Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Billy Horschel buries match play demons to take title in Austin

Billy Horschel buries match play demons to take title in Austin

AUSTIN, Texas - Billy Horschel vowed he wouldn't let it happen again. He was sick of match play getting the best of him when deep down he knew it was a format made for him. This time it would be different. To get to how Billy Horschel won the 2021 World Golf Championships - Dell Technologies Match Play, (which he did by beating Scottie Scheffler 2 and 1 in Sunday's final at Austin Country Club), we first must go back to how he lost it on his previous tries. RELATED: Final scoring, bracket | What’s in Horschel’s bag? In 2014, when the tournament was a straight elimination format, Horschel had destroyed the higher seeded Jamie Donaldson 6 and 5 in his first-round match and was cruising against Jason Day in the second round. He was 3-up at the turn and Day had just sent his drive on the 10th into a cactus, forcing an unplayable penalty while Horschel sat in the fairway. About five minutes later, after three-putting from 40-feet, Horschel had halved the hole. A previously dejected Day sparked up and forged a comeback - forcing a playoff before winning on the 22nd hole. Day would go on to win the tournament. At Harding Park in San Francisco a year later, with the new group format, Horschel made light work of Brandt Snedeker and Jason Dufner over the first two days setting up a winner-take-all showdown with Rory McIlroy. He had a chance to win from 12-feet on the 18th hole ... but you guessed it. He missed. "I was 2-up against Rory with two to play. Rory drained like a 45-footer on 17 (we checked – it was 26-feet, 4-inches) and birdied 18 and then he won two holes later. So that was an opportunity lost there," Horschel recalled. McIlroy went on to win the tournament. In 2019 - now at Austin Country Club - Horschel opened group play against Jordan Spieth. Like Scheffler, Spieth is a Texan who played at the University of Texas in Austin. He was a clear crowd favorite. But when Horschel birdied four of the first six holes to set up a 3-up lead they were pretty quiet. He lost the lead three holes later but managed to rebound to be 2-up with three to play. Then he bogeyed 16 and 19 to tie the match. Still, come Friday, he knew a win against Kevin Na would keep him alive and the pair were square with four to play. He lost three straight holes. Na didn't win the tournament, but he did get to the final eight. "I’ve had my opportunities. I just didn’t finish off matches. So to be able to do that this week - it makes this win sweeter," Horschel grinned. So what was the change? What was the vow that allowed this Billy Horschel to get out of his group with Collin Morikawa, J.T. Poston and Max Homa (via a playoff) and then past Kevin Streelman, Tommy Fleetwood (via a playoff) and Victor Perez before taking out Scheffler? "There were certain times that I’ve been too focused on trying to play my opponent instead of the course," Horschel explained. "When he’s in trouble you’re just like, hey, I just want to hit the green and make a par and you wind up not hitting a great golf shot." The passive mindset wasn't working for him. And so the vow was simple. First, play the course not the man. Second, if the moment came, be smart but keep the foot down. Third, move on from mistakes quickly. These came to life in the championship match. Holding a 2-up lead coming down the par-5 12th Horschel watched Scheffler's second shot find water. So he took the smart, yet conservative play of laying up. Then, when it came time for his wedge, Horschel smelled blood in said water - and took dead aim going for the kill. It was the right mindset - but wrong execution - as the ball bounded past the pin and into a bunker that he wouldn't get up and down from. Scheffler though did not take advantage. Rather than dwell on the negative Horschel moved on. "You have to understand that it’s going to be a roller coaster. You’re going to have ups and downs, you’re going to have swings in matches where you think you’re going to win a hole and you wind up tying or losing a hole," Horschel adds. "But you have to understand that the next hole’s a new opportunity to win a hole and improve your standing. So I’ve got the mentality that I’m never down, I’m never out, until you tell me I can’t play anymore. That’s a perfect mentality for match play. I’m a bulldog. I fight hard. I never give up, and I always think I can win. I always think there’s a way I can get the job done." As Scheffler tried to find a way to cut into his lead, Horschel held firm and even when he once again overcooked a wedge on the 16th, knowing a birdie would end the match, he shook it off and chipped brilliantly to preserve his lead. A hole later and the 2014 FedExCup champion was a six-time PGA TOUR winner. It turns out a spring vacation with family last week - where he left his clubs at home - went a long way to allowing him to stay in the correct mindset. "Mentally it was the key. I needed it. I needed a little mental reboot and that’s what I got," he said of the trip. "We went back to where I grew up in Melbourne, spent time with my cousin and her kids and my aunt and uncle and we had my boat down there and just spent time in the water, fishing, tubing, just water every day. "I don’t think we’ve been on a family vacation ever that didn’t have clubs involved. So everyone had a great time, and I’m sure there will be more of this after seeing the success I’ve had this week." The victory moved Horschel within reach of another FedExCup title as he flew up to seventh in the season long standings and back into the top 20 in the world (at 17th) for the first time since July 2015. He was as low as 98th in July 2018 but now feels he's where he belongs and has desires to climb to greater heights. "I’ve always felt I had the talent to compete with the best players day-in and day-out. I think the difference between me and maybe a Dustin Johnson or Rory McIlroy or Justin Thomas is just the consistency day-in and day-out," Horschel said. "My goals are lofty. If I could get to double digit wins and those be four majors and THE PLAYERS … I’ve always felt like I want to be one of those guys who have won a Grand Slam. I think I only have one top-5 in a major, so obviously I sound ridiculous saying this, but I think I have that talent, I know I have that talent, I just haven’t played well enough and done what I needed to do." Horschel is also fully aware it is a Ryder Cup year. "If you looked at some of the other formats, how I played in team events, what I’ve done at Zurich (winning with Scott Piercy in 2018). I’ve had success there. I’ve had success playing at QBE Shootout. So I feel like I’m a really good partner to pair up with a lot of people. "I feel like I should have been on Ryder Cup teams before but that’s my fault because I haven’t done what I needed to do to take care of that. But maybe this year is the year. It’s always been one of my priorities. If I do happen to make a Ryder Cup team in my career, I’ll be happy." For now - Cup team or not - he's plenty happy. And the first chance for a leg of that grand slam comes at Augusta National in less than two weeks' time. Don't count him out.

