Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Always a Tiger fan, Rory excited for grouping

Always a Tiger fan, Rory excited for grouping

While Rory McIlroy would have preferred a quieter start to this week’s Genesis Open, he said being grouped with Tiger Woods always is a positive. “I would rather be in this group than not,” McIlroy said.

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Turkish Airlines Open
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Brandon Robinson-Thompson+140
Haotong Li+450
Jorge Campillo+750
Jordan Smith+1100
Robin Williams+1200
Martin Couvra+1400
Matthew Jordan+1400
Joost Luiten+2500
Ewen Ferguson+3500
Mikael Lindberg+3500
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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
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PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+450
Bryson DeChambeau+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Xander Schauffele+2000
Collin Morikawa+2200
Jon Rahm+2200
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Brooks Koepka+4000
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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
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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
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Jim Herman closes out ‘very satisfying’ win at the Wyndham ChampionshipJim Herman closes out ‘very satisfying’ win at the Wyndham Championship

GREENSBORO, N.C. - Jim Herman had planned to get in his rental car on Sunday night and start driving down 1-95 toward his home in Florida. Herman had about 10 hours and 70-odd miles ahead of him. If he made it halfway and grabbed some sleep, he figured he could make it home Monday in time to see the kids get back from school. RELATED: Final leaderboard | The clubs Herman used to win | FedExCup standings "It was just going to be dad again and try to figure out this thing, figure out this game of golf, try to get my head right and start back up at Safeway," Herman said, thinking ahead to what he expected to be a three-week break before the PGA TOUR's 2020-21 season began. Even the best-laid plans have a way of changing, though. And Herman's did - in a big way - when he fired a 63 on Sunday to beat Billy Horschel at the Wyndham Championship and grab the Sam Snead Cup. So, instead of driving to Palm City, Florida, to see his wife Carolyn and their kids Abigail and Andrew, Herman will head to TPC Boston for the FedExCup Playoffs opener at THE NORTHERN TRUST. "My son’s probably not going to be too happy about that, but he’ll forgive me since I’m bringing home the trophy," Herman said with a smile. Herman's victory, one that even he called "out of the blue," enabled him to jump from No. 192 to 54th in the FedExCup and make the Playoffs for only the fourth time in his career. It was the largest move in the regular season finale since 2009, eclipsing the 110-point surge when Davis Love III won at Sedgefield in 2015. "Yeah, the FedExCup was definitely off the radar," Herman said. In some ways, so was Herman, a three-time winner who nonetheless has spent the bulk of his career living on the fringes of the PGA TOUR. The 42-year-old has only had 10 top-10 finishes in 195 starts on TOUR - but defied the odds by turning three of those into victories. The first, which Herman termed "life-changing," came at the 2016 Houston Open when he beat Henrik Stenson by one and Dustin Johnson by two. The second, which was "redemptive," he said, came a year ago at the Barbasol Championship, ending a dismal string of 16 missed cuts in his previous 19 starts. "Last summer was just a little validating, overcoming some injuries and just, you know, getting old," Herman said. "You get old pretty quick out here with the young guys. They make you feel inadequate off the tee and especially long irons. You know, it’s mentally frustrating. "To overcome it all and get here for a third time is pretty amazing." And making the win at Sedgefield even more satisfying was Herman's performance on the weekend. To even get to play the final two rounds at Sedgefield, Herman had to fight on the back nine Friday. When he bogeyed the 14th hole he actually had dropped outside the cutline but clutch birdies on his next three holes landed him Saturday's opening tee time. He shot a stellar bogey-free 61 on Saturday, one of two rounds of 9 under that the Donald Ross gem relinquished that day. He then came from four shots back and held off some of the TOUR's best in Horschel, the 2014 FedExCup winner, and former Wyndham and PLAYERS champs, Si Woo Kim and Webb Simpson, to name a few, with a final-round 63. Not bad for a guy who has now used a different putting stroke in each of his wins - the claw at Houston, a conventional grip at Barbasol and cross-handed at the Wyndham where he went back to one of his old Bettinardi putters. "I was thinking about doing it on Sunday at PGA," Herman reported. "I had it with me, a different model, and was going to do it, but I didn’t. I just stuck with what I was doing, conventional, at Harding Park. "But I got here, and these greens are so perfect, you’ve got to be able to start the ball where you’re looking with the correct speed, and cross-handed just gets the ball rolling a little bit better for me at the moment and just went with it." The decision proved to be an inspired one. Among the many keys on Sunday was the 59-footer Herman holed for eagle at the fifth hole. In all, he made 157 feet of putts in the final round and 444 for the week. He ranked first in greens in regulation and among the top five in Strokes Gained: Putting, Approach-the-Green, Off-the-Tee and Tee-to-Green. So, while we may not have seen the win coming, Herman's performance was solid at Sedgefield. Forget about the 27 missed cuts in his last 40 starts. He played with confidence and conviction in a victory he called "very satisfying" and should allow himself to savor. "I guess whenever you win, you never really truly expect it," Herman said. "I mean, there’s the guys at the top, they’re expected to win every week and they should expect that, they’re that good. You know, we’re all really darn good out here, but the mental game, it beats you down. … "I really don’t know that yet other than it’s very, very satisfying to, you know, be in the mix after yesterday’s round, put myself in a position to be near the lead and then come from behind and go low on a Sunday to get a win. "You watch it on TV, I watch that on TV all the time watching the guys and now to be able to do it is pretty amazing."

