Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting DraftKings preview: World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship

DraftKings preview: World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship

The TOUR will travel about 10 miles northwest of Mexico City for the first World Golf Championship of the year. The WGC-Mexico Championship being played at Club de Golf Chapultepec. The course will play as a 7,355-yard, par-71. The players will putt on poa annua greens for the third consecutive week. RELATED: Tee times | Power Rankings | Horses for Courses This is the fourth year the tournament will be played at Chapultepec. Dustin Johnson has won two of the previous three tournaments here, with Phil Mickelson sandwiching a win in 2018 between Johnson’s wins in 2017 and 2019. Mickelson, along with Tiger Woods and Rickie Fowler are some notables not in the field this week. The course ranked 17th in difficulty last year but played easier in 2018, ranking 31st in scoring relative to par. What will be different from most weeks on TOUR is the altitude. Golf Club de Chapultepec is about 7,400 feet above sea level, which should equate to the course playing less than 7,000 yards long. The course will be similar in grass type to Riviera Country Club, but it’s not the only course we’ve seen a correlation with. Other places like Torrey Pines, the Plantation Course at Kapalua and the Omega European Masters played in Switzerland on a course 4,920 feet above sea level share similarities in layout and leaderboards.  Driving distance will not be an advantage nor a necessity at Club de Golf Chapultepec, but more utilized for the par-5s all measuring over 570 yards with two being over 600 yards. If the course isn’t long, where does the difficulty lie? It’s heavily tree-lined along the fairways so you’ll need to have a modicum of accuracy off the tee and have the correct angles into these greens, many of which are two-tiered. Lineups should also have players who’ve experienced the difficulties with poa annua over the past two weeks or one of the past two weeks with a higher average rate of three putts per round at this course over the TOUR average. As always, focusing on elite ball-strikers, mainly through approach, will be key where distance control may be tough to gauge at elevation. Rory McIlroy ($11,500) His Sunday was a letdown, losing two strokes on the greens and 1.5 strokes with his irons, which is not the Rory we’re used to seeing over his past few tournaments. Even though his Sunday was quite messy, he still didn’t lose strokes with his ball-striking and travels to a tournament where he’s finished T7 in 2017 and runner up last year. He’s been at or near the top in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green dating back to the past 25 tournaments he’s played in as well as first in his past three tournaments on TOUR. What is also going to help is how great he’s been around the greens, especially compared to the other golfers in this price range ranking seventh over his past 12 rounds. Xander Schauffele ($9,400) A 23rd last week at Genesis feels like a letdown, especially when he was rostered in over 25% of lineups in GPP contests and 36% in cash lineups. Hopefully this decreases his projected ownership this week at a no-cut event, a format that seems to fit his game with elite finishes throughout his career and more recently a runner-up at both the WGC-HSBC Champions and the Sentry Tournament of Champions this season. He ranked ninth in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green last week, but Schauffele lost close to 1.5 strokes on poa annua greens, which is not the norm. He should be able to regain some confidence with his putter ranking inside the top 15 in Strokes Gained: Putting over his past three tournaments on poa annua greens. Sergio Garcia ($8,600) Garcia had a nice return to the PGA TOUR at Riviera ranking 10th in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green last week, but he lost four strokes putting leading to a mediocre finish. Being inside the top 40 at the Genesis isn’t terrible, but Garcia’s been great here recording two top 10 finishes in back-to-back starts at Club de Golf Chapultepec. His solid ball-striking should continue at a course where he’s hit the ball well, finishing inside the top six in Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green over the past two years. He should also be able to find the short grass this week, ranking 12th in fairways gained over the field in his past three tournaments. If he can have an average putting week, he could be in contention come Sunday. Matt Fitzpatrick ($8,000) We’ve seen some crossover with course condition and layout at Club de Golf Chapultepec and the Omega European Masters played at Crans-sur-Sierre GC in Switzerland, a tournament that Fitzpatrick has won in back-to-back years in 2017 and 2018. This doesn’t mean Fitzpatrick will automatically have success in Mexico — his best finish is a T16 back in 2017 — but he’s striking the ball well, ranking 10th in Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green and eighth in fairways gained over the field in his past three tournaments. Lee Westwood ($6,900) Westwood’s stats aren’t going to jump off the page, but his recent win the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship was impressive beating players like Tommy Fleetwood, Sergio Garcia, Louis Oosthuizen and Matthew Fitzpatrick. He’s also done well at the Omega European Masters over the past two years. It’s not imperative to roster golfers at this salary, but he’s one of a few in this range who’s won recently and the type of upside we should be looking at this price. Put your knowledge to the test. Sign up for DraftKings and experience the game inside the game ABOUT THE WRITER: 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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Five takeaways from the PGA TOUR’s fall swingFive takeaways from the PGA TOUR’s fall swing

