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Jason Day eyes 12th TOUR victory

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Jason Day may be known for his ability to launch golf balls into orbit, but it’s his performance with the shortest clubs that has him most excited about his game. Day is line to earn his second PGA TOUR win of the season after shooting 67 on Saturday at the Wells Fargo Championship. He made birdie on five of his final 10 holes Saturday to finish 54 holes at 10-under 203 (69-67-67). He’s two strokes ahead of Nick Watney, who’s seeking his first win since 2012. Day has made just three bogeys, the second-fewest in the field, at a demanding Quail Hollow layout despite ranking 52nd in greens in regulation (33 of 54, 61 percent). He leads the field in Strokes Gained: Around-the-Green and is 11th in Strokes Gained: Putting. He’s also perfect out of the sand this week, getting up-and-down all 12 times he’s been in a bunker. “It gives you all the confidence in the world sometimes,â€� Day said about his short game. “It doesn’t matter how bad you hit it, you know that in the back of your mind that you’re going to walk off with par.” “I’d much rather have a great short game than be the best ball-striker on the planet.â€� Day leads the field in Strokes Gained: Putting this season (+1.386), just as he did during his three-win season of 2016. He fell to 39th in the statistic last season. This is just Day’s third appearance in this event, but he fell in love with the course at last year’s PGA Championship, where he finished ninth despite a quadruple-bogey on the 54th hole. Day loves hard courses, and his short game can help him grind out pars on such tracks. That aspect of his game has been especially important this week as he continues to break in a new set of irons. He won this year’s Farmers Insurance Open with his old set, but switched to new irons at Augusta National because he felt like they were causing his shots to fly too high and with too much spin. He is using a mixed set with TaylorMade’s P790s in the long irons and P730s in the mid- and short-irons. Day also said his desire has returned after going winless last season. He had won nine times in the previous three seasons and reached No. 1 in the world ranking, but the demands of his lofty position in the game and his mother’s cancer diagnosis, led to burn-out. A win would lift Day as high as No. 2 in the FedExCup standings entering THE PLAYERS Championship, which he won two years ago. He’s currently 16th in the standings after his win at Torrey Pines and runner-up at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. His 22nd-place finish at the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard is his worst finish in six individual stroke-play events this season. “If you get up and you kind of don’t really want it and don’t have the motivation to improve and get better as a person and as a player, then it’s a real struggle to come out and beat the best players in the world,â€� Day said. “This year I’ve kind of recommitted myself to try to get back to No. 1.â€� WOODS BREAKS PAR Tiger Woods shot 68 on Saturday, his first sub-par round of the week. He will enter the final round in 31st place, nine shots behind Jason Day. Woods made six birdies, but also had three bogeys, including a three-putt on the 18th green. He still gained strokes on the green (+0.55) for the first time this week. “My ball-striking’s been fine. I just haven’t made anything,â€� Woods said as his first PLAYERS Championship since 2015 approaches. He won at TPC Sawgrass in both 2001 and 2013. WISE’S WILD RIDE Aaron Wise made an important save on Saturday’s