Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Live blog, updates from Capital One's The Match: Champions for Change

Live blog, updates from Capital One's The Match: Champions for Change

Phil Mickelson faces perhaps the biggest challenge of his historic golf career as he partners with NBA legend Charles Barkley against two-time Super Bowl champion Peyton Manning and current Golden State Warriors NBA legend and three-time NBA Champion Stephen Curry in Capital One's The Match: Champions for Change. Stone Canyon Golf Club in Oro Valley, Arizona is our host as 44-time PGA TOUR winner Mickelson tries to get Barkley's notoriously unreliable swing smooth enough to get through against near-scratch golfer Curry and single digit handicapper Manning. RELATED: How to watch The event will contribute toward and highlight diversity, equality, and inclusion through donations to Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and organizations that support them (Thurgood Marshall Fund, United Negro College Fund) while raising awareness and spotlighting opportunities for diversity and equality in sports. As many of us lay back in a food coma following Thanksgiving feasts it's also important to note The Match will support Feeding America. Around 50 million people may face hunger in the U.S. during 2020's pandemic times, including more than 17 million children. The competition format will be modified alternate shot match play where each player will hit a tee shot and the team can then choose their best option before continuing in alternate shot fashion until the ball is holed. PRE MATCH The smack talk has already begun with Manning handing Barkley a special kit that includes an airhorn he can blow if he gets lost in the desert. Clearly these four champions are out for some fun while raising money and awareness for great causes. Mickelson has his calves out in all their glory - and he'll likely need them to carry a pretty big load given what we've seen out of Barkley in the past. But the 44-time PGA TOUR winner is at least talking a confident game - while reminding us he'll be hitting bombs and hellacious seeds to put some pressure on the Curry/Manning combo. And hey, look at this, Barkley has actually made some decent contact on a few at the range. Could an upset be on the cards? GO TIME Just minutes away from the start of The Match and players are getting their final warm up moments in. Mickelson is dialed in on the putting green while Barkley is trying to stretch out his back before he submits it to his swing that usually resembles a frog in a blender. Curry and Manning have that look of quiet confidence but there's also a whiff of nerves coming from the duo who, at their best in their respective sports, were seemingly impervious to jitters. The anticipation for the smack talk battle is just as high as it is for the golf itself. HOLE BY HOLE HOLE 1: (par 4, 426 yards) The Curry / Manning team gets off to a fine start after Curry splits the fairway. Mickelson then busts out his driver and lets the group know, "I wouldn't normally hit driver here but I just want to set the tone," and cuts the corner of the dogleg left opener, but finds the rough. Barkley then takes iron and hits a perfect draw into the fairway, but it's well back meaning they decide to use Mickelson's shot. Manning pulls his approach ever so slightly to the fringe of the green, but ensures Curry will get a birdie look from around 20 feet. Mickelson tells Barkley the shot is 70 yards as he's worried about pace through the rough. It's actually 55 yards. Mickelson math backfires and Barkley hits it through the green to the back fringe leaving about 70-feet. "I won't do that to you again," the TOUR star is forced to say to his teammate. Mickelson lags it down to six-feet giving Curry a chance to win the hole, but his effort comes up well short. "I don't recall Tiger leaving you five-footers," Mickelson chirps to Manning referencing the previous Capital One's The Match where Tiger Woods and Manning bested Mickelson and Tom Brady 1up. Barkley leaves his par putt on the high edge and lips out but Manning makes no mistake and an early lead is established. Hole Result: Curry / Manning WIN Hole Scores: Curry / Manning - Par; Mickelson / Barkley - Bogey Match Score: Curry / Manning 1up Mickelson / Barkley Hole 2: (par 5, 559 yards) A change in strategy for the Mickelson / Barkley team is instituted immediately as Barkley defies all odds and finds his second straight fairway off the tee. Mickelson's drive is significantly longer, but they choose Barkley's ball, allowing Phil to try to reach the green in two. The 50-year-old comes up just short to the front of the green. After a sweet Manning drive, Curry lays up to a number that Manning clearly loved as his wedge shot tracks to the hole and actually lips out before settling about six-feet away. Unfortunately, Curry pushes the birdie putt out to the right. That miss proves costly as Barkley produces an impressive long lag putt from the front of the green to five-feet and given the chance to square the match, Mickelson makes no mistake. "I made a mistake there in strategy and gave them a hole," Mickelson says of the opening hole. "But Chuck and I can make pars and birdies on this course if we play to our strengths and with him that's his putting so I'll work on giving him those chances." Hole Result: Mickelson / Barkley WIN Hole Scores: Curry / Manning - Par; Mickelson / Barkley - Birdie Match Score: Curry / Manning ALL SQUARE Mickelson / Barkley Hole 3: (par 4, 304 yards) We've hit the Ford Mustang Mach-E Drivable par 4 challenge where a Hole-in-One would trigger a $5 million donation to HBCUs, an eagle nets $1 million, a drive within 10-feet is worth $250,000 and the winner of the hole $100,000. Mickelson doesn't even need driver and lets loose, coming up with a shot to the back fringe of the green. Barkley brings out his driver for the first time and snipes a low bullet that they can dismiss. Both Curry and Manning have a crack with driver with the former NFL star's shot just short and right in the rough the best of the two. Curry chips out, but the ball rolls out significantly so Manning must try for an unlikely birdie. It doesn't quite have the gas to get there and they settle for par. Barkley has a putt for the $1 million and the hole with Mickelson reminding him to "quieten his mind," and forget about the money, the cameras and all of the outside noise. His 25-foot eagle effort has some heat and runs five-feet past. The stress of it all is evident on his face, but you'd be hard pressed finding many 25 handicappers (Barkley's official number) able to do much better under the spotlight like this. Mickelson proves his pedigree by converting the birdie to win the hole and take their first lead in the match. Hole Result: Mickelson / Barkley WIN Hole Scores: Curry / Manning - Par; Mickelson / Barkley - Birdie Match Score: Mickelson / Barkley 1up Curry / Manning Hole 4: (par 4, 374 yards) Barkley has clearly been in some sort of golf boot camp like back in the day when he was part of the Hank Haney Project on Golf Channel. His swing is holding up fairly well under pressure and he once again finds the middle of the fairway off the tee. This allows Mickelson to go full flex with his calves and try to hit a bomb up near the green. "I've only seen one better resurrection," Gary McCord quips of Barkley's game in commentary. Mickelson does hit a huge drive that finds the fairway, but the 50-yard pitch would have to go over a bunker and find the correct tier of the green so he learns from the opening hole and decides to back his approach game from distance against Barkley's short game. A clever shot to about 18-feet makes the strategy appear genius. Manning's drive hooks into the left rough leaving Curry under enormous pressure given the momentum of the match. The Warriors weapon steps up in the clutch and pounds a good drive up near the green, albeit into the left rough. The angle for the short wedge approach is a good one though. Manning, mindful of needing to get the ball to the back tier where the pin is located, is just a tad aggressive and sends the second shot into the back rough, but close enough for Curry to use his putter for their third. That effort rolls some 10-feet past the pin. Barkley's attempt to win the hole with birdie from 18 feet is tracking, but ends up just short. It's good enough though when Manning pushes his par putt. Hole Result: Mickelson / Barkley WIN Hole Scores: Curry / Manning - Bogey; Mickelson / Barkley - Par Match Score: Mickelson / Barkley 2up Curry / Manning

