Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Jon Rahm, Justin Thomas, Adam Schenk share lead at Farmers Insurance Open

Jon Rahm, Justin Thomas, Adam Schenk share lead at Farmers Insurance Open

SAN DIEGO — Top-ranked Jon Rahm and Justin Thomas made the birdies they needed to keep pace on the easier North Course at Torrey Pines on Thursday and shared the lead with hard-charging Adam Schenk after two rounds of the Farmers Insurance Open. RELATED: Full leaderboard | Jon Rahm, Justin Thomas tied for lead at Farmers Insurance Open Schenk made eight straight birdies to shoot a career-low, 10-under 62, also on the North Course, and joined Rahm (65) and Thomas (63) at 13-under 131. The 30-year-old Schenk, who grew up on an Indiana sod farm, started his impressive run of birdies on the fourth hole and ended it on No. 11. He also birdied Nos. 16 and 17 in his bogey-free round. All three leaders opened Wednesday on the South Course, where Rahm won the U.S. Open last year for his first major. Rahm also got his first PGA TOUR victory in 2017 at Torrey Pines, a municipal facility on the bluffs overlooking the Pacific Ocean. The final two rounds will be played on the South Course. Schenk recorded the longest consecutive birdies streak at this tournament since 2003. “I lost track of how many I made in a row, but there was a lot of low scores on the North Course yesterday and I knew there was a lot of gettable holes and I needed to keep going if I wanted to get up on top of the leaderboard and hopefully stay there throughout the weekend,” Schenk said. “So I know I had to try to keep the pedal down and not get satisfied with how many birdies I made.” Schenk struggled to hit fairways, but his approaches were good enough to give himself reasonable birdie chances. “Just a lot of long putts,” he said. “It’s not like I was hitting it to 10 feet every time making the putts. I had a lot of lengthy ones.” Schenk said he made eight birdies in a row in an age-group championship in his early teens. “So I had done it before, obviously not on the PGA TOUR, on this stage. I just lost track and knew I had some par 5s coming up and wanted to take advantage of them. Luckily I hit some good shots on 9 and then 10 I made a long putt.” The Farmers Insurance Open is being played Wednesday through Saturday. Rahm closed his opening round Wednesday with an eagle for the best score of the day on the South Course. The Spaniard birdied five of his first eight holes on the North on Thursday before making his only bogey. “I mean, it wasn’t bad yesterday, it certainly wasn’t bad today,” Rahm said. “I managed really well today and it feels good because if you tell me before the round I’m going to hit four fairways and shoot 7-under, I’d tell you that something out there must have been really good, which today was. For how little fairways I hit, I was able to hit a lot of those greens from the rough, which is not the easiest thing to do.” Thomas, playing the Farmers Insurance Open for the first time since 2015, had nine birdies in his bogey-free round. “I played well, I drove it well, something you’ve got to do out here on the North Course,” Thomas said. “I mean, both courses, but if you drive it well, you’ve got a lot of wedges, a lot of short holes, four par-5s. Made some nice putts when I needed to, just kind of some of those short mid-rangers and it was a solid day.” Cameron Tringale shot a 65 on the North and was one shot behind the leaders. Peter Malnati was two back after a 66 on the North. Billy Horschel, who opened with a 63 on the North, struggled through a 1-over 73 on the South and dropped five shots off the lead. He made a double-bogey 6 on No. 14. The featured afternoon threesome of Jordan Spieth (78), Rickie Fowler (76) and Bryson DeChambeau (72) all missed the cut, with the big-hitting DeChambeau grabbing his wrist in apparent pain on several occasions.

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Scottie Scheffler+160
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Featured Groups roundtable: THE PLAYERS ChampionshipFeatured Groups roundtable: THE PLAYERS Championship

