Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Caddie Confidential: Bonuses and Rory scuttlebutt

Caddie Confidential: Bonuses and Rory scuttlebutt

Caddie Confidential: Bonuses and Rory scuttlebutt

Click here to read the full article

Do you enjoy classic casino table games? Check out our partner for the best casino table games for USA players!

Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Justin Thomas+1100
Joaquin Niemann+1400
Shane Lowry+1600
Tommy Fleetwood+1800
Tyrrell Hatton+1800
Click here for more...
US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Rory McIlroy+650
Bryson DeChambeau+700
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Shane Lowry+3500
Click here for more...
The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
Click here for more...
Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

Related Post

Homa proves resilient in road to winner’s circleHoma proves resilient in road to winner’s circle

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Max Homa was unflappable on Sunday at the Wells Fargo Championship. He continually holed important putts to stay atop a leaderboard that featured some of the game’s biggest names. He never made a mistake while conquering a course of major-championship caliber.  His steady play under Sunday pressure makes his performance two years ago that much more unfathomable. Homa is a PGA TOUR champion less than two years after he couldn’t find a fairway or make a cut. The former NCAA champion, a collegiate contemporary of Justin Thomas, was embarrassed to go into locker rooms. He wanted to spare his peers from playing practice rounds with him.  Now he’s a winner at Quail Hollow Club, where the list of champions includes Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy and Jason Day. Homa started Sunday with a share of the lead, then went out and shot the low round of the day. RELATED: Final leaderboard | Winner’s bag | Updated FedExCup standings That’s not what you usually see from players pursuing their first PGA TOUR title. Especially when their last season went the way Homa’s did. He missed 15 of 17 cuts and made less than $20,000. He won’t have to worry about money anymore. He earned his first winner’s check by shooting 67 to finish at 15-under 269 (69-63-70-67). Joel Dahmen, who also was seeking his first PGA TOUR win, finished alone in second. The victory moved Homa to 35th in the FedExCup standings and earned him a two-year exemption. Homa finished 163rd and 244th in the FedExCup in his first two PGA TOUR seasons. “The only goal I had this year was to make it to the TOUR Championship, so that’s obviously a big boost there,â€� Homa said. “Moving up that FedExCup’s sweet. The job security’s probably a little sweeter. I know it’s been tough on my family.â€� The reigning FedExCup champion, Justin Rose, finished four back. Sergio Garcia, Rickie Fowler, Paul Casey and Jason Dufner all tied for fourth. Rory McIlroy was two shots back at the start of the day, but faded to eighth place with a 73 on Sunday. “I told (caddie Joe Greiner) on one of the holes that I felt like I was going to throw up, but my hands felt unbelievable on the club,â€� Homa said. He couldn’t say the same in 2017, when he shot a cumulative 61-over-par in 17 starts on the PGA TOUR. But ‘resilient’ is a word that multiple people used to describe Homa. He has a similar word, ‘RELENTLESS’ tattooed on his wrist. “I refuse to give in and I believe that hard work will pay off,â€� he said. He’s just the fourth player in the last 25 years to win on the PGA TOUR after enduring a season in which they made less than $20,000 in 15-plus events. His toughness showed in Sunday’s performance. He made two birdies and no bogeys on the front nine to take a one-shot lead at the turn. He pulled away by holing putts of 14 and 13 feet to birdie 10 and 11. On Sunday, he missed just one of his five attempts from 10-15 feet. He also went 4 for 5 on putts from 5-7 feet. He led the field with 4.1 strokes gained on the greens Sunday. After pulling ahead with those two birdies to start the back nine, he holed three consecutive 5-footers for par on Nos. 12-14. The last one came after a rain delay of more than an hour. A bogey at 14 would have been especially costly. He laid up on the drivable par-4, then pulled a wedge that bounced into the rough left of the green. His chip shot skidded past the hole just before a heavy downpour hit the course. After marking the ball, Homa took one last look at the line before getting into a van. When the rain subsided, he practiced a similar putt on the practice green. “I knew in the back of my mind that if I make that putt, I win this golf tournament,â€� Homa said. Making that putt gave him a three-shot lead as he walked to the tee of the reachable 15th hole. A two-putt birdie there gave him a four-shot lead with only the infamous Green Mile remaining. He made his only bogey of the day at 16, but followed with an 11-footer for par on 17. With a three-shot lead, he was able to emulate his idol, Tiger Woods, and twirl his club after his tee shot on 18 found the fairway. Homa’s struggles started when he fell for the lie that he had to improve exponentially after turning pro. He won both the Pac-12 and NCAA titles in 2013 as a senior at Cal, winning the conference championship with a course-record 61 at Los Angeles Country Club, a future U.S. Open venue.  “He has this calm resiliency,â€� said fellow PGA TOUR player Brandon Hagy, who played with Homa at Cal. “You just see it time and time again in big tournaments. Winning the Pac-12s, winning NCAAs. In the bigger events he would step up at the right moments.â€� Homa was Walker Cup teammates with Justin Thomas, and they both made their pro debut on the PGA TOUR at the 2013 Safeway Open. Thomas finished 72nd. Homa was ninth. They both graduated to the PGA TOUR in 2014 after one season on the Web.com Tour. But while Thomas thrived, Homa’s game went into a nosedive. “He got too far in his own head,â€� said Homa’s swing coach, Les Johnson. “He’s so darn smart, so when he gets in his head he can get going in too many directions.â€� Homa returned to Johnson in 2017, seeking to become the player who left college as a can’t miss prospect. “When he came back to me, he was low,â€� Johnson said. “The first thing I told him is that you just have to get your game back in order. Once you do that, you can work back toward being the Max Homa that we know that you are.â€� Homa’s road to the winner’s circle started with another performance that proved the resiliency that his friends describe. At the WinCo Foods Portland Open, the final event of the Web.com Tour’s regular season, Homa birdied his final four holes Friday to make the cut on the number. If he had not made the cut, he would have fallen $96 short of the Web.com Tour Finals and would have needed to go to Q-School. He could have even been without Web.com Tour status this year. He doesn’t have to worry about that anymore. “It was embarrassing at times,â€� he said. “But it ain’t embarrassing anymore. It’s a cool story now.â€�

Click here to read the full article

Updates from The Match: Tiger Woods/Rory McIlroy vs. Jordan Spieth/Justin ThomasUpdates from The Match: Tiger Woods/Rory McIlroy vs. Jordan Spieth/Justin Thomas

The seventh edition of Capital One’s The Match is set for Saturday evening at Pelican GC outside Tampa, with Tiger Woods/Rory McIlroy set to face Justin Thomas/Jordan Spieth. The 12-hole competition will utilize a Four-ball format, where each player plays their own ball and the lowest score of the two players counts as the team score the hole. The Match will be contested under the lights in west Florida, featuring various mid-round challenges with proceeds going to Hurricane Ian relief efforts. Click here for How to Watch and format info. Click here for more about Pelican GC. Keep it here for hole-by-hole updates throughout The Match.

Click here to read the full article

Webb Simpson’s win at THE PLAYERS Championship not as easy as you might thinkWebb Simpson’s win at THE PLAYERS Championship not as easy as you might think

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – How do you celebrate the inevitable? The answer is you don’t, certainly not in golf, and certainly not at TPC Sawgrass — even if you’re leading by seven shots with 18 holes to play. History told us Webb Simpson was safe on Sunday, that his advantage was insurmountable, that no one in the history of the PGA TOUR had ever lost when entering the final round with such a cushion. Winning THE PLAYERS Championship would be a mere formality, an 18-hole coronation, a nice Sunday stroll on Mother’s Day. On the surface, that’s exactly what happened. Simpson shot a final-round 1-over 73 marred by a meaningless double bogey at the final hole, to win by a comfortable four strokes over Charl Schwartzel, Jimmy Walker and Xander Schauffele. It was, seemingly, a drama-free day. No mystery here. Move along. And yet … “Harder than I thought,â€� Simpson said. “Longest round of golf I’ve ever caddied in my life,â€� added sidekick Paul Tesori. While Simpson is a past U.S. Open champ (2012), he had not posted a TOUR win in his previous 107 starts. In that span, he had experienced two traumatic moments – one that affected his career; the other, more emotionally challenging one, that affected his life. At one point, those closest to him wondered if the 32-year-old would ever achieve the kind of success that appeared inevitable after his major win at the Olympic Club. The ban on anchor putters starting in 2016 had crippled Simpson’s game. He questioned his ability, with tough nights of self-examination. “I don’t know if he’ll say this, but I’ll say it – I don’t know if we would ever get to experience this again,â€� Tesori said in the afterglow of Sunday’s win. Meanwhile, Sam Simpson – not just Webb’s dad but his best friend — had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. Their bond of golf has always been a key part of their relationship, but just when Webb could have used him the most, Sam was simply too sick to offer specifics on how to fix his game. Still, there were much-needed words of encouragement. “He was still helping me through it and mentoring me,â€� Simpson said. It was a year ago that Webb finally found his putting stroke with his new grip, having solicited help from a variety of sources, including Phil Mickelson, Bernhard Langer and THE PLAYERS winner in 2010 Tim Clark. And then in November, Sam Simpson passed away at the age of 74. The loss was tough, but for the faith-minded Simpson, at least there was closure. Winning, though, remained elusive. And so that’s why, even with a seven-stroke lead, neither Simpson nor Tesori let their minds drift beyond the task in hand. No need to tempt the golf gods with a premature celebration of the inevitable. In fact, on Saturday night, Tesori was watching golf highlights with his wife Michelle at their house just a few miles from TPC Sawgrass when the history of safe leads was brought up on TV. Tesori told his wife that no lead was insurmountable. He had grown up in the area, and remembered that Davis Love III shot 64 to win in 2003 and that Fred Couples shot 64 to win in 1996.  