Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Kim leads by 1 after 1st round at Valero Texas Open

Kim leads by 1 after 1st round at Valero Texas Open

Si Woo Kim birdied five of his final eight holes Thursday for a 6-under 66 and the first-round lead at the Valero Texas Open.

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KLM Open
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Joakim Lagergren+375
Ricardo Gouveia+650
Connor Syme+850
Francesco Laporta+1200
Andy Sullivan+1400
Richie Ramsay+1400
Oliver Lindell+1600
Jorge Campillo+2500
Jayden Schaper+2800
David Ravetto+3500
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Cameron Champ
Type: Cameron Champ - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish-120
Top 10 Finish-275
Top 20 Finish-750
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Top 5 Finish+135
Top 10 Finish-175
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Shane Lowry
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Top 5 Finish+140
Top 10 Finish-175
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Thorbjorn Olesen
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Top 5 Finish-115
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Andrew Putnam
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Top 5 Finish+140
Top 10 Finish-165
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Sam Burns
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Top 5 Finish+150
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Taylor Pendrith
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Top 5 Finish+250
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Jeeno Thitikul+900
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Miyu Yamashita+2200
Wei Ling Hsu+2800
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Bryson DeChambeau+500
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Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
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USA-150
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Inside The Field: Dean & Deluca InvitationalInside The Field: Dean & Deluca Invitational

Click here for the latest field at Colonial CC as of May 19. Former Winners of the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational Keith Clearwater Sergio Garcia Zach Johnson Chris Kirk Phil Mickelson Tom Purtzer Jordan Spieth Steve Stricker Boo Weekley Winner – The Players Championship (Last 4 Yrs Plus Year of Win) Si Woo Kim Winner – U.S. Open (last 5 years) Webb Simpson Winner – PGA Championship (last 5 years) Jason Dufner Winner – THE TOUR Championship (Last 3 years) Billy Horschel Winners of the Arnold Palmer Inv. & the Memorial (Last 3 Years) Matt Every Marc Leishman David Lingmerth William McGirt Winner – Tournament Winner in the Past Year Aaron Baddeley Jonas Blixt Wesley Bryan Greg Chalmers Cody Gribble Adam Hadwin Brian Harman Mackenzie Hughes Billy Hurley III Ryan Moore Rod Pampling Pat Perez Jon Rahm Cameron Smith Jhonattan Vegas Member of Last Named U.S. Ryder Cup Team Matt Kuchar Brandt Snedeker Member of Last Named U.S.Presidents Cup Team Bill Haas Member of Last Named International Presidents Cup Team Steven Bowditch Anirban Lahiri Danny Lee Charl Schwartzel Players selected by winners of DEAN & DELUCA Invit. Beau Hossler Jamie Sadlowski Top 15 and Ties from Previous Year’s DEAN & DELUCA Invitational Harris English Ryan Palmer Kyle Reifers Martin Piller Chad Campbell Kevin Kisner Bryce Molder Chris Stroud Sponsors Exemptions – Web.com Tour Finals Martin Flores Rory Sabbatini Sponsor Exemptions – Unrestricted Angel Cabrera Jazz Janewattananond Curtis Luck Robert Streb Sponsors Exemptions – Members not otherwise exempt Jason Bohn Tim Herron Matt Jones Davis Love III Hunter Mahan Sam Saunders Top 50 – World Golf Ranking Paul Casey Emiliano Grillo Yuta Ikeda Charley Hoffman Top 80 on Prior Year’s FedEx Points List Sean O’Hair Jason Kokrak Scott Piercy James Hahn Fabian Gomez Tony Finau Graeme McDowell David Hearn Kevin Streelman Brian Stuard Vaughn Taylor Daniel Summerhays Ben Martin Ricky Barnes Patrick Rodgers Harold Varner III Martin Laird Johnson Wagner Scott Brown Top 80 from YTD FedExCup Points List Luke List Sung Kang Lucas Glover Kyle Stanley Ollie Schniederjans Kelly Kraft Kevin Tway Bud Cauley J.J. Spaun Michael Kim Patton Kizzire Stewart Cink Graham DeLaet Cheng Tsung Pan Chez Reavie Morgan Hoffmann Seung-Yul Noh Below 80th from YTD FedExCup Points List Camilo Villegas Nick Taylor John Huh Blayne Barber Dominic Bozzelli J.T. Poston Derek Fathauer Brian Gay Zac Blair Michael Thompson Geoff Ogilvy Nick Watney Ryan Blaum Tyrone Van Aswegen Whee Kim Brandon Hagy J.J. Henry Cameron Percy Bryson DeChambeau Cameron Tringale Scott Stallings

