Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Before working PGA TOUR events, Mark Dusbabek was an NFL linebacker

Before working PGA TOUR events, Mark Dusbabek was an NFL linebacker

It was Christmas 1989 when Mark Dusbabek made his first start for his hometown team. It came on Monday Night Football, in a winner-take-all contest between the Minnesota Vikings and Cincinnati Bengals at the Metrodome. The winner advanced to the postseason. Dusbabek grew up an hour south of Minneapolis. His family was interviewed by the local news before the game. Then the linebacker from Faribault starred before a national audience. He intercepted a Boomer Esiason pass and forced a fumble. The Vikings won, 29-21. “It was probably my best game,â€� Dusbabek says. Thirty years later, he’s returning to his home state for another important sporting event. The 3M Open at TPC Twin Cities is the first PGA TOUR event in Minnesota in 50 years. Dusbabek isn’t trying to become the next John Brodie or Tony Romo. He traded in his NFL playbook for the Rules of Golf. He’s worked in the golf industry for three decades, and as a PGA TOUR rules official since 2006. Making a living on both the gridiron and the golf course may be unique, but the transition was natural for someone from a family that was passionate about the game (his sister, Teresa Bergs, is the 3M Open’s director of sales and marketing, as well). Ed Dusbabek’s plaster and drywall business gave him the means to join Faribault Golf & Country Club, a modest course where Mark and his four sisters spent the long summer afternoons after working for their father. “I couldn’t wait for training camp to start because that was a breeze compared to working for him,â€� Mark said. He was a standout in basketball and football at Faribault High before accepting a football scholarship to the University of Minnesota. The Houston Oilers drafted him in the fourth round of the 1987 draft. He signed with the Vikings as a free agent in 1989. “Playing football, you had the microscope on you,â€� he says. “If you made a mistake, it was exposed to the world. I like that pressure with going and doing rules. “The difference is that in football, you were always trying to get away with something. I respected the officials, but I also knew where they were and what they were looking for and what I could get away with. Golf is different. It’s about honor and etiquette.â€� Dusbabek doesn’t deny, however, that a linebacker’s build – his NFL.com player page lists him as 6-3, 232 pounds — comes in handy when handing out rulings, especially the unfavorable ones. Mark Russell, the PGA TOUR’s Vice President of Rules and Competition, jokingly calls Dusbabek his “enforcer.â€� It’s not only Dusbabek’s size that can diffuse a stressful situation, though. He has the proper demeanor for the role, as well. “You have to be good with people to walk in there and make the players feel at ease,â€� Russell says. Dusbabek knows how to handle an angry player. He’s experienced the frustrating side of sports, as well. He exceeded expectations when he worked his way into the Golden Gophers’ starting lineup as a freshman – “I was told by everyone that I wasn’t even good enough to play Division II football. I wanted to prove everyone wrong,â€� he says — and he never thought about playing pro football until scouts started showing interest during his senior season, but his career was ended just as he was progressing in the pro ranks. Dusbabek started 11 games for the Vikings in 1990. The team ranked third in passing defense that year, allowing just 165 yards per game in the air. Little did he know it would be his last full season. He blew out his left knee in the first game of the 1991 season, tearing his ACL and meniscus. Surgery and rehab were unsuccessful. “After the fourth operation, I just realized that I couldn’t pass a physical and my knee wouldn’t come around,â€� he recalls. “I had to retire.â€� He worked in finance for a few years, but golf kept pulling him back. He made a move after reading a book entitled, “Do What You Love and the Money Will Follow.