Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Fantasy golf advice: One & Done, Rocket Mortgage Classic

Fantasy golf advice: One & Done, Rocket Mortgage Classic

Every once in a while, I’m asked to clarify how Future Possibilities is constructed. It’s the section of this weekly preview parked at the bottom and it’s reserved for notables in every field. Given the objective of PGA TOUR Fantasy One & Done and every other One & Done game across the landscape, the notables comprise the short list that should command the highest ownership percentages. Confusion can occur when you consider someone like Dustin Johnson, who sits atop my Power Rankings for the Rocket Mortgage Classic. A player of his caliber is going to attract attention everywhere he plays, and that translates into him qualifying as a future possibility 100 percent of the time. However, Future Possibilities discriminates against cachet and focuses on proven course success. After all, you’re selecting only one golfer per event, and even if you’re a two-man gamer, the demarcation line for value needs to be positioned much closer to actual value of the commodity than speculative value. Only 11 golfers in the field of 156 at Detroit Golf Club appear in Futures Possibilities below, and none are followed by the Rocket Mortgage Classic because it’s an inaugural event on the PGA TOUR. Sure, we can project who might be a good fit way in advance, and I do for a handful for the majors that migrate, but without any prior experience as evidence that any golfer will commit to the tournament, long-range planning is folly for the regular non-majors. This phenomenon yields a tremendous opportunity for One & Doners in pursuit in the Motor City. Even the chalk is iffy because of the unknown. Front-runners will be all over the place despite the presence of DJ, Gary Woodland, Hideki Matsuyama and Rickie Fowler. There’s also the reality that the RMC is the 36th event of the season. Even if your league started late, there’s a decent chance that most if not all of those golfers are no longer available to opponents you are targeting. If you’re way back and still have the means, it’s time to stop talking yourself out of DJ. That patience helped get you to where you are today. And that’s it. He’s the only haymaker who makes sense on the board. This is what happens when we’re presented with mystery. To assist in determining your choice, work the remainder of the season backward. Have you reserved your favorites for the TOUR Championship, Wyndham Championship, World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational (at TPC Southwind) and The Open Championship specifically? Those tournaments will be appearing considerably in Future Possibilities in the coming weeks. (Incidentally, if you’re curious where notables who didn’t commit to the RMC make sense later, simply navigate to the One & Done preview for the U.S. Open. It’s the most recent with the most comprehensive section.) If you already haven’t, pencil in your probables. Then count how many others will need to cover the duration. Now crosscheck that result with the chalk at Detroit GC. If you’re pacing with a surplus, knock off a big name. Now is not the time to get cute. Besides, you’ve earned the right to pig out. If you’re limited, lean on a hot hand like Kevin Streelman or invest in a safe play like Ryan Moore or Kevin Kisner. For chasers, allow yourself to be aggressive because you’re guaranteed to be stalking a moving target who has no better idea than you about what might transpire. If DJ is gone, scorers like Sungjae Im, Rory Sabbatini and Jason Kokrak can take the at-bat. Let this strategy guide you this week. It’s a terrific chance to connect with the game on an organic level. If you’re not already thinking and planning like this, it’s an exercise that will assist you in applying this step consistently over time. In fact, be ready for the same advice for next week’s 3M Open. FUTURE POSSIBILITIES NOTE: Select golfers committed to the tournament are listed alphabetically. Future tournaments are sorted chronologically and reflect previous success on the courses on which the tournaments will be held in 2018-19. The numerical values in parentheses represent the order of relative confidence of where to use each golfer if multiple sites are listed (e.g. 1 for strongest, 2 for next-strongest and so on). To present weighted confidence in real time, numerical values will not change all season no matter how many tournaments remain listed for each golfer. All are pending golfer commitment. Jason Dufner … Wyndham (8); TOUR Championship (10) Brian Harman … John Deere (4) Billy Horschel … Wyndham (6); TOUR Championship (1) Dustin Johnson … WGC-St. Jude (6); TOUR Championship (7) Martin Laird … Barracuda (2) Hideki Matsuyama … Wyndham (7); TOUR Championship (5) Ryan Moore … John Deere (8); Wyndham (2); TOUR Championship (9) Cameron Smith … Wyndham (3) Brandt Snedeker … Wyndham (1; defending) Brendan Steele … Barracuda (3) Bubba Watson … TOUR Championship (8)