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Roundtable: Surprises, analysis from Round 2 of PGA ChampionshipRoundtable: Surprises, analysis from Round 2 of PGA Championship

FARMINGDALE, N.Y. – The second round of the PGA Championship saw Brooks Koepka blitz out in front of the field… can he be caught? Here PGATOUR.COM’s writers tackle some of the big questions out of Friday at Bethpage Black. Brooks Koepka turned a one-shot lead into a seven-shot lead at the halfway mark of the PGA Championship. His 12-under 128 is a major championship record. Can we call this Tiger-like dominance yet? BEN EVERILL (Staff Writer): Woods’ 81 PGA TOUR wins might be saying, “hold my beerâ€�… But credit must come thick and fast if Koepka holds up the Wanamaker trophy again on Sunday. That will be four wins in his last eight major starts – not done since Woods in 2005-06. No one has ever defended the U.S. Open and PGA Championship in their career. That’s new history. SEAN MARTIN (Senior Editor): I don’t think we can, for two reasons. Tiger’s best runs lasted longer and it extended beyond the major championships. Woods’s win in the 2002 U.S. Open was his seventh victory in 11 majors. He won two majors by double-digits. A win this week would be Brooks’ fourth in his last eight majors. Also, Woods has 81 PGA TOUR victories. Brooks has five. I’m not ready to go down that road yet, no matter how good Brooks has looked. CAMERON MORFIT (Staff Writer): It’s absolutely Tiger-like. Woods led by six halfway through the 2000 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach and wound up winning by 15. How many will Koepka win by? That’s the only suspense left in this tournament. ROB BOLTON (Fantasy Insider): Sorry, but I’m not taking that bait. Indeed, Koepka is in his own lane right now, but it’d take years for it to merge with that narrative. Leave hyperbole to social media and Bartolo Colon home run calls. RELATED: Tee times | Leaderboard | Koepka builds seven-shot lead How many shots will Koepka win by (or not by)? EVERILL: He talked about winning double digit majors in his career… I think he can win by double digits here. 10 shots. MARTIN: Five. I think there has to be some regression at some point. That said, it’s not like he’s simply relying on a hot putter. He shot 65 on Friday and the longest putt he holed was 11 feet. It’s his iron play that has been incredible. And that is less likely than the putter to desert a player in an instant. Bethpage Black is just too punishing to allow a player to keep cruising like he has, though. MORFIT: Scott doesn’t inspire confidence with his putting, and Spieth looks pretty suspect with his driving, so I’m going to say 14. BOLTON: Even fantasy leagues that reward bonus points for margins of victory don’t care much about it after only two rounds, but if Koepka is threatening Rory McIlroy’s record eight-shot runaway (in 2012) after 54 holes are in the books, then give me the over. Adam Scott flirted with an extremely low round before settling for a 64. Koepka has a 63 and 65. Danny Lee shot 64. Has Bethpage Black lost its bite? EVERILL: No. This course still is plenty long. And the rough has plenty of bite. But it has always given you the chance to score if you find the fairway. Ask Tiger Woods, Jon Rahm, Sergio Garcia, Bubba Watson or Bryson DeChambeau how hard it is… they were among those to miss the cut. MARTIN:  I wouldn’t go that far. The rough is still extremely penal and the fairways are narrow. They’re fairly soft, though, which makes them