Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Sahith Theegala wins fans in WM Phoenix Open close call

Sahith Theegala wins fans in WM Phoenix Open close call

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – Sahith Theegala met with the media and tried to compose himself. RELATED: Leaderboard | Get to know Sahith Theegala in 10 stories | Inside Sam Ryder’s epic ace on WM Phoenix Open’s 16th hole He had just come one shot short of a playoff at the WM Phoenix Open, the killing stroke a tee shot that took a bad bounce into the water at the short, par-4 17th hole, leading to a bogey. His whole family had been here. So had his old coach at Pepperdine, and his coach’s young boys. “Sorry,” Theegala said as he fought back the tears. The cameras waited. “I thought I hit a great shot on 17,” he said. “It was cutting. As long as it’s another yard right, I think that’s perfect. Kick straight and it’s good. Kicked left into the water there. “Then I was worried about the ball – it was such a steep slope,” he continued. “I was worried about the ball kind of rolling back, so I maybe rushed my process just a little bit there and hit a poor chip and hit a poor putt. I just didn’t hit the shots at the right time when it counted, but definitely proud of the way I played this week.” All week Theegala, 24, said he’d already won just by being here. He only learned he’d gotten into the field as a sponsor’s exemption two weeks ago; given that he otherwise would’ve been watching from his couch, anything he did was gravy. As it turned out, there was a lot of gravy. Star-struck all week, he learned that he can go toe-to-toe with the players he used to watch on TV. He also won something that won’t show up in the FedExCup table, namely the admiration of a whole lot of new fans. By the end they were chanting his last name and giving him a loud ovation after his last-ditch birdie chip skittered past the cup on the 18th hole. After making the comebacker for par, Theegala signed for a final-round 70 that left him in a tie for third with Brooks Koepka and Xander Schauffele, one back. Then he went down to meet the media. What did he learn? What did we learn? Most importantly, a lot of people learned what those in his inner circle already knew, that you can’t know Theegala without liking him. All you had to do was check out what friends and family did to get here. Sahan, his little brother and a freshman at Seton Hall, sat on a snowy tarmac in Newark for two hours before making the journey west Sunday morning and landing in time to join his parents, cousin, uncles and assorted others watch perhaps the biggest round of Sahith’s young life. The two hugged when Sahith caught a glimpse of him outside the ropes on the eighth tee. “Oh, I was so surprised,” Sahith said. “I couldn’t believe it … the middle of the school year on a Sunday. He’s going to have to go back and go to school. That’s incredible that he did that.” Meanwhile, Michael Beard, who was Sahith’s coach at Pepperdine, gathered up his two young sons and an assistant coach and flew from Southern California to Phoenix. “I’m wearing the ring to give him good luck,” Beard said, flashing the national championship ring Pepperdine won last year, after Theegala turned pro. “He got one, too. He was such a positive influence on our kids and program, we felt he deserved it. “He’s one of those people,” Beard continued, “you can’t be around him and not really like him.” Vying to become the first sponsor’s exemption to win since Martin Laird at the 2020 Shriners Children’s Open, Theegala made no secret of being wide-eyed. Playing with guys like Koepka and Schauffele? Incredible, he said. They were so nice, he said. But don’t be fooled; Theegala himself is an incandescent talent, tabbed for stardom for a while now. An All-American at Pepperdine, he became just the fifth player to sweep the major awards as the top collegiate golfer in 2020. He played the Korn Ferry Tour last season and did well enough to earn his TOUR card. He hits it forever and has an otherworldly short game. Muralidhar Theegala, Sahith’s father who moved from India to the United States and was more of a tennis player than a golfer, had an inkling he had a budding star. Sahith demonstrated a fondness for the big stage when he won the Junior World and other tournaments, and in the family’s garage Muralidhar hung a two-part wooden sign. It says: THE WORLD’S BEST GOLFER LIVES HERE. And: BETTER IN THE WOODS THAN A TIGER. This time the trophy wasn’t to be for Theegala, who still lives at home. But he was right: There’s winning in the strict constructionist style and winning in the larger sense. Those new fans will have his back when he tees it up at The Genesis Invitational in his hometown of Los Angeles later this week, and you can’t help but suspect another kind of win is coming.

