Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Wolff’s Mayakoba lead down to 2 with late bogeys

Wolff’s Mayakoba lead down to 2 with late bogeys

Matthew Wolff bogeyed the 16th and 18th holes on Friday and settled for a two-shot lead over Scottie Scheffler in the World Wide Technology Championship.

Click here to read the full article

Do you want to gamble with Litecoin? Check this list of the best casinos to play with Litecoin!

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
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
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

Gator eyes Talor GoochGator eyes Talor Gooch

AVONDALE, La. – A congregation of alligators were eyeing off Talor Gooch as a snack during the opening round of the Zurich Classic on Thursday, forcing him to seek the rarely used free relief for a dangerous situation.  Gooch had just pushed his second shot on the closing par-5 18th hole at TPC Louisiana a touch, landing in a bunker near one of the many water hazards on the course. But when he reached his ball there were three pretty ornery alligators just a few feet away. Playing in the same group, Chesson Hadley managed to scare away two of the offenders with a bunker rake but one was having none of it. “I like my life. I like it with all my limbs. So I stay away from those things,â€� Gooch said afterwards. The Oklahoma State product called in PGA TOUR rules official Steve Carman to get a ruling and after Carman’s unsuccessful attempts to scare it away with a rake and a golf umbrella, Gooch was permitted to take relief. He pulled his ball back 10 yards, still in the bunker, but with the gators ahead of him where he could at least see them. “The third one was eating the rake basically, so we decided that we would not take the chance,â€� 27-year-old Gooch said. “They weren’t happy with us… I’m sure we would have been fine but any little movement by them – no chance I could make solid contact. “We went back in the bunker a little bit – unfortunately when you take a drop in the bunker you are going to get a terrible lie – but I chose life over a good lie in the bunker.â€� For the record, he made a pretty decent par. Gooch and partner Andrew Landry, who won the Valero Texas Open last week, combined for a 6-under 66 in Four-ball to open the tournament. They sit six shots back of the lead heading into Friday’s alternate shot.

Click here to read the full article

Brandt Snedeker’s battle to return to the courseBrandt Snedeker’s battle to return to the course

