Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting How to watch Cadence Bank Houston Open, Round 3: Featured Groups, live scores, tee times, TV times

How to watch Cadence Bank Houston Open, Round 3: Featured Groups, live scores, tee times, TV times

Round 3 of the Cadence Bank Houston Open takes place Saturday at Memorial Park Golf Course. Tony Finau holds the lead at 13-under par as the second round is delayed due to weather. Leaderboard Tee times HOW TO FOLLOW: Television: Saturday-Sunday, 1 p.m.-4 p.m. ET. (Golf Channel) Radio: Saturday, 1-6 p.m. E.T. / Sunday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. ET. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio) MUST READS Tony Finau ties career low with 62 to lead Cadence Bank Houston Open Air Force grad Westmoreland comes full circle in Houston Three Things to Know: Taylor Montgomery

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FedExCup Playoffs scenarios: How to make the final 30FedExCup Playoffs scenarios: How to make the final 30

The FedExCup Playoffs have been reduced to the top 70 going into this week's BMW Championship. By Sunday night, another 40 players will be eliminated, with the top 30 in points advancing to the TOUR Championship, where the FedExCup champion will be decided. Here’s a look at what the players in this week’s field have to do to secure a top-30 spot. Note: These are just projections and not definitive projections. Once competition begins, please rely on the FedExCup live projections.

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Golf in these times: FloridaGolf in these times: Florida

ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. – It’s 2 p.m. on Monday. That means the Mark McCumber-designed course at Marsh Creek Country Club is open for play. No tee times. No greens fees. No carts. Just walk up and pick out one of the six set of tees that awaits on every hole. Our foursome includes trivia night buddies Dillon, Kevin and Burt, the latter having recently performed in a production of Horton Foote’s “The Young Man from Atlantaâ€� at the Limelight, a community theatre just north of the Historic District. Yes, he’s the entertainer of the group. They each have push carts. I’m carrying. I make a mental note to search Amazon that night in hopes of rectifying my mistake. GOLF IN THESE TIMES • California: Ben Everill plays historic Rancho Park just before city courses in Los Angeles are shut down • Massachusetts: Jim McCabe sees the start of golf season delayed at Presidents Golf Course • Arizona: Rob Bolton sets the scene from an Outlaw Tour event at Western Skies Golf Club • North Carolina: Helen Ross reflects on memories of golf in her home state It’s the first time I’ve seen the guys since everything changed. I had set up Burt with two tickets for THE PLAYERS Championship. Luckily for him, he wanted to attend the first round. “Had a blast,â€� he said. A few hours later, there was no live golf to watch — for the rest of that week, then for the next month, then the month after that, and now who knows how long. But there is still golf to play, at least for those fortunate to have open courses and the ability to visit them. Florida fits the description … for now. Given how packed Marsh Creek’s parking lot was the few times I had driven by, it was obvious that others also are eager to get out, all of them of course employing social distancing and the other necessary safety precautions. Even the time I saw eight people on the smallish range, they were evenly spread out, the new rule of thumb we currently live by. Six feet now means something more than just another putt I’m doomed to miss. “Heard they were booked up on Saturday,â€� Dillon says. “I don’t think I’ve ever heard that happening before.â€� “This is the height of our season, so regardless of the situation, we’re usually packed this time of year,â€� Marsh Creek director of golf Cary Splane tells me later. “But we definitely haven’t lost many rounds.â€� It certainly was starting to get crowded on Monday. Burt’s friend Frank from Michigan’s Upper Peninsula joined us right before we teed off, and our fivesome gets going. We chat a little bit about the coronavirus pandemic, but it’s not the major topic of discussion. Even so, when we reach the green at the par-4 opening hole, someone from the previous day had left a stray ball about 10 feet from the pin. Admittedly, an odd place to leave a ball, but still … a freebie. “Any other day, I’d pick it up and put it in my bag,â€� Kevin says. We’re now standing on the second tee. It’s not a shot I look forward to hitting – a forced carry over marshland front and right. I’m usually good for at least one lost ball. But just as we’re about to hit, Bob – my neighbor from across the street, the one with the stylish new makeover to the front of his house — is finishing up on the first green. We invite him to join, giving us the potentially ponderous sixsome. I then pump two into the marsh. No worries – I carry plenty of spares. The sixsome is fun, but there are others behind us catching up fast. So one hole later, we split into threesomes. I’m in the first group with Bob and Kevin. Energy-wise, they’re each dragging a bit, with good reason. Earlier in the day, Kevin had played tennis at the club’s nearby courts for two hours. Meanwhile, Bob had participated in a 45-minute softball workout, plus he went fishing over the weekend, traveling 75 miles out to sea to catch dolphin and skipjack tuna. I’m guessing each is in training for the next season of American Ninja Warrior. I ask Bob about playing golf during this pandemic. Did it give him any pause for concern? “Not at all,â€� he said. “It’s nice to walk and get some exercise. And it’s a good way to socialize without getting too close to anybody.â€� Certainly, I’m not getting close to Bob or Kevin. I’ve yet to find the fairway with any of my tee shots. Even so, these two hours on the course have been terrific, a chance to escape from my CNN binge-watching, to feel normal again during a time in which nothing seems normal. Or as Cary describes it: “It’s one of the last bastions of normality we have, playing golf instead of losing our minds at home. We call it a day after nine holes, and then I wait in the parking lot for the other threesome to arrive. In addition to his acting skills, Burt is also a musician. He tells me he’s writing a song about the current state of the world – and more to the point, the current state of his mind. “I’ve been thinking about these lyrics,â€� he says. I just lost my longitude I don’t know where I’m going to Like a pirate learning how to pray “Everybody’s kind of lost their bearings,â€� he explains. And yet on this Monday, he found his way to the golf course. It’s a safe harbor. “Golf is a great microcosm for life,â€� Burt says. “You experience ups and downs. You can’t get too excited and you can’t get too depressed. When you make a birdie, you better not chortle because you know you’ll make a bogey at some point. It’s really great therapy for dealing with times like these.â€� Adds Dillon, who often plays golf alone: “It provides me quiet time and reflection.â€� I look over to see Bob reading the instructions on how to fold up his new push cart. It’s a six-step process and evidently requires an engineering degree. And then a clatter of balls – Frank from Michigan accidently left open the large pocket of his golf bag, and a dozen or so spilled out onto the asphalt. So much for quiet reflection. And now a guy driving a white sedan pulls into the parking lot and rolls down his window. “I think I left my wedge somewhere on the ninth hole,â€� he said. “You guys didn’t happen to pick it up?â€� Alas, we didn’t. But the question is oddly comforting. So much uncertainty right now. So much fear. Things have changed. In golf, we no longer shake hands or touch flagsticks or drive two to a cart. But at least we can still count on someone leaving behind a wedge.

