Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting One month from the Masters: Will Tiger and Phil be in Augusta, who’s in, who has work to do and more

One month from the Masters: Will Tiger and Phil be in Augusta, who’s in, who has work to do and more

It’s one month from Masters week. Will we see Tiger or Phil? What changes have been made to Augusta National? Who’s in? Who’s outside looking in? We break it all down.

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Sahith Theegala’s special feel for the game helps him earn first PGA TOUR cardSahith Theegala’s special feel for the game helps him earn first PGA TOUR card

Murly Theegala had a feeling his boy, Sahith, might be special when he was just six years old. At the Junior Worlds in his first tournament, he won his age group and a spectator pointed out that he had done it while hitting cross-handed – a feat Murly had never noticed. But that wasn’t the clue for Murly that something was different about his boy. Instead, it came when they tried to correct it. Shortly after winning Junior Worlds, he took him to the range to get him out of it and figured the change would take weeks or even months to break the cross-handed action his boy had built over the previous three years. “After five balls, he said, ‘OK it feels pretty good.’ It was amazing because he had played for three years left-hand low and switched it almost instantly,” Murly said. “That was an amazing transformation. I said, ‘My god this boy has a knack for this game.’” When Sahith was a toddler, Murly, who moved to the United States in 1987 from India for graduate school, didn’t care what sport was on the TV just as long as it was on. He loved watching sports and basketball and golf in particular were his favorites. Sahith, his oldest boy, would sit with his dad when he was just a toddler just as captivated as his old man was. “He was 1 or 2 and sitting with me, watching Vijay Singh, Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, and he just kept watching, watching and watching,” Murly said. When he was three, Murly asked him if he wanted to go hit balls himself? Of course, he did. So Murly borrowed a U.S. Kids driver and got Sahith a small bucket of 25 balls. He made good contact on 20 of them – a feat Murly was amazed by because when he’d tried to play golf for the first time with his buddies before Sahith was born, he rarely made contact the first couple tries. “I said, ‘Man, he’s got something,’” Murly recalled. “He was never afraid. He’d just try to rip it as hard as he can. Then I took him to the putting and chipping green, and he fell in love with it. He’d keep practicing putting and chipping until it went dark and then he’d cry when it’d get dark.” You still see that fearlessness and short game imagination throughout Sahith’s game today. His swing’s unique, he hits crazy recovery, gets up and down from the craziest places, and loves shaping the ball both ways. It’s kind of like a younger version of Bubba Watson’s game. At the 2016 U.S. Amateur, Sahith still laughs at the fact that he purposefully hit it down a different fairway on almost half the holes at Oakland Hills. It’s such a free-wheeling, creative game based off feel that a lot of people think he’s never had a coach. He actually has. He’s been working with the same instructor since he was eight, but the instructor learned quickly not to focus on positions or mechanics. Only setup, feels, visualizations and trajectories. It’s just all become more refined with age…well, everything except his driver. Unfortunately, there’s no reigning in that youthful fearlessness that he honed on the ranges of Chino Hills, California as a kid. “I get a little wild off the tee. That’s still my bugaboo,” Sahith said. “I’ve always had this attitude of I’m going to go hit it and find it and then try to hit a great shot from there and don’t let a bad shot bug me because you can do something special with the next one. And because of that I’ve always hit some pretty cool recovery shots. I was absolutely forced to have a good short game or else I’d shoot in the 80s every time. The reason I feel like I’ve made so much progress over the last couple of years is I was able to dial in my swing a little bit and hit the ball better and that’s freed up my short game a bit.” Although he’s been able to dial the swing in a little bit in recent years by creating a more consistent process and method, he also knows his incredible feel is the reason he was so good as a kid. He didn’t think about it. He just felt shots and hit them. Whenever his game gets out of line these days, he always goes back to that. “Obviously we’re sticking to our method every shot, feeling it doesn’t mean not going through your process, but yeah, there’s always time where I’m like, ‘Yeah, go play like a kid,’ because it’s so easy to overanalyze golf,” Sahith said. The Lean Times As easy as this journey to the top of the sport has seemed for Sahith, he hasn’t always made the game look like he was playing on easy mode. Despite Murly’s precociousness as a youth, which included Junior Worlds titles at age six, eight and 10, it all seemed to evaporate when he hit a six-inch growth spurt between his freshman and sophomore year of high school that threw his game all out of whack. “When he grew that six inches, he was not even breaking 80. The golf game just went so south,” Murly said. “But I knew he had those fine instincts and intangibles, and I knew he’d be successful if he stayed with it, so my goal was to just keep his confidence up. I started just saying enjoy your round because when you enjoy it, the round turns out amazing.” He did stay with it, fighting through the growth spurts to get his game back and earn a scholarship to Pepperdine. It was there as a freshman where the wrist injuries