Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Sam Burns beats Scottie Scheffler in playoff to win Charles Schwab Challenge

Sam Burns beats Scottie Scheffler in playoff to win Charles Schwab Challenge

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — Sam Burns made a 38-foot birdie putt on the first playoff hole at Colonial, which came just more than two hours after he had finished his round, to beat top-ranked Scottie Scheffler on Sunday. After finishing his 5-under 65 to get to 9 under, Burns was done in the clubhouse when, at one point, Scheffler was among five players tied at 10 under. The gusty wind and a strange sequence changed all that. And Scheffler needed three clutch putts for a 72 just to get into the playoff matching 25-year-old standouts and close friends. Burns’ seven-stroke comeback at the Charles Schwab Challenge matched Nick Price in 1994 for the biggest in a final round to win Colonial. Burns earned 500 FedExCup points and moved to No. 2 in the standings behind Scheffler. The playoff began with both driving into the fairway at No. 18, the same hole where just moments earlier Scheffler made a 6-foot par after his approach on his 72nd hole went into the bunker. Scheffler got on the green with his approach in the playoff, but was 36 feet away. Burns hit just off the back edge of the green and used his putter, with the ball curling the last few feet into the cup. Scheffler made a good run with his putt, but didn’t have a birdie all day. It was the third win this season for Burns, and his fourth overall in his last 27 starts. The world’s 10th-ranked player won at the Valspar Championship for the second time in March. The Colonial win was worth $1,512,000, along with a plaid jacket and a custom-built Schwab Firebird Trans Am. Masters champion Scheffler was going for his fifth PGA TOUR victory in his last 10 starts. He missed becoming the first player since Tom Watson in 1980 with five wins in a PGA TOUR season before the start of June. Burns was 5-under on the front nine to make his turn at 9 under. He had birdie at No. 11, but then had bogey after a wayward tee shot and a penalty stroke. He parred out and then waited. After Scheffler’s first putt at the 17th went 8 feet past the hole, he pumped his fist when he made the par save. That was even more emphatic than his reaction when he also pushed a birdie attempt 9 foot past at No. 15 and also saved par there. Brendon Todd (71), who played in the final group with Scheffler, gave up his share of the lead with back-to-back bogeys at Nos. 11 and 12. That dropped him to 8 under, where he stayed to finish in third alone. That was a stroke ahead of Tony Finau (67), Davis Riley (69) and Scott Stallings (72). Temperatures were again in the mid-90s with sustained winds of more than 20 mph gusting to more than 30 mph, much like Saturday. The greens got firmer, and the wind made it even more difficult to get on — and to putt when players did. There were five players tied at 10 under after the final groups made the turn, and then a long gap of time between shots for Scheffler when he briefly regained the solo lead. Stallings birdied the 631-yard 11th to get to 10 under before he flew his approach over the No. 12 green onto a slope where his view to the grew was obstructed by a temporary TV tower. After getting a drop from that, relief from standing on a sprinkler head and then even more relief from a temporary sign, Stallings was 43 yards from the hole with a direct line to it. But his approach came up short and he ended up with bogey. Harold Varner III, in contention for his first PGA TOUR victory, was in the group with Stallings and also fell out of a share of the lead when he four-putted from just inside 20 feet after the long wait. His approach had buried into a bunker fronting the green. After that triple bogey, Varner’s tee shot at the par-3 13th went into the water and he had a double bogey. He had another triple and double after that for a backside 10-over 45 and a 78 to finish the tournament tied for 27th at even par. During that delay, Scheffler was in the fairway at No. 12 and suddenly back in the lead alone at 10 under. But that was short-lived. His approach came up just short and he then missed a 3 1/2-foot par putt. PGA TOUR rookie Riley actually had the outright lead at 11 under with sixth birdie of the day, a tap-in at the par-5 11th after chipping from behind the green after a 340-yard drive and a 305-yard approach. But his par attempt at No. 13 curled off the cup, and then his drive at the 12th went out-of-bounds on way to a double-bogey 6.

