Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Everything you missed from Tiger Woods’ electrifying third-round 65 at Riviera

Everything you missed from Tiger Woods’ electrifying third-round 65 at Riviera

After a 30-hole marathon Friday at Riviera, it looked like Tiger Woods might play just six holes on Saturday morning after carding a third straight bogey at the par-3 fourth—putting him in danger of his first missed cut of 2019. The cut at the Genesis Open winded up being even par, but Woods felt a lot safer when he holed a 23-footer for birdie at the par-4 ninth to post a second-round 71, putting him at one under for the tournament. With fans at Riviera still out in full force late Saturday evening, Woods proceeded to make a huge move up the leader board in a very short period of time, electrifying the crowd before play was called for darkness.

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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
Brooks Koepka+700
Justin Thomas+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Xander Schauffele+1400
Jon Rahm+1800
Collin Morikawa+2000
Brooks Koepka+2500
Justin Thomas+2500
Viktor Hovland+2500
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Viktor Hovland+2000
Justin Thomas+2500
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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
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Major champ Matt Fitzpatrick popular pick for Genesis Scottish OpenMajor champ Matt Fitzpatrick popular pick for Genesis Scottish Open

The Genesis Scottish Open boasts arguably the best field it has ever seen thanks in part to the strategic alliance between the PGA TOUR and DP World Tour, which means a fantastic week of golf betting ahead. Of the top 20 players in the world, 17 will tee it up this week in what is now an official event for both tours. However, with a mixed field of DP World Tour and PGA TOUR players, it’s a little tricky deciding on players to bet on. Many in the online sports betting community are unfamiliar with the majority of players headlining the DP World Tour. There also isn’t a lot of data for the host course – The Renaissance Club. The links-style course has hosted the event for the past three years, but for many players in the field, it will be their first time playing there. Bettors appear to be leaning on players who come into the tournament playing well and have played the course before. At BetMGM, as of Tuesday, Matt Fitzpatrick (+2000) is generating the most action. The U.S. Open champion is pulling in the most handle – a massive 21.7% – and the second-most tickets (7%). This will be Fitzpatrick’s first tournament since winning his first major. The 27-year-old finished T-14 in 2019, T-42 in 2020, and lost in a playoff last year when Min Woo Lee birdied the first extra hole at The Renaissance Club. Another player drawing solid action is Justin Thomas (+1400). The PGA Championship winner is pulling in the second-most handle at 17.1%. Thomas has three top-5 finishes in his last five starts and is one of a few PGA TOUR players who have played in the tournament before, finishing T8 a year ago and T9 in 2019. While the weather could undoubtedly impact things – rain is forecasted for Friday – low scoring has been a theme of the three previous editions of the event at the course. Wind is the defense of the course but it has failed to appear in any significant manor the last few years. The average winning score has been 17-under, and all three years, it has ended in a playoff. Current Handle & Tickets Handle • Matt Fitzpatrick – 21.7% • Justin Thomas – 17.1% • Scottie Scheffler – 11% • Will Zalatoris – 10.3% • Cameron Smith – 5.9% Tickets • Will Zalatoris – 8.9% • Matt Fitzpatrick – 7% • Scottie Scheffler – 5.1% • Cameron Smith – 5.1% • Justin Thomas – 4.4% Will Zalatoris (+3000) is also a popular bet. This is his first event since finishing one shot behind Fitzpatrick at the U.S. Open. In terms of line movement, Fitzpatrick opened at +2200 and is now +2000. Others who have seen significant movement are Ryan Fox (+5000 to +4000) and Aaron Rai (+8000 to +6600). Jon Rahm has the best golf odds to win at +1200 but is only pulling in 2.1% of the tickets and 1.1% of the handle. * Visit BetMGM.com for terms and conditions. 21+ years of age or older to wager. BetMGM is available in AZ, CO, DC, IA, IN, IL, LA, MI, MS, NJ, NV, NY, PA, TN, VA, WV, or WY only. All promotions are subject to qualification and eligibility requirements. Paid in free bets. Free bets expire in 7 days from issuance. Minimum deposit required. Excludes Michigan Disassociated Persons. Please Gamble Responsibly. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-NEXT-STEP (AZ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO, DC, LA, NV, WY, VA), 1-800-270-7117 for confidential help (MI), 1-800-GAMBLER (IN, NJ, PA & WV), 1-800-BETS OFF (IA) or call (877-8-HOPENY) or text HOPENY (467369) (NY), call or text the Tennessee REDLINE: 800-889-9789 (TN) or call 1-888-777-9696 (MS). Sports betting is void where prohibited. Promotional offers not available in Nevada.

