Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Bold predictions for 2022

Bold predictions for 2022

The ball is round, weather is variable, equipment occasionally breaks. And then there’s COVID. Still, it’s time to predict what’s in store for the year ahead. So, let’s get right to it. Here are 10 things that absolutely, positively will go down in 2022, because they simply must, or we want them to, or something like that. Full disclosure: If even nine of these come to pass it would be amazing, eight would be impressive, seven pretty darn good, six not bad at all, five a very solid effort, four … 1. Rickie and Xander win again A victory for Rickie Fowler and Xander Schauffele would break a three-year drought for each. Fowler’s last win came at the Waste Management Phoenix Open, while Schauffele’s last win on TOUR – which doesn’t include his Olympic gold — came at the 2019 Sentry Tournament of Champions. That Schauffele didn’t win last season owed to lousy timing, with poor final rounds at the Waste Management Phoenix Open (71, T2) and the Masters (72, T3). You know it’s in him: He got up and down on the last hole to win the Olympic gold medal. His final-round scoring average was 69.22, 15th on TOUR, but his Round 3 average was 70.28, 85th. He’ll fix it. As for Fowler, whose 11-year streak of making the FedExCup Playoffs ended with a thud, the tee-to-green game is solid, but not so his work on the greens. No. 1 in Strokes Gained: Putting as recently as 2017, he was 126th last season as he wound up 134th in the FedExCup. Now that his tee-to-green swing changes have solidified, Fowler must find a way to make the putts fall again. When he does, he’ll turn the close calls – T3 at THE CJ CUP @ SUMMIT in October (third-round 63) – into wins again. He’s still only 33. 2. Tiger returns at St. Andrews The Old Course at St. Andrews, where the Royal & Ancient folks and everyone else will toast the 150th playing of The Open in July, is flat as a pancake and thus relatively easy to walk. The tournament is not for another seven months, giving Woods plenty of time to get stronger. Oh, and he’s won two of his three claret jugs at St. Andrews. There’s always a chance Woods could surprise us and pop into Augusta for the Masters, but the guess here is the course is too hilly, and treacherous, for him to make that his first week back. Also, although it’s barely any sort of prediction, Woods and his son, Charlie, will tee it up again at the PNC Championship in December, only this time they’ll turn that runner-up into a W. 3. Scheffler and McNealy get first wins Look for the teammates from the United States’ historic 2017 Walker Cup team – the roster also included Collin Morikawa, Cameron Champ, Will Zalatoris, Doug Ghim and Doc Redman – to enter the winner’s circle in the same season. Stanford alum McNealy did a lot right at the Fortinet Championship at Silverado last fall, other than a stretch of four bogeys in seven holes in the third round. His 70-68 weekend just wasn’t enough as he got pipped by fellow Bay Area product Max Homa of Cal (65-65) by a shot. McNealy is only 26, he’s getting better every season, and he knows how to win. It’s coming. Don’t be surprised if that win comes in his native Northern California, as he’s also played well at Pebble Beach the past two years. Meanwhile, it hasn’t been that long since Scheffler beat Jon Rahm in singles at the Ryder Cup. If he can do that, he can win on TOUR; all it’s going to take is a hot putting week. He already has two top-5s this season, including a runner-up at the Hewlett Packard Enterprise Open, and is on the precipice of the top 10 in the Official World Golf Ranking despite his lack of a TOUR victory. That’s testament to how steady he is. He closed 2021 by finishing second in the unofficial Hero World Challenge. 4. Homa will win a major or THE PLAYERS True, Homa can sometimes be the last guy to believe in his own greatness, but of his three wins, two have come on major-quality venues (2021 Genesis Invitational at Riviera, 2019 Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow). What’s more, there was something bloodless and clinical about his 65-65 weekend for his third and most recent victory, at the Fortinet Championship last fall. Of course, a win in one of these big events would help him return to the site of his maiden win for the 2022 Presidents Cup. Keep an eye on him this year. 5. Ancer and Smith lead Presidents Cup upset The International Team banked invaluable self-belief in its narrow loss in 2019. The U.S. stars