Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Inside Patrick Cantlay’s steady equipment setup

Inside Patrick Cantlay’s steady equipment setup

This week, all eyes are on Patrick Cantlay as he returns to Muirfield Village Golf Club as the defending champion of the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday. A lot has happened for Cantlay since last year’s event. After winning his second Memorial, he went on to win the final two events of the 2021 season, the BMW Championship and TOUR Championship, en route to claiming the FedExCup and earning PGA TOUR Player of the Year honors. He’s also coming off a recent win at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans with his good friend and potential Presidents Cup partner, Xander Schauffele. Cantlay is a year older (now 30), his career victory total has swelled to seven and his bank account is surely heftier (thanks in large part to the FedExCup’s $15 million first prize). His golf club setup, however, looks quite similar at this year’s Memorial. Cantlay is an old soul who is slow to make change, preferring to stick with what works instead of chasing the latest and greatest. “I feel like I have stuck to things being pretty much the same and I think that’s part of me being so consistent,” he once said. This philosophy applies to his equipment, as well. For example, Cantlay still uses a Titleist 915F 3-wood, which is a club that became available to the public at retail back in 2014. His irons, the Titleist 718 AP2’s, were released in late 2017 and his Titleist TS3 driver was released the following year. Although his deliberate gear approach still holds true, Cantlay has made a few key changes in a year’s time. For one, he’s changed out his previous Titleist 816 H2 21-degree hybrid for a Titleist TS2 21-degree 7-wood, which is now equipped with a Mitsubishi Diamana ZF shaft that matches up with his driver and 3-wood. He’s also upgraded his 56-degree wedge from a Vokey SM7 model into a new Vokey SM9. Being that the Vokey SM9 wedges were released to retail in March 2022, his new sand wedge is clearly the most modern golf club in Cantlay’s bag. Despite being a notoriously slow switcher of gear, Cantlay has indeed shaken things up a touch in the last year. Check out the full comparisons below. Patrick Cantlay’s WITB this week Driver: Titleist TS3 (9.5 degrees) Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana ZF 60TX 3-wood: Titleist 915F (15 degrees) Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana ZF 70TX 7-wood: Titleist TS2 (21 degrees) Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana ZF 80TX Irons: Titleist 718 AP2 (4-9) Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold 120 Tour Issue X100 Wedges: Titleist Vokey SM7 (46, bent to 47 degrees, and 52 degrees), Titleist Vokey SM9 (56, bent to 57 degrees), and Titleist Vokey SM8 (60 degrees, bent to 61 degrees) Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S300 Putter: Scotty Cameron Phantom T5 proto Ball: Titleist Pro V1x Patrick Cantlay’s winning bag from the 2021 Memorial Tournament Driver: Titleist TS3 (9.5 degrees) Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana ZF 60TX 3-wood: Titleist 915F (15 degrees) Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana ZF 70TX Hybrid: Titleist 816 H2 (21 degrees) Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black 10TX Irons: Titleist 718 AP2 (4-9) Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold 120 Tour Issue X100 Wedges: Titleist Vokey SM7 (46-10F, 52-08F, 56-08M) Titleist Vokey SM8 (61 Proto) Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S300 Putter: Scotty Cameron Phantom T5 proto Ball: Titleist Pro V1x

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Rising Korean star Sungjae Im returns homeRising Korean star Sungjae Im returns home

