Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting A look inside the bags of Scottie Scheffler and Patrick Cantlay

A look inside the bags of Scottie Scheffler and Patrick Cantlay

Scottie Scheffler has won four PGA TOUR events this season, including the Masters, and he once held a record-setting, 1,041-point lead in the FedExCup standings back in June. Scheffler holds the lead heading into the finale of the FedExCup Playoffs – this week’s TOUR Championship – but now it’s a matter of strokes and not points. He will begin the tournament at 10 under par, two shots ahead of No. 2 Patrick Cantlay under the unique Starting Strokes format. Cantlay, who was seventh in the FedExCup prior to his timely win at last week’s BMW Championship, moved to second with his victory. With the injury withdrawal of No. 3 Will Zalatoris, Xander Schauffele is the only other player within four strokes of Scheffler (and two behind Cantlay). The player with the lowest score in relation to par at week’s end will win the FedExCup and the $18 million bonus. For Thursday at least, the focus will be on Scheffler and Cantlay, who’s trying to become the first back-to-back FedExCup champ. We wanted to take a closer look inside the bags of the two players atop the leaderboard at East Lake. In Scheffler and Cantlay, you have two players who stay pretty consistent with their equipment but who also have several notable differences. We found six notable differences: 1. Brands: Firstly, and most obviously, Scheffler is sponsored by TaylorMade, whereas Cantlay is sponsored by Titleist 2. Different driver lofts: Scheffler uses a lower-lofted 7.5-degree build, while Cantlay opts for a higher-lofted 9.5-degree driver 3. Driving irons vs. high-lofted fairways: Scheffler fills out the top end of his iron set with driving irons (3- and 4-iron), while Cantlay uses a 7-wood instead 4. Blade vs. cavity back irons: Scheffler uses a set of blade-style irons, and Cantlay uses cavity-back irons, which are typically designed for greater forgiveness on off-center hits 5. Lighter iron shafts: Scheffler uses True Temper’s Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 shafts, which weigh-in at around 130 grams, and Cantlay uses True Temper’s lighter Dynamic Gold 120 Tour Issue X100 shafts that weigh 120 grams 6. Blade vs. mallet putter: Although both players use custom Scotty Cameron designs, Scheffler uses a more traditional blade-style putter, whereas Cantlay opts for a winged mallet design that helps boost forgiveness The vast differences in their golf clubs highlights the importance of custom fitting; not everyone swings the same way, so not everyone should use the same golf clubs. Look no farther than Scheffler and Cantlay for proof. Below, we’ll dive into both of their full setups to see what they’re currently using and what’s changed throughout the year. Scottie Scheffler As previously mentioned, Scheffler doesn’t tinker much with his equipment. Since his Masters victory back in April, in fact, he hasn’t made any changes to the clubs in his bag. Scheffler did, however, make huge equipment news in 2022 when he signed with TaylorMade Golf the week of THE PLAYERS Championship in March. Prior to the announcement, Scheffler was an equipment free agent, so he wasn’t obligated to play any particular brand. Plus, he was coming off of two PGA TOUR victories (the WM Phoenix Open and Arnold Palmer Invitational). So, why did he end up signing with TaylorMade then? “I would say first and foremost (the reason) would be the driver,” Scheffler told GolfWRX’s Two Guys Talking Golf podcast following his Masters victory. “I already used the (TaylorMade P-7TW) irons for a while. I like the irons, but the (TaylorMade Stealth Plus) driver, when we did testing over the winter, I saw some pretty nice gains. It was one of those things, like, I know I’m going to use this driver, I know I’m going to use the irons, so maybe let’s see if we can work something out. Just because having consistency with their brand, obviously I trust what they do. To be part of the family and be part of the team was pretty cool for me, and so we wanted to work something out with them, and we were able to get it done. I’m happy to be part of the team.” Since signing with TaylorMade, however, not much has really changed for Scheffler, aside from switching out his old Nike VR Pro Limited fairway wood for a new TaylorMade Stealth Plus 3-wood at the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play in Austin, Texas, which he went on to win to reach No. 1 in the world. He explained why to GolfWRX.com: “One of the things I’ve struggled with was actually hitting 3-woods too far, and also just not seeing all my shots. … Austin was a good area for me to be like, ‘OK, I’m only going to hit this off the tee maybe a few times, let’s put it in the bag and see what I can do with it.’ And it was a pretty seamless transition. I saw the shots I wanted to see. My mishits were more accurate with the TaylorMade than they were than my Nike. I’ve seen some significant improvements already.” Arguably the most notable clubs in Scheffler’s bag are the irons he plays. They’re TaylorMade P-7TW blade irons, which were actually co-designed by Tiger Woods, hence his initials in the clubs’ name. Not surprisingly, Scheffler told GolfWRX.com that Woods had an influence on why Scheffler even started testing the irons in the first place. “I would say the reason I tested it was definitely a Tiger influence,” Scheffler said. “I used the P730’s for a number of years, and I played with Tiger at the Masters in 2020, and I watched him it. He hits it so solid and he flights it so well and does all kinds of stuff with the ball. It kind of clicked in my head, I was like, ‘I used Nike clubs for so long when he was helping develop those irons.’ I’m like, why wouldn’t I at least test his new irons with TaylorMade because they’re his irons, and he obviously had some influence in the process of developing and producing the irons. “I went home in the off-season, tested them out, and I saw that I was able to hit more shots with them. I was able to flatten out the flight a little bit more if I wanted to hit it low or hit it through the wind. And when I wanted to hit it higher, I could do that, as well. It gave me a little bit more variety in what I could do with the golf ball than the P730. And it’s not a big difference, it’s just when you put yourself in a 20mph wind in your face and want to flatten it out a little bit. I can flatten it out and have the ball be a little bit more stable with the head. It’s only a couple yards, but for me it felt like a huge difference.” Also, during the week of Scheffler’s first TOUR win and first of four victories this season in 2022 – the WM Phoenix Open – he switched into a custom Scotty Cameron Timeless Tourtype GSS prototype putter that measured 36.5 inches, with two 25-gram weights in the sole. Scotty Cameron putter rep Brad Cloke spoke on the backstory behind the “Scottie” special: “He just wanted to switch things up a little bit and give himself a slightly different look heading into 2022,” Cloke said in a Titleist press release. “Prior to visiting us in the studio, he’d been messing around with an older Newport 2 Timeless he had at home. He’d added bunch of lead tape to the sole to try and get it to a similar swingweight as his Super Rat. He really liked the profile but the feel wasn’t exactly where he wanted it, so we went to work on building him a new setup with adjustable weighting.” Check out Scheffler’s full specs below, and for more photos, head over to GolfWRX.com. Driver: TaylorMade Stealth Plus (8 degrees, 7.5 degrees of actual loft) Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black 7 X 3-wood: TaylorMade Stealth Plus (16.5 degrees, 15 degrees of actual loft) Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black 8X Driving iron: Srixon Z-U85 (3-iron, 20 degrees) Shaft: Nippon Pro Modus3 Hybrid Tour X Irons: Srixon Z-U85 (4-iron, 20 degrees), TaylorMade P-7TW (5-PW) Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 Wedges: Titleist Vokey Design SM8 (50-12F, 56-14F), Titleist Vokey WedgeWorks prototype (60-06K) Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 Putter: Scotty Cameron Special Select Timeless Tourtype GSS prototype Ball: Titleist Pro V1 Patrick Cantlay Speaking of not changing clubs very often, Cantlay still uses a driver from 2018, a 3-wood from 2014, a 7-wood from 2018, irons from 2017, and two wedges from 2018. The newest clubs in his bag are his custom Scotty Cameron T5 prototype putter, which Cantlay started using in August of 2021, and a new Titleist Vokey WedgeWorks 60-T custom wedge, which he started using at the Masters. The new wedge has Vokey’s T-grind on the sole, which is the company’s lowest bounce option, and it’s popular on Tour with players such as Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas also using the grind. Check out Cantlay’s full current setup below. Driver: Titleist TS3 (9.5 degrees, B1 SureFit setting, 0.75-degree flat lie angle) Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana ZF 60 TX 3-wood: Titleist 915F (15 degrees, B1 SureFit setting, 0.75-degree flat lie angle) Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana ZF 70 TX 7-wood: Titleist TS2 (21 degrees, B1 SureFit setting, 0.75-degree flat lie angle) Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana ZF 80 TX Irons: Titleist 718 AP2 (4-9 iron) Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold 120 Tour Issue X100 Wedges: Titleist Vokey Design SM7 (46-10F, 52-08F), Titleist Vokey Design SM9 (56-08M and 60-T) Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S300 Putter: Scotty Cameron Phantom X T5 Proto Ball: Titleist Pro V1x

