Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Five matches to watch Thursday at WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play

Five matches to watch Thursday at WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play

AUSTIN, Texas — A clash of styles. Two guys emerging in their mid-30s. Fire and … fire. Those are some of the storylines from five matches that caught our eye for Thursday’s second day of action at the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play. RELATED: Tee times | Scoring | Match recaps from Wednesday Group 9: Bryson DeChambeau, USA, (9) vs. Lee Westwood, England, (47), 1:16 p.m. A clash of styles and a matchup of the protagonists from the 2021 Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, where DeChambeau came out on top. Westwood came into this week with 42 matches under his belt in this event (19-22-1) and went deep in 2012 (lost consolation match). Since the start of group play in 2015, he’s gotten out of his group once and lost playoffs to do so twice. The long-hitting DeChambeau is coming back from hand and hip injuries and admits he won’t be at full speed this week in his first TOUR start since late January. He has not made it out of pool play in two previous starts here. Group 6: Justin Thomas, USA, (6) vs. Marc Leishman (37), Australia, 3:06 p.m. Thomas could be building up to something, with top-10 finishes in four of his six starts in 2022. The only exceptions: a T20 at the Farmers Insurance Open, where he fell back with a rough weekend (73-74), and a T33 at THE PLAYERS, where he was on the wrong side of the draw but nonetheless authored a remarkable second-round 69 in the toughest conditions. He hasn’t made it out of pool play since finishing fourth in 2018. Leishman has made it out of pool play twice in his last four starts in this tournament but has never made the quarterfinals. Group 12: Billy Horschel, USA, (12) vs. Tom Hoge, USA, (33), 11:48 a.m. ET In an era being defined by the twenty-somethings, Horschel and Hoge are peaking in their mid-30s. Horschel, the former FedExCup champ, is trending nicely after finishing second at the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, T16 at The Honda Classic, and T6 at the WM Phoenix Open. He’s playing the best golf of his life after a 2021 that included wins in this event and the DP World Tour’s flagship event, the BMW PGA Championship. So, too, is Hoge, fifth in the FedExCup after edging Jordan Spieth for his first TOUR win at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. That’s where the similarities end, though, as Hoge is making his first start here, whereas Horschel is the defending champ. Group 13: Tyrrell Hatton, ENG, (13) vs. Si Woo Kim, South Korea, (48), 12:32 p.m. ET Hatton has advanced out of pool play in two of his last three starts in this tournament, compiling a 6-6-2 record going into Wednesday’s first round. If the cool weather and breezes persist, it may benefit him as he is best on difficult courses. Kim is an extravagant talent who became the youngest-ever winner of THE PLAYERS at 21. He’s streaky, though, and has emerged from pool play just once in four tries, only to lose 6 and 5 to Justin Thomas in 2018. Whatever happens, Hatton and Kim bear watching for not just their golf – they are two of the hottest-running players on TOUR. Group 2: Collin Morikawa, USA, (2) vs. Sergio Garcia, Spain, (43), 11:26 a.m. ET The seeds suggest Morikawa is favored here, but seeds can be deceiving. In his one start in this event, last year, Morikawa had a week to forget, losing to Max Homa and eventual champion Billy Horschel. He tied J.T. Poston and didn’t emerge from group play. In short, one of the game’s most ascendant talents has yet to make his mark in Austin. Garcia, on the other hand, has built his career on match play. The Ryder Cup legend was 28-22-1 at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play coming into this week, tied for fourth in the category of most matches won. He finished fourth in 2010 and was a quarterfinalist in 2019 and ’21. The putter may be the difference between two of the game’s pre-eminent ball-strikers.

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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
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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
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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
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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
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Player of the Year, Rookie of the Year nomineesPlayer of the Year, Rookie of the Year nominees

Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. – Following Sunday’s conclusion of the TOUR Championship and the FedExCup Playoffs, nominees for PGA TOUR Player of the Year and PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year were finalized by the PGA TOUR Player Directors and members of the Player Advisory Council (PAC). The nominees for the Jack Nicklaus Award as the PGA TOUR Player of the Year are (alphabetically) Dustin Johnson, Hideki Matsuyama, Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas. The nominees for PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year are Wesley Bryan, Patrick Cantlay, Mackenzie Hughes, Grayson Murray and Xander Schauffele. The Player of the Year and Rookie of the Year awards are determined by a member vote, with PGA TOUR members who played in at least 15 official money events during the 2016-17 season eligible to vote. The voting will close on Monday, October 2, with the winners to be announced that week. Player of the Year nominees Dustin Johnson, 33 Jupiter, Florida (Coastal Carolina University) • Entered 20 events with victories (4) at the Genesis Open, World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship, World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play and THE NORTHERN TRUST. • Finished fourth in the FedExCup. • Finished seventh in Adjusted Scoring Average (69.549). • Finished the season with eight top-10 finishes among 17 made cuts. Hideki Matsuyama, 25 Sendai, Japan (Tohoku Fukushi University) • Entered 22 events with victories (3) at the World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions, Waste Management Phoenix Open and World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational • Finished eighth in the FedExCup. • Finished 10th in Adjusted Scoring Average (69.624). • Recorded a total of seven top-10 finishes among 20 made cuts. Jordan Spieth, 24 Dallas, Texas (University of Texas) • Entered 23 events with victories (3) at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, Travelers Championship and The Open Championship. • Finished second in the FedExCup. • Finished first in Adjusted Scoring Average (68.846) to earn the Byron Nelson Award. • Recorded 12 top-10 finishes (tied with Justin Thomas for most this season) among 20 made cuts. • Top-10 finishes in all four FedExCup Playoffs events in 2017: THE NORTHERN TRUST (P2), Dell Technologies Championship (2), BMW Championship (T7), TOUR Championship (T7). Justin Thomas, 24 Jupiter, Florida (University of Alabama) • Entered 25 events with victories (5) at the CIMB Classic, Sentry Tournament of Champions, Sony Open in Hawaii, PGA Championship and Dell Technologies Championship. • Winner of the 2017 FedExCup. • Finished first on Official Money List to earn the Arnold Palmer Award with $9,921,560. • Finished third in Adjusted Scoring Average (69.359). • Recorded 12 top-10 finishes (tied with Jordan Spieth for most this season) among 19 made cuts. • Became just the fourth player since 1960 to capture five wins, including a major, in a season before the age of 25 (Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Jordan Spieth). Rookie of the Year nominees Wesley Bryan, 27 Augusta, Georgia (University of South Carolina) • Entered 28 events with one victory at the RBC Heritage. • Finished 41st in the FedExCup. • Finished 113th in Adjusted Scoring Average (71.062). • Recorded a total of five top-10 finishes with 19 made cuts. • 2016 graduate of the Web.com Tour. Patrick Cantlay, 25 Jupiter, Florida (UCLA) • Entered 13 events with a season-best runner-up finish at the Valspar Championship. • Finished 29th in the FedExCup. • One of two rookies to qualify for the season-ending TOUR Championship in 2017. • Finished 15th in Adjusted Scoring Average (69.971). • Recorded a total of four top-10 finishes with 13 made cuts. Mackenzie Hughes, 26 Charlotte, North Carolina (Kent State University) • Entered 31 events with one victory at The RSM Classic. • Finished 36th in the FedExCup. • Finished T109th in Adjusted Scoring Average (71.044). • Recorded a total of two top-10 finishes among 22 made cuts. • 2016 graduate of the Web.com Tour. Grayson Murray, 23 Raleigh, North Carolina (Arizona State University) • Entered 30 events with one victory at the Barbacoa Championship. • Finished 66th in the FedExCup. • Finished 114th in Adjusted Scoring Average (71.064). • Recorded a total of two top-10 finishes among 18 made cuts. • 2016 graduate of the Web.com Tour. Xander Schauffele, 23 San Diego, California (San Diego State University) • Entered 28 events with wins (2) at The Greenbrier Classic and TOUR Championship; first-ever rookie to win the TOUR Championship. • Finished third in the FedExCup. • One of two rookies to qualify for the season-ending TOUR Championship in 2017. • Finished 27th in Adjusted Scoring Average (70.163). • Recorded a total of four top-10 finishes among 20 made cuts. • 2016 graduate of the Web.com Tour.  

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PXG to sell new investment cast 0211 irons for about half the price of forged Gen2 0311 ironsPXG to sell new investment cast 0211 irons for about half the price of forged Gen2 0311 irons

