Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting DraftKings preview: Sentry Tournament of Champions

DraftKings preview: Sentry Tournament of Champions

The PGA TOUR returns after a few weeks off and travels to the middle of the Pacific Ocean for the Sentry Tournament of Champions located on Maui in the Aloha State of Hawaii. The tournament will take place at the Plantation Course in Kapalua and will be a no-cut event. The course will play as the only Par 73 on the PGA TOUR with just three par 3s, measure just over 7,500 yards and feature grainy, Bermuda greens. The field will consist of only those who qualified by winning last season, which includes members of the winning U.S. Presidents Cup team like Patrick Cantlay, Rickie Fowler, Dustin Johnson and defending champion Xander Schauffele, who shot a 62 in the final round last year to beat out Woodland by just a stroke. Those who won last season, but haven’t committed include players like Rory McIlroy, Tiger Woods, Brooks Koepka and the Open Champion Shane Lowry. The Plantation course ranked as the sixth easiest course in scoring relative to par last season and routinely plays as one of the easiest every year. Finishing scores at Kapalua have totaled as high as 30 under back in 2016 with the lowest winning score at 22 under over the past four years. The main reason we see scores get this high? Extremely wide and easy to hit fairways as well as accessible par 5s, which are all birdie and eagle opportunities. The course’s main defense is the wind, but it shouldn’t be too much of an issue as we’ve seen guys still go low like Dustin Johnson, who won back in 2018 shooting 24 under in extremely windy conditions. The normal key stats apply here like Par 5 scoring, birdie or better average and Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green, but this week we should also be focusing a little more on Bermuda putting and Approaches from 100 to 125 yards. There are six par 4s measuring under 400 yards, which are just as important to score on as the par 5s. Justin Thomas ($11,200) It’ll be tough to fade Thomas this week with how well he’s currently playing and how well he’s played at the Plantation Course over his career. He’s ranks second to only Dustin Johnson in Strokes Gained: Total since 2015 and is one of only three players to qualify for the Sentry Tournament of Champions in four of the past five years. Thomas has the all-around game to win anywhere, gaining an average of 6.3 strokes Tee-to-Green over his past 10 tournaments. Ride the momentum. Patrick Cantlay ($9,800) Cantlay played amazing last season, making 11 straight cuts leading up to the TOUR Championship and gained an average of 2.6 strokes with his irons over his past 10 tournaments. Cantlay ranks 12th in Par 5 scoring average over his past six tournaments and if we look closer at his statistics over his past eight rounds with shot tracker he ranks fifth in approaches from 100 to 125 yards, ninth in birdie or better percentage and first in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green. Collin Morikawa ($8,600) If you’re looking for value, Morikawa should be a solid play this week. It’ll be his first start in Kapalua, but what he lacks in experience, he more than makes up with his iron play, ranking second in the field dating back to the last 50 rounds coming into this tournament. It’ll be hard to trust his putting on Bermuda, but he’ll rely on his strong wedge play ranking fourth in Approaches from 100 to 125 yards over his past three tournaments. Put your knowledge to the test. Sign up for DraftKings and experience the game inside the game. I am a promoter at DraftKings and am also an avid fan and user (my username is reidtfowler) and may sometimes play on my personal account in the games that I offer advice on. Although I have expressed my personal view on the games and strategies above, they do not necessarily reflect the view(s) of DraftKings and I may also deploy different players and strategies than what I recommend above. I am not an employee of DraftKings and do not have access to any non-public information.