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Best of the decade: The ultimate listicleBest of the decade: The ultimate listicle

Another decade has come and gone, leaving us to ponder the most indelible moments of the last 10 years on the PGA TOUR. Who hit the best shot? Who had the best season? Who pulled the most heartstrings? The answers are highly subjective, which is to say the following list is a mere conversation starter, something to get the arguments started. Here are the moments that stood out and demanded to be counted when sorting through the last decade. BEST OF THE DECADE: Top 10 players | Stats of the decade | Equipment developments BEST SEASON Jordan Spieth, 2014-2015 Five wins and a FedExCup in the year he turned 22. Spieth was phenomenal on the way to 15 top-10s from 25 starts. Along with wins at the Valspar Championship and John Deere Classic, he claimed the Masters and U.S. Open to give hope of a calendar grand slam. The Texan was one shot out of a playoff at The Open Championship and runner-up at the PGA Championship. He finished the season by winning the TOUR Championship and FedExCup. Four total runner-ups, a third and two fourths also on the resume. Add an unofficial win at the Hero World Challenge, a Presidents Cup, and a win at the Australian Open and that was a season to savor. Honorable mentions: Justin Thomas, 2016-17 (five wins and the FedExCup); Tiger Woods, 2013 (five wins). BEST WIN – THE PLAYERS CHAMPIONSHIP Rickie Fowler, 2015 Fowler prevailed in the greatest finish to THE PLAYERS Championship ever. Over the final hour, six players had hopes of winning, and four of them were tied for the lead. Fowler played the final four holes of regulation in birdie-eagle-birdie-birdie to set the pace in the clubhouse. But both Sergio Garcia and Kevin Kisner made huge birdies on the island 17th to join him setting up the first three-hole aggregate playoff over the 16th, 17th and 18th holes. Fowler and Kisner made two birdies each to eliminate Garcia, so on to sudden death at the island green. Kisner took dead aim and hit it to 12 feet. Fowler responded in style, throwing a dagger to five feet. After Kisner’s birdie attempt came up short, Fowler birdied the hole one more time for the biggest win of his career. Honorable mentions: Tiger Woods, 2013 (11 years after his first PLAYERS win); K.J. Choi, 2011 (playoff against David Toms). BEST WIN – WORLD GOLF CHAMPIONSHIPS Jason Day, 2014 WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play The epic final match between Day and Frenchman Victor Dubuisson was incredible theatre. Day had a 2-up lead through 16 holes and appeared to be heading to victory until Dubuisson produced magic in the Arizona desert. He birdied the 17th from a fairway bunker and watched Day three-putt the 18th to send it to extra holes. It looked a short reprieve when Dubuisson found the dreaded jumping cholla cactus on approach, but an incredible recovery shot kept him alive. One hole later, he ridiculously again escaped a trapped lie around the green to extend. It took five extra holes before Day prevailed. Among others, Day had beaten Louis Oosthuizen and Rickie Fowler to get to the final, and the win was a precursor to his dominance in 2015-16. Honorable mentions: Tiger Woods 2013 WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational; Phil Mickelson 2018 WGC-Mexico Championship BEST WIN – FEDEXCUP PLAYOFFS Rory McIlroy, 2016 TOUR Championship Three shots behind with three holes to play, McIlroy holed a pitching wedge from 137 yards for eagle on the par-4 16th to catapult into contention. His 6-under 64 got him into a three-way playoff against Ryan Moore and Kevin Chappell with the FedExCup and $10 million on the line for the Northern Irishman. Four playoff holes later, back at the 16th, McIlroy knocked in his 15-foot birdie putt to win the TOUR Championship and the FedExCup in dramatic fashion. Honorable mentions: Tiger Woods, 2018 TOUR Championship; Dustin Johnson, 2017 THE NORTHERN TRUST BEST WIN – MAJORS Tiger Woods, 2019 Masters No surprise here. Nearly 11 years, plus multiple back surgeries and other upheavals removed from his 14th major (2008 U.S. Open), Woods picked up No. 15 at the 2019 Masters. Many thought the day would never come, and for a while even Woods was among them. Honorable mentions: Adam Scott, 2013 Masters; Darren Clarke, 2011 Open Championship; Sergio Garcia, 2017 Masters; Shane Lowry, 2019 Open Championship FIVE MOST MEMORABLE SHOTS Bill Haas: 17th hole, East Lake Country Club, 2011 TOUR Championship, Round 4 With the FedExCup and $10 million on the line Haas pulled his approach on the penultimate hole of the tournament into the lake in Atlanta. Miraculously it sat in the mud, half submerged in the water, and Haas played a spectacular recovery shot to save par and ultimately take home the season-long championship. Phil Mickelson: 13th hole, Augusta National, 2010 Masters, Round 4 Mickelson had just taken the outright lead with birdie on 12 but hit his driver on 13 into the pine straw and behind two trees. Instead of