Defending FedExCup champion and world No. 1 Dustin Johnson leads 49 of the world's top 50 into THE PLAYERS Championship after a one-year hiatus due to the pandemic. All but one of the current FedExCup top 30 will be in action, and Rory McIlroy will be the defending champion of sorts as he won in 2019, the last time all four rounds were played. PGA TOUR LIVE, which will be free for Thursday's first round, will offer exclusive early-round coverage of the action at TPC Sawgrass (Stadium Course). The field has been expanded from 144 to 154 to accommodate those who finished in the top 125 of last season's FedExCup standings. Johnson, Collin Morikawa, Bryson DeChambeau, Brooks Koepka, Jon Rahm and Patrick Reed are among those who will be in the Featured Groups. To get you ready for LIVE's coverage, we convened our experts for a roundtable discussion on the groups released so far. Enjoy. HOW TO FOLLOW (All times ET) Television: Thursday-Friday, 12 p.m.-6 p.m. ET (Golf Channel). Saturday-Sunday, 1 p.m.-6 p.m. (NBC) Every Shot Live: Live streaming of every shot hit at THE PLAYERS Championship will get underway Thursday morning from TPC Sawgrass. Nearly 100 cameras will capture roughly 31,000 strokes taken over approximately 430 rounds played. It will be available free through PGA TOUR LIVE on NBC Sports Gold on Thursday. See schedule below. PGA TOUR LIVE: Thursday-Friday, 6:30 a.m.-6 p.m. (Featured Groups), 8 a.m.-6 p.m. (Featured Holes), 6:40 a.m.-8 p.m. (Every Shot Live). Saturday, 7:45 a.m.-6 p.m. (Featured Groups), 12 p.m.-6 p.m. (Featured Holes), 7:50 a.m.-8 p.m. (Every Shot Live). Sunday, 7:45 a.m.-6 p.m. (Featured Groups), 12 p.m.-6 p.m. (Featured Holes), 7:50 a.m.-6 p.m. (Every Shot Live) Radio: Thursday-Friday, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday-Sunday, 12 p.m.-6 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio). TOURCast: Get shot-by-shot info in real time with shot tracks and video with TOURCast. TOUR Pulse: Get the PGA TOUR app to utilize TOUR Pulse, which provides users the ability to experience a mix of content, such as video highlights, written hole summaries and stat graphics on every player after every hole they complete. Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau, Collin Morikawa One of these, Morikawa, is not like the others, Johnson and DeChambeau. What role does distance play at TPC Sawgrass? CAMERON MORFIT: It's certainly not insignificant; Davis Love III won the tournament twice. But I'll go out on a limb and say Morikawa, who comes in hot after winning the World Golf Championships-Workday Championship at The Concession, will win this group. He's long enough, and his iron play is just too good. Combine it with his new "saw" putting grip and he's going to be plenty dangerous, even if he does only have one competitive round there. BEN EVERILL: When we moved from May to March in 2019, I remember a bunch of talk about how it would benefit the bombers more than had previously been the case. While there may have been some truth to that with Rory McIlroy winning and Johnson even getting his first PLAYERS top-10 finish, I would be remiss not to point out that 48-year-old Jim Furyk was runner-up. TPC Sawgrass doesn't benefit any specific type - it benefits whoever is on his game across the spectrum. I can certainly see Morikawa winning on this cerebral layout, but part of me thinks Johnson is ready to add another huge title to his resume. JEFF BABINEAU: Distance plays a role on any golf course - long and straight is always a strong mix - but I think it is less of a factor at TPC Sawgrass than other venues. To its credit, THE PLAYERS is one of the most democratic tournaments on the planet, and by that, I mean there is a wide variety of styles and games in its long roster of champions. Power players and shorter-hitting grinders have won the event. For every Rory McIlroy, or Tiger Woods, or Davis Love III, there is a Fred Funk, or Matt Kuchar, or Tim Clark - competitors who won despite giving up length to the field. Jon Rahm, Brooks Koepka, Patrick Reed Rahm looked great through 54 holes of THE PLAYERS before suffering a minor meltdown on the second hole of the final round in 2019, and finishing well back. Does a moment and a day like that make you more or less inclined to put a player on your fantasy team? CAMERON MORFIT: It depends on how old the player is when he has the close call. For a guy in his late 30s or 40s, there can certainly be an element of, "If he hasn't won it by now, he never will." But Rahm is too young for that kind of thinking. He'll be on my fantasy team for sure. BEN EVERILL: One swallow doesn't make a summer. Rahm isn't the only player to have meltdowns in his career - the important thing is he's shown the ability to close strong against quality fields as well. Pretty good chance the Spaniard makes my team... if there is room after I slot in my favorite Aussies! JEFF BABINEAU: Jon Rahm's closing 76 at THE PLAYERS and T12 finish two years ago would seem more an aberration than something to make you shy away from picking him. For three rounds, he played beautifully, shooting 69-68-64 as he headed to Sunday. Rahm is where he is in the World Ranking (No. 2, behind only Dustin Johnson) because he all the tools to win anywhere, at any time.