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KLM Open
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Joakim Lagergren+375
Ricardo Gouveia+650
Connor Syme+850
Francesco Laporta+1200
Andy Sullivan+1400
Richie Ramsay+1400
Oliver Lindell+1600
Jorge Campillo+2500
Jayden Schaper+2800
David Ravetto+3500
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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Justin Thomas+1100
Joaquin Niemann+1400
Shane Lowry+1600
Tommy Fleetwood+1800
Tyrrell Hatton+1800
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Rory McIlroy+650
Bryson DeChambeau+700
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Shane Lowry+3500
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Five Things to Know: Muirfield VillageFive Things to Know: Muirfield Village

Now in its second year after its second renovation, Muirfield Village will once again challenge the best of the PGA TOUR in its thick rough, on its firm greens and everywhere in between. Jack Nicklaus’s dream for the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday started in his 20s when he hoped to bring Columbus a pro-caliber event. Roughly five decades later, Nicklaus’ mindset is to keep innovating his track to fit the modern game, while maintaining its ability to be enjoyed by amateurs. If a certain local monument can now just cooperate, we are in for a beautiful week at Muirfield Village. 1. JACK’S TRIBUTE VISION The course is called Muirfield Village and is located in Dublin. But the Greater Columbus, Ohio area does not exactly present the same features as Scotland and Ireland. Muirfield Village is indeed named after Muirfield Golf Links, where Jack Nicklaus represented the United States for the first time in the 1959 Walker Cup and where he won his first of three Open Championship titles in 1966. The Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers, now based at Muirfield, are credited with writing the 13 “Rules of Golf” in 1744. Nicklaus planned to write American golf history in Dublin when he bought the future property for Muirfield Village, where he used to hunt rabbits with his dad, in 1966. Just 26 at the time of purchasing the land, Nicklaus hoped to provide his hometown of Columbus with its own PGA TOUR-caliber event, taking inspiration from Bobby Jones’ formulation of Augusta National Golf Club and the Masters. Construction began in 1972, with Nicklaus teaming with designer Desmond Muirhead (no relation to Muirfield), and in 1974, Nicklaus opened the course with an exhibition match against Tom Weiskopf. He won with a six-under 66, a course record that stood for Muirfield Village’s first five years. The Memorial tournament arrived two years later in 1976 and has not missed a year since. Roger Maltbie won the initial event before Nicklaus won twice in 1977 and 1984. In 2013, Nicklaus, who has now been tweaking Muirfield Village for 50 years, told The New York Times of Muirfield Village, “What it represents is my total vision as it relates to the golf course.” It may not have the flat, links terrain of Scotland or Ireland, but Muirfield Village has placed itself among the trademark tracks of American golf. And hey, there is some presence of Muirfield in town. Muirfield Village’s streets are named after Scottish golf communities. 2. 2020 RAPID RENOVATION As Jon Rahm survived Muirfield Village to win the 2020 Memorial Tournament at nine-under (with a final-round two-shot penalty unbeknownst to him), the course’s crew had more important things to handle. Moments after Rahm and final-round playing partner Ryan Palmer finished their front nine, this group began tearing up the grass. This was the start of an aggressive renovation that had no time to waste. While on the surface, a renovation seemed unnecessary – after all, Muirfield Village was already near the top of most top courses in the world lists – Nicklaus, sticking to his original vision for Muirfield Village, felt the urge to continue innovating the course to meet the modern game. Working with Nicklaus Design’s Chris Cochran and Muirfield Village Director of Ground Operations Chad Mark, Nicklaus envisioned a golf course that could continue challenging the pros while fitting the desires of Muirfield Village members. The renovation, Muirfield Village’s second formal renovation since its opening, actually started in 2019 with work on the back nine. The two-year, two-part renovation added distance to the tournament settings, stretching to 7,609 yards. However, for the members, Nicklaus went the other way, shortening the forward tees by 250 yards and widening fairway landing areas for amateurs. Overhead shots during the Memorial tournament will show TV viewers the different mouths of the fairways, which will narrow at the specific points the pros target. Meanwhile, all green complexes were rebuilt and adjusted from a bentgrass/poa annua hybrid to bentgrass-only. This also allowed for pin placement options to increase, for better or for worse depending on how close you like your pins to the edge. The result is a more durable Muirfield Village, looking more 2022 than 1972. But the bones and the strategy of the course remain similar. Perhaps to no surprise, Rahm came flying out of the gates in 2021, and until his late withdrawal, was navigating the renovated course with the same fervor he had in 2020. 