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Draws and Fades: Charles Schwab ChallengeDraws and Fades: Charles Schwab Challenge

In the high-stakes action of the PGA TOUR Experts league in PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf, there wasn’t hesitation. RELATED: Sleeper picks Actually, that’s a lie. Just like the Wells Fargo Championship a fortnight prior, the PGA Championship connected on a few haymakers. Because negative points are possible, the fantasy game most definitely causes pause when contemplating burning a start in favor of a zero that could have a net-positive effect. Case in point, if I had only one start remaining on Jon Rahm (instead of two), I probably would’ve holstered it for Memorial and gone with only three starters in the third and final rounds at Southern Hills Country Club. After Patrick Cantlay and Scottie Scheffler missed the cut, this was what I faced and therein existed my hesitation. Fortunately(?), I had two starts to burn and I already knew that he hadn’t committed to this week’s Charles Schwab Challenge, so it was an easy call. But lo and behold, Rahm proved my point by “scoring” minus-6 points in R3. He rebounded to total 11 (including bonus points) in the final to net a positive value of five points, so I’ll take it, but I’ll never argue that a mere five points is worth a full start unless you can stretch to the conclusion of a Segment. Of course, if I defend my title in my little league by fewer than five points, I’ll flip-flop on that promise! POWER RANKINGS WILD CARD Jason Kokrak (+165 for a Top 20) … Age 37; eighth appearance. I’ve already explained in the Power Rankings how he was expected to win last year, but the defending champ hasn’t been fulfilling even higher expectations throughout 2022. He can’t be overlooked this week, so the shrewd move is to invest elsewhere and let your opponents cancel. The field is more than deep enough to subscribe to that strategy. DRAWS Viktor Hovland (-110 for a Top 20) … Age 24; second appearance. If Kokrak wasn’t the Wild Card, the uber-talented Norwegian would occupy that slot, but for positive reasons. Building experience at Colonial is one thing, and guys can find their game on the course – Sebastián Muñoz did last year – but it’s been a minute now since Hovland has made the kind of noise for which we’ve been accustomed. Given all the variables, this prop is perfect. Chris Kirk (+165 for a Top 20) … Age 37; 12th appearance. The 2015 Schwab champion hasn’t missed a cut at Colonial and he’s fresh off a T5 at the PGA Championship where he was second in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green. That’s vintage stuff from the veteran. Even his oft-inconsistent putting was on point. The setup of grasses is the same – bermuda fairways and rough; bentgrass greens – so a continuation of the rally is reasonable to anticipate. Tony Finau (+165 for a Top 20) … Age 32; seventh appearance. The putting is turning a corner, so it’s not about overall rank as much as it is about direction. It’s also worth compartmentalizing his closing 63 at Vidanta. It was an outstanding round at an outstanding time, but he’s short on general consistency. Still, he hasn’t missed a cut at Colonial, he finished second here in 2019 and he’s logged another three top 25s, so he’s the perfect fit – finally – for PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf and at a time when we’re low on starts. Webb Simpson (+160 for a Top 20) … Age 36; seventh appearance. If not for a T20 in the challenging conditions at Southern Hills last week, he’d default as a trap. He’s inside our target for Colonial where he’s finished inside the top five on two occasions, but he hadn’t done enough to eliminate residual doubt after returning from the herniated disc in his neck. Ryan Palmer (+275 for a Top 20) … Age 45; 19th appearance. It’d be sacrilegious not to endorse him in some capacity on his home course. Yeah, you already know that he hasn’t won this tournament, but he earned over $1.4 million on the strength of four top-six finishes. He just finished T5 two weeks ago at TPC Craig Ranch, the latest evidence of how his game showing life once more. Kevin Na (+175 for a Top 20) … Age 38; 16th appearance. Prevailed here in 2019 as a 35-year-old, and he’s been on cruise control of late. Line him up in PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf and heavily in DFS. He’s presenting zero reasons why he won’t remain in a groove. Russell Knox (+400 for a Top 20) … Age 36; seventh appearance. He’s also in the bull’s-eye and he’s registered four top 25s at Colonial, so he’s an automatic for a top-30 prop and for DFSers. Further supported by sitting second on TOUR in greens hit and T4 in proximity. We’d love for him to score more but having chances to set up a hot putter is better than having a hot putter that