Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting How to Watch: WGC-HSBC Champions, Round 4, leaderboard, tee times, TV times

How to Watch: WGC-HSBC Champions, Round 4, leaderboard, tee times, TV times

Tony Finau carded a 2-under 70 in the third round of the World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions to take a three-shot lead at 13 under.  Patrick Reed, Justin Rose and Xander Schauffele are tied for second place. Here’s everything you need to know to follow Round 3 of the WGC-HSBC Champions: Leaderboard Round 4 tee times HOW TO WATCH/LISTEN (ALL TIMES ET) TELEVISION: Saturday-Sunday, 11 p.m.-4 a.m. (Golf Channel) NOTABLE GROUPINGS 10:05 p.m.: Jason Day, Kiradech Aphibarnrat, Keegan Bradley 10:15 p.m.: Tommy Fleetwood, Andrew Putnam, Patrick Reed 10:25 p.m.: Tony Finau, Justin Rose, Xander Schauffele MUST-READS Daily Wrap-Up: Finau grabs 54-hole lead

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Rory McIlroy / Shane Lowry+350
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Monday qualifiers: The RSM ClassicMonday qualifiers: The RSM Classic

A rising Korn Ferry Tour star and the roommate of a TOUR rookie are among this week’s qualifiers for The RSM Classic in coastal Georgia. Akshay Bhatia (62), Bryson Nimmer (63), Brett Drewitt (65) and Conner Godsey (65) earned spots in the field at Sea Island GC via Monday’s four-spot qualifier at Brunswick CC. With his girlfriend Presleigh Schultz on the bag, Bhatia delivered a signature performance to earn a spot in this week’s field. The 20-year-old began the calendar year of competition with a win at the Korn Ferry Tour’s The Bahamas Great Exuma Classic at Sandals Emerald Bay in January, and he’ll aim to conclude the year with a bookend sterling showing. Temperatures hovered in the high 50s and low 60s Monday, with wind strength reaching double-digit mph, but Bhatia was up to the challenge. “I’ve done this Monday so many times, and today I just knew I was going to do it,” Bhatia said. “It was freezing, and for whatever reason, I always play well with (Presleigh) and I always feel super comfortable … Couldn’t really feel my hands, trying to stabilize the putter as much as I could. “I haven’t played much this offseason. Not to get my card last year was tough, but to play this event this week, it will be great. I’ve played here before, I love this golf course and I know a bunch of people here.” This marked the final PGA TOUR qualifier of the 2022 calendar year. The next open event on TOUR will be the Sony Open in Hawaii in January. In all, 104 players competed for four spots in this week’s field. Click here for all scores from the qualifier. Here’s a capsule look at the four Monday qualifiers for The RSM Classic … Akshay Bhatia (62) Age: 20 Hometown: Wake Forest, North Carolina PGA TOUR starts: 19 Cuts made: 5 Best PGA TOUR finish: T9, 2020 Fortinet Championship Notes: Carded nine birdies against one bogey Monday, with girlfriend Presleigh Schultz on the bag … Holds full 2023 Korn Ferry Tour status after finishing No. 30 on 2022 season-long standings. Won season-opening The Bahamas Great Exuma Classic at Sandals Emerald Bay in January with Presleigh also on the bag … Also competed in last month’s Butterfield Bermuda Championship on TOUR, finishing T17 … Korean barbecue enthusiast. Bryson Nimmer (63) Age: 26 Hometown: Bluffton, South Carolina Alma mater: Clemson PGA TOUR starts: 10 Cuts made: 6 Best PGA TOUR finish: T11, 2022 Corales Puntacana Championship Notes: Carded five birdies and an eagle Monday, and he was without a bogey … Lives with TOUR rookie Ben Griffin in St. Simons Island, Georgia, down the street from Sea Island GC … Made three cuts in five TOUR starts last season, including a closing 65 for a T11 in Punta Cana … Made four cuts in seven starts on 2022 PGA TOUR Canada … Four-time first-team All-ACC selection at Clemson, joining Jonathan Byrd and D.J. Trahan as Clemson men’s golfers to accomplish the feat … Boating enthusiast. Brett Drewitt (65) Age: 31 Hometown: Taree, Australia PGA TOUR starts: 44 Cuts made: 17 Best PGA TOUR finish: T25, 2018 Fortinet Championship Notes: Carded seven bogeys Monday against two bogeys … Held 2022 PGA TOUR membership, making seven cuts in 23 starts and finishing No. 219 on the FedExCup … Has made 150 career Korn Ferry Tour starts, including a victory at the 2020 Memorial Health Championship presented by LRS … Twice earned PGA TOUR card via Korn Ferry Tour; 2016 Finals and 2020-21 Regular Season … Cricket enthusiast. Conner Godsey (65) Age: 30 Hometown: Rogersville, Alabama Alma mater: University of Montevallo PGA TOUR starts: 0 Notes: Made six birdies against one bogey Monday to earn his first career PGA TOUR start … Played 2022 Korn Ferry Tour, making 12 cuts in 22 starts and finishing No. 113 on the season-long standings. Best finish was T10 at The Ascendant presented by Blue in July … Finished T3 at PGA TOUR Canada’s CRMC Championship presented by Gertens in August … Finished No. 3 on 2020-21 PGA TOUR Latinoamerica Totalplay Cup, winning Banco del Pacifico Open in June 2021.

