Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Patrick Cantlay leads TOUR Championship by one shot

Patrick Cantlay leads TOUR Championship by one shot

ATLANTA — For the second day in a row, no one had a better score than Jon Rahm at the TOUR Championship. That’s just what he needed to make up ground on Patrick Cantlay going into a weekend chase for the FedExCup. RELATED: Full leaderboard | Jordan Spieth reveals that couple is expecting first child Rahm birdied his last three holes Friday for a 5-under 65. Cantlay birdied his last two holes for a bogey-free 66 to keep one shot ahead. It’s not quite a two-man race for the FedExCup with 36 holes still to play at East Lake, though it was shaping up as a possibility. Bryson DeChambeau was the next closest player, and his 67 lost ground Friday. He was six shots behind. “We definitely feed off each other,” Rahm said. “And that’s probably why you see the difference in the scoreboard right now.” Cantlay looked as though he was protecting a lead, often playing to the fat of the green. That was more a product of showing respect to an East Lake course that punishes even slight misses on the wrong side of the hole. He hit 16 of 18 greens, and only twice did he have par putts from about the 5-foot range. “I’m playing really well, and I think I’m playing the golf course the right way,” Cantlay said. Cantlay started the TOUR Championship at 10-under par because he was the No. 1 seed in the FedExCup. Rahm began four shots back. Asked if the idea was to chip away at the lead, Rahm replied, “What other strategy is there?” “As soon as we teed off, that didn’t matter,” he said of the four-shot deficit. “There’s a lot of golf to be played, even now.” The reason for Cantlay’s pre-tournament advantage was because of last week at Caves Valley. Cantlay and Rahm played in the final threesome, along with DeChambeau, going into the weekend at the BMW Championship. Cantlay finished 66-66 and won in a playoff. Rahm closed with 70-70 and tied for ninth, dropping to the No. 4 seed. That now seems long ago. The TOUR Championship, to a degree, feels normal now. Cantlay was at 17 under. He and Rahm will be in the final group again. DeChambeau had more work to do, as did Justin Thomas, who made two bogeys and failed to birdie the par-5 18th in his round of 67. He was seven behind. “A place like this, there’s not really a lead that’s safe with how tough it it can play,” Thomas said. “But at the end of the day, I can’t worry about what the other guys are doing. I just have to go out and try to make some birdies and stop making mistakes.” Harris English made his share of mistakes with five bogeys in his round of 69, leaving him in the large group at 9 under. So did Jordan Spieth. He was going for his fourth straight birdie to get right in the mix, facing a 10-foot putt on the 13th hole. He three-putted, lost momentum and shot a 67. Spieth, Rory McIlroy (66) and Louis Oosthuizen (67) were at 8 under. Gone are the low scores from the opening FedExCup Playoff events, at rain-soaked Liberty Natitonal and Caves Valley, where players at each course had a putt at 59. The best anyone has managed at East Lake, still slightly soft from rain and a light breeze, had been a 65. So it’s tougher for players to make up a lot of ground unless the leaders come back, and there has been little indication Cantlay and Rahm are going to do that. Cantlay had plenty of looks at birdie, and didn’t hear many calls of “Patty Ice” because not many of those putts were going in. He got up-and-down from a bunker on the par-5 sixth. His wedge into the 13th spun back to an inch of the cup. Rahm holed a 35-foot putt from off the green at the 13th, gave it back with a bad drive to the right on the next hole, and then closed the gap to one shot with a 10-foot birdie on the 16th. The final two holes felt like a duel, even for a lazy Friday afternoon. Rahm poured in a 25-foot birdie putt on the 17th, and Cantlay matched his birdie from 15 feet, the first time he had made a putt longer than 5 feet all day. On the closing hole, Rahm blasted out of the front bunker to tap-in range. Cantlay chipped down the slope and with the grain — one of the few times he was out of position — and watched it trail off 8 feet from the hole. He made that to regain the lead. “When you have somebody like him who played a round with very few mistakes — you could argue that it could have been a lot lower — it only motivates me to keep doing a little bit better,” Rahm said. “Even though I want to focus on myself, you know he’s not going to let up and he keeps putting it in the fairway and on the green and in the fairway and on the green. “It can raise your playing level a little bit,” he said, “as well as me raising his level when I’m making birdies.”

