Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Everything you need to know about the revamped FedEx Cup Playoffs

Everything you need to know about the revamped FedEx Cup Playoffs

This year brings the biggest changes yet to the playoffs, with an earlier start, one fewer event and more money at stake — and an intriguing and controversial way to end the competition.

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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Justin Thomas+1100
Joaquin Niemann+1400
Shane Lowry+1600
Tommy Fleetwood+1800
Tyrrell Hatton+1800
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Rory McIlroy+650
Bryson DeChambeau+700
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Shane Lowry+3500
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Dustin Johnson-Jordan Spieth showdown not the first, certainly not the lastDustin Johnson-Jordan Spieth showdown not the first, certainly not the last

In the final round of THE NORTHERN TRUST, Dustin Johnson and Jordan Spieth give fans a thrilling duel and a fascinating clash of styles that ends when Johnson blasts a 341-yard drive, hits a wedge inside 4 feet, and birdies the 18th hole in a playoff at Glen Oaks Club. Welcome to the Monday Finish, where the start of the FedExCup Playoffs gave fans in New York and around the world two of the most dynamic players in golf going head-to-head. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1. We’ll see more D.J./Spieth battles. Although they have contrasting styles, Johnson and Spieth tend to play the same golf courses well. Both have won the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am (Spieth in 2017, Johnson in 2009, 2010) and the Tournament of Champions at Kapalua (Spieth in 2016, Johnson in 2013). They were headed for a playoff at the 2015 U.S. Open at Chambers Bay before Johnson’s freakish three-putt on the 72nd hole. Then came THE NORTHERN TRUST at Glen Oaks on Sunday, when the two heavyweights found themselves going toe-to-toe yet again. “It seemed 50/50,â€� Spieth said of the fans’ preferences between the two. “I think everyone wanted a fight to the end. I think the way it played out, if I had been a fan, I would have been obviously very pleased with the way this tournament went. “But you know, it’s very difficult holding a lead on a difficult golf course when the guy you’re playing with goes bogey-free and doesn’t even really sniff a bogey and shoots 4 under. You know, hats off to D.J. But no surprise, either.â€� Food for thought: Johnson and Spieth have been paired together 23 times, with Johnson (48-under par) holding a slight edge over Spieth (46 under) in relation to par in those rounds. Spieth, though, has the head-to-head edge, shooting the lower score 12 times to Johnson’s nine. 2. This wasn’t David vs. Goliath. Much has been made of Johnson’s 341-yard drive and aggressive line over the water on 18 in the playoff. He had just 95 yards left, hit wedge to 3 feet, 7 inches from the pin, and made the birdie putt. But while Johnson’s power is impressive, Spieth had some pop of his own. He averaged 302.9 yards off the tee, ranking 18th in the field in driving distance. (Johnson averaged 314.3, and was second.) In fact, Spieth said afterward he regretted not taking the same line over the water, which he believed he could have cleared, what with the wind change in the playoff. Sometimes it’s more illuminating to examine how a winner performed in what is traditionally the weakest area of his game, which in Johnson’s case is putting. At Glen Oaks, he ranked 24th in strokes gained: putting (.667), heated up on the greens over the course of his back-nine 32, and salvaged par with a 17 ½-foot par putt on the last hole of regulation. Without that burst of Spieth-like putting, the winner wouldn’t have had a chance to wow, as he so often does, with the driver. 3. Spieth did a lot with what he had. Although Spieth started with a three-shot lead, the final round could easily have turned into a walkover—for Johnson. His birdies at Nos. 9 and 10 left them tied, and signaled that Johnson’s putting was finally warming to match his red-hot tee-to-green game, which has long been a daunting (and often unmanageable) prospect for his fellow competitors. Still, Spieth fought hard despite struggling from tee to green. His double-bogey at the par-3 sixth hole was uncharacteristic of him—of the last 10 times he’d led going into the last round, he’d won nine times—and hit just 10 greens in regulation, his worst of the week. “Played well,â€� Spieth said. “Game feels good. And I recognized a couple tendencies that I got into my swing towards the end of the round that prevented me from hitting great iron shots like I did before, so I know what to work on.