Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Monday Finish: Daniel Berger’s road back to winner’s circle

Monday Finish: Daniel Berger’s road back to winner’s circle

After three months of a COVID-19 hiatus, the PGA TOUR returned last week for the hotly contested Charles Schwab Challenge. A stellar leaderboard kept us riveted to live golf all weekend before a wild finish saw Daniel Berger prevail in a playoff over Collin Morikawa. Welcome BACK to the Monday Finish where if somehow you weren’t glued to the screen all week like we were … well here are some things you may have missed. THREE KEYS TO SUCCESS 1. Perspective. Daniel Berger grew up as the son of a top level tennis player turned Davis Cup and Olympic tennis coach, but that doesn’t automatically spell success. But being around professionals from a young age gave Berger a great appreciation of how to make it to the top. For Berger, making the PGA TOUR and winning was expected. Sure it was cool, but at the end of the day… that’s what he was there to do. Berger made the decision to be a professional athlete before he knew exactly what sport that would be in! He even admitted he used to not really love golf, it just turned out to be the sport he was best at. And yep, he’s pretty good. He won back-to-back FedEx St. Jude Classics (2016, 2017) before it was turned into a World Golf Championships event and was on his way. Then he hurt his wrist and the injury curtailed everything. A young man who knew nothing but practice, practice, practice and play could not do this anymore. Absence makes the heart grow fonder, they say, and for Berger it was true. As the months dragged on he started to worry he might never be fully fit and be able to compete to his usual standards. But finally as 2020 rolled around things were looking up. His perspective changed when he returned to competition and was trending very nicely with a T9-T5-T4 run going before the COVID-19 enforced break. What’s another three months right? He vowed to make sure he made each week count and not take anything for granted anymore. So as the stacked leaderboard was getting dissected pre final round and his name wasn’t the main focus. “I just kept telling myself, why not me today?â€� Berger said. Why not indeed. Read more on his victory here. 2. Approach – Precision on approach has long been a key factor at Colonial Country Club and it continued with Berger outperforming the field by +1.362 strokes per round this week. He ranked fifth in the field in Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green on his way to hitting 77.8% of Greens in Regulation (T4). That was over 10% more than the field average (67.45%) and he had the fifth closest proximity to the hole average at 26-feet, 1 inch, a good 5-feet, 10 inches closer than the field average (31-feet, 11 inches). 3. Putting – Berger made a field leading 16 putts from over 10-feet for the week, a career best for him in a single tournament. He was deadly from 10-15 feet where he made 10 from 14 for a PGA TOUR season high 71.4% (minimum 10 attempts). Berger ranks third in make percentage among players who’ve faced at least 50 putts from that distance over the entire season and he is the only player to make 10 or more putts from 10-15 feet in one week…, a feat he’s now done twice having also done so at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in Las Vegas. For more numbers to know, click here. OBSERVATIONS New normal. It was nearly three months between a ball being hit in a full-field PGA TOUR event thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic and took a lot of work from countless people to enable the TOUR’s Return to Golf, albeit under new guidelines. The endeavor went extremely well. Social distancing was in the forefront of the mind and while things are certainly different without on-site fans, there was still plenty of excitement. We can be pretty confident the next four events, before we start seeing some fans in the crowds and the guidelines shift slightly again, can also be a success. Read more about how it all went down here and here. Putting is hard, crowd or not. Pressure doesn’t need thousands of eyeballs piercing at a player to rear its head. Coming down the stretch at Colonial countless players had chances to make their mark on the title only to see their hopes dashed on the greens. Jordan Spieth had a four-putt earlier in the week and offered the simple explanation of having picked up all his close range putts during the three month break from competition. Maybe Xander Schauffele and Collin Morikawa had done the same. Schauffele had a horrible horseshoe lip out on the penultimate hole from close range and Morikawa lipped out in sudden death from close also to hand the trophy to Berger. Morikawa had missed from 6-feet to win on the 72nd hole. Others missed from makeable range to join the playoff. Get the full run down here. Old school course creates cool contest. Colonial is an old-school course where bombing away can help, but not necessarily be the difference. You can play short and precise and do well and you can wail away and still survive if you are a little off. This helped give us a leaderboard of all types. Bryson DeChambeau, Gary Woodland and Rory McIlroy used power, Collin Morikawa, Justin Rose, Jordan Spieth and co used precision. Early in the week 58-year-old Tom Lehman started hot… anyone can play decent on this track. We might get something similar this coming week in Hilton Head. HV3 always an MVP. Harold Varner III doesn’t ask to be a role model. He just is one. As one of the few African Americans on the PGA TOUR, Varner III became the point person for talk on racial and social injustice issues weighing heavy on the nation at this time. Varner III was strong in his views but as always even stronger in his actions. For those of us lucky to spend considerable time with him the facts are always clear – he’s a champion human who always tries to make others around him smile and feel important. The fact he led at the halfway point this week and went close to a breakthrough win was cool to see. And he will win sooner rather than later. Read more about the TOUR’S response to social change here. QUOTEBOARD “It’s tough out here. It’s cutthroat, and the best players in the world every week are showing up. I worked my butt off the last year to be in this position, and I’m just glad it all paid off.â€� – Daniel Berger “Definitely progress,â€� – Jordan Spieth who notched his third top-10 this season as he looks for first win since 2017. WYNDHAM REWARDS The Wyndham Rewards Top 10 is a season-long competition that offers a $10 million bonus for the 10 golfers who end the regular season at the Wyndham Championship inside the top 10 in FedExCup points. The player atop the standings will earn $2 million, with varying payoffs for the others through $500,000 for the 10th place finisher. Sungjae Im continues to hold the top spot this week, in fact second place Justin Thomas and third Rory McIlroy also hold their spots. Patrick Reed’s T7 at Colonial helped him vault from sixth to fourth sending Brendon Todd and Webb Simpson down a slot each. Xander Schauffele finds himself inside the top 10, jumping from 12th, with his T3 finish while tournament winner Daniel Berger is now just outside the mark in 11th, up from 45th. Other significant movers this week in the FedExCup Justin Rose from 205th to 123rd, Jason Kokrak from 116th to 69th, Collin Morikawa from 41st to 18th and Jordan Spieth from 110th to 88th. Here’s how the standings look heading into this week’s RBC Heritage. SOCIAL SNAPSHOT