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Expert Picks: QBE ShootoutExpert Picks: QBE Shootout

Let the fun begin. Sunday marked the PGA TOUR's final official round of the calendar year. That doesn't mean golf is over until 2021, though. In addition to this week's European Tour finale and the U.S. Women's Open, two dozen PGA TOUR players are competing in the QBE Shootout in Naples, Florida. It's an opportunity for TOUR players to partner up for some competition and camaraderie. The QBE Shootout will be played Friday-Sunday at Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Florida. A different format is in use each day. Friday's first round will be a shamble. Modified alternate shot will be used Saturday. Sunday is four-balls. We convened a roundtable to offer a quick look at some of the top teams at the QBE. Let's get straight to it. Who's your favorite to win? CAMERON MORFIT: Having covered the QBE a couple of times, I can tell you it's nearly impossible to predict, but I like the look of Abraham Ancer and Matthew Wolff. Ancer was in the hunt at the Masters until a final-round 76 dropped him back to a T13, and he just shot 65-66 on the weekend to finish T12 at Mayakoba. He was also a tough out in the Presidents Cup. Wolff had a couple of runner-up finishes in the fall and is up to ninth in the FedExCup. Plus, he can make a zillion birdies. BEN EVERILL: Get ready to be shocked. I'm going for the all-Australian duo of Cameron Smith and Marc Leishman. The pair have form together having been runner-up two years ago at the ISPS HANDA Melbourne World Cup of Golf - a tournament where only a tough start in freakish weather cost them the title. And this is a tournament run by an Aussie icon in the Great White Shark Greg Norman, an idol of Leishman's particularly. The pair are great mates and will be relaxed and ready for fun. Smith comes off a runner-up at the Masters and while Leishman's best hasn't been on display for a while, this is just the environment he could need for a reboot. SEAN MARTIN: I like the Florida-Georgia team of Horschel and Todd. Todd hits a ton of fairways, which will set them up well for alternate shot, and they both ranked in the top 30 of Strokes Gained: Putting last season. That's an important skill in this low-scoring tournament. They're both coming off top-10 finishes at the Mayakoba Golf Classic presented by UNIFIN, as well. Maybe they can bring together both sides of this long-standing college football rivalry while they're at it. ROB BOLTON: Leishman-Smith ... Picking a winner is as hard as it would be to rule out any team, so I'm going to keep it simple. It comes with no apology to Ben for potentially stealing his Down Under thunder but give me his Aussies in the tag-team battle royale in the duodecagon. JASON SOBEL: I'm not even sure the right team is favored in most sportsbooks. Tony Finau/Cameron Champ are atop many pre-tourney boards, but Abraham Ancer/Matthew Wolff feels like a deadly combo in these three formats. I can easily see them setting the pace in a scramble, then playing Heisman over the final two rounds and keeping the field at arm's length. There aren't many times a Sooner and a Cowboy can make for an uncontentious team, but I really like them here. MIKE GLASCOTT: I’ll let my pal Ben handle Leishman and Smith but I’m comfortable riding with the Sea Island twosome of Harris English and Matt Kuchar. Their record together speaks volumes as they won or finished second every year from 2014 thru 2017. BUT THEN THEY SPLIT UP??? What? Why? Back together for the first time since the 2017 victory, I’m hoping the Christmas magic hits again! OK, we covered the favorites, but which team is your FAVORITE. The one you're most excited to see. MORFIT: No one is going to have more fun than Harold Varner III and Ryan Palmer. HV3 is great company no matter what, and Palmer is a great teammate to have, especially given his winning history with Jon Rahm at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans. I'm guessing this duo plays well, laughs often, and maybe even breaks out the Skittles. EVERILL: I'm excited to see what Joaquin Niemann and Sebastian Munoz can put together. This young, energetic