Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting The new Korn Ferry Tour grads you need to know in 2021-22

The new Korn Ferry Tour grads you need to know in 2021-22

If Xander Schauffele’s correct, the deepest class in Korn Ferry Tour history is about to hit the PGA TOUR at this week’s Fortinet Championship. Schauffele’s theory comes from the fact that the 2021 Korn Ferry Tour class faced a season unlike any other – a 46-tournament, two-year season with a nearly three-month break in the middle of it. RELATED: Meet the Korn Ferry Tour Finals 25 | Meet the 25 players who earned TOUR cards through the Korn Ferry Tour regular season Among the 50 cards, 28 are rookies – 19 from the Korn Ferry Tour Regular Season Points List and nine from the Korn Ferry Tour Finals. Among those 28 rookies includes the 2020 NCAA Player of the Year (Sahith Theegala), multiple European Tour winners (Aaron Rai, Lucas Herbert, Kurt Kitayama, David Lipsky), a former college walk-on, a player with a 58 and 59 to his credit, and even one who quit professional golf for a year and caddied on the LPGA. Here’s a sampling of the new Korn Ferry Tour grads to know this week and going forward as they begin their journey on the PGA TOUR. GREYSON SIGG As PGA TOUR member Keith Mitchell likes to tell it, Greyson Sigg, or “Pigeon” as he’s more affectionately known by Mitchell and his former Georgia teammates, gets out of bed hitting baby draws. “He hits a five-yard draw with every single club throughout the bag, and he hits it dead straight and doesn’t try to do it. His natural game is perfect,” Mitchell said incredulously. “Not everybody wakes up and just hits it perfect like Greyson. A lot of people have to actually try to do that, but he just wakes up out of bed and hits a five-yard draw.” That’s a skill that’s already proven handy for Sigg on the PGA TOUR, with five straight made cuts including a T9 at the 2021 Corales Puntacana Resort and Club Championship. On the Korn Ferry Tour, he tore it up, too, finishing second in the Points Standings with two wins. “Greyson’s a stud. He stripes it, absolutely stripes it,” said former Georgia teammate Sepp Straka. When Sigg goes low, he goes lower than about anyone else on the planet can. The 25-year-old was only the second player in Forme Tour history to post a sub-60 score with a final-round 59 at the 2019 Golf BC Championship. He went even lower in a round with friends that summer, shooting a 58. HAYDEN BUCKLEY In mid-February, Hayden Buckley found out 15 minutes before his tee time that he got in the field at the LECOM Suncoast Classic. He hit 10 balls before his round and went on to win four days later in a three-way playoff. Now, seven months later, Buckley is a PGA TOUR member for the first time after finishing seventh on the Korn Ferry Tour Finals Points Standings with two top-10s in three events. The 25-year-old Mississippi native walked on at Missouri and left with the lowest scoring average in program history. It’s the same theme of proving people wrong at every level. “He was that kid with a chip on his shoulder,” said Mizzou coach Mark Leroux. “He knew what he wanted to do was to play professional golf, and he was going to do whatever it took to get there.” Buckley, who likes to bring his guitar with him on the road, turned pro in 2018 and won on the Forme Tour in 2019 before earning Korn Ferry Tour status. He only has three career PGA TOUR starts at this point, but it’s the consistent growth of his game at every level that leaves no ceiling at the next level. JUSTIN LOWER Arguably the best story among all the rookies, Justin Lower, an 11th-year pro, has experienced the entire gamut of heartbreak and disappointment in professional golf. He’s gone to Q-School six times. He’s played the mini-tours for years, grinding to keep the dream alive. In 2018, he missed his PGA TOUR card by a single shot after missing an 8-foot on the 72nd hole but still found the class through disappointment to find his good buddy, Jim Knous who got in off his missed putt, to congratulate him on his TOUR card. This season, he lost the 54-hole lead at the BMW Charity Pro-Am presented by SYNNEX Corporation and finished just shy of the top 25 at 30th on the Regular Season Points Standings. But there is zero quit in Justin Lower. The 32-year-old finally got redemption and achieved his dream