Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Monday Finish: Kang uses valuable experience to earn first win at AT&T Byron Nelson

Monday Finish: Kang uses valuable experience to earn first win at AT&T Byron Nelson

Golf is the ultimate game of experience. You fail much more than you win. And it was through the lessons learned from the past that South Korean Sung Kang was able to break through for his inaugural PGA TOUR win at the AT&T Byron Nelson. Welcome to the Monday Finish, where Kang overcame lengthy weather delays, a slew of challengers and a 27-hole Sunday to win by two at Trinity Forest. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1. Fool me once… Sung Kang had been in this position before in Texas. At the 2017 Houston Open, Kang started hot and looked set to cruise to a victory. His six-shot lead through 36 holes in Houston looked pretty good. But it put him in conservative mode over the weekend and saw him get passed by a hot Russell Henley. He vowed not to play the same way if it happened again. So when he equaled Trinity Forest’s course record 61 on Friday, he put that experience to good use. During the weather-interrupted third round, and on Sunday, those in the mix threw countless birdies at him, but Kang stayed focused and firm. He didn’t let the noise stop him from his own aggressive play. It was impressive to watch the evolution. Read much more about his breakthrough win here. 2. Not just a warm up… PGA TOUR Player of the Year Brooks Koepka dismissed the notion in the lead up to the tournament that he was just in Dallas to warm up for his defense of the PGA Championship. Koepka entered to win and he played like it. While there were a few moments of rust, Koepka’s 65-66-68-65 week to finish fourth was anything but the form of someone going through the motions. With Bethpage Black getting some rain early this week, length could become more important, and as such, you can expect the defending champion to be a force. 3. Not a surprise to ‘Every’body… Two-time Arnold Palmer Invitational winner Matt Every provided a serious challenge to the title at Trinity Forest, which led to talk about his struggles in the last few years. With just one top 10 between his 2015 victory at Bay Hill and his third-place finish with KH Lee at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, where they were T3, it certainly had been a lean period. But if you isolate the few starts he has been able to garner this season as a past champion… you can see it wasn’t totally out of left field. In his first four starts, he finished inside the top 20. And while he missed two cuts after that, he then joined Lee in New Orleans before his T2 in Dallas. In all, it adds up to being 55th in the FedExCup standings and on target to join the FedExCup Playoffs for the first time since 2015. 4. International jostling… Kang’s win moved him up to 13th on the International Team standings for December’s Presidents Cup. One thing that is becoming apparent is the notion of having solidified a spot on the team early is not happening. For the first time, the team selection criteria is based on points within a 12-month window, not just world ranking position. It makes for much more movement and opens the door for many more players to potentially make the team. At Trinity Forest, Kang made the big move, from 38th up to 13th on the points list. The top eight through the TOUR Championship automatically make the team before four captains picks. International team hopefuls Justin Harding, Matt Jones, Kiradech Aphibarnrat, Sebastian Munoz and Carlos Ortiz all had timely top-12 finishes in Dallas. We are in for a fascinating few months to see who can force their way in. 5. Slowly for Spieth… The good news: For the first time this season, Jordan Spieth had three rounds in the 60s. The bad news: He still could muster no better than a T29 at Trinity Forest, where he is a member, and remains outside the FedExCup Playoffs zone at 150th. “I don’t take the disappointment. I take more confidence than disappointment,â€� Spieth said. “The actual result doesn’t show really how well I played. We kind of had a tough draw the first two days and then still be — what was it 11 under for the week? — is solid playing on any golf course.â€� Spieth can claim the career Grand Slam if he was to to win the PGA Championship this coming week. Read more on that here. FIVE INSIGHTS 1. Sung Kang became the 10th Korean-born player to win on the PGA TOUR and the second Korean-born winner of the AT&T Byron Nelson (Sangmoon Bae/2013). He moved from 71st to 21st in the FedExCup standings and to 13th in the International Presidents Cup standings. 2. Kang broke the opening 36-hole record (16-under 126) at the AT&T Byron Nelson and equaled the opening 54-hole record of 194 (Loren Roberts, 1999; Brooks Koepka, 2016). He also equaled the Trinity Forest course record 61 (Marc Leishman, 2018). 3. Kang hit 48 of 56 fairways, 57 of 72 greens in regulation, and had 109 putts. (Strokes Gained: Putting – 10.300 ranked 2nd). 4. Scott Piercy became the first player to play all 72 holes without a bogey and not win since 2010. 5. Tyler Duncan snapped a streak of four-consecutive missed cuts on TOUR with a T5, posting his best finish in 53 PGA TOUR starts… This week marked the 87th start since Matt Jones (T5) had his last top-10 on TOUR (2015 Dell Technologies Championship)… After entering the week with four consecutive missed cuts, Peter Uihlein closed 63-64 to finish T5. WYNDHAM REWARDS The Wyndham Rewards Top 10 is in its first season and adds another layer of excitement to the FedExCup Regular Season. The top 10 players at the end of the FedExCup Regular Season will earn bonus payouts from the Wyndham Rewards Top 10. Brooks Koepka pushed his way further up the leaderboard with his fourth-place finish at Trinity Forest, moving up fifth place on the leaderboard heading into his title defense at the PGA Championship. Rank Rank last week Player What Top 10 gets (End of Regular Season) 1st 1st Matt Kuchar  $2 million 2nd 2nd Xander Schauffele  $1.5 million 3rd 3rd Rory McIlroy  $1.2 million 4th 4th Paul Casey  $1.1 million 5th 8th Brooks Koepka  $1 million 6th 5th Dustin Johnson $850,000 7th 6th Rickie Fowler  $700,000 8th 7th Jon Rahm $600,000 9th 9th Gary Woodland  $550,000 10th 10th Charles Howell III  $500,000

