Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Winner’s Bag: Scottie Scheffler, Masters Tournament

Winner’s Bag: Scottie Scheffler, Masters Tournament

Scottie Scheffler won the Masters by three shots. It’s his fourth win in his last six starts on the PGA TOUR. Check out the clubs he used to get it done at Augusta. RELATED: Final leaderboard Driver: TaylorMade Stealth Plus (8 degrees) Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black 7 X 3-wood: TaylorMade Stealth Plus (16.5 degrees @15) Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black 8 X Utility iron: Srixon Z U85 (3) Shaft: Nippon Pro Modus3 Hybrid Tour X Irons: Srixon ZU85 (4), TaylorMade P7TW (5-PW) Shaft: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 Wedges: Titleist Vokey Design SM8 (50-12F, 56-14F, 60-06K) Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 Putter: Scotty Cameron Special Select Timeless Tourtype GSS Prototype Ball: Titleist Pro V1 Grips: Golf Pride Tour Velvet

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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
Ludvig Aberg+400
Collin Morikawa+450
Jon Rahm+450
Justin Thomas+550
Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+450
Bryson DeChambeau+1100
Justin Thomas+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2000
Xander Schauffele+2000
Collin Morikawa+2200
Jon Rahm+2200
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Brooks Koepka+4000
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Viktor Hovland+2000
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
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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Veterans start strong at Sanderson FarmsVeterans start strong at Sanderson Farms

Experience will always count on the PGA TOUR. While there is no doubt golf on TOUR is certainly getting younger, Jimmy Walker and Charley Hoffman were the latest veterans to remind us that "old man golf" can never be discounted and can still in fact thrive in a youth dominated movement. RELATED: Full leaderboard | Lahiri headed in right direction For every Jon Rahm, Collin Morikawa, Matthew Wolff, Bryson DeChambeau, Justin Thomas and Xander Schauffele there is still a Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Stewart Cink or, as it turned out in Thursday's opening round of the Sanderson Farms Championship, a Walker or Hoffman. The duo were the standouts of the morning wave at the Country Club of Jackson with 43-year-old Hoffman and 41-year-old Walker putting up 8-under 64s. The 20-somethings might be stacked with talent but the 40-somethings have experience, tenacity and mental toughness. DeChambeau may have claimed the recent U.S. Open at 27 and PGA champion Morikawa is just 23 but between those two wins came a season-opening stunner from 47-year-old Cink. In claiming the Safeway Open last month, Cink took down young guns like Sam Burns and Harry Higgs in the process. It was just the type of result the veterans draw strength from. Cink hadn't won since 2009 but used all his guile to plot his way to victory. Now Hoffman and Walker hope to do the same in Mississippi. Walker hasn't had a top 10 finish on TOUR since May of 2018. The six-time winner has battled over the last few seasons since contracting Lyme disease that same year. He has finished 158th (2019) and 179th (2020) in the FedExCup. His last seven events produced six missed cuts and a T62 and as it turns out he wasn't overly hopeful things would be different this week. Being a 40-something does bring some challenges - in this case a penchant for injury. "I’ve had some tendonitis in my elbow, shoulder has been hurting, so it’s been tough," Walker said post round. "My elbow was really hurting. I’ve never had anything like that ever before, and it was pretty painful. "So I didn’t know really what to expect. I showed up on Tuesday and hit some balls and hit some balls yesterday and was just trying to take it easy. So I’m thrilled, ecstatic, excited. It was fun (today)." Walker said he could barely grab a club out of his bag with his right hand after the U.S. Open but some rest and rehab - and the smarts to have his physiotherapist with him in Jackson seemed to be paying off. Coincidentally the last time Walker shot 64 or better was the 2018 AT&T Byron Nelson first round, his last top 10 (T6). Four-time TOUR winner Hoffman has fared better than Walker in recent times but still can only boast four top 10s out of the last three seasons. In response to those younger than him making waves, Hoffman has endeavored to add some distance to his game by working with Greg Rose at the Titleist Performance Institute. But he's not becoming a gym rat and bulking up like Bryson. Instead he says the wisdom of age can just make someone of his ilk use his power reserves at critical times. The key is lengthening his swing at the right moments. "It’s just the game is changing. I’ve never struggled with yardage until the last couple years. That was never something I really explored before, so I started exploring how to do it. Greg trained a bunch of long drive guys, and it’s something that I’ve trained to do, be a little more efficient, swing longer," Hoffman explained. "The reality is in this day and age it’s more important to be long than straight, so that’s something I’m trying to do. I wouldn’t say I’ve trained to hit it longer. I’m learning to be more efficient and hit it longer. As a younger guy I didn’t have to worry about hitting it further because I just hit it far, and as an older guy I’ve got to pay attention when I’m swinging it hard. "My speed, I can get it up there pretty high. I don’t hit it on every shot. If there’s a par-5 where I need to get home in two I’m going to swing hard and hopefully hit the fairway. The other holes, like 18 here, I’m going to try to put it in the fairway and probably not swing quite as hard." Spoken like a true veteran.

