Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Day 2 review: THE PLAYERS Championship

Day 2 review: THE PLAYERS Championship

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – A quick look at Friday at THE PLAYERS Championship, where weather won the day once again. RELATED: Full leaderboard | Weather updates from TPC Sawgrass THE LEADERS WALK-OFF HOLE-OUT: Brice Garnett’s final shot Friday was a memorable one. He holed out with a sand wedge from 96 yards to eagle the par-4 fourth hole and tie Tommy Fleetwood and Tom Hoge for the lead at 6 under. Fleetwood and Hoge both shot 66 on Thursday. Garnett was on the fifth tee box, about to start his 14th hole of the tournament, when play was suspended because of unplayable conditions caused by the persistent rain that fell Friday. “We were just trying to stay in the moment and not get too ahead of ourselves with all the rain. It’s something exciting,” Garnett said. “Something that you kind of wish you would keep playing and keep the momentum going, but the course is unplayable. So we’re happy to come in.” Garnett arrived at THE PLAYERS ranked 186th in the FedExCup. His best finish in his first 11 starts of the year was T50 but he’s coming off a T7 at last week’s Puerto Rico Open. He continued his good play Friday, making four birdies and an eagle in the 13 holes he played. STORYLINES RAIN, RAIN GO AWAY (PART 2): Rain was the biggest story for the second consecutive day. Thursday’s opening day of THE PLAYERS was delayed more than four hours because of inclement weather, allowing less than half the field to complete its first round. Just four hours of play were completed Friday before play was suspended again because of unplayable conditions. Players did not return to the course Friday, leaving 47 players yet to complete the first round (Luke List withdrew mid-round) and a requiring a Monday finish at earliest. “We’re into a Monday finish,” said PGA TOUR Chief Referee Gary Young. “We know that.” The opening round will resume no earlier than 11 a.m. ET Saturday, with players to receive the next update at 7 a.m. ET. The last Monday finish at THE PLAYERS came in 2005, with Fred Funk as champion. INSPIRED DAY ON TRACK: Former PLAYERS champion Jason Day carded an impressive 3-under 69 in his return to competition following the passing of his mother last week. The Australian reached 4-under twice on the back nine after par-5 birdies only to give a shot back each time on the following holes. Day was a late WD from last week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational when he rushed to his mother Dening’s side as she lost her five-year battle with cancer. While the emotions remain raw, Day is making his best efforts to continue to do what his mother loved watching him do. On Friday he shifted some praise to his friend and caddie Luke Reardon who helped him stay focused on the task at hand. “You need a lot of commitment but also having a good game in these conditions,” 2016 champion Day said of how to excel in rainy surroundings. “A good caddie also helps maybe a shot or two out there when it’s tough. Luke knows what he’s doing, it definitely helps, and commitment is huge, especially when you come down the stretch. 17 and 18 are brutal, especially with rain.” OPPORTUNITY GAINED: As of last Sunday night, Michael Thompson was fifth alternate for THE PLAYERS. As of Friday morning, he was first alternate with 12 players yet to begin Round 1. After Tyler McCumber’s early-Friday withdrawal (shoulder injury), Thompson was next man up, and he took advantage with two birdies and an eagle in his first five holes. He stands 2-under through 12 holes, currently T33. FOUR-SPOT FOR TOP SPOT: Four players have a chance to usurp Jon Rahm for the world No. 1 position upon the conclusion of THE PLAYERS Championship. A world No. 1 scenario exists for each of Collin Morikawa, Viktor Hovland, Patrick Cantlay and Scottie Scheffler. Click here for a deep dive into the scenarios. NOTABLES DANIEL BERGER (5 under thru 16): He was 1 over after seven holes, but then birdied six of his next nine holes (Nos. 8, 9, 11-12, 14-15). DUSTIN JOHNSON (4 under thru 16): The former FedExCup champ had hit his tee shot at the island-green 17th to 18 feet when play was delayed. A 68 would match his second-best opening round at this event (his lowest is 66). SCOTTIE SCHEFFLER (4 under thru 15): The FedExCup leader is off to another strong start, going bogey-free thus far. He has won two of his past three events, including last week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard. He could go to world No. 1 with a win. BROOKS KOEPKA (3 under thru 15): A double-bogey at No. 5 is his only over-par hole thus far. He also has five birdies. JUSTIN THOMAS (2 under thru 15): The defending champ was 1 over after four holes but rebounded with birdies on three of TPC Sawgrass’ most difficult par-4s, Nos. 5, 7 and 14. RORY McILROY (1 over thru 15): It was an up-and-down day for the 2019 champ. He followed a bogey on the first hole with three consecutive birdies, but then made three bogeys and no birdies the rest of the way. COLLIN MORIKAWA (E thru 15): Three birdies and three bogeys have him at even par. He also could go to No. 1 in the world this week. WORTH WATCHING BY THE NUMBERS 4 – Number of balls hit into the water at 17 thus far, out of 119 players to complete the hole. 6 – Number of players currently bogey-free. Kramer Hickok (67) and Taylor Pendrith (68) hold the only two completed bogey-free rounds, while Brice Garnett (6-under thru 13), Scottie Scheffler (4-under thru 15), Zach Johnson (2-under thru 14) and Denny McCarthy (2-under thru 13) have the chance to join them. 1 – Only one of the 18 holes at TPC Sawgrass is yet to yield at least one penalty shot during the extended first round. The par-4 sixth hole hasn’t been a pushover, playing as the 11th most difficult so far at 4.008, but it is penalty-free. 47 – Players who still need to complete the first round upon the resumption of play, which will occur no earlier than 11 a.m. ET Saturday.

