Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Draws and Fades: PGA Championship

Draws and Fades: PGA Championship

If you play PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf and you’re on the fence to burn the final start for any of your possibilities at the PGA Championship, your best default is to open with any of those candidates on your bench and leave them there until the 36-hole cut falls. (REMINDER: The cut at the PGA Championship is low 70 and ties.) RELATED: Horses for Courses | Sleeper picks With only two tournaments remaining in Segment 3, and projecting that round-by-round fantasy scoring will be low at Southern Hills Country Club, there is no reason to rush into any golfer unless he’s unlikely to play at Colonial and/or Muirfield Village where fantasy scoring will be higher. Consider your experience at the Wells Fargo Championship just two weeks ago when actual scores were among the highest of the season. Until bonus points were applied to your starters in the final round, hanging up a zero in any round was addition by subtraction. For example, I played Matt Kuchar in all four rounds. He finished T49 at 7-over 287 and netted one fantasy point, that via his FedExCup bonus. In other words, if there ever was a week to sit the studs, that was it. The beautiful thing about the PGA Championship – other than the breathtaking course – is that the field is deeper than every other this side of THE PLAYERS Championship. Mix in one or two hard-charging internationals among the sometimers to reserve a start for one or two who project to contribute more in the two weeks that follow. POWER RANKINGS WILD CARD Shane Lowry (+125 for a Top 20) … This is a major, so it’s only rightful that he’s an extension of the Power Rankings proper. In fact, based on reaction to the PR, he’s a snub, and I can’t disagree even though I write the thing. Phenomenal form upon arrival with all of the data supports a continuation, he hasn’t done anything to warrant concern. But if he finishes solo 21st, I’m a genius. DRAWS Dustin Johnson (+110 for a Top 20) … In his first start as a married man, he finished T59 at the AT&T Byron Nelson, but there’s nothing to read into there, gang. Expectations for success always are way up there for the 24-time PGA TOUR winner, so every forgettable result to which you’re attached emotionally feels personal, but Southern Hills will reward his tee-to-green strengths, so go ahead and push for something stronger than this bet. Tyrrell Hatton (+225 for a Top 20) … In the numbers game of the Power Rankings, he just missed. In his last four stroke-play starts in individual competition, he’s finished no better than T21, and none of those were in a field as thick as this week’s. So, he slots nicely as a cornerstone to make the cut and take his talents into the weekend. Talor Gooch (+333 for a Top 20) … It’s easy to spin positively about anyone in the field with ties to the Sooner State, but it’s the right call for the native and resident of Midwest City, an eastern suburb of Oklahoma City about 90 miles southwest of Southern Hills. While he’s cooled a bit since his breakthrough title at The RSM Classic six months ago, he’s still been connecting for top 20s with regularity. One of the best around the greens and currently leading the PGA TOUR in par-3 scoring, a handy weapon in the winds. Keegan Bradley (+250 for a Top 20) … Fun fact: Back in the day when I was hosting and producing live text chats at Rotoworld, at the very end of the hang for the 2011 PGA Championship, a reader asked for only the name of a longshot. My answer: Keegan Bradley. Sho’nuff, the then-PGA TOUR rookie went out and prevailed in Atlanta in what was his major debut. He already had won the Nelson that season, so my short list was limited to recent winners, but Bradley also checked all of the boxes statistically. With four years of weekly, hands-on experience analyzing the sport and over 15 years playing fantasy, I was confident. Keegs has been dynamite on challenging courses in the last couple of months, so he no longer is a longshot. Brian Harman (+450 for a Top 20) … Keeps on keepin’ on. Went through the process of committing late to the AT&T Byron Nelson only to withdraw early, but even though the strength-of-field rating at TPC Craig Ranch was a sturdy 