Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Koepka continues strong play in majors with 63 in Round 1

Koepka continues strong play in majors with 63 in Round 1

FARMINGDALE, N.Y. – It was fitting that Brooks Koepka was paired with Tiger Woods in the opening round at the PGA Championship. Especially considering the last player to dominate major championship golf like Koepka has been was, in fact, Woods. Koepka opened his PGA Championship defense with a course-record 7-under 63 at what is supposed to be the difficult Black course at Bethpage State Park. It was the only bogey-free round of the morning wave and gave the PGA TOUR Player of the Year a four-shot lead over those who went out early. Koepka has won three of the last seven majors he has contested. Should he make it four out of eight, he will be the first to do so since Woods won four majors over the 2005 and 2006 seasons. Woods, who beat Koepka by a shot at last month’s Masters, was left as a spectator in his round of 2-over 72. Even so, the 81-time PGA TOUR winner and 15-time major champion felt Koepka could’ve done more. Given he didn’t birdie either of the two par-5’s, Woods was on to something. “He played well. I mean, he hit a couple loose tee shots today that ended up in good spots, but I think that was probably the highest score he could have shot today,â€� Woods said. “He left a few out there with a couple putts that he missed. But it could have easily been a couple better.â€� The 29-year-old Koepka’s last six rounds in the PGA Championship have been in the 60’s –  including two 63’s – the first person to have done so twice in the championship’s 101-year history. If no one catches him in the afternoon wave, he will have led the championship for three straight rounds, having held the 54-hole lead last season before claiming the victory at Bellerive Country Club. “That was one of the best rounds I’ve played probably as a professional,â€� Koepka admitted after needing just 25 putts. “This golf course is brutal. It tests every asset of your game. You’ve got to drive the ball straight. It’s long, so you’ve got to hit it far and really position yourself with some of these shots in. You can’t take a shot off, and that’s what I love.â€� While the massive New York crowd willing Woods to keep pace, Koepka seemed to feed off that energy. When Woods made an eagle to get within four, Koepka responded with another birdie on the next hole. Woods would three-putt for bogey. It was like watching what Woods used to do at his peak – almost bully others into errors. It was intimidating stuff. “(My game has) never been this confident. I think I’m still learning, understanding my game, and I’ve figured it out, and I think over the next few years, I’m excited for what’s to come,â€� Koepka added. “I understand a lot more about my misses, where to hit it, and major championships I just suck it up, and you don’t always have to aim at the flag like you do in regular events. Sometimes it’s just about how few bogeys and doubles you make this week.â€� Prior to the event, Koepka felt a couple under par might be the winning score through 72 holes. But now he plans to change that. He won’t be playing defense. “It’s always nice being out ahead. But you take a hole off, it could change very quickly out here. So you’ve just got to keep the pedal down. “I’ve just got to go out there and focus on me. I’m not really concerned about what’s going on (with others).â€�

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The first time Adam Hadwin met Mike Weir was not at a junior clinic or Canadian amateur event – when an up-and-coming star would usually connect with a country’s legend – but while they were sitting out a fog delay. It was 2013 at the Farmers Insurance Open and Hadwin had Monday-qualified. It was just the eighth PGA TOUR start of his fledgling pro career, and the first of three that season. By shooting 66-74 in the first two rounds at Torrey Pines, he was one shot ahead of Weir. Both made the cut but were well off the lead, as they were in the first two groups on Saturday. Due to the weather, the pair of Canadians had to keep retreating off the course. It was the perfect opportunity for them to finally meet and chat. Hadwin was in the midst of an up-and-down year on the Korn Ferry Tour and he’d go on to finish 74th on the money list, just barely earning his TOUR card again for the next season. 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