â€� To gain industry experience, he moved to Southern California and spent a year as a volunteer with the Southern California Golf Association. One of his early mentors told him that a knowledge of the Rules of Golf would be useful in a variety of positions. His unpaid tenure with the SCGA led to a job with the PGA of America’s Metropolitan Section. He returned to Southern California in 2001, spending four years with the SCGA before being hired by the PGA TOUR. The Official Guide to the Rules of Golf is 522 pages long. Rules officials have to decipher the complex language in that tome. Officials encounter unique rulings, and Dusbabek has had his share. He was involved in the ruling at last year’s RBC Heritage when Kelly Kraft’s tee shot hit a bird and went in the water (he had to accept the penalty stroke). His most humorous involved another Minnesota native, Tim Herron. Herron’s ball was in a penalty area at the Puerto Rico Open. He was hoping to get free relief from an animal hole, though. “It wasn’t a hard ruling. You can’t get burrowing-animal relief in the penalty area,â€� Dusbabek says. “But as we were talking, the crab came out and pulled the ball into the hole.â€� The role of rules officials is more than simply enforcing the letter of the law. They are responsible for marking the penalty areas and boundaries, and roping the golf course. It’s one of Dusbabek’s favorite parts of the job, and an area where there are parallels to his former career. Both require taking a wide view to see how all the pieces work together. “Mark is a good thinker. He thinks outside the box,â€� says Slugger White, also Vice President of Rules and Competition. “He’s very careful in his thought process. He’s not a knee-jerk type of guy. He’s very thorough. “When we’re marking the course, we have members come out and say, ‘No one ever hits it there.’ I say, ‘You’re probably right, but we have to be ready for it if they do.’â€� Dusbabek played for Lou Holtz at the University of Minnesota. When Dusbabek played for the Vikings, the defensive coaching staff included Monte Kiffin and Pete Carroll. Dusbabek enjoyed the challenge of deciphering an offense. Learning its tendencies. The preferred plays in certain situations. “The finer points of the game,â€� he says. “That was a big chess game. It’s the same way in golf, working out the strategy of it all. You try to put it together to make the best tournament you can.â€� There’s one big difference between the two vocations, though. “The physical aspect,â€� Dusbabek says. “You didn’t want to get your ass kicked.â€�

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Quick look at the Farmers Insurance OpenQuick look at the Farmers Insurance Open

Tiger at Torrey – always a nice mid-January gift for PGA TOUR fans. Tiger Woods has won the Famers Insurance Open seven times (and won another tournament at Torrey Pines South in the summer of 2008. You may have heard about it). If he wins Farmers for an eighth time this week, he’ll break his tie with Sam Snead and hold the record for most career wins in TOUR history at 83. Plenty of notables hope to spoil the party, of course. RELATED: Tee times | Power Rankings | Tiger eying No. 83 THREE PLAYERS TO PONDER THE FLYOVER The 570-yard par-5 18th was not the easiest hole, via stroke average, at Torrey Pines South last year. But it did yield the most birdies of any hole, and it has a habit of producing dramatic moments. It can also bite players if they’re not careful. In 1975, Bruce Devlin made a 10 after finding the water – now called “Devlin’s Billabongâ€� in front of the green. In renovating the South course, Rees Jones regarded the slope to the water and also expanded the surface area in front of the green. LANDING ZONE Say hello to the second hardest hole on the PGA TOUR last season – the 505-yard par-4 12th at Torrey Pines South. A year ago, it played to a stroke average of 0.387 over par; the only hole more difficult was the par-4 ninth at Sheshan International, site of the World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions, playing to a stroke average of 0.435 over par. At the 12th last year, nearly as many double bogeys (16) were made as birdies (22). Have to hit it straight; if you don’t find the fairway, you’re probably not going to make par on this brute of a hole. WEATHER CHECK From PGA TOUR meteorologist Stewart Williams: “Can’t rule out some patchy fog Thursday morning. Otherwise, off-shore flow will return Thursday through Saturday, providing partly to mostly sunny skies and warmer temperatures in the mid- to upper-60s. On-shore flow will return Saturday evening into Sunday as a trough of low pressure approaches Southern California. This will provide cooler temperatures Sunday and maybe the chance for a few light showers late Sunday night into early Monday morning.