Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting McIlroy vows to keep foot on gas in chase for victory

McIlroy vows to keep foot on gas in chase for victory

Catch me if you can. Reigning FedExCup champion Rory McIlroy has laid down the gauntlet to his chasers at the World Golf Championships – HSBC Champions, vowing to continue his aggressive play at Sheshan International Golf Club. For the third straight round, McIlroy posted a 5-under 67 in Shanghai to earn to the 54-hole lead at 15 under. He is one clear of Louis Oosthuizen and two in front of Matthew Fitzpatrick and defending champion Xander Schauffele. Since using a similar assertive mindset to claim last season’s RBC Canadian Open, where he carded a final-round 61 to earn victory, the 17-time PGA TOUR winner has tried to take wins, not protect them. He’s also armed with the knowledge that 54-hole leaders have often been reeled in at this event. Not to mention his last WGC event saw him give up the lead on Sunday when he fell into the trap of worrying about other competitors. This time, McIlroy will not die wondering. Related: Leaderboard | Li lets chance at history slip away | Three lead at Bermuda Championship “I want to go out there and be committed, play aggressively, and shoot a good number,â€� McIlroy said. “I took a lot from the win in Canada earlier this year. I went out tied for the lead, and I just said from the start, ‘I’m going to keep my foot down and I’m going to go for everything.’ It was a good lesson that when you do have something right there, in front of you, a tournament to win or something to achieve, you just have to grab it with both hands, and that’s what I’ll do tomorrow.â€� While others faced rollercoaster third rounds, McIlroy just went about his business without mistakes. He recorded one of only three bogey-free rounds on the day. “Right now, the game feels pretty simple. I know that it’s not going to feel like that all the time, but when it does, you have to take advantage of that feeling,â€� he added. “I’ve given myself another opportunity to win a very big golf tournament, a tournament that I’ve never won before. There’s enough guys close to me that I just need to go out there and play aggressively. Just have a similar mindset to the mindset I’ve had over the first few days.â€� Oosthuizen surged into contention with a 7-under 65 – the best score of the day – that included starting with five consecutive birdies. The South African is looking to add to his lone PGA TOUR win – the 2010 Open Championship. While he has eight European Tour wins to his name, Oosthuizen has been plagued on the PGA TOUR with eight runner-up finishes since his Open Championship win. “Winning a World event will be a big achievement, and I need to just go out and play some good golf,â€� Oosthuizen said. “I played with Rory the last two rounds last week. He’s absolutely striping it. I need to play really good golf tomorrow.â€� Oosthuizen admitted to nerves on Saturday, but not about his golf. Rather he was thinking of the Rugby World Cup Final between his native South Africa and England to be played between the third and fourth rounds. He was hoping for a win to use as an omen. Schauffele won’t be watching the match. He’s still overcoming the flu, so it’s remarkable the defending champion is even in the mix. He won from three behind a year ago. This time he’s just two adrift. “No one has ever repeated here. It’s a packed leaderboard… I just want a chance with nine holes to play. I think I’ll be pretty satisfied with that,â€� Schauffele said. “It’s been a long week. Strength is slowly coming back. Just give myself a chance and I’ll be able to hold my head high if I do that. “Of course I want to win and kick everyone’s face in, but at the same time, I’m just here to have a good time and have fun. I wasn’t expecting to play this well at the beginning of the week, so I’m probably the happiest guy here in the tournament.â€� Fitzpatrick surrendered the lead he had at the halfway point to McIlroy, much like he did at the World Golf Championships – FedEx St. Jude Invitational. He’s had four runner-up finishes worldwide this year and was ultimately fourth in Memphis. “Everybody is here is to win. If not, you may as well go home. Be a good day tomorrow,â€� Fitzpatrick said. “Unfortunately Rory is playing very well. He’s playing very annoying. I’ve got to play well tomorrow. That’s why it’s a World Golf Championships. It’s got the best players in the world.â€� Even if McIlroy does win, he won’t overcome Brooks Koepka at the top of the world rankings. but he will close the gap significantly. He will, however, almost certainly take the top spot in the FedExCup rankings. No player has ever won the FedExCup three times or defended the crown. McIlroy will aim for both in 2019-20. Catch him if you can.

