Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting DraftKings preview: The Honda Classic

DraftKings preview: The Honda Classic

The fourth and final tournament in the Florida Swing is The Honda Classic, which will play on the Champion Course at PGA National. The course is a par 70, measuring 7,125 yards and will be putt on Bermuda greens. Last season, the tournament was first in the Florida Swing and won by Sungjae Im (+1300, $11,000). Set your DraftKings fantasy golf lineups here: PGA TOUR $750K Flop Shot [$200K to 1st] STRATEGY PGA National is a Tom Fazio design that was renovated a few times over the past couple of decades by Jack Nicklaus. One of the more evident and consequential changes was back in 2018 when the greens increased close to 30% in size to around 7,000 feet on average. Past winners also include Keith Mitchell (+10000, $7,200), Justin Thomas, Rickie Fowler (+4500, $8,900), Rory McIlory, Russell Henley (+3000, $9,800), Padraig Harrington (+25000, $6,800) twice and Adam Scott. PGA National is a challenging course. In scoring relative to par, The Honda Classic has ranked inside the top 5 most difficult courses over the past few years and has been one of the few non-major tournaments annually to rank this high. The greens have consistently played difficult, recording around 59 percent hit in regulation rate, which is more than 10 percent less than the TOUR average. Something we've seen consistently on the Florida Swing is golfers electing accuracy off-the-tee over distance and PGA National is no exception. A ton of water, which is in play on virtually every hole, and the potential for windy conditions play a pivotal role in why average driving distance is 11 yards less here than the TOUR average. Since 2016, 25 percent of rounds have played in extremely windy conditions, and only 10 percent have played in calm conditions. The infamous "Bear Trap," hole Nos. 15-17, is a daunting challenge coming in. Per SHOT LINK data from last season, these three rank as the third-toughest stretch on TOUR among courses that have been played in at least 10 or more seasons since 2007 (non-majors). Two of the holes are par 3s, which rank as the fourth- and fifth-toughest on the course. Those who finish inside the top 5 are gaining more strokes on the par 3s than the par 4s and par 5s. Par 4 efficiency will be important as it is with all par 70s. GOLFERS TO CONSIDER Joaquin Niemann (+2000 to Win, $10,400 on DraftKings) Niemann struggled on Sunday last week but still finished inside the top 30, gaining 1.2 strokes tee-to-green. Niemann doesn't have the best record on Bermuda greens but has gained strokes in six of his past 12 rounds with his flat stick on said surface. Putting will matter at PGA National, but not as much as ball striking, and Niemann, who's one of the best drivers of the ball, should do well here, ranking third in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee and 19th in approach over his previous 24 rounds. His work on the par 4s over his last two dozen rounds has gotten him inside the top 20 in par 4 efficiency, and he hasn't lost strokes tee-to-green in nine measured rounds this season. Russell Henley (+3000 to Win, $9,800 on DraftKings) Henley couldn't make the weekend at TPC Sawgrass last week, losing close to three strokes with his irons, which is unlike him. Still, Henley has been one of the best ball-strikers on TOUR over the past couple of seasons and has an impeccable record at PGA National, ranking seventh in Strokes Gained: Total here since 2016. Henley's extremely accurate Off-the-Tee and is precise with his approaches from 175 to 200 yards, ranking 21st in the field over the past 24 rounds. Hopefully, his missed cut last week keeps his roster percentage lower than it should be at a par 70, Bermuda course in Florida. Chez Reavie (+12500 to Win, $7,000 on DraftKings) Reavie suffered a similar fate as Henley at THE PLAYERS, but it was at the hands of his putter, losing 6.1 strokes on the greens last week. Conversely, he gained four strokes with his irons and 1.4 Off-the-Tee. His short game has been dreadful, but he's gained with his ball-striking in four straight starts. 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. For Masters odds, head over to DraftKings Sportsbook or download the DraftKings Sportsbook app. 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. 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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Alistair Docherty+2500
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Rick Lamb+2500