3. GREENS AND ROUGH OF TERROR Jack Nicklaus and the crew at Muirfield Village have always maintained that the Memorial tournament provides a fair test of golf. In the last couple years, that has become arguably a fair gauntlet of golf. In 2020, Nicklaus noted that he uses some of the conditions of U.S. Opens to prepare Muirfield Village for battle. The 2020 edition was particularly unique, as it took place in July after the COVID-19 restart. It also followed the Workday Charity Open, also at Muirfield Village, which Collin Morikawa won in a playoff versus Justin Thomas at 19-under. Morikawa made the cut at the 2020 Memorial, but finished 27 strokes worse at eight-over. The winning score dropped ten shots to Rahm’s nine-under. Only nine players finished under par, as opposed to 56 at the Workday Charity Open (the cutline was two-under). Rahm called his Saturday 68 at the 2020 Memorial “one of the best rounds of golf that I’ve played in my life.” Tiger Woods said of the week: “One of the most difficult conditions I’ve played in a long time.” Now, how can Nicklaus make Muirfield Village harder on a week-to-week basis? The greens are the place to start. In 2020, Muirfield Village had the flat surface rolling at 13 on the stimpmeter. And on Sunday of that tournament, the first 16 holes all included pin placements four paces or less from the edge. No. 17 and No. 18 were more forgiving at six and five yards from the edge, respectively. And then there is the rough. In 2020, shots off the fairway or greens were in danger of needing a search party. In 2021, after the renovation, Nicklaus dialed things up to a new level of high rough. “I haven’t seen rough like this really ever,” Patrick Reed said, leading up to the 2021 tournament. “My first practice round I played, I just played the front nine on Monday, and I missed the fairway by maybe a yard on hole 6 to the right and Kessler [Karain] and I spent at least five to seven minutes searching. We couldn’t find the golf ball. And it is that brutal, that thick, that nasty.” A respectable 25 players finished under par at The Memorial in 2021, but the renovations reiterated the terror that Muirfield Village can present. The formula for combating the course is pretty simple. Just flop the ball like Tiger Woods did in 2012, out of the rough, downhill, toward the water, into the hole, en route to his 2012 win, his fifth and most recent Memorial Tournament title. Nicklaus has been notable for proposing golf courses find ways to challenge golfers within their surface area, as opposed to just lengthening holes. His work with the greens and rough put this vision on display. 4. THE CURSE OF CHIEF LEATHERLIPS While the Memorial tournament may be the most notable event every year in Dublin, Ohio, one resident in particular disapproves of the tournament. At least, according to local lore. Down the road stands the Leatherlips sculpture, a tribute to Chief Leatherlips, a Wyandot Native American leader in the area in the late 18th century and early 19th century. As the story goes, after Muirfield Village was built near Leatherlips’ gravesite, he cursed the Memorial tournament. Any rain or inclement weather causing play to stop at the Memorial is chalked up to “The Curse of Chief Leatherlips.” According to a 1997 Associated Press story, when the 1993 edition of the Memorial experienced a rain delay for a fourth straight year – and 11th such instance in 18 years – Barbara Nicklaus decided to do something. Arnold Palmer’s wife Winnie suggested that if Muirfield Village was built over an old cemetery, Barbara should bring Leatherlips a glass of gin to quell any angry spirits. So Barbara went to Leatherlips’ monument on Thursday night and Friday afternoon, both after suspensions of play, to leave a glass of gin for the Dublin icon. Jack even drove her that Thursday. “I had nothing to do with it, absolutely nothing,” Nicklaus said at the time in mock disbelief, according to the AP. “She just said, ‘Maybe I’ll give them a little gift this year, and maybe next year it’ll be something really nice.’” The Dublin Historical Society includes this tale in its archives related to Leatherlips. Although, there have been no recent reports of Barbara bartending for the statue. 5. BEAUTIFULLY, TREACHEROUS FINALE The final five holes at Muirfield Village embody Nicklaus’ credo: Hard, fair and picturesque. No. 14 is a 360-yard par 4 that Nicklaus himself refers to as one of the best par 4s in the sport. While driveable based on pure distance, danger is present on both sides of the hole. A creek hugs the right side of the green, also running directly in front of the green based on the tee box. On the left side, a sea of bunkers are present. But with the bunkers slightly elevated, players are asking to get down and up more than up and down. As for the lay-up, the creek runs back into the fairway, making a long-iron shot available, but needing to be in control. No. 15 is a par 5 that has seen more danger added since the recent renovation. Nicklaus moved the fairway over to the left, bringing a creek along that side into play on the tee shots or a lay-up. Up by the green, the creek meanders to the right, waiting for balls short or missed right that don’t smash into two protective bunkers. The par 5 is only 561 yards and traditionally plays as one of the easiest holes on the course, if not the easiest, but as Nicklaus noted after the renovation, “We will see a lot of eagle and birdie chances here, but also a fair amount of sixes and sevens.” No. 16, a 200-yard par 3 over water, has long been a trademark hole of Muirfield Village. However, during the renovation, Nicklaus actually had to correct his own work. After redesigning the hole for the 2013 Presidents Cup, Nicklaus noted the hole struggled to hold shots, especially on the back left. It soon became clear that the left side pitched away from the players. To fix this, Nicklaus took eight inches from the middle of the green and added eight inches to the left. The green now runs toward the players, holding shots as he had originally intended. No. 17 traditionally played as a challenge due to its brute strength. At 485 yards with a creek in front and bunkers protecting the left and right, the par 4 demanded two precise strikes. Nicklaus purposely made the hole even more difficult by narrowing the fairway. And this is not just simply done by growing out some grass. Nicklaus had fairway bunkers moved in tighter, bringing those more consistently into play off the tee. As for No. 18, commonly the hardest hole in the tournament, Nicklaus left much of the meet of the hole the same, as the 480-yard dogleg right requires players to avoid the creek on the left and the bunkers at the corner on the tee shot. The new challenge may come on the green. Previously, the green allowed only one available back left pin placement, so Nicklaus had the area softened and lengthened out with less pitch to allow more options for pins, while making it difficult to hold the green. That is not to mention two deep bunkers await if players come up short on the left side. It’s simple. If you can avoid all of those problems down the stretch, you might win.

