Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Dustin Johnson wins 2019-2020 FedExCup by three

Dustin Johnson wins 2019-2020 FedExCup by three

ATLANTA (AP) — Dustin Johnson hit his stride at just the right time and it paid off in a big way. Johnson won the FedExCup on Monday by holding his nerve, hitting just enough fairways and making a few key putts when his lead began to shrink. He tapped in for birdie on the last hole for a 2-under 68, giving him a three-shot victory over Justin Thomas and Xander Schauffele in the TOUR Championship. “This is a tough golf course. No lead is safe,” Johnson said. “The guys gave me a good fight today.” He became the first No. 1 seed at the TOUR Championship to win the FedExCup since Tiger Woods in 2009. Johnson was staked to a five-shot lead at 19-under par — 9 under on his own score and starting the tournament at 10 under as the No. 1 seed in the FedExCup. He finished at 21 under. Schauffele, who tends to bring his best to big moments, and Thomas each got within three shots on the front nine. They both closed to within two shots deep on the back nine at East Lake. Johnson gave the lightest fist pump — that’s big emotion for him — when he holed a 20-foot par putt on the 13th hole that kept his lead at three. He made nothing but pars on the back nine until the outcome was no longer in doubt. Thomas made bogey from a wild tee shot to the right on the 17th. Schauffele also had to scramble on the 17th, escaping with par after a tee shot into the bunker. And on the par-5 18th, Johnson unleashed a drive that started left along the pine trees and faded gently toward the middle of the fairway. That set up a birdie from the front bunker, a hug with brother Austin, his caddie, and a trophy he long wanted. Schauffele had the lowest score over 72 holes at 15-under 265, but without a victory this year, he started at No. 14 in the FedEx Cup, spotting the world’s No. 1 player seven shots. Jon Rahm, the No. 2 seed, closed with a 66 to finish fourth. Scottie Scheffler, who a year ago was getting ready to start his rookie year, had a 66-65 finish and was fifth. And so wrapped up the strangest season on the PGA TOUR. The new season starts Thursday. Two majors are still to be played. Golf was shut down for three months and when it restarted, Johnson was No. 111 in the FedExCup standings. He won the Travelers Championship and a month later began a stretch that brought him to the prize he desperately wanted. In four straight tournaments against the best fields, he had the 54-hole three times and was tied in the other. He converted one into an 11-shot win. He lost to a 65 by Collin Morikawa at the PGA Championship and to a 65-foot putt by Rahm at the BMW Championship. He badly wanted the last one, and even staked to a five-shot lead to par at East Lake, it was never easy. Johnson made an 18-foot birdie early that was important because Schauffele kept hitting it close. Johnson had consecutive birdies through the par-5 sixth and his lead remained at five. But he went well right off the tee at No. 7 and had to pitch back to the fairway. He three-putted from 55 feet on the fringe at No. 8 and dropped another shot. The lead kept shrinking. Johnson rolled his long birdie putt on the par-3 ninth some 7 feet by, and he made the par putt coming back to keep his lead at 3. No putt was bigger than the 13th, when his lead was down to two shots over Schauffele. Johnson went from left rough to right of the green and chipped weakly to 20 feet. He drilled the par putt, restored the lead to three and was on his way. “It’s a very tough trophy to win,” Johnson said. “I controlled my own destiny, but I still had to go out and play well. I had a lot of great players right behind me. It got close at the end. I knew it was going to come down the stretch and I’d have to hit some golf shots.”

