she adds. “I think this is just the start of something big.” Jason tries to take in their praise. “Well I am in a good place now. Less distractions,” he says. “And now I know how hard I need to work to get back to the top. So, it is time to put in the work.” After hearing his commitment to the grind, Dening nods. Her work here is done.

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Putnam, Johnson turn FedEx St. Jude Classic into 2-man racePutnam, Johnson turn FedEx St. Jude Classic into 2-man race

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Andrew Putnam matched the best round of his short PGA TOUR career with a 6-under 64 and tied Dustin Johnson atop the St. Jude Classic on Saturday. In position to reclaim the No. 1 ranking with a victory, Johnson had a 65 to match Putnam at 15-under 195. A two-time winner on the Web.com Tour, Putnam birdied No. 18. Putnam was bogey-free playing a group ahead. Now he will play in the last group on the final day for the first time on the PGA TOUR with Johnson. Stewart Cink, who had a hole-in-one on No. 8, matched his low round of the year with a 64 to get to 10 under.

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