Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Jordan Spieth takes another big step forward despite not winning AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Jordan Spieth takes another big step forward despite not winning AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

For the second consecutive Sunday, Jordan Spieth deflated golf fans' hopes with a less-than-stellar final round.

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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
Ludvig Aberg+400
Collin Morikawa+450
Jon Rahm+450
Brooks Koepka+700
Justin Thomas+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Xander Schauffele+1400
Jon Rahm+1800
Collin Morikawa+2000
Brooks Koepka+2500
Justin Thomas+2500
Viktor Hovland+2500
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Viktor Hovland+2000
Justin Thomas+2500
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Hero World Challenge, third round: Leaderboard, tee times, TV scheduleHero World Challenge, third round: Leaderboard, tee times, TV schedule

Charley Hoffman leads by three shots heading into Moving Day at the Hero World Challenge. Jordan Spieth, Tiger Woods and defending champ Hideki Matsuyama are all within striking distance. Third round tee times Third round leaderboard HOW TO WATCH/LISTEN Telecast: Golf Channel (12:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m. ET) NBC: (2:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. ET) NOTABLE PAIRINGS Dustin Johnson, Henrik Stenson 12:09 p.m. ET Kevin Chappell, Justin Thomas 12:20 p.m. ET Rickie Fowler, Patrick Reed 12:31 p.m. ET Hideki Matsuyama, Tiger Woods 12:53 p.m. ET Charley Hoffman, Jordan Spieth 1:15 p.m. ET

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From 250/1 to PGA champion: Behind the odds of Justin Thomas’ seven-stroke comebackFrom 250/1 to PGA champion: Behind the odds of Justin Thomas’ seven-stroke comeback