at the 2021 Korn Ferry Tour Championship presented by United Leasing & Finance, getting up-and-down from 30 yards on the 72nd hole to secure TOUR membership for the first time by a single shot with a T15 finish. For anyone looking for a rookie to cheer for, there’s no one more deserving than Lower, who also was the 2010 NAIA player of the year. CURTIS THOMPSON Curtis Thompson still isn’t sure what happened but after three years on the Korn Ferry Tour in which he led the Tour in driving distance from 2015-2017, he lost his game. “I tried to play but just never had it,” Thompson recalls. So, he walked away at the end of 2018 and spent the next year thinking he’d never play competitive golf again. He comes from a family of golfers – sister, Lexi, is a star on the LPGA and brother, Nicholas, has played on the PGA TOUR – and wasn’t sure what he wanted to do next, so he spent some time caddying to clear his head before friends convinced him that he wasn’t done yet. He even caddied for Lexi for four events and made $70,000, which was enough to help him keep the dream alive financially. The time away to reset turned out to be all he needed to engineer the ultimate comeback. After a year away from competitive golf, he won final stage of Q-School that fall. Now, nearly two years later, he’s heading to the PGA TOUR for the first time after finishing 23rd on the combined Korn Ferry Tour Points Standings (Regular Season and KFT Finals). Even more impressive than perhaps his work on the golf course is over the last two years, Thompson also went back to LSU and finished up the requirements he needed to get his college degree. JOSH CREEL Josh Creel, 31, will become only the second PGA TOUR member ever from Wyoming. The Cheyenne native was the 2012 Division II Player of the Year at Central Oklahoma but didn’t secure fully exempt status on the Korn Ferry Tour until 2019. In 2019, he missed an 8-footer in Utah for a win and his PGA TOUR card. But Creel got redemption over the last four months. Entering late June outside of the top 100 on the Korn Ferry Tour Points standings and facing a return to Q-School, the 31-year-old posted a runner-up and a win to secure entry into the Korn Ferry Tour Finals and then posted back-to-back top-10s to close out the Korn Ferry Tour Finals and secure a PGA TOUR card for the first time. “It means everything. It’s a big check off the list,” Creel said. “It’s obviously not the end goal. You want to stay out there for as long as you can, but it’s a big steppingstone for us, so I’m excited.” Creel and his wife are expecting their first child, a baby boy named Colt, in January. TAYLOR MOORE Taylor Moore, 28, turned pro in 2016 and made it look easy early on. He won almost immediately on the Forme Tour and finished third on the Order of Merit. He nearly got his TOUR card in 2017 and 2018 with 38th- and 37th-place finishes on the Korn Ferry Tour Points standings, respectively. But after making four starts in 2019, Moore’s lung collapsed, and he was out for more than three months. When he returned, the scar tissue in his chest and back from his surgery was causing back issues and tightness in his swing and he struggled to regain form the rest of 2019 and most of 2020. Desperate for a fix in the offseason of 2020, he tried neural injection therapy. It worked and it’s been off to the races ever since. In 20 starts in 2021, he posted 12 top-10s including his first career Korn Ferry Tour win at the Memorial Health Championship presented by LRS. Now, the former Arkansas Razorback is TOUR-bound for the first time and set to make his first TOUR start since 2017. NICK HARDY As a child, Hardy wrote an essay saying one day his dream was to be a PGA TOUR player. That dream is now a reality as the 25-year-old secured TOUR status for the first time this season. While Hardy may be a rookie on the PGA TOUR, he’s looked like a future TOUR player for a while. The former University of Illinois product made the cut at the 2015 U.S. Open as a 19-year-old and was a two-time Big 10 Champion and First-Team All-American before turning pro in 2018. After a disappointing year in 2019, Hardy secured full status on the Korn Ferry Tour with a fifth-place finish at the final stage of Q-School, and he’s taken advantage with a 21st-place on the combined Korn Ferry Tour Points Standings. Overall, although he