duo are seemingly always up for having fun and they have some stellar talent and a penchant for attacking pins and chasing birdies. I'm also excited to see the Abraham Ancer and Matthew Wolff duo. I enjoy both players styles and personalities and if I was onsite they'd be a team I'd love to watch. MARTIN: A few come to mind. Champ-FInau for obvious reasons. Oosthuizen-Bubba because I have to wonder if the 2012 Masters playoff ever comes up. But I think ultimately I'll pick Ancer-Wolff. They play contrasting games and we've seen them on leaderboards at this year's majors. I could see them having a ton of fun, playing well and being Presidents Cup opponents in the future. BOLTON: Berger-Stricker ... Never mind that, at 53, Stricker is the only senior in the field. As a 50-year-old, he prevailed in 2017 (with Sean O'Hair) for his second QBE Shootout title. While he's remained competitive on the PGA TOUR Champions since play resumed in June, Stricker also has recorded top 20s in his last two non-majors on the PGA TOUR proper, including a T17 this past Sunday at Mayakoba. Meanwhile, Berger has kept the pedal floored throughout 2020, so we get to watch him perform his magic on the bermudagrass greens of south Florida once more. (My close second is the Na-O'Hair team for the sole purpose that it's a marriage of two guys who turned pro during high school.) SOBEL: If that opposing college pride is too much for you to overcome on your card, then Marc Leishman/Cameron Smith should be aligned more closely. The Aussie duo has largely spent the past half-year on opposite ends of the leaderboard, with Smith playing some of the best golf of his career and Leishman languishing, but the latter has found a little something lately. GLASSCOTT: Champ and Finau. Two similar tee-to-green bombers won’t have to worry about anything except who’s golf ball they will be putting in play. Their yardages won’t differ much from playing their own balls so the alternate shot should be smooth, as long as one of them can keep it on dry land. Playing almost 7,400 yards, that should be an advantage. And finally, let's talk sleepers. Who is a team to keep an eye on? MORFIT: Now that the Florida-Georgia football game is in the rearview mirror, Billy Horschel (Florida) and Brendon Todd (Georgia) might get along famously. Neither player is in the top 75 in the FedExCup, but Horschel is coming off a 65-64 weekend at Mayakoba, where he finished T5. Todd, who was the defending champion at El Camaleon, finished T8. It just feels like this team is playing well at the right time. EVERILL: I like the look of the Harold Varner III / Ryan Palmer team. Varner III can go on a birdie run with the best of them and Palmer has had success in team events having paired with Jon Rahm to win the Zurich Classic of New Orleans. MARTIN: Stricker-Berger. Winning a tournament alongside the Ryder Cup captain is a good way to help one's candidacy. Berger has been one of the best players in the world since the Return to Golf, Stricker held his own against the kids last week in Mayakoba (T17) and his putter is always an asset. BOLTON: Griffin-Hughes ... Beware of underdogs. What Griffin has done in the last 15 months is remarkable, so that he's teamed with the Canadian who himself has battled fiercely for a trio of podium finishes in the last nine months is perfect. These two arguably have doubted themselves more often, more recently and more deeply than everyone else in the field, so this clambake very well could feel much more like a competition instead of a reward. SOBEL: They say opposites attract, and while sweet-swinging Daniel Berger and prodigious-putting partner Steve Stricker fit the bill, I'll go with Lanto Griffin/Mackenzie Hughes at a slightly bigger number. Griffin is a very good ball-striker who can get exceptionally hot at times, while Hughes is rapidly becoming GLASCOTT: I'll second Stricker and Berger. The Ryder Cup captain always has his eyes open for wild card picks and this should be a great chance for Berger to impress up close and personal. These two should have no problem rollin’ in birdies all weekend. Stricker has plenty of big finishes on this track in this event as well.

