Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Mickelson earns first PGA victory since 2013

Mickelson earns first PGA victory since 2013

Phil Mickelson ended a 1,687-day win drought by catching Justin Thomas at the WGC-Mexico Championship, then beating him in a playoff.

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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Justin Thomas+1100
Joaquin Niemann+1400
Shane Lowry+1600
Tommy Fleetwood+1800
Tyrrell Hatton+1800
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Rory McIlroy+650
Bryson DeChambeau+700
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Shane Lowry+3500
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
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
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Quick Look at the Dell Technologies ChampionshipQuick Look at the Dell Technologies Championship

THE OVERVIEW NORTON, Mass. — Be careful when you say it can’t be done — about the suggestion, that is, of someone sweeping all four FedExCup Playoff tournaments. Impossible? You might want to tell that to the great Jack Burke Jr., a member of the World Golf Hall of Fame and a notable name in the PGA TOUR record book: The last player to win four consecutive tournaments in a single year. Now, it was your grandfather’s world back then, the winter of 1952 (Feb. 17 to March 9, to be exact) when Burke manhandled fields in the Texas Open, Houston Open and St. Petersburg Open (average margin of victory, 6.67 strokes), and mixed in a triumph (via playoff) in Baton Rouge. But Burke proved you can win four straight out here. And just so you don’t go emphatically stating that such a feat won’t come to fruition again, let the record show that the only guy this year who can pull off four consecutive FedExCup playoff wins is one Dustin Hunter Johnson, who earlier this year won three straight starts, albeit over a six-tournament stretch. “Quite honestly, in my book, that was way tougher what Dustin did,â€� Billy Horschel said. “To win, take time off, come back and win, stop, win again. You don’t ride the momentum.â€� Horschel knows a thing or two about getting hot in the FedExCup Playoffs. He was T-2 here at the Dell Technologies Championship in 2014, then won the BMW Championship and TOUR Championship. “It was just about making sure I didn’t lose momentum,â€� he said. Eight times in 10 editions of the FedExCup Playoffs, a player has won twice. Rory McIlroy did it in 2012 and ’16. Six other players have done it once – Horschel, Tiger Woods (’07), Vijay Singh and Camilo Villegas (’08), Henrik Stenson (’13), and Jason Day (’15). Horschel and Woods came closest to winning three straight; Tiger also was T-2 at TPC Boston before winning the last two events in claiming the inaugural FedExCup title. Why so many multiple winners in the short history of the Playoffs? You could argue diminishing field size, for one. Start with 125, then 100, then 70, then the final 30 at East Lake. That’s a total of 325 competitors over the four events. Burke, by comparison, won his four straight in a combined field size of 356 players. If you’re wondering about Johnson’s three straight earlier this year – the cumulative field size was 284, although one of his wins was the World Golf Championships-Dell Match Play. In essence, that meant he needed to beat seven different players. Still, no one has won three Playoff events in a single year, and sweeping all four is perhaps unthinkable. “Truthfully, only a handful of guys could do it,â€� Horschel said. Like Johnson, winner of last week’s THE NORTHERN TRUST? Horschel agreed that the FedExCup leader and world No. 1 possesses the firepower to do it. Johnson seeks to take the second step this week at TPC Boston. But Horschel doesn’t see the sweep happening. “I’m on the record, Dustin’s not winning the next three events,â€� said Horschel, offering not so much a slight to Johnson as a testament to the depth of talent on the PGA TOUR. “It’s that difficult (out here). It’s such a fine line from winning to finishing top 20, top 10, or top 5. It’s all about who can carry the momentum from week-to-week and honestly, I don’t think there are a lot of guys who have that ability.