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Winner’s Bag: Jon Rahm, BMW ChampionshipWinner’s Bag: Jon Rahm, BMW Championship

Jon Rahm wins the BMW Championship and moves into the second spot in the FedExCup standings heading into Atlanta. Here’s a look inside his bag. RELATED: Final leaderboard Driver: TaylorMade SIM (10.5 degrees) Shaft: Aldila Tour Green 75 TX 3-wood: TaylorMade SIM (15 degrees) Shaft: Aldila Tour Green 75 TX 5-wood: TaylorMade SIM (19 degrees) Shaft: Graphite Design Tour AD DI (Black) 8 X Irons: TaylorMade P750 (4-PW) Shafts: Project X Rifle 6.5 Wedges: TaylorMade MG Hi-Toe (52), TaylorMade MG2 (56-12SB, 60) Shafts: Project X Rifle 6.5 Putter: TaylorMade Spider X Grips: Golf Pride MCC Ball: TaylorMade TP5 (#10)

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The education of Patrick CantlayThe education of Patrick Cantlay

When he tees it up at this week’s Travelers Championship, Patrick Cantlay will be celebrating an anniversary, of sorts. He shot a second-round 60 at the 2011 Travelers Championship, the first 60 or better by an amateur in PGA TOUR history, and while he faded to a T24 finish, he had announced his arrival. He turned pro in 2012, and nearly saw his career end in 2013. For three-plus years, Cantlay coped with career-threatening back problems and the heartbreaking loss of his best friend, dropping off the radar completely. But to watch him today, you would never know it; he never lost a step. How is that possible? Cantlay talks a lot about process, and while you could interpret that to mean his strict regimen of back exercises, and taking one hole at a time, it’s more illuminating to go back further into his formative years, when he learned the game on an almost cellular level. He has all the shots, yes, but according to those who know him best, it’s what’s between those ears that makes Cantlay stand out most of all. “Poise is the combination of how to get yourself relaxed, seeing the big picture and what makes things happen, and being practical,� says Jamie Mulligan, Cantlay’s coach at Virginia Country Club in Long Beach, California. “A lot of people get one of those. He got all three.� Says UCLA coach Derek Freeman, for whom Cantlay played for two years, “As I watched him from junior golf, maturing into the world’s best amateur, I watched a kid that understood the game at a higher level. He knew what architects were doing, what they were trying to draw your eye toward. I’m not sure I’ve ever had another young player understand the things that he did.� ‘Soaking it all in’ At first glance, little about Cantlay stands out. He is listed at 5 feet, 10 inches tall, and 160 pounds; is 26; is an introvert; and has good genes. Pat Cantlay, Patrick’s grandfather, brought his grandson Patrick to the course when he was still a toddler. Steve Cantlay, Patrick’s father, is a former club champion at Virginia Country Club in Long Beach. As it happened, Virginia C.C. was then a breeding ground for touring professionals. Paul Goydos. Peter Tomasulo. John Cook. John Mallinger. John Merrick. Cantlay watched them intently when he wasn’t working on his swing with the club’s pro, Jamie Mulligan, or playing the course each Saturday with the other pro, Mike Miles. “I was starting my PGA TOUR Champions career,� Cook says, “and Patrick was this kid who you could tell was not just a kid who played golf. He was something a little bit different. We liked being around him; he would come down and watch us practice and listen to how we talked to each other. You could tell he was soaking it all in.� Miles, who is now the Director of Golf at Oak Bridge Club in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, says Cantlay was an exceptionally observant learner. “Patrick basically distilled all the information,� says Miles, who played the TOUR in the 80s. “He knew who had the best short game, so he would sit and watch John Mallinger. He asked me, ‘Who’s got the best iron shots?’ I said, ‘Watch John Cook, because he was taught by Ken Venturi.’� Cantlay does not disagree. “There was some of that,� he says. “It was good to see how they prepared and practiced, and what TOUR golf was like at a young age. They were all really great to me. They would always take me out to play, or if I asked any questions they’d be really helpful.