Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Nick Taylor leads by two at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Nick Taylor leads by two at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — Nick Taylor birdied four of his last five holes at Pebble Beach on Friday for a 66 to take his first 36-hole lead on the PGA TOUR. Jason Day received a warm reminder at Pebble Beach how good it feels to hit shots the way he wants, make a bunch of putts and see his name high on the leaderboard. Related: Leaderboard | Day’s unique balloon therapy Day made two long birdie putts across the green, holed a 40-yard wedge for eagle on the dangerous par-5 14th, made a couple of big par saves and moved into contention with an 8-under 64 in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Taylor was at 14-under 129. “I feel like it’s been a long time since I’ve actually been out there and felt the way that I felt out there today and played well like that,” Day said. Defending champion Phil Mickelson also got in the mix with aburst of four straight birdies after the turn at Monterey Peninsula. He made bogey on the long par-3 ninth to finish his round of 7-under. He was three shots behind. Mickelson has not had a top 10 on the PGA TOUR since winning at Pebble Beach last year, though he finished third last week at the Saudi International and carried a little momentum into the event he has won five times. Day knows the feeling. Since last year at Pebble, he has recorded just three top 10s, none since last June. He has not seriously contended. His back troubles have been so frustrating that at times he wondered how much longer he wanted to play. He described those as “dark times.” His outlook Friday was as bright as the sunshine over the Monterey Peninsula, at least until a light marine layer over parts of the courses lowered the temperature. Day birdied the par 5s and made a 45-foot putt from the fringe on the par-3 fifth at Pebble. He holed a 50-foot birdie putt on the par-3 12th, another bonus. And then he surged into contention by holing out for his eagle on the 14th, and following that with a 15-foot birdie on the 15th. There’s still one more round before this tournament played over three courses takes shape, and there’s no better place to be in relative calm than Pebble Beach. “If you have really good weather, you can go low at Pebble,” Day said. That’s what Taylor did, making birdie on all the par 5s for his 66. Ditto for Chris Baker, the 33-year-old PGA TOUR rookie who played Pebble Beach for the first time in a practice round Wednesday, and really had a blast in his round of 64 on Friday that put him four shots behind, along with Charl Schwartzel (66 at Pebble). Of the top five players, only Mickelson was not at Pebble Beach. Monterey Peninsula played about two shots under par, while Pebble’s average was nearly 1 under. Spyglass Hill was nearly a stroke over par, so it was no surprise that only one player from the top 20 — Matt Every — was at Spyglass on Friday. Dustin Johnson, a two-time Pebble Beach winner who finished runner-up to Ted Potter Jr. two years ago, appeared to be hitting his stride with great control of his irons and usual power off the tee. He lost a little ground on the final hole when he three-putted for bogey from about 25 feet on his final hole at Monterey Peninsula, missing a 3-footer. That happens on poa greens with foursomes in each group, and Johnson shrugged it off. He’s used to odd things happening, even when it’s not all his doing. Day was feeling particularly optimistic, especially after the year he had. His back gave him so much trouble that one of his routines is to blow into a balloon for some 20 minutes to help get his rib cage aligned properly. He used to spend hours chipping and putting. He found it a small victory when he was able to putt for an entire hour. “It’s hard because … you expect so much of yourself, and everyone does,” Day said. “But sometimes when you’re injured, like for the most part I was all last year, it gets frustrating. And not only do you get frustrated, you don’t get the results and you lose confidence and then you’re … just trying to find a solution into why I’m not playing well and why is this happening. And you feel like your world is kind of crumbling. “It’s not a good feeling because there’s some dark moments in there that you got to kind of fight through.” There were no dark moments Friday, not in weather like this. Day and Taylor now move over to Spyglass Hill on Saturday morning, while Mickelson, Johnson and the celebrities head to Pebble Beach.

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Horses for Courses: Farmers Insurance OpenHorses for Courses: Farmers Insurance Open

Every winter since 1968 the PGA TOUR has been hosted by the famed Torrey Pines Golf Club in La Jolla, California, and this year, thankfully, isn’t any different. The famed South Course will serve as annual host and will also be the venue for this season’s U.S. Open in June. Before we put the cart in front of that horse, for the second week in a row a field of 156 will navigate two courses in Rounds 1 and 2 before moving to the South Course for the final two rounds. This familiar piece of real estate has produced elite leaderboards and that shouldn’t change this week with a deep field. RELATED: Power Rankings | Expert Picks | The First Look The South Course and its undulating Poa annua greens add even more bite than the distance tee to green. It’s hardly a surprise why the USGA will return here to host its national championship again. Both courses have three inches of over-seeded (Rye) Kikuyugrass, as normal, this time of year. Tom Weiskopf’s North Course redesign made its debut in 2017. With friendly bentgrass greens and four Par-5 holes, it plays the easier of the two annually. At just 7,258 yards it will play 507 yards less than the South and with less tallying on the scorecard. The 69th edition of the Farmers Insurance Open will pay out a handsome $7.5 million purse with the winner pocketing $1.35 million and 500 FedExCup points for posting the low four rounds. It never rains in Southern California, but there is Marine Layer, blustery winds and cool temperatures that will have a say before a winner is crowned, hopefully on schedule Sunday. Hold all tickets to the end as just two winners in the last decade held the 54-hole lead and only three this century not named Tiger Woods. Recent Event Winners Stats Recent Winners and Notables 2020: Marc Leishman (-15, 273) Shot 65 on Australia Day to make up four shots and win by one over 2017 champ Jon Rahm. … 65 was the co-low of the week on the South Course. … Posted 11-under on the weekend. … Becomes the fourth consecutive international winner, but just fifth overall in 68 events. … At 35 he joins the club of 30 and older winners in four of the last five events. … Second straight winner to open on the North Course, but just the third since 2010. … Hit only 3 of 14 fairways in the final round, but found 14 of 18 GIR. … One of only 19 rounds in the 60s on Sunday. … Won in his 12th start (10 made cuts). … Entered the week on a personal streak of five straight paydays including a pair of top 10s. 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Key stat leaders Top golfers in each statistic on the 2019-2020 PGA TOUR are listed only if they are scheduled to compete this week. * – Top 10 finish here since 2016 ** – Previous Champion Strokes-Gained: Tee to Green 2 *Hideki Matsuayama 3 *Jon Rahm 6 *Rory McIlroy 7 Xander Schauffele 8 Harold Varner III 10 Scottie Scheffler 11 *Tony Finau 16 Corey Conners 18 *Harris English 20 Viktor Hovland 22 Luke List 24 Emiliano Grillo 25 Cameron Tringale 26 *Patrick Reed 29 *Ryan Palmer Par-4 Scoring 4 Xander Schauffele 6 *Jon Rahm 6 *Patrick Reed 6 Scottie Scheffler 10 *Harris English 10 *Rory McIlroy 10 *Brandt Snedeker 14 Doc Redman 14 Cameron Tringale 14 *Hideki Matsuyama 14 *Tony Finau 14 Ryan Moore 21 Cameron Percy 21 *Harry Higgs 21 **Scott Stallings 21 *Joel Dahmen 21 **Kyle Stanley 21 Sungjae Im 21 Henrik Norlander 21 *Adam Scott 21 *Bubba Watson Bogey Avoidance 2 *Jon Rahm 3 *Harris English 4 Xander Schauffele 9 Cameron Tringale 11 Russell Knox 20 Adam Schenk 21 *Hideki Matsuyama 22 *Pat Perez 24 *Adam Scott 25 Matthew NeSmith 26 *Brandt Snedeker Horses for Courses

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