Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting How Pebble Beach was made anew for the U.S. Women’s Open

How Pebble Beach was made anew for the U.S. Women’s Open

It’s been over 70 years since the LPGA hosted an event at Pebble Beach, so fitting it for elite female players is a challenge. Here’s what players are expecting this week.

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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+350
Rory McIlroy+600
Bryson DeChambeau+900
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Collin Morikawa+2200
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Justin Thomas+2800
Brooks Koepka+3000
Viktor Hovland+3000
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+450
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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Royal Portrush shines in The Open’s opening roundRoyal Portrush shines in The Open’s opening round

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland – On the eve of The Open, the discourse was dominated by the tournament’s greater significance. The Open’s return to Royal Portrush was a significant step for a country that suffered through decades of sectarian violence. But golf became the focal point once Darren Clarke hit the first tee shot a little after 6:30 a.m. on Thursday, and Royal Portrush is playing the starring role. Related: 5 Things to Know about Royal Portrush | O.B. could be a factor at The Open “The course is special,â€� Eddie Pepperell said after shooting 70. “This is hopefully going to build into, progress to a historic Open. I’m confident it will be.â€� Rory McIlroy’s Open chances may have ended on his first hole. Graeme McDowell’s sterling round was spoiled by a lost ball on his last hole, and Clarke faded after a fairy-tale start, but the locals will still get to see one of their own shine this weekend. Harry Colt’s design did exactly what a golf course should. It was fair in doling out rewards and punishments. The doglegs require players to commit to a distance and line off the tee. Webb Simpson said he hit drivers and hybrids off the tee Thursday, and everything in between. He is 156th on the PGA TOUR in driving distance, but used his longest club just five times Thursday. First-round leader J.B. Holmes, on the other hand, is one of the TOUR’s longest players. Royal Portrush allows a variety of players to succeed. There’s a myriad of ways to play the course, but the penalties are high for a miscue. Royal Portrush may have the fewest bunkers of any course on The Open rota, but the rough is thick after recent rains and lost balls are a possibility whenever a shot strays from the fairway. “They’ve done such a great job setting this course up, where you have fairway, first cut and then about 7 or 8 yards of light rough,â€� Simpson said. “So a shot that’s not that bad is still okay. And then a really bad shot is super penal, which I think is the perfect way to set it up, because a bad drive, you’re going to have a pitch out. “It’s one of the few courses that every player who’s played it that I’ve talked to this year, they all loved it. Usually you’ll have both sides. But everybody loved it.â€� This is a much different test than the crispy Carnoustie that players faced last year. The lush conditions, combined with Royal Portrush’s elevated greens, mean players must take an aerial route on many holes. The slopes around the putting surfaces repel wayward strikes. Players lauded Royal Portrush for being tough, but fair. “He really will only penalize you if it’s a poor golf shot,â€� Paul Casey said about Colt. “Nothing is random with what he did. That’s the best way to put it. You can see a lot of randomness in links, a lot of why on earth is that there?â€� Casey said he puts Portrush, which is hosting The Open for the first time since 1951, in his “top coupleâ€� among courses in the Open rota. “This has everything,â€� Casey said. “This is an unbelievable golf course.â€� Ireland’s Shane Lowry is the only player within a shot of Holmes, but the crowd at 68 is as large as the one that’s gathered each night this week outside Portrush’s Harbour Bar. Among those contenders are links aficionados Sergio Garcia, Lee Westwood and Tommy Fleetwood, and the game’s dominant force in majors, Brooks Koepka. As proof that the course rewards good play, last week’s winner, Dylan Frittelli, continued his fine form with a first-round 68. But Royal Portrush shouldn’t be accused of impunity. It punished plenty, and it was impartial to the names on the caddie bib. McIlroy shot 79. Tiger Woods, Adam Scott and Marc Leishman were just one shot better. Phil Mickelson shot 76. Among the players who shot 74 were Gary Woodland, Bryson DeChambeau, Xander Schauffele and defending champion Francesco Molinari. The field’s scoring average on the par-71 track was approximately 73 strokes. “You couldn’t rely on getting (shots) back,â€� Scott said after making just one birdie Thursday. “There wasn’t birdie opportunities out there unless you hit a really great shot.â€� Throw in some trademark Open weather and Thursday offered a thorough examination. “We had a true Irish day today,â€� said Jordan Spieth, who shot 70. “It was all the seasons in one day, which is kind of cool to play The Open in that situation on such a beautiful track.â€� The claret jug isn’t handed out until Sunday, but Royal Portrush won on Thursday.