S H Kim+2500
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Seungtaek Lee+2800
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Tournament Match-Ups - M. Fitzpatrick / A. Fitzpatrick vs S. Stevens / M. McGreevy
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Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Steven Alker+700
Stewart Cink+700
Padraig Harrington+800
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Miguel Angel Jimenez+1200
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Ryder Cup: Match recaps, Day 1Ryder Cup: Match recaps, Day 1

FRIDAY MORNING FOUR-BALLS Match 1: Brooks Koepka / Tony Finau, USA, def. Justin Rose / Jon Rahm, Europe, 1-up Holes won: Europe 4, USA 5 Holes led: Europe 14 USA 1 Recap: After trailing for almost the entire match, the Americans stole a pivotal point with a great finish, helped by an incredible bounce. Koepka and Finau were two down with six holes to play and still under pressure when they reached the par-3 16th tee a hole behind. But Finau’s shot, that appeared well short and too far right, caught the wooden bulkhead and bounced up to just 3 feet from the hole. The birdie squared the match and then a pair of pars on the last was enough to steal the match when Rose found water and Rahm trouble in the deep rough. Quotes: “We will take the breaks when we can get them. I knew it needed to get up a little bit. It rose on me a little bit, started to spin. I said get lucky somehow, that’s what I was thinking in my head. Fortunately it did. That was a huge break for us.â€� – Tony Finau “Feels like two (points). They got us down early, which you never really plan on, but you just got to fight and keep fighting.â€� – Brooks Koepka Match 2: Dustin Johnson / Rickie Fowler, USA def. Rory McIlroy / Thorbjorn Olesen, Europe, 4 and 2 Holes won: Europe 1, USA 5 Holes led: Europe 1 USA 7 Recap: After halving the opening seven holes the European side took the lead on the par-3 eighth when neither American could make par. But it was the last bit of joy the home side faced. With Rory McIlroy playing poorly and unable to find a single birdie it was up to rookie Olesen to keep pace. He couldn’t despite some decent play. Fowler made back-to-back birdies around the turn to wrestle the lead and Johnson then stepped up with two of his own to create a big cushion. Johnson sealed the match with a clutch iron to a few feet on the 16th hole. Quotes: “I think the big thing was we tried to both be in as many holes as we could. We just played some solid golf. When one of us was out of the hole, the other picked the guy up. We knew that was going to be needed against Rory and Thorbjørn. They’re great ball-strikers, and knew it was going to be a tough match.â€� – Rickie Fowler “We believe in each other. Our demeanors are pretty similar, especially on the golf course. We practice a lot together. We spend a lot of time together, whether out here this week or even at home. We felt we’d be really good partners, and so far so good.â€� – Dustin Johnson Match 3: Jordan Spieth / Justin Thomas, USA def. Paul Casey / Tyrrell Hatton, Europe, 1-up Holes won: Europe 3, USA 4 Holes led: Europe 0 USA 16 Recap: It appeared the birth of a new super team for the USA after the good friends stormed to a 3-up lead through just seven holes. Spieth’s putter found form and the pair of former FedExCup champions were on fire. But Casey and Hatton refused to roll over and wins on 11, 12 and 13 squared the match. Thomas made his move to reclaim the lead on the 15th hole and they held firm over the difficult closing stretch. Quotes: “It was great. Playing Ryder Cups over here are extremely fun. We were able to feed off each other. We ham-and-egged it extremely well around this golf course. I don’t think we birdied the same hole once. We made a lot of birdies today. What a blast that was.â€� – Jordan Spieth “We’ve talked about this really for so long, so long being all of nine or so years, but it’s cool to finally be here and doing it. We’ve spent time at Ryder Cups together. We’ve played in the Junior Ryder Cup and he’s played in a couple of these now and it’s been my first. There’s not a partner in the world I’d rather have a chance to go out here with.