Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Corey Conners leads by one shot at Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard

Corey Conners leads by one shot at Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard

ORLANDO, Fla. — Corey Conners spent more time grinding out pars than chasing birdies, and that proved to be the right recipe Friday at the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard as Bay Hill began to bake under a warm sun. RELATED: Leaderboard | A tale of two Cowboys at Bay Hill Conners surged into the lead with a 25-foot eagle putt on the par-5 16th hole — his second eagle on that hole in two days — for a 3-under 69 and a one-shot advantage over former Bay Hill winner Martin Laird (67). Rory McIlroy was poised to at least join Conners in the afternoon until he hit a couple of loose drives that cost him one shot when he could only pitch back to the fairway, leading to bogeys. He closed with five straight pars for a 71 that he figures could have been worse. “It could have been the round that I could have shot 74 or 75. I got in with 71 and pretty happy with that,” McIlroy said. He was two shots behind, along with Viktor Hovland and Lanto Griffin, who each had a 68. Jordan Spieth remained in the mix going into the weekend, which is becoming a regularity in the last month as he tries to end more than three years without winning. Spieth hit a superb flop shot over the bunker to a fast green that rolled out to a foot to escape with par and a 69. Conners was at 9-under 135, and now everyone braces for the weather. The forecast featured plenty of rain Saturday, which figures to make Bay Hill play longer and tougher, while also keeping the greens from getting as crusty as they were last year when Tyrrell Hatton won with a closing 74. “We’ll just see what happens and be ready for anything,” Conners said. Hatton at least gets a chance on the weekend. He opened with a 77 and was 10 shots better Friday, a 67 that allowed him to make the cut with one shot to spare. Also making the cut were both Ryder Cup captains — Padraig Harrington of Ireland with a 74 to be nine shots behind, Steve Stricker with a 71 that left him one shot better. Conners, whose lone PGA TOUR victory came two years ago at the Valero Texas Open, saved par seven times during his round, the exception coming at the par-3 second hole when he came up short of the green, some 80 feet away, and wound up missing his par putt from 10 feet. Otherwise, the Canadian has been solid. This is only the second time he has held the lead going into the weekend, the other occasion at the Valspar Championship in 2018 when his bid to go wire-to-wire ended with a 77 in the final round. “I haven’t really been in this position a lot, but I have a lot of confidence in my game and feeling really relaxed the last few days, so try and keep that going,” Conners said. “I feel like I have a lot of energy. I had an off week last week and really excited for the weekend.” Laird has recent success winning on a familiar course. In the fall, he ended seven years without a victory by winning in Las Vegas, scene of his first PGA TOUR victory in 2009. He won at Bay Hill in 2011 on a final round so tough a 75 was enough to get the job done. Now there are plenty of others in the mix. U.S. Open champion Bryson DeChambeau overcame consecutive bogeys at the end of his front nine and shot 71. He was three shots behind. Another shot back were Spieth, Justin Rose (68), Sunjae Im (70) and Paul Casey (69). Hatton wasn’t the only player who saw a big improvement. Jazz Janewattananond of Thailand had the low round of the tournament with a 65, which was 10 shots better than his first round. Jason Day looked to be in much better shape than seven shots behind. He played in the morning, had a pair of birdies and came to the 16th, the easiest at Bay Hill. He lost his tee shot to the right and had to use binoculars and the zoom lens of a camera to make sure the ball stuck in the tree was his. That led to a double bogey, and he took another double bogey on the 18th hole by taking four to get down from a bunker. “A little unfortunate that it got stuck. It was literally in a nest,” Day said. “So I think mama birdy is going to come back and find another egg there.”

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Connor Syme-145
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Agronomy volunteers get insider's look at Farmers Insurance OpenAgronomy volunteers get insider's look at Farmers Insurance Open