â€� For the latest weather news from San Diego, check out the PGA TOUR weather Hub. SOUND CHECK It always feels good to be back here. It’s one of my favorite venues on TOUR, South course, one of my favorite golf courses in the world. And extra special I guess after playing so well last year, me being defending champion BY THE NUMBERS 176 under – Total score to par by Tiger Woods at the Farmers Insurance Open. It’s his best combined score in relation to par at any event he’s played on the PGA TOUR. 16 – Consecutive cuts made by Collin Morikawa, tied for the second-longest active cuts made streak on TOUR. (Tommy Fleetwood has the active longest streak at 31.) 16 – Top-10 finishes by Rory McIlroy since the start of the 2018-19 season, most of any player. 30 – Starts, including this week, by Phil Mickelson at the Farmers Insurance Open. That’s the third most in tournament history. 604 under – Mickelson’s combined score to par in California, second-best of any player in the last 37 years. 7,765 – Scorecard yardage for the South course, which is 67 yards longer than 2019 when the course was listed as the longest on TOUR last season. SCATTERSHOTS South changes: Rees Jones was brought in to lead the renovations made to the South Course, which will host the 2021 U.S. Open. Among the changes: • Rebuilding all bunkers, leveling and re-grassing all tournament tees, and re-grassing approaches and green collars • Modifying fairway bunkers on holes 1, 4, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13 and 17 • Hole 4 – Tee and fairway shifted towards the cliffs; size of front greenside bunker reduced • Hole 9 – Bunker in second landing zone brought in to act as cross bunker; new collection area added behind the green • Hole 10 – New tournament tee added to provide yardage flexibility; fairway bunkers moved inward to create options. • Hole 13 – New bunkers added to beginning of fairway; approach extended down the hillside • Hole 17 – New tournament tee added along the cliff north of the existing tee; fairway and fairway bunkers shifted closer to the cliff • Hole 18 – Front of green expanded to recapture lost surface area. Rose post-Farmers: After winning at Torrey Pines last year, Justin Rose took a month off. In his 23 worldwide starts since, he’s failed to get back in the winner’s circle, dropping from world No. 1 at the time of his Farmers win to currently 8th. “I got into bad habits last year. I swung the club poorly,â€� Rose said of his last 12 months. “I took a month off after this tournament and that was essentially my offseason. Didn’t do a ton of work because it was my offseason. I felt like the decision behind that was to be fresh for the majors. It just didn’t play out very well, it didn’t work out very well. So I was kind of learning on the fly last year about how to approach the new schedule and it just didn’t work, and kind of paid for it a little bit I felt like all season long.â€� Day’s back: Two-time Farmers Insurance Open champion Jason Day is making his first start since having to withdraw from the Presidents Cup due to a sore back. It was a tough decision for the Australian — who would’ve been a key player for the International Team – but a necessary one. “Obviously it was quite disappointing to not be able to play in the Presidents Cup, especially also playing the Australian Open,â€� Day said. “I was actually looking forward to going down there and playing there. Every time I would watch the Presidents Cup coverage, I was angry. I had to go up to the barn to kind of either ride or do some sort of exercise to get some frustration out because I really wanted to be there. But the rehab that I needed to do, I needed some time off.â€�

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What’s next for Tiger as he turns 45?What’s next for Tiger as he turns 45?

