Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Justin Leonard and Len Mattiace produced a historic PLAYERS in 1998

Justin Leonard and Len Mattiace produced a historic PLAYERS in 1998

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Justin Leonard’s 1-iron, the forged Hogan club with a wad of lead tape fixed to the back and a top line as thin as a dollar bill, still sits in TPC Sawgrass’ clubhouse with the other clubs used by past winners of THE PLAYERS Championship. It looks even harder to hit today, in an era of hybrids and forgiving cavity-back clubs. With each passing day, it provides further proof of its owner’s overlooked skill. Leonard hung up his clubs a couple of years ago. Like the 1-iron, technology made players of his ilk obsolete.  His early retirement makes it easy to forget that when he won THE PLAYERS Championship in 1998, he was drawing comparisons to Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson. That relic played an important role in Leonard’s victory two decades ago at TPC Sawgrass. He used it to make an eagle and near-ace in the final round. Both shots came on the front nine, though, and are lost in the shadow of his back-nine showdown with a 30-year-old local favorite who was seeking his first PGA TOUR title in front of friends, family and his high-school history teacher. Len Mattiace moved to Ponte Vedra Beach in April 1982, months after the first PLAYERS Championship at TPC Sawgrass, and graduated from nearby Allen D. Nease High School three years later. Mattiace remembers using a machete during science class to clear brush from the swampy area behind the school, much like Pete Dye had done to create the groundbreaking course that became the annual home of the PGA TOUR’s signature event. Neither Leonard nor Mattiace were the player who started the final round with a three-shot lead. That advantage belonged to Lee Janzen, a man who already had won THE PLAYERS Championship (1995) and was months from winning a second U.S. Open. He was in such control of his game that week that he was frustrated his lead wasn’t even larger. But, in further testament to the unpredictability of THE PLAYERS Championship, Janzen shot a final-round 79. His struggles cleared the stage for the largest comeback in the Stadium Course’s history, and its most heartbreaking defeat. Leonard and Mattiace combined for 14 birdies and an eagle in the final round. And a quintuple bogey.  ONE FOR THE AGES The 1-iron holds a unique place in golf history. Gene Sarazen’s sand wedge was ingenious. The driver has been the focus of unrivaled innovation. And the putter, of course, is either the perpetual scapegoat or the great equalizer. But only the 1-iron is the subject of a joke about its difficulty to hit. Lee Trevino famously declared that “not even God can hit the 1-iron.â€� (Trevino later joked that getting struck by lightning was his penance for that comment.) The 1-iron is a remnant of a hardscrabble era when players toured the country in caravans, playing for pittance. Without the aid of NASA engineers and space-age technology, that generation had to dig it out of the dirt. The 1-iron is for fans of John Wayne and Johnny Cash. It was the single club used for some of the game’s most historic shots. Its sheer difficulty makes any success with it that much more memorable. Hitting into the heavy winds blowing off the Pacific Ocean, Jack Nicklaus one-hopped a 1-iron off the flagstick on the 71st hole of the 1972 U.S. Open. Another shot he hit with that club – to the final green in the 1967 U.S. Open – earned him a plaque in Baltusrol Golf Club’s 18th fairway. Ben Hogan, survivor of a head-on collision with a Greyhound bus, hit one into the 18th green of the 1950 U.S. Open at Merion. His statuesque finish as he watches that shot is still one of the game’s iconic images. Hogan died in 1997, the same year Leonard won The Open Championship, but he would have been proud of how his fellow Texan wielded the club bearing his name at the 1998 PLAYERS. On TPC Sawgrass’ second hole, Leonard hit it to 12 feet to set up his eagle. Six holes later, he used it off the tee on the Stadium Course’s toughest par 3, the 215-yard eighth hole. Hitting a slight fade, his ball hit in the center of the green and rolled within a foot of the hole. Fathers are famously biased, but Larry Leonard was correct in his assessment when he told Sports Illustrated, “When he roped that 1-iron in there, I thought, ‘You just don’t see any better golf shots.’” It’s a shot Leonard had been preparing for on the eve of the final round. Between the late tee times and myriad media obligations, leaders are lucky if they can squeeze in a couple minutes on the range before the sun sets Saturday evening. You sign up for everything when you put that tee in the ground. Leonard used his limited time to work on that push-fade.  “It was a shot that I had struggled with a couple times during the week,â€� he said. “I remember Saturday evening hitting that shot off the tee, trying to hold it a little left-to-right. I thought that it was a shot that I might have at 8 or 16. And, sure enough, I had it at 8 and pulled it off.â€� Mattiace also had an important epiphany on the range that evening. The same swing thought led to his magical play in the final round … and may have aided in his tragic demise. Mattiace was bothered by a few drives he missed right during the third round. He was working with instructor Jim McLean at the time, but Mattiace’s older brother Bob was always a reliable second set of eyes. So, the brothers headed to the range that Saturday evening to sort things out. “The key was turning through the ball instead of stopping at it,â€� Mattiace recalled. “Then I could release the face instead of leaving it open.â€� ‘LOOK AT HER AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE’ Len’s two older brothers, Ken and Bob, both played professional golf on various tours around the world, but their little brother was the only one to make it to the PGA TOUR. Their father, Lou, was a club champion at Garden City Golf Club who introduced his sons to the game. He built a putting green and bunkers on their big backyard on Long Island. The boys could hit 60-yard wedge shots back there. “My dad asked the greens superintendent at Garden City for help and bought a used push mower,â€� Len said. “My brother Ken cut the green in the morning and I cut it in the afternoon. There was not a weed on the green. It was rolling as fast as (TPC Sawgrass’) greens during tournament play.â€� Len eventually earned his first TOUR card after pulling off a risky recovery on the final hole of the 1992 Q-School, hitting a high hook with a 6-iron through a small chute in the trees to a green fronted by water. A par on the last hole allowed him to graduate without a shot to spare. “I remember the 4-foot putt like it was yesterday,â€� Len said. “I drove from Houston to home nonstop. It’s 1,000 miles. It was a huge accomplishment. My brothers were still trying to make it. They were over in Asia and Canada. It was an accomplishment that was a long time coming. For everybody.â€� Len was the family’s standard bearer, and that continued at the 1998 PLAYERS, where he was playing for a family coping with one of life’s tragic turns. He was driving to Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, for the 1997 Heritage when he received the phone call that his mother, Joyce, had lung cancer. Joyce Mattiace was known for her a soft side. She was the one who offered support and encouragement, Len said. Now, as she watched THE PLAYERS from a wheelchair, her youngest son was looking to her once again. Her lung cancer had been declared inoperable. “I had a sports psychologist, Fran Pirozzolo. He had the foresight to see what’s coming. He didn’t say enjoy it. He said, ‘Look at her as much as possible and capture that,’â€� Len said. “And I did.â€� He started the final round of the 1998 PLAYERS in fourth place, six shots off the lead. The swing key he’d ingrained Saturday evening was still there when he warmed up Sunday. He hit his opening tee shot down the fairway. Then he made a 40-footer for birdie. “It just kept getting better and better,â€� Mattiace said. He chipped in on 10. Then he took the lead after knocking a wedge close on the short 12th hole. It was his third consecutive birdie, and seventh of the day. By the time he stepped to the 17th tee, he was one shot back. Leonard had taken the lead with a run of unconscious putting. He one-putted six consecutive holes from 10-15, holing birdie putts of 20 feet or longer on Nos. 10, 13 and 14. ‘WE’RE TRAINED NOT TO SAY ANYTHING’ The 1998 PLAYERS Championship was Gary Koch’s first in the tower behind the 17th tee. He assumed the role after Dave Marr, winner of the 1965 PGA Championship, succumb to cancer the previous October. Koch, a six-time TOUR winner who still calls THE PLAYERS for NBC, said NBC producer Tommy Roy tells his crew to ascribe to a “less is moreâ€� philosophy on one of golf’s most famous holes. “We’re trained there at 17 that, once the club is pulled, you try not to say anything after that because you want to kind of let the scene play naturally,â€� Koch said. There were no hospitality tents at 17 back then. Instead, the mounds that form an amphitheater around the green were filled by some 10,000 people. Mattiace had controlled his emotions all day — until playing partner Scott Hoch knocked it stiff right in front of him. Hoch tapped Mattiace on the backside and told him, “You hit it close too.