Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting DraftKings preview: Charles Schwab Challenge

DraftKings preview: Charles Schwab Challenge

The TOUR leaves Kiawah Island, and so does Phil Mickelson with his sixth major title. The TOUR travels from the historic 2021 PGA Championship to the storied Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, for the Charles Schwab Challenge. The course will play as a par 70, measuring 7,209 and will be putt on bentgrass greens. There are 121 players in the field, and the standard top 65 and ties make the cut. The Charles Schwab Challenge was the first tournament back after the COVID-19 shut down last season. Daniel Berger (+1800, $10,000) is your defending champion. STRATEGY The field moves back to its usual field size of 121 golfers after seeing its most robust group of 156 golfers in 2020, with every player on TOUR looking to get back to action post-COVID-19 shut down. The slimmer field will host some of the best golfers in the world like Justin Thomas (+1000, $11,000), Jordan Spieth (+850, $11,200), Tony Finau (+1600, $9,600), Justin Rose (+3300, $8,900), Collin Morikawa (+1400, $10,500), Abraham Ancer (+1400, $9700) and Patrick Reed (+1800, $10,300). With close to 54% or more of players potentially making the weekend, this week should result in one of the highest percentages of lineups having all six golfers make the cut. Colonial Country Club has been one of the longest-tenured courses on the PGA TOUR, with this being its 76th season hosting a tournament. Colonial isn’t known for playing difficult like the Ocean Course, but it’s been ranked inside the top-10 in difficulty scoring relative to par over the past few years. Like last week, the winds can cause havoc at Colonial. The tournaments held in 2012, 2014 and 2019 all recorded either higher than average or severe wind conditions, with the winning score averaging around 12-under. We’ve seen close to 20% of rounds over the previous four years register very windy conditions. The fairways are tight and tree-lined, making any wayward tee shots challenging to recover from if the golfers find trouble. The greens are below average in size, measuring 5,000 square feet, but the average greens in regulation (GIR) hit here is close to the TOUR average. Initially, we would think that smaller greens result in a smaller percentage of GIR, but it doesn’t. Over the previous five years, the highest distribution of approach shots has come from 125 to 175 yards, which are relatively easy scoring opportunities for these guys. Similar to other traditional layouts on TOUR, like Pete Dye’s Harbour Town Golf Links and TPC Sawgrass, Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green will be the predominant statistic that will lead to success. DraftKings scoring will need to come from a massive amount of birdies, with one of the lowest eagle rates on TOUR. Also, with nine par 4s measuring under 450 yards, rostering golfers who rank high in shorter par 4s should take precedent over golfers who aren’t succeeding on these holes. This classical course layout lends itself to all types of golfers. Kevin Na (+6600; $8,400) can win with an impeccable short game, while Rose can do it with tremendous ball-striking, shooting 20-under, gaining 10.2 strokes with his irons, and four strokes Off-the-Tee. GOLFERS TO CONSIDER Joaquin Niemann (+2500 to Win, $9,300 on DraftKings) When we’re back on bentgrass, we should be backing the Chilean sensation, who ranks 20th in approach over the previous 24 rounds. Niemann has only lost strokes with his irons in one tournament out of his past 11 and has played well on shorter courses like Colonial, finishing fifth at the RBC Heritage in 2020 and second at this year’s Sony Open at Waialae CC. Chris Kirk (+6600 to Win, $7,600 on DraftKings) Kirk is just 10 spots behind Niemann at 30th in Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green over the same timeframe but ranks the highest out of anyone in the field in Par 4 efficiency from 400 to 450 yards over the previous 24 rounds. On courses at or below 7,200 yards, Kirk ranks 27th in putting and eighth in birdies gained over his last two dozen rounds. Like Niemann, Kirk has been great on these shorter, classical courses, finishing seventh at the RBC Heritage and second at the Sony Open this year. Refer a friend and get $20 DK Dollars! Head to the DraftKings Playbook Promo page for more details! Set your DraftKings fantasy golf lineups here: PGA TOUR $750K Flop Shot [$200K to 1st] Put your knowledge to the test. Sign up for DraftKings and experience the game inside the game. All views expressed are my own. I am an employee of DraftKings and am ineligible to play in public DFS or DKSB contests. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisis counseling and referral services can be accessed by calling 1-800-GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) (IL). Gambling problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER (NJ/WV/PA/MI), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 (NH/CO), 1-800-BETS OFF(IA), 1-888-532-3500 (VA) or call/text TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN). 21+ (18+ NH). CO/IL/IN/IA/NH/NJ/PA/TN/VA/WV/MI only. Eligibility restrictions apply. See draftkings.com/sportsbook for full terms and conditions.