â€� – Justin Thomas Match 4: Francesco Molinari / Tommy Fleetwood, Europe, def. Tiger Woods / Patrick Reed, USA, 3 and 1 Holes won: Europe 7, USA 4 Holes led: Europe 7 USA 3 Recap: The most up and down battle of the morning finished with a European flurry to post their only point of the Four-ball session. Woods and Reed were touted to be a formidable mix but Molinari set a tone with an opening birdie. Through eight holes things were tight and square before Woods took the ninth with birdie and Reed chipped in for birdie on the 10th to go 2-up. And then the European revival took flight. Molinari posted back-to-back birdies to square the match at 11 and 12 before Fleetwood stepped up late. Huge birdie putts on the 15th and 16th holes from the Englishman took control of the match and then just for good measure Molinari made a long one on the 17th to close it out. Quotes: “Just unreal. We had that little tough stretch in the middle of the round, I lost three holes out of four, I think, it’s easy for it to go flat, but the crowds, the home crowds, as soon as Fran holed that putt on 11, things changed straightaway. And the crowd carried us through it all the way. There is nothing like it. And that’s just my first morning experience. Guys have done this 10 times. There is nothing like it, and I can’t wait to get out and do it again.â€� – Tommy Fleetwood “I love him. What can I say? I love him. We both played really well. We had a couple of moments where we had to dig in, but we both stayed positive.â€� – Francesco Molinari

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Captain America Patrick Reed ready to end U.S. Ryder Cup drought in EuropeCaptain America Patrick Reed ready to end U.S. Ryder Cup drought in Europe

It had been a week of painted faces and weird hairdos and rah-rah team spirit, but Patrick Reed had his game face on. He wanted an early knockout. This was at the 2006 Canon Cup, which features the nation’s top 40 boys and girls from the American Junior Golf Association, East versus West, at Conway Farms outside Chicago. Reed was 15. “He wasn’t a big name in junior golf yet,â€� says Walker Hill, who was with AJGA for 13 years and captained the East Team. “He had won the British Junior in ’06, but Patrick came on the scene in that match-play format as kind of an unknown to a lot of people. He was new. But right off the bat, he was a presence.â€� Other players, such as the West’s Rickie Fowler and the East’s Peter Uihlein, were bigger names, but Reed’s results spoke for themselves. On day one, he and Lion Kim beat Cody Gribble and Drew Kittleson, 1 up. On day two, he and Ji Moon beat Josh Jones and Kyle Stanley, 5 and 4. By the last day of singles matches, Reed was campaigning to play against the West’s best player. “We were pretty far behind,â€� says Hill, who now works for a homeless ministry in St. Louis. “I ended up putting Patrick in the anchor match because of his tenacity. All he wanted to do was play their best player, which was going to be either Rickie Fowler or Kyle Stanley.â€� Stanley had won some big tournaments, as had Fowler. Uihlein, the reigning Rolex Junior Player of the Year, was among Reed’s teammates on the East squad, as were Isabel and Marika Lendl, daughters of the tennis legend Ivan. By comparison, Reed had garnered little attention. Not yet. But he’d earned the right to play the best from the West. “It ended up being Kyle Stanley,â€� Hill continues. “Patrick had beaten him in the team setup, and he kept saying, ‘This kid is not going to see hole 15.’ He either wrote 15 on his golf ball, or on his golf glove, as his motivation. And, of course, he closed him out on 14, beat him 5 and 4 and Kyle didn’t see hole 15. “Even back then, Patrick was a confident young man,â€� Hill adds. “He was never cocky; he was a genuine guy that just flat-out competes.â€� The Ryder Cup starts later this week at Le Golf National outside Paris, where Reed and the U.S. Team will try to win on foreign soil for the first time since 1993. Reed is 6-1-2 in two Ryder appearances, and he’s similarly potent in the Presidents Cup (4-3-2 in two appearances, including a 4-0-1 mark with partner Jordan Spieth). While the above scene 12 years ago did not take place in either of those events, others like it are burned into our memory. The bonkers singles victory over Rory McIlroy at Hazeltine in 2016. The grind-it-out takedown of Henrik Stenson at Gleneagles in 2014, when Reed shushed the European crowd. Other Reed exploits, like the college grudge matches against Harris English (Georgia) and Uihlein (Oklahoma State) that were part of his 6-0 record as Augusta State won national titles in 2010 and ’11, we’ve heard about enough to feel like we were there. Collectively, Reed’s body of work begs the question: How did he get so good at this? Absolute absorption Life is messy, and