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Emergency 9: John Deere Classic, Round 4Emergency 9: John Deere Classic, Round 4

Here are nine tidbits from the final round of The John Deere Classic gamers can use tomorrow, this weekend or down the road. TPC Deere Run in Silvis, Illinois, hosts for the 18th time, measures 7,286 yards and plays to Par-71. Big thanks to Rob Bolton for coming off the bench yesterday as I was celebrating the nuptials of great friends. Thanks Rob! Seoul Man For the second week in a row on the PGA TOUR a native of Seoul romped to victory as Michael Kim took home his first TOUR win at TPC Deere Run after Kevin Na’s super Sunday at The Greenbrier. The former Cal Bear from the heralded Class of 2011, Kim fired a final round 66 to post 257 (-27), a new tournament record, as he won by a season-tying best eight shots over Francesco Molinari, Joel Dahmen, Sam Ryder and Bronson Burgoon.  Raise your hand if you saw this coming. Now keep it up if you’re lying! Kim entered the week ranked No. 473 in the OWGR and had made six cuts in 2018. His best finish on the season was T18 in Memphis and his scoring average checked in at No. 181. He was also 149th in birdie average while 195 in fairways and 192 GIR. In eight previous rounds in the Quad Cities he broke 69 exactly once. So what happened? Well, this did:  His worst round of the week was 66.  Circled 30 birdies.  Led SG: putting (13.514), proximity (24′, 11″) and T1 in scrambling.  Played the final 29 holes without a bogey.  Square only three bogeys (no others) for the week.  Played the Par-4 holes 18-under, this would have cashed T6 alone.  He opened with 63, T2, his worst ending-round position of the week. With this victory Kim secures a two-year exemption on TOUR and a last-minute trip across the pond to Scotland. Upon his return gamers should take a deep breath before rushing him into lineups. As we’ve seen before, these victories are life-changing events but I’d point out this is only his third top-10 finish in the last three years. This hasn’t “been coming” so keeping it up sounds just as unlikely. This performance was magnificent and that’s just fine. Know Thy Enemy These were the top-10 selected golfers in the PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf game presented by SERVPRO. Gamers who leaned on Kevin Streelman heating up on the weekend were rewarded as his 13 birdies against just two bogeys moved him up the leaderboard. He hit all 18 greens after finding 13 of 14 fairways. His T7 is his third top-10 payday for the Illinois native in eight tries. PAIN OR GAIN These were the top-10 selected golfers in the PGA TOUR Fantasy One & Done presented by SERVPRO: Joaquin Niemann moved up 16 spots in the final round to pick up another top 25, his sixth in 10 events this year. He closed with a bogey-free 32 on the inward nine to salvage a few more dollars for his investors. Believe it or not, this is his worst finish when playing the weekend, surpassing T17 at QLN. He’s 19. This is a recording. More Lire Francesco Molinari is 40-under par in his last two events on TOUR and has won and finished T2 on a pair of courses he’s never played before. Starting the day five shots behind not even a final-round 64 could put a dent in Kim’s lead. The Italian heads to Carnoustie as one of the favorites as his June and July results have been red hot. His cashes the majority of his checks based on his tee-to-green game and that was a key this week. He split 45 of 56 fairways (T12) and had to fix his ball mark on 57 of 72 GIR (T9). Bridesmaids Of the gang of four that tied for second, three not named Molinari could use the points and the cash. They all picked up their best finishes on TOUR and should all be sleeping comfortably tonight. 