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Kizzire embodies ‘floodgates’ theory of winningKizzire embodies ‘floodgates’ theory of winning

With everyone else having long-since packed up and headed home, Patton Kizzire outlasts James Hahn with a par on the sixth hole of a sudden-death playoff to win the Sony Open in Hawaii. Welcome to the Monday Finish, where Kizzire built on his breakthrough win at the OHL Classic at Mayakoba last fall to become the first multiple winner this season. He also takes over the top spot in the FedExCup. Not bad for a guy who until two months ago was winless in his career. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1. Kizzire is mentally tough. Because even the winners on TOUR are gloriously imperfect, the trick is to not get bogged down in the messy details. Kizzire is used to that. Hitting fairways at a 58.7 percent clip this season, he is 187th in driving accuracy. But he makes it work with solid putting (.829 in strokes gained: putting, 20th best on TOUR) and scrambling (63.03 percent, 47th). “My golf game is a roller-coaster,â€� Kizzire said after outlasting Hahn. “It always has been. I’m up and down and all around.â€� Case in point: the first hole of the playoff, the par-5 18th, where Hahn was looking at a makeable birdie putt and Kizzire, facing a delicate third shot, tried to get too cute and dumped his ball in the bunker. His caddie, Joe Eter, gave him a pep talk. “Yeah, that was a little rough, no pun intended,â€� Kizzire said. “I caught a little rough between my ball and the club and came up short, and I showed my caddie all the grass that was on the face. He said, just get that thing up and down, man, and we’ll see what happens.â€� Kizzire did just that, and when Hahn’s birdie try stayed out, Kizzire had staved off elimination. “Joe was big,â€� he said of caddie Eter. “He was big all week. He kind of gave me a kick in the rear end when I needed it and made me laugh when I needed to.â€� 2. Hahn has age on his mind. There were lots of positives for Hahn, who was 2-0 in playoffs before losing this one. After starting the day seven shots off the lead, his nine-birdie, one-bogey 62 was the low round of the day. It was also his best since a 10-birdie effort in the third round of the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide last season. And his play at the Sony would seem to bode especially well considering Hahn is beginning a stretch of five starts in five weeks. But Hahn said he doesn’t do moral victories, copping to uncertainty about how many more chances he might get (he is 36), and stressing the need to convert those chances into victories. “Everything I’m doing is great on the golf course,â€� Hahn said. “But you get to this level where you might only have two, three, four opportunities to win out on TOUR. These guys are really good. Dustin Johnson is going to get a couple. You know Jordan Spieth is going to get a handful, Justin Thomas. So, any time you have an opportunity to win and you don’t close the deal, I feel like it’s just one less opportunity for me. “So I feel really defeated right now. I probably sound that way. I probably feel like the most depressed guy in the room. Sorry. We didn’t get nuked, all right? But it’s one of those things where, at the end of the day, I’m going to be replaying all the bad shots that I hit and how I can improve, and that’s just the kind of person I am. I just keep grinding and just try to get better.â€� 3. Hoge classy in defeat. In retrospect, the worst place to be on the back nine, if not the whole golf course, may have been the bunker left of the 16th green. Tom Hoge and playing partner Brian Harman each wound up short-siding themselves in that bunker, and with little green to work with, neither could so much as hit the putting surface. Although Harman, whose first bunker shot didn’t get out of the sand, salvaged bogey, Hoge, whose bunker shot got caught up in the rough, succumbed to double-bogey to lose the lead and ultimately finish third. There were two ways to look at it for Hoge. The first was that it was his best-ever finish on TOUR. The second was that he’d made a mess of 16 from the middle of the fairway, just 156 yards remaining for his approach shot. Hoge, who lives in Fargo, N.D., tried to see the silver lining, remaining upbeat for a Golf Channel interview and to compose this tweet: 4. Harman a top-10 machine. Brian Harman (64-63-68-70) never quite found his best stuff on the weekend, but his T4 finish was his fifth in five starts so far this season. As usual, he hit a lot of fairways (nearly 68 percent, tied for fourth best in the field), but he was also long (averaging over 313 yards per pop, 23rd best). 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I just need to tighten things up a little bit.â€� Year-to-date, Thomas is sputtering at -.428 (T173) in strokes gained: putting. Spieth, meanwhile, sounded a similar refrain. Although it’s a tiny sample size of just eight rounds this season, he’s even further down the list at -.678 (201st) in strokes gained: putting. “I’ve got a lot of work to do with the putter,â€� he said. “It’s as simple as that. Everything else is plenty ready to win.â€� FIVE INSIGHTS 1. Sunday’s playoff marked the longest ever at the Sony, and the longest on TOUR since Bryce Molder outlasted Briny Baird in six holes at the 2011 Safeway Open. 2. It was a well-played six holes, with Kizzire and Hahn both making birdies at the 18th hole the second time they played it. And the third. Hahn seemed to tire, though, mentioning his failure to eat enough throughout the day after making bogey at the par-3 17th hole to end it. 3. 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How Tiger Woods inspired Phil MickelsonHow Tiger Woods inspired Phil Mickelson

