Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Andrew Putnam takes deep dive for good cause at Barracuda Championship

Andrew Putnam takes deep dive for good cause at Barracuda Championship

Normally when Andrew Putnam goes scuba diving, he’d be watching tropical fish weave their way in and out of the nooks and crannies of colorful coral reefs. He might notice a few sharks in the distance, too. Tuesday was different, though. Two days before he’ll tee off in the first round of the Barracuda Championship, Putnam was diving in the cool waters of nearby Lake Tahoe. The setting was nothing short of spectacular. The water was clear, and the visibility couldn’t have been better. But Putnam was picking up trash. And the avid conservationist and outdoorsman calls it “by far the most interesting dive I’ve ever done.” Putnam was working with a group called Clean Up The Lake in an effort to bring awareness to the importance of sustainability and protecting the environment. He was surprised to see what he found at the bottom of the lake, saying it was “eye-opening.” There were beer cans and soda cans – some that were 40- or 50-years old judging from the various shapes and designs. The divers found an anchor and some old tires, as well as different kinds of fishing tackle. And in a sad sign of the times, Putnam even found some COVID masks. When the dive was over, Putnam was exhausted, but the winner of the 2018 Barracuda Championship called the experience “rewarding” because he felt like he’d made a difference. “I’ve always been a big believer in going and seeing and doing things that you’re maybe not aware of that are happening,” Putnam says. “And in terms of sustainability going in and looking at seeing the trash and the impact that’s having on this lake definitely helped me gain a new perspective. … “I’m glad I did it and glad I could be part of it all and feel like this experience will help change me and change how I consume and use obviously cans and plastics and being more responsible to dispose of them correctly or not using them at all.” But Putnam, who has a business degree in economics from Pepperdine, has thoughts on the broader issues of sustainability, conservation and climate change that go beyond clean air and water and recycling and coexisting with nature. He says trying to solve the climate crisis from an economic system of inflation is not unlike getting stuck in a revolving door. Our money isn’t worth as much tomorrow as it was today and at the same time, technology has made things cheaper and cheaper, so we consume more and produce more – hence the abundance of goods we have today. With inflation, Putnam says, people aren’t as incentivized to save for the future. That’s where he thinks a decentralized currency like Bitcoin could be an answer since it’s deflationary, which increases buying power over time and as a result, encourages people to save in the present. “Having a degree in economics and playing a sport that I’m outdoors, enjoying nature, I think it’s a combination of the two that kind of led me to have my eyes opened and want to be a part of the conversation around this,” says Putnam, who is an avid reader of books on finance. Reducing water consumption, as so many golf courses are making an effort to do, obviously is a huge help. Recycling and driving electric cars are making a difference, too. But Putnam is trying to reimagine the future and figure out a way to stop the “constant treadmill of growth.” He feels finding the right economic model will be the key to fostering sustainability and solving climate change. “I’m not saying that Bitcoin is the end all, be all or the answer,” he says. “I think it’s just opened up a lot of people’s minds to think outside the current system, the current box, especially when it comes to sustainability and climate change. “I think everyone can agree that we kind of have to go down a different path than we’ve been going on the last 50, 60 years to make this planet sustainable for my kids and grandkids.” While golf is his first love, Putnam grew up in the Pacific Northwest and enjoys basically any outdoor activity. As a kid he went hunting with his father and grandfather. He and his wife Tawny, who now live in Washington, enjoy hiking, and he recently got a mountain bike. Their adventures have taken the couple all over the world, including the Bwindi Impenetrable Forest in southwestern Uganda, home to about 400 of endangered silverback gorillas – which sadly, is about half the world’s population. They were sitting completely still, just as their guides had cautioned them, when one of the animals decided to check Putnam out. The imposing gorilla passed close enough that his weathered hand grazed Putnam’s foot. “They had a couple of babies who are playing around in the trees,” he recalls. “Then of course you’ve got the big silverback who is kind of the leader and who’s keeping an eye on you, making sure you’re not threatening any family or anything. “That was really, really, really special.” Putnam also saw giraffes and lions in their natural habitat on that trip several years ago. In fact, one lion – who was about 150 yards away – roared so loudly he remembers that the sound “rattled our rib cages.” And when the group got between a mother elephant and her baby, she began to flop her ears and charge and “you quickly realize how small you are,” he says. Putnam wants those experiences to be available for his two children and his grandkids. He knows that if conservationists hadn’t start protecting the silverback gorillas 50 or 60 years ago, he wouldn’t have had the opportunity to see them. That’s why he’s trying to think outside the box – and why he hopes to bring attention to sustainability and conquering climate change. “It’s all interconnected,” Putnam says. “I love ideas and I love to continually learn. And so, it’s all connected for me – whether it’s picking up trash in Reno in the lake or going to see silverback gorillas and Bitcoin. As random as it is it’s all part of the same story for me. “It’s fun to kind of keep learning.”