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PGA TOUR announces the most expansive live 
coverage in the history of THE PLAYERS ChampionshipPGA TOUR announces the most expansive live 
coverage in the history of THE PLAYERS Championship

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – With more than 200 hours of digital coverage complementing 22 hours of live, limited-interruption telecasts from Golf Channel, NBC Sports, Sky Sports and dozens of broadcast partners around the world, THE PLAYERS Championship will feature the most expansive global programming in the history of the event. “THE PLAYERS will feature an unparalleled mix of innovative viewing choices along with traditional viewing options intended to create a robust, modern viewing experience that reaches every level of fan around the world,� said Rick Anderson, PGA TOUR Chief Media Officer. “We strive to showcase the strongest field in golf with an unmatched viewing experience, whether you are here in person at TPC Sawgrass, listening to live coverage in your car, watching Golf Channel and NBC while projecting live, augmented reality shot trails on your coffee table, or interacting from the other side of the globe with a virtual reality headset.� Following are ways fans around the world can follow the action: U.S. Television NBC Sports and Golf Channel will provide a total of 22 hours of live coverage with limited commercial interruption. Golf Channel will air six hours of live golf on both Thursday and Friday (1-7 p.m. ET), and NBC Sports will present five hours of coverage on both Saturday and Sunday (2-7 p.m. ET). Each day will include limited commercial interruption, thanks to the support of THE PLAYERS’ three Proud Partners: Grant Thornton LLP, Optum and Morgan Stanley. In addition to live coverage, Golf Channel will air primetime replays of competition on Thursday and Friday from 9 p.m.–12 a.m. ET. Golf Channel also has an extensive amount of ancillary programming scheduled around THE PLAYERS, including the Emmy-nominated “Live From THE PLAYERS� all week. 
 International Media Partners South Korea’s Si Woo Kim, who last year became the youngest-ever champion of THE PLAYERS, will lead a contingent of more than 50 international players at TPC Sawgrass. International players have won seven of the last 10 titles at THE PLAYERS: Spain’s Sergio Garcia in 2008; Sweden’s Henrik Stenson in 2009; South Africa’s Tim Clark in 2010; South Korea’s K.J. Choi in 2011; Germany’s Martin Kaymer in 2014; Australia’s Jason Day in 2016 and Kim in 2017. International coverage of THE PLAYERS in 2018 will be broadcast to over 1 billion households throughout 226 countries and territories in 23 languages. Sky Sports (United Kingdom and Ireland) and NHK (Japan) will be on site at THE PLAYERS to produce live telecasts back to their respective countries. In addition, the PGA TOUR’s International Broadcast Village will be the home of C-More (Sweden), Movistar (Spain), ESPN (Latin America), Canal+ (France) and Sky Sport (Germany) to provide live commentary from THE PLAYERS. Ten more international partners will be on site to cover the event and provide daily news and highlights to their respective outlets: iQiyi (China), Golf Channel (China), SBS (South Korea), Golf Network (Japan), Eurosport (Norway), TSN (Canada), Fox Sports (Australia), DAZN (Canada), Perform Group (Japan) and SNTV (global video news agency). PGA TOUR LIVE 
PGA TOUR LIVE, the TOUR’s global OTT video service, will provide live streaming coverage not only on competition days but also from key events leading up to Thursday’s first round. The schedule includes: Tuesday: Live coverage of the Military Appreciation Ceremony and Luke Combs concert, 5:30-7 p.m. ET Wednesday: Live PLAYERS preview show from Noon-2 p.m. ET, including a live broadcast from the Stadium Course, player interviews at the range, expert analysis of the field and course, and more. Thursday/Friday: Premium Featured Groups Coverage starting at 7:30 a.m. ET and Free Featured Holes coverage of the par-3 17th and drivable par-4 12th starting at 9 a.m. ET. Coverage is scheduled until 7 p.m. ET. Saturday/Sunday: Premium Featured Groups coverage starting at 8:30 a.m. ET, and Featured Holes coverage of the par-3 17th and the 12th starting at Noon ET. Coverage is scheduled until 7 p.m. ET. PGA TOUR LIVE is available at PGATOURLIVE.com along with iOS, Android, Apple TV, Windows 10 and Xbox One (launched this week). Twitter As part of its 2017 and 2018 partnership with the TOUR, Twitter will distribute a “free preview� of the Premium Featured Groups coverage on both Thursday and Friday. The free live window will be available globally to Twitter’s audience and can be found at http://live.twitter.com/PGATOURLIVE and via @PGATOUR. Thursday/Friday: Live coverage from 7:30 a.m. ET to approximately 9 a.m. ET of two Featured Groups through their first two holes. Facebook The PGA TOUR will team up with Facebook to stream 30+ hours of live coverage from THE PLAYERS Wednesday through Sunday on Facebook Watch. This coverage begins Wednesday of