Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Brendon Todd, Jason Day tied for lead after first round at the PGA Championship

Brendon Todd, Jason Day tied for lead after first round at the PGA Championship

SAN FRANCISCO — Jason Day took his first step toward a return to the spotlight in the majors Thursday at the PGA Championship. Brooks Koepka never seems to leave. RELATED: Full leaderboard | Tiger looks solid in Round 1 | DeChambeau snaps driver Day took advantage of a TPC Harding Park that never felt this accommodating during the practice rounds. With only a mild breeze and a welcome appearance by the sunshine, he finished his bogey-free round of 5-under 65 with an approach to 6 feet for birdie on No. 9, the toughest hole on the course at 518 yards. That gave him a share of the lead with Brendon Todd, whose round was equally impressive. Playing in the afternoon, as the wind strengthened, Todd made seven birdies and finished with a 10-foot par putt. They were one shot ahead of nine players, a group that included major champions from years gone by, a PGA TOUR rookie and the one guy — Koepka — who shows up at every major no matter what kind of shape his game is in. Koepka is the two-time defending champion, presented the opportunity this week to become only the seventh player in the 160-year history of major championship golf to win the same major three years in a row. It was last done 64 years ago. He’s still a little annoyed that he missed a similar chance last year down the Pacific coast at Pebble Beach, when he finished runner-up in his bid for a third straight U.S. Open. Koepka hasn’t won in more than a year. His left knee has been bothering him since last August. No matter. After a slow start, he powered his way to six birdies and made a series of key putts for par — and one 12-footer for bogey — that gave him an ideal start to this major. He was at 66 with eight other players, a list that included former major winners Justin Rose, Martin Kaymer and Zach Johnson, rising star Xander Schauffele and tour rookie Scottie Scheffler. “It’s only 18 holes right now,” Koepka said. “I feel good. I feel confident. I’m excited for the next three days. I think I can definitely play a lot better. Just need to tidy a few things up, and we’ll be there come Sunday on the back nine.” Tiger Woods ran off three birdies in a four-hole stretch toward the end of his round that offset a few mistakes. He opened with a 68, a solid start for a 15-time major champion who has played just one tournament in the last six months. Woods put a new putter into play — this one is a little longer, which he says helps him practice longer without straining his surgically repaired back — and it came in handy. He made a 30-foot birdie early. He was most pleased with a 20-foot par putt on No. 18 as he made the turn. And he was thrilled with the weather. “I thought anything today in the red was going to be good,” Woods said. In this case, there was a lot of good to go around. Just under one-third of the field –47 players — broke par. That included Bryson DeChambeau, who broke his driver on the seventh hole after another vicious swing. Oddly enough, it finally gave way when he leaned on it ever so slightly while picking up his tee. He was able to replace it and challenged the lead — he was 4 under through 10 — until he slid back to a 68. Instead of the wind and chill and the thick marine layer, it was pleasant enough to make this feel like a casual round of golf. It sounded like that, too. Woods is used to tournament golf in the COVID-19 era. Spectators have not been allowed at any tournament since the PGA TOUR returned two months ago. So that was nothing new. Still, there was a starter speaking into a microphone on the first tee, and he stuck with the tradition when introducing past PGA champions. Woods has won it four times. “It still funny,” Rory McIlroy said. “You know, `99, 2000, 2006, 2007 PGA champion, Tiger Woods. And then there’s nothing. That’s pretty interesting. That’s definitely different.” McIlroy, Woods and Justin Thomas, the No. 1 player in the world, each started with a birdie on No. 10 to no applause. McIlroy overcame three straight bogeys early in his round for an even-par 70. Thomas was going along fine until a pair of double bogeys, one on the seventh hole when his ball never came down from a Monterey Cypress tree. He shot 71. The start was a good sign for Day, the former No. 1 player in the world, because he has struggled so much since his last win two years ago. His back gives him trouble. Off the course, his mother was battling lung cancer in Australia. And then he finally made a clean break from his longtime coach and lifetime mentor, Collin Swatton. But he registered three top 10s coming into the PGA Championship, and his confidence is growing. Ditto for Koepka. He missed the cut at the 3M Open in Minnesota two weeks ago, went home to Florida and during one range session was so frustrated he heaved a few clubs. But a quick video review and some technical work revealed his weight was on the wrong side. He made the adjustment and tied for second last week at a World Golf Championship. And this is a major. Big Game Brooks is at his best in these. “He seems to find his comfort zone in these tournaments, in these environments, for whatever reason that is,” McIlroy said. “I think we are all just lucky that he doesn’t find it every other week.”

