Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Fishburn, McCarthy carry lead into Sony weekend

Fishburn, McCarthy carry lead into Sony weekend

Patrick Fishburn and Denny McCarthy share the lead in the Sony Open going into what figures to be a wide-open weekend at Waialae.

Click here to read the full article

RTG is one of the best casino games developers. Check our sponsor Hypercasinos.com with the best RTG casinos for USA gamblers!

Turkish Airlines Open
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Martin Couvra+200
Haotong Li+400
Wilco Nienaber+650
Yannik Paul+1400
Joost Luiten+1600
Todd Clements+1800
Jorge Campillo+2000
Ewen Ferguson+2200
Guido Migliozzi+2200
Robin Williams+2800
Click here for more...
3rd Round 2-Balls - A. Ayora vs E. Molinari
Type: 3rd Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Angel Ayora-110
Edoardo Molinari+120
Tie+750
3rd Round 2-Balls - F. Lacroix vs A. Wilson
Type: 3rd Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Frederic Lacroix-125
Andrew Wilson+135
Tie+750
3rd Round 2-Balls - B. Robinson-Thompson vs D. Erickson
Type: 3rd Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Brandon Robinson-Thompson-140
Dan Erickson+150
Tie+750
3rd Round 2-Balls - R. Johnston vs J. Luiten
Type: 3rd Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Joost Luiten-150
Ryggs Johnston+160
Tie+750
3rd Round 2-Balls - E. Ferguson vs M. Lindberg
Type: 3rd Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Ewen Ferguson-150
Mikael Lindberg+160
Tie+750
3rd Round 2-Balls - G. Migliozzi vs J. Campillo
Type: 3rd Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Jorge Campillo+100
Guido Migliozzi+110
Tie+750
3rd Round 2-Balls - C. Sordet vs T. Christensen
Type: 3rd Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Clement Sordet-140
Tiger Christensen+150
Tie+750
3rd Round 2-Balls - T. Clements vs Y. Paul
Type: 3rd Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Yannik Paul-110
Todd Clements+120
Tie+750
3rd Round 2-Balls - R. Williams vs H. Li
Type: 3rd Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Haotong Li-190
Robin Williams+200
Tie+750
3rd Round 2-Balls - W. Nienaber vs M. Couvra
Type: 3rd Round 2-Balls - Status: OPEN
Martin Couvra-105
Wilco Nienaber+115
Tie+750
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
Click here for more...
PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+450
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1600
Xander Schauffele+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Collin Morikawa+2200
Jon Rahm+2200
Joaquin Niemann+3000
Viktor Hovland+3500
Click here for more...
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
Click here for more...
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
Click here for more...
Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