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Justin Thomas using unique Titleist prototype ironsJustin Thomas using unique Titleist prototype irons

Justin Thomas is slow to change his equipment, adopting an “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” philosophy to his gear. “I don’t change just to change,” Thomas said from this week’s World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba. “If it’s working, just keep using it.” Thomas’ irons most definitely have been working for him. He’s one of the top players on TOUR in that area of the game, having ranked no worse than sixth in Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green in each of the five previous TOUR seasons, including three consecutive seasons ranked in the top three. That’s why intrigue abounded when the former FedExCup champion arrived at last month’s CJ CUP @ SUMMIT with a new set in the bag. The new irons are very similar to the Titleist 620 MB blades he’d had in the bag since 2019, but they bore a unique stamp with Thomas’ initials, signifying that these were built specifically for the reigning THE PLAYERS champion. Similar to Adam Scott’s 681.AS irons — which shared much in common with his beloved Forged 680 blades — Thomas’ 621.JT irons are, at a glance, very similar to his previous gamers. This week, he shed a little light on the irons that bear his initials. Now, “a little” is key here. The maker of the clubs, Titleist, hasn’t announced any future release possibilities of the prototype irons. Conversely, the company hasn’t said the clubs are one-offs just for Thomas. “Feedback from the best players in the world is a cornerstone of the Titleist R&D process, and these prototype irons (621.JT and 681.AS) have been developed in collaboration with each player to better understand some key design variables such as shaping, sole design and (center of gravity) placement – that ultimately may find their way into future Titleist iron development,” a Titleist spokesperson said. “We look forward to sharing additional updates on these prototypes as we gain feedback and learn more from each player’s experience.” So, while we wait for additional updates regarding the future of 621.JT (and 681.AS irons), we can at least learn a little more about the irons from JT himself. Thomas said he is just one of several players that Titleist approached, asking if their clubs needed any subtle changes to better suit their preferences. Thomas famously likes very little offset in his irons. The term refers to how far the leading edge of the club sits behind the hosel at address. More offset gives players more time to square the club at impact. Amateurs’ clubs often have a lot of offset to lessen their dreaded slice. As a general rule, better players prefer less offset, but few go so far as “zero offset,” which Thomas does. In working with Titleist engineers, Thomas also was keen to dial in the sound and feel of the new irons to complement the “clean look” he likes. “They came to me and said let’s create (a set of irons), anything that you want to change,” Thomas said. “Obviously I loved it, everything about (my irons) already, but the changes are so minor. … It just was about getting the best feeling iron, the best sounding iron. It’s one of those clubs that obviously you have to hit it properly for it to be that way, but one of those ones where you kind of hear it and you turn around like, what is that, you know what I mean?” Thomas indicated engineers experimented with sole grinds and milling techniques and “stuff that’s way, way past my pay grade” in order to produce his dream irons. The result? “They look awesome,” he said.

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