Click here to read the full article

Having problems finding out how match bonuses work? Check this guide on match deposit bonuses at our partner site Hypercasinos.com!

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
Brooks Koepka+700
Justin Thomas+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
Click here for more...
PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Xander Schauffele+1400
Jon Rahm+1800
Collin Morikawa+2000
Brooks Koepka+2500
Justin Thomas+2500
Viktor Hovland+2500
Click here for more...
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
Viktor Hovland+2000
Justin Thomas+2500
Click here for more...
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
Click here for more...
Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

Related Post

Match recaps from Friday: WGC-Dell Technologies Match PlayMatch recaps from Friday: WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play

The World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play is back. Friday’s third round is the third of three days of group play. After Friday, the player with the best record in each of the 16 four-man pools will advance to knockout play (ties of two or more players will be broken via sudden-death playoff). Two rounds apiece will be played Saturday and Sunday to crown a champion. This is the only PGA TOUR event where players go mano-a-mano, and Austin Country Club is a perfect site for this format thanks to its offering of risk-reward holes. Upon the conclusion on Friday’s 32 matches and any sudden-death playoffs, 16 players will advance to weekend competition, where knockout play will commence Saturday morning in the Round of 16. As each group concludes its competition, this file will be updated to keep you apprised of the action from the TOUR’s only match play event. Return here often to learn about the latest upsets, comebacks and nail-biting finishes. FRIDAY RECAPS (Click here for live scores) (Click here for scenarios into Friday) GROUP 5 SCOTTIE SCHEFFLER (2-1-0) def. MATT FITZPATRICK (2-1-0), 5 and 4 Scheffler, a Match Play finalist in his debut a year ago, needed to win to stay alive in his group and got off to the ideal start, jumping out to a 3-up advantage after six holes. He nearly aced the par-3 fourth (3 feet) and won the sixth when Fitzpatrick tugged a drive left, next to an out-of-bounds fence. He scrambled for par, but Scheffler got up-and-down for birdie. A key turnabout came at the ninth: Fitzpatrick hit his approach to 11 feet, looking to cut into Scheffler’s 3-up lead. Scheffler was 29 feet away, facing a downhill, right-to-left putt. He rolled it in, and Fitzpatrick missed, Scheffler stretching his cushion to 4 up. Scheffler ended the match with birdies at the 13th and 14th holes. Both players finished group play at 2-1-0. Scheffler: “I didn’t really make any mistakes. I took advantage of a few mistakes he made early. He got a really bad break on our second hole (which Scheffler won with a par), and after that I started cruising and played some good golf. NOTE: A playoff between Fitzpatrick and Scheffler to decide a Group 5 winner is pending. IAN POULTER (1-2-0) def. TOMMY FLEETWOOD (1-2-0), 4 and 3 After two opening losses, match play’s Postman (he always delivers) broke through on Friday, making sure he did not exit Austin without at least one match victory. Poulter defeated his fellow Englishman pretty handily, never trailing in the match. Leading 1 up through four holes, Poulter went on a bit of a tear, starting the run with a pitch-in for eagle from behind the front right bunker at the 342-yard fifth hole. He birdied the par-5 sixth, won the eighth with a par, and when he rolled in a 16-foot birdie at the ninth, he was 4 up. Fleetwood made a nice birdie at the par-3 11th, but it was just a matter of time until Poulter closed the