Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Brooks Koepka ‘pretty pleased’ after Round 1 at the U.S. Open

Brooks Koepka ‘pretty pleased’ after Round 1 at the U.S. Open

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Brooks Koepka’s first tee shot at the 2019 U.S. Open rolled into a divot. It didn’t matter. Koepka has been unstoppable in this event. An imperfect lie wasn’t going to stop him. He birdied the hole, then added three more in the next five holes, including a chip-in, to quickly put his name on another leaderboard in a major championship. Koepka couldn’t keep up the pace after exiting Pebble Beach’s easy opening stretch, though. He struggled with his ball-striking and made three bogeys and just a single birdie the rest of the way. His 2-under 69 leaves him just four shots off Justin Rose’s lead, however. RELATED: Tee times | Tiger cards 1-under 70 | Calm conditions lead to low scores | Koepka chases three-peat | Fowler opens with 66 Koepka hit half his fairways Thursday and 12 of 18 greens. “It’s a battle if you’re not going to hit fairways. If you’re not going to hit greens, it’s going to be tough,â€� said Koepka, who’s seeking a third consecutive U.S. Open title. “I’m actually quite pleased. I don’t know how many fairways I hit from 8 on in. I didn’t hit many.â€� He was scheduled to start his second round at 8:02 a.m. Friday, some 13 hours after he signed his scorecard. “Considering how I hit it coming in, I’m pretty pleased,â€� Koepka said. “I didn’t shoot myself out of it. I’m right there. I feel like if I get off to a good start tomorrow, I’m right back into it.â€� Koepka is third in the FedExCup thanks to wins at THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES and PGA Championship. Last month’s win at Bethpage Black was his fourth major championship.

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Hard work, perseverance serve Billy Horschel at MemorialHard work, perseverance serve Billy Horschel at Memorial

DUBLIN, Ohio – Billy Horschel won’t begrudge you the memory if all you take away from his victory at the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday on Sunday is his eagle at the 15th hole. His nearly 55-foot putt, curling from right to left, was a splendid stroke and extended his two-shot lead to four, the final margin as Horschel (72) bested Aaron Wise (71). But while the eagle stood out, shiny things do not excite Horschel, who obsesses more over peak performance and what goes into it. He wants to understand success like a cheetah understands speed. What works? What doesn’t? He thinks about this as it relates to real estate, business – he doesn’t want to play professionally forever – and, for now, golf. On a list of the hardest workers on the PGA TOUR, he puts himself in the top five. RELATED: What’s in Horschel’s bag? That work is paying off, and in capturing his seventh TOUR title over a cast of younger players – Wise, 25; Joaquin Niemann, 23; Will Zalatoris, 25; Sungjae Im, 24; Sahith Theegala, 24 – Horschel, 35, also authored a victory for professionalism itself. “I think today, knowing the golf course, knowing how it was going to be fast and firm again, it was knowing the pin locations,” Horschel said. “I didn’t have to do anything to do anything special out there. I’ve got a five-shot lead.” In other words, Horschel is 13 years into his TOUR career; he knows what it takes. When Tiger Woods converted all those 54-hole leads/co-leads, Horschel was paying attention. He knew to appraise the difficulty of the course, the rock-hard greens, the pin positions. “I love watching golf,” he said. “As I’ve said for many years, I probably watched more golf than any PGA TOUR player. Maybe it’s a good thing. Maybe it’s a bad thing.” Given that he is now 3-for-5 at converting 54-hole leads/co-leads to victory, it’s probably a good thing. Horschel has not only studied the game, he has assembled an all-star cast around him that includes his (longtime) swing coach, Todd Anderson; fitness guy, Alex Bennett at the TPC Performance Center; stats guy, Mark Horton; and caddie, Mark “Fooch” Fulcher, who was on the bag for Justin Rose’s 2010 Memorial victory and joined Team Horschel last summer. Horschel’s wife, Brittany, has his back, too, although she had never been there to witness one of his wins until Sunday. She’s been too busy with their three young children, Skylar, Colbie and Axel. She’s also, ahem, superstitious. “My wife has never wanted to fly in on a Saturday night when I’ve had a chance to win,” Horschel said, laughing at the running joke in their family. “She feels like she may be bringing bad luck or something. “I had a chance to win Bay Hill this year,” he continued. “My family was there. They were right there on the 18th green. As I was walking up, had a chance to make a putt to go into a playoff with Scottie Scheffler.” The most important, relatively new addition to the team is probably Fulcher, who thought that this might have been his 40th victory between caddying on the PGA TOUR, LPGA, and DP World Tour. (When your caddie has lost track of how many times he’s won, you’ve got yourself an experienced caddie.) After Horschel missed the cut at the Charles Schwab Challenge last week – his first missed cut on TOUR since the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines, nearly a year ago – he called a team meeting with Fulcher and statistician Horton. “We just said, ‘We need to get back to it,’” Horschel said. It, meaning their process, even if it sometimes feels too slow and deliberate for pedal-to-the-metal Horschel. “To be honest, it was probably long overdue,” Fulcher said. Not missing a cut since the U.S. Open was becoming too much of a story. Also, they were not thinking well, and consequently making poor decisions. Perversely, the missed cut at Colonial, and the ensuing meeting, prepared Horschel for winning. Deep into his successful but somewhat underrated career – he has never played on a U.S. Ryder Cup or Presidents Cup team – he is enjoying his best run since winning the 2014 FedExCup. He captured the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play last season, plus the BMW PGA Championship, the crown jewel of the DP World Tour. And now he’s earned the coveted Jack Nicklaus handshake at Muirfield Village, moving from 30th to 10th in the FedExCup. “He’s an incredible professional, and I think he’s getting better,” Fulcher said. Teeing it up against significantly younger competition, Horschel is a throwback to an earlier era when guys like Ben Hogan and Tom Watson and others routinely peaked in their mid-30s. He would know all about that. He also knows where success has eluded him: in the majors. It just so happens the next U.S. Open, at The Country Club in Boston, is in two weeks. Horschel will continue put in the work; he loves the grind. If it doesn’t pay off at the U.S. Open, then it will at The Open Championship, and if not at St. Andrews, then next year. He admits the majors get him extra riled up, maybe too riled up. “He’s emotional,” Fulcher said. “What I have seen, though, is he’s a lot quieter on the golf course now, especially in moments like today. He’s a lot more set in his process than even when I started with him. He was a bit loose.” Work hard, stick to the process, and success will get in the way. Horschel firmly believes that. “Sometimes they get a little tired,” he said of his team, which he calls the best in the business, “because I want to just keep pushing and keep going forward. But they all understand it’s all for the betterment of the team and hopefully gives us the best chance to be victorious. And it’s great to have three wins in roughly the last 15 months.”