â€� It was an unexpected gesture. Now the adrenaline started pumping. Thirty-seven seconds passed from when Mattiace teed up his ball until the start of his swing. The scene was too big for NBC’s crew, especially Johnny Miller, to let it pass. This is the dialogue that occurred during Mattiace’s pre-shot routine: Miller: “You want to see somebody really nervous, maybe the most nervous you’ll ever see a pro? This is it. We’ll see if he can do it. I hope he can hit a good shot, but I’m telling you, he is way over his comfort line.â€� Koch: “You know there must be some serious churning going on in his stomach. Heart pounding.â€� Miller: “He’s played this hole birdie-par-par, though. That’s pretty good. See if he can do it.â€� The fans erupted immediately after impact. Mattiace stared down the shot. NBC’s Roger Maltbie declared that the ball was headed right for the hole. Then the announcers go silent. The screams turn to shrieks as the ball flies over the green and into the water. It never touched land. Watching from the 16th green, Tom Lehman said he could tell the ball was hit too hard as soon as it left the clubface. Finally, Miller said: “You think he wasn’t pumped up, guys?â€� After Mattiace asked his caddie if the ball went in the water, the camera cut to an image of Joyce Mattiace in her wheelchair. As NBC showed an aerial replay of the shot, Miller pointed out the same swing key that led to Mattiace’s success on the previous 16 holes. Mattiace’s aggressive move through impact, as well as the adrenaline flowing through his body, caused his 9-iron to fly some 15 yards farther than normal.  “It was really a very fine swing,â€� Miller told the TV audience. “He really released his right side big time. It was a great shot, huh, Gary?â€� But it was too far. Koch said recently that he was concerned as soon as he learned that Mattiace pulled 9-iron. Many players had opted for pitching wedge because the hole played slightly downwind. And then you have to factor in the adrenaline. Miller has made a living out of his blunt assessments of players’ performances late on Sunday. His colleague, Dick Enberg, practically declared Miller prophetic after Mattiace hit his tee shot in the water. “The first thing I saw was that in 63 events, his career earnings were $713,000 total and he was playing for $720,000. … That oughta do it,â€� Miller continued as Mattiace prepared to play from the drop area. “He hasn’t been here before. You just couldn’t expect him not to be waaay nervous.â€� The tee shot wasn’t the end of Mattiace’s troubles at 17, though. After taking his one-stroke penalty and a drop, he hit a wedge shot into the front right bunker. More disaster followed – his bunker shot also sailed over the green and into the water. Another drop and penalty stroke followed. He then chipped onto the green and two-putted for an 8. Mattiace actually summoned the strength to birdie the last hole. It was his ninth birdie of the day, and a testament to his fortitude. What club did he hit into the final green? A 9-iron. The same club he hit on 17. Only this time he accounted for the extra yardage. ‘HE SEEMED TO BE SO MUCH IN CONTROL’ Leonard, his navy-blue Hogan hat pulled low over his eyes, was known for his stoicism on the course. The Stadium Course was a perfect fit. It didn’t demand extraordinary length off the tee, but it rewarded exquisite control and cool decision-making. Dye designed it so that players who took aggressive lines off the tee, often aiming toward the trouble, were rewarded with better angles into the green. Miscues were severely penalized, though. Leonard had a four-shot lead after Mattiace’s 8, but even Leonard knew that advantage wasn’t safe entering the Stadium Course’s hazard-laden last two holes. That’s why he broke