Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting One & Done: Dell Technologies Championship

One & Done: Dell Technologies Championship

NOTE: If you play PGA TOUR Champions One & Done presented by SERVPRO, the Shaw Charity Classic begins on Friday. For my recommendations among notables in the field, scroll to the bottom of the page. I think I know Ben Everill well enough now that he’s not necessarily bursting with virtues, but patience is one of them. Gotta tip my visor to the rookie’s beginner’s luck and every worthy gamer who sat on Dustin Johnson long enough to connect with DJ’s victory at THE NORTHERN TRUST. Every FedExCup Playoffs event awards its winner a season-high 2,000 points. Ben will be holding his breath after the coup, but he deserves at least this week to chirp. Don’t be surprised if he tweets about it, too. Suffice it to say that Johnson is no longer bothered by a sore back or any bad habits he picked up since his spill on the Wednesday of Masters week. I’ve been saving him for the TOUR Championship, but it’s tempting to ride his wave right now, particularly since a golfer has prevailed in consecutive tournaments five times in FedExCup Playoffs history. (Billy Horschel was the last to join the club in 2014.) However, because I’m still within range of Ben’s lead, there’s no need to deviate from the grand plan. Before we review the field for usual suspects, it’s incumbent upon me to review who Ben and Jonathan still have available as they are in my crosshairs. Only a league championship matters, so I’m not concerned with the guys in the rearview mirror. Unfortunately, I’m settling for a push with Ben at the Dell Technologies Championship where both of us have had Rory McIlroy slotted for months. The compelling story in the mainstream is that McIlroy is competing at all given his comments after the PGA Championship about possibly disappearing until 2018, but all gamers really care to know is if he’s committed. As the defending champion and in pursuit of becoming the first to successfully defend a FedExCup title, he remains a strong option. Ben will likely conclude the FedExCup Playoffs with Jason Day at the BMW Championship and Jordan Spieth at the TOUR Championship, neither of whom is available to me. Likewise, I have Justin Thomas and Dustin Johnson as my probables, respectively, neither of whom is available to Ben. Among the most notable, only Day remains available to Jonathan. So, short of the Aussie capturing victory at Conway Farms in two weeks, I fully expect to challenge only Ben for my own title defense of our little league. I lay out the basics of my permutations as an example for you and yours. You have to get the lay of the land to adjust your short list. If you’re the front-runner, look at the most logical stymies but also decide which philosophy suits you better. Do you empty the chamber now and hope for the best later? Or do you sit on a heavyweight to anchor the season? I prefer the latter because your competition still needs to execute in the interim. Insurance is never a bad thing as long as you don’t have too much of it. That can make an infinitesimal offseason feel a lot longer than the 10 days it is. If you’re chasing, the less you think about it, the better. With only two more events after the DTC, there’s less about which to think, anyway. DJ, McIlroy, Rickie Fowler, Paul Casey, Patrick Reed, Louis Oosthuizen and Adam Scott all make sense at TPC Boston. Short of those cornerstones, Webb Simpson and Charley Hoffman could be timely bridges. Jon Rahm remains a dynamic wild card. Thomas, Hideki Matsuyama, Brooks Koepka and Justin Rose are likely to make more sense next time. I can only imagine the chicken scratch two-man gamers have scribbled on their legal pads by now. If possible, finally burn Chez Reavie, will ya? Patrick Cantlay, Xander Schauffele and Jason Kokrak also deserve attention. FUTURE POSSIBILITIES NOTE: Select golfers committed to the tournament are listed alphabetically. Future tournaments are sorted chronologically and reflect previous success on the courses on which the tournaments will be held in 2016-17. All are pending golfer commitment. Daniel Berger … BMW Keegan Bradley … Dell Technologies Paul Casey … TOUR Championship Kevin Chappell … Dell Technologies Jason Day … Dell Technologies; BMW; TOUR Championship Jason Dufner … TOUR Championship Rickie Fowler … BMW Sergio Garcia … TOUR Championship Billy Horschel … TOUR Championship Dustin Johnson … BMW (defending on a different course); TOUR Championship Zach Johnson … BMW; TOUR Championship Russell Knox … Dell Technologies Hideki Matsuyama … BMW Rory McIlroy … BMW; TOUR Championship (defending) Ryan Moore … TOUR Championship Louis Oosthuizen … Dell Technologies Patrick Reed … Dell Technologies Justin Rose … TOUR Championship Charl Schwartzel … BMW Adam Scott … Dell Technologies; TOUR Championship