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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The Chevron Championship
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Jeeno Thitikul+900
Nelly Korda+1000
Lydia Ko+1400
Jin Young Ko+2000
A Lim Kim+2200
Ayaka Furue+2500
Charley Hull+2500
Haeran Ryu+2500
Lauren Coughlin+2500
Minjee Lee+2500
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Zurich Classic of New Orleans
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy / Shane Lowry+350
Collin Morikawa / Kurt Kitayama+1100
J.T. Poston / Keith Mitchell+1800
Thomas Detry / Robert MacIntyre+1800
Billy Horschel / Tom Hoge+2000
Aaron Rai / Sahith Theegala+2200
Ben Griffin / Andrew Novak+2200
Wyndham Clark / Taylor Moore+2200
Nico Echavarria / Max Greyserman+2500
Nicolai Hojgaard / Rasmus Hojgaard+2500
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Mitsubishi Electric Classic
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Steven Alker+700
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Padraig Harrington+800
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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
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Viktor Hovland+2000
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The Open 2025
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Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
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Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
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Shane Lowry+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
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Xander Schauffele holds one-shot lead at The OlympicsXander Schauffele holds one-shot lead at The Olympics

KAWAGOE, Japan — Xander Schauffele didn’t have a lot go his way until finishing on a strong note Saturday, a superb shot to 3 feet for birdie that left him 18 holes away from an Olympic gold medal. The podium still felt like a long way off. RELATED: Leaderboard, tee times | How the format works | Inside the Field: WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational Five players had a share of the lead at some point in the third round. Schauffele, Japanese star Hideki Matsuyama and Carlos Ortiz of Mexico were still tied playing the 18th hole at Kasumigaseki Country Club. Schauffele, who spent much of his round in the bunkers and dense rough, managed to end the day with a one-shot lead, in the same spot he started. From the fairway — foreign turf for him on this day — he hit a 9-iron that landed softly just belong the cup. The birdie gave him a 3-under 68. He’s at 14-under 199. Right there with him was Matsuyama, the Masters champion on whom Japan has pinned its hopes on a gold medal. He was recovering from COVID-19 just under a month ago and said he never would have guessed being in this position. Matsuyama had a 67 and will be in the final group along with Paul Casey, who shot a 66 in his bid to keep the Olympic gold medal in golf with Britain. He was two shots behind along with Ortiz, who made bogey from the bunker on the 18th hole. Saturday had all the trappings of a shootout, with eight players separated by a mere three shots. That’s not unusual at golf’s highest level, except only three walk away with a medal. Matsuyama and Schauffele played in the final group at the Masters. Matsuyama started with a four-shot lead and Schauffele, whose mother was raised in Japan, made a late charge that ended with a tee shot into the water on the par-3 16th. “I’m sure Xander will come out determined to win the gold medal tomorrow,” Matsuyama said. Matsuyama finished off the rain-delayed second round in the morning with a 64 to get into the final group. He caught up to the lead with a bunker shot to short range for birdie on the 17th, and had to save par from the rough on the last hole. Could he have envisioned this when he was recovering at home? “I definitely would not have believed it,” Matsuyama said, adding that he would have been most concerned with his endurance. That tested the entire 60-man field in stifling heat with only an occasional zephyr to circulate some air on the tree-lined course. Thomas Bach, the International Olympic Committee president, joined PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan under a tent next to the first tee to watch the final group start. Even with no spectators, Matsuyama still attracted some 250 people, most of them volunteers, all of them hanging on every shot by Matsuyama. “It does not feel like we don’t have fans out here,” Matsuyama said. Action came from every corner of Kasumigaseki. Rory McIlroy, indifferent about the Olympics until he arrived in Tokyo and already looking forward to Paris in 2024, made an early move until he was slowed by a poor pitch that kept him from birdie on the par-5 14th and a three-putt bogey on the 16th hole. He bounced back with a birdie and finished with a 67. McIlroy was three shots behind, along with Sebastian Munoz of Colombia (66), Mito Pereira of Chile (68) and Sepp Straka of Austria (68). All were very much in the mix for gold. Others were still hopeful of any medal, a list that suddenly includes Sungjae Im. The 23-year-old South Korean needs an Olympic medal to earn an exemption from mandatory military service, though this isn’t his last chance. Im was 12 shots out of the lead and was the third player this week to match the Olympic record with a 63. He was still seven behind, though another big round could keep him in bronze range. Schauffele has been trying to treat this as any other tournament, and it felt like one Saturday. “Tomorrow may feel a little different,” he said. “There’s a little bit more on the line than what we normally play for, and you’re obviously trying to represent your country to the best of your ability. So that’s why I’ll be on the range tonight.” His swing was out of sorts from the start, and his father, Stefan, kept a monocular to his right eye and could see flaws that weren’t there during his warm-up session, most of the shots to the left. Schauffele delivered key par putts, and a pair of birdies on the easier scoring holes, to keep the round and the lead from getting away from him. He was in trouble on the ninth, in the trees off the tees and having to lay up to the fairway. He escaped with par by making a 25-foot putt. “Your putter doesn’t know how bad you’re swinging it,” Schauffele said. “We’re getting it done right now. So I would like tomorrow to be a little bit more fun all round.”

