Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Monday qualifiers: RBC Canadian Open

Monday qualifiers: RBC Canadian Open

TORONTO, Ont. – Patrick Flavin is getting pretty used to this Monday qualifier thing. Especially if they’re for events outside the United States. “For some reason I have the international ones covered,” Flavin said with a laugh after earning medalist honors at the RBC Canadian Open’s Monday qualifier. It was his fourth successful Monday this season to go along with the Butterfield Bermuda Championship, the Puerto Rico Open, and the Mexico Open at Vidanta. Flavin was 1 over through nine holes at Oakdale Golf and Country Club in Toronto but fired a 4-under 31 on his back nine to finish at 3 under. His performance could give him a good preview of next year’s RBC Canadian Open, which is scheduled to be played at Oakdale. Brad Adamonis, former NCAA champ Braden Thornberry, and Jeffrey Kang got through a 4-for-3 playoff after finishing at 2 under. Adamonis was in a playoff with Kenny Perry at the John Deere Classic 14 years ago while Thornberry was college golf’s player of the year in 2017 and on the stacked U.S. Walker Cup team alongside Scottie Scheffler, Collin Morikawa, Cameron Champ and others. Oakdale has never hosted the RBC Canadian Open before and Flavin said he was “impressed” at the classic Canadian layout. “Obviously having the Canadian Open next year, it’s going to be a great golf course,” he said. “It’s so hard so I really didn’t have a number in mind. My experience in these Mondays … you never know what it takes. “I was 1 over through nine and I knew I had to get it going. With how tough it was playing and with the wind and the golf course in general, I knew I was still in it. I was happy to play really well on the back nine and … I honestly can’t believe it.” Flavin has played five PGA TOUR events this season and has earned 76 non-member FedExCup points. He’ll qualify for the Korn Ferry Tour Finals if he can earn an amount of points greater than or equal to No. 200 on this season’s FedExCup points list after the Wyndham Championship. Bronson Burgoon, who has 80 points, currently sits 200th in the FedExCup standings. Flavin says he usually gets “distracted” by having to arrange logistics and the travel while playing a schedule of Monday qualifiers, but earning enough Non-Member FedExCup points remains “the carrot” he’s chasing. And so far, he’s doing a solid job with that chase. “I’ve gotten into a really nice mentality of enjoying the competition and enjoying the grind of it,” he said. “I don’t think there is a better feeling in the world than Monday qualifying because you’ve accomplished something that’s so hard, and you still have the tournament to look forward to. It’s a dream come true. I’m thrilled.” Here’s a capsule look at the four Monday qualifiers for this week’s RBC Canadian Open. Patrick Flavin (68) Age: 26 Hometown: Chicago, Illinois Alma mater: Miami (Ohio) PGA TOUR starts: 6 Cuts made: 3 Best PGA TOUR finish: T17, 2022 Butterfield Bermuda Championship Notes: 3-for-5 in made cuts this season on the PGA TOUR. He Monday qualified into the Butterfield Bermuda Championship (T17) and Puerto Rico Open (T22), and he received a sponsor exemption into the Corales Puntacana Championship (T54) … Sat T8 through 54 holes in Bermuda this season … Finished No. 6 on 2019 PGA TOUR Latinoamerica Order of Merit … Recorded two top-10s in 13 starts on 2020-21 Korn Ferry Tour … Currently holds 76 non-member FedExCup points, which would currently place him No. 204 in the season-long standings, as he chases a top-200 position that would gain Korn Ferry Tour Finals entry in August. Braden Thornberry (69; advanced in 4-for-3 playoff) Age: 25 Hometown: Germantown, Tennessee Alma mater: Mississippi PGA TOUR starts: 9 Cuts made: 4 Best PGA TOUR finish: T4, 2017 FedEx St. Jude Classic Notes: Best TOUR finish came as an amateur, the same year he won the NCAA individual title and Haskins Award as college golf’s player of the year … Was a member of the 2017 U.S. Walker Cup team that also included Scottie Scheffler, Collin Morikawa, Cameron Champ and a handful more TOUR players … Was an 11-time winner while at Ole Miss … Finished No. 57 on the Korn Ferry Tour Regular Season Points List in 2020-21 season. Brad Adamonis (69; advanced in 4-for-3 playoff) Age: 49 Hometown: Cumberland, Rhode Island Alma mater: Miami (Ohio) PGA TOUR starts: 72 Cuts made: 28 Best PGA TOUR finish: T2, 2008 John Deere Classic Notes: Rookie season on the PGA TOUR was 2002 … Has one victory on the Korn Ferry Tour (WNB Golf Classic, 2007) … Lost in a playoff to Kenny Perry at the 2008 John Deere Classic … Last appearance on the PGA TOUR was the Valspar Championship in 2021 … Turns 50 and will be eligible for PGA TOUR Champions in January. Jeffrey Kang (69; advanced in 4-for-3 playoff) Age: 30 Hometown: Los Angeles, California Alma mater: University of Southern California PGA TOUR starts: 2 Cuts made: 0 Notes: Finished T7 at the season-opener on PGA TOUR Canada last week … Made first career TOUR start at the WM Phoenix Open (also Monday qualified). Earned his spot in the field on the 10th playoff hole … Won 2018 Chengdu Championship on PGA TOUR Series-China, one of six top-25s in 14 starts that season … Has made three Korn Ferry Tour starts.