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Is Finau next in line to end his win drought?Is Finau next in line to end his win drought?

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – This season started with Kevin Tway becoming a first-time winner in his 91st career start on the PGA TOUR. Since then, we’ve had Matt Kuchar ending his drought after 116 starts, followed the next week by Charles Howell III winning for the first time in 333 starts and nearly 12 years. Last week, Rickie Fowler returned to the winner’s circle for the first time in nearly two years. That brings us to 29-year-old Tony Finau. Since his lone win in a playoff against Steve Marino at the 2016 Puerto Rico Open, he’s made 78 TOUR starts. He’s come close several times to that elusive second win – four runner-up finishes, including a playoff loss last fall to Xander Schauffele at the World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions. He’s posted 20 top-10 finishes since his breakthrough win, and last season was the highest-ranked player in the FedExCup standings without a victory. He’s given himself opportunities. He’s made noise in the big events (three top-10 finishes in majors last season). He’s shown the ability to handle pressure; his opening tee shot at last year’s Ryder Cup still resonates as a defining moment, as does his 2-1-0 match record in Paris – one of just four Americans over .500 in an otherwise losing effort. “I played well on a big stage,� Finau said – and he hopes to do so again in December at the Presidents Cup in Australia. He’s among the biggest hitters on TOUR, his putting made a big leap in improvement last season, he’s easy-going and seems ultra-steady and calm inside the ropes. At the Masters last year, he even showed super-human recuperating powers, overcoming a dislocated left ankle while celebrating an ace in the Par-3 Contest to finish T-10. There’s a lot to like about Finau’s game, his demeanor and his future success. In this season of drought-busting, Finau would seem to be next on the list – perhaps starting with the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Even if it doesn’t happen this week, Finau is confident it will happen soon. “I’ve gotten a lot better every year and in every part of my game,� he said Wednesday. “And if that trend continues, then I know I’m going to win some golf tournaments. “That’s all I can do is try and get better, and my coach and I have worked on a lot of great things over the past few seasons and the progress has been continuous. And in the process of getting better, I’ve had some nice results. “That’s all I’m trying to do is continue to get better, and I’ve done that these last few seasons. If I continue to do that, then I know some wins will be on my resume this year.� Not a win. Some wins. That’s the expectation level that Finau asks of himself, and that’s probably an accurate assessment of what the golf world also expects of him. But it’s not easy. Fowler showed that last week at TPC Scottsdale. A five-shot lead disappeared in two holes, starting at the 11th when Fowler ran his third shot through the green and into the water, then suffered an additional penalty shot when his placed ball on the downslope rolled back into the water while he was on surveying his line on the green. He would go on to card a triple bogey, and then bogeyed the next hole, eventually falling one shot behind Branden Grace. Fowler managed to shake off the two-hole disaster and regain the lead to win for the fifth time on TOUR. Finau, who missed the cut last week – just his second missed cut in his last 24 worldwide starts – was an interested observer of how Fowler persevered. “To be able to finish in the fashion he did after basically something tragic in the middle of your tournament happens. … That’s a tough pill to swallow for anybody,� Finau said. “I feel like mentally I’m pretty strong when I play. And Rickie’s the same way, and he showed his true colors.� Finau led by three shots after 54 holes in Shanghai last October and shot a respectable 71 on the final day, only to be caught by Schauffele, who made an unlikely birdie at the 71st hole, then won the playoff with another birdie. Since then, Finau worked with swing coach Boyd Summerhays on a higher swing plane in hopes of avoiding the flat swing that sometimes got him in trouble. He called it a minor adjustment, but with additional practice time, he finally committed to it in the off-season. The results were immediate – a runner-up finish to Jon Rahm at the 18-man Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas. “Someone being my height,� said the 6-foot-4 Finau, “I think it’s a lot better to swing up and down more so than around you.� But more than the physical work for Finau, it’s the mental approach he wants to improve on the most. His off-season wasn’t spent so much on pounding balls each day but working on the proper mindset to turn those second-place finishes into wins. “Getting my mindset right and seeing what I can learn from,� he said. He thinks he’s on the right track, but validity will come only with a big trophy. “I look forward to the season,� he said. “I think it’s one that I carry a lot of momentum from last season.� Rain is in the forecast for the final three days this week at Pebble Beach. That should make the courses play longer, giving Finau and the other big hitters in the field an even larger advantage. Wet and favorable conditions – seems like a good week to end a drought.

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