â€� – Jim McCabe THREE PLAYERS TO PONDER Coughing up a five-shot lead is tough, but Spieth has no need to dwell on last Sunday. As he said, he didn’t lose it; DJ won it. His results coming into this week are eerily similar to his results going into last year’s event at TPC Boston. Might be a good sign considering the result. A past champ at TPC Boston, he’s the bubble boy in the U.S. Presidents Cup standings. A tie for 14th likely secures his first national team spot. PLAYER COMMENT NO. THE FLYOVER The 530-yard par-5 18th ranked as the second-easiest hole on the course last year, playing to a stroke average of 4.672 (the fourth hole below as the easiest). Nine different players made eagles last year, and Dustin Johnson had the longest drive of any player at 18, hitting his tee shot 332 yards in the final round (sound familiar?). Here’s a closer look at TPC Boston’s closing hole. THE LANDING ZONE Last season, there were 534 par-4 holes played on the PGA TOUR. The fourth hole at TPC Boston ranked as the 532nd most difficult – or, more to the point, the third easiest of all par 4s, playing to a stroke average of 3.627. Although listed at 353 yards on the scorecard, the hole played between 278 to 300 yards in the four rounds last year, with the back tee going unused. Players attempted to drive the green 96.4 percent of the time, and there were nearly as many birdies made (147) as pars (162). In essence, if you make par here, you’re losing a half-stroke to the field. Here’s a look at where all tee shots landed last year.   WEATHER CHECK Cool temperatures and mostly dry conditions are expected at TPC Boston. PGA TOUR meteorologist Stewart Williams said remnants of Hurricane Harvey could result in isolated thunderstorms on Saturday night through the day during Sunday’s third round. Expect shifting winds, with gusts forecast to 20 mph on Sunday. Click here for the latest weather conditions from Norton, Massachusetts.  SOUND CHECK TPC Boston has been a great place for me in the past, a place I feel very comfortable at and the kind of golf course I’ve played well on, and to get that win last year was awesome … I play the golf course very well. ODDS AND ENDS 1. COURSE CHANGES. Two par-4 holes are significantly different than last year – the 12th and 13th, with golf architect Gil Hanse making the design changes. The 12th is now 510 yards (it was 461), with Hanse installing new tees, two fairway bunkers, a split-level fairway and relocating the green. It’s expected to make the 12th play tougher this year. The left side of the 13th fairway has been recontoured to provide more generous tee shot options. Hanse also relocated and reshaped the green. 2. TARGET SCORE. If you’re looking to predict this week’s winning score, you should probably start at 15-under 269. That’s been the winning score the last three years by Rory McIlroy (2016), Rickie Fowler (2014) and Chris Kirk (2014). 3. LAUNCHPAD TO FEDEXCUP. Three of the past 10 winners at TPC Boston have gone on to win the FedExCup – McIlroy last year, Henrik Stenson in 2013 and Vijay Singh in 2008. 4. THE MISSING FOUR. Four players are not in the field this week – Henrik Stenson, Brandt Snedeker, J.B. Holmes and Scott Piercy. Holmes and Piercy are outside the top 70 and are now eliminated from the Playoffs. The injured Snedeker, ranked 68th, is sitting out the Playoffs. Stenson is safe at 22.