371, he may have determined that contributing to his divisor in the Official World Golf Ranking via only the PGA Championship was the better move to position better to qualify for The Open Championship via the next top 50. Whatever the case, he finished T9 the week prior in the test outside D.C., and he compensates for relative distance lost off the tee with accuracy and precision on approach. Confident short game and putting continues to pay off the efforts. Seamus Power (+333 for a Top 20) … The 35-year-old hadn’t qualified for a major until the Masters last month. Like more and more first-timers at Augusta National in the last couple of editions, he busted the trend that experience is required and finished T27. He’s 23rd in the FedExCup with four top 10s and another six top 25s, but he presents as a sleeper this week because of the star power around him. His analytics are eye-popping and he’s entirely worth full value of this bet. Tommy Fleetwood Sergio Garcia Russell Henley Billy Horschel Jason Kokrak Matt Kuchar Anirban Lahiri Sebastián Muñoz Ryan Palmer Adam Scott Harold Varner III Jhonattan Vegas Aaron Wise Odds sourced on Wednesday, May 18th at 9 a.m. ET. For live odds visit betmgm FADES K.H. Lee … Checks to see if the PGA Championship is contested at TPC Craig Ranch. No? OK, then. He’s equipped better to handle the comedown after defending his title in Texas than last year’s surprise breakthrough, but it’s still a fact that he’s 0-for-5 in the majors. Zero reason to expect lightning to strike in that bottle again this soon. Webb Simpson … At the certainty of repeating the lament, he still hasn’t put four rounds together since returning from missing two months due to a herniated disc in his neck. Marc Leishman … On Twitter Spaces for GolfBet in advance of the AT&T Byron Nelson, I stated that I’ve drifted accidentally into the position of an apologist in support of the Aussie. The absence of a top 10 in seven months doesn’t seem possible given how great of a fit he’s been for all the reasons. Even last week, he had an eagle-1, -2 and a pair of -3s, yet managed to finish T51. The cynic in me believes that, on the spectrum of golfers who have gone through the gauntlet of Riviera, Bay Hill, TPC Sawgrass, the Match Play, Augusta National, the team format in NOLA and the challenge at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm, someone will be situated near an endpoint of disappointing returns. The silence can’t last, and it should have ended last week, but there’s no reason to think that he makes noise at Southern Hills after so many solid looks without meeting even one expectation. Abraham Ancer … No top 30s in stroke-play competition in seven consecutive starts and no top 25s in the same format on the PGA TOUR since Mayakoba in November. Southern Hills isn’t a track where he’s going to find an elixir, either. Bubba Watson … He should love how the topography of the course fits visually with his style of play, but the form just isn’t there. The turning point was Riviera where he’s had so much success and still missed the cut despite months of inspiring performances. Tony Finau … He’s showing signs that his putting is turning a corner but not enough to warrant hope for something special beyond making the cut. Matthew Wolff … Well, I was on board at TPC Craig Ranch last week, but that didn’t pan out. If he wasn’t an Oklahoma State University product, I may have omitted him, but he continues to struggle in putting two rounds together, much less four. Cameron Tringale … Loyal readers already know what’s coming. In 21 starts in the majors and THE PLAYERS, he’s cashed just 10 times and only once for a top 25 (T16, 2016 PLAYERS). Bottom line, his game has not played up on the biggest stages. Jason Day Rickie Fowler Garrick Higgo Nicolai Højgaard Chris Kirk Kevin Kisner Luke List Patrick Reed Henrik Stenson Lee Westwood Bernd Wiesberger RETURNING TO COMPETITION Bryson DeChambeau … Easily the biggest question mark as we encroach on the opening round. He had surgery to repair the hamate bone in his left hand on April 14. In the context of elevated expectations, at best this is a potential boon for full-season owners who have been crushed by his decision to sit out the entire fall and failure to stay healthy in 2022. Daniel Berger … Careful