Related Post

Preview: Tiger Woods at the U.S. OpenPreview: Tiger Woods at the U.S. Open

With one more win, Tiger Woods will tie Sam Snead for most career PGA TOUR victories at 82. Each time Tiger tees it up, we’ll take a look at his chances for that particular week. Here’s a CHASING 82 preview entering this week’s U.S. Open at Pebble Beach. RECENT FORM Woods’ most recent start came two weeks ago at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide. He never contended, but he did produce a backdoor top-10 result with a final-round 5-under 67 at Muirfield Village. The T-9 was his fourth top 10 of the season. Woods said he entered Sunday wanting to see something positive and “I was able to accomplish that.â€� He was pleased with his play off the tee but had a couple of loose iron shots that contributed to his two double bogeys during the week. “Just need to clean up the rounds,â€� he said. RELATED: Tiger’s Jedi mind tricks at 2000 U.S. Open | Tiger ‘trending in right direction’ | Tee times Still, it was a far better performance than his previous start, a missed cut at the PGA Championship. That was his first start after his Masters win, and the rust showed. With a decent showing at Muirfield Village, rust won’t be an issue this week at Pebble Beach. “The PGA moving to May was very different,â€� Woods said. “And now it’s basically our normal schedule going forward.â€� TOURNAMENT HISTORY Woods is making his 21st start in the U.S. Open. He’s won three times – 2000 at Pebble Beach when he won by a record 15 shots; 2002 at Bethpage Black; and 2008 at Torrey Pines when he essentially won on one good leg. In addition to his three wins, he also has finished second twice and third once. His most recent start was last year at Shinnecock Hills when he missed the cut for the third time in his U.S. Open career (and second straight time). HISTORY AT PEBBLE BEACH 1997 – After turning pro the previous fall, Woods makes his first appearance at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. He finishes tied for second after shooting 63-64 on his two weekend rounds at Pebble Beach. His amateur partner that week was actor Kevin Costner. 1998 – With his father Earl as his amateur partner at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, Woods never made it to Pebble Beach. He played his first two rounds on the other courses in the rotation, but bad weather forced the tournament to delay the finish by several months, and Woods was among several players who opted to withdraw. 1999 – A third-round 78 (one birdie, seven bogeys) at Pebble Beach left Woods tied for 53rd at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in a tournament shortened to 54 holes due to weather. His amateur partner was baseball star Ken Griffey Jr. 2000 – Woods trailed Matt Gogel by seven shots with seven holes to play during the Monday finish at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am but played that last stretch in 5 under (including a hole-out eagle from 105 yards at the par-4 15th) while Gogel played it in 4 over. Woods’ final-round 64 gave him a two-shot win – it was his sixth consecutive win on the PGA TOUR going back to the previous season. His amateur partner was his former Stanford teammate Jerry Chang, who would be his partner for his next few starts in the event. 2000 – Four months after his AT&T win, Woods won again at Pebble Beach, this time in record-setting fashion at the U.S. Open. Shooting 65-69-71-67, Woods finishes at 12 under to win his first U.S. Open by 15 strokes over Ernie Els and Miguel Angel Jimenez. It was the first win of four consecutive majors in what would be his Tiger Slam 2001 – Back at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am as defending champ, Woods opened with a 66 at Spyglass Hill, followed by a 73 at Poppy Hills. His weekend rounds of 65-73 at Pebble Beach left him tied for 13th, eight shots behind winner Davis Love III. 2002 – Woods shot 71-68 on the weekend of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am to finish tied for 12th, eight shots behind Gogel. 2010 – At the U.S. Open, Woods shot 74-72 in the first 36 holes but shot a 66 that Saturday to move into contention. But a final-round 75 left him tied for tied for fourth, four shots behind winner Graeme McDowell. 2012 – Making his first AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am start in 10 years, Woods was solo third entering the final round. That left him paired with long-time rival Phil Mickelson, who was tied for fourth. Woods shot a 75 that Sunday to finish T-15 while Mickelson shot a 64 to claim the tournament by two shots. Tiger’s amateur partner that week was then-Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo. TEE TIMES Tiger will tee off Thursday at 5:09 p.m. ET off the first tee and 11:24 a.m. ET off the 10th tee on Friday’s second round. His playing partners are Jordan Spieth and Justin Rose.   WHAT THEY’RE SAYING TIGER WOODS (on his practice round at Pebble Beach a few weeks ago): “The greens are — I forgot, I haven’t played there in a number of years, I forgot how small the complexes are. Add a little firmness and speed to them, they get really tight. But seeing some of the new greens that they had redone, taking a look at the new pins was nice to see. So come next week, when I start concentrating and focusing on Pebble Beach, it will be nice to have those images.â€� RICKIE FOWLER (on Tiger’s 2000 U.S. Open win): “Obviously it was pretty dominant. Very impressive week. I don’t remember watching it a whole lot. I was a little young, Tiger is getting a little older now. We make sure he’s aware of that, too. We share the same trainer so it’s OK. No, obviously him kind of ’99, early 2000s is probably some of the most impressive and dominant golf I think anyone’s really ever seen.â€� BRANDEL CHAMBLEE, Golf Channel (on Tiger):  “As it relates to victory, you start to look at what type of player Pebble Beach has divined out. It’s divined out players with the most control who were scramblers. There’s nobody in the top-10 in the world that plays with more control than Tiger Woods does. He still has the scrambling skills that we saw on display last year. The big question is – as moss sort of creeps up his limbs as he gets a little older – can he putt as well as he used to on poa annua? His putting is not quite what it was. That is the only question mark I see with Tiger this week.â€�

Click here to read the full article

Byron Nelson a welcome sight on the schedule for SpiethByron Nelson a welcome sight on the schedule for Spieth

Last time we saw Jordan Spieth, he was keeping his sense of humor despite some mild frustrations with his game. He joked with the gallery about always being able to find playing partner Phil Mickelson’s ball but not his own, but in the next moment, after an unsatisfactory approach shot at the 10th hole, chided himself: “Come on! Give yourself some looks!” Spieth ultimately missed the cut by two at THE PLAYERS Championship, but he was hardly alone among the game’s bold-faced names who had an off-week. Seventh in the FedExCup standings, Spieth will be back in action at this week’s AT&T Byron Nelson at TPC Four Seasons Las Colinas. So will FedExCup leader Dustin Johnson, defending champion Sergio Garcia (13), and Jason Day, who is fourth in the Official World Golf Ranking. All of them finished outside the top 10 at THE PLAYERS, some well outside, but all have enjoyed way-above-average histories at Las Colinas, which is in its last year hosting the tournament before it moves to nearby Trinity Forest, a Bill Coore/Ben Crenshaw design.  “This is my seventh time [playing the Byron],” Spieth said at his press conference Tuesday. “It’s bizarre. Just feels like somewhat of another Byron to me. I know this week being last time being here, that will strike some feels, but it’s still a really fun week that I’ve learned to enjoy more than put that pressure on myself. And even when I’ve been in contention, I’ve learned to enjoy having that with everybody around, and it’s helped me just have a better time this week.” For Spieth, the good times in Dallas roll both on and off the course. He made his PGA TOUR debut at age 16 at the 2010 Byron—and finished T16. Since that auspicious beginning, he has made the cut in all five subsequent starts in this, his hometown event, where he is aiming to pick off his 10th TOUR victory this week at the age of 23. Off the course, Spieth is boarding three other contestants at his Dallas pad this week: Monday qualifier Alex Moon, Spieth’s roommate, who shot a 7-under 65 at Lantana Golf Club; former Texas Longhorn and sponsor’s exemption Kramer Hickok; and Smylie Kaufman. “We had a little pool basketball yesterday,” Spieth said, “but that’s probably done after Monday. We’re just on to tournament week schedule, and everybody is so different.” Spieth isn’t the only star who relishes coming to Las Colinas. So does Dustin Johnson, who is coming off a final-round 68 at THE PLAYERS for a T12 finish—his career best. His play at the Byron has been remarkably consistent, with four top-10 and six top-25 finishes in seven starts. Johnson also boasts the tournament’s best scoring average (67.88) of anyone since 2009. Oh, and don’t forget Day, who won the 2010 AT&T Byron Nelson, and who was fifth in 2011, and who tied for ninth in 2012. (Deep breath.) And Garcia, who is a two-time champion at TPC Four Seasons, most recently last year. Think they’re not thrilled to touch down in Dallas? “I did some really good things last week,” Garcia, who shot rounds of 73-71-67-78 at THE PLAYERS, said Tuesday. “But I also did some things that weren’t that great. I need to make sure I clean that up and, you know, have a solid, solid stretch here in Texas.” No one is more solid in Texas than AT&T ambassador Spieth, who at a kids’ clinic earlier this week drove golf balls into full Coke cans, which exploded in fountains of frothy fizz. Last year, you might recall, he hit a marshmallow into the air and caught it in his mouth. For Spieth, there is something especially sweet about playing a TOUR event at a place where he used to come with his father to watch his boyhood idols. And a victory this week would carry more than sentimental value. It would give him two rare doubles: the AT&T double (Spieth already won the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am earlier this season) and the DFW double (he won last year’s DEAN & DELUCA Invitational at Colonial in nearby Ft. Worth). “This one is definitely more home for me being in Dallas versus Ft. Worth,” Spieth said. “But winning both is something that is a lifelong goal for me and I have this one yet to accomplish.” To win, he added, he’ll have to play better on Thursday and Friday. “The problem this year so far has been my opening rounds,” he said. “I just haven’t had it. I’ve been behind the 8 ball too many times.” By his lofty standards, Spieth’s play has been up and down. He tied for 12th at the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship, but didn’t make it out of his pod at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play and missed the cut at the Shell Houston Open. He was in contention at the Masters (before a final-round 75), and with partner Ryan Palmer finished fourth at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, but shot 73-75 at THE PLAYERS at revamped TPC Sawgrass. What’s odd, Spieth added, is that tee-to-green he’s playing his best golf—2015 included. “My game was in great condition last week,” he said. “I hit the ball phenomenal and putting was great leading in. I just—my one bad day of the week was Thursday, striking the ball, and I recognized what it was. I couldn’t fix it in time for the round, and then I fixed that on Friday but then I just didn’t get any of the putts to go. “… I’m striking the ball as well as I’ve struck it this entire year, which is as good as I’ve struck the ball on Tour, is how I feel. My wedge play and putting are yet to kick into gear and it just takes a bit of momentum on course. I can do all the practice I want, it’s just seeing some go in on course, whether it’s one round or through a streak of two tournaments, just to feel like it’s all the way back to top notch. So, it’s close.” For Spieth, there could be no better week to turn “close” into “close the deal,” no better way to pay tribute to the consummate winner Byron Nelson himself. The DFW double awaits. 