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Fantasy Insider: TOUR ChampionshipFantasy Insider: TOUR Championship

With the Power Rankings for the TOUR Championship slotting all 30 qualifiers in pursuit of the 14th FedExCup title, this weekly Fantasy Insider column is predictably abridged. But that's not to say that it's without valuable and timely information. After all, the 2020-21 season begins in nine sleeps with the Safeway Open on Thursday, Sept. 9. First, the bad news. I will not be writing a full-membership fantasy ranking. Given that membership isn't turning over and with only two days in between seasons, the energy and focus is devoted elsewhere. Ever since the wraparound season was introduced in 2013, I've joked that it's stressed fantasy planning due to tight scheduling, but this year's squeeze is unprecedented. In place of the ranking will be a season primer that will read a lot like the customary introduction to the annual ranking. It'll be an evergreen guide. More on its timing below. RELATED: Power Rankings | Expert Picks | Eight things to know about East Lake While membership isn't changing, there is movement in the ranks. The next update to the Korn Ferry Tour graduate reshuffle page will list the opening order of the golfers who didn't qualify for the FedExCup Playoffs and who don't have status via a victory. Because there are no KFT grads in 2020-21, the title of the page will change. That'll be your cue for what's new if you don't already look at the date at the top. Medical Extensions will be updated at the same time as the Reshuffle. Plan on both being ready by Monday. Qualifiers will remain as fluid as it's ever been as the governing bodies around the world continue to adapt to the pandemic and how it influences their schedules. If you draft with an emphasis on who is exempt into the events included on that page, plan on no worse than the baseline constructs of how those fields have been assembled in recent memory. Anything unusual will be considered a bonus. The Rookie Ranking will be taking on a different form in 2020-21. Because there won't be any rookies to start the season, there won't be anything to rank. However, in due time, non-members will begin totaling the equivalent of FedExCup points in pursuit of Special Temporary Membership. (The target remains 288.035 points. That's a holdover from the 2018-19 season because 2019-20 was compressed.) Non-members will include the top 10 in Korn Ferry Tour points at the conclusion of the KFT Championship presented by United Leasing & Finance as they will have exemptions into all additional events in 2020-21. All three-time winners on the combined 2020-21 KFT season also will earn an automatic promotion to the PGA TOUR and could qualify as a rookie. With so many moving parts, Rookie Ranking will demand attention, just in a different way. With the Monday finish of the TOUR Championship, my preview material for the Safeway Open will slide back a day. So, the Power Rankings will publish on Tuesday, as will the season primer referenced above. Sleepers, Expert Picks and the Fantasy Insider will publish on Wednesday. We'll return to the