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‘Crescendo’ now exists for new PGA TOUR schedule‘Crescendo’ now exists for new PGA TOUR schedule

Few have worked harder or come from more improbable golf backgrounds to make it onto the PGA TOUR than Olin Browne, as late a bloomer as you’ll find. Smitten with the game at 19, he honed his talents while at Occidental College in Los Angeles and turned pro at 25. So, making it to the big leagues demonstrated uncanny determination. Yet, it wasn’t quite what Browne envisioned that late autumn day in 1994, enveloped by the surroundings of arguably the liveliest city in America, Las Vegas. At an age when many of his PGA TOUR peers were in the middle of their careers, Browne at 35 was in his sophomore season and feeling privileged to be there. Still, the bright lights and big-league stage of the PGA TOUR in Las Vegas didn’t mesh with the melancholy in his heart. It was the last full-field tournament of the year, No. 44 on the schedule and the 31st start of the season for Browne, yet “it just felt so sad,� he said. “The season was over, but there was no crescendo.� Twenty-four years later, Browne – a regular competitor on the PGA TOUR Champions – was apprised of the way the 46-tournament 2018-19 PGA TOUR schedule will conclude and in support of his younger colleagues, he nodded his approval. “Now, there’s a crescendo.� What caught Browne’s attention was the climactic finish to next season – three consecutive weeks of the FedExCup playoffs culminating with the TOUR Championship Aug. 22-25. Reducing the playoffs by one and concluding the season before Labor Day and the onrush of football are definitive exclamation points, in Browne’s view, and two former PGA TOUR competitors who helped give shape to the FedExCup Playoffs agree. “It’s more dynamic, instead of the season petering out like it used to,� said Joe Durant, who was a member of the Policy Board when the FedExCup debuted in 2007. Another Policy Board member was Brad Faxon, who recalls that “we always had the thought to eliminate competing against the NFL when the FedExCup started. This new schedule is good. I think it’s better to have only three playoff events.� That they were in on the ground floor or the FedExCup Playoffs but didn’t really get to reap the enormous benefits gives Durant and Faxon reason to laugh. Yet they’re in good company, because their contemporaries – players like Browne and Billy Andrade and Mark Calcavecchia – pretty much were on their way off the PGA TOUR when the FedExCup Playoffs started. But to a man, they sing the same refrain. “No regrets, none at all,� said Andrade, who, like Faxon and Browne, never qualified for the FedExCup Playoffs. “The PGA TOUR provided me with so much, so I’m thrilled that I was part of it.� Durant played in just the very first FedExCup Playoff in 2007. “We probably all wish we were out there for these playoff tournaments, there’s so much money, but to be fair, we had our opportunities and they were pretty good, too,� he said. “It’s the way life rolls. There’s nothing to be bitter about.� Instead, Browne points to the mission of the PGA TOUR – to provide financial opportunities – and appreciates that the FedExCup Playoffs “are another way to funnel proceeds to members.