Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Mikolas, O’Neill lead Cardinals to 7-0 win over Pirates 7-0

Mikolas, O’Neill lead Cardinals to 7-0 win over Pirates 7-0

Miles Mikolas scuffled in the first half of the season and wanted a fresh start after the All-Star game. Mikolas pitched an eight-hitter and Tyler O’Neill hit a pair of two-run homers, leading the St. Louis Cardinals to a 7-0 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Monday night. It was the first complete

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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
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Ludvig Aberg+400
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+1100
Justin Thomas+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2000
Xander Schauffele+2000
Collin Morikawa+2200
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Joaquin Niemann+3500
Brooks Koepka+4000
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US Open 2025
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Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
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Jon Rahm+1400
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The Open 2025
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Rory McIlroy+500
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Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
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Winner’s bag: Rory McIlroy, RBC Canadian OpenWinner’s bag: Rory McIlroy, RBC Canadian Open

Rory McIlroy earned his 16th PGA TOUR win with a final-round 61 at the RBC Canadian Open. Here’s a look at McIlroy’s equipment: Driver: TaylorMade M5 (9 degrees) Shaft: Mitsubishi Tensei CK Pro White 70TX Fairway Woods: TaylorMade M6 (15 degrees), TaylorMade M5 (19 degrees) Shaft: Mitsubishi Tensei CK Pro White Irons: TaylorMade P-750 (4 iron), TaylorMade P-730 (5-9 irons) Shafts: Project X 7.0 Wedges: TaylorMade Milled Grind (48 degrees), TaylorMade Hi-Toe (52, 56 and 60 degrees) Shafts: Project X 6.5 Putter: TaylorMade Spider X Golf Ball: TaylorMade 2019 TP5 (No. 22) Grips: Golf Pride Tour Velvet Cord

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Reavie leads Travelers Championship by six shots thanks to back-nine 28Reavie leads Travelers Championship by six shots thanks to back-nine 28

CROMWELL, Conn. – There is the natural reaction, as soon as the third-round scorecard is signed, to peek ahead to Sunday’s finale, to build up an enthusiasm for what is on the horizon. Then there are those times like Saturday at TPC River Highlands, when players scratch their heads, stare quizzically, and search for answers to the question, “What the heck just happened?â€� Related: Leaderboard | McDaniel’s wild week continues It wasn’t an easy one, especially for Zack Sucher. The journeyman who started the third round with a two-stroke lead in the Travelers Championship, conceded he knew this much: “The front nine was a lot of fun.â€� Indeed, it was – four birdies, out in 31, and leading by five. But it’s the next stretch of holes in question. What happened there? Sucher offered that it was “rough,â€� Chez Reavie called it “stunning,â€� while Keegan Bradley said “it was surprising,â€� then added, “but it proves anything can happen out there.â€� Oh, how Bradley was proven correct, because Reavie, who bogeyed the sixth hole to fall six behind Sucher, his playing competitor, caught fire, carding eight birdies over his final 11 holes – including a back-nine 28 to complete a round of 7-under 63 – to build a six-shot lead over Bradley (69) and Sucher (71). The bulk of that turnaround came on the first three holes of the outward nine, as Reavie went birdie-birdie-birdie to Sucher’s bogey, double-bogey, double-bogey. An eight-shot swing that even had Reavie, who is at 16-under 194, lost to explain. Where he wasn’t lost for words was when he was asked the last tournament in which he had such a large 54-hole lead. “Never,â€� said the 37-year-old veteran of 12 PGA TOUR seasons. “Junior golf, maybe.â€� Truth is, Reavie is navigating new waters here. His only other 54-hole lead came in 2008 at the RBC Canadian Open, when he held on for what is his only PGA TOUR win in 277 starts. That was so long ago, Reavie’s competition is either off the TOUR (Anthony Kim) or has settled into PGA TOUR Champions competition (Billy Mayfair, Mark Calcavecchia, Scott McCarron). Just don’t think the lack of victories translates into a pushover, because nothing is further from the truth. “He’s a little bulldog. He’s an MMA fighter trapped in a golfer’s world,â€� said longtime caddie and loyal friend Justin York. “He hates to lose more than he likes to win.â€� York concedes that the stunning turnaround will be remembered for the way in which Sucher started the back nine (he hit a tree on 10 and drove it just 154 yards; his tee ball on 11 landed up against the lip of a bunker; his third shot on 12 was flopped into a bunker), but what shouldn’t be overlooked is how Reavie remained stoic. The 5-foot-9-inch, 160-pound Corey Pavin-like competitor rolled in birdies from 24, 11 and 3 feet during that stretch, then kept the foot on the gas with birdies at 13, 15, 17 and 18. “We just stuck to our game,â€� said York, who has been on Reavie’s bag for nearly six years. While Reavie could have gotten caught up in the struggles of Sucher, who went out in 31 and came home in 40, the fact that he did not is a tribute to him. “It was like last week at the U.S. Open,â€� said York. “We played the fourth round with Brooks (Koepka) and Brooks birdied four of the first five, while we were 1 over. But Chez knows he isn’t Brooks, he can’t play Brooks Koepka’s game, so he just focused on playing his.â€� Koepka did shoot 68 to finish second, but significantly, Reavie came home in 71 for a share of third, his best-ever finish in a U.S. Open. So, it didn’t surprise York that Reavie remained settled and focused while all sorts of craziness was going on around him on that back nine. A plan was in place, and Reavie has one for Sunday’s bid at a second PGA TOUR win. “If I go out and shoot 5- or 6-under, if someone catches me, they’re going to play a hell of a round. That’s my goal. Go shoot 5- or 6-under.â€�

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Louisiana natives Sam Burns, David Toms have special relationshipLouisiana natives Sam Burns, David Toms have special relationship

Sam Burns was 10 days away from celebrating his first birthday when David Toms picked up his breakthrough win on the PGA TOUR. Toms was 30 years old that Sunday when he won the 1997 Quad City Classic and about to become a father for the first time. His son, Carter, and Burns would go on to become good friends, playing baseball and later golf together while growing up in Shreveport, Louisiana. “He’s spent a lot of time around the house, gone on vacations with us, played a lot of PlayStation upstairs,â€� Toms recalls. “Just watched them grow up — and watched him become a great golfer.â€� The two boys went to Louisiana State, Toms’ alma mater, although Burns had the most collegiate success, winning the Jack Nicklaus Award as the nation’s top collegiate golfer as a junior before turning pro that year. And even now, in his second season on TOUR, Burns has the former PGA Championship winner’s ear. “It’s great,â€� Burns says. “You can’t put a price on that — just having somebody who’s been on here for however long he has, 20-plus years, he’s had an incredible career, major winner, he’s won out here 13 times or so. “So just to be able to see it firsthand and then be able to talk to him about it, that’s really a really special for me and I think it’s something that he enjoys talking about. Yeah, it’s been very beneficial for me.â€� Ask when the two first met, and neither man is exactly sure. Toms thinks it might have been at Dixie Ball Park at a youth baseball game. Burns seems to remember attending a youth golf clinic Toms was giving when he was maybe 6 or 7 years old. One thing Burns is clear on, though, is driving three hours from Shreveport to Fort Worth, Texas, to see Toms win the Crowne Plaza Invitational. It was his 13th – and turned out to be his last — PGA TOUR victory and came a week after Toms lost a playoff to K.J. Choi at THE PLAYERS Championship. Burns, who got engaged last week at the RBC Heritage, lists that win at Colonial Country Club as his favorite golf memory in his PGA TOUR bio. “I just remember there was a big buzz about him playing,â€� he says. “… Everybody kind of knew he was playing well, and you knew that was good golf course for him. One of the things I remember was I was watching when he holed the wedge for eagle. That was pretty cool to see. “And I just remember everybody was really excited to watch and, you know, as a 14-year-old kid watching any PGA TOUR player, much less a guy that you knew, in contention that it was just a really special moment.â€� Toms remembers Carter and Burns coming to New Orleans to see him play in what is now known as the Zurich Classic. He took them into the locker room and introduced them to some players, including Rickie Fowler. Burns plays in the same tournament this week with his partner Cameron Champ. “It was fun and I’m sure that’s been good for Sam being around professional golf even before he was playing amateur golf,â€� Toms says. “So, I’m sure he feels pretty comfortable in that situation.â€� Toms remains a valuable resource for Burns now that he’s in his second year on TOUR. Sometimes the questions are as specific as how to play a particular hole. Or, he might ask Toms about scheduling or whether a certain golf course would suit his game. “I mean, anytime I have any questions about a golf course, there’s probably a 99 percent chance he’s played it if it’s out here,â€� Burn says. “So yeah, I’ve leaned on him for stuff like that for sure.â€� “He’s a great kid,â€� Toms says. “He’s comes from a good family. So, he has a lot of good advice already, but I think it’s probably a good thing for him that somebody like me, that he’s close to has, you know, done this for a long time. “He’s got the golf thing figured out. You know, it’s more just about, you know, how to do this, how to do that. I mean, he can hit every shot, but … he’s just trying to learn as much as he can.â€� When Toms was growing up in Shreveport, he looked up to another of Louisiana’s favorite sons, Hal Sutton, who is eight years older. Sutton won 14 times on the PGA TOUR, including THE PLAYERS Championship and PGA in his signature 1983 season. “What he did for me and all the guys my age, was give us something to shoot at, you know, local guy playing great,â€� he says. “And I think I was probably able to do the same thing for Sam and a bunch of the kids that grew up in our area.â€� The 52-year-old Toms is now a regular on PGA TOUR Champions. He picked up his first victory on the circuit last year at the U.S. Senior Open – with Carter carrying his bag on Thursday and Friday after Toms’ regular caddie, Scott Gneiser, had chest pains and had to be taken to the hospital. Burns keeps tabs on how his friend is playing on the 50-and-over circuit. And he’s grateful for all Toms’ advice – and says the best has been to trust himself. “Just play my game and just believe in what you’re doing,â€� Burns says. “I think you can get out here and kind of get sidetracked and wondering what everybody else is doing, how they’re playing and all that. “So, I think one of the things that he’s really tried to tell me it was just be yourself and just kind of focus on what I have going on.â€�

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