The hardest part is the uncertainty. Every other time Brandt Snedeker has been sidelined by an injury, like when he was on crutches after having hip surgery, not once, but twice, there was a target date to hold onto. In six weeks, the doctors would tell him, you’ll be hitting balls again. Or, maybe four, they’d say. But there was always a timeline so Snedeker could plan his PGA TOUR comeback. This issue with the manubrium joint in his chest is different, though. Doctors told him he had two options – rest and let it heal or have surgery to insert a metal plate attached to the upper and lower sternum. Snedeker, not surprisingly, chose rest. And therein lies the problem. Doctors can’t tell him definitively when he’ll have rested enough. It’s a wait-and-see proposition made more frustrating by the fact that otherwise, he feels fine. “It’s not restricting my everyday life whatsoever,� Snedeker says. “I’m able to work out. I’m able to do everything I want to do. It’s just the vibration of hitting golf balls that causes pain. “The only way I’m going to figure it out is hitting golf balls again and I need to try and give it as much time as possible to heal.� Snedeker tried to play through it. After all, the doctors told him he couldn’t do any more damage. But he had to withdraw from the Open Championship, the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational and the PGA. And when he found himself almost flinching when he hit golf balls on the Sunday prior to the Wyndham Championship, Snedeker knew enough was enough. Even though he was ranked 57th in the FedExCup, which he won in 2012, the eight-time TOUR champ decided to call it a season. “You’ve got to be smart and not risk developing a huge problem in your golf game by trying to play through something for a few weeks,� Snedeker says. “It was just time to make sure I got healthy and figure out what was going on with my body. “The last thing I want to do is go out there and not be able to practice the way I want to practice and not put the time in and go through the motions, which is how you create bad habits and lose confidence. “And if you lose confidence at golf, it’s hard to get it back.� So, Snedeker hasn’t hit a golf ball in four weeks. He probably could chip and putt but he’s chosen not to because he doesn’t want to chance trying too much, too soon. “My biggest fear right now is setting myself back,� Snedeker says. He takes medication to try to get the inflammation in the joint to subside. He’s changed his diet an estimated 180 degrees, cutting out sugars and carbohydrates to help it calm down, too.   “It’s been pretty miserable, I’m not going to lie,� Snedeker says. “It’s no fun not being able to eat stuff I like to eat.� Snedeker also wears a bone stimulator for 30 or 40 minutes every day. He describes it as a wrap that goes around his chest. There’s a “halo-looking� device, he says, that sends electric currents into the joint to stimulate healing. “I am doing everything I can to get this thing to heal up and solidify but it’s just such a weird injury, freak thing to have happen,� he says. “With no real trauma to cause it, it’s been a head-scratcher for just about every doctor I’ve been to see.� While being on the sidelines has been difficult professionally, Snedeker has enjoyed the unexpected time with his wife Mandy and their two children, 6-year-old Lily and Austin, who turns 5 next month. He’s been able to devote more time to the Brandt and Mandy Snedeker Foundation that helps children in middle Tennessee, too. “It’s been great to be home with the kids and be a dad again and see what every day life’s been like for them,� Snedeker says. “But I think they’re probably getting tired of me by now.� His absence has not gone unnoticed on TOUR, either. So many of his peers have called and texted to check up on him that Snedeker says he’s been “overwhelmed.� And he’s kept up with his friends on TOUR as a spectator, watching the broadcasts on TV, even though it reminds him of what he’s missing. Snedeker hasn’t been surprised by what he’s seen in the first two Playoffs events. He expected Dustin Johnson, who won THE NORTHERN TRUST, to rise to the occasion in the Playoffs. “He kind of has ebbs and flows like that every year and I thought he was due for another good run,� he says. “It’s pretty impressive to watch … the way he played the back nine and made birdies when he had to.� And Jordan Spieth has been playing “unbelievable golf,� Snedeker says, contending just about every week. Justin Thomas’ rise hasn’t been lost on the 36-year-old, either. “One thing I always thought about Justin, if he ever figured out how to save those shots in a round, he was going to be tough to beat because he makes so many birdies and he’s such a dominant player when he’s playing like that,� Snedeker says. “I guess the switch kind of flipped over this year. “You don’t win a major championship being able to limit your mistakes and he’s kind of figured it out.� Snedeker won’t be playing the BMW Championship next week at Conway Farms for just the second time in the 11-year history of the FedExCup. Ditto for the TOUR Championship at East Lake, which he won in 2012 on the way to pocketing the $10 million bonus. So Snedeker knows all too well what he is missing. “Those are two of my favorite tournaments,� Snedeker says. “Conway’s a great test. … Seems like every year we’ve been there there’s always drama going on, on the last hole. “And East Lake’s such a cool place. It’s kind of bittersweet not being there. … It’s such a cool feeling being there in that event.� Sometime in the next two weeks, though, Snedeker will have an MRI that will hopefully enable him to put together a plan for his return to competition. But he’s not going to get ahead of himself. “It will be a slow process,� Snedeker explains. “It won’t be go hit balls today, play 18 tomorrow. It will be a ball count kind of thing try to see judge how the sternum is going to feel going back into full bore again. “Hopefully I’ll be better suited to handle the stress and the forces I put on my body when swinging a golf club.� And he’ll know when it’s time.

