Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Best stats of the fall swing

Best stats of the fall swing

The fall portion of this PGA TOUR season was not without its share of milestones, drama or interesting finishes. Strong fields dotted the schedule. Seven of the nine winners had already laid claim to a PGA TOUR victory in their careers. The roster of champions included established names like Rory McIlroy, Hideki Matsuyama and Max Homa, along with rising stars such as Sam Burns, Sungjae Im and Viktor Hovland. Players went remarkably low to get to those trophies: the final-round scoring average for the winners this fall was 65.6. Over the previous five PGA TOUR seasons, winners have averaged 67.2 on Sundays. Here are the top numbers to know from the fall portion of the season: RELATED CONTENT: Five things from the fall season | Talor Gooch wins RSM to take FedExCup lead | Twenty First Group 62 At the Shriners Children’s Open, Sungjae Im put on a stellar display of approach play, hitting 62 of 72 greens in regulation on his way to a four-shot victory. Since 1990, only 4% of PGA TOUR winners have hit at least 86% of their greens in regulation for the week. Incredibly, it was the second week in a row that it happened! The previous week, Sam Burns lit up the Country Club of Jackson with 63 of 72 greens hit as he picked up his second PGA TOUR title. +1.78 Speaking of Burns, he careens into the new year sitting in second place in the FedExCup standings. Burns is averaging a whopping 1.78 Strokes Gained: Ball Striking (combining performance off-the-tee and on approach), a full quarter-of-a-stroke better than anyone else with at least eight measured rounds this fall. Now in the top 15 of the Official World Golf Ranking for the first time in his young career, Burns has not finished worse than T-21 in any event around the world since July 19. 68.85 With four consecutive top-20 finishes, another young star positioning himself for a successful 2022 is Matthew Wolff. The 22-year-old Oklahoma State product leads the PGA TOUR in scoring average and ranks fourth in Strokes Gained: Total. One intriguing figure within Wolff’s stat sheet is his increased club head speed. At 125.11 MPH, Wolff led all measured players this fall, and sits nearly 11 MPH above the TOUR average. 20 At THE CJ CUP @ SUMMIT, Rory McIlroy made two eagles and 13 birdies on the weekend to win by one stroke over a surging Collin Morikawa. At age 32, the victory was McIlroy’s 20th on the PGA TOUR, making him the second-youngest player born outside the United States to achieve this milestone. Harry Cooper, born in England in 1904, is credited with his 20th PGA TOUR title at age 31. Since 1960, McIlroy is one of just seven players to reach 20 official PGA TOUR titles before age 33. The others are a list of historical luminaries: Arnold Palmer, Billy Casper, Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson, Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson. 1 McIlroy found the winner’s circle in an unconventional manner for him: with an incredible week on the greens. He led the field in Strokes Gained: Putting for the week, just the second time in his career he has done that over the entirety of a PGA TOUR event. The other instance came at the 2018 Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, which he also won. It was just the seventh time McIlroy finished a PGA TOUR event ranked in the top five in the statistic; he’s won four of those seven instances, and never finished outside the top five when ranking in the top five in Strokes Gained: Putting for the week. -3.58 McIlroy’s terrific putting and usual stellar performance off the tee masked a below-average statistical performance with his approach play at Summit Club. For the week, McIlroy wound up with -3.58 Strokes Gained: Approach, ranking 67th of 77 players in the field. Of the nearly 700 PGA TOUR events officially tracked by ShotLink all-time, it is the worst Strokes Gained: Approach performance by a player in a victory. 3 At the World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba, Viktor Hovland became the first player to successfully defend a title on the PGA TOUR since Brooks Koepka won back-to-back PGA Championships in 2018 and 2019. Hovland picked up his third TOUR win at 24 years, 1 month, 20 days old, making him just the fourth international player in the last 40 years to win three times that young. The others: McIlroy, Sergio Garcia and Adam Scott. Hovland capped off his 2021 with an unofficial win at the Hero World Challenge last week to rise to a career-best seventh in the Official World Golf Ranking. He’s now the second-ranked European in the world, behind only No. 1 Jon Rahm. 31.8 Was this the most impressive collection of PGA TOUR winners we have ever seen in the fall? The numbers suggest so. The average World Ranking of the nine official tournament winners this fall was 31.8, by far the best since wrap-around scheduling began in 2013-14. For comparison’s sake, the average World Ranking of winners in fall 2020 was 169.8! Every winner this fall was ranked in the top 60 of the OWGR at the time of his victory. Only one other fall stretch can even boast an average under 60 (2013, 53.2). 19 The United States trounced Europe at the Ryder Cup, posting the largest margin of victory (19-9, 10 points) by either side in the modern era. The Americans dominated the par-5s for the week, winning 34 holes to Europe’s 14. Every American player won at least one match before Singles even began. Dustin Johnson was a flawless 5-0-0, becoming the first American since Larry Nelson in 1979 to win five matches in a single Ryder Cup. U.S. rookies posted a combined record of 14-4-3, the highest points per match average (0.74) for any group of rookies in the modern era.