Tiger Woods turns 45 today. It's been an impressive body of work, with his 82 victories leaving him (momentarily?) tied with Sam Snead for most all-time. Throw in 31 seconds, 19 thirds, and 199 top-10 finishes in 368 starts. The 11-1 career playoff record, the earnings of nearly $121 million. Oh, and 15 major championship titles. (Like we could possibly forget.) But what can we expect from Woods from ages 45 to 50? It's a thorny question. He is an old and a young 45. Old because his 1,322 rounds on TOUR have taken a toll with four back surgeries - spinal fusion in 2017 - and four knee surgeries. Young because he's an athlete, he still believes he can win, and now he has a new golf buddy in 11-year-old son Charlie. "More than any other athlete he's always been the guy who exceeds expectations," five-time TOUR winner and 12-time PGA TOUR Champions winner Tom Lehman said at the recent PNC Championship in Orlando, where the adorable Tiger/Charlie team was must-see TV. "I feel like he's still capable of so much. Nothing would surprise me. If he ended up winning 20 more tournaments over the next five years I wouldn't be surprised." Twenty? Isn't that a bit - um - optimistic? "Well - it probably is optimistic," Lehman allowed, "but he's done so many things in the game that I didn't think were possible. I would never put limits on what he might do. He's not far from a five-win season (in 2013). The limitations on him are how physically fit he can be, how much he's able to practice and work, but the great champions do things you think are impossible." It was only last December, for example, that Woods went 3-0-0 as playing captain of the winning U.S. Presidents Cup Team, becoming the first in the history of that event with 27 victories. He was coming off his 82nd win at the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP in Japan in the fall, his emotional Masters victory the previous April, and an earth-shaking TOUR Championship win before that. Three victories in 13 months. Lately, though? Well, Woods hasn't been all that good. "I haven’t put all the pieces together at the same time," he said prior to the 2020 Masters in November, when he again didn't put it all together at the same time. Tied for 10th after an opening-round 68, he faded from there before the proverbial pieces went haywire in the final round. A 10 at the 12th hole, where he hit three balls in the water, was the highest score of his career but he bounced back with birdies on five of the last six. On the plus side, Woods' closing burst showed he's still got it. On the minus side, he shot 76 and finished T38. "We love Tiger," Bubba Watson said at the PNC. "We want to see him succeed. But again, it comes down to how he feels, what's the weather like, what did he do, how's his body reacting. As you get older it's going to slow down no matter what, but now it's going to slow down even more so because of his surgeries and injuries. But hopefully we still have those roars we've seen the last couple years with Atlanta, Augusta and Japan. I think we all want to see it." Woods had but one top-10 finish in the 2020 calendar year - a T9 at the Farmers Insurance Open. He followed that with a 68th-place finish at his Genesis Invitational before back stiffness caused him to miss multiple events, including the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, which he's won eight times, and THE PLAYERS Championship (two-time champion). Then came the pandemic. His next start came at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide (T40). Woods has been a non-factor since. His T72 at the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP @ SHERWOOD, a course where he'd won the Hero World Challenge five times, said it all. For him, as for so many others, 2020 was a dud. One way to read the Tiger tea leaves is to watch his speed. His career best for measured clubhead speed, 129.2 mph, came in round three of the 2018 Valspar Championship, where he finished T2. More top-10 finishes followed, confidence and momentum building until on Sept. 23 he won the TOUR Championship to break a five-year dry spell. You could see it coming. By comparison, Woods has now been dormant for only about 13 months. Is his speed down? Some weeks, yes. But it could return, and surprise, as it did in 2018. "He's a very young man, but he is predisposed to a few injuries, too, and we've seen that," said Padraig Harrington, 49. "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." Big, brawny courses like Bethpage Black, where Woods won the 2002 U.S. Open, are no longer his friends. But the greatest iron player of all time, with one of the best minds, can still feast on second-shot courses like Augusta National and East Lake and a whole lot of other places. Maybe he'll start playing the Bermuda Championship, where light-hitting Brian Gay just won, or the Sanderson Farms Championship, which crowned iron giant Sergio Garcia, or the Mayakoba Golf Classic presented by UNIFIN, where past champions include Brendon Todd and Fred Funk. And if that all seems far-fetched, raise your hand if you saw Woods playing the PNC this year. Picking his spots, Woods would surprise almost no one with an 83rd victory in 2021. It does not seem unreasonable to think he'll run his total up to 85, or north of that, perhaps reaching the nice round number of 90 if his body allows - the biggest four words in golf - before turning 50. More majors? Maybe. There's always the Masters, and while the U.S. Open will return to Torrey Pines South next summer, the better bet is The Open Championship at Royal St. George's, where Darren Clarke won in 2011. (Woods, injured, didn't play.) Golfing know-how is the name of the game at The Open, and guile will guide Woods through the twilight of his career. We'll be watching.