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Paying homage to Firestone Country ClubPaying homage to Firestone Country Club

Perhaps no golf facility in the United States – or even the world – has been more utilitarian to the professional ranks than Firestone Country Club in Akron, Ohio. The list of events held at Firestone is formidable, starting with the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational, which this week is being held on the famed South Course for the 19th time. Home to 54 holes of championship golf, Firestone first appeared on the PGA TOUR’s schedule in 1954, when the Rubber City Open Invitational, primarily a regional event that for three years was staged at Breathnach Country Club in nearby Cuyahoga Falls, was moved to the highly respected – though not yet fearsome – South Course. Since then, Firestone has hosted a professional tournament every year, including three PGA Championships, in 1960, ’66 and ’75. At the time of the third edition in 1975, won by Ohio native Jack Nicklaus, Firestone’s South Course was the first layout to host the PGA three times. In all, there have been 88 tournaments at Firestone. Just three PGA TOUR venues have had a longer run – Pebble Beach Golf Links, home of the annual AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am; Colonial Country Club, home of the Charles Schwab Challenge; and Augusta National Golf Club, home of the Masters Tournament. This week will be a time of reflection and appreciation for Firestone, as the WGC event moves to Memphis, Tennessee, next season. While Firestone will not be on the regular PGA TOUR’s calendar, it will become the new venue for the flagship event on PGA TOUR Champions — the Bridgestone SENIOR PLAYERS Championship, one of five majors on the Champions schedule. Said PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan at the time of the announcement: “With Firestone Country Club’s South Course as the host venue, golf’s 65-year tradition in Akron will continue.â€� Don Padgett III, executive director of the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, has witnessed Firestone’s impact on golf and the local community for many years, having grown up around the course while his father served as head professional for 24 years. “Through the years, Firestone has been a part of one of the great Northeast Ohio sports traditions, and around the world it has to be one of the most televised venues,â€� Padgett said. “It’s the legacy of the rubber companies here, great companies that decided that golf was something they wanted to get behind. It goes way back, almost 100 years.â€� The American Golf Classic, the CBS Golf Classic and the World Series of Golf preceded the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, which began in 1999. So revered is Firestone that the aforementioned trio all were held on the South Course in 1974, making it the only facility in the world to have hosted three televised golf events in one calendar year. It also was the site for another made-for-television event in 1964, “Big Three Golfâ€� featuring Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player. In 2002, when the TOUR took the WGC event to Sahalee Golf Club in Seattle, Firestone’s South Course hosted the oldest major on the PGA TOUR Champions, the Senior PGA Championship. Fittingly, it now returns to the Champions schedule. While Firestone’s North Course also has been tapped by the TOUR, hosting the 1976 American Golf Classic and the 1994 NEC World Series of Golf, it’s the South Course on which the reputation of the club rests. Opened Aug. 10, 1928 – founder Harvey Firestone hit the ceremonial first shot – the South Course was designed by Englishman William Herbert “Bertâ€� Way, whose design credits prior to his work at Firestone included Detroit Golf Club among other Midwestern layouts. Way was brought to America by Willie Dunn of Shinnecock Hills fame after learning course design in his home country. In 1899, he was one of three players who finished runner-up to Willie Smith in the U.S. Open at Baltimore Country Club. Way’s work on what was at first known as the No. 1 Course at Firestone was a par-71 creation of 6,306 yards, notable for a routing that survives to this day. The South Course features 16 holes that trundle north and south. Only the fifth and sixth holes run