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A quick look at the Memorial TournamentA quick look at the Memorial Tournament

THE OVERVIEW DUBLIN, Ohio – To win on the PGA TOUR is always special, but to win at Jack’s place, that is something else entirely. The enormity of winning at Muirfield Village and shaking the hand of arguably the greatest golfer to ever play the game in Jack Nicklaus, the tournament host, is not lost on William McGirt. The defending champion is still pinching himself after his incredible up-and-down on the 72nd hole last year to secure victory in front of an idol. “Anytime you get to shake his hand, it’s a pretty special moment,â€� McGirt grinned as he seeks to become the first to defend the Memorial Tournament since Tiger Woods in 2000-2001. “Coming back here to his place, he’s put so much time and effort into making this place his own Augusta National, and to come back here as defending champion it’s honestly a dream come true.â€� A large part of the field these days never saw Nicklaus play golf, and certainly didn’t witness his prime as he worked his way to 73 PGA TOUR wins and 18 majors. But they all revere him. And they all love to honor his legacy by being part of the tournament. And it crosses all borders. “Winning here three years ago, I didn’t realize how big a tournament this really is,â€� Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama says. “Since winning, these last three years, I’ve come to realize what an important event the Memorial Tournament is. There’s a different feel here at the Memorial tournament … the course, the fans, Mr. Nicklaus hosting, it’s a special event and always will be to me.â€� Of the 31 different players to have won the tournament (some have won multiple times), 16 are major champions. It’s a who’s who of modern day golf. This year, five FedExCup champions are in the field in Jordan Spieth (2015), Billy Horschel (2014), Bill Haas (2011), Jim Furyk (2010) and Vijay Singh (2008) while 10 of the top 10 in the current FedExCup Standings are here, highlighted by Dustin Johnson who is No. 1. Nine of the 10 winners of the Memorial Tournament since the inception of the FedExCup in 2007 have qualified for the season-ending TOUR Championship. McGirt advanced to last year’s TOUR Championship for the first time in his career, posting a T17 at East Lake to finish a career-high No. 24 in the FedExCup. THREE PLAYERS TO PONDER Dustin Johnson The FedExCup leader has matched his career-high with three wins this season. Could he make the Memorial No. 4? He finished a shot outside a playoff last year. Jon Rahm He arrives at Muirfield Village with a TOUR-leading seven top 10s in 14 starts this season, including a runner up last week at the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational. Jason Day The Muirfield Village member is still seeking his first top-10 at the Memorial, but is coming off a runner-up finish in his last start (AT&T Byron Nelson). THE FLYOVER A closer look at Muirfield Village’s difficult finishing hole, the 484-yard, par-4 18th hole. It was the second-most difficult hole at last year’s Memorial Tournament, playing to a 4.15 scoring average. There were just 56 birdies on the uphill hole last year, compared to 103 scores of bogey or worse. It was the fifth-hardest fairway (59.3 percent) and third-hardest green (51.3 percent) to hit in 2016. THE LANDING ZONE Muirfield Village’s final hole gets most of the attention, but the 17th is no slouch. The 478-yard, par-4 was the third-hardest hole at Muirfield Village last year, playing just one one-hundredth of a stroke easier than No. 18. Seventy-three percent of the field hit the fairway last year, but fewer than half the players (46.6 percent) were able to hit the green in regulation. WEATHER CHECK Dry weather is forecast on Thursday, but central Ohio will enter a stormy weather pattern from Friday afternoon through Sunday as a frontal boundary stalls across the region. The weekend is not expected to be a washout, but there will be scattered showers and thunderstorms across the area each day. TEMPS: The mercury may never reach past 80 degrees this week, and morning lows will be in the 50s and 60s. TOUR players will get to enjoy some cool temperatures before summer arrives. RAIN: As is often the case, thunderstorms are in the forecast for the Memorial Tournament. There is a chance of thunderstorms from Friday to Sunday. WINDS: Friday and Sunday are forecast to be the breeziest days, but winds are never expected to surpass 20 mph. SOUND CHECK You can get murdered at 14. And a lot of guys do get murdered at 14. 