Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Cut prediction: Wyndham Championship

Cut prediction: Wyndham Championship

2020 Wyndham Championship, Round 1 (Play Suspended) Scoring Conditions: Overall: -0.75 strokes per round Morning wave: -0.26 Afternoon wave: -1.23 Current cutline (top 65 and ties): 66 players at -2 or better (T43) Top 3 projected cutline probabilities: 3 under par: 28.6% 2 under par: 25.2% 4 under par: 19.2% Top 10 win probabilities: Harold Varner III (T1, -8, 13.9%) Webb Simpson (T13, -4, 10.6%) Harris English (4, -6, 8.9%) Patrick Reed (T5, -5, 7.8%) Tom Hoge (T1, -8, 6.8%) Billy Horschel (T13, -4, 5.5%) Brian Harman (T5, -5, 3.6%) Ryan Moore (T25, -3, 2.7%) Roger Sloan (T1, -8, 2.4%) Paul Casey (T25, -3, 2.3%) NOTE: These reports are based off the live predictive model run by @DataGolf. The model provides live “Make Cut”, “Top 20”, “Top 5”, and “Win” probabilities every 5 minutes from the opening tee shot to the final putt of every PGA TOUR event. Briefly, the model takes account of the current form of each golfer as well as the difficulty of their remaining holes, and probabilities are calculated from 20K simulations. To follow live finish probabilities throughout the remainder of the Wyndham Championship or to see how each golfer’s probabilities have evolved from the start of the event to the current time, click here for the model’s home page.

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Players taking different approaches to rule changesPlayers taking different approaches to rule changes