regular schedule in advance of the U.S. Open the following week. Speaking of primers, this is a great time to reacquaint yourself with the fantasy primer for the restart of this season. It published in early June, but it can serve as a bridge into next week's primer and should help with some direction for draft leaguers. Before all of that, of course, there's the little matter of settling fantasy league championships at East Lake. Round scoring in PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf isn't influenced by the staggered start of the TOUR Championship, but the bonus points earned will be based on actual finish in the tournament, not by actual score over 72 holes. As I reminded gamers in this space two weeks ago and as the old One & Done determined values for the 2019 TOUR Championship, because no FedExCup points are up for grabs in the finale, bonus points in PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf will follow the same breakdown used at THE NORTHERN TRUST and the BMW Championship. So, the winner will yield 150 bonus points as a starter for his owners in the final round. PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf My roster for the TOUR Championship (in alphabetical order): Bryson DeChambeau Dustin Johnson Jon Rahm Xander Schauffele Webb Simpson Justin Thomas You'll find my starters in Expert Picks. Others to consider for each category (in alphabetical order): Scoring: Daniel Berger; Tony Finau; Tyrrell Hatton; Scottie Scheffler Driving: Daniel Berger; Tyrrell Hatton; Hideki Matsuyama; Collin Morikawa; Scottie Scheffler RETURNING TO COMPETITION Martin Laird ... Scheduled to tee it up at the Korn Ferry Tour's Lincoln Land Championship presented by LRS. He was among the internationals who didn't return to the PGA TOUR this summer. Finished 182nd in the FedExCup, but he'll keep his fully exempt status due to the eligibility adjustments announced during the hiatus. Kelly Kraft ... Also committed to the KFT event in Springfield, Illinois. This constitutes his first sanctioned start since he underwent surgery on his left hip (labrum, impingement) on Sept. 26, 2019. When he returns to the PGA TOUR, he'll have a Major Medical Extension with a full season's slate of 23 starts. NOTABLE WDs None. POWER RANKINGS RECAP - BMW CHAMPIONSHIP Power Ranking Golfer Result 1 Dustin Johnson P2 2 Webb Simpson DNP 3 Justin Thomas T25 4 Jon Rahm Win 5 Bryson DeChambeau 50th 6 Daniel Berger T25 7 Collin Morikawa T20 8 Kevin Kisner T25 9 Harris English T40 10 Scottie Scheffler T20 11 Alex Noren T40 12 Xander Schauffele T25 13 Tony Finau 5th 14 Louis Oosthuizen T25 15 Jason Day 64th 16 Viktor Hovland T40 17 Hideki Matsuyama T3 18 Matt Kuchar T59 19 Russell Henley T25 20 Ryan Palmer T40 Wild Card Rory McIlroy T12 SLEEPERS RECAP - BMW CHAMPIONSHIP Golfer Result Corey Conners T33 Matthew Fitzpatrick T6 Mackenzie Hughes T10 Mark Hubbard T51 Matthew Wolff T16 BIRTHDAYS AMONG ACTIVE GOLFERS ON THE PGA TOUR September 1 ... Matthew Fitzpatrick (26) September 2 ... none September 3 ... none September 4 ... none September 5 ... none September 6 ... Brice Garnett (37) September 7 ... none September 8 ... none