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Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
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A small change helped Johnson take control of the TOUR ChampionshipA small change helped Johnson take control of the TOUR Championship

ATLANTA - Dustin Johnson has a gift for making this maddening game seem so simple, so it was fitting that the fix for his wayward ball-striking was an easy one. He was standing too far from the ball. That's it. RELATED: Full leaderboard | McIlroy explains second shot on 18 from Saturday “I felt like I was swinging well. The setup was just a hair off," he said. "I was just hitting the driver a little bit towards the toe, and obviously when you hit it off the toe it does not like to cut." That small change to Johnson's setup was all he needed to separate himself from the field at the TOUR Championship. Johnson shot 64 on Saturday to take a five-shot lead into the season's final round. Xander Schauffele (67) and Justin Thomas (66) are tied for second at 14 under par. Johnson's 64 matched the low round of the week. Now, Johnson is just 18 holes from his first FedExCup. It's one of the few things missing from a resume that already has him destined for the World Golf Hall of Fame. "To be the FedExCup champion is something that I want to do," Johnson said. "It’s something that I want on my resume when I quit playing golf." A win tomorrow would be the 23rd of his PGA TOUR career. It would be his seventh in the FedExCup Playoffs, two more than anyone else. He also has a major and six World Golf Championships. He started this week with a two-shot lead but staying atop the leaderboard has been anything but easy. Jon Rahm caught Johnson after the first round. Starting Sunday, the top seven players on the leaderboard were separated by just four shots. Now only three players are within a half-dozen shots of him. Rahm is in fourth place at 13 under par. Johnson could leave East Lake as the consensus top player in the game. He's already No. 1 in the world ranking. Winning the FedExCup also would make him the favorite to win the PGA TOUR Player of the Year Award for the second time in his career. It was an honor he won in 2016, as well. The TOUR Championship would be his third win of the year. Johnson started this season on the sidelines after knee surgery. Then play was interrupted by a pandemic. His win at the Travelers Championship in June was his first in 490 days, matching the longest winless drought of his career. He struggled in his next two starts, shooting 80-80 at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide and withdrawing from the 3M Open after a tough start. He's responded with some of the best golf of his career, however. This is the fourth consecutive start where Johnson has held the 54-hole lead. He's led entering the final round of all three FedExCup Playoffs events and the PGA Championship, where he finished second. "I'm comfortable in the position I'm in," he said. "Even the two Sundays where I didn’t win, I felt like I played really solid rounds. Just a couple guys played a little bit better. "Tomorrow is more of the same. I just need to go out and focus on what I’m doing and try and shoot the lowest score I can." This is the second time Johnson has taken a five-shot lead into the final round in this year's FedExCup Playoffs. He also did it two weeks ago at the Playoffs opener, THE NORTHERN TRUST. A Sunday 63 at TPC Boston gave him an 11-shot victory and the second-lowest score in PGA TOUR history. He's potentially one improbable putt from a clean sweep of the three Playoffs events. Rahm holed a 66-footer on the first hole of their playoff at the BMW Championship. Johnson struggled in the first two rounds at East Lake, though. He was last in the field in driving accuracy through two rounds, hitting just 25% of the fairways. He hit more fairways Sunday than in the first two rounds combined. "If I’m driving it in the fairway, the game is much easier," Johnson said. "It’s never easy, but the game is much easier if you do drive it in the fairway." He had seven birdies in the third round, against just a single bogey. If he can play like this again Monday, he may not need to work too hard on Labor Day. "If he does what he normally does, it’s going to be almost impossible to catch him," Schauffele said. "If I birdie the first three holes it’s not going to faze him. It’s DJ." Johnson is one day closer to his first FedExCup. All because he started standing closer to the ball.

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