Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Every shoots career-best to take lead

Every shoots career-best to take lead

GREENSBORO, N.C. – Notes and observations from Thursday’s first round of the Wyndham Championship, where Matt Every shot a career-best, 9-under 61 to lead after the morning wave of the first round. North Carolina native Webb Simpson headed up a group of five players at 63, while 53-year-old University of North Carolina alumnus Davis Love III was among those at 64. For more coverage from Sedgefield Country Club, click here for the Daily Wrap-up. LOVE STILL A WYNDHAM WIZARD Davis Love III won the 2015 Wyndham Championship, becoming the third-oldest TOUR winner at 51 years, four months, 10 days of age, but he never got a chance to defend his title. That’s because the 21-time winner, who will be inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in September, was recovering from hip surgery at last year’s Wyndham. Now 53 and bidding to become the oldest winner ever on TOUR—Sam Snead was 52 when he won for the eighth time in Greensboro in 1965—Love hit all 18 greens in regulation on the way to an opening-round 64 on Thursday. “I like old style golf courses, traditional architecture,â€� Love said of Sedgefield C.C., a 1925 Donald Ross design. “This is certainly one of the best on TOUR. This one and Greenbrier are two of my favorite courses now on TOUR, and it’s not a bomber’s golf course. It’s one where you have to think your way around it, put in the right positions.â€� Love has three wins in Greensboro, and this week marks the 25th anniversary of his first, at nearby Forest Oaks. He’s won the PGA Championship and THE PLAYERS Championship, twice. He has played vital roles in Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup victories, and now his son Dru, who shot a 3-under 67 at Sedgefield on Thursday, sometimes plays in the same tournaments. But DL3, 209th in the FedExCup, just keeps on going through a torn labrum in his hip, through a broken collarbone (snowboarding) last winter. He played with Webb Simpson and Ryan Moore on Thursday, which couldn’t have been a better group, what with Simpson also getting hot, and Moore reminding Love that he’d gone low and won last time they played together here, in 2015. “I’d like to keep playing with him for a while,â€� Love said. SIMPSON’S CAREER REVIVAL CONTINUES Webb Simpson was another familiar face in the spotlight Thursday, what with Simpson having been born in Raleigh and currently residing in Charlotte, North Carolina. He also won the 2011 Wyndham, and named his third child Wyndham, for good measure. (No, the other three aren’t named Deutsche Bank Championship, Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, and U.S. Open.) Alas, it’s been a lean couple of years since Simpson’s fourth and most recent victory, at the 2014 Shriners Hospitals. Although he made the FedExCup playoffs the last two years, he didn’t win, and slogged through self-doubt. Now, though, Simpson, 32, is starting to look like his old self. Simpson lost a playoff to Hideki Matsuyama at the Waste Management Phoenix Open earlier this season, and is 37th in the FedExCup. On Thursday, he started on 10 and scorched the back nine with a 7-under 28; made two bogeys on the front; and ultimately signed for a 63. “I got a little excited thinking about—I’m not that far off from 59,â€� Simpson said. “But on the cart ride to the first tee I tried to kind of put it aside and get that ball in the fairway. Yeah, you don’t have many opportunities out here to do it. Today was certainly one of them.â€� One of many who had to revise his tactics on the green with the anchoring ban, Simpson took a tidy 25 putts Thursday after hitting nine of 14 fairways and 12 of 18 greens in regulation. He hasn’t missed a cut since the Wells Fargo Championship in May, and says he’s playing even better than he did during his near miss in Phoenix earlier this year. “I feel like I’ve been playing better for a longer period of time,â€� he said. “The game is more consistent.â€� He called his first nine holes, “the best start I’ve ever had to a tournament.â€� Another three days like this and he could be setting himself up to match his best year, too—at least in the FedExCup. He won twice and finished second in the season-long points race in 2011. “We’re obviously close to where I grew up,â€� Simpson said. (Raleigh is just over an hour from Greensboro, and Simpson attended nearby Wake Forest.) “I grew up playing courses similar to this that aren’t too long, hit different clubs off the tee, some doglegs. So, there’s a comfort here that I feel like I don’t have at a lot of places. I’ve always loved playing close to home.â€�

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For Davis Love III, a missed cut but an unqualified successFor Davis Love III, a missed cut but an unqualified success

DETROIT – The ball just sounds different coming off his club. There was a time when people said that about Davis Love III, but at 58 he’s in the September of his years. He will miss the cut at the Rocket Mortgage Classic (78-71) but was here also to scout out the current crop of young players vying to make his U.S. Presidents Cup Team, which will take on the International Team at Quail Hollow Club, Sept. 21-25. As the captain, Love gets six picks, and he started scouting contenders early in the week. “You see him on TV,” Love said of Will Zalatoris, after the two played a practice round together, “or you see him around the locker room, but when you stand right beside him and see him hit a golf ball – it was said about me when I was that age, like, ‘Listen, it’s a different sound when Davis hits it.’” There’s knowing, and then there’s knowing, so Love came to Detroit Golf Club this week to glean all the things you can’t quite pick up any other way than by being there. He played his first two rounds with Zalatoris and Cameron Young – no accident – and it was Young who impressed most, tying the course record with a 9-under 63 in the second round. At 10 under, Young was leading, one ahead of fellow rookie Sahith Theegala (67) and Adam Scott (66) as the afternoon wave of players, including first-round leaders Tony Finau and Taylor Pendrith (64), began play. Zalatoris shot 70-71 and was seven shots back. “I told my wife last night, I said it’s been a great week this week no matter what,” Love said after scoring better but still driving it poorly in the second round. “Dinner with Tony Finau and Zach Johnson (Thursday) night and a couple other guys the night before, playing a practice round with Will and got to play with – I didn’t know Cam at all, so it was a good week.” In auditioning for Love, Young made about as a loud a statement as he could have. After a ho-hum opening round in the afternoon wind Thursday, he took full advantage of the Friday morning calm with seven birdies and an eagle at the par-4 13th hole, where he holed out with a pitching wedge. “I mean, you obviously have kind of some idea why he’s there,” said Young, who is 13th in the U.S. Team standings. “I don’t know what I’m on the points list for Presidents Cup, but I think that I’m probably somewhere that I could get picked.” With six top-10 finishes, including a runner-up to Cameron Smith at The Open Championship and a T3 at the PGA Championship, Young is not only on Love’s shortlist for the Presidents Cup, but he’s also the frontrunner for PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year. That would be somehow fitting, since his pal Zalatoris, who was one year ahead of him at Wake Forest, won the Arnold Palmer Award last season. (Palmer, too, went to Wake Forest.) Love said Young and Zalatoris, who capably hold down the back of the alphabet, are “like peas in a pod” and could shine as a Foursomes and/or Four Ball pairing at Quail Hollow, where the U.S. Team looks to retain the Presidents Cup. “You can see it when after I hit and they take off running down the fairway,” Love said, “they’re chitchatting the whole day, comfortable with each other and giving each other a hard time.” Young was second in Strokes Gained: Off the Tee after Friday’s morning wave. Love called it “impressive power.” The top six on the list through the BMW Championship, the second event of the FedExCup Playoffs, will make the team automatically. After that, Love makes his six picks the Monday after the TOUR Championship, Aug. 29. International Team Captain Trevor Immelman, looking avenge a close loss last time around, also will make his picks that day. Whether or not it figures Young (and let’s face it, odds are he’ll be there), the U.S. Team figures to be plenty youthful. Sam Burns has never made a U.S. Team, but he’s a lock at second in the standings. Max Homa has never made a U.S. Team, either, but is also looking good at ninth. Zalatoris and Young, both 25, are on the cusp at Nos. 10 and 13, respectively. All that youth would seem to be a reason for optimism. The makeup of the team, and how it performs, also figures to impact the 2023 Ryder Cup team that will be captained by Zach Johnson – one of Love’s Presidents Cup assistants. “They keep coming, it’s unbelievable,” Love said. “Go back to Jordan Spieth, nobody heard of him and next thing you know in one year he’s on the Presidents Cup team. And Cam’s headed that way, too. No one ever heard of him on the Korn Ferry and here he is, he almost won a major. It’s great it’s coming that way. Happy for me and happy for Zach and our teams in the future.”

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