Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Collin Morikawa and Justin Rose are latest stars to commit to 2022 ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP

Collin Morikawa and Justin Rose are latest stars to commit to 2022 ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP

CHIBA, Japan – Tournament officials announced today that two-time major winner Collin Morikawa and former FedExCup champion Justin Rose have committed to play in the 2022 ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP at Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club in Chiba, October 13-16, 2022. The duo are the latest big names to sign up for Japan’s lone PGA TOUR tournament following earlier commitments by reigning Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 gold medallist Xander Schauffele, Cameron Champ, Jason Day, Rickie Fowler and Tommy Fleetwood. Travis Steiner, Executive Director of the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP, said: “We are delighted that Collin Morikawa and Justin Rose, who are both established stars of the game on the PGA TOUR, will compete in our tournament. Their presence will lend further credence to Japan being a major attraction for our top players and ensure another meaningful week of world-class golf for our Japanese fans to experience at Narashino.” Morikawa, 25, has emerged as one of the most exciting young talents in recent years. Since turning professional in 2019, he has won five times on the PGA TOUR including two major championships, the 2020 PGA Championship and 2021 Open Championship. He also became the first American golfer to win the DP World Tour Race to Dubai title last year. In the recently concluded 2021-22 PGA TOUR Season, the World No. 8 posted eight top-10s, including top-5 finishes at the Masters and U.S. Open, en route to a T21 finish in the FedExCup. Morikawa will be making his fourth straight appearance at the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP, with a T7 in 2021 being his best finish. Morikawa said: “I’ve played in every ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP since 2019 and it’s a tournament that I mark out on my calendar at the start of every year. Japan is an amazing country and the fans are incredible. The Morikawa family name goes back generations to Kumamoto, Japan, and having the opportunity to compete in a country with deep family roots is something I take great pride in. I look forward to concluding my year with some delicious Japanese food, playing on a great golf course and hopefully securing a win along the way.” Rose, a former World No. 1, is a renowned winner across the globe where he has won official tournaments on all six continents, including The Crowns Tournament on the Japan Golf Tour in 2002. He was also the gold medallist when golf made a welcome return to the Olympic Games programme in Rio in 2016. The 42-year-old Englishman holds 10 titles on the PGA TOUR, including a major triumph at the 2013 U.S. Open. Another career highlight was achieved in 2018 when he claimed the season-long prize, the FedExCup, following two victories and nine other top-10s. Rose’s best finish at the recent 2021-22 Season was a T4 at the RBC Canadian Open where he closed with a 10-under 60. His lone appearance to date at the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP was at Sherwood Country Club in 2020 where he finished T17 when the tournament was moved to the U.S. due to the challenges of COVID-19. Rose, ranked 58th in the world, said: “Japan will always have a special place in my heart as one of my earliest professional wins was achieved in Nagoya back in 2002. I look forward to returning in October to compete for another title at the PGA TOUR’s lone tournament in Japan. I’ve heard nothing but great things about the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP in Japan and I look forward to experiencing it myself.” The US$11 million ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP will showcase a 78-man field which will compete over four rounds with no cut. As Japan’s only official PGA TOUR event, the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP was successfully launched at Narashino in 2019 when Tiger Woods claimed the inaugural title with a three-shot victory over Hideki Matsuyama en route to equalling Sam Snead’s record of 82 PGA TOUR victories. Patrick Cantlay was victorious in the 2020 edition at Sherwood while Matsuyama produced a popular victory when the tournament returned home to Japan last October. This year’s ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP will include the leading players from the 2021-2022 FedExCup, players designated by the Japan Golf Tour Organization, the winner of the 2022 BMW Japan Golf Tour Championship Mori Building Cup on the Japan Golf Tour and sponsor exemptions. As in previous years, part of the tournament’s proceeds will be donated to charitable causes. As a full FedExCup tournament, the winner of the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP will earn 500 FedExCup points. The event will be co-sanctioned once again with the Japan Golf Tour Organization. For more information on the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP, please visit ZOZOCHAMPIONSHIP.com.

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Ben Martin takes two-shot lead at Corales Puntacana ChampionshipBen Martin takes two-shot lead at Corales Puntacana Championship