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Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
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Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
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Collin Morikawa+450
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Justin Thomas+550
Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+450
Bryson DeChambeau+900
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Ludvig Aberg+2500
Joaquin Niemann+3000
Brooks Koepka+4000
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Kensei Hirata+2000
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Neal Shipley+2500
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Scottie Scheffler+550
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DJ, Koepka, Wolff not feeling pressure to chase distanceDJ, Koepka, Wolff not feeling pressure to chase distance

BLAINE, Minn. – Sometimes when Brooks Koepka talks, his words seem punctuated with a rim shot. Take this week, for example, when he was asked whether he needed to do anything to keep pace with the distance gains Bryson DeChambeau made during the pandemic layoff. “I don’t need to keep up with anybody,” Koepka deadpanned, before adding, “I’m good.” Ba-da-boom! Cymbal crash! The four-time major champion isn’t the only big hitter in the 3M Open field who’s content with the length he’s hitting it. So is another former world No. 1 Dustin Johnson. And so is defending champion Matthew Wolff. RELATED: Featured Groups, tee times | Power Rankings | Expert Picks “I feel like I hit it far enough to keep up,” said Johnson, who has ranked in the top-6 in driving distance in each of the previous 12 seasons. “Like I said last week, until I feel like I can’t beat these guys with my game or when I’m playing my best, then I’ll try to change something. “I feel like right now, if I’m playing really good golf, that I can beat them. So, until then, that’s what I’ll have to go back and review.” That’s from a 21-time winner who picked up his latest victory at the Travelers Championship where DeChambeau, who is leading the PGA TOUR in driving distance at 323.8 yards, tied for sixth. Johnson is tied for 26th with an average of 306 yards. Koepka ranks 19th with a 307.3-yard average. Wolff, sixth in driving distance at 312.8 yards, felt the most heat three weeks ago at the Rocket Mortgage Classic. He took a three-stroke lead over DeChambeau and Ryan Armour into the final round only to be overtaken by DeChambeau’s 65. The win capped off a string of seven straight top-10 finishes by DeChambeau, who took the following week off before missing the cut at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide. DeChambeau is not at TPC Twin Cities this week but did finish T-2 here last year after Wolff eagled the 72nd hole with a 26-foot putt. Of course, that was before DeChambeau’s distance gains, as he’s picked up more than 21 yards off the tee in the last 12 months. Wolff didn’t feel like DeChambeau’s distance was the deciding factor in Detroit. Yes, the eventual winner played incredibly well but Wolff stumbled early, making a bogey at the start, and turned in 38 before “buckling down” with birdies on four of his last seven holes for a 71 and solo second. “Dustin said it best. I heard a quote from him a little bit ago saying that he doesn’t feel like he needs to hit it any farther to win,” the 21-year-old Wolff said. “… I feel like recently I’ve actually been trying to tone it down a little bit because I feel like I go hard at everything and instead of me going 110 percent at everything, I can go 90 percent and I feel like I honestly still hit the ball just as far, but I’m a little more controlled. “I don’t think that at any time soon it’s going to get to the point where people need to start hitting it ridiculously far because although it might help, I think that there are people out here who prove week in and week out that, … they’re not short, but they’re not long, but other parts of their game are so great.” Case in point, Wolff said, is Armour. He ranks 196th in Driving Distance with an average of 284.1 yards and was tied with DeChambeau for second entering the final round. The 72 he shot on Sunday left him tied for fourth — Armour’s second consecutive top-5 finish. “I was talking to him about it, about how Bryson is chasing distance and what he’s doing is unbelievable, but I was talking to Ryan about it and Ryan said he had a stretch where he chased distance and he was struggling a lot because he couldn’t keep the ball in the fairway, and that’s his game,” Wolff said. “He doesn’t hit the ball overly long, but he’s very straight, he’s a very good iron player and a good putter. He went back to that and you saw how well he did in Detroit. I think the most important thing is just to stick to what you do best in your game, not try to change your game based on other people. “Like I said, what Bryson’s doing is unbelievable. I think to be so precise with your irons and still such a good putter, but hit the ball as far as he does, it is very impressive. But I wouldn’t recommend it to everyone because not everyone can gain distance. Sometimes if you do try to gain distance, it affects other parts of your game.”

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