didn’t win, he was one of the more consistent players with 34 made cuts in 41 starts including 10 top-10s. “I just feel like I’m ready (for the PGA TOUR),” Hardy said. “I really do believe I belong.” Hardy had some success on TOUR in 2021, too, advancing through Monday qualifiers at both the Sony Open in Hawaii and Waste Management Phoenix Open on his way to T14 and T42 finish at each. LEE HODGES Thanks to the PGA TOUR’s new rule allowing the current top 10 on the Korn Ferry Tour Points Standings to play in opposite field events, Lee Hodges should feel quite comfortable in his first start as a rookie at the Fortinet Championship. Hodges has made his last four cuts on TOUR, including top-15s at both the Puerto Rico Open (T13) and Barracuda Championship (T11). After turning pro in 2018, the former University of Alabama product cut his teeth on the Forme Tour in 2018 with a 15th-place finish and then has enjoyed a steady climb on the Korn Ferry Tour. He finished 73rd in the Korn Ferry Tour Points Standings after getting up-and-down on the 72nd hole for birdie to keep his job at the regular-season finale in 2019. That proved a prelude to an even better second and third year on the Korn Ferry Tour as Hodges won the 2020 WinCo Foods Portland Open presented by Kraft Heinz and made 32 of 37 cuts on his way to an eighth-place finish on the Korn Ferry Tour Points Standings. TAYLOR PENDRITH Seventh-year pro Taylor Pendrith fought through palm, wrist and shoulder injuries and having to drop back down to the Mackenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada before securing his PGA TOUR card for the first time. Long one of the longest hitters in professional golf, Pendrith secured Korn Ferry Tour membership for the first time in 2016 after finishing third on the Forme Tour Order of Merit. The Ontario, Canada, native finished 103rd in the Points Standings in 2016 and it took three years largely on the Forme Tour to work his way back after enduring a freak palm injury that made it difficult to hold a club. Pendrith, who didn’t start golf until he was a teenager, won twice on the Forme Tour in 2019 to regain Korn Ferry Tour status and hasn’t slowed down since, with four runners-up in 37 starts on his way to a fifth-place finish on the Regular Season Points Standings. Pendrith played at Kent State with fellow PGA TOUR members Mackenzie Hughes and Corey Conners and was introduced to his wife, Meg, through Conners and his wife. CHAD RAMEY No player on the Korn Ferry Tour was more consistent this season than Chad Ramey. The 29-year-old made his last 26 cuts with 11 top-10s, including a win and four other top-threes. In June, he won the Live in Maine Open for his first win since his junior year of college. Making that win even more special was his father, Stanley, who is a golf course superintendent and taught him the game, was on the bag. Ramey, who left Mississippi State with the lowest scoring average in program history, turned pro in 2014 and spent a couple years on the mini-tours before gaining Korn Ferry Tour status for the first time in 2018. It’s been a steady climb since from 94th in 2018 to fourth on the Korn Ferry Tour Points Standings in 2021. Ramey grew up in the small town of Fulton, Mississippi, which is home to less than 4,000 people, with LPGA pro Ally Ewing. BRANDON WU After helping his team win the 2019 NCAA Championship at Stanford, Brandon Wu qualified for both the U.S. Open (T35) and Open Championship (MC) before representing the United States in that year’s Walker Cup. He made the cut and was forced to miss Stanford’s graduation but received his Stanford degree as he came off the 18th green. His professional career looked to be off to the races, but he only gained conditional status at final stage of Q-School. Thanks to the three-month COVID break and conditional status, his first Korn Ferry Tour start in 2020 didn’t come until late July, where he finished T9 to set off a run to the PGA TOUR. Wu went on to win the 2020 Korn Ferry Tour Championship in his sixth start six weeks later and secured his TOUR card for the first time with a 16th-place finish on the Korn Ferry Tour Points Standings. In February of this year, Wu, playing off top-10 status on the Korn Ferry Tour, held the 36-hole lead at the Puerto Rico Open, an opposite field event, on his way to a T7 finish.