play wider. And the greens are still relatively soft by major championship standards. And they’re fairly flat, which makes it easier to get on a roll. MORFIT: These are the best players in the world. It’s what they do. And after watching what the back nine has done to these guys, including Rory’s horrific 40 Friday, I’d say the place still has plenty of bite. BOLTON: Not quite. Remember, these are professional golfers. Bethpage is performing exactly how the PGA of America wants it to given the conditions and setup. It’s penalizing poor play and rewarding form commensurately. Jordan Spieth has found his way to second place, albeit seven shots back. Are we seeing the end of the slump once and for all? EVERILL: I really want to say yes but his stats this season, and this week, give me pause. Spieth hit just nine greens on Friday but rode a hot putter. Also his scoring average on Thursdays and Fridays has been fine this season… it is the weekends where he has tanked. If he puts four rounds together I’ll be more positive. MARTIN: I can’t make that proclamation yet. The weekends have been his biggest struggle. He’s played well on Thursday and Friday several times. But any uncertainty about one’s swing gets exposed under the pressure, and that’s been the case this year. I’ll have to wait to at least until Monday to make that proclamation. MORFIT: By his own admission he has made everything he’s looked at on the greens. I don’t like the big misses I’ve seen in his driver, and he was T88 in Driving Accuracy through the first two rounds. That tells you how great his putting his been, and that he’s not really back yet.  BOLTON: Two rounds don’t make or break a slump or surge and I want to see him put four together, but his first 36 holes at Bethpage match his confident rhetoric pre-tournament, so let’s not lose sight of that connection. Tiger Woods missed the cut. Does this make you think twice about his chances at the U.S. Open next month? EVERILL: I’m going to cut Woods some slack. He didn’t play between his Masters win and this week and then was sick in the lead up. He looked underdone and lethargic at times but by Pebble Beach, where he’s had so much success, you can assume he will be healthier. MARTIN:  I don’t think so. Pebble Beach is so much shorter. I thought his ball-striking looked solid on Thursday. He was just plagued by some silly mistakes. And he just couldn’t find a fairway on Friday. He won’t have to rely on his driver at Pebble Beach, though. I think Tiger still had the Masters hangover when he turned up at Bethpage Black. He’ll likely play the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide before the U.S. Open so that will give him another opportunity for some reps. MORFIT: Tiger just didn’t have it this week from the moment he double-bogeyed his very first hole, the brutish 10th. He drove it badly and made silly mistakes, which makes his Masters win look even more remarkable in retrospect. Was he tired? I don’t know. He’d better sharpen up for Pebble, though, because you can’t hit three of 14 fairways there, either. BOLTON: Hardly. While he’d never lay the foundation for doubt and excuse, it still would be nice to know sooner if he’s not feeling 100 percent. Assuming he’s healthy, all systems will be go at Pebble. It’s been fascinating to witness his learning curve as a capable 43-year-old.

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Mark Hayes, 1977 PLAYERS champion, passes away at age 69Mark Hayes, 1977 PLAYERS champion, passes away at age 69

