Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Jon Rahm, Justin Thomas share lead at THE NORTHERN TRUST

Jon Rahm, Justin Thomas share lead at THE NORTHERN TRUST

JERSEY CITY, N.J. — Jon Rahm returned from a month off and played like he was never gone. Justin Thomas took the advice of a 15-year-old and had his lowest score of the year. RELATED: Full leaderboard | Dustin Johnson shoots 70 without a driver in the bag Both opened with an 8-under 63 on Thursday at THE NORTHERN TRUST as the PGA TOUR’s postseason began with no shortage of bizarre developments. Rahm, who missed his chance at the Olympics because of COVID-19, expected a little rust in his game. It just didn’t show on his card. He chipped in for birdie, saved par on the next two holes and was on his way. Thomas had benched his putter for bad behavior after he spent too much of the year not seeing putts go in the hole. But during his junior event last week, a teenager asked why he wasn’t using his old putter. “And I found myself defending myself to this 15-year-old,” he said. “I was like, ‘Why am I not using this thing?’ It’s not like I’m making a lot of putts with what I have. If you’re putting well, any of us can go out and putt with anything.” He didn’t hole all of them, but enough to record nine birdies for his lowest round since a 62 last November in Mexico. Bryson DeChambeau also made nine birdies. He was eight shots behind. His round of 71 was noteworthy because of the pars he made on No. 4 and No. 10. Those were the only pars he made all day. The nine birdies were offset by five bogeys and two double bogeys. It was the first time in 10 years someone shot par or better with two pars or fewer. Not to be overlooked was Dustin Johnson, one of the most stress-free players in golf — at least he looks that way — who uttered words rarely heard: “Threw me for a loop.” He was hitting drivers on the range, and hitting them well, right before teeing off when a few of them came off the club funny and another one sounded funny. His driver cracked, and Johnson headed to the first tee with 13 clubs and one head cover for his 5-wood. He had a spare 3-wood in the car — but no driver — and got that on the third hole. If that wasn’t enough, he decided on a putter switch at the last minute. He still managed a 70. Otherwise, there was a range of good golf in surprisingly strong wind off the Hudson River across from the Manhattan skyline. Harold Varner III had a 66 in the morning, boosting his Playoffs chances. He is No. 72 in the FedExCup standings, and only the top 70 after this week advance to the next tournament. With the points at quadruple value, some big movements are expected. The six players at 67 included Adam Scott (No. 82), Robert Streb (No. 68) and Mackenzie Hughes (No. 67). Open champion Collin Morikawa, the No. 1 seed, struggled to keep the ball in play and opened with a 74. Jordan Spieth at No. 2 opened with a 72. Rahm has endured the strangest of times with COVID-19. He tested positive on the day he built a six-shot lead through 54 holes at the Memorial and had to withdraw, and then returned to win the U.S. Open for his first major. And then after more negative test results than he can remember for The Open Championship — he tied for third at Royal St. George’s — he had two more negative tests prior to his departure for the Olympics before a positive result showed up. The next day, he took two more tests (both negative), but by then it was too late. He returned from his bout with COVID-19 by winning a major. This is different. He never had a chance to win a gold medal because he never made it to Tokyo. But he wouldn’t mind the same result, which in this case would be a FedExCup title worth $15 million. “I sure don’t want to have to rely on being pulled out of tournaments to be able to win one, let’s just say that,” he said. Thomas knows putts that don’t fall is not the fault of the equipment, but something had to change, so he benched his putter at he U.S. Open. Ultimately, it’s about getting the speed to match with the line of the putt, and he did that well for so much of the day. He holed a 35-foot birdie putt for his first lead on the par-3 14th, gave it back with a poor chip, and then drove the 283-yard 16th green to set up a closing stretch of three straight birdies. The day started with another development: Patrick Reed withdrew with a sore ankle, the second straight week he has had to withdraw. Reed is No. 22 in the FedExCup, and there are only two tournaments left to qualify for the Ryder Cup. He is No. 9 in the standings, and only the top six automatically qualify. The idea was to give it another week of rest and being ready for the next one.

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Winged Foot fights back in round twoWinged Foot fights back in round two

MAMARONECK, N.Y. - Rafa Cabrera Bello shot even par and shot up the leaderboard. Bubba Watson double-bogeyed the last hole but his 69 was one of the best rounds of the day. Thomas Pieters took the lead at 6 under par before giving it all back with six bogeys. "Clearly," said Cabrera Bello, "the wind has picked up significantly." And that, he added, was making the already narrow fairways even smaller, and the already tricky greens trickier. The headlines after the first round of the 120th U.S. Open were all about the flood of red numbers, with more scores of 66 or better (four) than Winged Foot had given up in all five previous U.S. Opens combined. But it was apparent early that the course had something different in store on a cool, blustery Friday. Not only did the wind pick up, it also changed directions. The first three holes, which had played downwind Thursday, played straight into the wind Friday. All of which added to the fun, as first-round leader Justin Thomas might call it. (Thomas was just starting his round at 1:27 p.m.) "Yeah, this morning was actually okay," said Belgium's Pieters, who shot 2 under on the front nine before sliding back down the board with six back-nine bogeys. "It wasn’t that windy. Drove it well, so I gave myself a lot of opportunities. "Yeah, back nine the wind got up," he added, "and yeah, I don’t know, my scorecard says it all." At least he had company. Matthew Wolff was 3 under par and two off the lead when he made the turn, but bogeyed four of the first five holes on the front. The most annoying of these came at the par-3 third, where his long birdie try went up a slope, stopped woefully short, trundled slowly backward, and stopped closer to his feet than the hole. He made bogey. Course set-up had something to do with the players' frustrations, too. Although the USGA was said to be making things slightly easier in an effort to get all 144 players around in roughly two hours less daylight of a mid-September U.S. Open, there would be no such generosity in round two. The hole location at the first was three paces from the left, at the second it was just four paces from the right, and so on, encouraging short-side misses, of which there were many. "I also felt the greens have got maybe a smidge quicker and a bit firmer," said Cabrera Bello, who made five birdies and five bogeys. "But I also felt like some of the pins were a little bit tougher, harder to access today. Obviously more of a U.S. Open setup you would expect." Shane Lowry, who rebounded from an opening 76 to shoot even-par 70, was hoping to make the cut after fighting the course to a draw. "I played lovely today," he said. Lee Westwood, who had opened with a 67, faded with a 76 to go into the weekend at 3 over. He was disappointed with his finish, dropping four shots over his last three holes, but wasn't giving up or getting down on himself. "So a bit disappointed to finish like that," he said, "but 3 over par here for the week, and you never know what’s going to happen in U.S. Opens, do you?" Not with the course toughening up seemingly by the minute. Said Xander Schauffele, whose 2-over 72 moved him to even par, "It'll be a fun afternoon to watch on TV."

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