east-west. Rated among the top courses in the country by various golf publications, the South Course earned its reputation when Robert Trent Jones infused it with a lot of sharp edges for the 1960 PGA Championship. He built seven new tees, added 50 bunkers, two ponds and more than 500 yards, increasing the layout from 6,620 yards to 7,165 yards while knocking it down to par 70. He had hoped no player that week would break par – and sure enough, no one did, as Jay Hebert triumphed at 1-over 281. “The change to the golf course was as dramatic as you could imagine. It went from a pretty decent test of golf to a real beast,â€� said Paul Lazoran, who has witnessed every event in Firestone’s history, having worked at the course cleaning clubs when he was 9 years old. It’s apropos that Lazoran, now 76, conjures such a descriptive term. In the process of his redesign, Jones gave the course its signature hole, the 625-yard par-5 16th. After adding 50 yards to it and installing a pond in front, he proudly called it the “Waterloo Hole.â€� Palmer found out why when he made triple-bogey to fall out of contention in that year’s PGA. He referred to the hole as “a monster,â€� and the name stuck. Subsequently the South Course as a whole often has been referred to as “a monster course,â€� one that today is a burly 7,400 yards. When Palmer returned for the 1975 PGA Championship and was asked what he remembered about his 16th hole misadventure, he replied gruffly, “I remember all eight shots.â€� By then Arnie had made peace with the place, having won the 1962 and ’67 American Golf Classic to go along with his 1957 victory in the Rubber City Open. Last year, the late Palmer was honored with a plaque on the stone bridge that crosses a creek near the pond in front of the 16th green. The structure is now known as the Arnold Palmer Bridge. Because of its demanding broad-shouldered profile, Firestone’s South Course tends to favor the game’s celebrated ball strikers, and the list of winners exhibits as much, starting with Tommy Bolt in 1954. Al Geiberger emerged with his only major title in the 1966 PGA Championship. Other champions include Nick Price, Greg Norman, Tom Watson and Tom Weiskopf. In all, 38 winners are major champions and 18 are in the World Golf Hall of Fame. “It’s difficult but it’s fair,â€� Padgett said. “Even though the holes go back and forth, there’s great variety to the holes with a great deal of elevation change. It’s a ball-striker’s golf course. Players know that whoever is striking the ball best is probably going to finish on top. You can’t fake it around Firestone. The cream always rises to the top.â€� “Good shots are rewarded at Firestone and bad shots are punished. It’s the ultimate layout for gauging the quality of your play,â€� said John Cook, whose father Jim worked in the corporate office of Firestone Rubber Co., giving him access to the junior golf program at the club when he was 6 years old. “It’s classic Midwestern golf. Not every course stands the test of time, but Firestone has for 60-plus years.â€� No surprise that the two players who have most dominated the landscape are the game’s most successful major championship performers – Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods. A Columbus, Ohio, native, Nicklaus won seven times on the South Course under an array of competitive formats. Coincidentally, the place won him over first, when he made his debut in a PGA TOUR event in the 1958 Rubber City Open as an 18-year-old amateur. The burly Ohio State golfer, who was coming off a victory in the Trans-Mississippi Amateur, was predicted to “give the pros a tussle,â€� when he showed up at Firestone. And did he ever, opening with rounds of 67 and 66, 9 under par, to sit tied for second one stroke behind eventual winner Art Wall. He eventually ended with a share of 15th place. Thus began a beautiful relationship. Nicklaus captured the inaugural World Series of Golf in 1962, when it was a four-man exhibition, and he won again in 1976 when it became an official TOUR event. In between were five other titles, the biggest being the 1975 PGA Championship when he essentially won by converting “your basic miracle parâ€� on the famed 16th hole in the third round. From the right rough 137 yards from the green, the Golden Bear launched a 9-iron over a tree directly in his path – the late