routed Europe in the Ryder Cup and almost NEVER lose the Presidents Cup. Yep, conditions are ripe for an upset. Ancer was the surprise of the 2019 Presidents Cup, going 3-1-1 to tie Sungjae Im as the top point-earner for the Internationals. Smith, who just edged Jon Rahm to capture the Sentry Tournament of Champions, beat Justin Thomas in Singles to go 1-1-1 last time around in Oz. Those two rising stars give Trevor Immelman’s International Team a toughness they’ve rarely if ever had, and when you add veterans Marc Leishman, Hideki Matsuyama, Adam Scott and Louis Oosthuizen; ultra-steady Im; resurgent Branden Grace; plus Joaquin Niemann, Mito Pereira, and perhaps Garrick Higgo, this team looks poised to shock the world at Quail Hollow. 6. Spieth wins the Masters – or The Open Spieth and the Masters are the perfect marriage of man and major. The good times, of course, included his maiden green jacket in 2015, when he basically won everything that wasn’t nailed down. He was cruising for a successful title defense in ’16 until a water ball on 12 sunk his chances (T2). He was T11 in ’17 (final-round 75), solo third in ’18, and T3 last season, after breaking his win drought a week earlier at the Valero Texas Open. With his game back in full force, Spieth is primed to collect his second green jacket. And don’t forget about The Open at St. Andrews, where he finished a shot out of a playoff in 2015 while pursuing the Grand Slam. 7. Mickelson wins the Schwab Cup In November, Lefty joined Jack Nicklaus as the only players to win four of their first six starts on PGA TOUR Champions at the Charles Schwab Cup Championship. But Mickelson didn’t play in enough tournaments amongst the 50-and-over set to win the season-long Schwab Cup points race, which was won once again by Bernhard Langer. This time, Mickelson will win the marathon and the sprint. Of course, predicting anything Mickelson-related is risky, and after his moonshot victory at the PGA Championship last year he’s at liberty to keep teeing it up with the big boys at big events like the U.S. Open (his white whale). And he will. But now he also has a taste for Champions competition, too; he’s realized he enjoys playing with (and beating) guys his own age. The guess here is Mickelson will find time to hang with the young guys and beat the old guys, too, at least enough times to take home the trophy for the season-long competition. 8. Two others besides Rahm will touch No. 1 It’s tempting to say Rahm can’t be caught at world No. 1, what with his birdie-filled performance at the Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua, where he finished a shot behind winner Cameron Smith. And given what we’ve seen since Rahm regained the top spot with a T3 at The Open last summer, he deserves to be there. He’s the best player. And yet … Rahm is human, he can’t play every week, and the level of talent at the top in 2022 is staggering. Given the neck-snapping trajectories of Collin Morikawa, Patrick Cantlay and Viktor Hovland, surely one or two will reach the top spot at least briefly. Morikawa already would have done so absent his freakish bad final round at the Hero World Challenge. And what about a comeback for former No. 1s Brooks Koepka, Rory McIlroy, and/or Justin Thomas? Yes, Rahm is the best player, but it’s just too crowded at the top. 9. Burns and Mitchell make the U.S. Presidents Cup Team Burns is a no-brainer, what with his recent exploits. The only surprise, perhaps, is he wasn’t on the super-stacked U.S. Team that dusted Europe at the Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits. Mitchell has fought inconsistency but is trending in the right direction with a T3 (THE CJ CUP @ SUMMIT) and T12 (The RSM Classic) last fall. Also encouraging: his three straight birdies to top-10 at THE NORTHERN TRUST and play his way into the BMW Championship. Oh, and Rory McIlroy praised his game last year after they duked it out at the Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow, which as fate would have it hosts the Presidents Cup this year. 10. DeChambeau will get even longer With moonshots that topped out at around 400 yards, DeChambeau, the two-time reigning PGA TOUR driving distance champion, finished in the elite eight in his first crack at the Professional Long Drivers World Championship in Mesquite, Nevada, last fall. He loved the event’s smash-and-flex vibe and promised to return. He’ll do even better this time, his commitment to speed and innovation wowing fans as he powers his way to a final-four finish on the grid.

