Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Injured Jason Day shoots 67 after wife tells him to ‘suck it up’

Injured Jason Day shoots 67 after wife tells him to ‘suck it up’

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Jason Day may have hurt his back while kissing his daughter, but that didn’t mean his wife was going to give him sympathy about an ill-timed injury. “You need to suck it up,â€� Ellie Day told her husband Friday morning. A kick in the pants propelled him to the top of the leaderboard at Augusta National. One day after he considered withdrawing, Day shot 67 and shared the Masters lead when he walked off 18. He sits at 7-under 137, as do Francesco Molinari and Brooks Koepka. Back pain is nothing new for Day. He’s struggled with it since he was 13 years old. But this time it reared its head at the worst possible time, after an affectionate gesture toward his only daughter, 3-year-old Lucy. The pain reared its head after he bent down to give Lucy a kiss as he headed to the first tee. He received treatment on the second and fourth holes, but limped around Augusta National during his first-round 70. The pain was worst on practice swings, and while walking Augusta National’s hilly terrain. He was able to block it out after addressing the ball. The discomfort also had its benefits. “It’s almost a blessing in disguise,â€� he said. “It just brings down the expectation of going out there and trying too hard. … I’m hoping that I can take the same attitude — even though I feel pretty healthy now — into the next two days and play well.â€� The pain has become part of daily life. Day said he blows into balloons each morning to put his ribs back in place. “Sometimes I wake up and I feel like I’m 50. Sometimes I wake up and I feel like I’m 70. And sometimes I wake up and feel like I’m 18 again,â€� he said. “It just comes and goes, and that’s just how it is. “I’m just doing whatever I can to feel good. So, if blowing in balloons is what I need to do to feel good, then I will do it all day long.â€� Day received additional treatment both Thursday evening and Friday morning. With his back feeling better, he shot the second-lowest score of his career at Augusta National. He birdied all four of the par-5s and added birdies at Friday’s hardest hole, No. 5, and the par-3 16th. It was just three weeks ago that Day’s back problems forced him to withdraw six holes into the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard. He needed an epidural before competing in the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play Championship, where he went 0-3. On Thursday, he told his caddie that he would withdraw if the pain didn’t abate. He was able to continue, and now feels confident that he can continue his pursuit of the green jacket. He was runner-up here in 2011 and finished third two years later. “I feel a lot more optimistic now today than I did yesterday,â€� Day said, “I’m hoping that, bar some outrageous thing that could possibly happen, I’m hoping that, I feel this good going into Saturday and Sunday.â€�

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Forget monsters (Oakland Hills), snakes (Copperhead Course at Innisbrook) and bears (PGA National). If you had to anthropomorphize the old TPC Twin Cities, which has been totally redone for this week’s inaugural 3M Open in Blaine, Minnesota, you might settle on a Teletubby, or one of those Saint Bernard puppies with the tiny cask affixed to its collar.  The course was downright cuddly when it hosted a PGA TOUR Champions event, the 3M Championship, from 2001-18. Paul Goydos and Kenny Perry each shot 60; David Frost’s 25-under 191 in 2010 tied the all-time 54-hole record on that circuit; and in 2017 alone the tournament saw the fifth and eighth most under-par scores in a single round in Champions history. In the last 10 seasons, it ranked among the three easiest Champions courses eight times. 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Once a 7,000-yard par 72, the course is now a 7,450-yard par 71. (The old par-5 third hole has become a 500-plus-yard par 4.) The par-5 sixth measures over 600 yards. The par-3 17th features a 229-yard forced carry over water. At the 596-yard, par-5 18th, the tee was moved right, and the size of the lake roughly doubled, adding intrigue to what can be a beguiling hole. “I made a 10 there last year in the second round,� says Goydos, who also eagled the old version of 18, typical of the finisher’s feast-or-famine nature. “It was an exciting risk-reward hole.�    And now it’s even more so. Simply put, this is not the same TPC Twin Cities. “Extensive,� 3M Tournament Director Peter Mele says of the renovations. Originally a 2000 Arnold Palmer design with input from Lehman, the first iteration of TPC Twin Cities was above all meant to be fun and playable. It succeeded. 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Viktor Hovland makes hole-in-one on TPC Sawgrass’ eighth holeViktor Hovland makes hole-in-one on TPC Sawgrass’ eighth hole

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – TPC Sawgrass’ eighth hole isn’t as famous as its sibling on the course’s other nine, but it presents its own challenges. There’s no water on No. 8, the longest par-3 on the course, but its scorecard yardage of 237 yards is 100 more than its more-famous sibling. Viktor Hovland played the hole to perfection Monday morning, making an ace there with a 4-iron on his second-to-last hole of the third round. It was the eighth ace on No. 8 since 1983 and Hovland’s second on TOUR. He also made a 1 on Monterey Peninsula Country Club’s 14th hole in the second round of the 2020 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. The hole-in-one was Hovland’s second eagle on that side, as well. He also eagled the par-5 second, making a 22-foot for eagle on his final hole of Sunday. He made two eagles and seven pars on TPC Sawgrass’ front nine, his final nine of the round, to shoot 68 and get to 4 under par. “I’ve been playing really well the whole week. I just haven’t really been able to capitalize on any putts,” said Hovland. “Maybe if I get a few putts going early and maybe start blowing in the afternoon and gets a little shaky, then maybe, but got a lot of work to do.” He hit 17 greens in the third round after hitting 14 in each of the first two rounds. He’s gained more than four strokes with his approach play while losing more than four strokes on the greens. Hovland’s hole-in-one came a day after his Ryder Cup teammates, Shane Lowry, made an ace on TPC Sawgrass’ most famous hole. Both 1s occurred in the third round, however, which began Sunday afternoon after weather delays throughout the week. This is the fifth time since 1983 that there have been multiple holes-in-one in one round at THE PLAYERS.

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