just laying up, he convinced himself the percentage play was a 6-iron to the green on the iconic par 5. The incredible strike from a terrible lie, through a small gap and over the greenside creek, settled 4 feet from the pin and sent him on the way to a third green jacket. Jonathan Byrd: 17th hole, TPC Summerlin, 2010 Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, Playoff Byrd was locked in a three-man sudden death playoff with Martin Laird and Cameron Percy that had gone three holes without a winner. With darkness falling, the players were given the choice to come back Monday; Byrd said he’d let the others decide. They chose to go one more hole. Byrd then promptly made an ace on the 204-yard 17th with his 6-iron to secure the win. Bubba Watson: 10th hole, Augusta National, 2012 Masters, Playoff It was fitting that a “Bubba golfâ€� shot helped him secure his first Masters. On the second playoff hole against Louis Oosthuizen, the dogleg-left, par-4 10th, Watson sent his tee shot deep into the trees and onto the pine straw. With 163 yards left blocked by trees, Watson took a 52-degree wedge and hooked it an astonishing 45 yards onto the putting surface to help him close out the tournament. Jordan Spieth: 18th hole, TPC River Highlands, 2017 Travelers Championship, Playoff Stuck in a greenside bunker after two shots and his opponent Daniel Berger on the green in regulation in sudden death, Spieth produced a perfect sand shot to win his 10th TOUR title. The ball bounced twice and rolled right into the pin and dropped. Spieth’s club toss and chest bump with his caddie may be the most memorable celebration of the decade. FIVE BIGGEST DEVELOPMENTS IN GOLF Youth Infusion: Thanks to players like Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas, Jason Day and Hideki Matsuyama, 20-somethings won seven straight tournaments in 2015, the most since 1986, then did it again in ’16-17. As recently as the 1990s, golfers were thought to reach their competitive peak in their 30s, but now we don’t even bat an eye when players like Joaquin Niemann, 20, break through with victories (A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier) on the PGA TOUR. The Tiger effect? Yep. They’re flexible, they hit it a mile, and they just keep coming. Tiger’s resurgence: Back in 2017, it was easy to think Woods was finished, even if very few dared say it. He’d been through so much; his body, it seemed, had aged double-time, and even he suggested he might be done when he told the press he wasn’t sure what his future held, or even what he had to look forward to. But his spinal fusion surgery was a smashing success, and against all odds he reeled off his 80th, 81st and 82nd victories at the TOUR Championship, Masters, and ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP, all in a span of just 13 months. Finished? Hardly.   Rules and schedule changes: Admit it — when you came up in the game, you never envisioned a time when we would all be putting with the flagstick in. You thought the process of taking a drop was pretty much set in stone, forevermore. Oh, and the PGA Championship, once dubbed “Glory’s Last Shot,â€� was the fourth and final major of every season, and THE PLAYERS Championship was held in May. Well, so much for all of that. Thanks to the USGA, PGA of America and PGA TOUR, the Rules of Golf and the flow of the professional tournament schedule have evolved, looking drastically different than a decade ago. TrackMan/data revolution: Bo Van Pelt, 44, returned to the PGA TOUR this season after missing nearly five years with a mysterious right shoulder injury that turned out to be a torn labrum. Naturally, he was asked if everything looked as he remembered it. “Yeah, except for the TrackMan,â€� he said of the measuring device that breaks down shots by launch angle, ball speed and spin rate, among other characteristics. “When I was out here before, only one or two people had them. But when I came back and looked around, everyone had them.â€� Never before have the best players in the world, and others, been so well positioned to match their equipment and specifications to their unique swings. Task force: After another deflating Ryder Cup loss to Europe at Gleneagles, Scotland, in 2014, Phil Mickelson and Tiger Woods were among a handful of American stars who went to work on the creation and development of a U.S. task force to get better at major team competitions. Since then, the U.S. has gone 3-1 in Presidents and Ryder Cups, and is heavily favored to make it 4-1 at the Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne, Dec. 12-15. FIVE MOST EMOTIONAL WINS (NON-MAJORS) Bubba Watson, 2010 Travelers: After crying on his wife’s shoulder after his first PGA TOUR victory, Watson explained it all in his post-round interview: “My dad’s battling cancer right now. Dad, I’m praying for you. I love you.