PXG (Parsons Xtreme Golf), founded by billionaire-entrepreneur Bob Parsons, made an immediate mark in the golf industry by offering golf clubs that sold for relatively enormous prices in the domestic golf market. The barrier to entry for becoming a PXG customer, however, is shifting. Parsons has described the company’s products as the “Ferrariâ€� of golf clubs, and its prices have reflected that. PXG’s original 0311 irons sold for $300 per iron, and its 0811 drivers sold for $850. The company’s newest Gen2 0311 irons, released in March 2018, upped the ante even more, selling for $400 apiece. The new Gen2 drivers, however, which released in January 2019, came with a reduced price of $575 each because Parsons said the company was able to reduce manufacturing costs through scaling. Now, PXG is bringing a drastically lower-priced set of irons to retail with its 0211 irons that are priced at $195 per club with steel shafts, and $210 with graphite shafts. PXG recently tested the theory of making more affordable irons available to the public, and it passed. “After we introduced our Gen2 irons and pretty much sold through our Gen1s, we did a test,â€� Parsons told PGATOUR.COM. “What we did was we ordered a new run of our Gen1 irons and didn’t have the R&D that we needed to recover, so we were able to sell those at a lesser price. What we learned was there’s a big demand for that, especially from our brand, and sales of that were very well received.â€� The price difference between the Gen2 0311 irons (at $400 per iron) and the 0211 irons (at $195 per iron) comes from the different constructions, and the cost of making the clubs. PXG’s recently released Gen 0311 irons are triple-forged from 8620 carbon and feature the company’s trademark weight ports around the perimeter. The 0211 irons, on the other hand, are investment cast from 431 stainless steel, and they do not feature PXG’s traditional screw weights. The investment casting process is less expensive than the forging process. The new 0211 irons do, however, feature the company’s new COR2 material – a “proprietary high-speed polymerâ€� – in the space between the HT 1770M faces and the 431 stainless steel bodies. This design allows the faces to be constructed thinner for more ball speed without sacrificing feel, sound and durability. “What we did was we took our Gen2 technology, which we already have the R&D paid for with the Gen2 irons, and we put that in [the 0211 irons] as much as we could,â€� Parsons said. “We used a less expensive manufacturing process, but still, the way we do it, these irons cost us more to make than other companies pay for their forged irons.â€� Parsons also says that because they have the same COR2 technology that was introduced in the Gen2 irons, the new 0211 irons perform better than the forged Gen1 irons that did not have this material. “Our 0211s, when it comes to our Gen1 irons, they outperform them considerably,â€� Parsons said. “They’re longer, they have faster ball speeds, launch higher, got a higher peak height, steeper landing angle and they’re more accurate. So we made these as good as we could.â€� While PXG’s flagship Gen2 0311 family of irons consists of four different head models (0311T, 0311P, 0311 XF and 0311 SGI), the 0211 line has just one head model. The 0211 irons (4-PW, SW, GW, LW) have a progressive makeup where the short irons have less offset and smaller profiles and the long irons have more offset and larger profiles. Also, the Gen2 0311 irons have a slew of shafts available at no upcharge, but the 0211 shaft options are more limited; they come stock with True Tempers Elevate steel shafts, and Mitsubishi’s MMT steel or graphite shafts, with other shafts coming with an additional upcharge. For those who may question the relatively cheaper price tag of the 0211 compared to its previous iron releases, Parsons had this to say: “While these irons are significantly less compared to our 0311s — our forged irons, our flagship products — when you compare them to other investment cast products [they’re] pretty expensive,â€� Parsons said. “$195 for a casted product, that’s pricey. That’s still in that upper price range. But for the performance that you get, the value is totally there.â€� PXG’s new 0211 irons, which come with a chrome finish, will be available everywhere that PXG’s current 0311 Gen2 irons are sold, including its website.

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Winner’s Bag: Golf clubs played by Marc Leishman at the CIMB ClassicWinner’s Bag: Golf clubs played by Marc Leishman at the CIMB Classic

Marc Leishman rolled to a five-shot victory at the CIMB Classic for his third PGA TOUR title in the last 19 months and fourth overall.  Despite hitting just 73 percent of his greens in regulation at TPC Kuala Lumpur’s West Course (T46 in the field), Leishman made up for a mediocre ball-striking week with a red-hot putter that ranked tops in the field in putts per green in regulation (1.528 putts per round).  To put Leishman’s impressive putting performance into perspective, he hit 14 greens in regulation on Friday but still managed to shoot 62. He followed the low round of the week up by shooting 67-65 over the weekend — all while never hitting more than 13 greens in regulation per round.  Leishman’s custom Odyssey Versa #1 Red putter (White Hot insert) is a combination of two of the company’s more popular designs. The red color on the head was initially introduced with O-Works Red, while the single white line on the flange is part of the Versa line and aides in keeping the face square at impact.  Here’s a look at Leishman’s entire equipment setup.  Driver: Callaway Rogue (Fujikura Speeder 757 Evolution IV X shaft), 9 degrees 3-wood: Callaway Rogue Sub Zero (Fujikura Motore Speeder VC Tour Spec 9.2X shaft), 15 degrees 5-wood: Callaway Rogue Sub Zero (Fujikura Motore Speeder VC Tour Spec 9.2X shaft), 18 degrees Irons: Callaway X-Forged ’18 (3-9; Nippon N.S. Pro Modus3 Tour 130X shafts), Callaway Mack Daddy 4 (48 degrees; Nippon N.S. Pro Modus3 Tour 130X shaft)  Wedges: Callaway Mack Daddy 4 (54 degrees; Nippon N.S. Pro Modus3 Tour 130X shaft); Titleist Vokey Design SM7 (58-08M degrees; Nippon N.S. Pro Modus3 Tour 130X shaft) Putter: Odyssey Versa #1 Wide Red  Ball: Callaway Chrome Soft X 

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