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How Patrick Reed cracked Augusta National’s code to win the MastersHow Patrick Reed cracked Augusta National’s code to win the Masters

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Sure, Patrick Reed played Augusta National while starring at the college just miles down the road, a privilege extended annually to the Division I schools in the state of Georgia. Those rounds were on a shaggier, slower version of Alister Mackenzie’s masterpiece, though. Reed and his teammates were playing a very different Augusta National on those occasions when they drove down Magnolia Lane instead of the cleverly-named Magnolia Drive (so close, but so far!) that leads into Forest Hills, the public course that the Augusta State Jaguars called their home. The Augusta National that players face during Masters week is almost unrecognizable from the one that’s seen any other week. Conditions change so dramatically on the tournament’s eve that players talk about the Green Jackets “flipping the switchâ€� that makes the course exponentially firmer and faster overnight. That’s why Reed’s experience from his amateur days was little help, if any, when it came to the first major of the year. It showed in the high scores he kept shooting at what could be considered a hometown major. Nine of his 12 rounds at Augusta National were over par and none were lower than 70. His scoring average in his first four Masters was 74.3, and he was 21 over par in his previous six rounds. Last year, he shot 76-77 to miss his second cut in four Masters starts. Not exactly a record that portended future success. It didn’t look like Reed would be adding green to the red, white and blue that already filled his closet. For a player with majors on his mind, the repeated failures at the only annual site of a Grand Slam event was unacceptable. This year, Team Reed embarked on a “deep diveâ€� to try to solve the riddle that is Augusta National. That meant back-to-back, eight-hour days in the week heading into the 2018 Masters. On the first day, they only played four holes – Nos. 1, 2, 12 and 13 – while walking the golf course with a local caddie to look for the ideal lines off the tees and flat putts on the undulating greens. Kirk estimates they hit 20 shots in those eight hours. “Maybe 30,â€� he said. “And about 5,000 putts.â€� The next day, they played 18 holes in eight hours, a pace that makes Saturday at your local muni look like a two-ball with Brandt Snedeker and Usain Bolt. Reed hit multiple tee shots on each hole, searching for the optimal target for all the potential combinations of wind direction and hole location. They took their time around the greens, as well. “To play well on this golf course, you have to operate on such a non-linear plane,â€� Kirk said. “If you try to just go point-to-point (in a straight line), you’re going to get killed out here.â€� On Monday of Masters week, while most eyes were trained on the threesome of Tiger Woods, Fred Couples and Justin Thomas, Reed played alone behind them. It took him three hours to play nine holes. The long hours were worthwhile. Team Reed cracked the code, resulting in the first major championship for its 27-year-old CEO. Reed used his exhaustive education of Augusta National to shoot 15-under 273, just three shots off the tournament’s scoring record. His first three sub-70 rounds at the home of the Masters (69-66-67) gave him a three-shot lead after 54 holes. The final round wasn’t as good, but it was good enough. He hung tough through the trials and travails that can be expected on a player’s maiden voyage into major contention. He finished one shot ahead of Rickie Fowler and two ahead of a surging Jordan Spieth, who shot a final-round 64 despite a bogey at the final hole. Reed also held off Rory McIlroy, with whom he played in the final group. McIlroy shot a final-round 74 to extend his quest for the Career Grand Slam another year. Reed couldn’t help but notice that the fans and media were pulling for those other players. He thrives on slights, both real and perceived. It’s why his best play is in international Cup competition. “No one expects me to go out and win,â€� said Reed, who admit that the lack of support “fueled my fire.