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Henrik Stenson closes out Hero World Challenge winHenrik Stenson closes out Hero World Challenge win

NASSAU, Bahamas – It must have been a peculiar sight, the man in the blindfold hitting golf shots on the driving range at Emirates Golf Club in Dubai. But for Henrik Stenson, the very object of the exercise was to go without any kind of sight at all. He wanted total darkness, to really feel his mechanics, all the better to rediscover his swing. RELATED: Final leaderboard | What’s in Stenson’s bag? It was the winter of 2002—03, and he was mired in his first of two horrific slumps. “It’s mental, it’s technical— does the chicken or the egg come first?â€� he said in a lengthy interview with PGATOUR.COM a few days before winning the Hero World Challenge at Albany Golf Club on Saturday. “The first five times you’re looking for a provisional when you hit it into the forest or the hazards or out of bounds or whatever, you’re not thinking too much about it. “But you do that enough,â€� he added, “and you stand there and you’re not looking down the fairway anymore. You’re looking at what’s over there and what’s over there, and now it’s a problem.â€� Stenson, 43, shot a final-round 66 to win the Hero on a sun-splashed afternoon at Albany. His topsy-turvy back nine included a 30-foot par save on the par-5 11th hole and a tap-in eagle at the par-5 15th. He made three pars to secure the unofficial victory by one over Jon Rahm (66), marking Stenson’s first trophy of any kind since the 2017 Wyndham Championship. Patrick Reed (66) finished third and was the top American of the 11 U.S. players here whose 8 p.m. charter flight out of Nassau was bound for Melbourne and the Presidents Cup. Stenson and his wife, Emma, were left to celebrate the win in this vacation paradise with family friends from Lake Nona. “It’s been a very average season,â€� he said, “but it finished on a high.â€� Perhaps it was the presence of tournament host Tiger Woods (69, solo fourth), or the fall play of Brendon Todd (two straight wins and nearly a third), but it was hard not to take Stenson’s win as yet another reminder of the value of resilience, and the multitude of comeback stories in golf. “In this game,â€� said Emma Stenson, a former Swedish national junior team member who played collegiately for South Carolina, “you never know what’s around the corner.â€� Or, as Woods said of Stenson, “He completely lost his game there for a while and couldn’t hit it on the map. … The way that Henrik has fought his way back, the countless hours he’s hit golf balls to figure it out – there aren’t a lot of guys who lose their golf swing and come back.â€� Stenson’s ball-striking was solid, as usual, but not without flaw in the final round. His putter saved him. Unlikely pars on 11 and 14 kept him going, and a long two-putt on 18 salted away the win. Rahm, the European Tour’s recent Race to Dubai winner, was left to lament the close call and said that without scoreboards he didn’t know he was a shot behind coming up the last hole. “I played it 20 feet short of the pin thinking I was at least tied for the lead,â€� he said. Still, if he had to rate this season, Rahm said, he would give it a 9 out of 10. Stenson was not so kind in assessing his own recent play. He finished 90th in the FedExCup last season, and 57th in 2018. (The Hero win comes with no FedExCup points.) “I haven’t played to more than 75% of my capacity in the last couple years,â€� he said. He had an elbow injury, but that only set him back a few months. It just wasn’t clicking, but he kept working at it with his longtime swing coach, Pete Cowen, and mental coach, Torsten Hansson. After a T44 at the European Tour’s season-ending DP World Championship two weeks ago, Stenson decamped for the driving range with Cowen and worked for a couple of hours. Slowly, his tee-to-green game began to come back to him, setting his mind at ease for his trip to the Bahamas. Persistence has always been the Stenson way – through his first slump, which ended with a victory at the 2004 Heritage, a European Tour event at Woburn Golf Club, and his second slump in 2011. Well, almost always. There was one time, he admitted, that he uttered the Q word. As in quit.  “I think we were at the kitchen table at home back in Sweden,â€� Emma said, “but it’s not an option to quit when you have the talent he has. He’s just always had to work hard at it; he’s not like some of the boys who just go out there and it happens for them.â€� Stenson’s work ethic is the stuff of legend. At 18 and as one of Sweden’s most promising juniors, he was told to put weights in his backpack and go out and walk six to ten miles. “I guess I was one of the few who did it, if not the only one,â€� he said with a rueful smile. Not that he’s sure what it accomplished. As for wearing a blindfold back in 2002—03? “It was really to free up – if you take away the vision, one of the senses, then you’ve got to rely more on the other ones,â€� he said. “So, that was helpful. I’ll still wear it sometimes for putting.â€� Henrik and Emma and the kids would be back in Orlando soon enough, with Stenson playing more Santa than golf. He’s a big goal-setter, Emma said, but also a trickster who loves to get up to a bit of fun. When the calendar turns to 2020, it’ll be time to think about more PGA TOUR wins (he has six), more majors, a berth in the Tokyo Olympic Games and a sixth Ryder Cup berth. That’s a lot to play for, and the man in the blindfold is liking what he’s seeing.