If someone shot 64 on Sunday, then Simpson would need to shoot under par. Plus, Tesori had first-hand experience with losing large leads. He was on the bag for Sean O’Hair in 2009 when he took a five-shot lead entering the final round at Bay Hill. After the first six holes, Tiger Woods had tied O’Hair for the lead and eventually went on to a one-stroke win. “I’d much rather be 7 up than 5 up,â€� Tesori said. “But when I saw it on TV, I thought, man, you don’t want to make history that way.â€� So the key would be to not deviate from what got them that lead. For Simpson, that meant staying in his routine. This week, he’s been a frequent visitor at a couple of Starbucks in the area. His favorite drink is a six-shot ristretto espresso that gives him an afternoon boost. But when he has coffee in the morning before a round, it’s always decaf. Well, usually decaf. Before the final round of the 2012 U.S. Open, Webb and his wife Dowd were having breakfast. Webb asked her to order him a cup of decaf, but Dowd forgot and accidentally ordered a regular cup. “It served him well,â€� she recalled with a laugh. On Sunday morning before heading to TPC Sawgrass, Webb was having coffee at the Starbucks in Jacksonville Beach when Dowd called him. She was coming to town to watch the final round, although their four kids stayed back home in North Carolina. She thinks Webb was drinking decaf but “maybe he did have regular again.â€� Dowd and Webb first met as students at Wake Forest. It was, interesting enough, Sam Simpson that set them up. Dowd had attended a party for one of her best friends who had grown up with Webb. Sam was at the party, spotted Dowd across the room and made a bold offer: If she would go out with her son, he would pay her $100. Dowd told Sam, “If he’s half as cute as you, I’d do it for free.â€� As it turned out, she took the money, used it for the date to a local steakhouse. It was love at first sight – all thanks to Sam. “I think he just wanted his dorky golfer son to be seen with an older girl on campus,â€� Dowd said. Dowd had no doubt that her husband would keep the proper focus Sunday after that cup of coffee. Tesori liked his man’s mindset too, albeit a couple of alarming moments on the course. An early three-putt was disturbing. Then a couple of mental errors around the turn. After a bogey on the 10th hole reduced Simpson’s lead to four strokes, Tesori spoke up. “Hey, bud, are you really dialed in? “Yeah,â€� replied Simpson. “I don’t think you are,â€� said Tesori, noting that Simpson was missing his yardage numbers far more on Sunday than the previous three days. That’s when they got back to business. Their mantra all week had been: Be aggressive to conservative targets. At the par-5 11th, Simpson launched a 281-yard tee shot that split the fairway – “The biggest shot of the entire day,â€� Tesori said – and eventually birdied the hole. Crisis averted. Once Simpson landed his tee shot safely onto the island-green 17th, only then could the celebration truly start. “It’s hard not to future cast and start thinking about 7 p.m. (when the tournament ended) and what might happen,â€� Simpson said. “But you do your best to not stay in that place, and I kept reminding myself today that the only thing that matters is the next shot. It’s easy to do on Thursday; it’s a lot harder to do today.â€� It’s even harder to do after a four-year drought and a rollercoaster ride of emotions. In the end, it simply took great putting, the proper focus … and a cup of coffee.

Click here to read the full article