Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Stewart Cink aces 16th hole at the Masters

Stewart Cink aces 16th hole at the Masters

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Stewart Cink aced the 166-yard 16th hole in the second round of the Masters on Friday. He used an 8-iron. Standing on the tee at 8 over par and well outside the projected cut line, Cink aimed well right and watched his ball land and trickle down the embankment, toward the front-left pin placement, and into the cup. The crowd roared as Reagan Cink, his son and caddie, dropped the bag and went in for a hug with his dad. Harry Higgs also went in for an embrace, and Brian Harman offered a congratulatory knuckle-bump. It was the 24th ace on 16 in tournament history, and the first since Tommy Fleetwood last year. Padraig Harrington and Kirk Triplett each made a hole-in-one there in consecutive groups in 2004. A two-time PGA TOUR winner last season, Cink, 48, had just bogeyed the par-5 15th hole, where he tried to reach the green in two but found the water. He more than made up for that mistake with one magical stroke on 16. It was his sixth ace since the TOUR began tracking such data in 1983, tied for eighth most on TOUR.

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Five shots that tell the story of Rory McIlroy’s seasonFive shots that tell the story of Rory McIlroy’s season

Rory McIlroy won his third FedExCup on Sunday, shooting 66 to take advantage of Scottie Scheffler’s struggles. McIlroy’s 30-foot birdie putt on the 15th hole and his chip shot that bounced off the pin on 16 will be remembered as crucial moments on the season’s final holes, but the journey to becoming a FedExCup champion truly encompasses an entire year. This was a campaign of satisfying consistency for McIlroy. He finished outside the top 25 in just three of his 16 starts. He had 10 top-10s, including in each of the four majors for the first time in his career. His three wins were his most on TOUR in three years, and this was his fourth season of three-plus victories. And he finished atop Strokes Gained: Total, confirming statistically that he was the season’s most consistent player. McIroy’s season included rousing Sunday performances, as well as a heartbreaking finish at the game’s most historic venue. All of that led to him being crowned FedExCup champion for a third time. 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McIlroy was coming off a difficult season that saw him win just once and struggle to find consistency as he attempted to make swing changes. THE CJ CUP also was three weeks after the United States’ 19-9 win in the Ryder Cup. A struggling McIlroy sat out a session for the first time in his Ryder Cup career and became emotional in on-camera interviews after winning his singles match over Xander Schauffele for his lone point of the week. McIlroy went 1-3 at Whistling Straits. But this season-opening win proved to him that he was back on the right track. “I feel like the last couple weeks I’ve realized that just being me is good enough,” McIlroy said. “I know that when I do the things that I do well, this is what I’m capable of. “I’m capable of winning a lot of events on the PGA TOUR and being the best player in the world. It’s just a matter of me getting back to playing golf and playing golf my way.” He was right. 2. 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He didn’t take his first lead until the 16th hole Sunday, but it was just in time for him to take home his third FedExCup. His final-round 66 allowed him to overtake Scheffler, who started the final-round with a six-shot lead. “To claw my way back and end up winning the tournament, incredible,” McIlroy said. “Just really proud of my resilience and how I sort of handled that start and just sort of stuck my head down and kept going all week and took advantage of the opportunity that I was given today.” 3. BUNKER HOLE-OUT The Masters, Final Round Par-4 18th, Augusta National Golf Club The Masters is the lone title missing from McIlroy’s resume. While his towering iron shots and booming drives seem tailor-made for Augusta National, the course has been the scene of heartbreak and disappointment for McIlroy as he seeks the title that stands between him and the career Grand Slam. It started in 2011, when he shot a final-round 80 after starting the day with a four-shot lead. 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APPROACH SHOT RBC Canadian Open, Final Round Par-4 17th, St. George’s Golf & Country Club Rory McIlroy had to wait three years to defend his RBC Canadian Open title, and do so on a different course. It didn’t matter. A second win north of the border came in similar fashion to his win in 2019, with an incredible final round to hold off a strong leaderboard. McIlroy started the final round of the 2019 RBC Canadian Open at Hamilton Golf & Country Club tied for the lead with Webb Simpson and Matt Kuchar. McIlroy broke out of the pack by shooting 61 to win by seven. This year, McIlroy and Tony Finau shared the 54-hole lead and played in the final group alongside Justin Thomas. The trio combined to go 20 under in a memorable final round that saw McIlroy emerge victorious by making birdie on the final two holes to shoot 62. Finau and Thomas both shot 64. “I feel like it’s getting tougher and tougher to win on the PGA TOUR,” McIlroy said. “Just look at the two guys that I played with today. I went out with a lead and had to shoot 8 under par to get the job done. So the depth of talent on this TOUR is really, really impressive. And going up against guys like J.T. and Tony and coming out on top, that’s something to feel really good about.” After making bogey on No. 16, McIlroy pulled away with a birdie on the hardest hole of the day, the 486-yard, par-4 17th. The hole had allowed just nine birdies all day when McIlroy arrived. His 367-yard drive was the longest of the day by 30 yards. Then he hit his 127-yard approach to 2 feet to take a two-shot lead over Thomas, who bogeyed the hole, and Finau. For good measure, McIlroy hit his 145-yard approach to 18 to 4 feet for another birdie. That gave him a two-shot win over Finau. Thomas finished in third place, four back. “It feels really good,” said McIlroy. “For the Canadian Open, a national championship, to have a week like it’s had, three of the best players in the world going at it down the stretch, trying to win in front of those crowds and that atmosphere … it doesn’t get much better than that.” 5. PITCH SHOT The Open Championship, Final round Par-4 18th, Final round This season ended victoriously but the scene of McIlroy being driven away from the interview area at St. Andrews with his head resting on his wife’s shoulder also tells an important story about his year. Few players compete with greater awareness of history than McIlroy. There may not be anyone on the PGA TOUR that puts more emphasis on their legacy. That’s why a win at the Old Course would have meant so much for McIlroy, who started the final round of the 150th Open tied with Viktor Hovland for the lead, four shots ahead of the next-closest players (Cameron Smith and Cameron Young). 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