Click here to read the full article

Harry Higgs’ walk-off albatross sets up title push at Safeway OpenHarry Higgs’ walk-off albatross sets up title push at Safeway Open

NAPA, Calif. - Harry Higgs body slammed his 4-iron into the Silverado Resort and Spa North Course fairway and jumped in the air in what one could kindly call a chaotic celebration. The 28-year-old character then raised his arms outstretched, signaling to a non-existent crowd to show him love, before accepting elbow bumps from those in his group. Welcome to an albatross, Higgs style. Higgs had just made an incredible two from 230 yards on the par-5 ninth hole, his final hole of the second round at the Safeway Open, to card a 10-under 62 and move to just two shots off the clubhouse lead held by Sam Burns. With the Safeway Open another being played without on-site spectators thanks to COVID-19 protocols it was a strange moment for Higgs, who is without doubt one of the bigger personalities and characters on the PGA TOUR. "I don’t think anybody really would have seen it anyway. No one really goes and watches that hole, they’re all behind one drinking wine and champagne like my family was last year," Higgs said. "If that was on 18, that would have been obviously sick and then Lord knows what the reaction’s like when there’s people around ... I tend to do some crazy stuff if people start chanting my name." In fact, rather than take it up a few more notches Higgs revealed he suddenly had a serious concern on his mind as he continued walking towards the green to retrieve his ball. How would he get his nap in now. Higgs, who finished 55th in the FedExCup as a rookie last season, was bouncing off the walls after the sensational finish to a bogey-free round. Just moments before the shot he'd been telling his brother, who acts as his caddie, that he couldn't wait to finish and get to bed. "I hope that I can calm down in an hour so I can take a nap. I was looking forward to a nap all day long and I might be too jacked up now to actually fall asleep," Higgs laughed. "What a wonderful way to end the day. I couldn’t see it disappear ...but I finally hit one like on the button solid. Drew a little bit, obviously landed soft, rolled right in the hole. The volunteer off the left just started screaming and then he said, “It’s in the hole, it’s in the hole!” and then I had a little panic freak out, jump for joy and then I threw my club. I’m sure it looked funny and ridiculous. I’m sure it could probably be a “not top‑10 play” just based on the poor reaction that I gave it." That volunteer was George Kennedy who couldn't believe what he had just witnessed. Of the three stationed around the ninth green only Kennedy saw it. Another was getting lunch at the time and the last had his head down entering data into the ShotLink tablet. "I'm still on a high from it. The ball went pop, bop and clunk. It was a once in a lifetime type deal that you see," Kennedy said. "It’s really weird out here without the fans because they add so much energy and we have to be the energy of a couple thousand people." Another volunteer, Rufus Arther, was the beneficiary of the ball itself. Arther had acted as walking scorer for the round and was stunned when Higgs signed it and handed it over to him. "It was incredible. This is going to go in my trophy case and it’s going to be a special memory from not just this tournament but all my volunteering experience because you just don’t see something like this every day," Arther, who is in his seventh year as a walking scorer at the Safeway Open, said. "I’m definitely a Harry Higgs fan now. He’s such a likable guy and it couldn’t happen to a better person. I’m hoping he continues to do well as it was such a pleasure sharing this experience with him." Higgs could have kept the ball as a keepsake but was, as always, up front and honest as to why he didn't. "I would lose it, and I don’t have a cabinet. I thought about just tossing it in the bag but Rufus was with us today, I just signed it, “Thanks for going with us, 2 on No. 9” a couple exclamation points, signed it and handed it to him," Higgs added. "I figure that was better than me keeping it and losing it." Prior to the albatross Higgs had seven birdies, six of those came on the back side of the course, his front nine on Friday. Through two rounds he is 8 under on the back side and 5 under on the front. Three of those gained shots on the front side came from the one incredible shot. With a career best finish of runner-up at last season's Bermuda Championship, where he held the 54-hole lead only to be run down by Brendon Todd, Higgs is excited for the chance to go one better. "I’ve not played that front nine very well. I’ve got the back nine down, played the front nine fine, just haven’t made enough birdies, so I figured I’d make up for it holing my second on the last," he grinned. ‘"It gives me a nice little boost going into the weekend. I’ve got to keep doing it. It’s not like 13 under is going to win. Maybe sprinkle in another albatross on nine or whatever other hole. Those help, for sure."

Click here to read the full article