Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Contenders brace for condition switch at Sentry Tournament of Champions

Contenders brace for condition switch at Sentry Tournament of Champions

KAPALUA, Hawaii – Just as they became accustomed to the gusty trade winds off the Plantation Course the contenders at the Sentry Tournament of Champions face a new battle on Sunday. Heavy winds and gusts out of the east / northeast have tested the 33-man field for three rounds but Sunday’s final round forecast calls for a switch in direction and power. Sunday sees the winds expected to switch and come from the north / northwest – an entirely different proposition. While they are expected to drop from the gusts of around 20 miles per hour to around 10 miles per hour the change of strategy is one players must adjust to quickly. The drop in speed is something leader Gary Woodland is looking forward to. He is three clear of Rory McIlroy and four ahead of Marc Leishman. “It just allows you to be more aggressive. I’m very confident with where my game is, in the past it might have affected me a little bit, but I feel very good changing,â€� Woodland said. “I think it suits me, when it’s not blowing it suits me as much as it does when it is, so I’m excited about it.â€� For McIlroy it obviously means a change in game plan, but one he is confident he and his caddy have prepared for despite the fact this is his first trip to Kapalua. “A couple of adjustments to be made. It’s a little different, especially when it’s one you haven’t played in before,â€� McIlroy said. “To not have had that practice and try to go into a final round when you’re trying to win a golf tournament, it’s a little challenging, but it’s going to be the same for everyone. “Harry and I need to do a good job tomorrow of just hitting it to the right spots on the fairways. There’s going to be a lot of holes where I’m not hitting the same club off the tee as I was the previous few days and it’s just about picking your spots to hit at and trusting that this is what you need to do and just trying to be a little more thoughtful about where you’re placing the golf ball. That’s going to be key tomorrow.â€� Leishman grew up in the Australian town of Warrnambool which often gets high coastal winds that can switch on a dime. “I need to get off to a good start. It depends how the other boys start as well as to how aggressive I get,â€� Leishman said. “But it’s going to be very different. I think it’s a different direction, the wind, which we haven’t played this course in, in those conditions very often. “And so it’s sort of hard to tell what the scores are going to do, but, yeah, either way I’m going to have to play really good golf.â€� MUST-READS Woodland leads with heavy heart McIlroy looks for final group atonement CALL OF THE DAY

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Jason Gore joins PGA TOUR as Senior Vice President, Player Advisor to the CommissionerJason Gore joins PGA TOUR as Senior Vice President, Player Advisor to the Commissioner

Jason Gore is rejoining the PGA TOUR. Not as a player, but as the Senior Vice President, Player Advisor to the Commissioner in a move that was announced Friday by PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan. Gore will serve as a player advocate who will continue to strengthen the relationship between the TOUR and its membership. “We are thrilled to welcome the Gores back to the TOUR and know Jason’s work will have a profound impact on our efforts to continually serve our players and elevate our organization,” Commissioner Monahan said in a memo. “The addition of his perspective and experience in conjunction with our team’s existing knowledge will contribute greatly to this next chapter of the TOUR’s success.” Gore won on both the PGA TOUR and Korn Ferry Tour during a two-decade playing career. His seven wins on the Korn Ferry Tour are the most in that circuit’s history. That includes three wins in 2005, the same year he won the PGA TOUR’s 84 Lumber Classic and played in the final group of the U.S. Open. He also was a member of Pepperdine’s NCAA title team in 1997 and represented the United States in that year’s Walker Cup. Gore comes to the TOUR after three years at the United States Golf Association, where he was the Managing Director, Player Relations, a role that was created to open the lines of communication between players and the association. USGA chief executive Mike Whan called Gore “everything you hope for in a teammate – knowledgeable, helpful, dedicated and fun to be around.” “He believes deeply in the direction of the USGA, but the pull of his ‘brotherhood’ in the PGA TOUR ranks was very strong and Jason knows this is the right decision, at the right time for him (and for golf),” Whan said in a statement to USGA staff. Reporting directly to the Commissioner, Gore will spend his early days in his new role assisting the Commissioner and the TOUR’s senior leadership in developing long-range, player-focused strategies that align with the unique needs of the TOUR’s players. Monahan called the move “an important part of our evolution in further integrating our players into the business of the TOUR.”

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Henrik Stenson wins the Wyndham Championship, getting hot for FedExCup PlayoffsHenrik Stenson wins the Wyndham Championship, getting hot for FedExCup Playoffs