Newly crowned PGA Championship winner Justin Thomas sat eight strokes out of the lead and +25000 (250 to 1) with BetMGM Sportsbook with 10 holes to play at Southern Hills before becoming the centerpiece of one of the greatest comebacks in major championship golf. After two ultra-impressive 3-under 67s to open the tournament on the tough side of the draw, Thomas stumbled in Saturday’s third round with a 74, leaving him seven strokes back of the lead with 18 holes to play. He fell eight behind after some early errors including a stone-cold shank on the par-3 sixth hole that led to a bogey, not the type of shot typically seen from a major champion. Thomas opened as a +1200 chance with BetMGM but was +3300 to start the final round after dropping into a tie for seventh. “Someone told me he was 15 to 1 before today, which is crazy. I would have taken the other side of that,” Thomas’ father Mike laughed after the odds-defying victory. “There were just too many people in front of him; he was 12th on the leaderboard at one point, but he’s got a lot of guts and he’s got a lot of heart, and he had a good putting week to make things up.” Indeed, Thomas was second in the field in Strokes Gained: Putting (+6.314) and also ranked inside the top 16 in the field in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee (+2.638), Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green (+8.000) and Strokes Gained: Around-the-Green (+3.257). We’ve gone behind the numbers and tracked Thomas’ live odds from last Sunday’s final round to see just how miraculous the result turned out to be for the man who now owns a FedExCup, a PLAYERS Championship and two majors. ODDS TIMELINE – Justin Thomas to win PGA Championship (via BetMGM) +3300 – Overnight odds have Thomas at 33 to 1, sitting seven shots back of leader Mito Pereira, before he gets underway on Sunday. +4000 – After opening with two pars, Thomas finds himself short of the green in two on the par-4 third hole. His chip comes up 10 feet short of the hole. +6600 – Thomas misses his 10-foot par putt on the third hole, dropping to 1-under for the tournament, eight shots off the lead. +12500 – Coming off a birdie at the fifth hole and with 5-iron in hand on the par-3 sixth tee, Thomas catches the ball on the hosel, sending a wicked shank out to the right side. While by some miracle he misses a creek, he is still 120 yards from the hole. +15000 – As if the shank wasn’t embarrassment enough, Thomas hits his second shot into a tree and it rebounds into a bunker from the wrong hole, still 100 yards from the pin. He ends up making a great bogey to go back to 1-under. +25000 – Despite a great shot into the par-4 seventh with the same 5-iron he shanked moments earlier, Thomas misses birdie and gets through the par-3 eighth still eight shots off the lead and now running out of holes. +10000 – A lovely approach shot to the par-4 ninth hole, leaving just under 12 feet for birdie, has put some belief back into the bettors. +8000 – Thomas makes his birdie on the ninth hole, sitting seven shots back as he makes the turn. +6600 – A very accurate tee shot down the 10th hole brings with it more faith at BetMGM. +5000 – An even better approach shot to 11 feet on the 10th allows some folks to start dreaming. +6600 – When the birdie try on 10 goes by, there is a sense that so too may have Thomas’ chances at Southern Hills. +2500 – An incredible 64-foot, 7-inch birdie drops for Thomas on the par-3 11th, slashing his odds all the way back to 25 to 1 as the leaders start to stumble. Thomas is now just five back. +2200 – The odds tighten for Thomas a little more at Pereira bogeys the eighth and he sits just four off the pace. +2000 – Pereira’s drive down the ninth hole is bleeding into trouble. Thomas comes in again. +900 – Is this really happening? The 2017 FedExCup champion drains another birdie on the 12th hole and suddenly is headed to a par-5 within just three shots of the lead. +850 – Pereira’s approach on the ninth finds a bunker. +1100 – Pereira makes a great par save on the ninth hole, sending Thomas’ odds drifting again. +900 – The roller coaster begins again as Pereira gets unlucky to miss the 10th green in regulation. +1000 – Pereira hits an incredible chip shot to help secure a par on the par-4 10th. +1200 – Thomas lays up on the par-5 13th. +1100 – Thomas hits a decent wedge to create another chance at birdie. +1000 – One of the challengers, Matt Fitzpatrick, bogeys the 10th, while