Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Mickelson makes Masters return: ‘Fun to be back’

Mickelson makes Masters return: ‘Fun to be back’

Phil Mickelson is back at Augusta National Golf Club after skipping the Masters last year.

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Rory McIlroy+450
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Trace Crowe+1800
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Captain Nick Price’s 2013 prediction helped spur Hideki Matsuyama to Masters dreamCaptain Nick Price’s 2013 prediction helped spur Hideki Matsuyama to Masters dream

DUBLIN, Ohio – International captain Nick Price could see the raw disappointment in the eyes of his 21-year-old rookie after Hideki Matsuyama lost his Singles match at the 2013 Presidents Cup to Hunter Mahan. The Japanese prodigy felt like he’d let the International team down but Price wanted to make sure the youngster knew he certainly didn’t feel that way and nor did any of his teammates as they passed at the clubhouse of Muirfield Village. Price knew Matsuyama would be a staple of the International team in the years to come and sensed it was a time to send a message. He turned to Bob Turner – Matsuyama’s confidant and interpreter – and was straight to the point. “His game is so good… he’s going to win majors,” Price said before thanking Matsuyama with a hearty handshake for his efforts. It was a line that would live with Matsuyama from that point on and ultimately come true almost eight years later at the Masters. “At that time it was only a dream to think of winning a major championship but what Captain Nick said really gave me motivation to try to live up to those expectations,” Matsuyama said this week ahead of the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide at the same venue he received the praise. “The 2013 Presidents Cup is a week I’ll always remember. I was so grateful for Captain Nick and Adam Scott as it was those two who really took me under their wings and helped me a lot in my first time on the team. “They were great because I had no clue what to do, or how to do it, and they really paid special attention to me and helped build my confidence. It was unfortunate the team didn’t play a little better but the week will always hold great memories for me and it was important for my confidence going forward.” History shows that the following June, Matsuyama would return to Muirfield Village and win the Memorial Tournament, the first of his now six PGA TOUR wins. He was the youngest champion in tournament history at 22 and the first winner from Japan. It was an incredible rise as when Price was named the 2013 captain in May of 2012, Matsuyama was ranked outside the top 200 players in the world but by the time the team was picked in September of 2013 he’d moved inside the top 30 despite having just six TOUR starts as a pro. But it was a rise Price says was always going to come. The Hall of Famer returned to Muirfield Village this week as the tournament honoree. He remembers the infamous moment well. “I could sense Hideki was starting to get a little down so I was trying to think what’s the best thing I can do or say to pick him up and the first thing that came to mind was I just knew he was going to win a major,” Price said. “If I said that to him I thought it might just break him out of any funk he was in so I said to his interpreter Bob – you tell him he’s one of the best young talents I’ve ever seen and tell him I know he is going to win a major. “And hey, eight years later the prophecy came true but it wasn’t really going out on a limb, we all knew it was going to happen.” Price said he’d formed that opinion prior to the week at Muirfield Village where Matsuyama would go 1-3-1 as a rookie during the US 18.5-15.5 win. He could sense it in tournaments leading up to the event where he walked a handful of practice rounds with prospective team members. “I had obviously stopped playing on the regular TOUR before Hideki surfaced but I remember watching him play when he first popped up as a youngster. It was immediately noticeable that he had a beautiful golf swing and his short game looked amazing,” Price remembered. “When they announced I was going to be captain I obviously started to watch him play in person and I was so impressed with his demeanor. He seemed unflappable. He’s a great young man and I was really happy to have him on all three of my Presidents Cup teams.” And he was cheering Matsuyama home last April, on the edge of his seat watching the finish of the Masters, knowing how big the moment would be in a historical sense. “It was probably the greatest thing to happen in golf for some time,” Price says. “The Japanese have long revered the Masters and to have their first male major champion win there is something very special indeed and great for the International exposure of the game.” Price isn’t done with predictions when it comes to Matsuyama. “I don’t think the Masters is his last major win either,” he says. “Once the dust settles he will be back on the horse and he’s going to be looking for the second one. It won’t surprise me if he wins three, four or even more of them.” Let’s hope Matsuyama also takes this prediction to heart.