GREENSBORO, N.C. – Notes and observations from Sunday’s final round of the Wyndham Championship, where Henrik Stenson shot a final-round 64 to reach a tournament-record 22 under and edge rookie Ollie Schniederjans (64) by one. Webb Simpson (67) finished third, four back, while a handful of players moved into the all-important top 125 in the FedExCup. For more coverage from Sedgefield Country Club, click here for the Daily Wrap-up. STENSON CLOSES DOOR Technically, Henrik Stenson was tied with countrymen Jesper Parnevik and Carl Pettersson as the most decorated male Swedish player ever, all of them having won five times on the PGA TOUR. In reality, Stenson was first among equals. Those other guys hadn’t won The Open Championship, the TOUR Championship and the 2013 FedExCup. In any case, Stenson put the matter to rest at Sedgefield, where he reeled off three straight birdies on holes 15-17 to edge a surging Ollie Schniederjans and collect his sixth PGA TOUR win. In the process, Stenson bolstered his chances for the upcoming FedExCup Playoffs, moving from 75th to 23rd going into the opening tournament, THE NORTHERN TRUST. “It’s certainly a good time to start firing,â€� he said. “We know the kind of damage you can do during the Playoffs when the points are up to four times the normal season, right, so if you get hot and keep on playing well, certainly a chance to challenge for the overall. “… It’s the first step, and delighted to get a win this year.â€� Stenson’s previous three starts at the Wyndham had yielded two missed cuts and a WD with the flu, but he needed a start to get to 15 tournaments on TOUR. And this time he changed things up, taking his driver out of the bag and using only a 3- and a 4-wood off the tees, plus some long irons. The 41-year-old also stuck with a decision he made at the recent World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational, using four wedges for the first time in his career. After he’d salted away the victory with a tough two-putt par from behind the pin on 18, Stenson said it was the first of his 20 professional victories that came without a driver in the bag. It was also his first win since The Open last July, when he outdueled Phil Mickelson, then 46, in a classic. Was it especially gratifying to push back a challenge from a 24-year-old like Schniederjans in this, a season in which his young peers like Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas have reigned? “It’s always good to beat the 24-year-olds,â€� Stenson said with a bemused smile. “And the 34-year-olds, and sometimes the 46-year-olds.â€� SCHNIEDERJANS EYES EAST LAKE Ollie Schniederjans likes to say he’s on his own trajectory, which is worth remembering given the success of peers like Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas. The soft-spoken Schniederjans didn’t even take up golf until he was 12 — he was into baseball and basketball — but got good fast, reaching No. 1 as an amateur and becoming an All-American at Georgia Tech. Now the hatless rookie is hitting his stride on TOUR, thanks in part to a newfound belief in his putting and his putter, a Callaway Toulon that he put in the bag this week. He birdied three of the last four holes Sunday, when he was the only player in the field who went without a bogey. “Probably the best I ever played for four days,â€� he said. “I putted awesome all week.â€� (He was sixth in the field in strokes gained: putting at +1.825.) Schniederjans moved from 74th to 39th in the FedExCup, the significance of which was not lost on him. As a member of the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets and a resident of Alpharetta, about 30 minutes away from East Lake, he has played the TOUR Championship venue numerous times. He’ll need to move up just nine more spots in the standings over the next three tournaments, when points are quadrupled, in order to get there for the season-ender, Sept. 21-24. “The goal to start the year was to make it to the TOUR Championship, so this is a huge boost,â€� Schniederjans said. His best score on the course? “I think 64,â€� he said. CALL OF THE DAY ACES WILD IN FINAL ROUND Roberto Castro made a hole-in-one at the 174-yard third hole on the way to a final-round 66 and a T28 finish. Then things got crazy. Ben Crane started the week at 147th in the FedExCup, so he needed to make a big move in order to play his way to New York and the first Playoffs event, THE NORTHERN TRUST. With scores of 69-64-72-67, Crane didn’t quite get it done, never contending and finishing T37. But he got a great consolation prize when he aced the 172-yard 16th hole at Sedgefield, a master stroke that — as the first hole-in-one there this week — brought 105,000 Wyndham rewards points for not only Crane but also his caddie, Joel Stock. “It’s been a special week,â€� said Crane, who stayed with friends in Greensboro. “And then, you know, kind of playing pretty good but need something to get over the hump. Got to 16 there and hit a beautiful shot. As soon as I hit it: ‘Oh, be right, baby.’ “Sure enough, it landed two paces short there and rolled in just like a putt. You know, most PGA TOUR players — I have to brag — don’t nail the celebration, but Billy Horschel and I did a lot of choreography work beforehand and nailed it, did the right high-fives, the caddies did the right high-fives. … It was awesome. We had a lot of fun with it.â€� Crane’s fate was similar but different than that of Martin Flores, who also aced the 16th two hours later. Although Flores did not get the Wyndham points — only the first golfer to ace the hole got the prize — he shot a final-round 63 to tie for seventh, as did playing partner Cameron Smith (63). The difference: While Smith was already squared away for the FedExCup Playoffs, Flores played his way in, moving up from 139th to 118th.   “I was really thankful that I got to watch Cam hit first,â€� Flores said of his hole-in-one at 16, “because that kind of changed a little bit of how hard I was going to hit my 8-iron.â€� ODDS AND ENDS Ryan Armour (64, T4) had missed the cut in his three previous starts at the Wyndham, in 2007, 2008 and 2015. But with a slight equipment modification this time — new shafts — he finished in the top 10 for the first time since a T6 at the 2007 Valero Texas Open. Armour, 41, moved from 187th to 159th in the FedExCup. … Shane Lowry (67, T7) notched his first top-10 finish since a runner-up at the 2016 U.S. Open. … Three-time Wyndham winner Davis Love III, vying to become the oldest TOUR winner at 53, shot a final-round 69 to finish T10, his first top-10 since winning the 2015 Wyndham. He was making his 746th official start on TOUR. … Matt Every, who opened with a 61, finished strong, too, with a 66 to finish 13th — a promising result at the end of a season in which he missed 20 cuts. He still has one more year of full eligibility on TOUR from his win at the 2015 Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by MasterCard, a tournament that offers a three-year exemption for a win. … Hunter Mahan, who came into the week at 197th in the FedExCup, shot an even-par 70 to tie for 16th, his best result of the season. Mahan, who once reached as high as fourth in the Official World Golf Ranking, moved up 15 spots to 182nd in the FedExCup.   BEST OF SOCIAL MEDIA

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