KAPALUA, Hawaii – Ian Poulter was an animated figure as he spent several minutes demonstrating potential drop scenarios with a rules official on the first tee at the Plantation Course on Tuesday night. Bryson DeChambeau was over at the nearby putting green still experimenting with speeds and angles of flagstick in and flagstick out putting. He’d been doing it a for a few days.  Bubba Watson was having fun with it on his Instagram account in the days prior.  Jason Day and Dustin Johnson hadn’t bothered to study the changes at all.  Here was the varied approach to the biggest rule changes in golf in decades as the Sentry Tournament of Champions is about to kick off as the first PGA TOUR event played under the new world order. The changes from the USGA and R&A are many — you can get our comprehensive guide on them here — but it is a select few that have some of the players talking. DeChambeau made his intentions clear during the fall series when he admitted he intends to put with the flagstick still in the hole as the new rules allow.  “It depends on the firmness value of the flag. The C.O.R. or coefficient of restitution of the flagstick,â€� he said on his way to winning the Shriners Hospital for Children Open.  DeChambeau knows his method is going to create some division amongst players, too.  “Inside a certain distance it could become a problem. Most people are going to want the flagstick out and I’m going to want the flagstick in,â€� DeChambeau said. “There are going to be weird instances where I want it in because I know it is a benefit. If it’s a 20 to 30-footer I’ll just put it in and it might add a little time taking it in and out. “So I don’t know how I am going to deal with that yet (with playing partners) … it is certainly going to be interesting.â€� His first playing partner will be defending champion Dustin Johnson. The pair will go off in the final group in the opening round on Thursday.  “It’s going to be weird because the flag’s going to be going in and out a lot,â€� Johnson said, smiling. “But it’s all right. I mean it’s not bad.â€� He even said he could envisage a few scenarios he might leave it in himself. “If you got a real long putt or something I might leave it instead of having the caddie stand there and tend it,â€� Johnson said. “Or if you know it’s sometimes if you hit one up there, it’s always awkward trying to take the flag out. You can just tap it in.â€� Johnson admitted to not spending much thought on the changes, saying a poster in the locker room was his first real peek into it all. His brother and caddie, Austin, hadn’t yet immersed himself in it either.  “I had one of the TOUR officials do a printout that I’m going to give to him to study later on today,â€� Johnson said.  In the group ahead of them on Thursday is 2017 Sentry Tournament of Champions winner Justin Thomas.  “If I have an eight-footer to win a golf tournament … I mean no offense, I can’t really take myself seriously if I kept the pin in,â€� Thomas said.  DeChambeau wasn’t perturbed by that, later joking that he’d be very comfortable leaving it in in the same scenario and would take another trophy to go with his now five PGA TOUR wins very seriously.  “All I try to do is use every aspect of the game of golf to my advantage,â€� DeChambeau said in November. “I try to use the rules to my advantage in the most positive way possible. Not trying to skirt around anything, just use them.â€� Golf has always been a sport of integrity where players call infringements on themselves. While plenty of grey areas have been removed with the changes, others have popped up.  We now no longer have to worry about balls moving on greens, a lost ball being stepped on, balls being accidentally double hit, balls accidentally hitting a player or caddie or equipment, accidentally brushing a grain of sand in a bunker, or knocking off a leaf in a penalty area, among other changes.  Many of the changes bring the word accidental into play — and that can cause debate.  “There is just a lot of grey area that is starting to occur and questions are coming up where we didn’t think about that so it is going to come down to integrity,â€� DeChambeau said. “We are playing for millions of dollars … what do you think could happen?â€� The changes to green reading books sparked the most debate in a player meeting in Kapalua.  Limitations on the books have been placed with any putting green image that is used during the round limited to a scale of 3/8 inch to 5 yards. A yardage or greens book must also meet a size limit of 7 inches x 4.25 inches. Any hand-drawn or written information by the player or the caddie is allowed, but only if contained in a book or paper meeting this size limit (other than a hole placement sheet).  Questions came a plenty. Can a caddie or player trace their old books and then cut them into a four by seven square that fits in a book? The other debate came around the new drop rules where you drop from knee height. Now if the ball bounces from the drop into your body accidentally then there is no penalty. The interpretation around intent here has some players waiting to see how it plays out.  Rory McIlroy said it had provided some comedic fodder for players, especially at shorter players expense.  “Guys are practicing drops from your knees,â€� Mcilroy said. “We’re saying that Brian Harman has got a big advantage, he can basically place it. Where you got someone like Tony Finau who is dropping it probably from like waist high for me.â€� One thing is certain: There will be an adjustment period, and everyone should try to remain as patient as possible. “Everybody’s going to be calling a rules official in as much possible,â€� Thomas said. “So unfortunately play is probably not going to be too fast. But it’s tough, with anything, with change it’s always going to be different. “I’ve tried to study up … You would hate to get penalized just for making a mistake for something you’ve done your whole life, so it will be different.â€� Despite all the debate and talk amongst the playing throng, McIlroy said there was still an overbearing feeling of change will be for the best.  “I’ve always said that the rules of golf are way too complicated, especially after the debacles and farces we have had at U.S. Opens and all sorts of stuff over the last few years,â€� McIlroy said. “So I’m happy that they made the decision to try and simplify them and just try to make everything a little bit easier to understand.â€�

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Carlos Ortiz hoping to inspire Mexico’s next generation after breakthrough winCarlos Ortiz hoping to inspire Mexico’s next generation after breakthrough win