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PGA TOUR players praise Pete Dye’s legacyPGA TOUR players praise Pete Dye’s legacy

Legendary golf architect Pete Dye died Thursday at age 94 but leaves an undeniable stamp on the game. As the news filtered through the golf fraternity TOUR players and others who have been touched by his contribution to the world begun reflecting on the World Golf Hall of Famer’s legacy en masse. RELATED: Pete Dye passes away at age 94 “We are deeply saddened to learn of the passing of Pete Dye, a true friend of the PGA TOUR and one of the most important course architects of this or any generation. A 2008 inductee into the World Golf Hall of Fame, Pete’s influence is far-reaching, leaving a global imprint on both the amateur and professional games. He designed some of the best known golf courses in the world, though none more recognizable than THE PLAYERS Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass. It was here that Pete masterfully brought Commissioner Deane Beman’s revolutionary stadium golf concept to life, melding Deane’s vision with a brilliantly designed course that is celebrated annually as one of the game’s great strategic courses during THE PLAYERS Championship. Pete, though, was always quick to credit his beloved wife, Alice, with his success, including the concept for his most famous hole, the 17th island green at TPC Sawgrass. Together, Pete and Alice made a formidable team in golf and life, and with sons Perry and P.B., themselves successful course architects, they are recognized as one of the most accomplished families in golf. Our thoughts and prayers go out to the entire Dye family.â€� – PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan “He leaves a huge footprint on the game. One of my best experiences with Pete was playing Whistling Straits one of the first times we went there and I was lucky enough he walked nine holes with me in a practice round and I would ask him, “Mr. Dye why would you put that bunker right there… what were you thinking?â€� and he would look at me and said dryly, “just to piss you off, that’s the only reason.â€� He was a good man who obviously loved golf and just a wonderful course designer who knew how to make difficult golf courses. If you were going to play well around his places you couldn’t fake it and it’s a sad loss for golf. His footprint was at all of his places, undeniably and not a lot of designers can say that. And boy you knew it was going to be tough.â€� – Charles Howell III “Pete and Alice Dye are royalty in golf, no question. My mother was friends with Alice and always enjoyed talking with Pete every chance I could get. I love TPC Sawgrass and my parents were members at The Honors Course which I think is one of his best of all time. He revolutionized golf, changed it, and made it better. We are all lucky to have had him. If you look at the history of golf I’m not sure there is a bigger change in architecture than when Pete Dye came along. It was the most radical change and it was a great change. He is timeless. They’ll be copying him till the end of time.â€� – Jerry Kelly “You can’t mistake a Pete Dye. You knew it was his as soon as you played it. He had a different set of rules when he built golf courses and every single one he built was tough. He built TPC Sawgrass and helped build THE PLAYERS, and Whistling Straits, plus so many golf courses that are amazing. It is sad to lose someone who meant so much to not just the game of golf but to so many of its players as well. I had so many good experiences with him, I learnt a lot from him and he was clearly a very smart man. He will be missed.â€� – Vijay Singh “There’s fingerprints (of influence), and if Pete Dye doesn’t have one of the biggest, certainly in the last 50 years, I don’t know who would rival that. I was fortunate enough to play with him at Hilton Head, one of his gems, in the Pro-Am. It was me and Mr. Dye, Mr. Finchem, and I believe there was another executive of the TOUR. I believe Mr. Dye shot 78 or 79 that day in the Pro-Am and this was within the last 10-12 years for sure. Just hearing the stories, you know, what he did with this hole and that… it was awesome. It was just fantastic to see a golf artist on his canvas he made. Very special. Condolences to his family obviously. He’s a legend.â€� – Zach Johnson “He was an icon when it comes to golf course design. He was a guy who really made you uncomfortable the whole round. And he did it visually. He’d always make you think. He’s one of those guys that you respected him because he built some great golf courses but in the midst of playing them, you hated his guts.â€� – Brandt Snedeker

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