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Top 40 Finish-275
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Top 10 Finish+200
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Type: Sam Burns - Status: OPEN
Make-350
Miss+250
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Type: Robert MacIntyre - Status: OPEN
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Top 10 Finish+225
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Top 40 Finish-200
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Type: Robert MacIntyre - Status: OPEN
Make-350
Miss+250
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Top 5 Finish+550
Top 10 Finish+250
Top 20 Finish+110
Top 40 Finish-165
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Make-275
Miss+200
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Top 10 Finish+250
Top 20 Finish+115
Top 40 Finish-175
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Type: Sungjae Im - Status: OPEN
Make-275
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Top 40 Finish-165
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Make-250
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Make-250
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Keith Mitchell
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Top 5 Finish+800
Top 10 Finish+375
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Make-225
Miss+165
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Make-225
Miss+165
Thorbjorn Olesen
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Top 5 Finish+900
Top 10 Finish+400
Top 20 Finish+175
Top 40 Finish-130
Ryan Fox - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Make-225
Miss+165
Wyndham Clark
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Top 5 Finish+900
Top 10 Finish+400
Top 20 Finish+175
Top 40 Finish-115
Alex Smalley - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Make-225
Miss+165
Cameron Young
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Top 5 Finish+1000
Top 10 Finish+450
Top 20 Finish+180
Top 40 Finish-115
Kurt Kitayama - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Make-225
Miss+165
Gary Woodland
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Top 5 Finish+1000
Top 10 Finish+450
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Top 40 Finish-110
Wyndham Clark - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Make-225
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Make-200
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Top 40 Finish-110
Alex Smalley
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Top 40 Finish-115
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Top 40 Finish-105
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That’s what Cantlay did to win a season-high four times, including the TOUR Championship. It fulfilled the promise that Cantlay showed a decade ago in that magical summer of 2011, when he shot 60 at the Travelers Championship, was low amateur at the U.S. Open (T21) and finished in the top-10 in another TOUR event (RBC Canadian Open). Personal tragedy and injury derailed his career, however. But when he returned four years ago, he quickly earned a reputation as one of the TOUR’s most consistent contenders. In an age of data and analytics, Cantlay is unwavering in his old-school approach, preferring for stability instead of tinkering. That slow build came to a crescendo this year. His four wins were twice as many as he’d earned entering this season. “With each passing year, he’s been better in these situations, better dealing with the crowds, better in the media,” his caddie, Matt Minister, said. “His interviews are fantastic; you see it with each passing year, his maturity and how comfortable he is being out here.” He was comfortable beating the best. And now, at the end of this Super Season, he lays claim to being the best. 2. THE ACCIDENT For a moment we feared the worst. In the early hours of Tuesday, February 23, the news was humming around the golf world that legend Tiger Woods was involved in a serious car accident but details were sketchy at first. Just how serious it was wasn’t immediately known but after quite a few tense hours it was revealed the 82-time PGA TOUR winner lost control of his vehicle near Los Angeles before it hit a tree and flipped several times. Woods needed to be extracted by first responders and faced several emergency surgeries on his right leg. It was revealed the 82-time TOUR champ and 15-time major winner broke both bones in his lower right leg, the tibia and the fibula, in multiple places and the bones had pierced his skin in places. While Woods has yet to talk in depth on his recovery there have been some positive signs of late with Woods seen up and about albeit with the help of crutches. A timetable on any possible return to golf is still unknown but the golf world felt a collective sigh of relief just to know Woods was alive and mobile in any way, shape or form. We all wonder what the future holds for the now 45-year-old and hope to see him back playing again one day. At what level… well that’s ultimately irrelevant… Woods has already provided the game with more we could have ever hoped for. 3. THE DROUGHT BREAKERS Stewart Cink, with his win in the season-opening Fortinet Championship, set the pace for a season that saw plenty of players end their winless droughts. The Fortinet was Cink’s first win since tearing up the storybook quest of Tom Watson in the 2009 Open Championship. Of course, Cink went on to win again this season, becoming just the fourth player to win multiple times in a season after turning 47. Cink did so with his son, Reagan, on the bag, who is the age of many of Cink’s PGA TOUR peers. Stewart’s first PGA TOUR title came the same year that Collin Morikawa was born. Now Cink was one of just several players to re-enter the winner’s circle this year after lengthy waits, providing all of us with a bit of inspiration and showing the power of perseverance. Jordan Spieth didn’t have to wait nearly as long as Cink, but no one on this list had to answer more questions about a next victory. Like Cink, Spieth’s win this was his first since hoisting the claret jug. 