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Mickelson’s U.S. Open quest, take 27Mickelson’s U.S. Open quest, take 27

SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. — Welcome to the 118th U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills, and the renewal of annual traditions like wrist-breaking rough, linoleum greens, and Phil Mickelson’s (thus far) doomed quest to put his thumbs-up on the trophy and ride off into a fescue sunset. He has every chance in the world. He has no chance at all. The heart and the mind agree on the basics: This is Mickelson’s 27th U.S. Open start, and he has finished second six times. He will turn 48 on Saturday and would be the oldest winner of our national championship (surpassing Hale Irwin, 45). You want to believe he can do it, becoming the seventh player to win the career Grand Slam. The heart points to his final-round 65 and T12 at the FedEx St. Jude Classic at TPC Southwind (momentum!), and his T13 at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide at Muirfield Village (not his favorite, but a solid result). Does he still have it in him? Perhaps. “If he wins the U.S. Open at 48,â€� said Brad Faxon, an analyst with Fox Sports this week, “and does it in New York after all of the second-place finishes, it would be the biggest story in the history of golf.â€� Okay, wait just a New York minute. C’mon. This is crazy. Mickelson’s energy comes and goes — and you could see it at the steamy FedEx St. Jude on Saturday, when his legs looked shot and he signed for a 73. At THE PLAYERS Championship last month, which came on the heels of a tiring T5 at the Wells Fargo, he opened with a 79.  He must avoid a similar early fizzle at Shinnecock. “My goal is not to try to win on Thursday,â€� Mickelson said. “My goal is to stay in it Thursday, stay in it Friday, and have an opportunity for the weekend. So I’m not really thinking about winning right now. I’m thinking about getting in it for the weekend.â€� He repeated this old golf chestnut, that you can’t win the tournament in the first round but you can sure lose it, no fewer than three more times, which was a snooze. But wait, hang on, we interrupt this column for an echo from Phil’s past: “Phil! You’re so f—in’ East Coast!â€� Amy Mickelson laughed when recounting that booming endorsement from a fan at the 2005 PGA Championship at Baltusrol. You may recall that “East Coast Philâ€� won that PGA, further underlining the fact that not only does New York love Phil, but Phil loves New York back. What’s not to like about his chances this week? Hmmm. Let’s unpack that. There have been many storylines over the last two decades, but two have loomed large: Woods’ quest to eclipse Jack Nicklaus’ 18 professional majors, which Woods later said was a bigger deal to everyone else but him, and Mickelson’s struggle to get out of his own way and win a major (done), the No. 1 world ranking (nope) and the U.S. Open (your thoughts here). The heart says Mickelson can still win because he’s second in Strokes Gained: Putting (+1.050) this season, and first in one-putt percentage (46.75). 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Heart: Shinnecock U.S. Opens reward great short games: Raymond Floyd in 1986, Corey Pavin in 1995 (when Mickelson finished T4). “The chipping and short game around the greens are going to be a huge factor this week,â€� Mickelson said. Mind: The short game factors into it every year, and it’s why he won’t win. You know what happens to a 48-year-old when he tries to win a major? Kenny Perry (who’s in this week’s field as the U.S. Senior Open champion) fumbling on the goal line at the 2009 Masters.  Heart: But Phil loves this course! He finished second to Retief Goosen at the 2004 Shinnecock U.S. Open, and praised this year’s setup as one of the finest he’s seen. Mind: Doesn’t he say that every year? Heart: Okay, forget about architecture. Forget science. Think poetry! Mind: [Pause.] Are you off your meds? Heart: Miracles happen! Yep. They do. The Cubs won the 2016 World Series, snapping a 108-year drought, and the Boston Red Sox won the 2004 World Series, breaking the 86-year Curse of the Bambino. Then there was the biggest exhale of all for golf fans: Mickelson finally winning the Masters (also in ’04) for his first major title after 46 starts and 17 career top-10s. “I did it!â€� he yelped after his birdie putt curled into the hole on No. 18, inciting the restricted-flight jump for joy now immortalized in his logo. All the struggle made it all the sweeter, the catharsis widespread because we are all still knocking on some door or another. We’re all Mickelson in the majors then, Mickelson at the U.S. Open now. He will tee it up for the USGA’s stress-fest yet again, this time in the company of Rory McIlroy and Jordan Spieth, starting at 8:02 a.m. off the 10th tee Thursday. No, he can’t win it Thursday, but maybe Sunday. Maybe.