� But he credits PGA TOUR leadership for molding the schedule the way it has; whereas in much of his career it ended without that season-ending crescendo, now the close of the season – three playoffs in a row coming on the heels of a summer stretch of two majors and a World Golf Championship – is the best part of the year. “You could make that point and you’d have a hard time arguing that,� said Browne. Not that there aren’t highlights elsewhere in the 2018-19 schedule, among them: With THE PLAYERS Championship returning to March (14-17) for the first time since 2006, there will be four straight tournaments in Florida. That easy travel flow will appear again in the summer with three Midwest stops – new tournaments in Detroit (Rocket Mortgage Classic at Detroit Golf Club June 27-30) and Minneapolis (3M Open at TPC Twin Cities July 4-7), followed by a longtime favorite in Silvis, Ill. (John Deere Classic July 11-14). Given the PGA Championship’s move to May, the month of August will be cleared for the PGA TOUR’s dynamic sprint to the season’s finish line with three straight weeks of playoffs: THE NORTHERN TRUST (Aug. 8-11), the BMW Championship (Aug 15-18) and TOUR Championship (Aug. 22-25). From the PGA TOUR’s perspective, a significant aspect of the schedule involves the vitality of the deals with the title sponsors. Nine are signed on for 10 years, six others for at least seven years, and 29 partners have deals that extend beyond 2020. All positive factors at a time when the PGA TOUR is firmly establishing a different look to its schedule and welcoming a wave of younger faces. While a veteran such as Calcavecchia – who was in his 12th PGA TOUR season and had won seven times by the time Jordan Spieth was born – competed most of his career without the FedExCup Playoffs, he suggests there is a common denominator with he and that younger star. “My goal was always to get to the TOUR Championship at the end of the year,� he said. “I don’t think that’s any different.� Spieth would likely agree. But what has changed are the logistics to getting to the TOUR Championship. Andrade pointed out that back in his playing days, competitors lagging well down the money list could make a big charge in the mid-August-to-late-October stretch and he was a big fan of those tournaments. Now, “they are still big tournaments in the fall, only players need to take advantage of them to get a jump on the (FedExCup) list.� Back when the FedExCup was announced, then-Commissioner Tim Finchem said there were layers of intent. One, an exclamation point was needed to the season, with the best players gathered for a series of tournaments. Successful as that has been with 11 seasons of the FedExCup, that scenario will be stronger with the 2018-19 playoffs. But Andrade and others remember Commissioner Finchem talking of “creating a situation where players will play more,� and that vision has come to fruition, too. Consider the fall and early January tournaments that begin the wrap-around season. Players have approached them differently as the race for the FedExCup has become more established and numbers from the 2017 TOUR Championship prove this. Of the 30 players who made it to East Lake Golf Club, 12 of them had started their seasons by playing in at least five of the first nine weeks. Then, at the other end of the schedule, the push to improve FedExCup status and take advantage of the Playoffs has produced stellar fields, too. Of the top 20 players in the Official World Golf Ranking, 17 of them played in at least six of the last nine PGA TOUR tournaments, including No. 1 Dustin Johnson, who played in eight of them. That represents a shift in the landscape, because 15 years ago six of the world’s top 10 players play in just two or three of the final 10 weeks of the season, Such data has made a believer out of a Faxon, who was involved in discussions to bring on the FedExCup Playoffs, but not the wrap-around schedule. “The wrap-around season didn’t make sense to me until I realized the NBA, NHL and NFL all do it successfully,� said Faxon. “But now it all makes more sense and I’m very impressed how they moved it this quickly.�

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