doesn’t have chances. Talor Gooch (age 30; fifth appearance) Billy Horschel (age 35; fifth appearance) Maverick McNealy (age 26; fourth appearance) Cameron Tringale (age 34; ninth appearance) Harold Varner III (age 31; third appearance)e Odds sourced on Tuesday, May 24th at 6 p.m. ET. For live odds visit betmgm FADES Mito Pereira … Age 27; first appearance. If he wasn’t a debutant, I’d extend a share or two for the benefit of the doubt, but we don’t know how Sunday’s bad beat will affect him. The conservative play, obviously, is to abstain. That means that the sharper angle is to rely on the majority to abstain and lean in fractionally in DFS. Daniel Berger … Age 29; fifth appearance. Before you beat me to it, yes, I typically ignore negative results in majors and when the lights are brightest, but in the absence of something else to rule out that he’s feeling good again in dealing with his sore back, my hands are off his wheel. Kevin Kisner … Age 38; ninth appearance. He hasn’t missed an edition since returning full-time to the PGA TOUR in 2014, but he hasn’t hung up another top 25 since he prevailed in 2017. It’s a stage on which he should shine every time, but he’s also short on form upon arrival. Entirely a contrarian investment. Patrick Reed … Age 31; sixth appearance. Still scuffling (for him). Still just the one top 25 in a full-field event all season (T2, Bermuda). The Texan has a pair of top 15s at Colonial, so perhaps the drought ends now, but there’s little by which to be inspired to invest. Erik van Rooyen … Age 32; second appearance. Hmm… Withdrew early from the Wells Fargo and Byron Nelson, and then missed the cut at the PGA Championship by seven. James Hahn … Age 40; sixth appearance. With T9s in his last two starts (Wells Fargo, Byron Nelson), he was situated as an early possibility for the Power Rankings. However, he’s yet to cash at Colonial and hasn’t broken par since the only time he did it, with a 1-under 69 in the opening round of the 2015 edition. Joel Dahmen (age 34; fifth appearance) Rickie Fowler (age 33; ninth appearance) Kramer Hickok (age 30; fifth appearance) Charley Hoffman (age 45; 14th appearance) Beau Hossler (age 27; fifth appearance) Denny McCarthy (age 29; fourth appearance) Andrew Putnam (age 33; fifth appearance) RETURNING TO COMPETITION Nick Hardy … Committed to the Korn Ferry Tour’s NV5 Invitational presented by Old National Bank. It’s not far from his home north of Chicago, so it’s as sensible a spot as any to get back after it in the wake of a wrist injury that’s sidelined him for a month. He’s 194th in the FedExCup and won’t be eligible on merit for next week’s Memorial Tournament presented by Workday, either. NOTABLES WDs Bryson DeChambeau … Just like last week, he can’t withdraw unless he commits. It’s the classic week-to-week approach. It’s his second consecutive early WD and he hasn’t played since missing the cut at the Masters after which he has surgery on his left wrist for a fractured hamate bone. Harris English … This is his sixth early WD since his last start at Waialae four months ago. His surgery to repair a torn labrum in his right hip was on Feb. 14. He’ll continue to play it like DeChambeau. Bubba Watson … Alerted his followers on Twitter on Monday that he’s going to be out “4-6 weeks” due to a torn meniscus in a knee. He didn’t specify which one. The 43-year-old lefty didn’t begin this season until a T14 at the WM Phoenix Open, so he’s logged only nine starts. He’s fully exempt through 2023-24. Sepp Straka … Hey, ya can’t play ‘em all, but you can’t accuse him for not trying. He’s T2 on TOUR with 23 starts. (Brian Stuard has made one more.) Just qualified for the U.S. Open, too. Charl Schwartzel … Hadn’t appeared at Colonial since 2016, anyway. He’s picked up steam of late with a T10 at the Masters and a solo eighth at the AT&T Byron Nelson, but he’s still just 152nd in the FedExCup.x RECAP – PGA CHAMPIONSHIP POWER RANKINGS Power Ranking Golfer Result 1 Jordan Spieth T34 2 Jon Rahm T48 3 Justin Thomas Win 4 Scottie Scheffler MC 5 Rory McIlroy 8th 6 Patrick Cantlay MC 7 Xander Schauffele T13 8 Matt Fitzpatrick T5 9 Hideki Matsuyama T60 10 Cameron Smith T13 11 Collin Morikawa T55 12 Max Homa T13 13 Will Zalatoris P2 14 Tiger Woods WD 15 Viktor Hovland T41 16 Joaquin Niemann T23 17 Cameron Young T3 18 Corey Conners MC 19 Brooks Koepka T55 20 Sam Burns T20 Wild Card Shane Lowry T23 SLEEPERS Golfer (Bet) Result Dean Burmester (+275 for a Top 40) MC Sam Horsfield (+200 for a Top 40) MC Rikuya Hoshino (+333 for a Top 40) T60 Sadom Kaewkanjana (+550 for a Top 40) MC Bio Kim (+400 for a Top 40) MC BIRTHDAYS AMONG ACTIVE MEMBERS OF THE PGA TOUR May 24 … Bill Haas (40); Mark Hubbard (33) May 25 … Tom Hoge (33) May 26 … none May 27 … none May 28 … none May 29 … Seung-Yul Noh (31) May 30 … Stephan Jaeger (33); Taylor Pendrith (31)