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Joel Dahmen proving he can handle the pressure on TOURJoel Dahmen proving he can handle the pressure on TOUR

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Battling cancer provided perspective. Playing with Tiger Woods proved he can handle pressure. It’s easy to assume that the winless Joel Dahmen will be overcome with anxiety at 2 p.m. Saturday, when he steps onto Quail Hollow’s first tee alongside a major winner. Dahmen disagrees. “I’ve been through life and death,â€� Dahmen said. “This is not it.â€� Dahmen trails Jason Dufner by one stroke at the halfway mark of the Wells Fargo Championship. Rory McIlroy, Patrick Reed Justin Rose and Jason Day are lurking in the top 10, as well. Winning on the PGA TOUR is life-changing. Cancer, all too often, takes lives. Dahmen hasn’t experienced the former. But is all too familiar with the latter. His mother died of cancer when he was a junior in high school. He battled testicular cancer in 2011. Dahmen, 31, is in his third year on the PGA TOUR. He’s been appearing on leaderboards more often as he continues his steady ascent through pro golf. His 66 on Thursday gave him his third first-round lead in his last five individual starts. He shot the same score Friday. Related: Tee times | McIlroy ‘right there’ heading into weekend | Dufner, Homa prove there’s light at the end of the tunnel | Day makes dream come true for young fan | Harsh lessons can pay big dividends on the PGA TOUR Starring on Thursday can only gain a player so much notoriety. Playing with Woods is a different story. That happened at last year’s Quicken Loans National, where Dahmen and his wide-brimmed bucket hat shot 69 to Woods’ 68 in the third round. It was an impressive result considering how he felt on the first tee. “I wasn’t sure I was going to get the ball in the air,â€� he said. Dahmen again showed his steely reserve on the final two holes of this year’s PLAYERS Championship. He’d just birdied 16 and was hanging around the top 10. He still had to face the Stadium Course’s water-lined finishing holes, though. “If you can finish par-par on those two holes under the gun when it doubles my net worth, that’s some pressure,â€� Dahmen said. “It doesn’t get much more than that.â€� He managed to make those two last pars on Pete Dye’s penal design and earned $253,125. Coming from a small town in eastern Washington, surviving cancer and toiling for five years on the Mackenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada has given Dahmen a unique perspective. He admits that he doesn’t practice as much as his peers. He knows that the world’s best play at a different level than him, but he’s not dying to trade places with them, either. He’s content with his lot. He enjoys traveling the TOUR with his wife, Lona, who documents their meals on Instagram. “I love this game. It gives me a great career, a great life,â€� he said. “I don’t really care about trophies, to be honest. I love competing, but I love money too. “I’m a kid from Clarkston, Washington, who’s on the PGA TOUR. … They give you free food inside. You can hit Pro V1s on the range. That just doesn’t happen where I grew up. You dream of that stuff, but to actually be doing it, … I think I’m probably more appreciative than other people.â€� Quail Hollow is playing firm and fast this week, which suits him perfectly. Hitting fairways and greens is his specialty. He’s missed just four fairways and five greens through two rounds.  Dahmen, 31, last won five years ago, on PGA TOUR Canada. That two-win season came after another failed attempt at Q-School that left him despondent. He didn’t pick up a club for a six weeks, and tried to ease the pain by buying a dog. Quitting was never an option, though. “I didn’t have anything else to do,â€� said Dahmen, who turned pro in 2010. “I don’t have a degree. I always knew I was good enough. You have to put a lot of time into this. It doesn’t just happen.â€� His success in Canada earned him Web.com Tour status. He played there for two years before graduating to the PGA TOUR. He finished 176th in the FedExCup as a rookie. He was 80th the next season, following his foray with Woods with four consecutive top-15 finishes, including a runner-up at the John Deere Classic. He’s 65th in the standings this season. “I’m getting better every year,â€� he said. “I’m getting better weekly.â€� And now he has a chance to win on the PGA TOUR for the first time. But he’ll be OK even if he doesn’t.

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