first started to surface with tendinitis in his wrist. It got better for a year or so but then midway through his junior year he developed a stress fracture in his wrist. He sat a month but tried to come back too early and played through it as it worsened during the Spring and Summer because he didn’t want to let his team down. “It was a stupid decision looking back at it. Took a cortisone shot but it still hurt like crazy, but I played all through summer. By the time I got to the US Amateur, I couldn’t hold a club,” Sahith said. “My joint was messed up, tendon was gone, TFCC was torn. It was just a mess. In total, he took 11 months off from tournaments and couldn’t play at all for six of them after surgery. In those 11 months, he worked with his coach to refine his swing to where it would put less pressure on his wrist. In his downtime, he developed a love of chess. He watched a lot of his Los Angeles Lakers. And when it was time to come back, he came back better than ever, dominating college golf as a senior to the point where he became only the fifth player ever to sweep all three major National Player of the Year awards. “That time away was great perspective too. I think that helped me mentally too,” Sahith said. “I was so hungry when I got back but at the same time, I was like golf doesn’t mean life and death and sometimes you need a reminder. I just think of that whole thing as a blessing instead of a setback.” Dad’s Birthday Gift Ironically, in arguably the biggest moment of Sahith’s career, Murly couldn’t be there because he was moving his youngest son, Sahan, into Seton Hall University for his freshman year. Instead, he was following closely on the PGA TOUR app as his boy delivered an early birthday present with a T4 at the Nationwide Children’s Hospital Championship. He knew that T4 would be enough for his boy to secure his first PGA TOUR card. “I said, ‘Boy, you gave me a great birthday present!’” Murly said. “Because I knew a T4, mathematically there was a chance he could get eliminated, but I knew there was no way that he could miss a PGA TOUR card. I knew in my heart of hearts, but we didn’t want to celebrate until the next event.” When Sahith, 23, made the cut the following week at the Korn Ferry Tour Championship presented by United Leasing & Finance, it was official and Murly and his wife, Karuna, flew out to get to Nebraska in time for the card ceremony. “I think it finally hit me on Sunday night when he was finishing up 18. This is for real,” Murly said. “He made it!” The pride Murly has in his boy seemingly oozes out with every word and every inflection as he speaks. It’s the type of pride and joy that comes from parenthood but also from being a cheerleader, chauffeur, and financier for every step of the journey. Even a premonition that the boy was special was a kid couldn’t have prepared Murly for this journey. His boy, Sahith, is now a PGA TOUR member, competing against the guys he used to watch with him on TV. “There’s no words,” Murly said. “That day when I told him he gave me the best birthday present, it hit me finally, I said, ‘Oh my god, this is like a dream come true!’ because I’ve watched thousands of junior golfers and so many great swings and so many great players and here in the end my boy did it! Seeing his name at the end, it made me so proud!” Proud not just because of what he’s accomplished on the golf course but proud because he never quit. Proud because he got his degree from Pepperdine while juggling the full-time job that is college athletics. Proud because it didn’t come easy even after turning pro as the top-ranked player in the country. Proud because of the type of person he’s grown up to be. “We all understood how much he went through to get that. It’s just a very proud moment. It’s a story that unless you’ve been there it’s so hard to realize,” Murly said. “Going through the process, it’s not easy and what he did is amazing, amazing, amazing.” It’s a process that is difficult for everyone turning pro but was made even more difficult by the timing of when Sahith was – Spring 2020, also known as about the worst possible time to turn pro due to the pandemic. Professional golf was on hiatus for nearly three months, creating deeper fields than ever and making it more difficult than ever to get sponsor exemptions when it returned. Korn Ferry Tour Qualifying Tournament was cancelled for the year, and the NCAA Championship had been cancelled, too, so his name didn’t get out there as much as most National Player of the Years would. He also narrowly missed out at Forme Tour Q-School. “Unfortunately, with COVID, opportunities just came less,” Murly said. He even considered going back to college for another year after the NCAA granted another year of eligibility to every player due to the pandemic. But ultimately, there was nothing left to prove on the college golf scene, so he remained a pro even with nowhere confirmed to play. “I just wanted to compete,” Sahith said. He even filled in the lean weeks with mini-tour events, winning a couple times to give him the confidence that he could do it at the pro level too. In his seven TOUR starts, he earned just enough non-member FedExCup points to sneak inside the top 200 and earn a spot in the Korn Ferry Tour Finals. He was so close that he even flew on a red eye from Reno, Nevada to the Wyndham Championship Monday qualifier to try to earn more non-member points at the regular season finale then flew to the Korn Ferry Tour’s regular season finale after he missed. Ultimately, his 197 non-member points ended up being enough. “I was like, ‘Sweet! For the first time all year I have a schedule of three events in a row I know I’m going to play in,’” Sahith recalled. There will be more where that came from for Murly’s boy on the PGA TOUR this season.