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First Tee-Mexico continues to grow under Agustin PizaFirst Tee-Mexico continues to grow under Agustin Piza

When Agustin Piza was a kid growing up in Tijuana, Mexico, golf was just one of the many sports he learned to play. “It never really caught my attention,” Piza says. “I preferred to play football, basketball, tennis — whatever I could sweat and bump into somebody and get all muddy from the experience and everything. So, I was just being a kid out there. “Golf never did it for me at that time. After he graduated from college with a degree in architecture and a desire to work in the sports arena, though, Piza decided it was time to give the game another try. He grabbed his old clubs and started to practice only to find his swing had deserted him. “Then I was mature enough … to now stop and listen to the birds, listen to nature, enjoy the experience,” Piza says. “And of course, by then, since I lost my swing, I was like, holy moly, this is difficult. “I’m like, whoa, wow. I thought this was easy. … Wait a minute. So, it taught me all these lessons in one afternoon, and I just got hooked.” Piza has gone on to become a highly respected golf course architect with a masters from the University of Edinburgh and more than 70 projects on three different continents on his resume. He counts himself lucky to have worked with Jack Nicklaus and Tom Fazio, to name a few. The decision to give back to the industry he loves was an easy one. First, Piza designed short course in Lima, Peru that serves 100 kids who might not otherwise have the chance to play the game. And seven years ago, he created Primer Swing to introduce youngsters to golf. Carlos Ortiz and Abraham Ancer, who each picked up their first PGA TOUR wins last year, and Esteban Toledo, the first Mexican to win on PGA TOUR Champions, were on hand to help launch the program. Among those on Primer Swing’s board of directors was Benjamin Salinas, a billionaire businessman who is the vice president of the board of Grupo Salinas and was instrumental in bringing PGA TOUR golf to Mexico. “And Mr. Benjamin Salinas spoke to me and said, ‘Hey, Agustin what do you think if we do it the other way around? What do you think if Primer Swing evolves to the First Tee of Mexico?’” Piza recalls. “Let’s do this together.” With Grupo Salinas as the primary sponsor, Salinas as the chairman and Piza as the director, First Tee — Mexico was launched in November 2017. It’s one of six international chapters in the First Tee network which is celebrating its 25th anniversary this year. Less than four years after launching First Tee — Mexico, some 300 kids participate at the 10 chapters, including the newest, Lomas de Coyococ, at Club Lomas de Coyococ, Morelos, announced earlier this week. “There is a saying, and a very famous saying that if everybody played golf, the world would be a better place, and I truly believe that,” Piza says. “It gives us all these tools and skills to understand life, to live it in an 18-hole round. … “So, all of these lessons can translate into better human beings, better citizens of Mexico, better citizens of the world. And that is the objective.” Ortiz, who grew up playing with his parents and grandfather and a close-knit circle of friends, loves seeing how First Tee — Mexico is exposing the game to a wider audience of kids. “It’s great, especially in a country like Mexico, having golf accessible to everybody — all kinds of people, not depending on having a private club or if your parents come from money or not,” he says. “I think what they’ve done starting and taking it on, the Salinas family, it’s great to grow the sport because having these kids involving in sports and actually in a sport like golf, it’s huge. “Even though they end up becoming professionals or not, it’s always going to have an impact in, in their life.” One of the chapters is in Puerto Vallarta where the Mexico Open presented by Vidanta is being played this week. About 25 First Tee members were on hand to meet and take selfies with some of the PGA TOUR’s top players on Tuesday and attend a clinic presented by Ancer. “These children appreciate everything,” Piza says. “It’s arguably one of my favorite days of the year.” First Tee — Mexico offers a character building program created around core values and empowering youth to build inner strength, self-confidence, and resilience that they can carry to everything that they do.. But First Tee — Mexico has added a key pillar – empathy. “We thought that one was a very important pillar to have,” Piza says. “We think empathy is what’s lacking in this world nowadays.” In addition to the character building and teaching the kids how to play golf, First Tee — Mexico has a program built around the skills it takes to maintain a golf course — how to mow a green, how to rake a bunker, how to edge the bunkers, … and ultimately how to operate a golf course. “So, we’re teaching them not only the core values, not only the game, but also a set of skills so that they can, when they finish the program, they would hopefully push themselves and become part of this industry,” Piza says. “And with our context, somebody can give them a job or a part-time job, and they could hopefully pay for their studies and continue with their lives. “That’s what we want to achieve. That’s what we’re shooting for. We’re shooting for a chapter in every state of Mexico so that every corner of Mexico can have this opportunity of learning this fabulous game of life that has all of these and offers all of these indirect and direct advantages — sustainable advantages, the economic and the ecologic, and in the social aspect.”