match out. He did so with his sixth consecutive par, winning the 15th hole. Poulter is 33-19-0 in his career at the Match Play, defeating Paul Casey for the title in 2010. GROUP 12 BILLY HORSCHEL ADVANCES BILLY HORSCHEL (2-0-1) tied THOMAS PIETERS (1-1-1) The first match out on the day and it was beautifully played from beginning to end. Yet Pieters walked off the 18th green heated, even though he made five birdies and no bogeys during the epic duel. That’s because Pieters was 2 up with two holes remaining and Horschel, who made six birdies in the match, made birdies on 17 and 18 to win the holes and tie the match overall. On the 17th green, Pieters had already made par and Horschel was standing over a birdie putt from 13 feet. He needed to make, or he’d have lost the match and would’ve been heading to a playoff to determine who would advance from the group. But the defending WGC-Dell Match Play champion calmly poured in the putt, then got up and down for birdie from 30 yards short of the 18th green, won the hole, tied the match and is moving on. Pieters missed a birdie attempt from outside 6 feet on the last hole that would’ve given him the victory. Pieters was 2 up after three holes and made birdies on the second, third and fourth holes. Horschel tied the match after birdie on the ninth hole, then Pieters went to 1-up on 13 when Horschel drove the ball into the water. Birdie on the par-5 16th from Pieters gave him the 2-up advantage before Horschel closed with the heroic finish to be able to continue his Match Play title defense. “I hung in there,” Horschel said. “I hit some really quality shots. Some of them didn’t turn out. I made some putts, which was nice to see. Being 2 down with two to go and knowing all I needed was a half to move on to Round of 16, that’s a real confidence boost to birdie the last two to get through.” TOM HOGE (0-2-1) tied MIN WOO LEE (1-1-1) Hoge was already eliminated before the match but still gave it a valiant effort, making birdie on the last hole to squeeze out a tie after being winless in his previous two matches. Hoge, who told reporters earlier in the week that he hadn’t played in a competitive match play event for 11 years, jumped out to an early 1-up lead, but Lee was 1 up at the turn. Lee went 2 up with a birdie on the 12th hole, but Hoge won the 13th with a par. Lee remained 1 up until the final hole, where he made a mess of it and drove it wildly left off the tee. That allowed Hoge to cruise, blasting a 342-yard drive and hit an approach to 7 feet to win the hole and tie the match. Lee had a chance to advance to the Round of 16 before the match started, but when Billy Horschel birdied the last two holes to tie his match against Thomas Pieters, Lee was officially eliminated before his match with Hoge ended. GROUP 13 SI WOO KIM (2-1-0) def. CHRISTIAAN BEZUIDENHOUT (0-3-0), 6 and 4 This match was lopsided from the opening tee shot and Kim was 5 up after seven holes. Bezuidenhout was eliminated before the match even started and didn’t put up much of a fight. He conceded the first hole, then Kim birdied the fourth, sixth and seventh holes, eagled the fifth hole and the match was quickly out of hand. Bezuidenhout made birdie on the 11th to cut into the lead, but Kim birdied No. 12 to move back to 5 up and then closed the match out on the 14th hole, not needing to play the final four. Bezuidenhout was winless on the week. With the match being over so quickly, Kim had to sit and wait to learn his fate. If Daniel Berger defeats Tyrrell Hatton, there will be a three-man playoff between Kim, Berger and Hatton. If Hatton wins or ties his match with Berger, Hatton advances.

Click here to read the full article

Dustin Johnson settles for 60 and THE NORTHERN TRUST lead on historic dayDustin Johnson settles for 60 and THE NORTHERN TRUST lead on historic day