Click here to read the full article

Do you like other ways of online gambling besides sports betting? Play some casino games at Miami Club Casino! Follow this link for the best bonus codes.

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
Click here for more...
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
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
Viktor Hovland+2000
Justin Thomas+2500
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

Man’s best friend serves as good luck for Adam SchenkMan’s best friend serves as good luck for Adam Schenk

SILVIS, Ill. — The last name is Schenk, which, of course, rings frighteningly close to that ugly never-to-be spoken S-word that equates to kryptonite for golfers. So why tempt the golf gods even more by naming your dog Bunker? “We kind of are,” Kourtney Schenk conceded while watching Adam, her childhood chum and husband of less than two years, put the finishing touches on a strong second round of 7-under 64 at TPC Deere Run. His eight-birdie, lone-bogey effort put the 29-year-old Indianan in prime position to contend on the weekend for a second straight John Deere Classic. “Maybe it’s working in our favor, though. “I want to name our next dog Bogey,” she declared, thumbing her nose at the gods of golf even more. Why not? If there are horses for courses, maybe Bunker is a hound for these grounds. Although the frisky young Golden Retriever stayed back at the hotel Friday morning to help family friends Jonas and Jamie Blixt miss their left-at-home Golden, Boone, a bit less in advance of Jonas’ afternoon tee time, Bunker was at Deere Run on Thursday afternoon while Adam worked his way around the course with an opening round of 67. Bunker also made the trip five hours north from the Schenk’s native Vincennes, Indiana, in 2019, when Adam, a sixth-year professional who played collegiately at Purdue, posted a T6 JDC finish that ranks as the best of his four years on the PGA TOUR. “Bunker is a good luck charm,” Kourtney said. Or maybe Deere Run is just a track that suits Adam’s game particularly well. Schenk, after all, grew up on a sod farms that provides turf grass to golf courses across southwestern Indiana, and is especially comfortable on the bentgrass fairways and greens endemic to Midwest golf courses. Friday, he took particularly advantage of firm morning fairways that added yards to his low-flighted drives. “Yeah, seems like it’s just ending up a little further for me this week,” said Schenk, who is averaging a fraction more than 300 yards off the tee through two rounds and, despite hitting only 18 of 28 fairways, ranks among this week’s midway leaders in strokes gained: off the tee. “I don’t think I hit it more solid, but I do launch it a little lower, so with it landing in the fairway and it rolling in the fairway, it’s tumbling out.” More than Deere Run’s lush bent fairways, Schenk is taking advantage of the course’s L-93 bentgrass greens. Through two rounds, he has gained more than five strokes on the field with his putter. He ended Friday’s round with 12 1/2 -foot downhiller for birdie at the 487-yard par-4 ninth that ranks among the most challenging holes on the course. “Yeah, the greens are so good here,” he said of a birdie roll that offset his lone bogey of the day. “The putter has been nice this whole week. It’s the best I’ve putted in a while, which is nice.” Schenk’s affinity for this event goes beyond Deere Run’s greens to John Deere green. Both he and his wife were raised on farms where Deere & Company equipment was the family brand. Yeah, it would be nice to do something special here. I could definitely use it with the season I’ve had so far,” said Schenk, who is looking to improve on a campaign with just three top 25 finishes and a current FedExCup ranking of 135. “If I could somehow have a chance to win on Sunday, that would be great, and to pull it off at the John Deere would be kind of ironic, I guess, growing up driving John Deere tractors. So that would be funny.” Even better with Bunker nearby. He accompanies the couple only to the handful of events within driving distance of Vincennes, so his presence makes the Deere a family event. “Bunker is our kid right now,” Courtney said. “Goldens are the best. I think I would have 10, if I could.” That’s a lot of golf god-defying names to concoct, though. Hazard? OB? Hosel Rocket? Quadruple? “Bring it on,” Kourtney said.

Click here to read the full article

FedExCup Update: Na makes a big moveFedExCup Update: Na makes a big move

Just six weeks and eight events are left in the regular season, so jockeying for the top 125 qualifiers for the FedExCup Playoffs has reached the super-serious stage. Each week for the rest of the 2017-18 season, PGATOUR.COM will provide an update on the various moves being made in the FedExCup standings. Winner’s Move Kevin Na, the winner of A Military Tribute at the Greenbrier, moved to 18th in the standings. It’s his best position this late in the season since he entered the 2016 FedExCup Playoffs ranked ninth. Top 125 to Watch The top 125 players in the standings after the Wyndham Championship (Aug. 19) advance to the FedExCup Playoffs. Here are the players who moved in and out last week at Greenbrier. MOVING IN Sam Saunders. Finished T5 to move from 132 to 113. Joel Dahmen. Finished T5 to move from 126 to 108. Harold Varner III. Finished T5 to move from 139 to 123. MOVING OUT Troy Merritt. Did Not Play to move from 123 to 127. Nick Taylor. Finished T-56 to move from 124 to 128. Robert Garrigus. Missed the cut to move from 125 to 129. Biggest Movers The five players at the Greenbrier who made the biggest moves in the FedExCup standings. Looking Ahead This week’s John Deere Classic offers 500 FedExCup points to the winner. The tournament’s champions have an impressive history in the Playoffs the year of their win at TPC Deere Run. Eight of the 10 winners of the John Deere Classic in the FedExCup era have qualified for the season-ending TOUR Championship. After claiming his first PGA TOUR title at TPC Deere Run last year, Bryson DeChambeau advanced to the first three of four FedExCup Playoffs events, eventually finishing 49th in the FedExCup standings. Seven of the top 30 in the current FedExCup standings are in this week’s field, including DeChambeau, who sits sixth. The others are Patton Kizzire (9), Chesson Hadley (17), Andrew Landry (19), Austin Cook (24), Aaron Wise (25) and Chez Reavie (27).

Click here to read the full article