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The First Look: CIMB ClassicThe First Look: CIMB Classic

• COURSE: TPC Kuala Lumpur (West), 7,005 yards, par 72. Located just five miles from the city’s heart, the facility spent its first 25 years as Kuala Lumpur Golf & Country Club before joining the TPC Network two summers ago. No stranger to high-level events, the West layout has served as host on both the PGA TOUR and European Tour schedules, holding the Malaysian Open site for seven years. The LPGA also makes the club’s East course an annual stop, with Shanshan Feng set to defend her title at the Sime Darby LPGA Malaysia at the end of the month. The club’s original 1991 Nelson & Haworth layout was given a thorough redesign in 2008 by Ted and Geoff Parslow.  • FEDEXCUP: Winner receives 500 points. • CHARITY: The CIMB Foundation supports some 130 charities, with emphasis on projects relating to community development, education and sports. In addition to developing junior golf in Southeast Asia, the foundation also sponsors programs in squash, soccer and cycling. • FIELD WATCH: New FedExCup champion Justin Thomas, winner of the past two CIMB crowns, and world No. 3 Hideki Matsuyama headline a limited field of just 78 players. Eleven entrants finished among the top 30 in last season’s FedExCup points race. … Matsuyama and THE PLAYERS champion Si Woo Kim are among nine teammates from the International squad that competed in the Presidents Cup at Liberty National. … Xander Schauffele, whose TOUR Championship victory at East Lake sealed Rookie of the Year honors, makes the first start of his second TOUR season. … The field boasts 10 major championship winners, including newly enshrined World Golf Hall of Famer Davis Love III. … Ten berths are held for top Asian Tour players; local exemptions were given to Malaysian pros Danny Chia and Nicholas Fung. • 72-HOLE RECORD: 261, Bo Van Pelt (2011 at The Mines Resort & GC). KLGCC record: 262, Justin Thomas (2015). • 18-HOLE RECORD: 61, Nick Watney (4th round, 2012 at The Mines Resort & GC), Justin Thomas (2nd round, 2015 at KLGCC). • LAST YEAR: Thomas chased down Anirban Lahiri to successfully defend his first PGA TOUR title, closing with an 8-under-par 64 that was two shots better than anyone else in the field. Thomas began the final day four shots behind Lahiri, but birdied four of his first five holes while the Indian pro stumbled with a quadruple bogey at No. 3. From there, Thomas added three more back-nine birdies to finish three shots ahead of Matsuyama (66), who overtook Lahiri for second with birdies at Nos. 17 and 18. After fixing an alignment issue midway through his third round, Thomas played his final 23 holes in 13-under par. He became the first man to successfully defend a title since Matt Every at the 2015 Arnold Palmer Invitational. • STORYLINES: Thomas is the latest with an eye on the TOUR’s first three-peat since Steve Stricker won three John Deere Classics from 2009-11. The only others to do that in the past dozen years: Tiger Woods (three times) and Stuart Appleby (Sentry Tournament of Champions 2004-06). … Matsuyama, who struggled throughout the FedExCup Playoffs and went just 1-2-1 at the Presidents Cup, hopes his singles win over Thomas and a return to his home continent ignites a spark. … No Asian Tour pro has won the CIMB Classic, though Thailand’s Kiradech Aphibarnrat nearly pulled it off in 2013. Aphibarnrat finished one shot out of joining Ryan Moore and Gary Woodland in a playoff. • SHORT CHIPS: A total of 29 players are heading to Malaysia from the Safeway Open that starts the new PGA TOUR season. That includes Emiliano Grillo, who also competed in the Presidents Cup a week earlier. … Doubles have been in style since the event moved to the TPC Kuala Lumpur in 2013. Moore won the first two editions, followed by Thomas going back-to-back. … Even with a history dating only to 2010, no one has teed it up in every CIMB Classic. Moore, Marc Leishman and John Senden each played six of the first seven, but none of the three are entered this week. • TELEVISION: Wednesday-Thursday, 10:30 p.m.-2:30 a.m. ET (Golf Channel). Friday-Saturday, 11 p.m.-3 a.m. (GC). • PGA TOUR LIVE: None. • RADIO: None.

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