Click here to read the full article

The epic slumps and epic comebacks of Max Homa and Michael KimThe epic slumps and epic comebacks of Max Homa and Michael Kim

NAPA, Calif. – Michael Kim and Max Homa, who will play together along with Cameron Champ in the first and second rounds of the Fortinet Championship at Silverado Resort & Spa, sometimes regard their college years with a pinch of nostalgia. The Cal teammates hit fairways, made birdies. It was a simpler time. They roomed together on the road, and when Kim, who moved to America from Korea when he was 12, spoke to his parents on the phone, Homa couldn’t catch a word of it. At other times, though, Kim would slow it way down as he dictated simple Korean phrases into his phone. “He’s going to be so mad I’m telling people this,” Homa said with a grin. “… He starts recording something on his phone and it would be like me saying like – ‘I drove my car to the store’ in Korean. I was like, ‘What are you doing?’ And he said, ‘Oh, I’m in this Korean 101 class that I’m not supposed to know, I’m not supposed to be fluent in this.’” Ah, the college years. But what followed for Homa and Kim was no laughing matter. Each made it to the TOUR only to fall apart in his mid-20s, lose his TOUR card, and slog through a bewildering odyssey in the golfing wilderness. The game, once so simple, got complicated. Homa missed 15 cuts in 2015, played on the Korn Ferry Tour in ’16, and missed 15 cuts again in ’17, when he dropped to 244th in the FedExCup. “He’s way too good a player to lose his card,” Rory McIlroy said of Homa at the Wells Fargo Championship in May. True enough. Homa, the defending champion at the Fortinet, is still in the afterglow of a career-best two-win season and fifth-place finish in the FedExCup. Last week U.S. Presidents Cup Captain Davis Love III named him among his six picks to help round out the team that will take on the Internationals at Quail Hollow Club next week. Now it’s Kim’s turn to come back. He parted ways with longtime swing coach James Oh to go with John Tillery just three weeks before the 2018 John Deere Classic, which he then won by eight shots. It was a happy day, with Kim having shot 27 under to lap the field, but when asked in his press conference afterward about the recent coaching change he burst into tears. “You feel like you’ve gone to war with a guy for years,” Kim said Wednesday, “and I started seeing (Oh) when I was 15, and he’s the one who had really helped me get on TOUR. That was three weeks after I had told him, and it felt like 90 percent of the work we had done for that win was with James, and maybe the last 10 percent was with J.T., but it was going to be looked at as J.T. came in and fixed everything. I felt bad that people were going to look at it that way.” What’s more, as Kim sat there before the press, the trophy won and a life goal realized, he harbored a bizarre secret: Other than that one week at TPC Deere Run, he wasn’t playing well. “I was still struggling even that year,” he said. “I wasn’t playing great, I just got hot at the perfect moment and the stars aligned for me. I got caught up in the trendy thing in the golf swing and tried to quote, unquote take the hands out of it. Growing up, a lot of my feel was in my hands. Tiger Woods talks about his hands. I lost that.” Kim’s freefall was dizzying. He made it to the weekend just once in two years, at one point missing 25 consecutive cuts. He fell outside