character after his tee shot on 17 found the green, staring directly into the camera and letting out a large exhale as he rolled his eyes back in his head. Avoiding the water meant he could play safely on 18. A lackadaisical three-putt was just his second bogey of the day. He won by two shots over winless journeyman Glen Day and Tom Lehman, who preceded Leonard as The Open champion and reached No. 1 in the world ranking less than a year earlier. It was the fourth PGA TOUR win for Leonard, then 25, and the third in a row where he overcame a five-shot deficit in the final round. He had won the previous year’s Open Championship and finished second in the PGA Championship. Now he beat the strongest field in golf. He moved inside the top 10 of the world ranking for the first time. He also had a U.S. Amateur and NCAA Championship on his resume. “He had a way of playing, he seemed to be so much in control,â€� Koch said. “He was rarely out of play, which back then still worked. That’s not necessarily the case anymore.â€� Growing up in Texas, Leonard was a throwback who looked up to Hogan and Byron Nelson. He was one of the last players to use a persimmon driver, as well as the 1-iron. He finally had to give it up after the advent of solid-core golf balls. It was too hard to get the club airborne with the lower-spinning balls. The distance boom also left the 5-foot-9 Leonard in the dust. He would win eight more times, but his last win came in 2008. He retired eight years later at the age of 44 and moved from Texas to the Colorado mountains to enjoy the outdoors with his family. ‘I GOT TO SEE THE SON I RAISED’ Mattiace’s grace in defeat moved not only the large television audience that watched THE PLAYERS, but also his mother. “She said, ‘I saw my son play a wonderful round and then I read what people wrote about him and I got to see the son I raised. What is more important? To see him win his first event or see what a class act my Len is?â€� Len’s wife, Kristen, told Golf World magazine in 2004. It took several weeks for Len to get over the tough defeat at the 1998 PLAYERS, though. He could hear the murmurs in the crowd whenever he teed it up. But he was buoyed from the hundreds of letters he received. Some were mailed to PGA TOUR headquarters. Others somehow found his home address. “I’m just out playing a golf tournament, trying to capture moments with my mother, and a lot of people connected with that and felt moved to write,â€� Mattiace said. “A lot of people were touched because they had a family member who was dying. They could grasp it because they relived their last few months with their family member.â€� Joyce Mattiace watched her son play again at the Heritage a few weeks later. Len again found himself in contention, starting the final round in fourth place, four shots back. He shot 76 on Sunday, though. Joyce Mattiace suffered a stroke shortly after that left her without the ability to talk. She passed away that June. Len finally won his first PGA TOUR title at Riviera in 2002. Then he won a few months later at the FedEx St. Jude Classic. Those would be his only two wins. Another heartbreaking loss would come a year later after another magical run on a Sunday. Mattiace was 8 under for the first 17 holes in the final round of the 2003 Masters. He bogeyed the last hole, then waited as Mike Weir tied him. Mattiace made double-bogey on the first hole of their sudden-death playoff. Later that year, Mattiace crashed while skiing, tearing the ACL and MCL in both knees. He was never the same player. But Mattiace can still be spotted most days at TPC Sawgrass. He still loves the game. Still embraces its challenges. He plays and practices at the site of his difficult defeat. When he enters the clubhouse, the small locker room reserved for PLAYERS champions is just to his left, through a pair of swinging saloon doors. He turns right, though, to change his shoes in the same room as the members and other TOUR players who call the course home. And Mattiace is still willing to talk about that week because he feels he’d be short-changing the game that has given him so much if he didn’t share his story. “That’s part of the history, for good and for bad,â€� he said recently. “I blew that tournament but there was a lot of good in that, as well. We didn’t want that to happen, but you sign up for everything when you put that tee in the ground.â€� The 1998 PLAYERS Championship proved that.