another in Will Zalatoris has left himself a 16-foot par putt on the 12th hole. +1600 – Thomas misses his chance at birdie on the par-5, and the sportsbooks think that might be costly. +2000 – Thomas sends his tee shot on the par-4 14th into a bunker. +2200 – Pereira secures par on the 11th with a nice two-putt from long distance. +1600 – Pereira’s drive on the 12th ends up in a horrible spot, forcing a chip out back to the fairway. +1400 – Thomas gets up and down for par from the sand on 14. +1600 – Pereira is still in trouble on 12, and has left just under 8 feet for his par. +1100 – Pereira’s par putt won’t drop. His gap over Thomas is now just two shots. +700 – Thomas hits a beautiful approach into the 15th, leaving just 8 feet for birdie. +1000 – As many have done before him Sunday, Thomas misreads the putt on 15 and settles for par. +2000 – Pereira hits a brilliant second shot into the par-5 13th, setting up an 18-foot eagle attempt. +2500 – Thomas loses his tee shot on the 16th hole to the right. +3300 – Pereira misses his eagle but taps in for birdie on 13, while Thomas hits his approach to 16 into a greenside bunker. He trails by three again. +2000 – Pereira sends his tee shot to the par-3 14th long and left. +1400 – Thomas almost holes his long bunker shot on 16. +1200 – Pereira fails to get up and down and bogeys the 14th, leaving Thomas two behind with two to play. +1100 – Zalatoris misses his birdie attempt on 15 from close range. +900 – Thomas sends his tee shot on the drivable par-4 17th into a greenside bunker. +1600 – Pereira rebounds from his bogey with a laser approach inside 10 feet on 15. +1100 – Pereira, like Thomas before him, misreads the putt on 15 and fails to convert his birdie. +800 – Thomas secures a birdie at 17. He’s just one back of the lead. +700 – After a debate with his caddie Jim “Bones” Mackay, Thomas pulls driver out of his bag. +500 – Thomas hits a near perfect drive down the last hole. +300 – Pereira comes up short on his approach to 16. +200 – Pereira’s third shot into the 16th leaves him with a tricky 11-footer to save par. +150 – Thomas takes dead aim on approach at the 72nd hole and flies it next to the pin. It rolls out, leaving just under 11 feet to post another birdie and join the lead. +225 – Pereira makes a clutch par putt at 16 to maintain his one-shot lead. +350 – With seemingly it all on the line, Thomas fails to nudge the birdie home on the 18th and now must wait after a beautiful 3-under 67 leaves him in the clubhouse lead at 5-under. +600 – Zalatoris birdies the 17th. +500 – Fitzpatrick finds the creek off the tee on 17 and Pereira’s drive doesn’t reach the putting surface. +350 – Pereira hits a great putt for his birdie on the 17th but it stops a revolution short of the hole. He settles for par and a one-shot lead heading to the last hole. -154 – Pereira produces a wild tee shot that slices hard right and finds its way into the water. +110 – Zalatoris makes a clutch up-and-down from in front of the 18th green to join Thomas in the clubhouse at 5-under. -125 – After hitting his third shot long and left of the green, Pereira faces a tricky up-and-down to join a playoff. His chip shot trickles off the front of the green and he’s unable to hole out from there. -137 – The double bogey from Pereira leaves Thomas fighting Zalatoris over a three-hole aggregate playoff. Thomas is the favorite before they begin. +120 – Starting on the par-5 13th, Thomas sends his drive into the rough while Zalatoris is in the fairway. -118 – Thomas hits a lovely wedge inside 10 feet after a forced lay-up, leaving him with a very likely birdie. He secures the birdie, but so too does Zalatoris. -200 – Thomas hits perhaps one of the shots of the week by driving the second playoff hole (the par-4 17th). -303 – Zalatoris can’t match Thomas and is short of the putting surface. -222 – Zalatoris chips up to close range, leaving him a chance to match Thomas with birdies after Thomas misses his eagle attempt. -500 – Zalatoris watches his birdie try from inside 10 feet slide by, leaving Thomas a shot ahead with one to play. -1000 – Thomas pumps his drive perfectly down the final hole. -2500 – Zalatoris hits a decent drive but doesn’t match Thomas for distance or optimal angle. His approach finds the green but sucks back and sits against the fringe, some 45 feet away. -10000 – Thomas sends his 9-iron approach to 25 feet, from where he two-putts to win his second PGA Championship.