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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+800
Justin Thomas+1600
Collin Morikawa+2200
Jon Rahm+2200
Xander Schauffele+2200
Ludvig Aberg+2500
Joaquin Niemann+3000
Brooks Koepka+4000
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AdventHealth Championship
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Kensei Hirata+2000
Mitchell Meissner+2200
SH Kim+2200
Neal Shipley+2500
Seungtaek Lee+2800
Hank Lebioda+3000
Chandler Blanchet+3500
Pierceson Coody+3500
Rick Lamb+3500
Trey Winstead+3500
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Regions Tradition
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Stewart Cink+550
Steve Stricker+650
Ernie Els+700
Steven Alker+750
Miguel Angel Jimenez+1200
Bernhard Langer+1400
Jerry Kelly+1600
Alex Cejka+1800
Retief Goosen+2500
Richard Green+2500
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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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Matt Kuchar renaissance continues at Sony Open in HawaiiMatt Kuchar renaissance continues at Sony Open in Hawaii

HONOLULU, Hawaii – Matt Kuchar certainly isn’t looking to create another win drought. The affable veteran waited 1,667 days and 116 starts between winning the 2014 RBC Heritage the Mayakoba Golf Classic earlier this season. If he surges forward from his comfortable 36-hole position this week at the Sony Open in Hawaii it will be his second triumph in three starts on TOUR and come just 64 days apart. Kuchar has posted back-to-back 7-under 63s at Waialae Country Club to move to 14 under, currently four shots clear of Chez Reavie (65) and Stewart Cink (62) after the morning wave. Only Andrew Putnam (11 under total through 12 holes) appears a threat to his lead. “Just two great days. To shoot 7-under back to back is unexpected, but certainly awfully excited,â€� Kuchar said. While the wins went missing for the lengthy stretch, Kuchar’s form did not. At least not at first. He finished inside the top 20 of the FedExCup in 2015, 2016 and 2017. In 2018 however Kuchar dropped to 76th in the season long race, his worst result since being 116th in 2008. The St. Simons Island resident says he may have tried too hard last season and having the early victory this season was certainly keeping him on a high. “I want to say last year I probably ground harder than I’ve done in the past,â€� he admitted. “Close to Ryder Cup I was on the outside of a couple things and felt like I hadn’t been used to being in that situation. “So now being in good shape it’s certainly a nice place to be. Freed up? I’m not sure. I still kind of attack the game the same way.â€� While his record of turning a halfway lead into a victory is far from stellar at two out of 12 the 40-year-old did close the deal from this spot in Mexico recently. He knows players can go low at Waialae but the course can also bite you if you’re not careful. “Love the golf course. It’s a challenging one. If you play well you can make birdies; if you don’t you’re going to make bogeys,â€� Kuchar added. “The golf course gets tough when you’re playing from the rough. Even if you have short clubs in your hand it’s challenging.â€�

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History, mystique distinguish RBC HeritageHistory, mystique distinguish RBC Heritage

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. – This is a week to celebrate consistency because the PGA TOUR has set up its stage at the RBC Heritage on a most-beloved golf course. RELATED: Leaderboard | Five Things to Know: Harbour Town Harbour Town Golf Links “is in my top five,” said Tom Watson, and Hale Irwin gushed about “that look, that feel, that mystique.” Said Nick Faldo, “it’s got the right charm, the right ambiance,” and when Nick Price came here, he added, “I used every club in the bag because it demands strategy.” Those Hall of Famers have given way to a new generation of elite players, but the sentiments strike a consistent chord. Many of those on the first page of the leaderboard may be playing well because they feel they’ve already won just by being here. “I love the island here, such a great event,” said Graeme McDowell, who won here in 2013 and hasn’t missed it since. 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Second to Sepp Straka at The Honda Classic, Lowry continued solid play at THE PLAYERS Championship (T-13), Valspar Championship (T-12), and Masters (T-3). He has broken par in 11 of his 16 rounds, and just once in seven stroke-play tournaments worldwide in 2022 has he finished outside the top 20. That finish, in his so-called off-week, was a T-24. On a breezy Thursday morning when the Calibogue Sound offered its usual sultry backdrop, the challenge to Harbour Town was as it always has been – figure out how to shape the ball around the trees and don’t get too lofty with your trajectory. 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Harbour Town Golf Links is saturated is consistency, from the way the residents embrace the tournament to the style of play the course demands. “The way the course is set up, I like keeping the ball under the trees,” said Lowry. “I think it kind of suits that. You kind of flight it around here and that’s what I do well, keeping it down out of the wind.” And the 2019 Champion Golfer of the Year has another attribute that serves him well at Harbour Town. “There are a lot of talents I would like for myself,” McDowell said. “Rory’s driving, Tiger’s mind. (But) Shane’s chipping is right up there for me. Shane, to me, is one of the best chippers of the ball that I’ve seen.” That is a valuable tool anywhere, but particularly at Harbour Town, where you might feel like you’re playing 18 postage stamps. The small greens are partly why this Pete Dye design generates such a passionate following. 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PGA Championship 2.0 starts at Bethpage BlackPGA Championship 2.0 starts at Bethpage Black