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Hideki Matsuyama+800
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Howard Men, Texas A&M Corpus Christi Women lead PGA WORKS Collegiate ChampionshipHoward Men, Texas A&M Corpus Christi Women lead PGA WORKS Collegiate Championship

Howard University moved one round closer to its first stroke-play victory as a men’s Division I program on Tuesday at TPC Sawgrass, shooting a second consecutive 19-over-par 307 – this time on the Dye’s Valley Course – to take a 1-shot lead into the final round of the 34th PGA WORKS Collegiate Championship. Howard, in its 154th year of existence, is only 13 months into restarting its golf program (it competed years ago in Division II), and is playing in only its third stroke-play tournament of 2020-21. Everett Whiten Jr. shot 1-over 73, with Gregory Odom Jr. pitching in with a 75. Odom, at 2-over 146, leads all individuals inside the Men’s Division I Team Division. Howard’s coach, Sam Puryear, played on a winning team in this tournament while at Middle Tennessee, and Odom said he and his teammates would like to give him a win as a coach, too. “I’m trying to stay mentally in the game,” said Odom, a junior from Memphis. “Leading as a team is always great. We didn’t have a super great season, but this is the finale. You’ve got to turn up.” Texas A&M-Corpus Christi took a commanding lead in the Women’s Team Division, shooting 26-over 314 on the TPC Sawgrass Stadium Course to stretch its lead to 24 shots over Delaware State. Delaware State’s Baipor Khunsri (3-over 147) is the low individual through two rounds, but Texas A&M-Corpus Christi boasts four (Lucie Charbonnier, Kelli Ann Dugan, Reese Drezins and Kellsey Sample) among the top six. Joni Stephens, in her third season as coach for the Islanders, had a message for her front-running team: “Soak in this experience. The fact that we’re here at TPC Sawgrass and playing in the PGA WORKS Collegiate Championship is unbelievable. This is an opportunity unlike anything we’ve ever had before and will be unforgettable. This will be something they’ll carry with them forever.” Dugan didn’t shoot her team’s lowest round, but provided the highlight of the day for the Islanders with a birdie-birdie finish at the Stadium’s famous 17th and 18th holes. She hit her tee shot in tight to set up birdie on the island 17th, then holed her third shot from short of the green at the par-4 18th. There are a lot of pros who would pay handsomely for such a finish in The Players each year. “I thought to myself, ‘I just birdied 17 and 18!’” said Dugan, a junior from San Antonio who shot 79. “I’ll never forget that. It’s something I’ll be able to tell my grandchildren.” Prairie View A&M’s men’s team, coming off a victory in the Southwestern Athletic Conference – its third consecutive conference title – shot 16-over 304 on Dye’s Valley to close the gap on Howard, and will head into Wednesday trailing the Bison by one shot. Prairie View received a rounded team effort, getting 75s from Lorenzo Elbert Jr. (the SWAC’s individual champion) and Isaiah Wilson and a 76 from Jordan Stagg. “The beautiful thing about winning the SWAC, it was very different than the first two (conference titles),” said Prairie View A&M Coach Kevin Jennings. “After the first round, we were 10 strokes back, and we made up nine strokes in the second round. Coming from behind gave the team a lot of momentum, and personally, gave us a lot of confidence within the group. I’m more than confident in my guys.” Alabama State (301) and Florida A&M (307) will start the final round eight shots behind Howard. Florida A&M, which recently won its first Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference title, placing three players among the tournament’s top four, was the favorite to win the PWCC – the Rattlers were runners-up two years ago – but have yet to put a complete team round together. In the Women’s Individual Division, UNC-Wilmington junior Phu Khine produced the round of the tournament thus far, making six birdies in a 5-under 67 on Dye’s Valley. Khine started fast with two birdies and closed her round with two more, and said the effort was the best she has had this spring. “I’ve been waiting to see a round like this,” Khine said. “I wasn’t confident enough with my swing, and without confidence, my swing got messed up. So I’ve worked on a few key things and I’ve been committed. It’s more like a mental thing. I look at the pin sheet, and it’s like, I can hit that shot.” Miles College (Alabama) took a slim 3-shot edge over Livingstone College (North Carolina) into the final round of the Men’s Division II Team Division. Savannah State will start the final round 10 shots back. Anthony Lumpkin (74) leads Miles and is tied for second individually, one shot behind leader Jared Southerland of Kentucky State. Through two days of play, perhaps the best battle in any of the five divisions is taking place for the Men’s Individual title. Appalachian State junior Timothius Tarmardi pitched in for eagle from 15 yards at the penultimate par-5 17th hole at Dye’s Valley, and his 2-under 70 pulled him even with talented University of Alabama-Birmingham sophomore Khavish Varadan, who shot 74. The nearest competitor to those two stands eight shots back. Tamardi shot 33 going out on the Stadium Course on Monday, but didn’t finish well in his opening 74, so he cannot wait to get back there for one more go on Wednesday. “It was good experience for tomorrow,” he said. “I just need to seal the deal tomorrow. It’s not always about how you start, but how you end it. That’s all that matters.” This is the first time the PWCC has been staged at TPC Sawgrass, home course to The Players Championship each spring. Asked how he’ll handle the nerves on Wednesday when he steps to the famous finish at the Stadium Course, which includes that perilous 140-yard shot to the island green at No. 17, Tamardi, who is from Indonesia, paused for a moment. “Nothing crazy. One shot at a time,” he said, smiling. “We will talk about the 17th hole tomorrow.”