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Monday Finish: Deja vu at the Safeway OpenMonday Finish: Deja vu at the Safeway Open

Welcome to the Monday Finish where Justin Thomas is already 500 points behind in the new FedExCup race after Brendan Steele reaffirmed his love affair with California wine country. Steele reclaimed the Safeway Open with a solid Sunday to set up his season once more. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1. The old “horses for courses� saying certainly rings true for Brendan Steele at Silverado. While he’s now made it back-to-back wins in the Napa Valley some of you may forget he held the 54-hole lead the year before as well before fading in the final round. His redemption last year clearly gave him some next-level confidence. As such he calmly overtook Tyler Duncan on Sunday and then, after some back nine bogeys gave others like Phil Mickelson life, he parried off the challengers with two late birdies. His maturity talking of his win was also noteworthy. Steele acknowledged he felt he stopped playing to win in the back half of last season and played to just make the TOUR Championship. Instead he drifted to 33rd in the FedExCup. This year he plans to keep the foot down and that should ensure he contends a fair bit more before the TOUR stops in Atlanta again. 2. Tony Finau is too good to have just one PGA TOUR victory. Finau was threatening on Sunday, without his best stuff, before a wayward drive finally caught up with him on the 14th hole. He’d just come off a birdie on the 13th and you figured, with the two late par-5s to come, the big-hitter was primed to add to his 2016 Puerto Rico Open. But his drive on 14 ended up behind a tree forcing a punch out – something that shouldn’t have been the death of him. The subsequent poor approach and missed short putt that turned it into a double bogey however were not his best moments. His approach game and putting throughout the rest of the round had been on point. I reckon the experience will steel him next time around. 3. Phil Mickelson surely is going to break his drought soon … right? I mean it is utterly ridiculous to think the veteran finished T3 having hit just 15 of 56 fairways for the week at Silverado. In rounds 1 and 3 he hit just two fairways each day. On Sunday, he found just three fairways. Yet, he hung around the top of the leaderboard all week. Phil did say the stats were a little misleading. “This is a very skewed golf course to judge fairways hit,� Mickelson said. “I hit three beautiful drives on 18; none of them found the fairway. The fairway’s 13 yards wide. I paced it. So on a normal TOUR course, I would have hit 10, 11 fairways today. I drove it fairly well. But out here, I think, is a way to kind of protect that, they move the fairways in so that they’re about half what they normally are.� His next chance to break the drought that now stretches back to The Open Championship in 2013, will be in China in a few weeks’ time at the World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions. Mickelson has won twice before at Sheshan Golf Club, so maybe …. 