â€� Four months later, Gerry Watson passed away. Charlie Beljan, 2012 Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals Classic: Won with his TOUR status in jeopardy and two days after suffering a panic attack that sent him to the hospital after his second round. Charles Howell III, 2018 The RSM Classic: Broke an 11-year win drought (4,291 days to be specific). He teared up as he hugged his wife, Heather, and their two kids, neither of whom had previously seen him win. Nate Lashley, 2019 Rocket Mortgage Classic: Walking up 18, he thought about his parents, who along with his girlfriend died in plane crash after watching him play in a college event in 2004. Cameron Champ, 2019 Safeway Open: Triumphed just down the road from Sacramento, where his grandfather, Mack, who taught him the game, lay watching in hospice care. MORE BEST OF THE DECADE Fastest finish: Kevin Streelman made seven straight closing birdies to win the ’14 Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands in Connecticut. “I was in blackout mode,â€� he said. Best comeback (career): After not winning for over five years, Tiger Woods won three times in 13 months at the TOUR Championship, Masters, and ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP. Best comeback (one week): Feel-good story Kyle Stanley won the Waste Management Phoenix Open just one week after giving up a three-shot lead on the last hole and losing a playoff to Brandt Snedeker at the 2012 Farmers Insurance Open. Best comebacks (single round): Stanley again, as he came from eight back to catch a faltering Spencer Levin at the 2012 Waste Management Phoenix Open; Justin Rose also came from eight back to catch a faltering Dustin Johnson at the 2017 World Golf Championship-HSBC Champions. Most likely record to fall that didn’t: Sam Snead winning the 1965 Greater Greensboro Open (Wyndham Championship) at 52 set the record for oldest to win on TOUR. It was a mark that seemed destined to fall, but somehow it survived the decade despite a few close calls. Davis Love III won the 2015 Wyndham at 51 years, 4 months, 10 days, becoming the third-oldest to win on TOUR. Vijay Singh, at 56, was just a shot back through 54 holes at The Honda Classic last season before carding a final-round 70 for solo sixth place. The record remains, but for how long? Most unusual feat: Brian Harman made two holes-in-one in the final round of the 2015 The Barclays at New Jersey’s Plainfield Country Club. He had never had a single ace on TOUR, and had double-bogeyed one of the holes (the third) the day before. Only twice had a player accomplished the feat of double aces in a single round, according to TOUR records: Bill Whedon at the 1955 Insurance City Open, and Yusaku Miyazato at the 2006 Reno-Tahoe Open. Best drama: Phil Mickelson hadn’t won in three years. Henrik Stenson hadn’t won a major, and indeed no Swedish man had. They clashed at the ’16 Open Championship at Troon, where Stenson was 20 under, Mickelson 17 under. (J.B. Holmes, their closest pursuer, was 6 under.) The final round was epic: Mickelson’s bogey-free 65 was his best final round in a major, but Stenson made 10 birdies, becoming the second player to win a major with a final-round 63. He also became the first Swede to win a men’s major. “It’s probably the best I’ve played and not won,â€� Mickelson said. Best week: Justin Thomas was near-unconscious during the 2017 Sony Open in Hawaii. Having already won at the Sentry Tournament of Champions the week before, Thomas opened with a historic 59 at Waialae Country Club and then added rounds of 64-65-65 to finish at 27 under, win by seven, and set a new PGA TOUR scoring record of 253 for 72 holes. Any questions? Best round: Jim Furyk had already shot a 59 at Conway Farms in the 2013 BMW Championship. Then came his 12-under 58 at TPC River Highlands in the 2016 Travelers Championship, the round of the decade and still the lowest ever on TOUR. Furyk had an eagle and 10 birdies while hitting 13 of 14 fairways and all 18 greens in regulation. He even had a putt for 57 on the final green. “I had an amazing 18-hole stretch,â€� he later told the PGA TOUR. “I had an amazing four hours. Would I trade it (for a win)? It’s a nice feather in my hat. It’s over. I did it. Someday I’ll be sitting back with a cocktail in my hand and my feet kicked up and I’ll tell the story.â€� Best streaks Dustin Johnson won at least once every season of the decade, including a three-event stretch in 2017 in which he won, in consecutive starts, the Genesis Open, World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship and World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play. Rory McIlroy won The Open Championship, World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship and PGA Championship in consecutive starts in the summer of 2014. Kevin Chappell tied the PGA TOUR record of nine straight birdies on the way to shooting a 59 at the 2019 A Military Tribute to the Greenbrier. Brendon Todd’s 12 consecutive rounds of 68 or better in the just-completed fall portion of the 2019-20 season was the longest such streak of the decade. Honorable mention: Phil Mickelson made every available Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup team of the decade until this upcoming 2019 Presidents Cup.