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. - Phil Mickelson has often said he owes a lot to Tiger Woods. The 50-year-old knows Woods helped golf’s popularity soar, and with it, so did the purses and exposure for sponsorship opportunities. This allowed someone as successful as Mickelson to have a very fruitful career. But as Mickelson returns to the PGA TOUR at the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP @ SHERWOOD this week, fresh off claiming his second PGA TOUR Champions win in as many starts, he was praising Woods for another aspect of his own career. His longevity. Mickelson has been competitive on TOUR since winning as an amateur in 1991. "Looking back, I wish I had been a little bit more committed fitness‑wise in the height of my career… (but) Tiger pushed me to start training a little bit more, which has helped me elongate my career," Mickelson said Wednesday at Sherwood Country Club. During the last few years, Mickelson has significantly added length to his game despite his age, but while he wished he'd been even fitter, he says he doesn't regret not chasing "bombs" earlier in his career. As Bryson DeChambeau sets new marks for ball speed and distance, Mickelson says it just wouldn't have been feasible in his time. "During the prime of my career we really didn’t have launch monitors, so we weren’t able to dial a lot of this stuff in. A lot of this was by feel and seeing the ball and using vision to see, oh, it’s spinning too much, it’s floating. We didn’t have the precision to dial things in the way we do now," Mickelson said. "Now guys that are hitting it in the 180‑mile‑an‑hour ball speeds are getting pushed to go to the 190s because of Bryson and a lot of guys have to do that to keep up." While Mickelson will continue to work on the speed that is comfortable for him and his play, the 44-time TOUR winner is mindful of accuracy with driver. It has been a problem for him throughout his career. "I actually feel there’s a point of diminishing return about 182‑ to 185‑mile‑an‑hour ball speed. I think once you get over that, I don’t know if you’re really getting out of it what you put in, meaning a lot of courses won’t allow for that advantage to be taken if you get in the 190s," Mickelson explained. "Holes dogleg, you have tighter landing areas, there’s only a couple holes a golf course where it can really help you and I feel like most guys are already at that optimum distance of 182‑ to 185‑mile‑an‑hour ball speed." The veteran is full of confidence again after another victory against his former foes. He became just the third player to win in his first two starts on the PGA TOUR Champions with a win in the Dominion Energy Charity Classic last weekend. But he knows he needs to step it up to compete on the PGA TOUR. "I’m excited to compete and come off of last week’s event on (PGA TOUR Champions) and try to play, compete against the young guys. This is a fun opportunity for me," he said. "It’s been really fun for me to play and compete on (PGA TOUR Champions), a lot more so than I thought it would be. I’m surprised how much fun I’m having, how much fun it is to see some of the same guys that I’ve seen for so many years and haven’t had a chance to be with them for a number of years now. I seem to get a little bit of confidence and I’m hoping to bring that over into this event. "But the penalty for a miss is much more severe on the regular TOUR, the pin placements are a little bit more difficult. The length isn’t as different as I thought. We play the back tees on the Champions Tour and it can play every bit as long, but the courses out here are a lot more penalizing. I have to be a little bit more precise."

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