Click here to read the full article

Be sure to check the legality of online gambing in your state! Our partner Hypercasinos.com has a list of which US states allow online gambling.

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
Justin Thomas+550
Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
Click here for more...
PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+450
Bryson DeChambeau+900
Justin Thomas+1800
Collin Morikawa+2200
Jon Rahm+2200
Xander Schauffele+2200
Ludvig Aberg+2500
Joaquin Niemann+3000
Brooks Koepka+4000
Click here for more...
AdventHealth Championship
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Kensei Hirata+2000
Mitchell Meissner+2200
SH Kim+2200
Neal Shipley+2500
Seungtaek Lee+2800
Hank Lebioda+3000
Chandler Blanchet+3500
Pierceson Coody+3500
Rick Lamb+3500
Trey Winstead+3500
Click here for more...
Regions Tradition
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Stewart Cink+550
Steve Stricker+650
Ernie Els+700
Steven Alker+750
Miguel Angel Jimenez+1200
Bernhard Langer+1400
Jerry Kelly+1600
Alex Cejka+1800
Retief Goosen+2500
Richard Green+2500
Click here for more...
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
Justin Thomas+2000
Viktor Hovland+2000
Click here for more...
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
Click here for more...
Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

Related Post

Bryson DeChambeau’s Masters odds continue to improve; Tiger Woods remains the favoriteBryson DeChambeau’s Masters odds continue to improve; Tiger Woods remains the favorite

Bryson DeChambeau’s big year included four PGA Tour titles and a budding friendship with Tiger Woods that led to their unsuccessful stint as Ryder Cup partners. Following DeChambeau’s latest victory in Las Vegas — his fourth win in his past 11 starts — the 25-year-old has improved to 20-to-1 odds to win the 2019 Masters, according to Westgate Las Vegas Superbook. Woods remains the favorite at 10-to-1 odds.

Click here to read the full article

Confidence Factor: Fantasy golf advice for the Safeway OpenConfidence Factor: Fantasy golf advice for the Safeway Open