PUNTA CANA, Dominican Republic — Ben Martin shot his second straight 6-under 66 on Friday to double his lead to two strokes in the PGA TOUR’s Corales Puntacana Championship. RELATED: Leaderboard | WGC-Match Play Day 3 Match Recaps Martin had four birdies in a late five-hole stretch, finishing the afternoon round on the front nine at breezy Corales Golf Course. “I think the course was playing a little easier,” Martin said. “The wind was up yesterday morning more than it was this afternoon. But it was starting to dry out some in the afternoon, so a little give and take there.” He began the late run with a birdie on the par-5 fourth and added three more on the par-4 sixth, par-5 seventh and par-4 eighth. He also started fast, birdieing the first three holes. “I’ve just been in a great mindset,” Martin said. I think more than anything, my swing feels in a good place, I’m rolling it nice. So everything kind of feels easy and I’m not putting too much pressure on myself and making some birdies when I have chances, but not trying to do too much.” The 34-year-old former Clemson player has made only one other PGA TOUR start this year, missing the cut in Puerto Rico with rounds of 78 and 70. He won the 2014 Shriners Hospitals for Children Open for his lone PGA TOUR title. “Not having a great status, I think that motivated me to get back out,” Martin said. “I would say over the last six months sort of I’ve been working harder, working smarter than I have in the past four or five years.” Alex Smalley was second at 10 under after a 65. The TOUR rookie from Duke countered an opening double bogey with an eagle on No. 4 and closed with birdies on Nos. 7 and 9. On his first hole, his mother helped him by finding his ball in a bush. “Not how I wanted to start, not super happy, but she saved me a good 190-yard walk,” Smalley said. Chad Ramey (65) and Adam Schenk (68) were 9 under. Schenk also eagled the fourth. He advanced to the weekend for the third time in his last 10 starts. “Just play your game and just worry about yourself,” Schenk said. “I look at handling 18 situations, 18 holes and just handle each situation you get on every hole just to the best of your ability and kind of block out the rest.” Graeme McDowell, the 2019 winner, was 8 under after his second 68. He birdied four of his last five holes. “Key finish to get my momentum back moving into the weekend,” McDowell said. “Continuing to feel very comfortable, like the way the greens are setting up, driving it really well and just got to keep doing more of the same really.” Nate Lashley was 7 under after a 68. Nicolai Hojgaard of Denmark, the highest-ranked player in the field at No. 77 in the world, missed the cut by a stroke with rounds of 73 and 71. His twin brother, Rasmus, was 4 under after a 67. The tournament is being played opposite the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play event in Austin, Texas. The winner will be exempt into the PGA Championship. Defending champion Joel Dahmen withdrew because of illness. He opened with a 71.

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Hardest-driving closing hole: 18th at TPC SawgrassHardest-driving closing hole: 18th at TPC Sawgrass