â€� 4. Jon Rahm looked like his old self. The new FedExCup No. 1 Johnson joked that he needed a win more than Spieth, since Johnson, who is also No. 1 in the Official World Golf Ranking, hadn’t hoisted a trophy since the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play in late March. But they weren’t the week’s only big winners. Jon Rahm, who shot a final-round 68 to tie for third with Jhonattan Vegas, broke out of a mini-slump that saw him miss the cut at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide and the U.S. Open, and finish a blah T44 at The Open and T28 at the WGC-Bridgestone. At Glen Oaks, Rahm looked more like the sensation who won the Farmers Insurance Open and rocketed up the FedExCup standings earlier this season, in just his second year as a pro. He also moved up to fifth in the FedExCup standings, an important distinction given that the top five will control their own destiny at the season-ending TOUR Championship, Sept. 21-24. “It’s been quite a long time since I had such a good tournament on the PGA TOUR,â€� said Rahm, 22, “and it’s good to be back on track.â€� 5. Jhonattan Vegas compartmentalized well. Venezuelan Vegas, who lives in Houston, shot a final-round 65, tied for third, and all but wrapped up a spot on the International Presidents Cup team that will take on the Americans at Liberty National, Sept. 28-Oct. 1. Somehow, he did all of that as Hurricane Harvey slammed the Texas coast with torrential rain and winds of over 100 mph. Vegas, who lives in The Woodlands, slightly northwest of Houston, said his wife, daughter and mother were still back there, but safe. “The main thing is the family is OK,â€� Vegas said. “I know there’s a lot of people hurting right now with the rain but you know, it’s one of those things that sometimes you have to learn to deal with and try to putt as much things behind. “There’s not much that I can do at the moment, so you know, I’m sure they are feeling a little bit better that I actually had a good day today.â€� FIVE INSIGHTS 1. The cream rose to the top. Four of the top-nine finishers at Glen Oaks started the week in the top 10 in the FedExCup standings, but, oddly, not all four moved up in the standings. The top two, Johnson and Spieth, started at fourth and third before moving to first and second, respectively. So far, so good. Rahm tied for third and went from sixth to fifth. Fine. But because of the one-two finish by Johnson and Spieth, Justin Thomas, who started the week at No. 2 in the FedExCup, actually went backward, to No. 3, with his T6 finish at Glen Oaks. Tough league. 2. Big movers were few and far between. Only three players moved from outside to inside the top 100 in the FedExCup, playing their way into this week’s Dell Technologies Championship at TPC Boston. That’s the fewest number of gate-crashers since only two played their way in at the first FedExCup Playoffs event in 2007. The three: Bubba Watson (T10) went from 113th to 72nd; Harold Varner III (T20) moved from 123rd to 91st; and David Lingmerth (T29) narrowly got through, going from 103rd to 91st. Watson, incidentally, has spent the fourth most weeks (62) inside the top five of the FedExCup standings since 2013. Johnson (88) tops the list, followed by Jimmy Walker (73) and Spieth (66). 3. DJ’s pin-seeking was statistically historic. Johnson’s proximity-to-the-hole average of 25 feet, 1 inch was not only tops in the field, and it was not just nearly 12 feet better than the field average. It also was the second-best proximity-to-the-hole average by a winner in the history of the FedExCup Playoffs, trailing only Camilo Villegas (23 feet, 10 inches at ’08 BMW Championship). 4. Cantlay’s trajectory keeps going up. Thanks to a seven-way tie for 10th, there were more than the usual number of top-10 finishers at THE NORTHERN TRUST. Patrick Cantlay, who shot from 78th to 50th in the FedExCup, was not the biggest mover in the group—Bubba Watson climbed 41 spots to 72nd—but has made the biggest strides this season. The No. 1-ranked amateur in 2011, Cantlay started the year on a major-medical extension and with more inspired play could make the TOUR Championship. 5. Spieth is still a tough front-runner. Runner-up Spieth has now converted nine of his last 11 54-hole leads to victories on the PGA TOUR, which is just under 82 percent. That’s still darn good, and approaches the gold standard in the category, Tiger Woods (92 percent). Overall, Spieth is nine of 15, or 60 percent, for his career. In 43 TOUR events this season, only 13 winners led through three rounds, a conversion rate of just 30 percent. The number would be even worse without Spieth, who accounted for three of the 13 with his victories at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, Travelers Championship and The Open. TOP VIDEOS 1. DJ’s drive on the first playoff hole was incredible. But the line he took? Wow. 2. This is MUST-SEE content. Rickie Fowler goes all-in for one lucky fan. 3. Texas wedge? Yup.