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Sleeper Picks: Cadence Bank Houston OpenSleeper Picks: Cadence Bank Houston Open

Charley Hoffman (+375 for a Top 20) … No matter where this tournament has been contested, he’s done well. Overall, he’s 12-for-12 with a T29 last year at Memorial Park. It wasn’t all that long ago when he checked all of the boxes on the stat sheet. That includes pop off the tee into his mid-40s. He’s also had something brewing the last two times out and arrives having scored par or better in 11 consecutive rounds. It’s spillover from a modest late surge of last season when he walked off with four straight paydays, including a T10 in Detroit. This bet is aggressive, but it’s a timely “before the reign” endorsement. Scott Piercy (+450 for a Top 20) … The same thing as detailed for Hoffman can be said of this veteran (who celebrated his 44th birthday on Sunday). Piercy is perfect in nine starts in this tournament, with a T32 (2020) and a T19 (2021) at Memorial Park. Teases to reignite in the long-term have been far and few between, but he’s connected for four top 30s in the last five months, including a T19 this season at the Sanderson Farms. Wyndham Clark … When he’s at his best, we’re treated to a show with his power and putting. It was only four weeks ago when he showcased both default strengths for a T16 at the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP. Now, when they’re matched up on a track like Memorial Park, he’s the one treated to his best chance to excel. He opened last year’s second visit in 5-under through two rounds before slipping on the weekend, but that experience taught him what it will take to put four rounds together here. Retreat into a top-30 or -40 market where available. Beau Hossler … The University of Texas product has done some of his best work in the Lone Star State. That includes in Houston where he hung up a pair of top 15s at the previous host of the tournament. He regained fully exempt status this season with a terrific 2021-22 during which he elevated for seven top 25s. He’s already 4-for-4 this season with two top 25s thanks to one of the most reliable putters on the PGA TOUR. Walker Lee … The lefty from Houston is making his professional debut on the PGA TOUR. He concluded his amateur career at the Palmer Cup this past summer and turned pro for PGA TOUR Latinoamérica Qualifying at which he was the runner-up in Florida just last week, so the 24-year-old splashes with momentum. Twice a winner at Texas A&M and peaked at 38th in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. The only prop worth considering probably doesn’t exist, but it’d be fun to invest a fraction of a unit for him to make the cut. Odds were sourced on Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2022. For live odds, visit BetMGM. Responsible sports betting starts with a game plan. Set a budget. Keep it social. Play with friends. Learn the game and know the odds. Play with trusted, licensed operators. CLICK HERE to learn more at HaveAGamePlan.org.

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