In weather conditions so ferocious that one competitor shot 91 and 47 others posted second-round scores in the 80s, it was only fitting that one of the PGA TOUR’s quietest and calmest players, Mark Hayes, stepped into the spotlight to win the 1977 PLAYERS Championship. “That was him, such a quiet star,â€� said Doug Tewell, who grew up in Oklahoma with Hayes, traveled the PGA TOUR with him, and considered him one of his closest friends. “I asked him once how he didn’t show his nerves, how he kept so calm, and he told me, pointing to his gut, ‘You’ve got to keep (the nerves) in here and not let them percolate to your hands.’ â€� Hayes, whose win at the 1977 PLAYERS was the last of three PGA TOUR wins in a solid 19-year career, died Monday at the age of 69 in Edmond, Oklahoma. Hayes’ death was confirmed by his oldest brother, Larry Hayes, the General Manager at TPC Craig Ranch in McKinney, Texas. He was 69 and had been ill for more than a year. “He had a great career and was a big influence on me,â€� said Tewell, a four-time PGA TOUR winner who was inducted along with Hayes into the Oklahoma Golf Hall of Fame in October 2017. Tewell told John Rhode of the golfoklahoma.org website that Hayes was the junior golfer everyone was chasing back in the 1960s, but no one, not even Tewell, could catch him. “Yet, we were friends. I’m not even sure we really knew we were rivals.â€� Having been a star player for famed Oklahoma State golf coach Labron Harris, Hayes made it onto the PGA TOUR and had four top 10s in 34 starts during his rookie year, 1974. In 1976 he won twice, at the Byron Nelson Golf Classic and Pensacola Open, but besides his notable bucket hat, what put Hayes in the spotlight was the first PLAYERS Championship to be played in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. Mark Hayes won three times on the PGA TOUR, which includes his win at the 1977 PLAYERS Championship. (Michael O’Bryon/PGA TOUR) More than the brutal second-round conditions at Sawgrass Country Club, what then PGA TOUR Commissioner Deane Beman vividly remembers was the way Hayes sealed his win. “He hit his (approach) shot over the green on the last hole, into a bunker,â€� said Beman, “and he hit absolutely one of the best bunker shots I’ve ever seen.â€� Trying to hold off Mike McCullough, Hayes stood over his ball, which had run through a flat bunker to the back but stayed on the downslope up against the rough. Calmly, as was his nature, Hayes, choked down on a mid-iron and played a shot-maker’s shot, a bump-and-run through the sand. The ball hopped across a small strip of rough down to about 4 or 5 feet and with a round of 72, Hayes finished at 9-over 289 to win by two over McCullough, who had started the fourth round tied with Tom Watson, one ahead of Hayes. And just where did Tewell find Hayes, to finally offer congratulations? “He was in his work shop at home, changing his shafts in his irons,â€� said Tewell. “I said, ‘Are you nuts? You just won THE PLAYERS Championship.’ But that was Mark. He was a perfectionist.â€� There’s a special place in Beman’s heart for Hayes, for the 1977 PLAYERS was the first to be played where the PGA TOUR is headquartered. “The conditions were tough,â€� said Beman of 40-mph winds that caused havoc in Round 2 and produced the highest aggregate score by a winner in the 45 years of THE PLAYERS. “But he was calm, and he played well.â€� Later in 1977, Hayes had a memorable second-round 63 at Turnberry – then an Open Championship record – to get within two of Roger Maltbie’s lead. But he closed 72-73 as that championship morphed into Watson’s unforgettable “Duel in the Sunâ€� win over Jack Nicklaus. Hayes likely would have qualified for the 1977 Ryder Cup, only rules at the time mandated that players had to have five years of service, which precluded his selection. But when Watson withdrew from the 1979 team, Hayes replaced him and was part of the Americans’ 17-11 win over the first European Team at The Greenbrier. Hayes lost both his team matches, but won, 1 up, in singles over Spain’s Antonio Garrido. Though he never won again after the 1977 PLAYERS, Hayes had a productive career. He was easily within the top 125 on the money list for 14 straight years. By 1993 he was a part-time player on the PGA TOUR and focused on his golf course design and construction business. Hayes returned to play two seasons on the PGA TOUR Champions, 2000 and 2001, but was more committed to his business ventures. “He was just a good man, who provided well for his family (wife Jana, sons Ryan and Kelly) and was a dear friend,â€� said Tewell. “I’m going to miss him dearly.â€� Besides his wife and two sons, Hayes is survived by a grandchild.

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