Jordan Spieth … TOUR Championship Bubba Watson … TOUR Championship Gary Woodland … Dell Technologies; TOUR Championship CHAMPIONS ONE & DONE NOTABLES Shaw Charity Classic Canyon Meadows Golf & Country Club in Calgary has been the only host of the tournament since it debuted on the PGA TOUR Champions in 2013. After playing as a par 71 for its inaugural edition, the 7,086-yard track has been a par 70 with five par 3s and three par 5s since. Golfers listed alphabetically. Rob’s serious considerations in bold. Stephen Ames … Impressive season continued at Snoqualmie with a T13. It gave him six top 20s in his last seven starts. Just one top 50 at Canyon Meadows in three tries, though, a T5 in 2015. Billy Andrade … Lost in a playoff in his debut here in 2014, but didn’t land inside the top 35 in both return trips. Up-and-down 2017 warrants future use, so hold tight for another week. Woody Austin … Horse for a course, but his form has been erratic. Not that it hasn’t glistened at times, but you’d be leaning almost entirely on a 6th-T10-T19 slate at Canyon Meadows since 2014. Fred Couples … Disappointing T20 outside his native Seattle last week. It was his first finish outside the top 15 in 10 starts this year. Winner here in 2014. T10 in 2013 and a T5 in 2015. Joe Durant … A splendid find for gamers who somehow haven’t yet burned him. Twelve top 20s this season, including in seven of his last eight starts. Two top 20s in three tries at Canyon Meadows. Bob Estes … Since he didn’t qualify for the FedExCup Playoffs, he can focus on taking on guys his own age. Last week’s T33 was his first of four results outside a top 25 on the PGA TOUR Champions in 2017. Steve Flesch … Strides in with six consecutive top 20s and Canyon Meadows is a good fit for the lefty. Not eligible to be ranked officially in the stats, but the results speak for themselves. Carlos Franco … Defending champion. Canyon Meadows is the site of his only victory in individual competition on the PGA TOUR Champions. He hasn’t logged a top 30 on another in five months. Fred Funk … Continue to holster for the PURE Insurance Championship, but hope that he flips his form. Paul Goydos … Bridge. He’s traded top 20s (including a win at the 3M) with results outside the top 25 in his last six starts. T7 at the Shaw in 2014, but a T68 last year. Lee Janzen … Streak of seven straight top 20s came to an end with a T39 at the Boeing. Making his third appearance at the Shaw and still chasing his first top 35. Miguel Angel Jiménez … Sustaining a phenomenal season. All of his 15 starts have resulted in a top 25; eight have gone for a top 10. T12 in his first look at Canyon Meadows last year. Brandt Jobe … Shared 14th in his debut here last year. He’d take another after finishing outside the top 30 in his last two starts after a torrid couple of months. Still a wild card for us. Jerry Kelly … Beaming off his breakthrough title at the Boeing Classic. It was only a matter of time. Now 11th on the money list, it’s a good time to let the rookie go this one alone. Scott McCarron … Answered victory at the DICK’S with a season-worst T41 at the Boeing. Didn’t crack the top 10 in either prior visit to Canyon Meadows. Colin Montgomerie … Strong converging trends with progressively improving results in his last three starts, culminating in a solo fifth at the Boeing. Runner-up here in 2015 and T6 last year. Corey Pavin … Rested since a T20 at the DICK’S. Top 20s in four of his last six starts. T15 (2014) and T22 (2015) in his trips to the Shaw. Tom Pernice, Jr. … Two top 10s and another two top 25s at Canyon Meadows, but only one top 25 in his last 10 starts. Kenny Perry … Making his first appearance. Ranks third on the money list but he’s been inconsistent. Very much worth a shot if you’re chasing. Gene Sauers … Played up to his billing at the Boeing with a T10, his fifth consecutive top 25. Mixed bag at Canyon Meadows, however, with only two top 40 in four tries, and both were but T19s. Vijay Singh … Tournament debut. Settled for a T29 at last week’s Boeing. Twelfth on the money list but hasn’t logged enough rounds to qualify for official rankings. Kevin Sutherland … If there’s a spot where you’d consider taking a pass, Canyon Meadows might be it. No better than a T9 (2014) in three appearances. David Toms … T6 at the Boeing where fellow rookie Jerry Kelly broke through. Four top 10s and another six top 25s this season. Kirk Triplett … Top 20s in three of the four editions. His T71 at last week’s Boeing ended a string of four straight top 25s. Scott Verplank … The tour’s leader in putting has recorded top 10s in four of his last six events, but he’s making his tournament debut. Duffy Waldorf … The wait is over. It’s time to give him a look. He finished a respective T3, T15, T22 and T6 in this event. Trending nicely with a T7 and a pair of T20s in his last three starts.

