Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Nick Jones honoring father’s legacy at Butterfield Bermuda Championship

Nick Jones honoring father’s legacy at Butterfield Bermuda Championship

SOUTHAMPTON, Bermuda – Here was the lead in a wire services story 53 years ago: “Postman Eardley Jones in Warwick, Parish, Bermuda, is a father, a golfer – and more recently, a hero.” The story detailed how Jones jumped out of his mailman’s outfit and dove into rough water on Bermuda’s south shore to save a drowning man. After medics took the man to the hospital, the story goes that Jones nonchalantly slipped back into his work clothes and continued on with his route. “I have a picture somewhere, of my father that day standing in his skivvies,” says Nick Jones, the youngest of Eardley’s six children. It is that segment of the slideshow memory that makes him laugh. The next slide, however, brings a somber, yet respectful reflection. “I’ve met the man (my father) saved,” Nick says. “He’s still alive. It’s that connection that helps me remember my dad fondly. I miss him every day. He believed in me and was the driving force behind me. “There was no shaking his faith in me.” When Eardley Jones died at 73 in 2012, he was praised as “the Arthur Ashe of Bermuda golf,” a Black man who helped end segregation policies on this island. Until 1967, Black golfers could only play Ocean View, but Eardley Jones helped break down that barrier and open the door for Frankie Rabaid, Llewelyn Tucker, Keith Pearman, and so many others. Including, of course, Nick Jones, now 33 and beaming with pride as he prepares to play in this week’s Butterfield Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course. He earned one of three spots in a local qualifier (fellow Bermudians Michael Sims and Jarryd Dillas also got in) and embraces the opportunity before him. “I love that I’m here,” he says. “I love the chance to show what I’ve got.” What Nick Jones has is a story that is equal parts adventure, passion, and pride, with golf being the common denominator. The game took him from Bermuda to high school in Florida. He turned pro at a young age and showed immediate promise with victory in the 2011 Daytona Beach Open, then flew to England to chase minitours while living with extended family. “I can’t be in the United States for three months at a time because of visa (restrictions),” Jones, who has a British passport, says by way of explaining his allegiance to competitive golf in the U.K. By now it’s likely you have heard of those who were stranded somewhere during the beginnings of the COVID pandemic. But Jones can likely top them all. “I was stuck in Palau for almost two years,” he says. Palau is in the Western Pacific, part of an archipelago of hundreds of islands in the Micronesia region. Indonesia is to the south, the Philippines to the north, but Jones, whose wife’s job had moved them to Palau in late 2019, couldn’t leave once the lock-down began in the spring of 2020. “There was a range with a big net where I could hit balls, but during lock-down they down took the net,” Jones says, laughing at the memory. “I could chip and putt, but that’s it. I didn’t touch my clubs for more than a year. I just did a lot of diving and a lot of fishing.” When the lock-down was lifted in the fall of 2021, Jones followed his heart. “Bermuda is home,” he says, “and it’s the golf community here that I love.” Beyond rusty, Jones didn’t get through the local qualifier for the Butterfield Bermuda Championship in ’21. But he was so determined to be a part of the tournament that he caddied for a competitor in a Monday qualifier, then stuck around Port Royal to wash dishes at night and even tend bar. The sense of adventure still burns for Jones, who placed fourth in the Trinidad and Tobago Open in the spring and is signed on for the upcoming Jamaica Open. But his time back in Bermuda has returned him to his roots. It’s where he learned the game, and where his father’s legacy still is rich. “My ideal goal is to spend six-to-eight months here,” he says, “teaching kids and rebuilding and developing the junior program, which my father started years ago. Then spend a few months traveling to play in golf tournaments.” He has a soft spot for Spain, has family in the U.K., and says, not surprisingly, “I love all the islands.” His father and other Black golfers from Bermuda were trailblazers who overcame long odds. Rabaid played in the 1971 Open Championship. Eardley played in the Canadian Amateur and once brought Nick, then a young teenager, to caddie for him in the British Senior Open. “My father didn’t have much money, but he had a big heart,” says Nick, whose father played at an elite level while juggling two jobs, as a mailman and a maître d’ at that onetime bustling hot spot in Hamilton called Forty Thieves. On top of that, Eardley Jones led the fight against segregation. “He had to fight for his sport,” Nick adds. That battle won, Eardley Jones then brought kids, Nick Jones prominent among them, into his junior program right here at Port Royal. “He didn’t force me to play, but he made sure I wanted to play,” Jones says. “He gave me the freedom to fall in love with the game.” Mission accomplished, Eardley. Mission accomplished.