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The win was preceded by glimpses that he was trending in the right direction, but even a player of Spieth’s caliber needed to re-learn how to win. The good signs started on a thrilling Saturday at the Waste Management Phoenix Open, where he shot a magical 61. But Sunday was a different story, as it was the following week at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Still, those top-5 finishes, as well as another one at the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, were good signs. Then came that Sunday at TPC San Antonio, where he looked like the player who’d won three majors, a FedExCup and reached No. 1 in the world. He shot a 6-under 66 to hold off Charley Hoffman, the perennial contender at TPC San Antonio. The victory was followed by podium finishes at the Masters (T3) and Open Championship (2nd) and a ninth-place finish in the FedExCup, a leap of nearly 100 spots since last season and his best finish since 2017. 5. PHIL THE THRILL While Phil Mickelson was still wowing us with the occasional epic bomb of a drive or with a filthy flop shot, most fans figured the 50-year-old veteran had moved into the ceremonial section of TOUR events. Winning a couple of times in a row on PGA TOUR Champions after going past the half century in age was cool but really only fed into the above narrative. Some Phil fans were hoping for a miracle win at The Masters given the season held two versions and Augusta National has always been kind to past champions. But he was T55 in November and T21 in April. So when he turned up at the PGA Championship at Kiawah Island in May Mickelson wasn’t anywhere near the first line of betting. Three back after the opening round Mickelson was a nice side story. Tied for the lead at the halfway point was a great novelty. Everyone loved the idea of the oldest ever major winner but not many truly believed he could hold on as conditions got even tougher and brutal winds continued to wreak havoc. But when he took a one-shot lead into the final round those who had laughed off the probability of Mickelson winning were getting nervous. Those doubters were doing cartwheels after Brooks Koepka produced a two-shot swing on the opening hole of the final round but Mickelson continued to stay the course and by the final hole the crowd couldn’t contain their excitement – breaking through the ropes to swarm their hero as he closed out an incredible and historic two-shot win. Mickelson, just shy of his 51st birthday, became the oldest major winner in the history of the game at 50 years, 11 months and 7 days. He also became the sixth oldest TOUR winner. 6. POWER BALL The revolution may have stalled, but Bryson DeChambeau’s incredible transformation still made us rethink the way the game is played and netted him his first major championship. His dominance at Winged Foot led others, including Rory McIlroy, to follow DeChambeau’s lead, only for them to find that swinging out of your shoes isn’t as easy as it seems, even when armed with a 460cc driver. DeChambeau even backed off from his original plan, dropping pounds as the season wore on in the name of consistency. So, we may not see a cadre of bulked-up brutes swinging for the fences on a weekly basis but credit to DeChambeau for thinking outside the box. He won two big titles this season, the U.S. Open (2020) and the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, and led the TOUR in driving distance for the second consecutive season. We’ll even see him ply his trade in a couple weeks at the World Long Drive Championship. What’s next for DeChambeau? It’s hard to tell, but there’s never been a better illustration of the value of distance. 7. MATSUYAMA’S MASTERS Ten years earlier, Hideki Matsuyama did the unthinkable. He debated whether he should accept an invitation to Augusta National. These were exceptional circumstances, however. His homeland was devastated by a tsunami and competing in a golf tournament didn’t feel appropriate. He was encouraged to go, however, and serve as an inspiration to his reeling countrymen. The teen-aged schoolboy went, and was an inspiration indeed, shooting a third-round 68 and earning low-amateur honors while holding his own against the best players in the world. That Saturday score proved to Matsuyama that a pro-golf career was an attainable dream. A decade later, he returned to Augusta National and again he was part of the trophy ceremony held late Sunday evening on the club’s practice putting green. This time, he was having the Green Jacket slipped on his shoulders, however. His Masters win was his first victory since 2017. Matsuyama had become the first major champion from golf-mad Japan and almost thrilled his country again at the Olympics, where he came up just short of earning a medal. 