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Stewart Cink ‘borderline in denial’ as he approaches 50Stewart Cink ‘borderline in denial’ as he approaches 50

ORLANDO, Fla. – By all measures, if Stewart Cink were to never again tee it up on the PGA TOUR, the 49-year-old would rest easy knowing he amassed an impressive resume. Propelled by three Korn Ferry Tour wins in 1996, the Alabama native would go on to amass 11 PGA TOUR titles, including the 2009 Open Championship. En route to that title at Turnberry, a 36-year-old Cink defeated 59-year-old Tom Watson in a four-hole aggregate playoff. Watson began the 138th Open Championship with 12 PGA TOUR Champions titles already under his belt. Cink will tee it up at this week’s PNC Championship alongside son Connor in the company of several of golf’s legends, including PGA TOUR Champions stalwarts like Padraig Harrington, Bernhard Langer and Jim Furyk. He’ll become eligible for the 50-and-over circuit next May 21, but he isn’t letting his focus go there just yet. Cink’s intentions are driven by the mind of a competitor still feeling strong and fine-tuned for even more TOUR success. He won twice in the 2020-21 TOUR season and intends on again contending at the game’s highest level. “Other than having to hold the menu further away to read it these days, I’m really not feeling any older at all,” Cink said. “I would say that I feel as good as ever. I don’t feel like I’ve lost any speed with my swing. I’ve got to say that being close to hitting 50 feels great.” Determined to maintain the commitment and focus which also resulted in 104 PGA TOUR top-10 finishes – 11 of which were runner-up showings – Cink is approaching the big 5-0 strategically. Eight players have won on TOUR after turning 50, and Cink doesn’t see any reason why he can’t become the ninth. “Certainly, I’ve thought about the fact that I’m about to turn 50, but I have not at all thought about turning 50 and joining PGA TOUR Champions,” explained Cink. “That’s by design. I feel like if I put my eye there before I turn 50, it would become too easy to lose that focus on the PGA TOUR.” Believing that an unwavering focus on maximizing his TOUR performance will translate to maximum performance on PGA TOUR Champions, in a way, Cink is preparing for PGA TOUR Champions success by way of PGA TOUR success. “It’s not that I don’t want to focus on PGA TOUR Champions,” Cink said. “It’s actually something I’ve thought about for the last handful of years. But, I do feel like if I let myself dream too much about all it can be on PGA TOUR Champions one day, then I’ll be done out here on TOUR. I don’t want to be done yet.” As enticing as the prospect of PGA TOUR Champions is, as part of his TOUR focus, Cink has yet to even begin the process of picking the brains of fellow competitors who preceded him on PGA TOUR Champions turf. “I’m borderline in denial that my 50th birthday is near,” Cink said. “Of course, I’ve had a lot of friends and other competitors come up and tell me how much I’m going to enjoy it out there, which I know I will. But, I don’t turn 50 until May. I’ve got to figure out how to be the best player on the PGA TOUR that I can until then and then after that … we’ll see.” Determined as he is to stay the PGA TOUR course as long as possible, make no mistake about it, the alluring opportunity of PGA TOUR Champions is one Cink is grateful to soon be enjoying. “Initially, I’ll likely fit in a few PGA TOUR Champions events, fewer than on the PGA TOUR,” Cink said. “Then, gradually, the mix will become more weighted towards PGA TOUR Champions. I just don’t really have a set plan yet.” To further illustrate the competitive fire which largely defines him, Cink is paying close attention to the evolving landscape of the PGA TOUR. And he’s invigorated by what he’s seeing. “Every time the PGA TOUR announces an elevated event, it really entices me to try and stay in shape and keep my mind and heart in the right place because those are amazing opportunities to be able to play for that kind of prize money,” Cink said. “I’d love to finish my TOUR career qualifying for, and playing in, some of those. I’ll have a lot of great years on PGA TOUR Champions after that. That’s something I don’t take lightly. I’m really excited about PGA TOUR Champions and, even without a formal plan for it yet, I think it’s something I can bring to it to.” On Thursday morning before the start of the PNC Championship Pro-Am in Orlando, the practice range at Ritz-Carlton GC made for quite the interesting sports stage. At one end was 83-year-old Lee Trevino, who won his first of 29 PGA TOUR Champions titles in February 1990. Further down the line was Cink, who was 16 when Trevino won that Royal Caribbean Classic in Miami more than three decades ago. While Trevino’s competitive days are now behind him, the Tour he helped solidify is stronger than ever today and, as such, poised to feature another world-class contender in Cink.

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