His sisters might have been the first to know. Sungjae Im was 4 when his family moved from Cheongju, the historic city smack in the middle of South Korea, to golf-mad Jeju Island. That was when he first followed his mother to the golf course and got his first club, and soon he was tagging along to the course with his sisters. Right away they saw his potential; the boy hit it straight and rarely suffered a bad shot. A few years later, Brian Vranesh was among the first to know in the States. Vranesh had played on both the PGA TOUR (T8, 2009 Buick Open) and the Web.com Tour (playoff loss, 1999 Chitimacha Louisiana Open), so he’d seen great golf. He saw it again when he first caddied for Im at the Web.com Tour Qualifying Tournament, Final Stage, at the end of 2017. “His ball doesn’t move much,â€� Vranesh said of Im, who led the Web.com money list wire-to-wire and is the most highly touted PGA TOUR rookie this season. “He hits it far enough with the driver. 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Ernie Els, the International Team Captain for the 2019 Presidents Cup, is taking notice. “The kid is for real,” Els said Tuesday during a pre-tournament news conference. “He’s only 20 years old and he’s got a really unbelievable future ahead of him.” The immediate future, specifically the next few days on his home course, certainly could be unbelievable — especially if he can deliver a win to his home fans. “He’s going to bring a lot of popularity to the event this week,” Els said. So good, so young It was hard to miss the resemblance as Im tied for fourth at the season-opening Safeway Open two weeks ago, coming up just one shot shy of the Kevin Tway/Ryan Moore/Brandt Snedeker playoff that Tway eventually won. Im, with his deliberate takeaway, swings a bit like Hideki Matsuyama. “I never had any intentions of following his swing,â€� Im said of the Japanese star, through an interpreter. “But I like the fact that he plays to his own rhythm. I wanted to find my own unique swing rhythm as well, and people have been telling me that my swing resembles his.â€� Im actually is a bigger fan of Adam Scott and Tiger Woods, the latter of whom he took cell phone video at the PGA. (Having cracked the top 100 in the world, Im got a special invite and finished T42.) Somehow, though, Im has maintained his sense of wonder without the awe. “He’s got no fear,â€� Vranesh said. Prodigies often don’t. Im got his first coach at 7; was enrolled at a Korean golf academy by 12; and turned pro at 17. He ironed out the kinks on the Japan Golf Tour, among other places, and, traveling with his manager and parents, left little doubt as to his prowess on the Web.com Tour last season. Im won in his first Web.com Tour start before going on to produce 54 rounds in the 60s and 397 birdies, both tour records in 2017-18. He won again at the end of the regular season and also had three runner-up finishes and three other top-10s. 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The plan is to work on his driving; he hopes to get his license. Assuming he does, he may soon find himself traveling portions of the TOUR in a Porsche Cayenne, his car of choice. That seems about right. It’s all happening pretty fast for Sungjae Im, for whom life is an open road. THE SUNGJAE IM FILE BULLET POINTS • Recorded eight top-10s in 25 starts during the 2018 Web.com Tour season, highlighted by three runner-up finishes and two victories (The Bahamas Great Exuma Classic at Sandals Bay and WinCo Foods Portland Open presented by Kraft-Heinz). • Became the first player since 1990 to win the first and last event of the Web.com Tour’s Regular Season. • Earned his TOUR card for the 2018-19 season by finishing No. 1 on the Web.com Tour’s Regular season and became the first player in Web.com Tour history to go wire-to-wire atop the money list for the entire season (27 weeks). • At 20 years old, Im is the youngest member among the 21 rookies in the 2018-19 TOUR season. • Competed in two major championships in the 2017-18 season. He missed the cut in the 2018 U.S. Open, but produced the best result out of any Korean in the field at the PGA Championship, finishing T42. • In his first TOUR start as a full member, played his way into the final group on Sunday at the Safeway Open and finished T4, the best finish among the 21 rookies in the field. BY THE NUMBERS 19 days, 9 months, 7 days — Age when he won the Bahamas Great Exuma Classic, becoming the second youngest to win on the Web.com TOUR (Jason Day won the 2007 Legend Financial Group Classic at 19 years, 7 months, 26 days). 54 — Number of rounds in the 60s, the most of any player during the 2018 Web.com TOUR season. 397 — Total number of birdies, the most of any player in a single Web.com TOUR season since 2011. 68.00 — Final-round scoring verage, the lowest of any player during the 2018 Web.com TOUR season. $553,800 — Total earnings in 2018, the fourth most by any Web.com TOUR player in a single season. For more on Sungjae Im, click here for his player page.

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