She has her favorite players, like Rory McIlroy and Jordan Spieth. But when Dee Robideau goes to a golf tournament, she's not like most golf fans. Robideau usually gets to the course when the gates open so she can walk the course in relative solitude. Practice rounds are the best since the golf course superintendent isn't looking at the shots the players hit - she's checking out the bunkers and the tightly-mown greens. And the equipment. Robideau, who oversees the nine-hole golf course at the Hiawatha Sportsman's Club on the upper peninsula of Michigan, loves, loves, loves the equipment. "I think it was last year when I was at the Ryder Cup, I'm like, I want to get in their maintenance barn," she says with a chuckle. "I want to see the equipment now. What do I need? What can I put in my budget and on my wish list?" Robideau got her wish - and more this week — at the Farmers Insurance Open. She and Agustin Galvan are going behind the scenes this week at Torrey Pines as agronomy volunteers. The two were selected by the Diversity, Education and Inclusion Advisory Board of the Golf Course Superintendents Association of America to work at the event. The initiative also supports Farmers' commitment to continuing education, as well as to DEI. For Galvan, it was a short trip. He's the landscape manager at The Santaluz Club, which is about 20 miles away from Torrey Pines, the scenic municipal layout on the Pacific coast. But what happens at Torrey this week is on a much bigger scale than the Rees Jones layout he helps maintain. "We have golf tournaments here at work, but they’re just different," Galvan says. "This is professional. This is, everyone’s watching, everyone’s looking at the grass on TV. It needs to be perfect. I just wanted to get an experience for what that entails." The two have been on the property since a welcome dinner on Saturday night. They're working daily shifts from 5:15-8:30 a.m. and 2:15-7 p.m. doing a variety of assignments like bunkers, data collection, hand-watering and course cleanup. They can use their free time to rest, network with peers or check out the competition between the PGA TOUR's best. "They're all great to watch," says Galvan, who has a 15 handicap. "They’re like robots. Their swings are just, I mean, it’s all that practice. They do everything. It’s just, wow." Galvan came to the United States from Mexico when he was 4. He had his own landscape company until rising insurance costs compelled him to look for a job with benefits. He now works full-time at Santaluz and recently completed his Turf Grass certificate at Penn State. "It’s great," says Galvan, who gets up at 3 a.m. each day and drives 90 minutes to Santaluz from his home in Hemet, California. "I like to play golf and I do enjoy the whole aspect of the scheduling of, like, the fertilizer program, the mowing program. There’s always something to do." As the landscape manager, Galvan is responsible for the environs around the course outside the rough, fairways and greens. Among his responsibilities are tree-trimming, planting seasonal vegetation and removing plants that have seen better days. "I guess you could call it golf course maintenance but it's a separate division," says Galvan, whose crew also takes care of requests from homeowners who live on the golf course. Next, the 39-year-old plans to work on his Associates of Science degree. He hopes to move to the course maintenance side of the operation at Santaluz, an upscale private community that also includes a vineyard that makes Merlot and Sangiovese. Unlike Galvan, Robideau only works part of the year. The winter has been mild in the UP of Michigan - she saw patches of green when she walked the golf course over New Year's weekend. But she was still shoveling snow when she was interviewed last week. Robideau's family has been a member at Hiawatha, which encompasses five miles of shoreline along Lake Michigan, for three generations. Both sets of her grandparents had homes on the property. She remembers swimming with her cousins at one home and fishing and trail-riding at the other. "I always said I had the best of both worlds," Robideau says. "It’s 35,000 acres, so there’s a lot of big playground." After getting a degree in horticulture from Michigan State, Robideau worked in landscape design for 10 years and moved briefly to Florida. She went back to school after her divorce and got a degree in business, thinking she might start her own company, but the economic climate wasn't right. She continued to dabble in landscape design. She also started working in the pro shop at Hiawatha, and it didn't take long for her to know her heart wasn't in being inside, making tee times and collecting greens fees. "I’ve always worked outside. I’ve always done landscaping, garden centers, worked with my hands, and it would just drive me crazy being inside the pro shop wondering, how can I get out there," Robideau says. Luckily, the course superintendent, Gary Thrombley, needed someone to help out after one of his crew was having knee problems. He asked Robideau, who used to beg him to let her clean up flower beds that had been neglected, to fill in one summer as a mower, and suddenly, she found her niche. "I jumped on it and he was the one that saw my love for working outside and mentored me towards this path, really," she says. When Thrombley retired, the members at Hiawatha, which features trout ponds, hiking trails and rental cabins, didn't need to look far for a replacement. Robideau is in her second year on the job and has helped bring innovative projects like bee pollinators and butterfly preserves to the property. So, what's her favorite part of the job? It's not hard to guess. "I think when I come in first thing in the morning," Robideau says. "I’m usually the first one there. Just the quiet, getting on my golf cart, kind of tooling around in the morning ... just getting a feel for what the course needs that day."

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