final hole to keep himself in contention. The rookie chipped in for bogey on 18 after whiffing a ball inside the hazard left of the 18th green. He can be grateful that his bogey wasn’t a bigger number. He shot 70 while playing alongside Peter Malnati in the final group and will start the final round in a four-way tie for third at 7 under par, three shots behind Day. Wise pulled his approach shot to the final green. The ball was on grass, but also inside the hazard line drawn around the creek that runs down the hole’s left side. He was unable to ground his club before attempting his shot from a steep downhill lie. He slid under the ball on his first try. The next one landed on the green, but rolled to the back fringe. He holed his 40-foot chip shot to avert further disaster. NOTABLES Peter Uihlein, who’s playing his first season as a PGA TOUR member, shot 62 to jump 45 spots and into a tie for third place. He’ll start the final round three shots behind Jason Day. Uihlein’s score is the lowest at Quail Hollow since it underwent renovations for last year’s PGA Championship. Click here to read more about his round. Like Uihlein, Phil Mickelson also shot a low round early Saturday after shooting back-to-back 72s. Mickelson made five birdies and an eagle (at the par-5 10th) to shoot his lowest score since a final-round 64 at last year’s Greenbrier Classic. Those are his lowest two scores since his 63 at Royal Troon in the first round of the 2016 Open Championship. “I felt very unfocused the first two days,â€� Mickelson said Saturday. “I didn’t feel like I was really committed to the shots. I didn’t have great focus. I don’t know how else to say it.â€� Mickelson, winner of THE PLAYERS in 2007, is fourth in the FedExCup. He will start Sunday in 10th place, five shots behind Day. Rory McIlroy made a 10-stroke improvement from Friday to Saturday, shooting a 5-under 66 in the third round to move up to T16 entering the final round. The 2016 FedExCup champion still sounded like he was wary about the state of his game, though. “I’m just not that comfortable with anything right now,â€� said McIlroy, who ranks 32nd in the FedExCup. Bryson DeChambeau was 5 over par after the first 21 holes of the Wells Fargo Championship, including a triple-bogey on his third hole. He played the next 33 holes in 12 under par, making 11 birdies, one eagle and one bogey, and now sits in third place. He’s 22nd in the FedExCup after finishing in the top three in two of his past three starts (2nd, Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard; T3, RBC Heritage). He will start Sunday three shots off the lead. SUPERLATIVES Longest drive: Bryson DeChambeau and Tom Lovelady both hit 369-yard drives on the par-5 15th holes. DeChambeau made par, while Lovelady made birdie as part of his 72. He’s in 66th place. Longest putt: Michael Thompson holed a 62-foot putt for birdie on the par-3 13th hole as part of his third-round 69. He is in 16th place at 3 under par, seven shots behind Day. Lowest round: Peter Uihlein shot a bogey-free 62 after making seven birdies and an eagle. Starting at No. 4, he played a six-hole stretch in 7 under par. He eagled the par-5 10th hole and made birdies at 14 and 15 before making par on the final three holes. Easiest hole: The 301-yard, par-4 14th hole played to a 3.51 scoring average. There were two eagles and 45 birdies on the hole. Only six players made bogey. Hardest hole: The 494-yard, par-4 finishing hole played to a 4.26 scoring average. There were just six birdies on the hole Saturday. CALL OF THE DAY For play-by-play coverage of Round 4 of the Wells Fargo Championship, listen from 1-6 p.m. ET on PGATOUR.com.