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Scottie Scheffler+160
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Bryson DeChambeau+1100
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Rory McIlroy+500
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Confidence Factor: Wells Fargo ChampionshipConfidence Factor: Wells Fargo Championship

The Wells Fargo Championship returns to Quail Hollow Club outside Charlotte after a one-year hiatus hosting the 2017 PGA Championship. Eagle Point Golf Club in Wilmington, North Carolina, served as the host for the 2017 event that was won by Brian Harman. The data from last year will be worthless in preparing for the return to Charlotte. The data from the PGA Championship on the other hand, will have value. Quail Hollow Club has hosted annually since its inception in 2003. Both PGA TOUR Fantasy games are back in action this week plus this is the last chance to qualify for THE PLAYERS Championship next week. After a week of partner’s golf, it would appear things are back to “normal” in fantasy golf on TOUR. Not quite. Quail Hollow Club began its Tom Fazio renovation/redesign in 1996 that continued until the TOUR arrived in 2003. After a harsh winter in 2013, most of the bentgrass greens barely made it through the May event that spring. With the 2017 PGA Championship and 2021 Presidents Cup on the horizon the club replaced all of the greens after the 2013 event with Miniverde Bermuda, a grass more durable in heat and humidity. The Miniverde was used in the 2014-2016 events but was replaced with state-of-the-art G12 Champion Bermuda, just 15 months before the PGA Championship arrived. That was just the beginning of the preparation. The first five holes of the course were completely rerouted and redeveloped and No. 11 was extended to stretch out to 7,600 yards for the final major of last season. The par on the card changed from Par-72 to Par-71. The official scorecard for this year shows that at 7,554 yards and Par-71, Quail Hollow Club should continue its annual ranking in the upper echelon of most difficult courses on TOUR. One of the major changes before last year’s PGA Championship was eliminating the opening Par-5 hole that ranked as one of the easiest on the course. It’s now a 495-yard Par-4. Woof. I haven’t even mentioned “The Green Mile” yet!   TALES OF THE TAPE Usually I’ll start at the oldest event and work my way to through to the most recent winner but that’s not the case this week. After the significant changes made after the 2016 edition, I’m starting with the new normal. Last year Kevin Kisner tried to go wire-to-wire to win his first major championship but ran out of gas on Sunday. Hideki Matsuyama, looking to also win his first, played in the final group with him and never fired either. Instead, it was Justin Thomas who picked up the final major of the campaign. The 24-year old blazed home in 68 to win by two shots over Francesco Molinari, Louis Oosthuizen and Patrick Reed. Thomas posted 8-under-par 276 on the “new” Par-71 and played his final three rounds in 10 under. He was the only player in the championship to post three rounds in the 60’s. Molinari and Matsuyama shared the lowest round of the week with 64. 2016 Wells Fargo champion James Hahn collected T13. Please understand that Quail Hollow Club will not be set up like a major championship this week but those who have played the “new” edition will have a point of reference and a feel for the new grass on the greens. Rob Bolton’s Power Rankings will update you on who is back from last August. The three previous events before the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow were interesting in their own ways. The first year with Bermuda greens J.B. Holmes had 37 one-putt greens and made 48 putts inside three feet. He led the field in birdies even though his ball-striking was barely in the top third. Usually new putting surfaces favors the players who hit the most of them. Holmes entered that week 89th in SG: Putting and left with the trophy on 14-under 274. In 2015 McIlroy broke out the video game code to win by seven shots and setting too many records to list here. He became the first multiple winner of the