PLAYA DEL CARMEN, Mexico - Carlos Ortiz and Abraham Ancer, born two months apart in early 1991, developed a friendship via the junior golf circuits in their native Mexico. Ortiz and Ancer have always supported each other's chase of professional golf dreams. So as Ortiz vied for his first PGA TOUR title down the stretch of last month's Vivint Houston Open, Ancer delayed his Masters preparation to cheer on his friend. "I was there at the (Augusta National) locker room with Bryson (DeChambeau) ... I was on my phone filming," said Ancer of watching Ortiz drain a 22-foot birdie on the 72nd hole to secure a two-stroke win. "I'm like, ‘Man, he's going to win.' Bryson's like, ‘Don't jinx him.' "I said, ‘I'm not going to jinx him. He's going to make this putt.' It went dead-center and I was fist-pumping; I was so pumped. I've never really been that excited or nervous watching anybody play. I was really, really excited." Ortiz became the first Mexican player since 1978 (Victor Regalado, Quad Cities Open) to win on TOUR. He described the aftermath of his victory as "like a dream," receiving messages from fellow Mexican athletes like Formula 1 driver Checo Perez, boxer Canelo Alvarez and LPGA great Lorena Ochoa, as well as countless friends and family members. This week's Mayakoba Golf Classic presented by UNIFIN, contested in the Cancun metroplex, provides an ideal venue to conclude the TOUR's 2020 calendar with another Mexican flag atop the leaderboard. Ortiz nearly broke through last year at El Camaleon. He finished in a three-way tie for second, as Brendon Todd got up-and-down at the final hole to cement a one-stroke victory. Although no fans will be in attendance this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, a home-country title would still represent a lifetime dream. "It couldn't get any better than that," said Ortiz of what a Mayakoba Golf Classic title would mean. "Winning on your home soil would be a dream come true for us. I was close last year, and Abe (Ancer) has been close a couple of times, so I think it's coming. "We're definitely seeing the difference in how much golf has grown in Mexico in the last years. Right now, we consistently have six, seven Mexicans in the (Mayakoba) field, and we've had Mexicans competing on the weekend here, and that definitely says a lot about how golf is growing." Ortiz grew up learning the game at Guadalajara CC, the same home club as Ochoa, a 27-time LPGA winner. Although he was 10 years younger, Ortiz vividly remembers Ochoa's pursuit of perfection on the range, and was further inspired by watching her LPGA success on television. "She helped me believe that working hard and doing things the right way, we're able to achieve our goals," Ortiz said. Ortiz played collegiately at North Texas, alongside fellow TOUR winner Sebastian Munoz, and won three times as a Korn Ferry Tour rookie in 2014 to earn his first TOUR card. After two seasons on TOUR, Ortiz lost his card and returned to the Korn Ferry Tour, where he spent two more years and regained TOUR status via a top-25 position on the 2018 Regular Season money list. Looking back, Ortiz is thankful for that second Korn Ferry Tour stint. "I lost confidence. I stopped believing in myself ... the Korn Ferry Tour definitely helped me to find that again," Ortiz said. "To believe in yourself is the most important thing. It doesn't matter if your team believes in you, or your parents, or anyone; if you don't believe in yourself, you have no chance. "When you go back to the Korn Ferry Tour, you realize what worked for you to get to the PGA TOUR. You shouldn't lose your essence. I feel a lot of times, we lose our essence when we go to the PGA TOUR, because you're impressed by all your idols, all the people you look up to. You start doing things differently, where honestly, whatever got you there is what you should work on, and you build on top of that." Ancer followed a similar trajectory - earning his TOUR card via the 2015 Korn Ferry Tour, losing his card in 2016, then regaining it via the 2017 Korn Ferry Tour. The University of Oklahoma alum said he similarly benefitted from a return trip to the Korn Ferry Tour - and saw his longtime friend Ortiz do the same. "Carlos had a year that he lost a little bit of confidence, and went back to the Korn Ferry Tour and grinded it out," Ancer said. "I think that helped him a lot. He's a solid player, doesn't really have any weaknesses ... he can hit it high, low. I mean, the guy is good. We've played a lot of golf together, and he never disappoints. "I know he went back to pretty much everything that he did, just everything, and every year it's getting better and better." With Mexico's 42-year winless drought in the rearview, Ortiz and Ancer will push each other to collect more titles as they navigate their TOUR careers. And they'll encourage their country's next generation to do the same. "I hope that by me winning on the PGA TOUR, being on TV, being out there, it inspires more kids and more people to go do that," Ortiz said. "Working hard, you can achieve your goals. And it's the same thing with Abe. We're trying to inspire as many kids and as many guys that are trying to make it, so they know and they can believe that it's possible."

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