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Scottie Scheffler+160
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Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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Joaquin Niemann+3000
Brooks Koepka+4000
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Monday Finish: Woodland reaches new level with U.S. Open victoryMonday Finish: Woodland reaches new level with U.S. Open victory

Facing one of the most delicate shots in the game – a pitch off the putting surface over the ridge that bisects the 17th green – Gary Woodland taps into the resolve and positivity of a friend (Amy “I got thisâ€� Bockerstette) and stays cool under pressure from beginning to end to win the U.S. Open by three over two-time defending champion Brooks Koepka.  Welcome to the Monday Finish, where Woodland converted a 54-hole lead/co-lead into a victory for the first time in eight tries on the PGA TOUR, and signaled he has reached a whole new level of excellence as he jumped to fifth in the FedExCup. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1. Woodland is one-dimensional no more. With his broad back and an athlete’s swagger, Woodland made no secret of his competitive advantage over the course of his first 244 starts on TOUR. He was strong. He was long. Now he’s a lot more than that. “It was just learning how to play golf,â€� the popular winner said after not only hanging onto his one-shot lead but extending it to three by the time the day was done. There were plenty of reasons to doubt Woodland, starting with his seven failures to close out 54-hole leads/co-leads, extending to his streaky putting, and grinding to a halt at his pedestrian record at Pebble. (He shot 76-76 to miss the cut at the 2010 U.S. Open there, and had missed three cuts in four starts at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, the other one a T5 in 2017.) But this really was not the same guy. Woodland, 35, was unrelenting in his quest to improve. He already had one of the best coaches in the game in his corner in Butch Harmon, but found another in Pete Cowan, and yet another in putting specialist Phil Kenyon. It was his work on the greens that stood out most as he captured his first major in his 31st career attempt. He made highlights with a 42-foot par save at the 14th hole Saturday, but was just as solid Sunday, even when his work on the greens meant swinging a sand wedge on 17. In the end, Woodland made just four bogeys all week, tying a U.S. Open record, and was a career-best 2nd in Strokes Gained: Putting (+8.3).  For more on how Woodland became a complete player, click here. 2. It all started when he changed everything. “You look at guys that are successful,â€� Woodland told the PGATOUR.COM prior to defending his title at the Waste Management Phoenix Open earlier this season, “and you ask yourself: What are they doing that I’m not?â€� And by “guysâ€� he meant more than golfers. Frustrated by injuries and looking to change things up, he called friend Ray Allen, then with the Miami Heat. “Ray told me to come to Miami to come check out this guy named David Alexander,â€� Woodland said. Alexander founded DBC Fitness, which stands for Dumbbells, Barbells and Cables, and boasts a deep roster of star athletes. DBC reshaped Woodland’s workouts, but also the way he ate, hydrated and even traveled. He even moved to South Florida (Delray Beach), which had the added benefit of facilitating further skull sessions with Alexander. “It’s just changed everything,â€� Woodland said. For more on Woodland’s decision to change everything, click here. 3. The Amy factor was huge. The final piece of the puzzle was attitude, and there was some kismet involved in how that one came together. Woodland played a hole with Special Olympics athlete Amy Bockerstette at the Waste Management at TPC Scottsdale, and after coaching herself up with self-talk (“I got thisâ€�) Bockerstette made a par that went viral on social media. Woodland made a friend who turned into more than that: an inspiration. Whenever things got tight at Pebble, and there were no shortage of such times, starting when Koepka birdied four of the first five holes ahead of him, he repeated those words from Amy in Phoenix: I got this. “She’s meant everything for me from a mental standpoint,â€� he said. For more on how Amy fueled Woodland’s major breakthrough, click here. 4. Mighty Koepka just keeps on rolling. Before he won his fourth major at the PGA Championship at Bethpage Black, Koepka said he didn’t see why he shouldn’t aim for at least 10 major victories. At the time his prediction likely struck a few listeners as perhaps a bit over-ambitious. But now—did he aim too low? Koepka electrified fans with his hot start Sunday (he cooled and signed for a 68) and became the first player to shoot four rounds in the 60s at a U.S. Open and not win. He has now finished either first or second in the last four majors, and doesn’t seem to be going away. “It doesn’t sting,â€� said Koepka, who after birdies at four of the first five holes went 1 over the rest of the way. “I played great. Nothing I could do. Gary played great for four days. … He deserves it; he’s worked hard and I’m happy for him.â€�   5. Rose, McIlroy rue missed opportunities. Reigning FedExCup champion Justin Rose started the day just a shot off the lead but struggled from tee to green and did well to limit the damage to a final-round 74 (T3). “I didn’t have my “A” game this week,â€� said Rose, who gave a memorable congratulatory fist-bump to Woodland after the latter player had hit perhaps the shot of the tournament on 17. “And to contend in a major with no game, really, I take the positive from that…â€� Rory McIlroy, coming off a rousing victory at the RBC Canadian Open, had only an outside shot and needed to shoot a magical round. 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Expert Picks: U.S. OpenExpert Picks: U.S. Open

How it works: Each week, our experts from PGATOUR.COM will make their selections in PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf. Each lineup consists of four starters and two bench players that can be rotated after each round. Adding to the challenge is that every golfer can be used only three times per each of four Segments. The first fantasy golf game to utilize live ShotLink data, PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf allows you to see scores update live during competition. Aside from the experts below, Fantasy Insider Rob Bolton breaks down the field at this year’s U.S. Open in this week’s edition of the Power Rankings. For more fantasy, check out Rookie Watch, Qualifiers and Reshuffle. THINK YOU’RE BETTER THAN OUR EXPERTS? The PGA TOUR Experts league is once again open to the public. You can play our free fantasy game and see how you measure up against our experts below. Joining the league is simple. Just click here to sign up or log in. Once you create your team, click the “Leagues” tab and search for “PGA TOUR Experts.” After that? Pick your players and start talking smack. Want to represent the fans against our experts? SEASON SEGMENT

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