Bob Rosburg used his oft-repeated line, “he’s got no shot,â€� for the first time when he sized up Jack’s prospects – and then buried a 30-footer from the back fringe. The Golden Bear’s ties to the facility also include a renovation of the South Course by his design company in the mid-1980s. “This has been a pretty special place for me,â€� Nicklaus said after receiving the Ambassador of Golf Award from Northern Ohio Golf Charities at Firestone during the 2013 World Golf Championship-Bridgestone Invitational—23 years after his wife Barbara was similarly recognized. “I have so many great memories of Firestone and all the years I played here. I loved coming up here. I loved playing the golf course. It suited my eye. It suited my game. I always said, ‘I don’t care what’s going on. I’m going to get to Firestone, and I’ll be able to play well there.’â€� Woods expressed a nearly identical sentiment before his record eighth victory that same year. It remains the most recent of his 79 PGA TOUR wins. “I’ve come into this event not playing great, and I’ve come into this event playing great, but it’s one of those golf courses I always feel comfortable,â€� said Woods, who this week makes his first appearance at Firestone since withdrawing in the middle of the final round in 2015 because of back spasms. Woods qualified for the event thanks after moving into the world’s top 50 following his tie for sixth at The Open Championship. “The neat thing is there are certain venues, whether it’s here or Torrey Pines or Bay Hill, I somehow see the sight lines,â€� Woods continued. “This golf course is just amazing. It’s very straight forward. It’s right in front of you. And there are some years where it is just impossible to hit these fairways; they’re so hard and so fast. And other years, everything plugs, and it plays long, and you’ve got to make a bunch of birdies. It goes to show you that you don’t need elephant burial grounds out there to make a golf course fair, difficult, and enjoyable.â€� In addition to his eight victories, tied with Sam Snead for most in a single TOUR event and which he has equaled at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, Woods holds a share of the South Course record, a 9-under 61, with Spaniards Jose Maria Olazabal and Sergio Garcia. Olazabal, by the way, holds the distinction of winning the World Series of Golf on both the South Course, in 1991, and the North in ’94. When you’ve seen all 88 events at Firestone, it’s difficult to choose a favorite highlight. Lazoran immediately can recall two – one shot each by Nicklaus and Woods that define the duo’s magical and entrenched preeminence, though his favorite personal moment came in the 1965 World Series of Golf, when he caddied for winner Gary Player. On the 71st hole, Player was sizing up a birdie putt with a foot of break moving right to left. Lazoran corrected the reigning U.S. Open champion, instructing him that the putt curved twice as much. Player took his advice and made the putt. He rewarded Lazoran with a $2,500 payday, huge at the time. The first of the two shots was the aforementioned Nicklaus sky ball to save par at 16. The second was the 8-iron from 167 yards Woods planted two feet from the flagstick at the par-4 18th in twilight in the 2000 WGC edition. “I’ve never seen the likes of it,â€� Sir Nick Faldo remarked after Woods buried the putt and then was bathed in staccato bursts of flashbulbs. “Yeah, that was a cool moment,â€� Woods said. At Firestone, there have been many.

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Winner’s bag: Max Homa, Wells Fargo ChampionshipWinner’s bag: Max Homa, Wells Fargo Championship

Max Homa earned his first PGA TOUR win with a final round 67 at the Wells Fargo Championship. Here’s a look at Homa’s equipment: Driver: Titleist TS4 (9.5 degrees) Shaft: Mitsubishi Tensei CK Orange 70TX Fairway Wood: Titleist TS3 (15 degrees) Shaft: Aldila Rogue Black 80TX Hybrid: Titleist 818 H2 (19 degrees) Shaft: Graphite Design Tour AD-DI 105X Hybrid Irons: Titleist 718 MB (4-9 iron) Shafts: KBS $-Taper 130 Wedges: Titleist Vokey SM7 (46, 50, 54 and 60 degrees) Shafts: KBS $-Taper 130 (46-degree wedge), KBS Hi-Rev 2.0 135X (50, 54 and 60) Putter: Scotty Cameron T5W Golf Ball: Titleist Pro V1 2019 Grips: Golf Pride Tour Velvet Cord

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