16 turned out to be a strongest hole on the golf course. 17 is a strong par-4. And 18 is a strong par-4. Those three holes – I suppose what I tried to do was strengthen up the finish of the golf tournament, I think I accomplished that. ODDS AND ENDS 1. William McGirt waited a long time for his first PGA TOUR victory. More than 37 years, to be exact. He earned that first win at last year’s Memorial Tournament in a playoff over Jon Curran. Dustin Johnson, who was in the midst of his Player of the Year season, finished a shot back. McGirt arrives at Muirfield Village after appearing on early-week leaderboards at the Masters and THE PLAYERS, eventually finishing 22nd in both events. He points to last year’s win as a reason for his good play in big events. “The biggest thing was confidence, knowing that I could get the job done out here now, especially against the best players in the world,â€� McGirt said. “If you look at the leaderboard on Sunday last year, I mean it was top-10 players in the world, it seemed like every one of them were up there. It was just nice to get that done. … It’s just been huge in many, many ways. So much of it you just can’t put into words.â€� 2. Muirfield Village was the site of Hideki Matsuyama’s first Presidents Cup appearance (2013) and his first PGA TOUR victory, at the 2014 Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide. He also finished fifth in his title defense. His strong iron play makes him a good fit for Muirfield Village, where players hit tee shots into wide, forgiving fairways but are challenged on the approach shots. Matsuyama ranks in the top 15 in proximity to the hole from 125-150 yards, 150-175, 175-200 and more than 200 yards. He’s also eight in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee. The putter is often the question mark for Matsuyama, who ranks 182nd in Strokes Gained: Putting. Matsuyama ranks second in the FedExCup, 405 points behind Dustin Johnson, but is seeking his first top-10 since winning the Waste Management Phoenix Open in February. “It has been an up-and-down year. Hopefully I’m on the upswing, but to be honest, my swing isn’t where I’d like it to be and I’m not putting very well,â€� Matsuyama said. “But really coming back to Muirfield Village, there are some special vibes here and hopefully that will encourage my game to play much better than I have been the last couple of months.â€� 3. Kisner’s big win: Kevin Kisner arrives at Muirfield Village as the PGA TOUR’s most recent winner, having claimed the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational on Sunday. It was the culmination of an eight-tournament stretch that saw him collect that win and two runners-up (Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, Zurich Classic of New Orleans) to move to seventh in the FedExCup standings and virtually lock up a spot on the Presidents Cup team. He’d love nothing more than to continue his good play at Muirfield Village, where he finished eighth in 2015. “I love the golf course, love the place. This tournament has a little extra special feel. It’s Mr. Nicklaus’ tournament, so it’s a lot like Bay Hill, Mr. Palmer’s tournament. When you get here they treat you well,â€� Kisner said. “The golf course is sweet. It’s demanding, but still you can make a lot of birdies. So that’s the cool thing about courses on Tour when you can still shoot 5 or 6 under, but if you don’t shoot well you’re going to shoot a couple over.â€�

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