tournament week with an exclusive preview show from 3-4 p.m. ET. Then, on Thursday and Friday from 9 a.m. – 7 p.m. ET, Facebook will globally distribute Featured Holes coverage from holes Nos. 12 and 17. On both Saturday and Sunday from 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. ET, Featured Groups coverage will be available to Facebook viewers in the U.S. Fans can tune into this action by following the PGA TOUR show Page at facebook.com/PGATOURLIVE/. Augmented Reality PGA TOUR AR, an augmented reality (AR) app, will bring live AR tournament coverage of THE PLAYERS to life for fans around the world on their iPhone or iPad. Coverage on PGA TOUR AR will begin in conjunction with the opening round of THE PLAYERS Championship on Thursday and will feature holes 16, 17 and 18. The PGA TOUR AR app is available for free exclusively in the App Store here. PGA TOUR AR allows fans to interact with 3D featured holes and live 3D shot trails on any flat surface right in front of them. Fans will be able to select their favorite player on the golf course, compare shot trails from each round and compare the shots of different players. Live Virtual Reality/360 Video The PLAYERS will feature 30+ hours of Virtual Reality coverage and will expand from three cameras covering the 17th hole last year, to eight cameras spread over both the 12th and 17th holes. The live VR experience, done in collaboration with Intel and produced with Intel True VR technology, can be viewed on Samsung Gear VR headsets on a global basis through the PGA TOUR VR Live app available on the Oculus store, on the PGA TOUR VR LIVE app on Google Daydream or on the PGA TOUR Mobile app using Cardboard or Panoramic viewing mode. For fans without the headset, a 360-video stream will be available on Twitter (@PGATOUR) for fans using any smartphone. This is the second year in a row for VR coverage at THE PLAYERS. Thursday/Friday: Live 12th and 17th hole coverage from 9 a.m.-7 p.m. ET Saturday/Sunday: Live 12th and 17th hole coverage from Noon-7 p.m. ET 
PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM, PGA TOUR Digital and 1010XL Now in its 14th season, PGA TOUR Radio will provide 26 hours of exclusive audio play-by-play coverage from TPC Sawgrass (broadcasting on Sirius 208 and XM 92 on satellite radios as well as on the SiriusXM app, streaming on PGATOUR.COM and the PGA TOUR’s official iPhone, iPad and Android apps, and available via Amazon Alexa). THE PLAYERS live broadcast will be available Thursday and Friday from 12-7 p.m. ET, then Saturday and Sunday from 1-7 p.m. For the third consecutive year, the play-by-play coverage will also be available on terrestrial radio in the greater Jacksonville area, airing locally on 1010XL. PGA TOUR Radio’s on-air team will be led again this year by host Earl Forcey and analyst Mark McCumber of Jacksonville, winner of THE PLAYERS in 1988 and a 10-time PGA TOUR champion. Reporting on the course will be Fred Albers, Doug Bell, Dennis Paulson and Kevin Sylvester. In addition to live play-by-play coverage, SiriusXM will be airing multiple hours of preview, pregame and postgame programming specifically devoted to THE PLAYERS. PGA TOUR Experience on DIRECTV For the second consecutive year, DIRECTV will offer fans four distinct channels of coverage from THE PLAYERS – the GOLF/NBC Simulcast, Featured Group, Launch Pad and ShotLink powered by CDW. DIRECTV will run programming on Thursday and Friday from 1 -7 p.m. ET and on Saturday and Sunday from 2-7 p.m. ET. PGA TOUR Innovation Highlights The PGA TOUR strives to be a leader in sports innovation with a goal of reaching new fans globally. THE PLAYERS Championship in 2017 marked the first time a major sports event distributed a live 360 VR experience on Twitter. Soon after, the PGA TOUR and Intel announced an exclusive relationship to produce and globally distribute live virtual reality (VR) and live 360 video via Twitter at six PGA TOUR events in 2017 and 2018. The PGA TOUR was the first sports league to utilize AR in a live competition. Development of the PGA TOUR AR app in collaboration with POSSIBLE Mobile, part of the creative agency POSSIBLE, with Official Launch Partner Mastercard was aided by existing data gathered by ShotLink powered by CDW, the TOUR’s longstanding state-of-the-art scoring system. The PGA TOUR AR app was built using ARKit in iOS 11 to provide immersive AR experiences for the game of golf. The PGA TOUR was also the first sports league to have a virtual reality app on the Oculus Platform and the first sports league to develop a unique experience for Amazon Echo. The PGA TOUR HoloLens app, which debuted this year at the Waste Management Phoenix Open, is available for free in the Microsoft store. The HoloLens app integrates post round data from ShotLink and CDW to create a 3D model of TPC Scottsdale that can be displayed on a tabletop or any flat horizontal surface. Users can zoom in to view the details of any hole and compare how two players performed on a hole and view heat maps of most ball traffic on a certain hole along with real time weather.