8. THE FIRST TIMERS While we were nowhere near the record of 18 first time champions from season 2002, we still had 10 new champions join the exclusive club of PGA TOUR winners this season. Arguably the most popular was one of the last ones in Mexico’s Abraham Ancer. After 19 previous top-10s on TOUR, including six this season prior to lining up at the World Golf Championships – FedEx St. Jude Invitational in Memphis, the popular International Presidents Cup team member started the final round four shots off the lead. While appearing out of the running for most of the afternoon Ancer stuck solid at TPC Southwind and as carnage began around him the 30-year-old showed the benefit of experience from countless near misses to forge his way into a playoff. He then produced a brilliant birdie on the first extra hole to take down Hideki Matsuyama and Sam Burns for his breakthrough triumph. Burns had experienced the incredible feeling of a first win earlier in the season by taking home the Valspar Championship title. Huge shoutout has to go to Jason Kokrak who not only won his career first TOUR event at THE CJ CUP @ SHADOW CREEK he then backed it up with a win at the Charles Schwab Challenge to produce the best of his 10 seasons. Others to join were Carlos Ortiz (Vivint Houston Open), just the third Mexican winner on the TOUR before Ancer became the fourth. Joel Dahmen (Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship), K.H. Lee (AT&T Byron Nelson), Garrick Higgo (Palmetto Championship at Congaree), Cam Davis (Rocket Mortgage Classic), Seamus Power (Barbasol Championship) and Erik Van Rooyen (Barracuda Championship). Special shout out to Jon Rahm who became a first-time major winner at the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines less than two weeks after having to withdraw from the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday with a six-shot lead and a round to play with a positive COVID-19 test. His birdie, birdie finish on Sunday was almost karmic. 9. BONUS GOLF GALORE The season was full of close finishes with 14 playoffs needed to decide winners, including a stretch late in the year of four straight weeks needing extra holes to get a result. The final playoff, which came in the FedExCup Playoffs at the BMW Championship, was arguably the best. Bryson DeChambeau and Patrick Cantlay had already started the final round at Caves Valley three clear of the pack and quickly were in a match play like scenario. When DeChambeau took a one-shot lead on the 16th hole in regulation and Cantlay put his tee shot on 17 into the water it appeared over. But Cantlay made a huge bogey putt to stay within one and then made a birdie bomb on 18 to ultimately stay alive. During the first five extra holes both players missed chances to win or made great saves to stay alive. DeChambeau recovered from a water ball of his own and Cantlay responded to one DeChambeau dart with a better one. In the end another great 17-foot birdie on the sixth extra hole was enough for Cantlay to prevail and take the FedExCup lead to East Lake – ultimately very important as he held on for a one-shot win over Jon Rahm to win it all. It wasn’t the only incredible playoff. At the Travelers Championship Harris English went eight extra holes before taking down a plucky Kramer Hickok at TPC River Highlands. And who could forget the six-man showdown at the Wyndham Championship where Adam Scott missed a short chance for victory allowing Kevin Kisner to come through on the second playoff hole and break his extra holes curse. Other playoffs included Martin Laird outlasting Matthew Wolff and Austin Cook at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open; Brian Gay besting Wyndham Clark at the Bermuda Championship; Robert Streb taking down Kisner at The RSM Classic; English getting the better of Joaquin Niemann at the Sentry Tournament of Champions; Max Homa kept Tony Finau out of a trophy at the Genesis Invitational and Team Mullet of Cameron Smith and Marc Leishman beat Louis Oosthuizen and Charl Schwartzel at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans. Then we marveled when Cantlay took down Collin Morikawa in an epic at the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday; Cam Davis claimed his first win after extras against Troy Merritt and Niemann; Seamus Power also got his first after a playoff with J.T. Poston at the Barbasol Championship, Abraham Ancer was the man over Hideki Matsuyama and Burns at the WGC – FedEx St. Jude Invitational and Finau broke his victory drought at THE NORTHERN TRUST by beating Smith on the first extra hole. 10. MORIKAWA SHUTS DOOR ON DOUBTERS Sometimes it can be hard to just accept greatness when you see it. The beginnings of PGA TOUR life for Collin Morikawa were certainly different. He made his first 22 cuts for one thing and was a winner in his sixth start as a professional in 2019 at the Barracuda Championship. But the naysayers said – well that was an opposite field event. He won twice in the following 2019-20 season, including the PGA Championship. But the naysayers said – well there were no crowds at Harding Park so he didn’t face real pressure. And then came this season where even a win at the World Golf Championships – Workday Championship wasn’t enough for some. Limited crowds they said. Wait till he really feels pressure. The question marks were ludicrous. And Morikawa made that abundantly clear at The Open Championship at Royal St Georges. A week earlier he struggled with his ball striking at the Scottish Open, his first foray into links golf. So he adjusted to new irons and also had the temerity to change his putting grip between long and short putts. He then put on a clinic over four days in front of huge crowds including a stone-cold Sunday effort as Jordan Spieth and Louis Oosthuizen, among others, lurked. He was impervious to the so-called pressure and proved, at just 24, he is the real deal.

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