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Mistakes mar Tiger Woods’ solid play at PGA ChampionshipMistakes mar Tiger Woods’ solid play at PGA Championship

FARMINGDALE, N.Y. – Tiger Woods didn’t come to Bethpage Black on Wednesday after falling ill. He said he felt fine during the first round of the PGA Championship, though. It was just the sloppy mistakes that made him sick. Woods drove the ball well enough to contend at Bethpage Black, but his steady ball-striking was outweighed by too many sloppy shots when he had short clubs in hand. Bethpage Black is a long, brutish course lined by rough so thick that players are struggling even to hit mid-irons out of it. Woods missed just four fairways while hitting driver off a majority of the tees. And he had birdie putts on nine of his final 10 holes to steady himself after making two double-bogeys on his opening nine. But he three-putted twice on his back nine and signed for a 72. He sat nine shots off Brooks Koepka’s lead after that frustrating first round. “It wasn’t as clean as I’d like to have it for sure,â€� Woods said. His score was about three-quarters of a shot below the field average in the morning. RELATED: Leaderboard | Tee times | Rethinking Tiger’s future | Tiger ‘welcomes’ playing in Olympics The miscues started on his first hole, the 502-yard 10th. He had to chop out of the rough after his ball barely missed the fairway. He air-mailed the hole with his 85-yard wedge shot en route to a double-bogey. He sailed a similar shot over the green on the par-5 13th. He saved par but it was a missed opportunity on one of two par-5s on the course. That was his only sloppy shot on the six holes between his double-bogeys on Nos. 10 and 17. He appeared to be in control during those six holes, making all pars and a birdie at 15 after a strong long-iron approach to the uphill green. Then his tee shot plugged in the front bunker on 17, a long par-3, and he compounded that bad break by racing his par putt past the hole and missing his comebacker. Woods atoned for all those mistakes with the start of his front nine. This may be the PGA Championship in name, but it is playing just as difficult as the two U.S. Opens that visited this municipal masterpiece on Long Island. Just reaching red figures is an accomplishment, and that’s what Woods did after playing the first four holes of the front nine in 4 under par (a missed 9-footer was the only thing that kept him from playing that stretch in 5 under). He started his second nine with a deft recovery from the trees right of the first fairway. Then he knocked a wedge stiff on the second hole. He lasered a long-iron within 10 feet on the long par-3 third hole (but missed the putt). And then there was the eagle at the par-5 fourth, one of the rare reprieves on this punishing course. He holed a 31-footer for eagle there and the New York fans responded with voracious roars. It was his first eagle at the PGA Championship since 2001. His time below par was short-lived. He bogeyed three of his next four holes, including two three-putts. The other came after he raced a relatively straightforward chip 8 feet past the hole on the par-3 eighth. Woods faced five putts from 5-10 feet on Thursday. He missed them all. Woods lost nearly a stroke on the greens (-0.91). “I let a couple slip away with a couple bad putts and a couple mistakes at the end,â€� he said. The scorecard said Bethpage Black was 7,406 yards on Thursday, but the wet ground and cool weather made it feel even longer. Woods had to hit long-iron into several holes after averaging just 281 yards off the tee. Half of his approach shots were from outside 190 yards. “When I had opportunities there with short irons, I was aggressive,â€� Woods said. “And I was able to get the ball in there relatively close. Otherwise, it felt like I hit a lot of 4-irons and 5-irons in there, and it was hard to get the ball close.â€� Bethpage Black may be known for its length, but it was the short shots that gave him the most trouble Thursday. ROUND 1: TIGER HOLE-BY-HOLE No. 10 (par 4, 502 yards): Not an ideal start for Tiger. He needed four shots just to reach the green, then missed a 6-foot putt for bogey. He isn’t the only player to struggle on No. 10, though. Early on Thursday, it’s playing as the second-hardest hole at Bethpage Black. The average score is 4.6. Woods’ 6 is the fifth double-bogey or worse on the hole. It started with the tee shot. Woods hit a high fade with the driver that barely missed the fairway. In a sign of how thick the rough is this week, Woods had to lay up from 201 yards. His biggest error came on his next shot, an 85-yard wedge shot that flew the hole by 20 yards. He couldn’t get up and down from the short grass behind the green. Fairways hit: 0 for 1 Greens hit: 0 for 1 Putts: 2 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: -0.12 Approach: -0.85 Around-the-Green: -0.01 Putting: -0.51 SCORE: Double bogey (2 over through 1 hole) No. 11 (par 4, 435 yards): Woods looks like he has