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Rory McIlroy voted 2019 PGA TOUR Player of the Year; Sungjae Im voted Rookie of the YearRory McIlroy voted 2019 PGA TOUR Player of the Year; Sungjae Im voted Rookie of the Year

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – The PGA TOUR announced today that Rory McIlroy has been named the 2019 PGA TOUR Player of the Year as voted by the TOUR’s membership for the 2018-19 season. McIlroy will receive the Jack Nicklaus Award for winning PGA TOUR Player of the Year for the third time in his career (2012, 2014, 2019). Sungjae Im was voted 2019 PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year and will receive the Arnold Palmer Award, renamed in 2019 as a tribute to its namesake’s influence on countless young players and a fitting honor for its recipients, who will shape the game and the PGA TOUR for generations to come. RELATED: McIlroy’s greatest season | McIlroy claims THE PLAYERS | WATCH: McIlroy’s highlights from East Lake PGA TOUR members who played at least 15 official FedExCup events during the 2018-19 season were eligible to vote. The balloting process ended on Sept. 6. McIlroy, 30, of Holywood, Northern Ireland, won the FedExCup for the second time (2016, 2019), becoming just the second player to win the season-long race multiple times (Tiger Woods), and the first player to win THE PLAYERS Championship and the FedExCup in the same season. With three wins on the season (THE PLAYERS, RBC Canadian Open, TOUR Championship), McIlroy matched Brooks Koepka for the most on TOUR, and marked the third time he collected three or more victories in a single season. McIlroy also won the Byron Nelson Award for Adjusted Scoring Average (69.057) for the third time in his career and led the PGA TOUR in Top-10s (14) and Strokes Gained: Total (2.551). “On behalf of the PGA TOUR, my congratulations to Rory McIlroy on being voted the 2019 PGA TOUR Player of the Year by the TOUR’s membership,â€� said PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan. “While there are a number of honors one can receive in this game, PGA TOUR Player of the Year has to be among the most satisfying as it comes directly from his peers. Rory’s season was a model of consistency punctuated by milestone victories and ultimately the FedExCup in Atlanta.â€� After one start in the fall of 2018 (World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions), McIlroy opened the 2019 calendar year with top-sixes in his first five starts before winning THE PLAYERS for his 15th career PGA TOUR victory. He became only the third player to win THE PLAYERS, a major, the FedExCup and a World Golf Championships event in a career, joining Tiger Woods and Henrik Stenson. Six starts later, McIlroy made his tournament debut at the RBC Canadian Open, where he set the tournament record and won by seven shots, the largest winning margin of the season. Three of McIlroy’s 14 top-10 finishes came at World Golf Championships events: Mexico Championship/2, Dell Technologies Match Play/T9 and FedEx St. Jude Invitational/T4. McIlroy ended the PGA TOUR Regular Season at No. 2 in the FedExCup standings, claiming second place in the inaugural Wyndham Rewards Top 10, a $10 million bonus pool split among the top-10 finishers in the FedExCup Regular Season. McIlroy entered the TOUR Championship at No. 5 in the FedExCup standings, beginning the FedExCup Playoffs finale at 5-under, based on the new FedExCup Starting Strokes system. With rounds of 66-67-68-66, McIlroy won the TOUR Championship and hoisted the FedExCup for the second time in his career. McIlroy was selected for the honor over (alphabetically) Brooks Koepka, Matt Kuchar and Xander Schauffele. Im, a 21-year-old native of Jeju, South Korea, was the only rookie to advance to the TOUR Championship and finished the season tied for 19th in the FedExCup standings. With his Rookie of the Year honors, Im joins Stewart Cink (1996-97) as the only players to be named the Korn Ferry Tour Player of the Year and PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year in consecutive seasons. For the season, Im made 26 cuts in 35 starts, becoming the first rookie in the FedExCup era to play 35 or more events. He recorded seven top-10s, highlighted by three top-fives, with his best finish of the season coming at the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, where he tied for third. “Congratulations to Sungjae on being voted 2019 PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year,â€� said Monahan. “His ‘Ironman’ season was remarkably consistent from start-to-finish, and his fellow players raved about his all-around game throughout the year. Like so many Korn Ferry Tour graduates, he arrived on the PGA TOUR prepared to compete with the world’s best, and his season was a reflection of a maturity beyond his 21 years.â€� Im was selected for the honor over (alphabetically) Cameron Champ, Adam Long, Collin Morikawa and Matthew Wolff.

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