â€� Most of his peers will avoid listening to TV commentators in the hours before the final round, but Reed was watching when all but one of Golf Channel’s commentators picked him to lose his three-shot lead. Reed also noticed the tepid response he received on the first tee, compared to the enthusiastic roars for “Rors.” Combine Sunday’s lack of support with his copious course notes, and it created a winning combination. Late on Sunday afternoon, one of Augusta National’s club professionals congratulated Kirk on his student’s victory. “No one worked harder,â€� he said. Reed now has six PGA TOUR victories, including a major, World Golf Championship and FedExCup Playoffs event. He’s fifth in this season’s FedExCup standings. Like many of his peers, Reed uses a collective noun when discussing his on-course efforts. Team Reed includes his wife and former caddie, Justine; her brother, Kessler, who now carries Patrick’s bag; Kirk, the swing coach, and Gregory, Reed’s college coach at Augusta State who now serves as his performance coach. They spent the past few months trying to find Patrick the right clubs after he struggled last year with his equipment. He started the year without an equipment deal, giving himself the freedom to tinker but also the burden of experimenting with the endless options available. “It was a big distraction,â€� Kirk said. “Instead of spending time on skill training and doing things to help his golf game, we were testing shafts and heads and balls.â€� The setup he used to win the Masters wasn’t finalized until last month. He settled on a Ping G400 driver at the Waste Management Phoenix Open and put a Titleist Pro V1 into play at the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship. He also put an old set of Callaway irons in his bag earlier this year. The new clubs helped him have three consecutive top-10 finishes entering the Masters, including a runner-up at the Valspar Championship. Justine is more than just the mother of their two children, three-year-old Windsor Wells and four-month-old Barrett Benjamin. She’s involved in all his decisions, even poring through the data to find the holes at Augusta National that gave her husband trouble. Patrick credited her for convincing him to hit 3-wood off the first tee instead of driver, which helped him play one of the course’s hardest holes in even par. He’d averaged 4.7 strokes on the hole in his previous Masters. He birdied the hole for the first time in this year’s second round. A change in trajectories also helped. The standard scouting report on Reed notes his strong preference for a draw. He worked to add a fade before the Masters to help him hit some of the fairways he’d consistently struggled to find. When Reed had trouble producing that shot shape during a practice session, Kirk told him to “scrap all the rulesâ€� and do whatever it took to move the ball left-to-right. It required an exaggerated swing, with an Arnold Palmer-esque follow-through, for Reed to go against his natural ball flight. He had hesitations about unveiling the unorthodox swing on TOUR, but the shot was crucial to his victory. Finding more fairways is important for Reed, who isn’t one of these 20-somethings who gets it done with prodigious distance off the tee. He ranks 52nd on TOUR in driving distance (299.4 yards). “When he can be in the fairway, he’s tough to beat,â€� Gregory said. “He’s as good as anybody in the world from 150 yards and in.â€� Augusta National famously favors a draw, the trajectory played by its co-founder Bobby Jones, but there are several holes where it helps to hit the tee shot left-to-right, including the par-5 eighth and 15th holes, as well as the finishing hole. The new shot shape was one reason Reed was on record-setting pace on the par-5s, playing his first 12 in 13 under par. He eagled both of the second nine’s par-5s on Saturday to take control of the tournament. He parred all four on Sunday, but still was just two shots off the tournament’s par-5 scoring record. Clinging to a one-shot lead, he played the 18th hole perfectly to clinch his first major. “He’s a throwback. He’s a shotmaker. He loves to move the ball,â€� said Gregory, who celebrated his 43rd birthday Sunday by watching his student’s victory. “Augusta rewards a creative mind, not someone who only sees only one shot, especially around the greens.â€� But it also takes local knowledge. That was the added ingredient this year. “It takes time to learn this golf course,â€� Gregory said. “Jordan Spieth is the exception.â€� And, for this year, Patrick Reed rules.

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