things back under control. He hits the fairway and green, then two-putts from 44 feet for par after burning the edge on his long birdie putt. This is what he needed to settle in after that tough start on 10. Fairways hit: 1 for 2 Greens hit: 1 for 2 Putts: 4 Score: +2 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: -0.05 Approach: -0.92 Around-the-Green: -0.02 Putting: -0.43 Total: -1.22 SCORE: Par (2 over through 2 holes) No. 12 (par 4, 515 yards): Another driver. Another high fade. This one finds the fairway, but it only traveled 277 yards. Tiger has 230 yards left, but at least it’s from the short grass. Woods leads the TOUR in greens hit, so finding the fairways is the first priority and he proves that by knocking it on the green. For the second straight hole, Woods almost rolls in the long birdie putt. It’s another two-putt par. Things are going smoothly after that tough start. Fairways hit: 2 for 3 Greens hit: 2 for 3 Putts: 6 Score: +2 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: -0.08 Approach: -0.57 Around-the-Green: -0.01 Putting: -0.39 Total: -0.79 SCORE: Par (2 over through 3 holes) No. 13 (par 5, 608 yards): Hitting it far is important at Bethpage Black, but not with wedges in hand. Woods has flown the green both times he’s had a shot from inside 100 yards. This time it was with his 87-yard third shot at the par-5 13th. He did save par from behind the green but it’s a missed birdie opportunity on one of the two par-5s on Bethpage Black. On the plus side, Woods has hit three consecutive fairways and made three consecutive pars after that opening double bogey. Fairways hit: 3 of 4 Greens hit: 2 of 4 Putts: 7 Score: +2 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: -0.10 Approach: -0.94 Around-the-Green: +0.19 Putting: -0.39 Total: -0.95 SCORE: Par (2 over through 4 holes) No. 14 (par 3, 161 yards): Two-putt pars are always a good thing at Bethpage Black, but this was another missed birdie opportunity on a course that doesn’t offer many of them. The pin was back-right on this short par-3, but Woods couldn’t get his tee shot onto the back shelf. He has yet to hit an approach shot within 30 feet of the hole. Woods walked off the green with his fourth straight par after holing a 4-foot putt. Fairways hit: 3 of 4 Greens hit: 3 of 5 Putts: 9 Score: +2 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: -0.10 Approach: -0.93 Around-the-Green: +0.20 Putting: -0.39 Total: -1.08 SCORE: Par (2 over through 5 holes) No. 15 (par 4, 484 yards): Tiger’s first birdie of the day comes on one of the toughest holes, the uphill 15th. It’s just the second birdie of the day on 486-yard hole. It started with another strong tee shot, a cut driver that found the fairway for the fourth consecutive time. Then he hit a 208-yard approach to 16 feet. Woods has looked solid. His driver is under control and his iron game is impeccable per usual. His only mistake thus far has been the two wedges that air-mailed the green. Fairways hit: 4 of 5 Greens hit: 4 of 6 Putts: 10 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: -0.05 Approach: -0.55 Around-the-Green: +0.21 Putting: +-0.43 Total: +0.24 SCORE: Birdie (1 over through 6 holes) No. 16 (par 4, 490 yards): That was a good old-fashioned grinding par for Tiger. He missed his first fairway since No. 10 after his drive didn’t cut enough. He gouged one out of the thick stuff, and was able to roll it to within 30 yards of the hole. He pitched to 4 feet and walked away with a par that had to put a pep in his step. Those kind of pars will be important this week. Fairways hit: 4 of 6 Greens hit: 4 of 7 Putts: 11 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: -0.02 Approach: -0.82 Around-the-Green: +0.59 Putting: +0.54 Total: +0.23 SCORE: Par (1 over through 7 holes) No. 17 (par 3, 207 yards): All that good momentum may have gone out the window with a double-bogey on 17, his second of the day. Woods’ tee shot on the par-3 plugged in a bunker. He hit that sand shot to 30 feet, then inexplicably three-putted from the fringe after racing his par putt 8 feet past the hole. This one was a head-shaker. Fairways hit: 4 of 6 Greens hit: 4 of 8 Putts: 13 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: -0.01 Approach: -1.21 Around-the-Green: -0.41 Putting: +0.02 Total: -1.48 SCORE: Double-bogey (3 over through 8 holes) No. 18 (par 4, 411 yards): Tiger makes the turn after a solid par at the 18th hole. He split the fairway and knocked his approach to 18 feet. He makes the turn in 3 over after playing seven solid holes and two head-scratching ones. SCORE: Par (3 over through 9 holes) FIRST 9 STATS Fairways hit: 5 of 7 Greens hit: 5 of 9 Putts: 15 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: +0.13 Approach: -1.13 Around-the-Green: -0.37 Putting: -0.23 Total: -1.64 No. 1 (par 4, 430 yards): A bounce-back birdie, and this was a hard-earned one. It didn’t look like a 3 was possible after Woods’ tee shot landed underneath the trees that protect the inside of this severe dogleg-right. He