Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting 2021-22 Medical Extensions

2021-22 Medical Extensions

Medicals extensions in order of the 2021-22 PGA TOUR Priority Ranking ^ – If Ryan Moore or Briny Baird fails to meet the terms of his medical, he’ll be demoted to conditional status. • Kiradech Aphibarnrat … In the only start on his Minor Medical Extension, he missed the cut at the Fortinet Championship. He fell 341.155 FedExCup points shy of fulfilling its terms, so he will play out of no worse than Category No. 26 of the Priority Ranking for the remainder of the season. • Joseph Bramlett … In the only start on his Minor Medical Extension, he finished in a five-way T42 at the Fortinet Championship. He fell 100.017 FedExCup points shy of fulfilling its terms, so he will play out of no worse than Category No. 23 of the Priority Ranking for the remainder of the season. • Cameron Percy … In the only start on his Minor Medical Extension, he finished in a two-way T64 at the Fortinet Championship. He fell 36.197 FedExCup points shy of fulfilling its terms, but he cleared the threshold for conditional status by 117.021 FedExCup points, so he will play out of no worse than Category No. 32 in the Priority Ranking for the remainder of the season. • Vincent Whaley … In the only start on his Minor Medical Extension, he missed the cut at the Fortinet Championship. He fell 67.409 FedExCup points shy of fulfilling its terms, so he will play out of no worse than Category No. 26 of the Priority Ranking for the remainder of the season. • Kevin Stadler … In the last start on his Major Medical Extension, he missed the cut at the Sanderson Farms Championship. He fell 438.570 FedExCup points or $685,699 shy of fulfilling its terms and 303.045 FedExCup points short of securing conditional status. As a result, the Past Champion has been demoted to Category 35 in the Priority Ranking. • Jim Knous … In the last start on his medical extension in the Graduate Reshuffle, he finished in a five-way T57 at the Butterfield Bermuda Championship. He fell 85.863 FedExCup points shy of fulfilling its terms, but he cleared the threshold for conditional status by 1.684 FedExCup points, so he will play out of no worse than Category No. 32 in the Priority Ranking for the remainder of the season. • Danny Lee … In the second-to-last start on his Minor Medical Extension, he fulfilled its terms with a four-way T7 at the World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba. As a result, he will play out of no worse than Category No. 22 in the Priority Ranking for the remainder of the season. • David Hearn … In the last start on his Minor Medical Extension, he missed the cut at The RSM Classic. He fell 199.051 FedExCup points shy of fulfilling its terms and 45.833 FedExCup points short of securing conditional status. As a result, the Veteran Member has been demoted to Category 34 in the Priority Ranking. • D.J. Trahan … In the last start on his Minor Medical Extension, he missed the cut at The RSM Classic. He fell 318.084 FedExCup points shy of fulfilling its terms and 164.866 FedExCup points short of securing conditional status. As a result, the Past Champion has been demoted to Category 35 in the Priority Ranking. • Kevin Chappell … In the last start on his Major Medical Extension, he finished in a six-way T43 at the WM Phoenix Open. He fell 98.127 FedExCup points shy of fulfilling its terms and 10.580 FedExCup points short of securing conditional status. As a result, the Past Champion has been demoted to Category 34 in the Priority Ranking. • Grayson Murray … In the last start on his medical extension in the Graduate Reshuffle, he missed the cut at The Honda Classic. He fell 315.111 FedExCup points shy of fulfilling its terms and 161.893 FedExCup points short of conditional status. As a result, the Past Champion has been demoted to Category 34 in the Priority Ranking. • Ryan Brehm … In the only start on his Minor Medical Extension, he won the Puerto Rico Open. So, he will play out of no worse than Category No. 9 for the remainder of the season. • Wesley Bryan … In the last start on his Major Medical Extension, he finished in a four-way T62 at the Valspar Championship. He fell 91.054 FedExCup points shy of fulfilling its terms and 3.507 FedExCup points short of conditional status. As a result, the Past Champion has been demoted to Category 34 in the Priority Ranking. • Kelly Kraft … In the last start on his Major Medical Extension, he missed the cut at the Valspar Championship. He fell 234.190 FedExCup points shy of fulfilling its terms, so the Korn Ferry Tour Finals graduate will play out of no worse than Category 26 of the Priority Ranking for the remainder of the season. • Ryan Blaum … In the last start on his Non-exempt Medical Extension, he missed the cut at the Wells Fargo Championship. He fell 402.510 FedExCup points shy of fulfilling its terms and 249.292 FedExCup points short of securing conditional status. As a result, he no longer has status on the PGA TOUR. • Seung-Yul Noh … In the last start on his Major Medical Extension, he missed the cut at the AT&T Byron Nelson. He fell 217.355 FedExCup points shy of fulfilling its terms and 106.033 FedExCup points short of conditional status. As a result, the Past Champion has been demoted to Category 34 in the Priority Ranking. # – In the field at the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday as of May 27. * – Because the FedExCup points structure was modified for the 2016-17 season, when golfers on medicals granted to time missed before the conversion earn FedExCup points in a tournament in 2021-22, they will be credited with the values distributed through the 2015-16 season. Thus, both “FedExCup points earned” and “FedExCup points remaining” for these golfers reflect the distribution through 2015-16 and not actual points earned that apply to their FedExCup ranking in the 2021-22 season.