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Communication key for Chez Reavie and Lucas GloverCommunication key for Chez Reavie and Lucas Glover

AVONDALE, La. – They call it ham and egging when a team cleverly splits their good holes between them. Chez Reavie and Lucas Glover timed it perfectly with six birdies each to send their team to a blistering opening 12-under 60 at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans on Thursday and a share of the lead with Chinese duo Xinjun Zhang and Zecheng Dou. The key? Making a ton of putts after solid communication. While most teams leave each individual to do their own thing in Four-ball play, this pair picked each other’s brains. And it worked. “We read them right early, and that just gave us good feeling for the rest of the day. Chez birdied the first two; we were dead on with both the reads, so we just kept it going,â€� former U.S. Open winner Glover explained. “We changed maybe a ball or two in a direction one way or the other and that was it. We were pretty right on. Luckily we were hitting our lines also.â€� The pair combined last season for a T39 finish and learned plenty from the experience. Joining back together again they’ve taken an analytical approach, as well as putting in plenty of practice. “I think we’re both really good ball strikers. We wanted to strategize properly, and so I would lay back in some of the fairways and let him get more aggressive on the tees,â€� Reavie explained. “We’re just very comfortable helping each other out. If I tell him something and he’s not all in, then he’s going to do what he wants and I’m completely good with it, and vice versa.â€� They expect to keep the roll going in alternate shot on Friday after getting in a solid 27 holes of practice in the format over the past few days. NOTABLES Xinjun Zhang and Zecheng Dou have been struggling a little in their rookie seasons on the PGA TOUR, but the Chinese pioneers had no such issues Thursday. Zhang, who sits 128th in the FedExCup and Dou, who is a distant 215th, came flying home in the final group to join the lead at 12-under 60. Despite being in the culinary town of New Orleans, the pair said they felt at home after finding a Chinese market and buying supplies. Kevin Kisner and Scott Brown are still a little rankled by their playoff loss to Cameron Smith and Jonas Blixt a year ago, so their 10-under 62 to open this year was certainly a step in the right direction for redemption. They sit T3. “Obviously we didn’t finish it off the way we wanted to, so we’re coming back for a little revenge this week,â€� Kisner said. Tony Finau and Daniel Summerhays have been friends a long time. They share the same coach (Daniel’s brother Boyd) and Utah roots. Summerhays opened their round with two birdies and closed it the same way to help them to a 10-under 62 and T3 position. Finau – in his return from an ankle injury had six birdies of his own. “I think it’s really important to get off to a good start in best ball,â€� Summerhays said. “Last year we started alternate shot and you always felt like you were behind the eight ball, because it is a more difficult format. So to come out and really play good golf as a team I think that sets us up really nice for tomorrow.â€� Tommy Fleetwood and Chris Paisley are looking to continue the trend of international winners at the Zurich Classic. The English pair and good mates fired up an impressive 10-under 62 to be T3. Both have won on the European Tour this season and are looking to now notch up a PGA TOUR win. “It’s been kind of the best start to the year I’ve ever had,â€� Paisley said. “It’s been amazing. Hopefully I can just kind of keep it going. Maybe get my card over here. That would be great.â€� Jim Furyk and David Duval turned back the clock with an impressive 7-under 65. Duval, who has played just seven TOUR events in the last three seasons and hasn’t made a cut since 2015, produced four of the seven birdies. “It’s a joy,â€� the former World No. 1 Duval said. “The competition is different. I certainly miss it. I’d like to play a little bit more than I do.â€� Rob Oppenheim created a huge highlight with an albatross on the par-5 7th hole. His hole-out from 262 yards helped his partnership with Nick Lashley open with an 8-under 64 to be T11. Roundup: Jordan Spieth and Ryan Palmer sit T32 after a 6-under 66. Cameron Smith and Jonas Blixt started their title defense with a respectable 7-under 65 to be tied 21st. Patrick Reed, in his first start since winning the Masters is T21 after a 65 with Patrick Cantlay. FedExCup leader Justin Thomas and Bud Cauley struggled to a 2-under 70 to be T77 of 80 teams. QUOTABLES Going to try and look good so we feel good to play good.When you got on so well and you feel comfortable, it makes a big difference out there.He’s the par-3 assassin, so he gets three Par-3s and I get to putt them.Sometimes simplicity is huge in this game. SUPERLATIVES Low Round: 12-under 60 from the Chez Reavie/Lucas Glover and Xinjun Zhang and Zecheng Dou teams. Hardest Hole: Par-4 15th played as the only hole over par at 4.013. It yielded just five birdies. Easiest Hole: The Par-5 7th averaged at 4.238 and had three eagles and 54 birdies. SHOT OF THE DAY

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How to watch Corales Puntacana, Round 4: Leaderboard, tee times, TV timesHow to watch Corales Puntacana, Round 4: Leaderboard, tee times, TV times

Round 4 of the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship begins Sunday. Here’s how to follow the action. Tee times Leaderboard HOW TO FOLLOW Television: Saturday-Sunday, 3 p.m.-6 p.m. (NBC) Radio: Saturday-Sunday, 1 p.m.-6 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio). MUST READS Long looks for second TOUR win, motivated to get to East Lake Lashley feels good after Saturday 65 O’Hair off to strong start after ‘really hard recovery’ McCumber has good energy at Corales Puntacana Win probabilities: Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship Grillo, Como aiming for winning combination CALL OF THE DAY

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