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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Justin Thomas+1100
Joaquin Niemann+1400
Shane Lowry+1600
Tommy Fleetwood+1800
Tyrrell Hatton+1800
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Rory McIlroy+650
Bryson DeChambeau+700
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Shane Lowry+3500
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Hot potatoHot potato

Your 54-hole leader or co-leaders at this week’s Barbasol Championship and Open Championship will be asked a lot of questions, many of them predictable. What would it mean to win? What’s going right this week? Think you’ll sleep much? The next day, he/they will wake up and knock around their rental house/hotel room. They’ll eat, watch TV, check the phone. Finally, they will go to the course, and not win. Not if form holds, anyway. Through the John Deere Classic, just nine players have converted a 54-hole lead into a win this season on the PGA TOUR. Two of those, Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth, had done it twice, meaning 11 of 36 tournaments have been won by a third-round leader/co-leader, with 11 remaining on the schedule. This year’s third-round leaders are converting 31% of the time, which is way lower than the gold standard in this category, Tiger Woods (92%). It’s lower, too, than the win-conversion rate for this year’s second-round leaders (16 of 36, 44%), despite second-round leaders being further from the goal line. Depending on what happens from here to the season-ending TOUR Championship at East Lake, Sept. 21-24, this could be the worst season for 54-hole leaders in at least a decade—even worse than 2012 and 2007, when the win-conversion rate was just 16 of 44, or 36%. What exactly is happening here? Here are five theories. THE MARKED MAN PROBLEM Some leads are blown, some are lost. Patrick Rodgers summoned admirable touch under pressure as he barely missed chipping in from behind the 18th green at the John Deere Classic, a chip he had to make. He shot a 1-under 70 to lose to Bryson DeChambeau (65) by one. Rodgers didn’t so much lose as DeChambeau won. “You’ve got to just keep making birdies,â€� says Troy Merritt, who cites the 2015 RBC Heritage, where he shot a final-round 69 only to have his doors blown off by Jim Furyk (63) and Kevin Kisner (64). “Any of the guys out here are very capable of shooting a low number.â€� Steve Stricker has never lost after entering the last round with the solo lead, going seven for seven. (He did finish T3 after taking the lead into the last round of the 90-hole CareerBuilder Challenge in 2009.) And yet even Stricker appreciates how hard it is to close on TOUR. “You go to bed as a marked man,â€� he says. “You kind of feel like you should win, you expect to win, and always the last day there’s a few challenges. The wind will change, or it’s a tougher day. It’s just hard. You’re the guy that everybody is chasing. They can come out free-wheeling and you’re kind of protecting, and it’s hard to protect.â€� But to chase? That’s way more fun. 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So, it was a lot of kind of laying around and just trying to stay off the phone and try to stay away from reading stuff just because there are so many things out there that are being said or written. “I just tried to stay away from it, but, yeah, it was hard to. But I would like to think that’s not why I played how I did today. I just didn’t play well.â€� Sports psychologists tell us to stay in the now, but it’s easier said than done. Sometimes the overactive mind can’t help but race ahead to all those FedExCup points and Presidents/Ryder Cup points on offer, not to mention the mountains of money and accolades and exemptions. “That’s all you think about,â€� Stricker says. “You sit in your room and have breakfast but all you do is think about it—that tee time can’t come quick enough. It’s just a challenge.â€� MICROPHONE FATIGUE In cycling, the wind in the leader’s face is literal. In golf, it’s figurative. 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And I got off to a tough start Sunday. But I was proud of how I steadied after that.â€� (Munoz ultimately signed for a final-round 72 to finish T3.) Even players who lead after just one round, the third, often struggle. “What happens is, let’s say a guy shoots 7-under on Saturday and he takes the lead,â€� says Bubba Watson, who is three of 10 at converting third-round leads/co-leads into victories. “But [the media] weren’t talking to him on the first two days. Right? “Well, guess what? Now all the media attention comes, and it puts thoughts in your head: ‘Can you win?’ ‘You haven’t won yet.’ ‘You’ve only won nine; you need to win a 10th.’ ‘You’ve never won a major.’ The media attention makes it worse, but it’s still there.â€� NOT JUST A ROOKIE THING One of the commonly held beliefs about closing is that untested players like Munoz have problems with it, but once they “get over the hump,â€� they’re fine. It’s not true. Zach Johnson admitted he stopped making birdies when he got near the lead at the Deere. Phil Mickelson said he flat-out panicked when he saw his name atop the leaderboard at the FedEx St. Jude Classic, promptly making a triple-bogey to plummet down the board. Consider Martin Kaymer at the 2014 U.S. Open. He already had won one major, and yet Kaymer, who led after every round at Pinehurst No. 2, told his caddie Craig Connelly on the morning of the final round that it would be the toughest 18 holes they’d ever played. Jordan Spieth calls it “chasing the ghostâ€�—the feeling you get when there’s no one ahead of you on the leaderboard. And it’s not easy. Having led after each of the first three rounds at the recent Travelers Championship, Spieth had to fight hard to win. (He holed out from a bunker to beat Daniel Berger in a sudden-death playoff.) The finish was in stark contrast to the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in February, where he’d held a six-shot lead through 54 holes. “You’ve got to keep resetting goals,â€� Spieth said. You also have to not panic when you’re caught. That’s where the caddie comes in, and Spieth praised his man Michael Greller’s well-timed exhortations at the Travelers. “He’s a closer,â€� Greller said afterward. “And that’s what I kept telling him. ‘Dude, you’re a closer. You know how to close and you’ve got a killer instinct.’â€� He was right. The Travelers marked the 13th time Spieth had led or co-led through three rounds on TOUR, and the eighth time he’d won. He’s converting at a spiffy 62%. ‘IN CONTENTION’ NEEDS REDEFINING A lot can happen in one hole, but 18 of them? Forget it. There are too many variables to anoint anyone the top contender a day or even five hours before the trophy ceremony. That’s why Dr. Morris Pickens, a sports psychologist who works with Zach Johnson, Stewart Cink and others out of the Sea Island (Georgia) Golf Performance Center, believes the entire concept of the 54-hole leader/leaders is grossly overhyped. “You might think that you’re in contention because of the way people talk on TV,â€� Pickens says. “But I tell my guys ‘contention’ doesn’t exist until there are three or four holes left. “Let’s say you’re at THE PLAYERS at TPC Sawgrass,â€� he adds, “and you’re looking at your second shot on 16. That’s when you’d need to take into account where you are in relation to everyone else, but I tell my guys to keep your head down until then.â€� Maybe Pickens is right. How many times have we trained our eyes on the third-round leader/s only to watch everything get turned upside-down Sunday afternoon? The most indelible example: Retief Goosen and Jason Gore played their way into the last group at the 2005 U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2, but shot 81 and 84, respectively. Michael Campbell won. It happens on the other side of the Atlantic, too. Of the last 20 Open Championships, 10 have been won by someone other than the guy/s who held the 54-hole lead and were ushered into the media room to talk about it. Someone other than the guy whose cell phone lights up with messages from his friends and family Saturday night, as if he’s already almost won something. “That’s the way people are raised,â€� Pickens says. “It’s the way tournaments are framed. But it’s the player’s choice if they want to buy into it.â€�

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Tiger Woods undergoes fifth back surgeryTiger Woods undergoes fifth back surgery

Tiger Woods has undergone a fifth back surgery. He recently had a microdiscectomy to remove a pressurized disc fragment that gave him nerve pain during last month's PNC Championship, his TGR Foundation announced Tuesday. "I look forward to begin training and am focused on getting back out on TOUR," Woods said in the statement in which his doctors deemed the operation successful and predicted a full recovery. Woods' quest for a record 83rd PGA TOUR victory has been put on hold. He announced that he will miss next week's Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines and his own The Genesis Invitational, which he will host at Riviera Country Club on Feb. 18-21. Woods and Sam Snead are tied with 82 career wins, the most in PGA TOUR history. Woods has won eight times at Torrey Pines - seven times in the Farmers, and at the 2008 U.S. Open - but remains winless at Riviera, where he played his first PGA TOUR event. Woods will be at Riviera next month to serve as tournament host, according to Tuesday's release. Woods underwent his fourth back surgery, a spinal fusion, in early 2017. He returned in 2018, contending for multiple titles before winning the TOUR Championship at East Lake. He won The Masters Tournament and ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP in 2019, when he was also the playing captain of the U.S. Presidents Cup Team, leading a dozen of the best American players to victory at Royal Melbourne while also going 3-0-0 himself. Since then, however, he's gone largely quiet. His 45th birthday last month was an occasion to step back and appreciate not only his 82 victories, but also his 31 seconds, 19 thirds, and 199 top-10 finishes in 368 starts. He has an 11-1 career playoff record, and earnings of nearly $121 million. But his 1,322 rounds on TOUR have taken a toll. Woods, who has also endured multiple operations on his left knee, had but one top-10 finish in the 2020 calendar year - a T9 at the Farmers Insurance Open. Worn out by 2019, and experiencing stiffness in his back, he skipped the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, which he's won eight times; The Honda Classic, his hometown tournament; and THE PLAYERS Championship (two-time champion). Then came the pandemic. Returning at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide in July, he finished T40 and did not contend elsewhere, either. His T72 at the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP @ SHERWOOD, a course where he'd won the Hero World Challenge five times, said it all. "I haven’t put all the pieces together at the same time," he said before the Masters in November. He didn't put the pieces together at Augusta, either. Tied for 10th after an opening-round 68, he faded to the finish, and his 10 at the 12th hole in the final round - where he hit three balls in the water — was the highest score of his career. Although he bounced back with birdies on five of the last six holes, he still shot 76 and finished T38 to cap a largely forgettable year. At the PNC Championship last month, he opted not to hit a tee shot on a handful of holes where his partner, 11-year-old son Charlie, was already in play well down the fairway. "He's a very young man, but he is predisposed to a few injuries, too, and we've seen that," Padraig Harrington, 49, said then. "Some weeks he doesn't look like he could be competitive, but the weeks that he does come out and is walking that bit better, he's a big contender." What he'll have left after stepping aside to heal once more remains to be seen.

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