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Fantasy Insider: John Deere ClassicFantasy Insider: John Deere Classic

There’s never a bad time to review what’s up for grabs, but some times are better than others. This is one of those times. • Earnings are no longer used to determine status on the PGA TOUR. • The top 125 in the FedExCup standings at the conclusion of the Wyndham Championship qualify for the Playoffs and are fully exempt in 2017-18. • Golfers ranked 126-150 in FedExCup points will secure conditional status (unless already fully exempt, of course). If this is a golfer’s highest status earned for 2017-18, he will have the option to play concurrent Web.com Tour events in 2018. • Golfers ranked 126-200 are exempt into the Web.com Tour Finals. All who are already fully exempt for 2017-18 are ineligible to compete in the Finals from which an additional 25 PGA TOUR cards will be distributed with the 25 earned on the 2017 Web.com Tour. • The Safeway Open will kick off the 2017-18 season on Oct. 5-8. This means that there is no week off between The Presidents Cup and Web.com Tour Championship, both of which are scheduled to conclude on Oct. 1. Anyone who follows the sport as closely as I do knows that these are merely broad strokes. So, if you ever have any questions, drop them in the discussions beneath any of my columns and content, email me at [email protected] or connect with me on Twitter, either publicly or via private messaging. PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO My roster for the John Deere Classic (in alphabetical order): Daniel Berger Chad Campbell Brian Harman Charley Hoffman Ryan Moore Kyle Stanley You’ll find my starters in Expert Picks. Others to consider for each category (in alphabetical order): Scoring: Charles Howell III; Zach Johnson; Matt Jones; Kevin Kisner; Kelly Kraft; Danny Lee; Trey Mullinax; Sebastian Muñoz; Kevin Na Driving: Zach Johnson; Matt Jones; Kevin Kisner; Danny Lee; William McGirt; Rory Sabbatini; Kevin Streelman Approach: Charles Howell III; Kevin Kisner; Kevin Na; Chez Reavie; Rory Sabbatini; Scott Stallings; Steve Stricker; Nick Watney Short: Charles Howell III; Kevin Kisner; Danny Lee; Sebastian Muñoz; Chez Reavie; Steve Stricker Power Rankings Wild Card Nick Taylor … Not unlike how Kyle Stanley didn’t surprise gamers at the Quicken Loans National, Taylor’s T9 at The Greenbrier Classic aligned with his arc on which he’s climbed from outside the top 400 in the Official World Golf Ranking in February to his current position at 188th. He didn’t crack the Power Rankings for the John Deere Classic primarily due to the fact that he’s 0-for-2 at TPC Deere Run, but expect that record to reflect success at the conclusion of this weekend with the kind of balanced attack he’s maintained all year. Draws Robert Streb … There’s always some concern about what to do with guys who nab one of the exemptions into The Open Championship, and then remain committed to a tournament in the interim. This is the curious case of the 30-year-old who is on his way to Royal Birkdale after last week’s runner-up performance at The Old White TPC. To say that he was trending for something special would be inaccurate, especially since he was 137th in the FedExCup standings before the coup. So, with his card and spot in the Playoffs shored up, expect him to keep his head down to avoid a regression before the major. He’s been around long enough to understand how to approach it mentally. That he’s 3-for-4 with a pair of top 25s at TPC Deere Run is security for gamers to double down on a track that he knows well and where he’s confident. Sebastian Muñoz … Was one round from history at The Greenbrier Classic. The 24-year-old from Colombia settled for a share of third place, but he was bidding for a wire-to-wire victory. That would have landed him beside Mackenzie Hughes as the only rookies to go wire-to-wire since Tim Herron at the 1996 Honda Classic. Muñoz parlayed a putting tip from Gonzalo Fernández-Castaño into a career-best finish. Armed with that, the confidence it created and four consecutive cuts made, throw him into your DFS lineup. Kelly Kraft … But be careful here. Checks both boxes defining converging trends with a T5 in his Deere debut last year and a T5 at last week’s Greenbrier, but the 28-year-old has been anything but consistent in his sophomore season. If