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Spieth closes with 68, says Rory is ‘guy to beat’ at PGASpieth closes with 68, says Rory is ‘guy to beat’ at PGA

AKRON, Ohio – After dramatic victories in each of his last two starts, Jordan Spieth had a pretty stress-free finale at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational. Spieth closed with a 2-under 68 at Firestone Country Club, playing alongside Matt Kuchar just two weeks after their memorable duel at Royal Birkdale. It left him at 4 under for the week and outside the top 10, but Spieth managed to find a silver lining. “I had a chance to do something special today, but after nine holes that was done,� Spieth said. “It was kind of nice playing a little relaxed golf. But I do miss the heat of things, and that’s the goal is to get back in the heat by Saturday, Sunday next week.� While Spieth’s work in Akron didn’t

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Byron Nelson roundtable: Debating the 1945 seasonByron Nelson roundtable: Debating the 1945 season

In conjunction with the 75th anniversary of Byron Nelson’s historic 1945 season, PGATOUR.COM’s writers responded to a couple of pertinent questions. Feel free to chime in via the message board at the bottom of this file. THE IMPACT OF BYRON NELSON During what would’ve been AT&T Byron Nelson week, PGATOUR.COM is celebrating the tournament’s legendary namesake and his impact on golf with a series of stories, including: • His impact on my life and career, by Tom Watson • His impact on the modern golf swing • His impact on winners of his event • His impact on charity with the Salesmanship Club • 11 things to know about Nelson’s 11 consecutive wins What’s more unbreakable: 11 consecutive wins or 18 in one season? BEN EVERILL: I’d say both might stand forever, but the 11 consecutive certainly will never be broken. The depth of fields these days and forever more will just make this downright impossible. Winning three in a row now is an incredible achievement. Anything more than that in today’s game is other worldly. JIM McCABE: Neither will be touched. But the one-in-a-million chance it could happen would probably be 18 total wins. Winning 11 straight is never-in-a-million. CAMERON MORFIT: Given that no one has come even remotely close since – Snead won 11 times in 1950 – I don’t think anyone will ever match 18 wins in one season. That number is so outrageous it seems like a typo. HELEN ROSS: I don’t see either being broken, to be honest. The most Tiger ever won in a single season was nine while Jack’s best was seven — and I’m hard-pressed to see that kind of talent and dominance anywhere on the horizon. But I’ll choose the 11 consecutive wins because that requires a steely mental focus to cast aside the distractions, as well as the abundant talent to get the job done. SEAN MARTIN: Can I say both? Neither can be broken and neither will be. MIKE McALLISTER: Initially, I was thinking 11 straight wins is the more daunting task. But I’ve reversed course. A dominant player could theoretically pick and choose his optimum schedule based on form and health, as well as the courses that fit his game – and remember, the record book is based on starts regardless of the season (hence, Tiger’s seven spread over two years). From that perspective, 11 straight over a longer stretch seems slightly more doable than 18 wins in a single season. And consider this: According to ShotLink, of the 937 players who have won at least one PGA TOUR event, just 49 have won 18 for their careers. To achieve that in just one season boggles the mind. Is Nelson’s 1945 performance the greatest single season in golf? BEN EVERILL: Statistically of course it is — 18 wins in 30 starts, 30 of 30 top-10s with seven runner-ups to go with the