Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting J.J. Spaun in control in Round 2 at Shriners Hospitals for Children Open

J.J. Spaun in control in Round 2 at Shriners Hospitals for Children Open

LAS VEGAS — J.J. Spaun shot a 6-under 65 on Friday at breezy TPC Summerlin to take the lead in the suspended second round of the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. Spaun rebounded from a bogey on the par-4 third with birdies on the par-4 fourth and par-3 fifth and closed with a birdie on the par-5 ninth to get to 11-under 131. “I think we were just real deliberate on our numbers out there,” Spaun said. “It’s super swirly, windy. … Out here you’ve got so many undulations around the greens and you’ve got tight hazards next to the pins and the greens, so it’s crucial to get the right number, and we did that well today. That kind of set us up for having a bunch of looks out there.” Kelly Kraft was second at 8 under with three holes left when play was suspended for the day because of darkness. He had a hole-in-one on par-3 fifth, using a 6-iron on the 174-yard hole. Spaun is making his third start of the season after finishing 97th in the FedExCup standings. He missed the cut in the opener at Silverado and tied for 34th last week in Mississippi. “I’m putting well, I’m hitting it well, I’m just trying to play simple golf,” Spaun said. “I know it’s not going to be easy on the weekend, but just trying to keep things in perspective and stay within myself and give myself a shot on Sunday.” Robert Garrigus was four strokes back at 7 under after a 65. “I really didn’t swing it as good as I wanted to off the tee,” Garrigus said. “I was hitting some squirrelly shots, but the putter worked really well today, which can cure a lot of things.” Aaron Baddeley and Patton Kizzire each shot 66 to get to 6 under, and Round 1 leader Whee Kim was 5 under after a 72. “It was windy today,” Baddeley said. “There were a couple holes there where it was like a two- or three-club wind, which is really unusual here in Vegas. But it’s just nice because it really brings out the good ball-hitters and also the people who can be patient in this type of weather.” Charley Hoffman was 3 under after a 71 in his hometown event. Bubba Watson is in position to make the cut on the number at 1 over in his first event of season, shooting 72-71. Defending champion Rod Pampling also was 1 over after a 73.

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Top 5 Finish-120
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Rory McIlroy+650
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USA-150
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Emergency 9: RBC Heritage, Round 4Emergency 9: RBC Heritage, Round 4

Emergency 9 Here are nine tidbits from the final round of the 50th RBC Heritage that gamers can use tomorrow, this weekend or down the road. Harbour Town Golf Links on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina plays to 7,099 yards (Par-71). Didn’t See This Coming Japan’s Satoshi Kodaira defeated Korean Si Woo Kim with a birdie on the third playoff hole to win the 50th RBC Heritage. Both players posted 12-under-par 272 to force extra holes as Kim couldn’t convert multiple chances down the stretch. Kodaira, the 46th-ranked player in the world, posted a final round 66 and recovered a six-shot deficit to win for the first time in 15 TOUR events. It is his seventh win in 146 starts worldwide. Kodaira served notice in Round 2 as he posted 63, the lowest round of the week, to jump into the conversation. This was his first round in the 60’s in six TOUR events in 2018 and first since posting 67 in Round 3 at the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow last summer. Sunday, he birdied the first three holes of the day and finished with seven total on the round. He squared just two bogeys to post 66 and the clubhouse lead before winning in the playoff. His final three rounds were played in 14 under. He said after the round that this course reminded him of the tracks he played in Japan and immediately felt comfortable. He led the field in proximity for the week and was in the top 10 in SG: Off the Tee, Approach the Green and Tee to Green. He split 42 of 56 fairways (T4) and staked 49 of 72 greens in regulation (T7). He also didn’t make anything worse than bogey for the week. He becomes the sixth winner in a row at Harbour Town to make up a Sunday deficit of at least three shots. He also becomes the 29th winner of the last 36 to play the week before the RBC Heritage. The streak of first-time TOUR winners at this event reaches three events in a row as he joins Branden Grace and Wesley Bryan in that category. He also joins Bryan in winning in his first attempt at the event, suggesting that previous experience isn’t required at Harbour Town. If he chooses to accept TOUR membership, he will get all of the perks of any winner plus all of his non-member points he previously accrued. I’m not sure many gamers thought his T28 at Augusta last week would push him into victory lane this week. Gamers’ Choices — PGA TOUR Fantasy Game presented by SERVPRO Kuchar couldn’t recreate the magic of his 64 on Sunday last year as his 73 didn’t include a birdie in his final 12 holes. Since his win in 2014 he’s dropped each year on the leaderboard. His T23 this year is his worst check since T35 the year before his victory. Gamers’ Choices — PGA TOUR One & Done presented by SERVPRO As I told you in Friday’s Emergency 9, only one player had Kodaira in the PGA TOUR One & Done game presented by SERVPRO. He is truly the big winner this week. Those of you who took a chance this week probably didn’t lose too much ground and saved a “name” for down the road. Close Encounters Si Woo Kim was ready to join a list of BIG NAMES if he would have picked up his third TOUR win today at the age of 23. If. He entered the week 202nd in SG: Putting and that was the club that came back to haunt him. Down the stretch he had a few chances to make a birdie or save a par to increase or maintain his lead. Instead he limped home in 39 to necessitate a playoff. When he made the turn at 15-under, I didn’t think that would be the case. There’s an old saying that you revert to your old habits when the pressure hits and his “old” putter showed up at the wrong time. This adds another chapter of mystery to the already thick novel of last year’s PLAYERS Championship. Rally Cap It did not go according to Hoyle yesterday for Bryson DeChambeau but his bounce-back round on Sunday tells me all I need to know. 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In a vacuum, T7 is very solid but investors might argue differently. … Danny Lee began the final round T9 and shot 79 to collect for T55. His three Sunday rounds in 2018 are 78, 75 and 79. … C.T. Pan sounded confident after his round on Saturday after T4 but his 76 on Sunday knocked him all the way down to T19. Study Hall The final round scoring average was 71.416, the second-hardest round of the week. The scoring average for the week was 70.847 and was helped by the early, two-tee start to avoid inclement afternoon weather on Sunday. … DeChambeau and Kim led the field with 22 birdies. They both had a triple bogey on the week as well. … Simpson was the only player in the field to post all four rounds in the 60’s. … Billy Horschel’s T5 was his best finish since last June. He said he’s “close”. … There were no bogey-free rounds on Sunday. … Jon Rahm won the Open de Espana by two shots to pick up his fifth win in 45 career starts as a professional.  