Click here to read the full article

Do you like other ways of online slots and want to learn about their volatility? WHAT IS SLOT VOLATILITY AND WHY IS IT IMPORTANT? will answer all your questions!

KLM Open
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Joakim Lagergren+375
Ricardo Gouveia+650
Connor Syme+850
Francesco Laporta+1200
Andy Sullivan+1400
Richie Ramsay+1400
Oliver Lindell+1600
Jorge Campillo+2500
Jayden Schaper+2800
David Ravetto+3500
Click here for more...
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
Click here for more...
US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Rory McIlroy+650
Bryson DeChambeau+700
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Shane Lowry+3500
Click here for more...
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
Click here for more...
Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

Related Post

2019-20 PGA TOUR full-membership fantasy rankings2019-20 PGA TOUR full-membership fantasy rankings

To burn or not to burn a start. That again will be a familiar question. After a season without any rewards for actual finish in a tournament, PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf has brought back bonus points. All starters in every final round will earn bonuses equivalent to one-tenth of FedExCup points earned in the tournament proper. While cuts made and fantasy points totaled using ShotLink data will remain relevant, sizable swings are possible. Forty-three tournaments are segregated into four Segments. The first Segment begins with A Military Tribute at the Greenbrier and extends through The RSM Classic, thus spanning all 10 weeks of action before the holiday break. Please visit the platform for How to Play, Rules and Prizes. Meanwhile, PGA TOUR Fantasy One & Done will not launch immediately. That game is under review. An update could be available before the end of the year. For everyone else, it’s time for my annual full-membership fantasy ranking. If you’re new to it, welcome! If you’re a returning reader-gamer, welcome back! Unlike my weekly Power Rankings and other preview material that focus on individual tournaments, the full-membership fantasy ranking of 243 golfers is a guide. It’s one-stop shopping for long-term value and all kinds of nuggets of information for all kinds of purposes. It’s the file that you bookmark and resource later, but the corners never dog-ear. The full-membership fantasy ranking isn’t a prediction piece. It presents projections for full-season fantasy formats. This is to say that if you disagree with any golfer’s ranking specifically, leverage your opinion in your league because that’s where it’s relevant. The 2019-20 schedule has 49 events, three more than last season, but only the Bermuda Championship (opposite the World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions on Oct. 31-Nov. 3) is new. After sitting out a season due to the shifted schedule, A Military Tribute at the Greenbrier (Sept. 12-15) and the Houston Open (Oct. 10-13) have returned. 2020 also is a Ryder Cup year. This usually impacts dual-tour European members of the PGA TOUR who are on the bubble to qualify nearer the deadline, but it’s not a red light for all. This biennial variable doesn’t impact any golfer’s ranking, but keep it in mind regarding decisions for any investments next summer. FULL-MEMBERSHIP RANKINGS: Intro | 1-50 | 51-100 | 101-150 | 151-200 | 201-243 | Cheat sheet It’s impossible to predict how notable modifications to tournaments will affect any one golfer’s fantasy value, but this advance knowledge will assist league commissioners and weekly gamers: The 36-hole cut has been reduced to low 65 and ties. The secondary cut after 54 holes (“MDF”) has been removed. Therefore, all golfers who survived a 36-hole cut are guaranteed to play through to the final round. All five additional events will have fields of 120. Previously, each reserved space for 132. Indicated by its new name, The Genesis Invitational no longer is an open. Its field has been reduced from 144 to 120 and the winner will receive a three-year membership exemption à la the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard and the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide. All golfers who were eligible for membership accepted. Each is included in the ranking as well as all non-members inside the Top 50 of the latest Official World Golf Ranking (Sept. 2). Lucas Bjerregaard, Matthew Fitzpatrick, Doc Redman and Matt Wallace are first-time members, but none is a rookie. Each would have finished inside the top 125 of the FedExCup last season. Despite making only 14 starts with fully exempt status last season, Martin Kaymer begins 2019-20 with conditional status. The decision on why he is eligible is explained in his COMMENT. The three non-members in the top 50 of the latest OWGR are included in the ranking: Bernd Wiesberger (41st in the OWGR), Eddie Pepperell (43rd) and Hao Tong Li (50th). Life Members Davis Love III and Vijay Singh as well as PGA Professional National champion Alex Beach (allowed six restricted starts) are excluded. When you review the ranking, you’ll see five columns. “2018-19 EARNINGS” is geared toward salary gamers. Wins are not assumed for any golfers, but asterisks beside earnings indicate a projection that the golfer will earn measurably more in 2019-20. It would be redundant to tag an asterisk beside golfers’ 2018-19 salaries valued as “–” (meaning $0), so rely on overall position and the COMMENT for projected value. STATUS for every golfer also is listed. It’s the most important component to gauge long-term value because it identifies the most lucrative events for which a golfer already is exempt, which in turn helps determine how far in advance a golfer can set his schedule. STATUS … BERTHS Top 125 in FedExCup points in 2018-19 … Projects entry into every open and the following the invitationals: Desert Classic, The Genesis Invitational, RBC Heritage, THE PLAYERS. Top 80 … Top 125 exemptions plus entry into the Charles Schwab Challenge. Top 70 … Top 80 exemptions plus entry into the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by MasterCard and Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide. Top 60 … Top 70 exemptions plus entry into the THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES and ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP, both of which will make room for the top 60 available. Top 30 … Exemptions into every tournament before the Playoffs except the winners-only Sentry Tournament of Champions, the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play, the PGA Championship and the World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational. As a complement, click on the Cheat Sheet. It’s a one-page printable visual to assist you in your draft. My rules of fantasy golf are rules for life: 1) Have fun; 2) Listen and learn; 3) Remain fluid. They matter. Prove why.