It’s welcome-back week! After a quick, one-week hiatus the brand-new 2019 PGA TOUR schedule kicks off in wine country with the third edition of the Safeway Open. The Silverado Resort & Spa (North Course) in Napa, California will play host for the fifth consecutive season and 144 players will have the first shot at claiming a share of the $6.4 million prize pool. The winner will take home 500 FedExCup points, $1.152 million and essentially a three-year exemption, including the rest of this Regular Season. With a new $10 million bonus system from Wyndham in place for the top 10 Regular Season FedExCup points leaders it won’t hurt to jump out of the gate strongly! It’s hardly a wonder why all of the new faces (21 rookies) are teeing it up right out of the chute. Silverado’s Resort and North Course just missed being severely damaged by the wildfires shortly after the conclusion of last year’s event. Friends of mine attended the event and took a few stunning pictures, safely of course, as the fire approached. Sadly, there were more than a few places that weren’t as fortunate as the resort as homes and businesses burned to the ground. All of the ticket sales this week will go directly to support fire relief in Napa Valley. Don’t forget the Fantasy Games at PGATOUR.COM are up-and-running as well. Check out the new format for the weekly game and enter your team(s)!   Tales of the Tape Emiliano Grillo joined Russell Henley as the only players in recent memory to win during their first official start on TOUR with status. Grillo didn’t steam-roll the field like Henley did at the Sony Open in Hawaii but he showed his nerve by holding off Kevin Na in a playoff. The rookie from Argentina was fresh off his victory at the Web.com Tour Championship and was in sizzling form. Grillo trailed by six shots at the halfway point to Brendan Steele and began the final round two back before forcing a playoff. Steele attempted to go wire-to-wire but his 76 on Sunday, his only round above par to this day in 16 rounds at Silverado, knocked him to T17. Grillo rode this momentum to the BMW Championship and barely missed out at East Lake, finishing No. 32, and Rookie of the Year. This was the second event at Silverado and these guys solved the puzzle quickly. The top 25 all posted 10-under or better and the cut was 2-under-par. After almost wiring it in the 2016 edition, Brendan Steele wasn’t going to miss his chance for redemption in 2017. In this edition he came from off-the-pace to stalk, catch and pass Scott Piercy and others. Piercy lit the place up, opening with 62 (12 birdies!) and setting, at the time, the course record. He backed up 62 with 67 and raced to a three-shot lead at 15-under after 36 holes. Gamers, this should clear anything up about how important scoring is this week! Steele played the weekend 67-65 and birdied his last three holes to set the Silverado tournament record of 18-under 270 and win by a shot. With nothing to lose on Sunday he posted the co-lowest round and made up a four-shot deficit to win outright and for the second time on TOUR. He led the field with 24 birdies on the week and for the second year running the entire top 25 was 10-under or better. The target on his back as defending champion didn’t bother Steele at all last year as he defended his title with another Sunday charge. With winds gusting up to 30 miles per hour Steele posted one of just eight rounds on Sunday in the 60s (69) and made up a two-shot deficit this time around. As easy as Silverado North had played leading into the final round, the gusting winds made life difficult as there were exactly zero bogey-free rounds to mention. Chesson Hadley stole the spotlight in Round 2 as his 61 included 10 birdies, an eagle plus a bogey. It was his only round in the 60s as he cashed T3 but did co-lead the event with Phil Mickelson as they had 23 circles on the cards. Rookie Tyler Duncan, as Steele did in the 2016 edition, ran out of gas in his attempt to go wire-to-wire. The weather during the week was perfect before the wind started whipping around on Sunday and four of the top six led the field in Par-5 scoring. Gamers, please be aware that Silverado has been the host for just the last four years. Previously this event was in San Martin, California, and Scottsdale, Arizona, so there’s nothing of value to gamers before the 2015 edition. NOTE: Golfers inside the top 30-ish in each category last season. * – Finished inside the top 10 since the move to Silverado in 2015. Ball-Striking Rank Golfer 1 Sam Ryder 8 Kevin Streelman 9 Patrick Cantlay 11 Corey Conners 16 *Scott Piercy 19 *Hudson Swafford 22 J.J. Spaun 23 Michael Thompson 25 *Brendan Steele 26 *Emiliano Grillo 26 *Tyler Duncan 28 Bronson Burgoon 30 Joel Dahmen 30 *Hunter Mahan Strokes-Gained: Approach-the-Green Rank Golfer 9 *Chesson Hadley 11 *Scott Piercy 15 *Ryan Moore 16 Patrick Cantlay 17 *Chris Kirk 20 Chez Reavie 23 *Phil Mickelson 27 *Tyler Duncan 28 Russell Henley Par-5 Scoring Rank Golfer 14 Ricky Barnes 17 Kevin Tway 17 Bronson Burgoon 17 *Phil Mickelson 17 Patrick Cantlay 24 Rory Sabbatini 24 Luke List 33 Peter Uihlein 33 Stephan Jaeger 33 Sam Saunders 39 Shawn Stefani Scrambling Rank Golfer 2 *Johnson Wagner 12 *Ryan Moore 16 Seamus Power 18 *Chris Kirk 20 Joel Dahmen 23 Ben Crane 27 Abraham Ancer 29 Chez Reavie 31 Aaron Baddeley 34 *Emiliano Grillo 36 *Nick Taylor Silverado Resort & Spa is owned by a group that features Johnny Miller so ball-striking will be at a premium this week. Graduated rough will max out at almost 4 inches of Bluegrass and ryegrass so those keeping it on the shorter grass will have more opportunities to attack flags. It should be noted that the greens are Bent/Poa annua and are usually in tip-top condition. If the weather cooperates they could get shiny on the weekend but won’t run more than 12 feet on the Stimpmeter. Bogeys need not apply this week as the pros will handle the 7,166 yards and rake the four Par-5 holes on this par 72. None of the Par-5 holes measure over 575 yards and should all be easy to attack, relatively speaking. Course Ratings: 2015: 25th-most difficult of 52 used on TOUR; (-0.296) 2016: 33rd of 50; (-0.893) 2017: 36th of 50; (-1.111) 2018: 23rd of 51; (-0.243) The defense, as with most courses when hosting these studs, is always firm-and-fast on the ground and wind in the air. The average winning score is a click above 15-under par for the first four events and I would expect something similar this week. Avoiding bogeys and rounds in the 70s will go a long way this week as will a hot putter to cash in birdie chances. Steele provides us plenty of clues as he’s 50-under par here in four events and that includes a 76! He is looking to become the first player since Steve Stricker (2009-11) at the John Deere Classic to go back-to-back-to-back on TOUR. Brooks Koepka also goes for three in a row at this season’s U.S. Open.                    Rob Bolton’s Power Rankings will give you more juice for the week so make sure you stop by. It’s also who I trust with the weather each week so pay attention! NOTE: The groups below are comprehensive to assist in data mining. Inclusion doesn’t imply automatic endorsement in every fantasy game as all decisions are specific to your situation. I have not included ANY DATA PREVIOUS TO 2015 as not to confuse course history with event history.  

Click here to read the full article