Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting How to watch: ‘Golf with a Purpose’ charity challenge

How to watch: ‘Golf with a Purpose’ charity challenge

ATLANTA - The ‘Golf With A Purpose' Charity Challenge, a televised nine-hole charity exhibition, takes place on Thursday, Sept. 3 from 2-4 p.m. ET. The event will benefit the East Lake Foundation and the TOUR Championship's other charitable beneficiaries. NBA legend Vince Carter will team with four-time PGA TOUR winner Ryan Palmer, while former Pittsburgh Steelers running back, NFL Hall of Fame member and Super Bowl XL champion Jerome Bettis will join forces with 2020 Payne Stewart Award recipient Zach Johnson. Fans can support the East Lake Foundation's mission of continued neighborhood revitalization and commitment to advancing and operationalizing racial equity by visiting TOURChampionship.com/Charity. HOW TO WATCH Coverage of the exhibition match will air from 2-4 p.m. (ET) as a special presentation of PGA TOUR LIVE and will be simulcast on Golf Channel, GOLFTV (internationally) and other PGA TOUR media platforms, including PGA TOUR social channels.

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Charles Howell III still has burning desire to add to trophy collectionCharles Howell III still has burning desire to add to trophy collection

ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. – Charles Howell’s childhood memories illustrate how much this game has changed. Working with David Leadbetter allowed Howell to watch the practice sessions of some of the best players from the 1990s. It was a rare treat for a teenager enamored with golf, but there’s little from those experiences that’s still applicable today. The games that got Nick Faldo and Nick Price to the top of the world ranking wouldn’t work today. “They were hitting 3-irons 200 to 205 yards. They would draw some, they would fade some,â€� Howell said Wednesday. “It was super impressive. But how the game has changed. … Go watch Rory McIlroy and Dustin Johnson and Brooks hit drivers and watch Jordan Spieth putt and find a way to do that. That’s just the reality of it, that’s just the facts. If I was a kid growing up, that’s what I would learn how to try to do.â€� Howell is no longer a kid, but driving distance and putting are the two facets of his game that he’s focused on since winning last year’s RSM Classic. He has been a TOUR player for nearly two decades but still has an enthusiasm for the game, and a desire to add to a trophy collection that is smaller than he expected when he turned pro out of Oklahoma State. His latest title came 12 months ago, when he held off a 26-year-old Patrick Rodgers in a sudden-death playoff. Rodgers set a TOUR record by shooting 61-62 on the weekend at Sea Island Golf Club. Howell started the final round with a one-shot lead but was three over par after the first two holes. He didn’t make another bogey the rest of the day. His six birdies included three in a row on Nos. 15-17. Howell made a 15-foot birdie putt on the second playoff hole to earn his third PGA TOUR victory. The victory may have ended a long drought, but it didn’t create complacency. It reinforced how hard it is to win. Few players know that better than Howell. He’s won three times in 558 career starts but has finished second or third another 25 times (16 runners-up, nine third-place finishes). “That was a good reminder at 40 years old to continue to work at my game and find ways to improve and get better,â€� Howell said. “As much excitement as it was to win and finally win again, it was also a reminder that if I’m going to stay competitive and keep doing this into my 40s, I have to keep finding ways to get better.â€� He started working with short-game coach Josh Gregory to shore up his play on and around the greens. Howell also changed his workout regimen, finding exercises that he could do on the road instead of saving most of his gym time for the few weeks he’s home. He hasn’t gained distance, but his workouts have kept the effects of Father Time at bay a little longer. “The way the game is going, I would say more so than ever the driver and the putter have become golf,â€� Howell said. “There was a time a long time ago where I think you saw guys with iron play, I’m going to try to draw this into this flag, I’m going to try to fade this, a little off‑speed this and that. I think what’s replaced maybe a great iron player is a guy that drives it great and putts it great.â€� Howell, 40, is still on an unceasing quest for improvement. Few compete as often as he does. He’s averaged 28.3 starts per year since becoming a TOUR member in 2001. This is his seventh start of the new season. He’s 23rd in the FedExCup with two top-10 finishes. “I still love the game,â€� Howell said. “I’’ve been a little bit rejuvenated because my son is playing golf and he loves it. So after school and et cetera, we’re going to the golf course.  He makes me play a bit more, gets me off the driving range hitting range balls, which is sort of my thing. But he makes me play more, chip and putt more. He’s getting into playing the U.S. Kids golf stuff, so watching that, watching him go through that is really cool because I remember when I went through that.â€�

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Jordan Spieth shares his house, PGA Championship practice round with Justin ThomasJordan Spieth shares his house, PGA Championship practice round with Justin Thomas

The next two events are among the most important on Jordan Spieth’s calendar each year. This week, he returns to the tournament that served as his TOUR debut, where he twice contended as a teenager but has yet to win. He’s hoisted the trophy at the other TOUR stop in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, the Charles Schwab Challenge, but winning his hometown event, the AT&T Byron Nelson, has eluded him. Then Spieth will try to complete the Career Grand Slam at a course that seems to complement his skill set, Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Spieth heads into this important fortnight in good form, fresh off a victory at the RBC Heritage. Sharing his home this week with two friends, Justin Thomas and Jason Dufner, should help alleviate any pressure he may feel to win a home game and the only major lacking from his resume. “I always want to play really well here,” said Spieth, whose T9 in last year’s AT&T Byron Nelson, the first played at TPC Craig Ranch, is his best in 10 appearances at this event. “It’s obviously one that’s starred on the calendar.” So is the PGA Championship, the tournament that’s stood between him and the Career Grand Slam for each of the past five years. This year’s venue, Southern Hills, is one Spieth played in his amateur days, but it has undergone a dramatic renovation by Gil Hanse since then. That’s one reason Spieth and Thomas, following in the flight path of Tiger Woods and Scottie Scheffler, visited Southern Hills earlier this week for an early PGA Championship practice round. 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He said he was “blown away” by the layout, despite the 35 mph gusts they faced in their practice round. “I thought tee to green it was excellent,” he said. “I thought it challenged kind of all facets of your game. You have to work the ball quite a bit, you have to, you really, really have to be good around the greens. You can’t fake your way around it.” Spieth played Southern Hills in the 2009 U.S. Amateur, when he was still in high school. “It’s changed so much and I was 15 or 16 years old, so I just wanted to see it … take some stress off practice rounds next week and be able to do nine each day instead of feeling like I got to go out and learn a lot,” Spieth said. “The golf course was fantastic. I loved it. The green complexes are perfectly fitting to the holes. The greens play maybe three quarters of the size that they actually are. There’s a lot more runoffs than I remember into Bermuda chipping areas and into runoff areas that are mowed. 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Thomas is 20th in the FedExCup with six top-10s, but not a win, this season. “I felt like taking four weeks off into a major wasn’t a very smart idea … and I personally just want to try something a little different this year,” Thomas said. “These last three majors, I’m going to see how I feel this week, and potentially add (the RBC Canadian Open, the week before the U.S. Open), but I just want to play the week before and see how that feels and see how that gets going into next week and seeing if that can lead to some success. “My game has been very, very solid this year. It just hasn’t produced any wins, which is what I play for. I’m getting close, I just got to stay patient and just let it come. I know that it will. Just have to be in the right frame of mind for it and hopefully we can get on a little run whenever it does happen.”

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