event by setting the course (61), tournament (267), birdies (27) and margin-of-victory record (7). Perfect weather conditions didn’t hurt scoring and it was a list, again, of big boys off the tee occupying the top 12, who all finished 10 under or lower. For a big, bad course, there were only 10 rounds over par for the top 27 players for the week. Hahn became the final winner before the redesign as scoring calmed down after McIlroy’s trouncing the year before. Hahn kept it between the yellow lines as he didn’t sign for any crooked numbers on the week posting 9 under 279 for the win. He’s not the longest hitter on TOUR but he hit enough fairways and greens to point to that value here. I’ll also point out he was magic on the greens so when the entire bag is on point, these guys are ALL very good. His best finish in three previous attempts was T50 so that suggests course form isn’t a necessity. That will be music to the ears of those who didn’t play in the PGA Championship last summer. If that’s not enough, he MC in his eight previous starts entering the event. NOTE: Golfers inside the top 25-ish in each statistic on the 2017-18 PGA TOUR are listed only if they are scheduled to compete this week. * – Finished inside the top 25 at the Wells Fargo Championship (since 2012), 2017 PGA Championship or is a former winner. Driving Distance (all drives) Rank Golfer 4 *Justin Thomas 7 Tony Finau 8 Trey Mullinax 8 Xander Schauffele 10 *Gary Woodland 11 Luke List 12 *Hideki Matsuyama 14 *Francesco Molinari 15 *Grayson Murray 16 Kevin Tway 17 Keith Mitchell 18 Tom Lovelady 22 Bryson DeChambeau 24 Phil Mickelson 24 Byeong-Hun An 27 *Rory McIlroy SG: Off the Tee Rank Golfer 3 Tommy Fleetwood 6 *Francesco Molinari 7 *Louis Oosthuizen 8 Luke List 10 Keith Mitchell 12 Byeong-Hun An 13 *Gary Woodland 14 Bryson DeChambeau 15 Xander Schauffele 16 Emiliano Grillo 19 Dylan Frittelli 21 *Kevin Streelman 22 *Rory McIlroy 25 *Lucas Glover SG: Tee to Green Rank Golfer 4 Tommy Fleetwood 5 *Justin Thomas 6 Luke List 7 Keegan Bradley 9 *Paul Casey 10 Adam Scott 11 Tony Finau 12 Bryson DeChambeau 14 Brendan Steele 16 *Hideki Matsuyama 17 *Kevin Streelman 18 Alex Noren 19 *Francesco Molinari 21 Byeong-Hun An 23 Adam Hadwin 24 *Tiger Woods 25 *Patrick Reed SG: Putting Rank Golfer 1 *Jason Day 2 *Phil Mickelson 3 Sam Burns 4 Greg Chalmers 6 *Brian Harman 7 *Kevin Kisner 8 *Tiger Woods 9 *Webb Simpson 11 Michael Thompson 12 Alex Noren 14 Seamus Power 15 Peter Malnati 16 Beau Hossler 17 Bud Cauley 19 Nicholas Lindheim 23 *Patton Kizzire 25 Johnson Wagner With 7,554 yards and Par-71, there’s no question that the winner this week will earn their 500 FedExCup points and $1.386 million. There are 60 white sand bunkers and two water hazards that will keep the players attention. The top 70 (and ties) survivors of the 156 teeing it up will play the weekend. Brian Harman is the defending champion at the EVENT, not this course, so please be aware of this any other non-PGA Championship results from 2017. This is a recording. There is plenty of meat on this bone and it’s hardly a surprise it rated as the most-difficult course on TOUR last year. Quail Hollow Club checked in at +2.468 strokes above par. It was not just the redesign (eliminating the easiest Par-5 on the course and replacing it with a 500-yard Par-4) or set-up for a major championship that increased the difficulty. Before the change it ranked the ninth-most difficult in 2016, 20th-most difficult in 2015 when 21 under won the event and 13th-most difficult the first year with Bermuda greens in 2014. There are nine Par-4 holes that measure 449 yards or better and five of those are greater than 480. The three Par-5 holes will provide minimum relief and the three finishing holes, “The Green Mile”, are annually the toughest three-hole stretch on TOUR. They stretch out at Par-4 506, Par-3 223 and Par-4 494 that all have water in play. Players expecting to come-from-behind late on Sunday aren’t going to find many chances for birdie in that stretch while the leaders will gladly sign for pars. The last two events haven’t produced a double-digit winner reinforcing that par is a solid score this week. Hitting fairways is a difficult task here