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Course Historians The combination of Steve Stricker and Zach Johnson has had more than their fair shares of success at TPC Deere Run over the last 10 years. The pair didn’t add to their podium finishes this year but Johnson’s rally on Sunday turned a dire week into a decent one for gamers. The Iowan posted a bogey-free 64 to jump up 23 spots to T16 to salvage points and dollars in every format. Interestingly enough Stricker had his worst payday of the season on track he’s annually dominated reinforcing there are no sure things in fantasyland. We move on. Sunday Silence Beginning the final round T3. Matt Jones still hasn’t been able to find the key to Sunday as he dropped nine places to T12. It’s his best finish of the season but he’s still on the outside (No. 145) looking in. … David Hearn opened 66-64 and sat T7 after 70 on the marathon that was Saturday. His matching Sunday 70 pushed him to T16 matching his best finish on his own ball this season. Gamers will point out his bogey-bogey final two holes didn’t help matters any. … Johnson Wagner re-established his horse-for-course status again this year as his run at TPC Deere Run is T7, T5, T5, MC and T16 this year. His one-under-par 70 dropped him nine spots to his final spot reinforcing how rounds in the 70’s just don’t work here. Study Hall The final round scoring average of 68.254 (-2.746) was the easiest of the four rounds by over half of a shot. For the week TPC Deere Run took on plenty of rain and averaged 69.185 (-1.815) for the four rounds. There were 18 bogey-free rounds on the weekend including 10 on Sunday… Kim was joined by World No. 371 Brandon Stone, who shot 60 to win the Scottish Open, plus Eddie Pepperell and Jens Dantorp as the final four players exempt into The Open Championship. … For those of you wondering about Graham DeLaet, I saw this tweet earlier in the week.

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Communication key for Chez Reavie and Lucas GloverCommunication key for Chez Reavie and Lucas Glover

AVONDALE, La. – They call it ham and egging when a team cleverly splits their good holes between them. Chez Reavie and Lucas Glover timed it perfectly with six birdies each to send their team to a blistering opening 12-under 60 at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans on Thursday and a share of the lead with Chinese duo Xinjun Zhang and Zecheng Dou. The key? Making a ton of putts after solid communication. While most teams leave each individual to do their own thing in Four-ball play, this pair picked each other’s brains. And it worked. “We read them right early, and that just gave us good feeling for the rest of the day. Chez birdied the first two; we were dead on with both the reads, so we just kept it going,â€� former U.S. Open winner Glover explained. “We changed maybe a ball or two in a direction one way or the other and that was it. We were pretty right on. 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PGA tour pros criticize 18th hole at Northern TrustPGA tour pros criticize 18th hole at Northern Trust

Dustin Johnson hit one of the most insanely impressive drives we’ll ever see on the first playoff Sunday at The Northern Trust. Seriously, a 341-yard bomb on an outlandish line right over a huge water hazard at Glen Oaks Club’s par-4 18th. We’re getting excited, let’s watch this again. This left Johnson just 94 yards to the hole … on a 467-yard par 4. From there, he would smooth a wedge to 4 feet and birdie the hole to defeat Jordan Spieth, who hit a brilliant 315-yard drive but came nowhere close to what Johnson produced off the tee. Spieth’s drive was 25 yards shorter and on a way more conservative angle, leaving him 182 yards to the hole. Apparently this struck a nerve with a few PGA Tour

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