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Cink turns back the clock; trio tied for the lead in MemphisCink turns back the clock; trio tied for the lead in Memphis

MEMPHIS, Tenn. – Notes and observations from the second round of the FedEx St. Jude Classic, where Chez Reavie fired a bogey-free 65 to get to 9 under, then watched as unheralded Colombian Sebastian Munoz (67) and Charl Schwartzel (66) tied him at the top. Stewart Cink, enjoying a career revival at age 44, shot 68 to get to 8 under, just a shot off the lead. For more coverage from TPC Southwind, click here for the Daily Wrap-up. CINK DIALS UP WAY-BACK MACHINE Stewart Cink is seeking his first victory since the 2009 Open Championship, the one in which he beat the suddenly-young-again 59-year-old Tom Watson in a playoff at Turnberry. So you might think Cink looks back on ’09 as a high-water mark in his career. The six-time TOUR winner says that isn’t so. “Going back to 2009, you know, if you really examine that year closely, I won the British but the rest of the year wasn’t all that spectacular,â€� Cink said, when asked when was the last time he felt this good about his game. “So going back to 2008 probably, the first half of ’08, and I really, really felt good about my game and I felt like I had a chance to win a lot of tournaments. “I feel like if I can just hang in there and stay within myself and not get too ahead of myself with the results, then I’ve got a chance here, too.â€� It’s been a banner year for Cink in more ways than one in 2017. Most importantly his wife Lisa’s cancer is in sustained remission, but Stewart’s game has been robust, too. After making 14 cuts in 18 starts this season, including top-10s at The RSM Classic and DEAN & DELUCA Invitational and six other top-25 finishes, he came into this week at 60th in the FedExCup. On Monday, he got through sectional qualifying for the U.S. Open at Erin Hills.   What’s more, he is right at home in Memphis, quite possibly America’s best barbecue town—a fact that is not lost on Cink, who enters his own recipes in competitions. He planned to call fellow barbecue aficionado Davis Love III and perhaps hit up his favorite spot Friday night. Life is sweet, and a victory Sunday would be even sweeter. SOUTH AFRICANS LOVING MEMPHIS Maybe it’s just a coincidence, but South African countrymen Ernie Els, Retief Goosen and Charl Schwartzel—who have seven major titles between them—are loving TPC Southwind. Schwartzel leads the way (66, T1), but Goosen (68, T6) is only three off the lead. Then there’s 47-year-old Els, who has had a tough year, making just four cuts in 14 starts coming into this week, but who fired a second-round 69 to get to 3 under par, well inside the cut line here. “I’ve been putting well for a while,â€� said Schwartzel, who is first in strokes gained: putting this week after making 220 feet of putts. “Just some weeks you see the lines better than other weeks. You know, this week I can really see the breaks well, and my speed’s good.â€� At 74th in the FedExCup, Schwartzel is looking to build on a season-best third at the Masters and a sixth-place finish in his title defense at the Valspar Championship earlier this year. With the U.S. Open looming next week, he says he couldn’t pick a better time to heat up. “That’s the ultimate in our sport, is to win majors and peak for those tournaments,â€� he said. “Whichever way suits you to do that, this is what you must do.â€� MICKELSON RUN STALLS Still looking for his first victory since the 2013 Open Championship, Phil Mickelson got hot and was hovering around the lead at 7 under par, sending a jolt of excitement around the course. Then he bogeyed the fifth and sixth holes and hit his approach shot into the water to double-bogey the ninth, his last hole of the day, for a dispiriting 67 to drop to 4 under. At five off the lead, he is tied for 18th place and will need a banner weekend. “Yeah, it’s a disappointing way to finish the round,â€� said Mickelson, who hit 11 of 14 fairways Friday after hitting just five in the first round. “I made a poor swing there and made double, but I hit a lot of really good shots today and had a chance to shoot something really low, and unfortunately didn’t get the score out of it, but it was encouraging that I played really well.â€� ODDS AND ENDS Chez Reavie hit 14 of 18 greens in regulation and is first in the field this week in proximity to the hole on approach shots (23 feet, 2 inches). He has twice led through 36 holes, once at the 2008 RBC Canadian Open, which he won for his first and only TOUR victory, and agains and the 2011 John Deere Classic, where he tied for fifth. … Adam Scott shot the round of the day, a 6-under 64, to get to -5 and T11 going into the weekend. He ranks first in strokes gained: off the tee, first in driving distance (301.4 yards) and first in strokes gained: tee to green. His only weakness so far has been his usual Achilles heel, putting, where his strokes gained number is -2.589 (82nd in the field). … Those at 1 over or better made it to the weekend, although a second cut will come Saturday. Notable names to miss the 36-hole cut included Rickie Fowler (74-70), who was coming off a runner-up finish at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide and came into the week eighth on the FedExCup points list, and Byrson DeChambeau (69-73). … This is the second time Charl Schwartzel has held the 36-hole lead/co-lead in 154 TOUR starts. He was tied for first at the 2011 Dell Technologies Championship but finished T21. … Munoz, 24, would become the 14th different player under 30 to win on TOUR this season. To date, 13 different players have accounted for 16 wins. … Ben Crane, a five-time TOUR winner, came into the week 160th in the FedExCup and ready to try something completely different. Crane, the 2014 FedEx St. Jude champion, decided to celebrate like the former professional wrestler Ric Flair after every made putt. “We’re going two claps and a Ric Flair after you make a putt,â€� he said. “So you go (clap, clap) whoo!â€� CALL OF THE DAY SHOT OF THE DAY BEST OF SOCIAL MEDIA

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