but the above-average sized greens (6,500 square feet) will help. Players finding the sprinkler line and approaching the proper portion of the landing areas will have the most scoring chances. The problem is there aren’t many of them. As shown above, there are plenty of rounds at par-or-better for the top players annually. Those new greens should still be firm so find guys who will hit the most of them! This event rarely stands still but the only part that doesn’t change is the big hitter who keeps winning. I’m leaning with history and loading up on guys who rake from tee-to-green and can handle almost 7,600 yards. NOTE: The groups below are comprehensive to assist in data mining. Inclusion doesn’t imply automatic endorsement in every fantasy game as all decisions are specific to your situation. CONFIDENCE MEN Selected golfers with multiple cuts made sorted by rank on the tournament’s money list. BUILDING CONFIDENCE Sorted by best finish, selected golfers who are either finally finding form on the course or are still relatively new to the tournament but have enjoyed some success. OTHER SIGNS OF CONFIDENCE Sorted by most recent top 10s, selected golfers for whom it’s been a few years since their last.

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Fantasy Insider: Safeway OpenFantasy Insider: Safeway Open

Say this about the latest iteration of PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf, it’s going to be harder to dominate. While bonus points are back to reward actual finish, the new provision of low 65 and cuts has raised the bar for what constitutes a successful week. Because fewer golfers are making cuts, even when you connect with a winner, as I did with Sebastián Muñoz at the Sanderson Farms Championship, you still need to avoid zeroes for it to have an impact. (I’ve had only three make each of the first two cuts.) RELATED: Tee times | Power Rankings | DraftKings daily fantasy preview   After A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier, I gravitated to the notion that the fantasy game is set up stronger than ever, but now that I’ve experienced the sweet and the sour myself, it’s been validated. The best weekly fantasy games with long-range objectives present massive swings in scoring in a given week. That churn not only keeps things fresh, it keep the possible within reach. Front-runners can’t waver and those in pursuit always have a chance. The underrated component of PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf is that overall scoring is down since the last time bonus points were in play (2017-18), which I cited last week. This reinforces the balance of the old and the new. PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf My roster for the Safeway Open (in alphabetical order): Patrick Cantlay Martin Laird Hideki Matsuyama Ryan Moore Collin Morikawa Justin Thomas You’ll find my starters in Expert Picks. Others to consider for each category (in alphabetical order): Scoring: Byeong Hun An; Bud Cauley; Harris English; Sungjae Im; Adam Long; Troy Merritt; Sebastián Muñoz; Kevin Na; Chez Reavie; Adam Scott; Cameron Tringale Driving: Bud Cauley; Corey Conners; Harris English; Lucas Glover; Emiliano Grillo; Charles Howell III; Sungjae Im; Scott Piercy; Brendan Steele; Kevin Streelman; Harold Varner III Power Rankings Wild Card Chez Reavie … Since he pulled out of the Sanderson Farms Championship before it started, Silverado become the site of his season debut. Great choice. He’s 5-for-5 on the course with a trio of top 25s. As last season’s TOUR leader in fairways hit, he’s a poster boy for how the course rewards avoiding three-inch primary rough off the tee. It also doesn’t hurt that he ended a mild slump with an eighth-place finish at the TOUR Championship. Draws Kevin Tway … While he’s experiencing the obligations of his first title defense, it’ll no doubt rejuvenate him to pile onto a 3-for-3 record on a course that suits his style. Plus, he’s played much better in recent months than how he opened 2019. Because there’s nothing glaringly wrong, you can’t rule out the rarest of repeats. Think Matt Every at Bay Hill in 2014 and 2015. Brendan Steele … But only because he’s turning a corner in