you make room, you do so riding his confidence of leading the field in strokes gained: tee-to-green at The Old White TPC. He also co-led in fairways hit and ranked T9 in greens in regulation and seventh in proximity to the hole. Chez Reavie … No shift in this narrative, really. He’s 7-for-8 since New Orleans with a T4 in Memphis and a T16 at the U.S. Open. Perfect in his last four trips to the Quad Cities with a T5 in 2011 and a T15 in 2013 during which he spun a 61 in the second round. Currently 38th on TOUR in adjusted scoring and T11 in par-3 scoring. Kevin Streelman … Par or better in all four rounds en route to a T29 at The Greenbrier Classic. On its own, it’s not bad, but it was his first finish outside a top 20 in five starts. He’s recorded a pair of eighth-place finishes at TPC Deere Run (2009, 2012), but your motivation to make room is based almost entirely on his mild heater during which he’s shed over three-quarters of a stroke on his adjusted scoring average, jumping from 125th to 66th on TOUR. William McGirt … Hasn’t really made any noise since opening THE PLAYERS with a 67, but his baseline is still valuable if for no other reason than it’s predictable. If the 38-year-old has regressed to his horse-for-a-course stereotype, we can work with that. That includes at TPC Deere Run where he was inside the top five after each of the first three rounds before fading to T23 in 2014. That was also before his breakthrough title at Memorial last year, of course, so given the same opportunity again, he’d likely respond more favorably. Nick Watney … Now 36 years of age, he’s no longer the force he once was, but he can still be a valuable piece. Returns to TPC Deere Run for the first time since 2013 on the shoulders of eight consecutive cuts made. It’s been an ugly effective in that he’s survived big numbers to secure his card for 2017-18. It also doesn’t hurt that he’s T6 in proximity to the hole and T52 in adjusted scoring. Matt Jones … Sneak him in somewhere. He hasn’t recorded a top 10 on the PGA TOUR in over 22 months, but he’s hung three on the board in seven tries at TPC Deere Run (2009, 2010, 2013). The Aussie has overcome his shortcoming in manufacturing scoring opportunities with cuts made in eight of his last nine starts thanks to his consistently strong short game that supports his slot at 44th in adjusted scoring. Andres Romero … Worth a flier in DFS given that he’s survived the cut here in his last three appearances and arrives for his sixth career start just three weeks removed from winning the BMW International Open. Still just 36 years of age. Curtis Luck …  Given his multiple victories on the biggest stages on the amateur level around the world, we’re not surprised that he’s been a quick study since turning pro in April. Chased a T5 at the Quicken Loans National with a T20 last week. He’d rank 162nd among members in FedExCup points, so with a berth into the Web.com Tour Finals tucked away, the Aussie is playing on house money. That makes him even more dangerous in the shootout at TPC Deere Run. Fades Bubba Watson … Until he reverses course, it’s impossible to envision him as a sensible investment in any format. That day may come soon for full-season salary gamers, however, as the lefty has banked just $820K this season. Then again, it could be a trap until he eliminates the doubt that playing a new ball has created. This is his first appearance at TPC Deere Run since 2010. Ryan Palmer … First trip since 2012. Currently 120th in the FedExCup standings and hasn’t cracked a top 50 since mid-May. Obviously, golf took its proper position in the back seat this season given his wife’s battle with breast cancer, so you can understand the lull in his performance overall. Ricky Barnes … For just about all intents and purposes, last year’s T5 was an anomaly and not only because he hadn’t finished better than T45 in seven prior appearances, five of which ending in a missed cut. Gamers associate him with complementary value on harder courses, not racetracks like TPC Deere Run. It also doesn’t help that he hasn’t recorded another top-15 finish since he departed the Quad Cities in mid-August of 2016. Smylie Kaufman … Pretty much going about his sophomore season as expected. His closing 61 to win the Shriners in October of 2015 remains his lowest aggregate in individual competition by five strokes. It was