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The Latest: Booker raises $6 million, says he needs moreThe Latest: Booker raises $6 million, says he needs more

Sen. Cory Booker raised more than $6 million over the last three months, with a third of that coming in the past 10 days after he warned he would have to drop out of the Democratic presidential race if he didn’t take in more cash by Monday’s fundraising deadline. Despite that flood of money,

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International Team plays for prideInternational Team plays for pride

JERSEY CITY, N.J. – Notes and observations from the third day at the Presidents Cup, where the International Team is on the brink of a heavy defeat. The U.S. Team dominated morning Foursomes 3.5-0.5, then were almost as impressive in afternoon Four-ball matches to the tune of 3-1. They are just a point away (14.5-3.5) from clinching the Cup in Sunday singles. For more from Liberty National, click here for the Daily Wrap-up.  PLAYING FOR PRIDE AND PRICE The odds of the International Team winning all 12 singles matches on Sunday to win the Presidents Cup are around 15,000/1. As such, Sunday becomes mostly about pride and about the future. It also is about the past. With Captain Nick Price likely finishing up his term having now overseen three Cups, the focus is on where to from here. “We may be down, but we are not out,â€� Price said “We’ve given it our best shot this week. We’ve just come up against a juggernaut of an American Team that has not put a foot wrong, it seems like, in three days. They have had all the momentum and we’ve had nothing. “There’s an outside shot tomorrow, and the guys all know that. They are going to go play for their pride, they are going to play for themselves, they are going to play for the team and they are going to play for us (captains). “They are going to do their best. You’re not going to be able to take the spirit away out from our team, that’s for sure.â€� Anirban Lahiri, who with Si Woo Kim provided the only International Team win on Saturday, said the side would play with freedom and a determination to send Price out on a better note. Price has been the most popular International leader in some time and the score line has cut the Zimbabwean deep. “We can compete. We haven’t this week but going into tomorrow, I think we have to enjoy ourselves a little more,â€� Lahiri said. “It’s difficult to do that when you’re down the way we’ve been but I think all of us are going to go out there and try and play our best. We’ve got a mountain in front of us, but nothing to lose. “All 12 of us, caddies, and everybody, we feel terrible about this being Nick’s last captaincy, and we’ve not played well. This is not the way we’d like him to leave. We want him to go out on a happy note. So we are going to give him our all and we are going to play for our pride and for him.â€� LAHIRI REDEMPTION KEEPS SLIMMEST OF HOPES ALIVE Two years ago Anirban Lahiri had a 4-foot putt to give the International Team at least a share of the Presidents Cup. It missed. And they eventually lost the Cup by a point. Since that moment the Indian star had wanted a chance for redemption and while his impressive efforts on Saturday didn’t clinch the Cup, they did stop a dominant U.S. Team from doing so. Si Woo Kim and Lahiri sat all square with Charley Hoffman and Kevin Chappell through 15 holes before Lahiri buried a 16-foot birdie putt, pointing it into the hole as it dropped, to go 1 up. But the drama was far from over. On 17 Hoffman’s approach came up short of the green while Lahiri sat 19-feet from the hole. Hoffman chipped in and celebrated like he’d won the Cup, chest bumping Chappell and running around in euphoria. Once the deafening noise subsided Lahiri lined up his putt – and drained it – ensuring Sunday’s singles would not be dead rubbers. “I think the Americans have done it all week. They seem to make the turn, just around the clubhouse, which is the 14th, and they make birdies down the stretch. They make putts; they hole shots,â€� Lahiri said. “I was sitting in the morning when I came in, and I said one of us or some of us have got to try and do the same. We have to try and make those putts and make those birdies coming home. I guess that was just a good seed in my head when I started out today.â€� On 18 he was left with a 3-foot par putt to secure the 1-up win but as he lined it up Chappell conceded it in a display of good sportsmanship. The International Team had been privately upset at some of the American antics, including Phil Mickelson and Kevin Kisner’s three amigos dance on Friday. “There has not been as much sportsmanship as there should be up until those last two holes,â€� Lahiri added. “So I think that should kind of demonstrate to everyone here how we really should play the game, with the right kind of spirit.â€� ODDS AND ENDS Since 2015 Jason Day has won eight PGA TOUR events including a major and a WGC – Dell Match Play Championship. Unfortunately, his past two Presidents Cups in that time frame have not been as prolific. Day is now 0-7-2 in the last two Cups combined. He plays Charley Hoffman in singles on Sunday as he tries to get an elusive win. The 11-point lead by the U.S. Team heading into Sunday’s Singles Matches surpasses the previous record of nine points; the International Team led by nine points in 1998 and ended up beating the U.S. Team 20.5 to 11.5. The largest overall margin of victory in Presidents Cup history after all sessions is 11 points, when the U.S. defeated the International Team 21.5 to 10.5 in 2000. CALL OF THE DAY SHOT OF THE DAY BEST OF SOCIAL MEDIA

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