getting closer to putting four rounds together. The two-time Safeway Open champ (2016, 2017) has scuffled for well over a year, but Silverado is the softest of landings. The benefit for alert DFSers is that he’ll be over-owned by course-history buffs, so pivot accordingly. Emiliano Grillo … It’s been four years now since he famously went Win-Win to bridge the Korn Ferry Tour Finals with the opening of the 2015-16 PGA TOUR season. Still hasn’t recorded another top 25 at Silverado since the breakthrough victory, but he hasn’t missed a cut, either. He doesn’t miss most cuts as it is, so slot him confidently in PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf. Harris English … Already was entered via a sponsor exemption before his second consecutive top 10 of the season eliminated the need for the opportunity, so he’s known he was headed back to Silverado before the T6 in Mississippi. When he’s on, his ball-striking has carried him. Well, eight rounds into 2019-20, he’s fourth in total driving, second in greens hit and 10th in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green. If the TOUR still awarded a Comeback Player of the Year, he’d be the clubhouse leader. Charles Howell III … As one who always has thrived on the West Coast, it’s surprising that this is his first appearance at Silverado since missing the cut three years ago. However, because he makes most cuts and usually rewards those hopeful in an over-under for a top 25, don’t think twice. Lucas Glover … Despite last week’s disappointment as the No. 2 in the Power Rankings, I’m doubling down on his prospect at Silverado where he’s hung up a pair of T17s, including last year. When his knack for hitting fairways and greens abandons him, it’s returns just as quickly. Invest in the expected rebound. Doc Redman … Off to a nice start as a first-time TOUR member. Because so much good has happened so quickly, he still has to feel like he’s stealing a little bit, but it’s not like he doesn’t have the pedigree. Proper in all formats. Corey Conners Lanto Griffin Tom Hoge Nate Lashley Robby Shelton Harold Varner III Fades Phil Mickelson … Despite a T8-T3-T17 flourish at the Safeway Open in the last three years, he’s exhibited virtually no form since the Masters. His long-range strategy to peg it only on courses with light rough not only backfired, there simply aren’t enough of those setups after the West Coast Swing to generate momentum for courses on which rough is a primary challenge. Now, Silverado is a bomb-and-gouger’s track, and it has four par 5s, so his muscle and short game alone should get him to the cut line, but he’s angling to record a career-worst result on it. Bryson DeChambeau … As a big fan of this guy, I know who’s not reading all of the time when I’m panned when I hop off the bandwagon at various stops. Being criticized for not respecting him and his method is amusing given I’ve loved everything he’s challenged and continues to chase. As the saying goes, it’s entirely better to try and fail than not to try at all. Inject his intelligence and growing wisdom as a touring professional, and there’s every reason to buy in. So, you’re wasting your time with cracks that I “don’t get it.” The only thing that matters is whether you use him in a given situation. Simply, his inconsistency throughout 2019 has regressed him into a better longer-term own than hoping to get lucky with a lottery ticket. Si Woo Kim … Continues to struggle in general, but he plays often enough to warrant confident investment in the long-term. In his only prior trip to Silverado, he missed the cut in 2015. Pat Perez … Silverado has been unkind what with his 0-for-2 record and scoring average of 74.25, but he’s yet to display consistency since injuring his left calf in March. Luke List … He’ll test the battle between course history and recent form like few have all year. He’s 3-for-3 at Silverado with a T4 last year and a scoring average of 69.83. However, he arrives mired in a 1-for-8 skid with a T77 at THE NORTHERN TRUST. I’d be interested only if the facts were reversed. Charley Hoffman … The 42-year-old is making just his second start at Silverado (MC, 2017), but he’s coming off a T23 at Country Club