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Bryson DeChambeau divulges cause of dizziness at Augusta NationalBryson DeChambeau divulges cause of dizziness at Augusta National

Bryson DeChambeau thinks he knows what caused dizzy spells at the Masters. His brain was working too hard. DeChambeau was the betting favorite in November with his enormous size and power to go along with his six-shot victory in the U.S. Open at Winged Foot a few months earlier. He fell behind early and complained of feeling dizzy and something being wrong with his stomach. He says he saw doctors for any issues with his inner ear, had tests for eye pressure and ear pressure and even had an ultrasound on his heart. “The one thing I will tell you is that I’ve done a lot of brain training … and the frontal lobe of my brain was working really, really hard,” DeChambeau said Friday. “And that’s kind of what gave me some weird symptoms.” DeChambeau finished a disappointing T34 at Augusta National, his only finish outside the top-10 in four starts this season. He was T7 at last week's Sentry Tournament of Champions, where he led the field in driving distance (303.6 yards) and Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee (+6.52). He played his final eight holes at Kapalua in 6 under par, including an eagle at the final hole, where he hit his 244-yard approach to 6 feet. DeChambeau is fourth in the FedExCup standings. He did not elaborate on what made the frontal lobe work so hard or how it affected him. DeChambeau, ever the scientist, uses a program called “Neuropeak Pro” to use proper breathing control his heart rate and calm his brain. “As I started to to relax my brain a little bit and just get into a more comfortable situation and got on a really good sleep schedule routine, a lot of those symptoms went away,” he said. “And they come back every once in a while, but as I do a lot of breathing, it goes away and that’s really what I’m focused on trying to do.” As he chases speed — he says he reached a ball speed of 211 mph on the range at Kapalua last week, but nowhere near that on the golf course — the immediate target outside the ropes is his stomach. “I’m really working on gut health right now,” DeChambeau said. The most obvious difference is the 40 pounds of muscle and mass he has added as he tries to build a body that can tolerate swinging the club as hard and as fast as he can. He said he now is trying to lean out what he described as a “dirty weight gain bulk.” He also said he was taking digestive supplements at the Masters as he worked on the “gut stuff,” and that contributed to him not feeling his best. Then there’s the additional layer of stress from being at Augusta National under a brighter spotlight than ever. “It all took a toll,” he said. “I don’t think it was exactly that specific thing. But it was a combination of a few things that escalated my brain, overworking and just giving out.” Meanwhile, the chase for speed and distance continues as he keeps tabs on his body. DeChambeau’s quest is to swing so fast that the golf ball comes off his driver at 210 mph. He topped that on the practice range, but found his ball speed at 193 or 194 mph during the tournament. “That just shows you how the brain reins you in going, `No, I need to hit it straight because I’m a professional golfer and I still need to keep it in play every hole.’ So you kind of lose that ability to just free yourself up and let it go,” he said. “I can get it over 200, no problem. It’s just about how can I get that on a golf course now.”

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