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Chris Stroud surges, wins first title at Barracuda ChampionshipChris Stroud surges, wins first title at Barracuda Championship

RENO, Nev. — News and notes from Sunday’s fourth round of the Barracuda Championship, where Chris Stroud captured his first PGA TOUR victory Sunday with a win in a two-hole playoff over Richy Werenski. STROUD SURGES FOR FIRST WIN Chris Stroud exploded for 20 points in the final round of the Barracuda Championship and walked away with his first victory on the PGA TOUR. Stroud was at No. 144 in the FedExCup standings going into the Barracuda. He picked up 300 points with his win Sunday and jumped all the way to No. 76 in the standings. Stroud went back to an old club he had used before, a counter-balanced, long putter. “It just really helps me release the putter,â€� he said. “And when it does that, it keeps me very still. And the trouble I have with putting, with a shorter putter, is I lean the shaft a little bit. So I end up pushing a lot of putts. “So it’s nice to have, but at the end of the day, I played beautifully. I had some really nice little bounces that I hadn’t been getting in the last few weeks and capitalized on them, made some good birdies.â€� Stroud, 35, from Houston, Texas, said he loves the Modified Stableford format, which rewards risk-taking and aggressive play. It was his first win in 290 PGA TOUR events. Stroud turned pro in 2004. He played on mini-tours until earning his PGA TOUR card at the 2006, 2007 and 2008 Qualifying schools.  His best performance in a PGA TOUR event during these early years was a tie for fifth at the 2007 Zurich Classic of New Orleans. In 2010, Stroud finished T10 at THE PLAYERS Championship, and he lost in a sudden-death playoff to Ken Duke on the second extra hole of the 2013 Travelers Championship. Stroud had never made the cut in Reno in three previous trips (2007, 2009 and 2016). Despite his history at Montreux, Stroud credited his caddie for helping him stay so calm on Sunday. “He kept me distracted,â€� he said. “If I hit a shot and I started talking about it, he’d say, ‘hey, let’s talk about something else.’ He never let me talk about golf. He was crazy. I was so calm.â€� Stroud also said his father was able to help him with his confidence going into Sunday’s final round and that his father knew he would excel in the unique format. “My dad sent me a text last night, he goes, ‘Hey, I don’t want to get in your way,’ he said, ‘But this is a good format for you. You’ve been making a lot of birdies. Just go out and make as many as you can, see if you can make a couple of eagles,’â€� Stroud said. “And sure enough I made two eagles on the weekend.â€� Despite it being his first win on TOUR, Stroud said he doesn’t have a celebration planned and his focus is now looking ahead to the PGA Championship. “I got my two baby girls — I was planning on going home because I wasn’t in the PGA Championship, going home to Houston and hanging with them for a week. But now I get to play Quail Hollow, which is an awesome, great golf course,â€� Stroud said. “My phone is dead from all the text messages coming in. That’s a good problem. I’ve gotta go charge that. Call my wife. I know she’s freaking out at home.â€� APPLEBY SURPRISES HIMSELF Stuart Appleby capped off a remarkable week with a tie for fourth at the Barracuda Championship. He had five birdies and one bogey in his round Sunday. Appleby said he enjoyed the change from stroke play events. “It’s a dynamic format. You never quite know where you are, quite as simple one shot can go either way,â€� Appleby said. “It’s interesting because you can come from behind or you can build a big lead.â€� Appleby said he has had a tough year and he still can’t wrap his head around how well he played this week. He said he hopes to build off his experience at Montreux. “I really even barely have my body going well to play for four days,â€� he said. “Hopefully this is something to run me in, for the next few, where I feel like I’m hitting and putting good. I just have to understand that I have a lot of experience in these situations and I need to use it. Good experience versus so much of the stuff I’ve had recently and go on.â€� TRENDING IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION Richy Werenski, in his first year on the PGA TOUR, fell short in the playoff Sunday but said he can learn from the disappointment. “I haven’t experienced it before. I think it’s going to help me learn for the next time I’m in a playoff. I can just build off of this,â€� Werenski said. He said he was not flustered by the playoff atmosphere, as fans crowded around the 18th green. “I’ll learn from this experience and take it to the next time I’m here. The week was really good, solid, felt like I really could have played a lot better. I think everybody always says that. But I know I definitely don’t have my best stuff. My game is trending in the right direction.â€� BEST OF SOCIAL

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