of Jackson. It was his first top 50 in eight starts. We know who he is, but we thought we knew he was before a lackluster 2018-19. Approach him as a contrarian to fend off the sharks. Kevin Chappell …  I love that he’s returned and refreshed. It’s also of value that he’s swatted away residual rust from his extended layoff due to back surgery, but he’s 0-for-2 at Silverado where he hasn’t competed in four years. Abraham Ancer Adam Hadwin C.T. Pan Nick Watney Returning to Competition Marc Leishman … Despite his cachet, he’s not an automatic. The Aussie started the season ominously with a back injury that compelled him to withdraw only one round in at Greenbrier. After a week off, he returns to Silverado for the first time since a T46 in its inaugural edition in 2014. Aaron Baddeley … Also a victim of the injury du jour, this Aussie hasn’t played since walking off Liberty National during his first round of THE NORTHERN TRUST with a sore back, and that occurred after he withdrew from the Wyndham Championship before it started. En route to reestablishing fully exempt status, he finished T4 at Silverado last year, but recency bias should trump course history in his case. Chris Stroud … Played only one round in the FedExCup Playoffs before a back injury forced him to withdraw from THE NORTHERN TRUST. It was his second mid-tournament WD in six starts (Rocket Mortgage Classic). Just 1-for-4 at Silverado, but the lone payday was a T10 in 2015. Bo Van Pelt … This is not a misprint. He’s poised to make his first PGA TOUR appearance since Pebble Beach in February of 2016. In the interim, he’s undergone surgeries to reattach a bicep muscle and repair a torn labrum in his left shoulder. Despite having only one TOUR title (2009 U.S. Bank Championship in Milwaukee), he has status today via a career earnings exemption that has carried over since he was eligible for sitting inside the top 50 all-time. Veteran gamers who invested back in the day remember how dangerous he could be to the opposition. He was a top-25 machine who could go low almost on cue. Now 44 years of age, don’t be surprised if he rekindles the magic at some point, but give his body a chance to chisel away the rust before considering even fractional ownership. Notable WDs Jimmy Walker … This is the first time he’s opted out of a commitment after the deadline since the AT&T Byron Nelson in 2017. In his only prior appearance at Silverado, he placed 63rd in his title defense in 2014. He’s 0-for-5 since the Scottish Open in July. Matt Jones … After opening the season with a T10 at Greenbrier, he withdrew before the second round of the Sanderson Farms Championship with a sore back. Kramer Hickok … Since a blistering Korn Ferry Tour Finals to regain his card, he’s 0-for-2 in his sophomore season. Like so many others at his tier, he’s played a ton of stressful golf over the last three months. Since the Travelers Championship in the third week of June, this will be just his third week off. Graham DeLaet … He continues to tease us. It was at the Korn Ferry Tour’s TPC Colorado Championship in July to which he also committed and withdrew early. Clearly, he’s getting closer to getting back inside the ropes for real, but there’s no sense rushing it, either. Every one of his 24 starts on a Major Medical Extension makes a difference. Power Rankings Recap – Sanderson Farms Championship Power Ranking  Golfer  Result 1  Scottie Scheffler  T16 2  Lucas Glover  MC 3  Brian Harman  T14 4  Sungjae Im  P2 5  Joaquin Niemann  T54 6  Vaughn Taylor  MC 7  Robby Shelton  T28 8  Wyndham Clark  MC 9  Corey Conners  MC 10  Sebastián Muñoz  Win 11  Brandt Snedeker  T45 12  Byeong Hun An  3rd 13  Denny McCarthy  T18 14  J.T. Poston  T11 15  Grayson Murray  MC Wild Card  Kyle Stanley  MC Sleepers Recap – Sanderson Farms Championship Golfer  Result Akshay Bhatia  MC Ryan Blaum  MC Joseph Bramlett  MC Roberto Castro  T52 D.J. Trahan  MC Birthdays among active golfers on the PGA TOUR September 24 … none September 25 … Adam Long (32) September 26 … Freddie Jacobson (45) September 27 … none September 28 … Will MacKenzie (45) September 29 … Matthew NeSmith (26) September 30 … none

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