NORTON, Mass. - Difficult as it may be in these unprecedented times of spectator-less arenas to generate spontaneous electricity, Dustin Johnson came close late in Friday's second round of THE NORTHERN TRUST at a TPC Boston golf course enveloped in pulsating warmth. He said he tried to birdie every hole and, good gracious, for the better part of his round he succeeded. If the birdie, eagle, birdie, eagle, birdie start wasn't enough of an attention-grabber, there were two more birdies to make the turn in 9-under 27. Then, to put your interest in a headlock, Johnson birdied the par-4 10th and par-3 11th. It was officially silly, wildly impressive, and seriously historic stuff in the making. To be 11-under through 11 holes and using just 13 putts to cover a whopping 128 feet was taking this game to a level that it had never been. RELATED: Full leaderboard | Scheffler cards 59 at THE NORTHERN TRUST So, when Johnson rode home in seven consecutive pars to shoot 60 and push to 15-under 127 and into a two-stroke lead, he was asked "condolences or congratulations?" No surprise, given his ability to shake things off is on a world-class level equal to his uncanny ball-striking skills, but Johnson smiled, then laughed. Well aware of what had transpired earlier in the day with Scottie Scheffler posting the 12th 59 in PGA TOUR history, Johnson said of bid to match him: "I don't really care. It's a good score. I'm happy with it." Honestly, playing competitor Marc Leishman nailed it when he said that Johnson produced the "easiest 11-under through 11 that you could think of." Yes, there was the 41-foot eagle putt at the 542-yard, par-5 second, and a 20-footer for birdie at the 208-yard, par-3 third. But the eagle putt at the 298-yard, par-4 fourth was from 5 feet, but the other birdie rolls - at Nos. 1, 5, 7, 8, 10 and 11 - well, they were all done the old-fashioned stripe-show way. "I was striking it really well," said Johnson, offering a potential understatement of the year, "just giving myself really good looks." Having teed off at 12:44 p.m., Johnson was early in his round when he saw that Scheffler had birdied the par-5 18th for his 59. "Good round," Johnson said to himself. Then he told himself to go lower. He wasn't alone in that sentiment. "We were pulling for him," said Leishman. "Fifty-nine didn't even seem like a question there for a while. (I was) wondering what the lowest score ever anyone had shot." On the PGA TOUR it's 58, by Jim Furyk in Round 4 of the Travelers Championship in 2016, but if the people who were following Johnson along the back nine at TPC Boston would be honest, there didn't appear to be any doubt that Johnson would surpass that. Not when he managed to two-putt from 48 feet at the course's most difficult hole, the 510-yard, par-4 12th. And not when he striped drives at 13 and 14 to give himself birdie tries from 12 and 20 feet. But when those putts leaked wide, you could sense the roll slipping away from. Driving it wide right into thick rough at the 15th, Johnson could do no better than a two-putt par from more than 50-feet. Long and left into a stiff wind at the par-3 16th, it was another lengthy two-putt, this time from 43 feet. So, going lower than 58 was out of reach. But surely, matching Scheffler at 59 appeared a safe bet, given that the par-4 17th and par-5 18th are birdie holes. (They rank as fifth easiest and easiest, respectively.) Ah, but just when you take this game for granted, golf happens. So brilliant with the putter all day, Johnson at the 397-yard 17th missed a 10-footer. He was stuck at 11-under and needed birdie at 18 to shoot 59. He knew what was at stake and didn't run from the challenge. "I wanted to shoot 59. I've never done it." Never? As in ever, even in a fun, recreational round? "I don't think so," he said. "Not that I remember, and I think I'd remember that." Likely what he will remember is a decision that he promptly regretted - he hit driver at the 18th. It's roughly 325 to a swale that runs in the middle of the fairway, a grass bunker, if you will, and Johnson reached it. It necessitated a lay-up, which led to an 83-yard wedge shot that left him a 26-foot putt for birdie. As he had done consistently since the 11th hole, he missed. Johnson confirmed that driver was the wrong club, that he likely could have hit 3-wood and a 6-iron to reach the green in two. But a go-to money shot for him is a "chip driver," a weapon that he uses effectively time and time again, like earlier in the round when he drove the green at No. 4. This time, the shot failed him. That is, if you could say anything failed him on a day when he shot a career low . . . on a day when he pushed to 15-under 127 through 36 holes to seize a two-shot lead over Scheffler and unheralded Aussie Cameron Davis (65) . . . on a day when he made a case for 60 being better than 59 . . . on a day when he did the impossible and plugged excitement into an arena without fans.

Click here to read the full article