� By the time he was 12, Cantlay started taking on Miles, himself a former prodigy. Miles would play the kid using only a 3-wood, and it was only a matter of time before the student surpassed the teacher. Soon, Cantlay had a decision to make between Mater Dei and Servite, two local Catholic high schools with exceptional sports programs. The interview “I was interviewed by him to be his high school golf coach,� Servite’s Dane Jako says with a laugh. “I’d been teaching a P.E. class, and told him to meet me on the football field, and he and his parents, Steve and Colleen, got there early and sat in the bleachers. “This is my 23rd year, so I’d been in it for a few years,� Jako continues. “I’d had some success. We had won league titles and all that. I knew of him, but I also knew how the system worked. He did 90 percent of the talking, and I kept interrupting him. He wanted to know about the golf, the courses, what tournaments we were planning on playing.� Most importantly, Cantlay wanted to know what it would take to make varsity. Jako replied that he would first want to focus on making the freshman team, and then the junior varsity, and if his scores were good enough, he’d get a varsity tryout. “You could tell he didn’t like that answer,� Jako says, “so I explained to him, that’s just the process, you’ll be fine. I didn’t find out until later, he got in the car with his parents afterward and said, ‘Well, I’m never playing for that guy.’� Cantlay did in fact choose Servite; Jako now says he simply got lucky. As he remembers it, Cantlay shot 1- or 2-under on the first day of freshman tryouts. Then he shot 1- or 2-under the second day. Jako brought the kid up to varsity. Their first varsity match, a nine-hole competition at Western Hills Country Club, a formidable course that has hosted U.S. Open qualifiers, arrived on a cold, drizzly day in February. “He broke the course record, shot 31 on the front nine,� says Jako, who still has the ball Cantlay used that day. “He beat a senior from Long Beach Wilson, a good school that Paul Goydos had gone to. The kid was committed to go to Loyola-Marymount. “After that day,� Jako continues, “everything changed. Patrick led the team in stats as a freshman. It was funny how the season evolved. All the seniors, in the beginning, were like, ‘Who’s this freshman? Coach, you’re changing the rules.’ I think I dropped one of the tryouts for him. Nobody wanted to pair up with him. By the end, he was their little brother.� Cantlay took a leadership role, to say the least. Rarely did a day go by when he wouldn’t knock on the coach’s door to delve into a conversation about, say, the value in playing harder courses. “It was relentless,� Jako says. “He’s just a very driven, very loyal guy. Pat, in a matter of speaking, taught me how to be a golf coach. I was lucky that he trusted me. I consider his swing coach, Jamie Mulligan, a friend. Years later, Patrick asked me to caddie for him at a lot of events. It’s weird, considering where we started, but I consider him one of my closest friends.� Boy becomes a man Cantlay was getting close to the end of high school when he hit a growth spurt. “He went from just popping it down the fairway to, whoa, this kid has added 30 or 40 yards in three or four months,� Cook says. Cantlay was still inquisitive, still a sponge for information about the game. He reminded Cook of himself at that age. Later, after moving to Orlando and taking a membership at Isleworth, Cook would come to know another young player like that: Tiger Woods. In 2010, Cantlay won the California State High School Championship, was runner-up at the Cal State Amateur, and lost to Peter Uihlein in the semifinals of the U.S. Amateur, narrowly missing out on a Masters berth. Although his parents had gone to USC, Cantlay decamped for UCLA, where he won the Fred Haskins and Jack Nicklaus awards as the nation’s top collegiate. And he was just getting started. His 60 at the 2011 Travelers promised an incandescent future, for Cantlay at his best appeared to have a limitless upside. Ask Miles about the contemporaries with whom he grew up—Tom Lehman, Corey Pavin, Jay Delsing and Steve Pate—and he’ll tell you Cantlay is better than any of them. He’s not the only one with such a lofty opinion. “Patrick hit smart shots at the right time,� UCLA’s Freeman says. “More than anything, he knew what made him successful and that’s what he focused on. He wouldn’t worry about anybody else.� Freeman stops, then reconsiders. “He asked me one time who was the best player I ever coached,� he says. “I’m trying to push him, so I say, ‘Kevin Chappell is better. Anthony Kim is better.’ He wants to know who is the best ball-striker, the best putter. He never liked it when I said someone was better, but as I look back now, it’s tough to say who’s the best player. Is it based on what they’ve done after school? What they’ve done in school? If he would have stayed four years like Chappell, there’s no telling how many records he could have set, how many times he could have won.