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The Confidence Factor: DEAN & DELUCAThe Confidence Factor: DEAN & DELUCA

If we were to publish a guide to compile the levels of comfort for every host course on the PGA TOUR, Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, would be a finalist for its cover. There are many ways to define comfort, but all apply at the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational. Whether it’s individual success, total appearances or the time it often requires to find form on the 81-year-old track, comfort exists everywhere you look. Monday’s Power Rankings detailed how age and familiarity have played co-protagonists since Sergio Garcia captured his first PGA TOUR victory here in 2001. Inherently correspondent to that theme, the average number of starts at Colonial before each of the 12 different champions in the last 14 years – Kenny Perry and Zach Johnson have won the tournament twice since 2002 – is 6.25. However, there’s been a gradual reduction in the average since ZJ’s first win here in 2010 as none of the last five unique champions made more than five starts prior to hoisting the hardware. Still, Colonial’s reputation as a comfortable place to unpack one’s bags is alive and well. Thirty-three of the 121 in the field (as of Monday) have made at least seven starts in the tournament. Eighteen have made as many as 10. For this is the leading factor in projecting success at the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational. The course itself renders opportunity for all, evident in just how differently even just the last three champions navigated their paths to paydirt. TALES OF THE TAPE As maddening as it might be to discern any direction from the last three winners, not to mention how weather influences things, rest assured that there are reliable factors to locate value. While proper positioning off the tee never hurts anywhere, if you reviewed how contenders have rated in both distance and accuracy over the years at Colonial, you’d quickly learn that Chris Kirk’s uninspiring splits off the tee tilt toward a majority. 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Zach Johnson penalized shot due to 10-second ruleZach Johnson penalized shot due to 10-second rule

A matter of seconds cost Zach Johnson a shot on Friday. An 18-foot birdie putt at TPC River Highlands’ par-4 third (Johnson’s 12th) during the second round of the Travelers Championship saw Johnson’s ball finish right on the lip. As Rule 16-2 notes, when a ball overhangs the lip a player is allowed time to reach the hole without “unreasonable delay� and an additional 10 seconds to determine if the ball is at rest. If the ball falls in the hole in that timespan, the player is deemed to have holed out with the putt and is given that score. But if the ball falls in the hole after that unreasonable delay + 10-second timespan, a player must add a penalty shot to his score. In essence, Johnson would’ve

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