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‘The last thing we imagined is that it was cancer’‘The last thing we imagined is that it was cancer’

While it’s not uncommon for Titleist to sign players, for a golfer, it’s one of life’s most celebrated achievements. After all, Titleist is among the most recognized brand names in all of golf. Some may go so far as to call it life-changing. As one of the most outgoing and friendly players on the PGA TOUR, it’s not uncommon for folks to have the opportunity to rub elbows with 11-time PGA TOUR winner and 2015 FedExCup champion Jordan Spieth. To some, it’s a once-in-a-lifetime experience in itself. For one young man making his way through life the best way he can, life-changing and once-in-a-lifetime experiences became one Tuesday at the Valero Texas Open. This is the story of how it came to be and how it will sustain Alex Trevino, Jr. through the rest of his life. People who make the decision to go at life alone are one of two types. Most are naïve and eventually stand down. The unwavering others forge ahead with a rare level of courage so astounding that it will define them until they’ve delivered their last breath. It’s a story of despair or repair. The thing is, though, who is who can only be truly determined when faced with life’s most challenging elements. Texas native Alex Trevino found himself at one of those most difficult crossroads in September of 2017. That was the first time. He proved to be among the courageous few. And, he had yet to celebrate his 15th birthday. Alex began experiencing pain in the back of his neck. Instead of it going away, the pain proved to be almost unbearable. So, too, would be the news. “We went to his pediatrician, we went to emergency rooms, and we got all kinds of tests done,â€� said Alex’s father, Alex. “The last thing we imagined is that it was cancer.â€� Barely a teenager, Alex was diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma. The hardest thing to imagine had become a stark, glaring reality.  “At the beginning, they thought it was a fracture or something,â€� said Alex’s mother, Madai. “But, it was one of the rarest forms of cancer, especially in kids. And, because it was in the C‑2 vertebrae, the doctors didn’t think it was going to be a tumor.â€� Doctors, sadly, were wrong. But, in May, after starting treatment shortly after the diagnosis, Alex’s cancer went into remission. He and his family clung to hope.    As fate would have it, in November of 2018, Alex was again diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma. This time, though, it had metastasized into his lungs.    “It was very hard the first time, but even harder the second time,â€� Madai said. “When you overcome the first time, you have to realize you will be going through everything again, with no assurance that you will make it out.â€� Alex took to the game of golf at a young age and became quite a player. He was well on his way to big things within the game as a teenager when news of his illness broke. But, with a determined spirit, he made it through the first setback. “Alex just started to get his health and his strength back where he was able to perform the way he wanted, and he finally was even able to win a tournament,â€� said Alex Sr. “Then, the second diagnosis came about, so he knew he was going to have to cut back.â€� “It was hard for him when they told him the results of the CAT scans,â€� said Madai. “He decided to be strong again and fight and keep fighting. But, it was hard, because he was back into golf and even on the team.â€� Alex underwent surgery to remove the biopsy, but the doctors had to cut the muscle, making it challenging to swing a club. Recently, though, doctors told him he can start practicing again. “He’s limited,â€� said Alex Sr. “He’s able to putt and chip. He’s physically able to, and he tries, but chemotherapy attacks your blood cells and he gets fatigued along the way. He’s just vulnerable. We try to limit that vulnerability for him to be able to stay healthy and continue the treatment, and hopefully, get the best results.â€� As opposed to taking treatments three weeks apart, Alex decided his best chance for survival would be to compress them into two-week intervals. What that meant was that very strong medicine was inside his young body continuously. “He was prepared just like a golfer would be in the sense that he knew what he had to do, what he had to eat, how to take his medicine,â€� said Alex Sr. “He knew exactly what he had to do in order to reach that goal every two weeks.