Click here to read the full article

Stats Report: CIMB Classic, Round 1Stats Report: CIMB Classic, Round 1

After Thursday’s first round at the CIMB Classic, Bronson Burgoon leads alone at 9 under par. In pursuit 1 stroke behind is Austin Cook, who is then followed by a trio of players at 7 under par. However, the clear frontrunner in terms of win probability is Justin Thomas, who sits one shot further back at 6 under par. Here are the top 10 win probabilities according to our live predictive model. Thomas is in a league of his own this week according to our model. He is estimated to be 2.1 strokes better than the average PGA TOUR professional, while the second-best player in this field, Paul Casey, is estimated at just 1.2 strokes above the average professional. Thomas’ pre-tournament win probability was 14 percent; his 6 under par 66 on Thursday increased that number by 5 percentage points. Thomas has been a model of consistency over the last year and a half. Shown below are Thomas’ adjusted strokes-gained (“True SG�) by event since 2015. The 2017 Open Championship is highlighted because this is the last time Justin Thomas had negative adjusted strokes-gained in an event, a remarkable achievement. The CIMB Classic is one of the easier events to win on the PGA TOUR schedule; we estimate it to be similar to the John Deere Classic or the AT&T Byron Nelson. That being said, it is a great feat to win any PGA TOUR event. Even this week, where Justin Thomas is clearly in the best form of any player in this field, he still only has about a 1 in 7 chance of winning at the start of the week. This speaks to the variability in golfer performance, and lends credibility to the idea that “on any given day, anyone can win� in professional golf. NOTE: These reports are based off the live predictive model run by @DataGolf. The model provides live “Make Cut�, “Top 20�, “Top 5�, and “Win� probabilities every 5 minutes from the opening tee shot to the final putt of every PGA TOUR event. Briefly, the model takes account of the current form of each golfer as well as the difficulty of their remaining holes, and probabilities are calculated from 10K simulations. To follow live finish probabilities throughout the remainder of the CIMB Classic, or to see how each golfer’s probabilities have evolved from the start of the event to the current time, click here for the model’s home page.

Click here to read the full article