here. He was slated to play the Mexico Open at Vidanta but withdrew early due to a sore back. Fine. That’s an international trip. However, his back also thwarted his title defense at Pebble Beach in February. Of course, in between those episodes, he went 5-for-5 with a solo fourth at PGA National headlining a trio of top 25s. Louis Oosthuizen … This is his first live action since he pulled out of the Masters before his second round with a sore back. The irony was that one of his playing partners was Tiger Woods, he of his own comeback at the time and curiosity of the physical capability to complete two rounds, much less make the cut and complete all 72 holes as he did. For the record, while Oosthuizen has withdrawn twice during competition in the last six months (RSM), he hasn’t missed a cut since the 2020 edition of the RSM. NOTABLES WDs Phil Mickelson … The defending champion announced late last week that he will remain sidelined indefinitely. He hasn’t played anywhere since early February. Sungjae Im … Complications regarding travel from his native South Korea after testing positive for COVID-19 made it impossible for him to arrive at Southern Hills in time. He was among the handful of internationals who opted not to compete in the 2021 Open Championship as a result of challenges related to the pandemic. Paul Casey … Extended discomfort in his back has prevented him from playing, or at least trying to play since his mid-tournament withdrawal just two holes into the first round of the Match Play in late March. This is his third early WD since. Harris English … Had hoped to give it a go for the first time since having surgery to repair a torn labrum in his right hip on Feb. 14. Jimmy Walker … Out since missing the cut at home in San Antonio. This is the first PGA Championship he’s missed since taking the title in 2016. Davis Love III … Recently withdrew after two rounds of the Mitsubishi Electric Classic on the PGA TOUR Champions. An explanation wasn’t released; he was T53 at the time. This is the fourth edition of the last seven PGA Championships that the 1997 winner has skipped. He’s missed the cut in his last seven appearances dating back to 2012. RECAP – AT&T BYRON NELSON POWER RANKINGS Power Ranking Golfer Result 1 Scottie Scheffler T15 2 Justin Thomas T5 3 Will Zalatoris MC 4 Jordan Spieth 2nd 5 Sam Burns MC 6 Talor Gooch MC 7 Xander Schauffele T5 8 Joaquin Niemann T25 9 Brian Harman DNP 10 Hideki Matsuyama T3 11 Marc Leishman T51 12 Dustin Johnson T59 13 Jhonattan Vegas T59 14 Cameron Champ T38 15 Aaron Wise T51 Wild Card Tommy Fleetwood T59 SLEEPERS Golfer (Bet) Result Joohyung (Tom) Kim (+550 for a Top 20) T17 Maverick McNealy (+200 for a Top 20) T32 Shaun Norris (+650 for a Top 20) MC Cameron Percy (+1100 for a Top 20) MC Callum Tarren (+1100 for a Top 20) T46 GOLFBET Bet: Adam Hadwin – Top 30 (+190) Result: MC BIRTHDAYS AMONG ACTIVE MEMBERS OF THE PGA TOUR May 17 … Hunter Mahan (40) May 18 … Christiaan Bezuidenhout (28) May 19 … Austin Smotherman (28) May 20 … Branden Grace (34) May 21 … Stewart Cink (49); Gary Woodland (38); John Huh (32) May 22 … Scott Brown (39); Jason Kokrak (37) May 23 … none

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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
Ludvig Aberg+400
Collin Morikawa+450
Jon Rahm+450
Justin Thomas+550
Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+450
Bryson DeChambeau+800
Justin Thomas+1600
Collin Morikawa+2200
Jon Rahm+2200
Xander Schauffele+2200
Ludvig Aberg+2500
Joaquin Niemann+3000
Brooks Koepka+4000
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AdventHealth Championship
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Kensei Hirata+2000
Mitchell Meissner+2200
SH Kim+2200
Neal Shipley+2500
Seungtaek Lee+2800
Hank Lebioda+3000
Chandler Blanchet+3500
Pierceson Coody+3500
Rick Lamb+3500
Trey Winstead+3500
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Regions Tradition
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Stewart Cink+550
Steve Stricker+650
Ernie Els+700
Steven Alker+750
Miguel Angel Jimenez+1200
Bernhard Langer+1400
Jerry Kelly+1600
Alex Cejka+1800
Retief Goosen+2500
Richard Green+2500
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US Open 2025
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Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