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Zach Johnson figuring prominently in 100th PGA Championship, as there are two of themZach Johnson figuring prominently in 100th PGA Championship, as there are two of them

ST. LOUIS – Zach Johnson met Zach Johnson for a photo op at the end of the driving range at the PGA Championship at sweltering Bellerive Country Club on Wednesday. One is a club pro who played for Southern Utah from 2001-2005, after which he tried without success to make it through PGA TOUR Q-School for four years. He eventually found a club job was a better fit. The other was born in Iowa but now lives in St. Simons Island, Georgia, and has 12 TOUR wins, including the 2007 Masters and 2015 Open Championship, to his name. The club pro, 35, and the touring pro, 42, both wore shorts in the blazing heat. They got the basics out of the way first. Were they both Zachary, with an “ary�? Yes, and yes. What were their nicknames among friends? And what did their loved ones call them? There’d been some Twitter confusion to laugh about—fans thinking erroneously that TOUR pro Johnson had switched from PXG to TaylorMade clubs, the brand that club pro Johnson uses. “Have a good week,� the famous Johnson said after the photographers had taken their shots. “Oh, I am,� said Johnson, an assistant pro at Davis Park Golf Course outside Farmington, Utah. “There isn’t any reason why you can’t do it,� TOUR pro Johnson said. They shook hands and the TOUR pro went on his way, leaving the club pro on the range. “I’ve got to let the goosebumps go down,� club pro Z.J. said. “Then I can hit again.� Welcome to the 100th PGA at Bellerive, otherwise known as the Zach Johnson Experience, where of the 156 players in the PGA field, only 154 are not named Zach Johnson. The one from Utah finished T12 in the 2018 PGA Professional Championship, earning a berth in this PGA. The touring pro, of course, is a staple at golf’s biggest tournaments and plays the game on TV. One name. Twice the fun. “I always knew there was another one,� TOUR pro Johnson said. “I’d see his name in the back of Golf Week and other magazines, where they list the tournament results.� Naturally, the presence of two Zach Johnsons here has resulted in some confusion. “Half of these autographs, they think I’m the other Zach Johnson,� said the grinning club pro. Not that he minded. The winner of the 2013 Utah Open, he is savoring this PGA Championship, his first TOUR start of any kind. As the crowd thinned late Tuesday, he lingered behind the 18th green, where he gave away his sweaty glove, smiled for every photo, inked every autograph. Finally, he ran out of golf balls to give away and hats to sign. “Is everybody good?� he asked. “Nice job,� a parent said. “Thanks,� Johnson said. The other Zach Johnson, by the way, is also good with autographs. If they didn’t know about each other before, it became impossible not to in 2009, when club pro Johnson was sent the other one’s scorecards and a plaque from the Sony Open in Hawaii. The club pro opened it; realized the mistake; took photos and had a laugh; then sent the package to its rightful Zach Johnson. Club pro Zach Johnson even got a few of TOUR pro Zach Johnson’s e-mails, years ago. In 2015, alerted to the prospect of another Zach Johnson potentially making the PGA field, the famous Johnson tweeted, “The more Zach Johnson’s in the field, the better!� Utah’s Johnson didn’t make it that year, but he has now, which led to Wednesday’s photo op on the range, and, in family dining Monday, the very first meeting of the Zach Johnsons. “It was an awesome meeting,� TOUR pro Johnson said. “I was there with a buddy, and he was there with his family. It was good to finally meet the other one. He’s a super nice guy.� “He was very cool about it,� club pro Johnson said. “I just walked up and said, ‘I have to introduce myself. I apologize for all the crap you’ve had to take for sharing the name.’ We laughed about it. He came over and introduced himself to my family. He was great.� In an attempt to keep things straight at Bellerive, the PGA of America told club pro Johnson he would be using his middle initial here, as in Zach J. Johnson. What does the J stand for? “Nothing, but it really is on his birth certificate,� said his father, Charlie, who with Johnson’s mother, LuAnn, wife, Kaitie, and 3-year-old son, George, made the trip from Utah. “So you’re Z-J squared,� TOUR pro Johnson said of the mysterious J. Not that the initial has clarified much. Charlie keeps hearing people say, “That’s not the real Zach Johnson.� And a fan asked on Twitter whether it was wise for TOUR pro Johnson to switch to TaylorMade clubs right before a major. “Wrong Zach Johnson,� TOUR pro Johnson tweeted back. “There are two of us this week … not kidding.� A local journalist interviewed club pro Johnson for a good five minutes earlier this week when the conversation took an ominous turn toward all the golf he’d played with Adam Scott. Johnson stopped the conversation and explained the mix-up. “Trust me,� he said, “I disappoint a lot of people.� Well, yes and no. He isn’t disappointing all those young kids at Bellerive, chirping like gulls as they thrust their merchandise over the metal gates and nylon ropes. He’s soaking it up as he signs, takes selfies, and asks his caddie, fellow Davis Park assistant pro Taylor Laybourne, if they have anything left in the bag to give away. “He’s a great sport about it,� Laybourne said. “To see everyone from kids to adults thinking he’s THE Zach Johnson, getting his autograph, with him, going, ‘Oh, I’m a huge fan! I’ve been following you for years!’ He just smiles. Zach is the most-humble human being I’ve ever known. “I get goose-bumps, because there are not too many other guys that are more deserving of this and who could handle this type of confusion,� Laybourne said. “He’s my best friend. When he asked me to do this, I told him he’s crazy, he needs a real caddie. He said, ‘No, screw that. Let’s go have fun.’�

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