� Injury and heartache Cantlay turned pro after his sophomore year in June, 2012. He would play his way up through the Web.com Tour, and take the odd sponsor’s exemption into tournaments on the big TOUR. He was leading the 2013 Web.com money list when he arrived for the Fort Worth Invitational where, he said later, it felt like someone had plunged a knife into his back as he warmed up before the second round. He withdrew, but his problems were just beginning. A short layoff became a seven-month break, and still his back wasn’t right. Cantlay struggled in 2014, making six mostly unproductive starts on TOUR; sat out 2015 entirely; and still wasn’t feeling well at the dawn of 2016. After developing a golfing mind like few others, he was now betrayed by his body. “It was just a weird deal,� says Preston Valder, one of Cantlay’s high school and college teammates and still a friend. “He was constantly proactive in everything he did to try and get better, but in the end, it was just basically: take time off. That’s a weird thing to have to do when you’re trying to get better. When we were having lunch, or seeing someone during that time, his back was all anyone ever wanted to talk about. I just wouldn’t even touch it.� Then came the tragedy. Cantlay and his best friend, Chris Roth, had figured everything out since their days at Servite: Cantlay would play the PGA TOUR, and Roth would be his caddie. That all changed in an instant in the middle of the night in Newport Beach, when Roth was struck by a car while crossing the street on the way to a restaurant. He died in Cantlay’s arms at just 24, the victim of a hit-and-run driver who would wind up behind bars. “Just a freak, one-in-a-million type deal,� Cantlay later called it. He called 911 and was covered in blood when the ambulance arrived; Roth was pronounced dead at the hospital. Cantlay spent the rest of 2016 rebuilding emotionally as well as physically. There were times, he said, when nothing seemed to matter. But when he returned in 2017, it was as if he’d never left golf’s ruling class. There was something deep inside him that had emerged unscathed. In limited action, so as to protect his L5 vertebrae, he fulfilled his Major Medical Extension in just his second start, an eye-opening runner-up at the Valspar Championship. More incredibly still, Cantlay made 13 cuts in 13 starts, and despite his limited schedule got all the way to the TOUR Championship. Last fall he nabbed his first victory at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in Las Vegas, where Woods had broken through 21 years earlier. Back among the elite Cantlay led going into the back nine of the recent Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide, but faltered coming home to finish solo fourth. He is back to playing a full schedule this year, and while he keeps a small apartment in California, he has recently taken a condo rental in North Palm Beach, Florida. During off-weeks you can find him not at Long Beach but at The Bear’s Club, butting heads with fellow 20-somethings like Justin Thomas. Pat Cantlay, Patrick’s grandfather, doesn’t play much anymore, but he still mows that backyard putting green every day. Patrick’s dad, Steve, is no longer in his golfing prime. Patrick, having learned his lessons from them and others, spends his idle hours picking through non-fiction tomes like “A Brief History of Time� (Stephen Hawking), “The Selfish Gene� (Richard Dawkins) and a comprehensive biography of General George Patton. His book of the moment is “Guns, Germs and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies� (Jared Diamond). “I like reading about certain people,� Cantlay says, “and seeing if I can pick up anything that other successful people have done.� He’s not an e-book guy, incidentally; he likes the feel of the pages on his fingers. And he is careful not to treat any one account as gospel. “Like with history,� he says, “you’re not going to get an honest or a straight look from any one person. You’ve got to blend everybody’s take, and that’s the closest you’re going to get.� As ever, that philosophy extends to the golf course. “If he’s playing with Phil,� his pal Valder says, “and Phil’s good with wedges, Patrick is trying to learn how he does it.� Goydos now sees in Cantlay a player who fell on tough times but whose extraordinary golfing acumen saw him through to the other side. “You shoot 60 as an amateur, there are expectations that can be difficult,� Goydos says. “Then you get hurt and don’t compete for three and a half years, well, that doesn’t make it any easier. Then you come out and play 13 tournaments and make the TOUR Championship? That’s ridiculous. How many guys could do that? Tiger could do it, Jack could do it, Hogan could do it. It’s a pretty small club.� Adds Miles of his former pupil, “If he didn’t win two or more majors, I would be awfully surprised.� The golf world awaits.

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