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USA-150
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Quick look at the Desert ClassicQuick look at the Desert Classic

The PGA TOUR is back on the mainland – specifically the Coachella Valley in Southern California. This year marks the 60th anniversary of the Desert Classic. Arnold Palmer won the inaugural event in 1960, then won it for a fifth time in 1973, a victory that would be the last TOUR win of his legendary career. We’ll be thinking of Arnie this week. THE FLYOVER The 435-yard par-4 18th at the Stadium Course was ranked in the middle of the pack among all closing holes on TOUR last season (25th of 51 with a stroke average of 4.043). Water down the left side and a bunker complex on the right ratchets up the difficulty level – especially if you’re in the mix late Sunday afternoon. PGA West master instructor Bryan Lebedevich discusses the challenges of the 18th below. LANDING ZONE The 195-yard par-3 13th ranked 26th hardest among the 918 holes played on the PGA TOUR last season, playing to a stroke average of 3.302. Not only did it produce 13 double bogeys, but also eight “others.â€� The other 17 holes combined at the Stadium Course had nine others. Because of the water, you can’t miss left, and there’s not much room right of the green to bail out. So, yeah, pretty tough hole. Here’s where all recorded tee shots landed last year. WEATHER CHECK From PGA TOUR meteorologist Wade Stettner: “Another storm system will impact Southern California on Thursday with mostly cloudy skies and a chance for rain showers. Most of the rain will fall west of the mountains, but there may still be a few light showers and periods of light rain. Total rainfall on Thursday is forecast under 0.10 of an inch. Dry weather is forecast from Friday through Sunday with warm afternoon temperatures. Breezy conditions are forecast on Friday with winds gusting to 25 mph.â€� For the latest weather news from La Quinta, California, check out PGATOUR.COM’s Weather Hub. SOUND CHECK I get a good vibe in California. I like it. What can I say?   BY THE NUMBERS 5 – Players in the FedExCup era who made the Desert Classic their first career TOUR victory (Charley Hoffman in 2007, Pat Perez in 2009, Bill Haas in 2010, Jhonattan Vegas in 2011 and Hudson Swafford in 2017). 68.83 – Scoring average last season at La Quinta, making it the third easiest course on TOUR behind Aronimink (67.88) and Sedgefield (68.69). That was also the lowest scoring average at La Quinta in the ShotLink era since 1983. 7,503 – Strokes under par on the par 5s at the Desert Classic since 2012. No other tournament on TOUR has had easier par 5s than the three courses used at this event. SCATTERSHOTS 30-Birdie Club: Since the 2013-14 PGA TOUR season, there have been four TOUR winners who made 30 total birdies on their way to victory in four-round events. Two of those have come at the Desert Classic — Jason Dufner in 206 and Patrick Reed in 2014. The other two were Justin Thomas at the 2015 CIMB Classic and Michael Kim at the 2018 John Deere Classic. Charl’s Debut: Among the first-time Desert Classic participants this week is South African Charl Schwartzel, who will be making his 183rd career start on the PGA TOUR. Schwartzel’s best results in any tournament debut were solo thirds at the 2013 AT&T Byron Nelson and third (with teammate Louis Oosthuizen) at the 2018 Zurich Classic of New Orleans. Fast Starter: Will 2007 Desert Classic winner Charley Hoffman gets off to another fast start this week? He’s a combined 42 under in the first round in his 11 career starts (five different courses), and his first-round stroke average of 68.18 is his third-best Round 1 scoring average at any tournament . He has 11 opening-round scores of par or better. After starting at La Quinta the last four years, Hoffman will start out at the Stadium Course on Thursday with Schwartzel as his playing partner (along with their amateur teammates). Another Big Hitter: USC freshman Charlie Reiter is considered one of the longest hitters of any 2019 freshman golfer. The Palm Desert High School grad, who is playing on a sponsor exemption this week, isn’t exactly sure how he generates all that power. “I think I was just born with it, maybe,â€� he said.