was able to gouge one out of the rough and onto the green, though. He finished it off with a 14-foot birdie putt. Tiger has two birdies and two doubles. He’s parred the other six holes. Fairways hit: 5 of 8 Greens hit: 6 of 10 Putts: 16 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: +0.12 Approach: -0.86 Around-the-Green: -0.36 Putting: +0.56 Total: -0.74 SCORE: Birdie (2 over through 10 holes) No. 2 (par 4, 389 yards): Back-to-back birdies to start his back nine. The first one was a master-class in scrambling. This one was a textbook 3 on the course’s shortest par-4. He lasered a fairway-wood into the left side of the fairway, then knocked his 110-yard approach to 3 feet. Fairways hit: 6 of 9 Greens hit: 7 of 11 Putts: 17 Score: +1 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: +0.30 Approach: -0.12 Around-the-Green: -0.32 Putting: +0.60 Total: +0.34 SCORE: Birdie (1 over through 11 holes) No. 3 (par 3, 230 yards): Tiger lasered a long-iron within 10 feet on the 235-yard hole but was unable to convert the tee shot for birdie. Still, Woods’ card is only marred by those two doubles. He has three birdies and seven pars on the other 10 holes. Fairways hit: 6 of 9 Greens hit: 8 of 12 Putts: 19 Score: +1 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: +0.31 Approach: +0.54 Around-the-Green: -0.33 Putting: +0.16 Total: +0.70 SCORE: Par (1 over through 12 holes) No. 4 (par 5, 517 yards): Tiger is under par and on the leaderboard after holing a 31-foot eagle putt at this hole. It’s his first eagle at the PGA Championship since 2001, and just his third at this event. He’s played the first four holes of his back nine in 4 under par. He was a 9-foot birdie putt from playing those four holes in 5 under. It’s an incredible turnaround. He played this hole beautifully, hitting a 298-yard drive and then hitting the middle of the green from 210 yards. His long-iron play has been impeccable today. This was the latest example. Fairways hit: 7 of 11 Greens hit: 9 of 13 Putts: 20 Score: -1 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: +0.57 Approach: +0.81 Around-the-Green: -0.32 Putting: +1.10 Total: +2.30 SCORE: Eagle (1 under through 13 holes) No. 5 (par 4, 478 yards): Well, that was a letdown. After an eagle that brought the roars to Bethpage, Tiger three-putted for his first bogey of the day. He raced his 32-foot putt about 4 feet by the hole, then missed the comebacker. Woods is even par despite missing four putts from inside 10 feet already today. Fairways hit: 8 of 12 Greens hit: 10 of 14 Putts: 23 Score: E Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: +0.65 Approach: +0.94 Around-the-Green: -0.32 Putting: +0.08 Total: +1.72  SCORE: Bogey (Even through 14 holes) No. 6 (par 4, 408 yards): Tiger found trouble off the tee on the course’s second-shortest par-4, but he was able to hit the green from the fairway bunker. After three-putting from 30 feet on the previous hole, Tiger makes a tidy two-putt from 50 feet. Fairways hit: 8 of 12 Greens hit: 11 of 15 Putts: 25 Score: E Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: +0.36 Approach: +1.11 Around-the-Green: -0.31 Putting: +0.19 Total: +1.81 SCORE: Par (Even through 15 holes) No. 7 (par 4, 524 yards): That’s two three-putts in his last three holes. Tiger has hit eight consecutive greens in regulation, but after playing the first four holes of the front nine in 4 under par he’s given two of those strokes back because of poor lag putting. Woods had 55 feet for birdie on this converted par-5 but left it 6 feet short. Woods is back to 1 over par. Fairways hit: 9 of 13 Greens hit: 12 of 16 Putts: 28 Score: +1 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: +0.39 Approach: +1.21 Around-the-Green: -0.31 Putting: -0.60 Total: +1.07 SCORE: Bogey (1 over through 16 holes) No. 8 (par 3, 210 yards): Woods streak of eight consecutive greens hit came to an end by mere inches. His tee shot on the longpar-3 came to rest in the first cut. He was left with a straightforward chip shot but raced it 9 feet by the hole. He missed it, his sixth miss from inside 10 feet today. He’s missed all five of his attempts from 5-10 feet. It’s his third bogey in his last four holes. Fairways hit: 9 of 13 Greens hit: 12 of 17 Putts: 30 Score: +2 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: +0.41 Approach: +1.11 Around-the-Green: -0.57 Putting: -1.04 Total: +0.53 SCORE: Bogey (2 over through 17 holes) No. 9 (par 4, 460 yards): Woods two-putts from 28 feet to walk away with 72, a score that has to be disappointing after making eagle on his 13th hole to get into red figures. He bogeyed three of his last five holes despite steady ballstriking on his back nine. Woods had birdie putts on nine of his last 10 holes but only played them in 1 under par. He three-putted twice on his back nine. Fairways hit: 10 of 14 Greens hit: 12 of 18 Putts: 31 Score: +2 Strokes Gained Off-the-Tee: +0.55 Approach: +1.13 Around-the-Green: -0.52 Putting: -1.03 Total: +0.76 ROUND 1 SCORE: 2-over 72