wins. Incredible. But the world is increasingly biased towards modern history and things we remember or have seen. My parents were still 10 years away from being born in 1945 and with the greatest amount of respect to Lord Byron, I’m not sure the events he played had the depth of competition we have today. For mine – the 2000 Tiger Woods season is the greatest. Nine wins, 17 of 20 top 10s, 20 of 20 top 25s. Won the last three majors of the year as part of his nine wins and outside of those was on winning Presidents Cup and World Cup teams. But if Nelson’s season got the majority nod, I wouldn’t be disappointed. JIM McCABE: Yes. He established not one, but three records that will never be sniffed – 11 straight wins, 18 in all, 30-for-30 in top 10s. I know about the depth-of-competition argument, but here’s what never gets treated properly: Travel was way more difficult, money was absurdly petty, and the character it took to survive was off the charts. As always, when wisdom is required, I turn to the greatest sage of ‘em all, Jack Burke Jr., who said of Nelson’s 1945 season: “I don’t care if he was playing against orangutans, winning 11 straight (and 18 in all) is amazing.â€� CAMERON MORFIT: Hard to judge two eras 55 years apart, and I’m no historian, but I’ll say Tiger Woods’ 2000 season was the best. His non-adjusted scoring average of 68.17 beat Nelson’s unofficial mark of 68.33. Woods also joined Hogan in ’53 as the only men to win three professional majors in a single season. Woods won tournaments by 15 (U.S. Open) and 11 strokes (WGC-NEC Invitational), which is insane. Yes, Nelson won more, 18 times to Tiger’s nine, but he also had 30 starts to Tiger’s 20, and golf was more of a global game, with a roster of more stars from more places, when Tiger had his magical season. HELEN ROSS: The only other season that would merit consideration is Tiger in 2000, and frankly, it seems like heresy to pick one over the other. It’s hard to compare strength and depth of field, but for purposes of the debate, I’ll go with Nelson, who played 30 times and won 18 of those while finishing second on seven other occasions. His unadjusted scoring average was 68.3, which certainly compares favorably to Wood’s 68.17 in 2000. That streak of 11 straight wins also strengthens the argument, although for many, Tiger’s three majors are the trump card, and I can’t disagree. SEAN MARTIN: I’m biased toward Tiger’s 2000 season. Three majors, including a 15-stroke win at the U.S. Open and 8-stroke margin at The Open Championship. Maybe it’s the bias of youth. He won nine times in 20 starts that year and finished outside the top 3 just six times. MIKE McALLISTER: Using Tiger’s three major wins in 2000 as the deciding factor is a bit unfair, considering only one major was played in 1945 – the PGA Championship, which Nelson won while playing 204 (yes, 204!) holes in the old format. The other three majors, canceled due to World War II, would’ve been played during Nelson’s 11-win streak. Same for lack of wartime competition – Hogan and Snead did make a combined 44 starts in 1945, so it wasn’t like Nelson was bereft of significant rivals. I actually think the most interesting comparison involves unadjusted scoring averages. Of the top 10 recorded scoring averages in TOUR history, nine belong to players in the last 20 years. The outlier is Nelson in 1945. To me, that’s pivotal in the argument of the better season. Yes, Tiger’s average was slightly lower, but Nelson’s was the more impressive in its era. You may argue the set-ups were harder, the courses longer in 2000; I’ll respond that the equipment was much better, the courses better manicured, the travel more demanding. Give me Nelson’s season as the best.

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