It is “The Godfather Part IIâ€� — better and more substantial. Only 17 is “The Godfather,â€� first in line. It has more muscle and more water. Only the 17th has more marketing manpower. It is a Joe Louis right cross, more deliberate and punishing. But No. 17 is a Muhammad Ali jab, delivering pain in the time it takes you to draw a breath. The 18th hole at THE PLAYERS Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass should set the standard for grueling tests. Only it can’t get top billing over its smaller, but sexier neighbor, the island-green 17th. Which is OK, because while the crowds might be 25-deep at 17 come Saturday and Sunday, the layers of fear are thicker when you stand on the tee at the 18th. “No doubt about it,â€� said Brad Faxon, whose eight-win PGA TOUR career included 22 appearances in THE PLAYERS Championship. With a pair of top 10s and cuts made in 12 straight starts starting in 1994, the veteran could be deemed as having a good feel for the Stadium Course – except for when he stood at 18 tee. “The hardest-driving golf hole I’ve ever played,â€� Faxon said. He has the numbers to validate his assessment – 23 over at No. 18 for his 77 rounds – but Faxon also has plenty of esteemed company when it comes to being thrust into the confounding 462-yard closing hole. (It was a 440-yarder when this Pete Dye creation debuted in 1982.) It all starts with an inability to get settled on the tee, said Steve Stricker, who is making his 21st appearance at THE PLAYERS. “I’ve just never been comfortable on the tee there,â€� he said. “It’s just one of those holes. I like to turn the ball right-to-left, but I never feel I can push it.â€� That’s because the genius of Dye shines brilliantly at the 18th. He provides for a large area of fairway, but against a backdrop of an even larger expanse of water (left) and daunting trees (right). It is a fairway that bends right-to-left, so it’s understandable that players will prefer that shape of shot off the tee, but that invites the reality that your ball would be been steered in the direction of what feels like the Atlantic Ocean. “I mean, we deal with water all the time, but at 18, it’s right on top of you,â€� Faxon said. “And there’s so much of it. You actually see more water than fairway, you’re at sea level with it, and it makes you uncomfortable.â€� When he got to the 18th in Thursday’s first round, Adam Scott was 4 under for the eight holes he had played, but it’s not like he could have a bounce in his step. Not when he owns membership in one of the PGA TOUR’s largest fraternities – players who are off-balance at the Stadium Course’s 18th. So when Scott took aim down the right side and failed to turn it left, he watched his drive waggle aimlessly right, hit a cart path, and bounce up on a large, Bermuda-grass covered hill. He made bogey, which slowed his momentum but was markedly better than what he had done in recent years in Round 1 at the 18th – a double in 2014, a double in ’15, a snowman in ’16, and a double last year. Now 27 over for his 59 rounds, the Aussie has stretched to 49 the numbers of rounds since he last birdied the 18th (for the record, it was Round 1 in 2004, the year he won THE PLAYERS), but Scott knows he’s not the only one to be battered by the hole. Likewise, he knows to what he owes his troubles. “I don’t turn the ball (right-to-left) like I did when I was younger,â€� Scott said. “Different swing, different technology, and it’s especially harder to turn it with a driver.â€� A driver that doesn’t move left brings those trees into play (“They are the most perfectly placed trees in golf,â€� said Faxon) and Scott has been especially penalized by them. But if you choose to play conservatively and hit 3-wood, as Stricker often does, “I end up with 220-something (for yardage) and that’s no fun into that green.â€� Indeed, the green at 18 is vintage Dye, with an assortment of grassy mounds that rarely provide a straight-forward lie if you miss the green. Also, that massive stretch of water is ever-present, so the competitor in you “tells you that you want to get it as far down the fairway as possible,â€� Stricker said. With that other Florida commodity that is in greater surplus than oranges and beach sand – wind – such a factor, Stricker knows it is easier said than done. And, yes, he, too, has the numbers to substantiate his concerns; he made par in Round 1, but in his 65 rounds at the Stadium Course, Stricker is 26 over. Just don’t blink an eye, because guess what? The 18th has been dishing out misery for 36 editions of this golf spectacular. More misery, by the numbers, than the heralded 17th. To wit, going back to the second PLAYERS in 1983 (data from 1982 is not available) and including Thursday’s first round, the double-bogeys at the 18th have outnumbered those at the 17th by a 1,107 to 1,001 margin. Ditto triple-bogeys, 260 to 251, and in six of the last 10 editions of THE PLAYERS, the 18th has ranked as the most difficult hole. What’s more, even though more eyeballs and lots more buzz embrace the watery challenge of the island-green, between 2003 and 2017 there has been one more ball hit in the water at the 18th (704) than the 17th (703). Keegan Bradley has contributed to that total at the 18th and he did so again Thursday, though his ball crossed the hazard well down the fairway and helped him at least salvage a bogey. It’s not a score that leads him to beat himself up. “I’d say if you play that hole even 2 over for the week, you’d take that,â€� said Bradley. Hard to argue with Bradley, because of the 36 previous winners of this showcase event, 13 have prevailed despite playing the 18th over par. Even the incomparable Tiger Woods survived a roller-coaster ride at the 18th – a double, a birdie, bogey, bogey – to win in 2001 and both Fred Couples (1984) and Craig Perks (2002) have held the trophy after playing the final hole in 3 over. On just eight occasions has the winner played 18 under par, with Steve Elkington in 1991 the only champion to play it in 2 under. Given the ferocity of the hole, there are more examples of gut-check up-and-downs to save par than birdies at the 72nd hole Sunday. Rickie Fowler in 2015 did birdie the 18th on Sunday to muscle his way into a playoff that he would win, but only three other times has the winner made a birdie in Round 4 – Elkington doing it in ’91 and ’97, Sandy Lyle accomplishing the feat in 1987. More frequently – eight times, in fact – the winner has prevailed despite a bogey at the 18th in the final round. Scott was one of those, though his up-and-down after hitting his approach into the water, was a career-defining moment and perhaps got him into an early mindset (being just his third PLAYERS) that bogeys don’t kill you at No. 18. “It’s just a hard, hard hole,â€� he said. “It doesn’t fit a driver, but 3-wood sometimes leaves you just too far back.â€� When he hit it into the water in Thursday’s first round, Woods missed an opportunity to finish in red numbers. But it wasn’t a surprise and Woods proved again Friday that even the best struggle to play this hole in four shots. From the left side of the fairway, Woods was short right with his 194-yard approach and made another bogey. Thus, in 65 career rounds, Woods is now 21 over at the 18th, though he’s not at the bottom of this dubious list. No, sir. You go all the way down and can find a premier ball-striker, Corey Pavin, at 36 over and major champions Mark Brooks, Jeff Sluman and Bernhard Langer are all at 33 over. They are the sort of numbers that fans might not appreciate, but colleagues understand. That’s because they’ve stood on that tee at 18, felt wind whipping left-to-right or right-to-left or straight in or even down off the right, as it blew Thursday, and never has a sense of calm come over them. “It’s just so hard to pick a line (off the tee) that’s the right line,â€� said Faxon. Of those who’ve played more than 10 rounds at THE PLAYERS, Russell Henley rated as best at the 18th – 3 under for 16 times. He continued with that success with a par in Round 1, so naturally he was asked his secret recipe. No surprise, it was one that dated back to Old Tom. “I just try to get it in play, just try to hit it straight,â€� he said. Henley smiled, thrust out his hands, indicating that that was all there was to it. Yeah, right.

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