the epitome of capturing lightning in a bottle. Sits 134th in the FedExCup standings as he debuts at the John Deere Classic. Ollie Schniederjans … The impressive rookie has slowed in recent weeks despite making cuts. It’s not unusual at this time of the season, both due to tougher courses and the learning curve of understanding how to navigate it in the long-term. Now, he would have missed his first cut in eight starts last week if not for signing for an incorrect scorecard after his second round of The Greenbrier Classic. Still, expectations remain elevated for full-season investors, but weekly gamers don’t need to dig this deep in his first go-around at TPC Deere Run. Returning to Competition Grayson Murray … Completed only two holes at The Greenbrier Classic before withdrawing, citing illness. The rookie was one of my Sleepers last week given that he had connected 10 cuts made from the Shell Houston Open through the Quicken Loans National. At 117th in the FedExCup standings, he’s among the many in the pressure cooker as we continue into the heat of the summer. Nicholas Lindheim … Walked off The Old White TPC during his second round with a knee injury. He opened with 8-over 78 to extend his string of consecutive rounds of par or worse to 12. His mid-tournament withdrawal during the FedEx St. Jude Classic was due to an illness. The rookie is 7-for-16 on the season and ranks 183rd in the FedExCup standings. Steven Alker … The Kiwi called it quits before his second round of last week’s Greenbrier due to an illness. It was his first mid-tournament withdrawal in 81 career starts. Perhaps he finds a groove this week. In his previous two spins with a PGA TOUR card, he finished T25 in 2003 and T28 in 2015 at the John Deere Classic, but gamers are advised to observe only. Will celebrate his 46th birthday on July 28. Notable WDs NOTE: None of this week’s early withdrawals qualified for next week’s Open Championship. Harris English … Salvaged his season with five paydays in his last six starts to rise to 97th in the FedExCup standings. Of course, this falls below our expectations, but full-season salary gamers are licking their chops staring at his current value of $843K. He hadn’t collected less than $1.97M in any of his previous four seasons. Fabian Gomez … Very little of this season has gone according to plan for the 38-year-old. He’s 157th in FedExCup points and hasn’t played since withdrawing one round into the Quicken Loans National two weeks ago. An explanation wasn’t released. The good news is that he’s fully exempt through next season by virtue of his victory at the Sony Open in Hawaii in 2016. Currently valued at $332K, salary gamers in deeper leagues should be stalking the Argentine as a bargain in 2017-18. Seung-Yul Noh … Missed the cut on the number at The Old White TPC to extend his mini-slump to 0-for-3. Currently 98th in the FedExCup standings and nearly 105 points inside the top 125, so he can afford the week off. Will MacKenzie … Withdrew early in the week before The Greenbrier Classic as well. Placed T17 two weeks prior at the Travelers Championship. Currently 170th in the FedExCup standings, he’s a lock for a spot in the Web.com Tour Finals, but gamers’ expectations aren’t what they once were as he approaches his 43rd birthday in late September. He hasn’t qualified for the Playoffs since 2014. Zack Sucher … Second consecutive week in which he’s withdrawn early. The 30-year-old is just 3-for-14 on the season and sits 221st in FedExCup points. Charlie Beljan … With just one cut made (T66, WMPO) in eight starts this season, you can understand if he’s rationing his remaining four starts on a Major Medical Extension. Nicholas Thompson … This is the fourth time that he’s burning a start on his Non-exempt Medical Extension in favor of a start on the Web.com Tour. It’s because of that status on the PGA TOUR that he continues to grab our attention, if but barely. The 34-year-old is 29th in earnings on the Web.com as he preps for this week’s Utah Championship. Power Rankings Recap – The Greenbrier Classic Sleepers recap – The Greenbrier Classic Birthdays among active golfers on the PGA TOUR July 11 … Sean O’Hair (35) July 12 … Robert Allenby (46) July 13 … none July 14 … Michael Kim (24) July 15 … Dicky Pride (48) July 16 … Adam Scott (37) July 17 … none

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