Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Nate Lashley feels good after Saturday 65

Nate Lashley feels good after Saturday 65

Nate Lashley feels good at Corales Golf Course. He proved that Saturday. Lashley, who won the 2017 Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship when it was a Korn Ferry Tour event, fired a bogey-free 7-under-par 65 Saturday to move into the top five late in the afternoon. He's looking for his second PGA TOUR win after capturing the Rocket Mortgage Classic last summer. "Anytime you win a tournament on a course, you feel comfortable, you feel confident," said Lashley. "It’s one of those courses that is kind of a second-shot course and I feel like that’s a strength of my game, getting on the green and making some putts." RELATED: Leaderboard | O’Hair off to strong start after ‘really hard recovery’ Lashley said Saturday's 65 was solid from tee-to-green. He's now in a position to recreate some magic from three years ago in the final round. "It’s just one of those rounds you come out, it’s the way you want to play," he said. "You want to hit fairways, get it on the green and when you have chances, make the birdies putts and I did that today. "When I’m hitting my irons well, I feel like on a course like this I’m going to have a chance to finish well." Lashley made a key par save on the difficult par-4 18th. The tee was all the way back for the third round and the hole, a dogleg right around the ocean, measured 501 yards on the card. Lashley tried to hit his drive over the fairway bunker and ended up with a poor lie and had to punch up to the green. He made an 18-foot putt to save par. Lashley was 5-for-5 in scrambling on the day, which he said was another important factor for him moving up the leaderboard Saturday. "When you can get up and down and save those pars or save the birdies when you’re up around par 5s, that’s huge. That’s where you turn in a 7-under round or go to a 3- or 4-under round. That’s a big difference when you get up and down 5 out of 5 times," said Lashley. "So that’s when you have some great scores and hopefully can continue that tomorrow." Fellow Corales winners Dominic Bozzelli and Brice Garnett also found the weekend. Garnett sits at 4-under through three rounds. Bozzelli was inside the top-15 on the leaderboard before three-putting the 18th green to finish at 1-under for the day. Bozzelli is 8-under for the tournament.

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Between Hawaii events, TCU alum Tom Hoge attending college football title gameBetween Hawaii events, TCU alum Tom Hoge attending college football title game

An opportunity to see one’s beloved sports team compete for a championship can be fleeting. Perhaps not for all fan bases – think New England Patriots – but for most of the sports fan population. TCU graduate Tom Hoge knows this, and he refuses to let the opportunity pass him by. With TCU set to face Georgia in Monday’s college football national title game in Los Angeles, Hoge has devised an itinerary that allows him the best of both worlds. He’ll attend the game live without impacting his year-opening schedule of the Sentry Tournament of Champions and Sony Open in Hawaii. Hoge booked a Sunday evening red-eye flight from Maui to Los Angeles, and he’ll head from Los Angeles to Honolulu on Tuesday morning. TCU last claimed a football national title in 1938. “I had booked everything within the first 20 minutes to an hour after the game,” said Hoge, who quickly sprang into action after TCU defeated Michigan in a memorable New Year’s Eve semifinal matchup at the Fiesta Bowl. “I went to the Fiesta Bowl, stayed with my mom, and by the time we got out of traffic and back to her place, we probably had everything booked in 15 to 20 minutes.” Hoge earned his spot at the Sentry Tournament of Champions with his maiden TOUR title at last year’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, marking his first start at Maui. He demonstrated an accelerated learning curve at the Plantation Course at Kapalua, carding a final-round 64 for a 23-under total in his first start of 2023, comfortably inside the top-10 for the week. His final round was highlighted by a remarkable 129-yard approach from thick rough on the par-4 13th hole to near tap-in range. Hoge wasn’t about to miss his first start at Kapalua, where last place receives $200,000 in the 39-player field, nor did he want to miss the Sony Open in Hawaii. Hoge has a soft spot for Waialae CC, where he finished third place in 2018. It was his career-best PGA TOUR finish at the time and sparked his best season to that point; he proceeded to qualify for the FedExCup Playoffs for the first time, kick-starting an upward career arc that led to a top-10 finish on last season’s FedExCup. Life as a traveling professional golfer allows one to develop sharp instincts for travel scheduling, getting creative when necessary. Hoge, 33, put these instincts to good use in devising his itinerary to watch TCU compete for its first football title since before World War II. “I never thought about skipping Sony; that’s one of my favorite events; I’ve had a lot of success on that course,” Hoge said. “There were some thoughts after I booked flights and hotels and all that stuff, whether I should really go to the game or not, but I think I want to be there for it. So we’ll do both.” Hoge and his wife Kelly – who attended Montana State but has become an “adopted Horned Frog” – booked a flight for 11 p.m. Sunday, scheduled to arrive in Los Angeles at 7 a.m. Monday. They’ll fly from Los Angeles to Honolulu on Tuesday morning, scheduled to arrive at 1:15 p.m. local time. Then it’s to the golf course and business as usual, hopefully with memories of a national championship. Hoge is a 2011 TCU grad in accounting and finance, and he was privy to gridiron success while in school; the 2010 Horned Frogs went undefeated and finished the season ranked No. 2. (This was prior to the College Football Playoff era, with Auburn and Oregon selected to compete for the BCS national title. TCU defeated Wisconsin in the Rose Bowl.) Hoge and his wife procured tickets through the TCU allotment, $975 apiece, and he said he’s “thinking about it a little more each day” as game day approaches. This week at Kapalua, he reflected on fellow TCU alum J.J. Henry’s devotion to the Horned Frogs program – there are tales of Henry flying to a game after completing a Saturday morning round, then back to tee off Sunday. “He’s kind of our idol that we look up to at TCU,” Hoge said of Henry. “My rookie year on TOUR (2014), the Sanderson Farms Championship, TCU was hosting Kansas State. That was a home game in Fort Worth, and he flew from Jackson to Fort Worth on Saturday to get there for the night game, and he came back on Sunday morning for the final round.” In that context, Hoge’s Hawaii-California round-trip seems like a breeze. — Cameron Morfit contributed reporting from Hawaii

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