Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting A big win at stake for Jordan Spieth, Matt Wallace at the Valero Texas Open

A big win at stake for Jordan Spieth, Matt Wallace at the Valero Texas Open

SAN ANTONIO — The co-leaders after three rounds at the Valero Texas Open spoke on a darkening Saturday night about their hopes to play hard and well for one more day. Neither mentioned the personal stakes. One wants to win for the first time in 83 starts on the PGA TOUR. The other wants to win for the first time period. RELATED: Full leaderboard | Wallace plays with new cross-handed swing The last group in the final round of the oldest professional tournament in Texas, the one celebrating its 99th year on the TOUR, will feature Jordan Spieth and Matt Wallace at 12 under par, with Charley Hoffman two strokes behind them. Spieth, a Texan who has yet to triumph in his home state, looks to summon the brilliance of his first five seasons, when he won 11 times, including three majors. Wallace, an Englishman with 36 TOUR starts since 2017, has never finished better than third. Hoffman has no victories since the 2016. That was right here at TPC San Antonio, in the sixth-oldest professional golf tournament in the world. The three of them separated themselves on a cool, gloomy afternoon after rain postponed play for two and a half hours. Spieth and Wallace shot 5-under 67. Hoffman shot 65. They played the back nine in a combined 14 strokes under par, which bodes well for those who believe in momentum carried over. Spieth has had his opportunities in a resurgent 2021 season. He held a share of the 54-hole lead at the Waste Management Phoenix Open, his first since 2018. He finished tied for fourth. He did the same thing a week later, at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, but this time he had the 36-hole, too. He tied for third there. "I was pretty anxious to start that next day" in Phoenix, said Spieth, whose struggles since 2017 have been documented well and discussed widely, including after his even-par 72 in the fourth round in the desert. "I felt really calm at Pebble," he said, "and then been in contention a few times since." In his five starts in stroke-play tournaments since a missed cut in January at the Farmers Insurance Open, Spieth has had a reasonable chance to win four (he tied for 48th at THE PLAYERS Championship). In every one of them, he failed to break 70 in the final round. That pattern must end. "The goal this week was to get myself into contention and have a chance to win," Spieth said. "The next goal is to try and get myself into position to be in control on the back nine." Wallace knows and accepts that spectators at the Valero Texas Open, even in modest numbers in a pandemic, unanimously agitate for a Texan to prevail — or maybe even Hoffman, a Californian who, since 2006, has four finishes here inside the Top Five and six inside the Top 10. "Hopefully I won over some fans there today," Wallace said. Wallace, 30, has four international victories, all of them on the European Tour, but none in the U.S. "There's times in rounds where you know you need to make things happen and know you need to hole a putt at the right time," he said. "So I'll prepare myself for that and I'll think of the good stuff," he added. "That I've holed putts this week. I've pulled shots off." The winner of the Valero Texas Open gets a pair of Lucchese boots — crafted in Texas since 1883. Those are stakes of a different shape. The player who holes the most putts, pulls off the shots and produces enough of the good stuff gets to try them on for size.

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AUGUSTA, Ga. - Even in the middle of a pandemic and absent the patrons, the show must go on. A light rain fell in the semi-darkness as Gary Player, 85, and then Jack Nicklaus, 80, hit the ceremonial opening tee shots to open the Masters Tournament on Thursday morning. "We'll never know," Nicklaus said of the fate of their golf balls, and the mask-wearing members, press and tournament officials ringing the tee chortled. The old legends sauntered off and soon the skies opened, the rain halting play with just nine players having recorded a hole score, and nine others having just begun their rounds. "It's been fun," Nicklaus said once the two were inside the press building and bedecked in green blazers for their annual press conference. "We miss Arnold, but it's a nice tradition." Lee Elder, the first African American to play in the Masters in 1975, will join them as the third ceremonial starter next April. Asked about the addition, which Augusta National Chairman Fred Ridley announced earlier this week, Player recalled how he'd invited Elder to join him in an exhibition amid South African apartheid in 1969. It required approval from the president, and Player praised the courage it must've taken for Elder to show up. "It was very influential because at that stage no Black visitors or people of any color were visiting South Africa," he said. "I think he encouraged a lot of - at that stage we still had a lot of young Black potential golfers, but they didn’t have a hero, so to speak, and to have Lee Elder come down there was remarkable, and it went off extremely well." Nicklaus (six Green Jackets) and Player (three) touched on a wide range of topics that included: Health - Nicklaus said his back has been so bad, he can no longer go on walks but has been walking in the pool with Barbara. And Player, to no one's surprise, said, "I started exercising and weight-training in 1944," a time, he added, when the only exercise most other golfers did was "taking an olive from one martini to the other." Equipment and the modern golfer - Both players have been alarmed at the distances the ball is flying and are worried for Augusta National when players are reaching par-5s with short irons. Player counts himself as a big fan of Bryson DeChambeau, whom he considers very smart. "People say, ‘Here comes the scientist, here comes the kook,'" Player said. "Well, he is a scientist, and he's taken it to another level." The pandemic - Nicklaus said he and Barbara recently had dinner with Rickie Fowler and his wife, and Fowler discussed COVID-19. Nicklaus also commented on the robust health of the game when so many people have been looking for something to do in a safe and socially distant manner. "It's brought the game of golf back to people who hadn't been playing," he said. Family - Player said he'd traveled to Philadelphia at the outset of the pandemic and had planned to visit his daughter for three days. He stayed eight months. "The price was right," he said. Nicklaus' caddie for the ceremonial shot was his wife Barbara. "I normally have one of the grandkids, but we couldn't bring anybody with us except for the spouses this time," he said, adding that Barbara took some convincing before she agreed to the job. Tiger Woods - Both players commented on Woods' eloquence at the Champions' Dinner. "It was very heartwarming listening to him speak," Player said. "He said he was on the way to the golf course and he had to stop because he had tears in his eyes and paused for a little while on the road because a lot of memories were going through his mind very quickly, as I interpreted what he was saying, and to have won the tournament again with his children there. "He paused for a while and he spoke very, very well," Player added. Said Nicklaus, "Gary was right. 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"I did a lot of yoga and mindset and sort of almost brainwashing," he said. "I did some very extraordinary things, which I won’t go into, in my room to do it and a lot of mindset, and I teed off believing and this is what I believe Rory has got to do. "... A lot of players tell you they believe," he continued, "and when that bell rings and they get on that tee, there’s something that they don’t believe, and I think he’s got to get up there and say - he’s got to start meditating. He’s got to start believing that he can do it, because time goes by."

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