4. A new season means a new bunch of rookies and we got to see some talent shine early. Tyler Duncan held the 36- and 54-hole lead at Silverado before perhaps the occasion got the better of him. His final round 75 saw him drop to a T5 finish that should be as pleasing as it is disappointing to the young man. Opening Sunday with three straight bogeys is a pretty quick education in final round pressure on the main TOUR. Duncan can look to champion Brendan Steele as inspiration if he so desires. In 2015 Steele similarly let the 54-hole lead slip and now he’s gone back-to-back. Fellow rookie Brandon Harkins also marked the start of his season with a top-10, closing with a tidy 68 to be T9. Then, there was the flash of brilliance early in the tournament from Maverick McNealy. He threatened the top of the leaderboard in Round 2 before a triple bogey, and while his over-par weekend saw him fade to T52, you saw a glimpse of why some pundits are expecting very big things. 5. I really enjoyed seeing Graham DeLaet (T5) and Hunter Mahan (T13) near the top of the leaderboard this week. Both had been at the forefront of my mind recently as I watched replays of previous Presidents Cups in preparation for this year’s biennial event at Liberty National. When Canadian DeLaet was part of the International Team in 2013, a year he was 8th in the FedExCup, I figured it was just a matter of how soon a win on TOUR would come. But things haven’t gone that way. While he’s maintained enough form to keep his card each year, he also went through a period of chipping and bunker yips. Those times appear behind him as he continues from some late form last season and hopefully the drought-breaking win is coming soon. As for Mahan, well, he played in four Presidents Cups. He’s won six times on TOUR. But now he finds himself playing from the past champion category. Somewhere inside is the magic and perhaps this week is the early stages of finding the combination. FIVE INSIGHTS 1. Steele collects his third PGA TOUR victory (2011 Valero Texas Open, 2016 and 2017 Safeway Open) in his 178th start at the age of 34 years, six months and three days. At the Safeway Open his results now show: (T7-2011, MC-2012, MC-2013, T21-2014, T17-2015, 1-2016, 1-2017). But since moving to the Silverado Resort and Spa in 2015, Steele is the most under par of any player at 50-under par. 2. Steele ranked 1st in the field in driving distance (327.8 yards) and T3 in driving accuracy (67.86 percent). Coupled with finding 79.17 percent of greens (4th) at an average proximity of 29’10� (6th) and you can see how he was able to repeat. 3. Chesson Hadley’s course record 61 on Friday showed why the top finisher on the web.com TOUR last season is probably destined to stay up top for some time to come. While Sunday failed to bring similar heroics and he ultimately finished T3 his 23 birdies in the tournament was tied for the most on the week. 4. Xinjun Zhang finished T37, becoming the first-ever full PGA TOUR member from China to play all four rounds in a TOUR event. 5. Graham DeLaet (T5) now owns 16 of 18 rounds of par-or-better at this event (75/R2/2017, 77/R4/2016). Prior to this week’s fifth-place effort, his previous-best result at the Safeway Open was T6 in his debut in 2010. TOP 3 VIDEOS 1. Phil Mickelson had trouble hitting fairways at Silverado but when he found one … he made sure to admire it. 2. John Daly to the weekend! 3. Jason Day’s 5-year-old son Dash is probably a better bunker player than you.

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