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Inside the Field: A Military Tribute at The GreenbrierInside the Field: A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier

HOW THEY QUALIFIED Winner — PGA/U.S. Open Championship Jimmy Walker Winner — THE PLAYERS Championship Webb Simpson Winner — The Masters Tournament Bubba Watson Winner — the Open Championship Phil Mickelson Winner — TOUR Championship Xander Schauffele Winners of the Arnold Palmer Invitational and the Memorial Matt Every David Lingmerth William McGirt Tournament Winner in last two seasons Ryan Armour Jonas Blixt Wesley Bryan Kevin Chappell Austin Cook Tony Finau Brice Garnett Fabian Gomez Cody Gribble James Hahn Brian Harman Russell Henley Mackenzie Hughes Billy Hurley III Smylie Kaufman Kevin Kisner Patton Kizzire Peter Malnati Ryan Moore Scott Piercy Ted Potter Jr. Brandt Snedeker Chris Stroud Hudson Swafford Vaughn Taylor Aaron Wise Sponsors Exemptions — Web.com Tour Finals Tommy Gainey Sponsors Exemptions — Members not otherwise exempt John Daly Ken Duke Sponsors Exemptions — Unrestricted Davey Jude Sam O’Dell Norman Xiong PGA Club Professional Champion — 6 Events Omar Uresti PGA Section Champion/Player of the Year Devin Gee Past Champions Angel Cabrera Danny Lee Life Member Vijay Singh Top 125 on Prior Season’s FedEx Cup Points List Bill Haas Charles Howell III Kevin Na Keegan Bradley Anirban Lahiri Scott Brown Jamie Lovemark Sung Kang Ollie Schniederjans Sean O’Hair Robert Streb Kelly Kraft Jason Kokrak Patrick Rodgers Chad Campbell Kevin Streelman Cheng Tsung Pan Whee Kim Harold Varner III Nick Taylor J.B. Holmes J.J. Spaun Michael Kim Scott Stallings Martin Flores Richy Werenski Ryan Blaum Geoff Ogilvy  Robert Garrigus Brian Gay  Brandon Hagy Derek Fathauer Tyrone Van Aswegen Harris English Dominic Bozzelli Nick Watney John Huh Blayne Barber Rory Sabbatini J.J. Henry Major Medical Exemption Michael Thompson Jon Curran Bob Estes Chris Cough Steve Marino John Peterson Top 10 and Ties from Previous Event Chase Seiffert Top Finishers from Web.com Tour Prior Season Andrew Putnam Tom Hoge Keith Mitchell Brandon Harkins Alex Cejka Martin Piller Abraham Ancer Corey Conners Tyler Duncan Seamus Power Talor Gooch Nicholas Lindheim Sam Saunders Joel Dahmen Ben Silverman Denny McCarthy Tom Lovelady Adam Schenk Shawn Stefani Xinjun Zhang  Sam Ryder Bronson Burgoon Jonathan Randolph Matt Jones Rob Oppenheim  Stephan Jaeger Ethan Tracy Roberto Diaz Jonathan Byrd Lanto Griffin  Cameron Tringale  Brett Stegmaier Conrad Shindler Matt Atkins Steve Wheatcroft Zecheng Dou Andrew Yun Kyle Thompson Kris Blanks Will Claxton Will MacKenzie David Berganio Jr. 126-150 Prior Season’s FedEx Cup Points List Trey Mullinax J.T. Poston Ben Crane Johnson Wagner David Hearn Zac Blair  Cameron Percy Ricky Barnes Daniel Summerhays Reorder Category — Cat. 34-38 Joaquin Niemann Jim Furyk Hunter Mahan Tim Herron Stuart Appleby Brendon de Jonge Parker McLachlin

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