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Rookie Austin Cook jumps to the top of the leaderboard at the RSM ClassicRookie Austin Cook jumps to the top of the leaderboard at the RSM Classic

SAINT SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. — Veteran PGA TOUR caddie Kip Henley has seen his share of spectacular golf, but he said he’d never seen two stress-free, back-to-back rounds as those turned in by Austin Cook at The RSM Classic. In fact, Cook made it look so easy on Friday at the Seaside Course that Henley didn’t even realize Cook had signed for an 8-under 62. “I knew it was good, but I didn’t know it was that good,” Henley said. Cook hit 17 greens while carding eight birdies in the second round. He equaled the best 36-hole score at The RSM Classic, 14-under 128 and grabbed a 1-stroke lead over Brian Gay. Cook, who played his college golf at Arkansas, remembers playing in the Southeastern Conference Championship here, but never quite like this. He made four birdies in a row on the back nine beginning at No. 13, and said the 5-iron he stiffed from 179 yards at the 14th hole was his best shot of the day. “I never remember doing what I just did on that golf course,” he said, adding, “I was close to a 62 for nine in one SEC.” Cook, 26, is a PGA TOUR rookie after finishing 15th on the 2017 Web.com Tour money list. He solidified his spot in “The 25” with a runner-up finish at the Utah Championship. “It’s been a lifelong dream,” he said of earning his TOUR card. Next Tuesday, his hometown club, Jonesboro Country Club in Arkansas, is throwing a party for him in recognition of his achievement. When told he could have a lot more to celebrate if he were to become The RSM Classic’s fifth PGA TOUR first-time winner, Cook hesitated to look too far ahead. “Well, you know…” he said, taking a pregnant pause. “Yeah, we can have a lot to celebrate.” OBSERVATIONS GAY’S PUTTER HEATS UP. Brian Gay is regarded as one of the TOUR’s top putters and it keyed another vintage performance. Gay, 45, drained a 38-footer at the 6th hole for birdie, one of seven birdies in a round of 6-under 64 at the Seaside Course. He ranked third in strokes gained: putting (+3.538) on Friday, and heads into the weekend trailing Cook by one shot. Gay, who missed 18 months due to neck surgery and a thumb injury, regained his TOUR privileges last season on a major-medical exemption. Now he’s looking to get back into the winner’s circle. “It feels like it’s been a while,” said Gay, who last won at the 2013 CareerBuilder Challenge. “It really does.” WEEKEND PLANS FOR de JONGE. The putter case for Brendon de Jonge is a sun with shades and a smile and it matched its owner’s disposition after he shot a second-straight round of 67. That’s because de Jonge made his first PGA TOUR cut since the Shell Houston Open in April. “It feels really nice,” de Jonge said. “It’s a small monkey off my back.” Missing 16 of your last 17 starts, and finishing 221st in the FedEx Cup standings can lead to dark feelings. It has de Jonge contemplating a life after golf. He said he and his wife have started a company and invested in real estate. But he’d still like to get that elusive first TOUR win. De Jonge is fully-exempt on the Web.com Tour and plans to play out of the Veteran member category on the TOUR this season as much as he can. “The last few years have been a mental battle if whether this is what I want to keep doing,” he said. “I need to play one really good week and that’s how I’m going to figure out if that’s what I really want to do.” De Jonge, 37, wore a smile on his face as he described holing his second shot for eagle, a 9-iron from 138 yards on the 13th hole. He’s also enjoyed having childhood friend Bruce McDonald on the bag and staying with Sea Island teaching pro Mike Taylor this week. De Jonge and Taylor spent an hour on the putting green Wednesday, and it has paid quick dividends. “Sometimes you need a few to go into the hole to start believing,” McDonald said. KIRK USES AN OLDIE BUT A GOODIE. Chris Kirk blames a balky putter for his dip in performance last season. He slipped to a career-worst 125th in strokes gained: putting. But this week his short stick is behaving, and he credits a switch to a Scotty Cameron by Titleist center-shafted Laguna model that he used during the 2010 Web.com Tour. “That was one of the best putting seasons I’ve ever had,” he said. Kirk, a Georgia Bulldog alum, pulled the Laguna putter out of his storage closet last weekend while watching the Georgia-Auburn football game. “The game wasn’t going so well so I started messing around with it on my putting rug,” he said. It ended up in the bag this week. The 2013 RSM Classic champ took just 23 putts Thursday en route to a 9-under 63 at the Plantation Course, and though he needed 31 putts during Friday’s even-par-70 at Seaside Course, he said he rolled it “incredibly well.” Kirk, who is winless since 2015, enters the weekend at 9 under and in a share of third place. NCAA CHAMP IMPRESSES AGAIN. Amateur Braden Thornberry, a 20-year-old junior at Ole Miss, fired a 6-under 64 at the Seaside Course on Friday. Count veteran TOUR caddie Don Donatello, who is on the bag for the reigning NCAA champ this week, impressed. “He’s the youngest player I’ve ever caddied for, and he handles himself like he’s been playing this game for 30 years,” Donatello said of Thornberry. Thornberry, the Haskins Award winner as college golf’s best player, continues to show that his game can translate to the next level. He finished tied for fourth at the FedEx St. Jude Classic in June in his TOUR debut. After an opening-round 72 at the Plantation Course, Thornberry canned a 34-foot birdie putt at the first hole at Seaside Course and birdied five of his first 10 holes. He enters the weekend tied for 22nd. “I was surprised how comfortable I do feel out here,” he said. NOTABLES Brandt Snedeker – The eight-time TOUR winner used his 14-week layoff with a rib injury to good effect. He and instructor John Tillery changed his natural draw ball flight to a fade through a series of drills and exercises.” I was anxious to see how it would perform under pressure,” said Snedeker, who carded a second-straight 67 to improve to 8 under. “I hit a 4-iron from 220 into the wind today at the second and it never left the pin. Hit it straight to 5 feet and made birdie. I feel like my swing is starting to feel natural.” C.T. Pan – He finished in style, making eagle at the 18th hole en route to shooting 7-under 65, the low round on Plantation Course. Pan, 25, enters the third round at 9-under overall and in position to improve upon a T6 finish at The RSM Classic last season. Bud Cauley – Cauley, who grew up just across the Georgia border in Jacksonville, improved nine strokes on Friday. Cauley, 27, carded a bogey-free 7-under 63 on the Seaside Course. That was a stroke off Cauley’s personal-best on the TOUR — a 62 during round one of The 2012 RSM Classic. Cauley rallied on Friday to make his sixth consecutive cut dating back to last season. Bubba Watson – The nine-time TOUR winner made eight threes and a five on the par-5 seventh hole of the front nine at the more difficult Seaside Course and signed for a 6-under 64. Watson, who finished 75th in last season’s FedExCup and had intended to take a long layoff, is making his second start in the fall season. He improved to 7 under overall and T12 heading into the weekend. QUOTABLES “My mind kind of got off of golf. Being home and being with the family and everything, I realized how much I missed the game of golf and that’s why I wanted to come and play in these tournaments.”– Bubba Watson, who after a subpar year, decided to play in two fall events” He has the confidence on the greens like Jordan Spieth in that he thinks he can make anything.”– Caddie Don Donatello on reigning NCAA champion Braden Thornberry SUPERLATIVES Low round: 62. Austin Cook at the more difficult Seaside Course. Longest putt: Scott Brown went long distance at the par-4 14th hole, draining a putt from 69 feet, 4 inches. Longest drive: Trey Mullinax gripped it and ripped 357 yards on the ninth hole at Seaside Course. Fewest putts: Bubba Watson led the field with 13 one-putt greens and took just 23 putts in Round 2 at the Seaside Course. Hardest hole: The par-4 14th hole at Seaside played to a stroke average of 4.429. Only four birdies were recorded on the day. Easiest hole: The par-5 15th hole at Seaside played to a stroke average of 4.506. There was one eagle and 41 birdies in round two. CALL OF THE DAY

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