There were eight tournaments, and eight winners, from the East Coast to the West Coast to Asia. The best golfers in the world played it safe (Safeway Open) and gambled (Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in Las Vegas). They were hot (CIMB Classic) and cold (The RSM Classic). They won it on the greens (Cameron Champ), the tees (Champ), or both at the same time (Champ). What did it all mean? Here are five takeaways from those eight events. 1. It’s (still) not how you start … Charles Howell III went 3 over for the first four holes but 6 under for the final 14 in capturing The RSM Classic on Sunday. He was the latest fall winner to finish with a flourish. Kevin Tway was four behind playing partner Brandt Snedeker at the turn, reeled off five straight birdies — including three in a sudden-death playoff — and won the Safeway Open. He tied two others for the best score to par, 8 under for the week, on holes 16-18. Bryson DeChambeau played the front nine in just 6 under for the week, but the back in 15 under in winning the Shriners, a continuation of his great play in the FedExCup Playoffs. Brooks Koepka shot a back-nine 29 in the final round to win THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES, then explained, “I’m not somebody that’s going to panic if things go the wrong way, pretty sure everybody can tell that. I just kind of hang in there, wait for my holes, I know I’m going to have some good looks and when I do, you’ve got to capitalize on them.â€� Yep, hitting the back-nine afterburners was kind of a thing in the fall. 2. You could almost measure Strokes Gained: Patience Howell, 39, broke a win drought that went back 333 starts, all the way to the 2007 Genesis Open at Riviera. And he did it one week after Matt Kuchar, 40, broke his own win drought of 116 starts dating back to the 2014 RBC Heritage. When he won for the first time in his 91st start, Tway, 30, made himself and his mostly retired father, Bob, the 10th father-son duo to win on TOUR. Marc Leishman didn’t win last season, but wasted no time in capturing the CIMB Classic, by five, in just the second tournament of the new season. Another example of the power of patience: Leishman said he was hitting the ball everywhere early in the week but found something on the driving range and used it to shoot 26 under, tying the tournament record at TPC Kuala Lumpur. 3. Champ lived up to his name The owner of perhaps the coolest golf moniker since Tiger Woods, Cameron Champ lived up to his surname. Befitting a guy who easily led the Web.com Tour in driving distance, he dominated with his long game in winning the Sanderson Farms Championship in just his ninth TOUR start. Or did he dominate with his short game? Although it’s true that Champ, 23, ranked second for the week in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee at the Sanderson, and led the field with eight drives of 340 yards or longer, he was also second in Stroke Gained: Putting, making over 114 feet of putts in the final round alone. Champ became just the 22nd winner on TOUR since the 2004 introduction of ShotLink lasers to rank in the top two in both categories. Two additional top-10s in the fall tied him for the TOUR lead with Scott Piercy and Gary Woodland, and his 117 birdies were the most of anyone over the first eight tournaments and the most ever for the fall portion of the wraparound season. 4. Koepka, DeChambeau validated Although the fall and the 2018 calendar year in general gave us more than the usual number of comeback stories (see above), Koepka validated his PGA TOUR Player of the Year season with a final-round 64 and a four-shot victory over Woodland at THE CJ CUP. Koepka fans had had to wait only a little over two months since his win at the PGA Championship at Bellerive. DeChambeau also validated in winning the Shriners in Vegas, where he dominated from tee to green. It had been two months and one day since DeChambeau’s win at the Dell Technologies Championship, his second victory in as many weeks in the FedExCup Playoffs last season. He also further cemented his status as a premier ball-striker. He ranked 6th in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee and 3rd in Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green in Vegas, making up for his 45th in Strokes Gained: Putting. In all five of his wins, DeChambeau has not ranked worse than 27th in either SG: Off-the-Tee or SG: Approach-the-Green. 5. Spieth, Finau will command extra eyeballs in ’19 Jordan Spieth is back! That was the conventional wisdom after his opening 66 at the Shriners, his first fall TOUR start in the U.S., but rounds of 68-71-72 dropped him into a T55 finish. Not what he was looking for as he comes off a winless season that saw him struggle on the greens. There were fewer highlights as Spieth missed the cut at the Mayakoba Golf Classic (71-69) the next week, but focus may have been hard to come by as he prepped for his impending marriage to his longtime girlfriend, Annie Verret. A former world No. 1 and the 2015 FedExCup champion, Spieth, 25, has dropped to 16th in the Official World Golf Ranking, and will enter the 2019 portion of the schedule tied for 190th in FedExCup points. Tony Finau had better luck in the fall, but after looking nerveless while going 2-1-0 at the Ryder Cup, he shot a final-round 71 and lost a sudden-death playoff to Xander Schauffele at the World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions in Shanghai. Finau, who still hasn’t won since breaking through at the 2016 Puerto Rico Open, later called it a missed opportunity. All of which says—what exactly? The fall doesn’t provide an adequate sample size, Spieth was on the verge of a major life event, and no less a superstar than Dustin Johnson had fumbled at the goal line at the WGC-HSBC Champions. (Yeah, he seemed to survive OK.) It happens. But going into 2019, the mega-talented Spieth and Finau aren’t just due for a win. They’re overdue.

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