the top 1,000 in the world. By abandoning the right-to-left tee shot that found fairways and allowed for the fullest expression of his above-average wedges and short game, he became utterly, hopelessly lost. “It might have been a technical thing at first, but I think it became a mental thing,” said Michael Weaver, a Cal teammate who briefly played on the Korn Ferry Tour. “I was a fill-in caddie for him at the 3M Open in 2019, and he played with Smylie Kaufman and Austin Cook, and I felt bad for Austin because Smylie and Michael were hitting it all over the place.” Kaufman is now a golf broadcaster, and for a time it was anything but certain Kim would make his way out of the williwags. He parted with Tillery and tried his luck with various other coaches, including George Gankas, but nothing stuck. His friends tried to buck up his spirits, telling him they still believed in him even as the cuts piled up. “Every time I asked him, ‘Where are you playing next?’ I was prepared to hear, ‘I might not play for a while,’” Weaver said. “You work so hard to build up your confidence and then it all goes badly and you’re like, I used to be good at this and now I suck. I wouldn’t fault anyone for shutting it down; it’s a natural reaction to not being able to find your way out.” Kim saw flashes of form, but they could vanish even as he made the turn. “I was really dejected because on the front nine you have that hope,” he said, “and then it’s a crash all over again.” He got a slight reprieve from Covid, the pandemic extending his status a year and saving him from a return to Korn Ferry Tour Q School. After Monday-qualifying for the Fortinet last year, he tapped Weaver to caddie for him again. “He hit it in the condos on one,” Weaver said. It looked like the same old stuff, but just a few weeks earlier Kim had begun working with was Sean Foley, who diagnosed the problem: Kim had gotten away from his swing DNA and what made him great in the first place. “Sean said, ‘We needed to get you swinging a little more like you did as a kid, with similar feels and tweaks here and there,’” Kim said, “and that’s how we started. We were still making the transition last year. It was all very new.” Slowly, methodically, Kim clawed his way back. He started the 2022 Korn Ferry Tour season with a pair of missed cuts, but a T15 at The Panama Championship in February provided hope. He texted Foley: This was going to work. Kim racked up 12 top-25 finishes in 25 starts to regain his PGA TOUR card. He also shared the first-round lead at the Puerto Rico Open (T16) and finished seventh at the Barbasol Championship. Today, he feels like he has a new lease on life. “I mean obviously it would be great if I went to see Sean first,” he said. “I’ve come to believe it’s more about your fit with your instructor and does his swing philosophy fit with what you have.” Without the last four years, though, he added, he might not be the same player he is today. “I don’t think I’d be as excited and have a fresh perspective on playing the PGA TOUR,” he said. “You go through the ups and downs and you appreciate it more.” Homa could say the same. His eyes got a little teary Wednesday as he talked about the journey from his very first PGA TOUR start to making his first U.S. Presidents Cup Team, and the ups and downs along the way. For the two Cal Bears who will reunite at Silverado, the struggle makes it all the sweeter.

Click here to read the full article