Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Justin Thomas struggles with ‘dead arm,’ shoots 74 in Round 2 at The Honda Classic

Justin Thomas struggles with ‘dead arm,’ shoots 74 in Round 2 at The Honda Classic

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. – The dead arm was one issue for Justin Thomas. A cluttered mind was the other. Combine the two, and it’s no wonder the defending champion of The Honda Classic was left searching for answers as he walked off PGA National on Friday after a 4-over 74. “My mind is just all over the place,â€� Thomas said. “I can’t seem to focus. Not playing well today definitely doesn’t help with that. That’s no excuse; it’s no one’s fault but my own, but sometimes you just can’t quite get into it.â€� At 2 over through the two rounds, Thomas was outside the cutline when he signed his scorecard in the early afternoon, although he’s hopeful that challenging conditions will move back the cut line and give him a chance to squeeze into the weekend and regroup. He could certainly use it after a second round that included water balls at the par-3 15th (triple bogey) and par-4 sixth (double bogey). It’s the second time in his last four rounds that he’s suffered at least two doubles-or-worse; his third-round 74 last week at the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship included two doubles. Thomas was able to minimize some of the damage Friday with a hole-out for eagle from 52 yards at the par-5 third. “One of the few positives of the day,â€� he said. It was a day that started off on the wrong foot. Or more specific, arm. On Thursday, he suffered a stinging sensation to his right arm when his 9-iron scraped a tree after he hit his approach shot at the 10th hole. It made the club unusable for the rest of the round, and Thomas was worried that his wrist might be sore. He took some Advil and iced the wrist, but when he woke up Friday morning, he knew he wasn’t 100 percent. He said the arm wasn’t necessarily numb, but “tingly a little bit.â€� “It just feels like I have a dead arm, like when someone kind of punches you in the arm and you have a dead arm,â€� he explained. “It’s just been about a seven-hour long dead arm … just feels like it kind of needs to get popped. Just doesn’t have a lot of strength.â€�

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Austin Cook claims first TOUR victory at The RSM ClassicAustin Cook claims first TOUR victory at The RSM Classic