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Jon Rahm leads after Round 3 of THE PLAYERS ChampionshipJon Rahm leads after Round 3 of THE PLAYERS Championship

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Jon Rahm felt like every shot would be good and most of them were Saturday as he posted an 8-under 64 and built a one-shot lead over Rory McIlroy and Tommy Fleetwood at THE PLAYERS Championship. Five shots behind going into the third round, Rahm shot 30 on the back nine at the TPC Sawgrass Stadium Course and surged into the lead when McIlroy and Fleetwood couldn’t keep pace. His only bogey was on the sixth hole, and even that landed next to the pin until running over the back. “Didn’t miss many shots out there,” Rahm said. “Really, really confident with my irons. Every time I stepped up, I felt like I was going to hit a good shot.” There were too many to single out for the 24-year-old Spaniard, who was at 15-under 201. McIlroy and Fleetwood struggled from the start and both eventually recovered, McIlroy sooner than Fleetwood. McIlroy muffed a chip and had to scramble for bogey on the opening hole, hit a chip over the green on the par-5 second hole and turned potential birdie into bogey, and that was as bad as it got. He still was under par at the turn by running off three birdies, including a 4-iron to a foot on the hardest par 3 on the course at No. 8. But after a two-putt birdie on the par-5 11th, McIlroy’s chances dried up. Even on the par-5 16th, he tried a low runner out of the pine trees and it came out so hot that it ran through the green and into the water. Even so, he was bogey-free over the last 16 holes and shot 70. And he can at least avoid questions about winning from the final group, something McIlroy hasn’t done in his last nine occasions dating to the start of 2018. “I just need to hit fairways and greens. If I can do that, and take the opportunities I give myself, hopefully I can turn tomorrow into the best Sunday of the year so far,” McIlroy said. Fleetwood missed a 30-inch putt on the opening hole and took double bogey, and he fell three shots behind through seven holes. He holed a 30-foot birdie putt on No. 8 after McIlroy tapped in for his birdie, and then picked up four birdies where they were available for his 70. “It was just a grind,” he said. “I’m glad I showed the strength mentally more than anything. Under par is always a good score around here no matter how you play.” Jason Day had a 68 and was three shots behind. Tiger Woods was five shots better on the par-3 17th — a quadruple bogey on Friday, a 2-foot birdie putt on Saturday — but still started so slowly that even a late run of birdies was only good for a 72. Five players were within five shots of Rahm, the deficit the Spaniard made up on Saturday. That group included Brandt Snedeker (65) and Keegan Bradley (68), and Dustin Johnson, who played the par 5s at even and still shot a 69. Rahm, who already has six worldwide victories in just short of three years as a pro, was still lagging behind when he made the turn, and then quickly moved to the top. After a short birdie on the 10th, he hit 4-iron from 243 yards to 3 feet on a front left pin at the par-5 11th for an eagle. He hit the right shot on the par-3 13th, with the pin below a ridge near the water, into 3 feet for another birdie. By the end of the day, his 64 was about as high as it could have been. He two-putted from just inside 15 feet for a birdie on the 16th, and he had another birdie chance from about that range on the 18th that would have tied the course record. No matter. He was in the lead, facing a Sunday pairing with Fleetwood as he goes for the most important win of his young career. It figures to be a mental test as much as anything he does with his irons. The Stadium Course can take as quickly as it gives, and the forecast was for much stronger wind — compared with very little on Saturday — and cooler weather. Rahm is fiery, and his emotions at times can get in his way. He has worked hard to control his temper and still let his passion carry him to great shots. “It was a year of personal growth rather than golf game,” Rahm said. “It’s been a work in progress of many years to get to this point, and it’s hard to do when you’re playing highly competitive golf. … This is what I called earlier a midterm of hopefully a very good final project.”

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