FARMINGDALE, N.Y. – With its new May date, leaving August to the FedExCup Playoffs, the PGA Championship represents the exact mid-way point in golf’s new Season of Championships, five big tournaments over five months. PGA of America CEO Seth Waugh spoke of how the new schedule improves the “cadenceâ€� of the season. PGA of America President Suzy Whaley said the PGA Championship’s new date coincides nicely with the start of the golf season. All of these things, while positives, have required a certain adaptability and good cheer. Then there’s PGA of America Chief Championships Officer Kerry Haigh, whose job has changed most of all. He laughed about waiting for spring, and wondering nervously if it would ever come. “Thankfully for all of our lives,â€� Haigh said, “that’s happened.â€� Bethpage features 25 acres of fairway, 35 acres of primary rough, and 78 bunkers, approximately eight acres of sand. There’s just one water hazard, at the 210-yard, par-3 eighth hole. The tees and fairways are poa annua and ryegrass, the greens a mix of poa annua and bentgrass. Fans who tune into CBS’s coverage will get to see all of that in living color, mostly green. RELATED: Tee times | Power Rankings | Expert Picks | Tiger ‘rested and ready’ | Wednesday notebook What they won’t see is the behind-the-scenes race to make it that way. The MVPs here are mostly Bethpage Director of Agronomy Andrew Wilson, Black Course Superintendent Mike Hadley, and Haigh. Those three and their staffs had a growing season of only about four weeks in which to make this vaunted, A.W. Tillinghast design tournament-ready. That’s not a lot of time, but they seem to have pulled it off. “It’s in beautiful shape,â€� said Jordan Spieth. “The greens are just immaculate.â€� That’s been a common sentiment. But how did that happen? Planning was the key. In preparation for spring 2019, Haigh, Wilson and Hadley began in spring 2018. When would the grass come in? When could they aerate and top-dress? Could they skip any steps? What could be done in order to get the course ready as fast as possible? “We knew sort of what happened, when it happened,â€� Haigh said. “We adjusted our agronomic plans that normally are done in the spring, moved some of those to the fall and didn’t do some of the things you normally do in the spring knowing that it was such a short period.â€� Case in point, agronomist Wilson said he noticed during last year’s “practice runâ€� (his words) that some of the grass on the course was still straw-colored or dormant on May 1. To accelerate the greening process, he brought the soil moisture up, which better retained the heat. “A little trick,â€� he said. Moisture has been plentiful this week, but with its sandy soil, Bethpage has drained well. Haigh and company, with additional manpower from volunteer superintendents from 16 states and six countries, were able to do little more than mow and roll the greens with the heavy rain Sunday and Monday. They planned to “topâ€� or cut the rough on Wednesday. Players have emphasized the importance of hitting fairways while not sacrificing distance on a course that measures 7,459 yards but may in fact play even longer than that in the damp cold. “I think it’s going to be interesting for everyone, definitely the course this week, but maybe going forward, as well,â€� said Italy’s Francesco Molinari. “… If you think about the last few U.S. PGAs, it was seriously warm, and we haven’t got any of that this week.â€� Defending champion Brooks Koepka called Bethpage a sort of PGA/U.S. Open mashup. To take it further, the Black will have not just elements of the U.S. Open (the first major to come here, in 2002), but also The Open Championship (weather) and THE PLAYERS Championship (date). But Haigh, whom Rory McIlroy called the best course set-up man in the business, will give it the PGA imprimatur. That means keeping it fair, and not becoming the story. “Our number one aim is not to get in the way of the best players,â€� he said. “Let them showcase their skills, make it tough, make it fair, make it challenging, hopefully at times make it exciting, and hopefully make the players think because I think if any golfer is given the ability to think, then they enjoy their game more and they enjoy the challenge of that golf course more.â€� Waugh conceded that certain courses in the Northeast may need to be reevaluated, while others in the Southeast might be brought back into the fold. In the end, he anticipated a net gain. “We think we’re great here,â€� he said of Bethpage. The course is ready. Now it’s just a matter of which of the 156 players are.

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