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Jason Day offers peek at TaylorMade’s yet-to-be-released P760 ironsJason Day offers peek at TaylorMade’s yet-to-be-released P760 irons

Whether it was pre-planned or not, Jason Day provided equipment enthusiasts with an early peek at TaylorMade’s yet-to-be-released P760 irons on Wednesday. Working with Tomo Bystedt, TaylorMade’s senior director, metalwoods product creation, Day went live on his Instagram account from the practice range and showed off what is soon to be the newest iron offering from the equipment manufacturer. What remains to be seen is how P760 slots into the current lineup. While Day offered looks at the 9-iron from multiple angles, Bystedt pulled the curtain back on the design, confirming that the transitional set will feature some of the best design aspects from the popular P770 and P750 models — in addition to technology from P790. Due to the number of players on TOUR who are currently playing blended sets, TaylorMade appears set to debut an iron with similar traits. Bystedt confirmed the two-piece long and mid irons (4-7) in the set will have a similar look to P770 and will include the same low-density Speed Foam found in the cavity of P790. The foam provides support to the face and dampening properties for improved sound. The 8-iron through pitching wedge will be a forged construction and likely won’t include Speed Foam. Instead, a premium will likely be placed on feel and workability with the scoring clubs. With P760 in the fold, TaylorMade’s iron lineup would include five different offerings. Due to the design aspects that were taken from P750 and P770 — and the fact that Day was testing the unreleased model — we could see TaylorMade replace one or both models with P760 to simplify the offerings. With Day testing the iron, it’s possible TaylorMade could provide full details in the coming weeks.

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