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The First Look: Travelers ChampionshipThe First Look: Travelers Championship

Jordan Spieth will defend his title against a strong lineup that includes multiple other high-profile U.S. Open cuts, as the PGA TOUR travels some 100 miles north from testy Shinnecock Hills to a more birdie-friendly TPC River Highlands next week for the Travelers Championship.  FedExCup titleholder Justin Thomas and Masters champion Patrick Reed also headline a field that features eight of the top 15 in the world rankings. U.S. Ryder Cup captain Jim Furyk will also return to the site where he carded the TOUR’s first 58 just two years ago. FIELD NOTES Bubba Watson, a two-time winner on Hartford’s outskirts, and THE PLAYERS Championship winner Webb Simpson also help bolter a post-Open lineup with 13 of the world’s top 30. Patrick Cantlay, whose 60 in the 2011 edition remains the lowest PGA TOUR round by an amateur, returns to River Highlands for the first time since 2014. He tied for 24th that year but missed two cuts in later visits. TPC River Highlands is set to welcome 50 players who teed it up at Shinnecock Hills this week. Hogan Award winner Doug Ghim, last year’s U.S. Amateur runner-up, makes his pro debut on a sponsor invite. Other exemptions went to former Illinois teammates Nick Hardy and Dylan Meyer. FEDEXCUP Winner receives 500 points. STORYLINES Spieth, Rory McIlroy and Jason Day all seek to bounce back after a rough two days at Shinnecock Hills. A bogey/bogey finish Friday kept Spieth from playing the weekend, while tough openers left McIlroy (80) and Day (79) unable to recover. Each of the past four Travelers winners have triumphed after competing in the U.S. Open, though Russell Knox’s 2016 win gets an asterisk. An Olympic shakeup that year moved the Travelers to August. Spieth has a chance to join Phil Mickelson (2001-02) as the only man to go back-to-back in Hartford. Just four New Englanders have won in Hartford, though two came back-to-back in 2005 (Brad Faxon) and 2006 (J.J. Henry). The others are Paul Azinger (1987, ’89) and Bob Toski (1953). Comedian George Lopez, ESPN’s Chris Berman and Boston sports legends Ray Allen (Celtics) and Tim Wakefield (Red Sox) top the marquee for the Wednesday celebrity pro-am. COURSE TPC River Highlands, 6,841 yards, par 70. Marking its 35th year as a PGA TOUR venue, the Pete Dye design overlooking the Connecticut River is the third course housed on the property dating back to 1928. Dye completely overhauled the footprint in 1982, and Bobby Weed provided an upgrade nine years later in consultation with former TOUR pros Roger Maltbie and Howard Twitty. Nos. 15-17 play around a four-acre lake, helping create a finish considered among the most thrilling on TOUR. River Highlands is the site of the TOUR’s only 58, when Jim Furyk reeled off 10 birdies and holed out for eagle at the par-4 No.3. 72-HOLE RECORD 258, Kenny Perry (2009). 18-HOLE RECORD 58, Jim Furyk (4th round, 2016). LAST YEAR Spieth’s first visit to River Highlands produced a highlight-reel finish last season, holing a bunker shot on the first hole of a playoff to dispatch Daniel Berger and celebrate with an emphatic shoulder bump with caddie Michael Greller. Unable to stave off Berger’s late charge in regulation, Spieth watched as his blast from 60 feet away dove into the cup on the second trip through No. 18. Berger nearly rendered the celebration premature when he just missed a 50-foot birdie try, but the FedEx St. Jude Classic winner came up shy in his bid to sandwich two wins around the U.S. Open. Berger forced the playoff with three birdies in the final six holes of regulation, erasing a three-shot deficit with a 3-under-par 67. Spieth became just the second man since World War II to collect 10 PGA TOUR victories before turning 24, taking up company with Tiger Woods (15 wins). HOW TO FOLLOW TELEVISION: Thursday-Friday, 3:30-6:30 p.m. ET (Golf Channel). Saturday-Sunday, 1-2:45 p.m. (GC), 3-6 p.m. (CBS). PGA TOUR LIVE: Thursday-Friday, 7 a.m.-3:30 p.m. (featured groups), 3:30-6:30 p.m. (featured holes). Saturday-Sunday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. (featured holes). RADIO: Thursday-Friday, noon-6:30 p.m.; Saturday-Sunday, 1-6 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com).

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