Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Monday Qualifiers: Genesis Open

Monday Qualifiers: Genesis Open

  Richard H. Lee was successful in a second consecutive Monday qualifier as he tries to work his way back to the PGA TOUR. Lee’s 64 was the low score in the Genesis Open’s qualifier at Industry Hills Golf Club’s Eisenhower Course. It came two weeks after he fired a 66 to play his way into the Waste Management Phoenix Open. Lee, 30, played the PGA TOUR from 2012-14, finishing a career-best 96th in the FedExCup in 2013. He had surgery on his left thumb in February 2015 and has been unable to regain PGA TOUR status since. Last year, Lee made just two starts apiece on the Web.com Tour and Mackenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada. This year’s Waste Management Phoenix Open, where he missed the cut with rounds of 74-70, was his first PGA TOUR start since the John Deere Classic in August 2016, the final event of his medical extension following surgery. He has six top-10s in 88 career TOUR starts, highlighted by T4 finishes at the 2016 Barbasol Championship and 2014 Puerto Rico Open. Zecheng Dou, Rob Oppenheim and Parker McLachlin were the other successful qualifiers for the PGA TOUR’s annual stop at Riviera Country Club. Dou shot 65 on Monday, while Oppenheim and McLachlin fired 66 before winning a 5-for-2 playoff. Conrad Shindler, club pro Michael Block and Hyun Woo Ryu, the world’s 130th-ranked player, also were in the playoff. Block is the winner of the 2014 PGA Professional National Championship and a four-time Southern California PGA Player of the Year (2013-16). Dou, 21, and Xinjun Zhang both graduated the Web.com Tour in 2017, becoming the first Chinese-born players to earn PGA TOUR cards. Dou was the first Chinese-born player to win on the Web.com Tour, as well. He is 201st in this season’s FedExCup standings. Dou won PGA TOUR China’s Order of Merit in 2016 after winning four times. Oppenheim, 38, is playing his second PGA TOUR season after regaining his card at last year’s Web.com Tour Finals. He finished 27th on the Web.com Tour’s Regular Season money list in 2017, missing his TOUR card by about $7,000, but had two top-5 finishes in the four Finals events. The Rollins College alum was 35 years old when he earned his first PGA TOUR card, but he finished 158th in the FedExCup standings and had to return to the Web.com Tour last year. He’s 138th in this season’s standings. McLachlin, winner of the 2008 Barracuda Championship, is an alumnus of nearby UCLA. This will be just his 16th PGA TOUR start since the end of the 2010 season. He has made the cut in just one of those events. McLachlin made seven of 18 cuts last year on the Web.com Tour to finish 157th on the money list. Julian Suri, the world’s 65th-ranked player, shot 67 on Monday to miss the playoff by a shot. Former Masters champion Mike Weir fired 68.

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Reavie-Glover, Xhang-Dou share Zurich Classic leadReavie-Glover, Xhang-Dou share Zurich Classic lead

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First Round Leader: Pebble Beach Pro-Am gives three chances to collectFirst Round Leader: Pebble Beach Pro-Am gives three chances to collect

As we narrow our focus down from the full tournament view to the opening round, we find the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am brings with it a level of opportunity that other championships usually don't have. The three-course rotation used at Pebble Beach, Spyglass Hill and Monterey Peninsula can certainly make picking a 72-hole winner tougher than other weeks based purely on variables like what weather hits what course on any of the opening three rounds. But, with three courses brings three chances, each with less players than normal, to dive into the first-round leader categories. At BetMGM, like most sportsbooks, the first-round leader market is separated by course. And interestingly, BetMGM also pays ties in full, meaning if it's one, or six, or any number of players on top after the opening round, all will pay out at full odds, rather than a split. Pebble Beach and Spyglass Hill are par 72s, with Monterey Peninsula a par 71. Last year, Pebble's scoring average was 70.756 over the tournament; Spyglass Hill was 72.179, with Monterey at 70.104. Traditionally Monterey has played the easiest and Spyglass the hardest, but this is all somewhat moot as we target just the opening round. First, let's take a look at the latest weather update from PGA TOUR meteorologist Joe Halvorson. "A few spotty patches of fog may develop offshore or over portions of Monterey Bay Thursday morning but are unlikely to impact visibility across the Monterey Peninsula. Southerly winds will become sustained at 9-18 mph with gusts of 20-25 mph range Thursday afternoon - strongest across the exposed holes of Pebble Beach Golf Links after 2pm. An isolated area of drizzle may occur Thursday afternoon, with a few showers becoming possible Thursday evening before increasing to a scattered coverage overnight into Friday morning." In other words, the later the day goes, the likelihood of tougher conditions increases. As such, the lean should be towards earlier tee times, rather than later, and in the case of Pebble Beach, those finishing on the coastal holes of the front nine could be in for a rough time. Let's start our search there. PEBBLE BEACH Defending champion Tom Hoge and former U.S. Open winner Justin Rose headline those players beginning their tournament at the picturesque Pebble Beach Golf Links. Hoge is the +900 favorite to be first-round leader at this course, with Rose next in line at +1200. Given Hoge starts on the first hole in just the second group of the day and led the entire field last year with a first-round, bogey-free 9-under 63 at Pebble Beach, he deserves favoritism. He ranks 17th on TOUR this season in first-round scoring average (68.0). But there are a few names who rank higher than Hoge in opening rounds on TOUR so far this season that might be worth noting. 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Collin Morikawa storms back into contentionCollin Morikawa storms back into contention

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