you can’t always know where you stand, but not so in match play. It’s right in front of you — the hole-by-hole stakes (win/lose/tie), the threat (your opponent is never out of sight), and how everyone feels (your teammates are with you, America loves you, and everyone else not so much). All of which helps explain why Reed goes into this Ryder Cup as America’s toughest out. In college, he was so excitable for match play, his nickname was Next Level. But excitement and enthusiasm only go so far; Reed, more than most players this side of Ian Poulter (more on him shortly), somehow utilizes that run-through-a-wall spirit to elevate his play. “I just get more jacked up, more excited,â€� Reed says of his Captain America persona. “Just really pumped and goin’, and that’s why even if it’s a 5-footer for par, I’m screaming. I think just the show of emotion gets the crowd going, gets me kind of going, kind of picks you up. That’s a week that’s all on adrenaline. “When your back is up against the wall,â€� he adds, “or the team is relying on you, I just learned somehow how to harness that and actually use that in a positive way. I learned how to not get too excited and hit it too far, getting out of my rhythm. My swing almost gets tighter and gets better in those situations.â€� For a while, Reed’s most famous match was against Oklahoma State’s Uihlein in the semifinals of the 2011 NCAA National Championship. They were playing at Karsten Creek, Oklahoma State’s home course, and Uihlein, son of Acushnet CEO Wally Uihlein, was the reigning U.S. Amateur champion and a can’t-miss pro prospect. Reed birdied six of the first 11 holes and won 8 and 7. The next day, in the final, Reed was set to play Harris English of Georgia in the anchor match. Fearing that his man might be too hyped up, since he’d transferred from Georgia, then-Augusta coach Josh Gregory approached Reed to dispense some sort of coaching advice. “I walked up to him and he said, ‘Don’t even say a word. I’ve got this,’â€� Gregory recalls.“I walked up to him and he said, ‘Don’t even say a word. I’ve got this.’ Reed did. He beat English, giving Augusta its second national title. “I’ve told a lot of people this: I think Patrick could potentially go down as one of the best Ryder Cup players of all time,â€� Gregory says. “He’s so tough to beat one-on-one; he’s not afraid of anything. The Spieth-Reed pairing has been so successful, and they feed off each other, and when things are going well they’re two of the best players in the world. “Patrick’s kind of like a linebacker playing golf,â€� adds Gregory, who has since left the school and counts Reed as one of his many students on the PGA TOUR and Web.com Tour. “He’s got that I-want-to-hit-you mentality. I want to knock you down.â€� Perhaps no match in recent memory evoked a college football rivalry game, or maybe a boxing match or MMA tilt, more than Reed going toe-to-toe with Rory McIlroy at Hazeltine two years ago. Their flurry of front-nine birdies and an eagle produced an uncharacteristic moment of bravado from McIlroy (“I can’t hear you!â€� he yelled to the crowd, cupping his hand to his ear), a finger wag (Reed, after answering McIlroy’s crazy birdie with one of his own), and deafening eruptions from the large American crowd as Reed produced a wildly entertaining 1-up victory. Although the quality of play dipped slightly on the back nine, it was an unforgettable, rollicking good time that set the tone for a U.S. victory. Following on the ground, Poulter, who was 12-4-2 in five Ryder Cup starts before an injury left him in the role of vice-captain in 2016, was duly impressed—maybe the highest praise any U.S. player could ever receive, considering the source. “He gets it,â€� Poulter, who earned a captain’s pick to rejoin this year’s European side, says of Reed. “He gets the Ryder Cup. There’s a lot of passion and excitement and he definitely gets it. He enjoys that atmosphere, he embraces it. That was a fun match to be a part of.