â€� Courage aside, not many people – especially kids – could conjure the fortitude Alex did to increase every chance of survival. Then again, not every kid is Alex Trevino. On his terms, Alex was going at life alone. “I’ll tell you a story as to why he did it,â€� said Alex Sr. “He played team sports and he was really good. But, they were team sports. So, if he committed an error in baseball or someone didn’t get the out needed, his feeling was that he let the team down or because of another’s error, he didn’t feel as if his work made a difference. I told him it was a team sport. I told him that golf is an individual sport, and you have nobody else to blame or let down.’” The words resonated with the young man. “He said he wanted to go to golf because he didn’t want to have to depend on anybody,â€� said Madai. “I remember him saying, ‘I think I can do it myself. If I’m going to lose it, it will be for me making my own mistake, not for anybody else making a mistake for me.’ That’s why he loves golf. He loves it because it’s only him against the course, and he can’t blame anybody else. He likes to be that type of individual. So, it’s just a natural fit for him, the way his character is.â€� Through the Make-A-Wish Foundation and in conjunction with the PGA TOUR, Alex was treated to a VIP experience at the Valero Texas Open on Tuesday which, among other things, featured one-on-one time with Spieth, who finished second in his first start at TPC San Antonio in 2015. “I’m touched that when it’s presented to someone, to Make-A-Wish for something, that they would like to involve me,â€� Spieth said. “But, at the same time, it really puts things into perspective, especially when you think about someone going through what Alex is. If we can be a part of him finding a day that brings him a lot of joy, it will go a long way …not only for him, but for us. We take a lot away from these kinds of things, too.â€� “He’s been through the three rounds of chemo this time around, with 13 remaining,â€� said Alex Sr. “This day is such a good way for him to make a goal of us coming back out here and either playing this course or being here next year as spectators. He’ll have that in his mind, and it will help drive him and help him go through all of the treatments.â€� In addition to walking several holes with Spieth during Tuesday’s practice round – and even draining a few impressive putts – Alex was also taken to the Titleist equipment truck for what he was told would be a quick tour. It was there where, to his surprise, he was officially signed to the Titleist team. “It means a lot because he’s going to get more encouraged to keep going, to keep fighting the fight,â€� said Madai. “This will be his reason to keep going, because this treatment is harder than the first one. He doesn’t show it, but it’s very hard on him. He’s going to be a lot better for this experience. He’s going to say, ‘I want to do that, I’m going to be there in the future. I’m going to be there for real.’â€� “I got word that he was close to not even being able to come out here,â€� said Spieth. “So, the fact that he is here and doing all he is doing today is amazing. I mean, he is out here, walking holes, asking questions and just talking about only positive things. That’s got to be so difficult to do, especially at his age. But, what it does is speak so much to how strong-willed he is.â€� As part of his VIP experience Tuesday, Alex and his family were treated to a behind-the-scenes tour of the Valero Texas Open media center. It included a special, impromptu press conference where Alex was asked to make a few comments. He sat in the chair reserved for each year’s tournament champion. “I’d like to thank my family,â€� he said. “They have given me a lot more than I have given them.â€� Alex Trevino, Jr. may have made the choice to face this part of his life on his own as best as he can. However, he would hard-pressed to find anyone, family or friend, who would agree with him that he hasn’t given them just as much. “He’s so easy to have as a kid,â€� said Alex Sr. “I feel like we should not even get credit, because he’s just naturally that person and naturally that strong‑willed. Right now, he has it in his mind that he’s going to beat it again. So, we’re just along for the ride with him.â€� In a text message Tuesday night to a PGA TOUR staff member, Alex wrote a note of thanks, calling it “one of the most amazing days of my life.â€� Memorable as it was, it’s also fitting for a kid like Alex to refer to it as one of the most amazing days of his life, but not the best. The most amazing day of his life, he knows, will be tomorrow. And, the best one after that will be the next day. The most amazing day of Alex Trevino, Jr.’s life will always be tomorrow.

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