SAINT SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. — Andrew Landry called it last week. The Arkansas Razorback grad told caddie Kip Henley that his former teammate Austin Cook doesn’t know how good he is. “But he’s about to find out,” Landry said. “I feel a win coming pretty soon.” Landry’s words proved prescient. The rest of the field at The RSM Classic found out just how good Cook can play as he fired a final-round 3-under 67 to win The RSM Classic by four strokes over J.J. Spaun. It’s the first PGA TOUR victory for Cook, 26, in just his 14th start. “I knew I had a good bag, but I didn’t know he was going to be this good this soon,” said Henley, who started caddieing for Cook during the Web.com Tour Finals. “I’ve got a 5-foot, 7-inch Matt Kuchar. He’s going to be hanging around the lead all the time.” Cook grabbed the lead on Friday with a bogey-free 62 at the Seaside Course and never relinquished it. He didn’t make a bogey until he three-putted the 14th hole of the third round, which led to Henley declaring, “The dream is over.” Cook made birdie at the next hole and opened a three-stroke lead heading into the final round. Cook conceded he endured a restless night’s sleep. He hadn’t won a tournament since a 2014 Adams Tour Winter Series mini-tour event, which earned him $4,000. An early bogey at the second hole allowed Chris Kirk to climb within one stroke of the lead, but he fell back and eventually finished T4. Cook never cracked, even as Spaun tried to erase his five-stroke deficit. “I saw what he was doing,” Cook said. Cook made birdie at No. 7 and skated along with seven consecutive pars in the middle of his round. “He’s impervious to pressure,” Henley said of Cook. Cook finished in style, making birdies on three of the final four holes, including holing a 14-foot putt at the last. When asked how winning compared to how he envisioned such a scenario growing up, he said, “Better. It was way better because it actually happened. You always grow up thinking that you can do it, but actually being able to get the job done and perform and hold all these nerves down and still put in a good round especially in these conditions and on this golf course, I’m just so happy.” All of the perks that go with winning on the PGA TOUR were just beginning to sink in for Cook. He recalled that he had attended a Tuesday practice round once before at the Masters and promised himself he would never go back until he earned an invitation. Mission accomplished. And he’s well on his way to achieving much more. “My goal coming into the year was to win Rookie of the Year, and I’m on a good path so far,” Cook said. OBSERVATIONS SPAUN KNOCKS ON THE DOOR AGAIN. A solo second-place finish for J.J. Spaun is the best finish of his young PGA TOUR career. Spaun, 27, became the forgotten man in his rookie season when he cooled off after three top-10 finishes through April. But he showed this fall that he’s got the game to win and win soon. Spaun held the 54-hole lead at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, but struggled down the closing stretch and fell to T10. He bounced back the next week at the OHL Classic at Mayakoba, finishing T14. His runner-up at The RSM Classic vaulted him 36 spots in the FedExCup to No. 10, and likely secured his playing privileges for next season. “I feel like I’m just knocking on the door,” he said. “Eventually I think that door will open.” HARMAN’S BEST FALL. EVER. That’s how Brian Harman termed the start to his 2017-2018 season. It’s tough to argue with three top-eight finishes, topped off by a T4 at the RSM Classic. “I tend to fade out at the end of the year, so I’m proud of how I played this fall.I drove it really well in Asia and again this week and started to make some putts,” he said. Harman, who finished T5 at THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES and eighth at the WGC-HSBC Champions, improved his score all four days at The RSM Classic. He closed with a 65 at Seaside that included a 6-iron into the wind at No. 13 to 3 feet. Harman, a Sea Island resident, had missed the cut the last two times he played The RSM Classic. He also finished tied for low-Georgia Bulldog honors with Kevin Kisner and Chris Kirk. “It’s been a great year,” Harman said. “Doesn’t mean it can’t get better.” SILVERMAN SHINES. What a difference a year makes for Ben Silverman. A year ago, he had to play all three stages of PGA TOUR Q-School to regain his Web.com Tour status. He did that, notched a win and finished 10th on the Web.com Tour money list to earn his card. And he’s off to a fast start as a PGA TOUR rookie. Silverman shot 66 on Sunday to cap a week of four rounds in the 60s, and his second top-10 finish of the Fall Series. Silverman finish T8 to go along with a T7 at the Sanderson Farms Championship. “It feel like it happened fast,” he said. If you’re looking for a player with a good underdog story, look no further than Silverman. He walked on to the “B team” at Johnson & Wales University, tried his hand at the Hooters Tour in 2010 and lost his savings in five events, and ended up winning more than 30 times on the Minor League Golf Tour before working his way up the food chain to the PGA TOUR. “I never gave up,” he said. “The road I took has made me mentally tough.” Silverman, a Canadian who makes his home in West Palm Beach, Fla., is hoping his strong performance will get him into the Waste Management Phoenix Open so he can experience the rowdy crowds, the Honda Classic near his adopted home, and the RBC Canadian Open, where he was a Monday Qualifier in 2014. He missed the cut and watched Jim Furyk play on Saturday. 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Usually there’s a setback,” he said. “I’m ready to hit the ground running on the West Coast.” Snedeker, 36, said he expects to play four tournaments in a row beginning at the CareerBuilder Challenge. POTTER’S ACE – Davis Love III was in a deer stand a week ago when Johnnie Morris, the owner of Bass Pro Shops, called and said he wanted to contribute to The RSM Classic. “How about you do something if someone makes a hole-in-one,” Love said. Ted Potter Jr., was the beneficiary of this phone call. Potter holed an 8-iron at the 180-yard par-3 sixth hole and was awarded a $10,000 gift card to Bass Pro Shops. “I’m sure a lot of it may go to my son, find the toy section there, and then hopefully find some hunting gear,” he said. “They’ve got plenty of stuff.” A $10,000 donation also will be made to the Davis Love Foundation. BABY LINGMERTH – Four rounds in the 60s left a smile on the face of another Arkansas grad, David Lingmerth. He played three times this season, and his T17 at The RSM Classic was his best finish. Now, Lingmerth, 30, is getting ready for a new addition to the family. He and his wife, Megan, are expecting their first child on Dec. 19. “Timed it perfectly in the off-season,” he cracked. LOVE’S SURGERY – Davis Love III said he is scheduled to undergo hip-replacement surgery on Nov. 21. Love knew something was wrong with his left hip when he played the Sanderson Farms Championship, but he wanted to delay surgery until after competing in and hosting this week’s RSM Classic. Love will undergo surgery at the Andrews Institute Total Joint Center in Birmingham, Ala. Love said he expects to be sidelined for three months. “I hope to be back for the Florida swing,” Love said. QUOTABLES “I had a small moment with myself, teared up a little. 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Trump golfing? Aides won’t say, but video tells the taleTrump golfing? Aides won’t say, but video tells the tale

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