â€� Heartbeat of America Jeff Overton was an American catalyst at Celtic Manor in 2010, a narrow victory for Europe, and Keegan Bradley was that guy at Medinah in 2012, but almost as quickly as they came on the scene they stopped making Ryder and Presidents Cup teams. The U.S. has at times struggled to find a consistent heartbeat. Meanwhile, Europe had Poulter, Colin Montgomerie and Sergio Garcia, competitors for whom the Ryder Cup has had a transformational effect, making very good players reliably great over long-time horizons. But in Reed, it seems, the U.S. teams have their heartbeat. What’s more, he doesn’t appear to be going anywhere, having taken his career to the next level with his Masters victory in April. There was even a hint of his Ryder and Presidents Cup prowess in that career-defining win, as many Masters patrons were cheering not for Reed but for his playing partner, McIlroy, to complete the career Grand Slam. What’s more, McIlroy had engaged in some Ryder Cup-style gamesmanship, telling the press after the third round that all the pressure was going to be on Reed. “That was music to Patrick’s ears,â€� Gregory says. “Don’t poke the bear.â€� In truth, Reed has been the heartbeat of every team he’s played on since that ’06 Canon Cup, where Fowler had his hair done up in something resembling a Statue of Liberty crown, and players who sat out a session caddied for teammates who were competing. “I knew Slick Rick back then,â€� Reed says of Fowler. “When I saw (the hairdo), it made me laugh pretty hard. I thought it was cool that when we weren’t playing, our other teammates were playing and we were caddying, wearing bare feet, trying to coach them on what to do. It was a blast.â€� He smiles at the memory. “We all stayed in the same hotel,â€� Reed continues, “on the same floor, and we’re all pulling pranks on the other guys and stuff like that. It was stuff that kids can do but you wouldn’t get away with now; if I tried to pull pranks on Rosy or Stenson, you might get hit. You might get thrown out of the room. Who knows what would go on?â€� If Reed’s opponents don’t always know what to make of him, it should be noted that some of his teammates don’t, either. Ask the best American players about Reed and, almost to a man, they shrug and say they don’t know him that well. However, they add, they’re “glad he’s on our side.â€� Indeed, Reed keeps mostly to himself, sometimes with headphones on. More than many players his age, Reed appreciates that social media is just noise and professional golf isn’t a popularity contest. The game is the thing — and winning supersedes all. “Patrick can go in, whether he’s in form or out of form, and he can play some of the best golf he’s ever played,â€� says Spieth, with whom Reed has gone 8-1-3 in team play, including 4-1-2 in the Ryder Cup. “It’s an odd thing to do. “So much of it has to do with the physical aspects, right?â€� Spieth adds, as if he’s still trying to figure it out himself. “The fine-tuning. For him it almost doesn’t matter, he can, like, will the ball where he wants it to go, and he’s so confident and aggressive in the way he putts, especially inside of 12 feet, at the Ryder Cup. I don’t know how he does it.â€� Especially memorable, Spieth added, was a Four-ball match at the 2016 Ryder Cup in which Reed went on a birdie barrage and he and Spieth beat Henrik Stenson and Justin Rose, 2 and 1. “I had played poorly,â€� Spieth says, “and whoever was Henrik’s partner had played poorly that day, and it was kind of a one-on-one show within the best-ball match.â€� Reed birdied 5, eagled 6, birdied 7, and birdied 8. Stenson tried to answer, but when Reed birdied 14 and 15 to give the Americans a 3-up lead with three to go, it was basically over. If Spieth and others sometimes marvel at Reed, Reed has at times been captivated by the heroics of his Euro equivalent, Poulter. As the rappers put it: Game recognize game. This played out most vividly when the fiery Englishman Poulter made five straight birdies to close out a four-ball match victory with partner Rory McIlroy at the 2012 Ryder Cup at Medinah. Reed watched it all on TV as Poulter’s thrusting fists, bugging eyes, and piercing screams woke up Europe, setting the tone for the continent’s wildly improbable comeback the next day. “I’m just sitting there,â€� Reed says, “like: Yeah, I want a piece of him.â€� Asked what would happen if the two met in singles, Reed makes no brash predictions other than to note that he has already defeated Stenson and McIlroy, two of Europe’s toughest competitors. A bemused smile comes over Poulter’s face when presented with the same hypothetical. “We’ll see,â€� Poulter says. “We’ll see.â€� Beating Poulter, though, would not be the ne plus ultra of team golf for Captain America. The ultimate, for Reed, would be leading what he has calls the underdog U.S. Team to its first Ryder Cup win on foreign soil in 25 years in front of what is sure to be a hostile crowd. It’s bound to be hard, and rowdy, but you get the sense that Patrick Reed prefers it that way.

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