Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Pick ‘Em Preview: The Genesis Invitational

Pick ‘Em Preview: The Genesis Invitational

Welcome to PGA TOUR Pick ‘Em Live! This is the PGA TOUR’s first offering of an interactive game using live odds, which are powered by PointsBet. It’s a weekly contest developed by Low6 and it’s free to play on desktop and mobile devices. RELATED: FAQs for PGA TOUR Pick ‘Em Live! Fittingly, its launch aligns with The Genesis Invitational. The annual stop at The Riviera Country Club hosts a smashing field of 120. What you’re reading now is the first edition of Pick ‘Em Preview, the weekly space dedicated to tournaments that PGA TOUR Pick ‘Em Live will be presenting. Our resident fantasy writers, Rob Bolton and Mike Glasscott, have been collaborating on various projects for many years, so we hope that you enjoy their analysis, insight, opinion, and banter as much as they do. Before you go on though be sure to sign up at https://pickemlive.pgatour.com/ and join the free fun! Not sure who to pick where? Never fear, our gurus are here! After having reviewed the board at PointsBet, Rob and Glass are sharing their opening selections for the weeklong component and for the first round. With this debut, they’ve dug into some of the strategic components of the gameplay. As we navigate PGA TOUR Pick ‘Em Live for ourselves, we will present more perspective, tips and other helpful hints from the experience. A cash prize bounty of $5,000 is on offer ever tournament for the top five scorers. $2,500 for first place, $1,000 for second, $750 for third, $500 for fourth and $250 for fifth. You cannot lose points at any time, so there’s no reason to abstain from any pick. And with three weeklong wagers hovering over 12 props for which progressive multipliers of 25, 50, 75 and 100 drive the action, you’re never out of the hunt. Odds for weeklong outrights will change in real time, and quite often in your favor. So, if you’re locked in at, say, +1200, and he moves to +2000, and you still want him as your choice, cancel and reselect at more favorable pricing. Just like that. Enjoy! WEEKLONG Outright Rob … Francesco Molinari (+15000) Unless you’re the punter who’d rather set and forget, à la Glass turning to shorter odds below, reaching for a longshot before R1 is the way to go in PGA TOUR Pick ‘Em Live. The experience and phenomenon of monitoring odds changing in real time is fascinating for me as someone who has never played in this space. With the power to modify the investment at any time, and with the insurance that I still can select the winner just before he is determined, consider making it a weekly routine to start outside the box. Thing is, despite what the board says, Molinari really isn’t a longshot on a course where he is a member. His value is long in part because of his form, but also because of the depth of the kind of field over which he hasn’t prevailed in recent memory – his and ours. Glass … Xander Schauffele (+2200) Uh, Rob, how many times has Webb Simpson won at Quail Hollow? How about Ryan Palmer at Colonial? I’ll hang up and listen to your answer. Meanwhile, it’s hard to turn down a number on Schauffele after he led the field last week in Strokes-Gained: Tee-to-Green for a T3. SoCal player has never missed the cut here in four tries and won’t have to figure out Poa. Max Homa won on his fifth try last year. Top 10 Rob … Francesco Molinari (+1000) There are a few ways you can go with this and your top-20 prop. First and foremost, unlike the outright, the lines for top 10 and top 20 will freeze during live action. You will be unable to modify either selection until play concludes every day. That could be challenging depending on where you are and your lifestyle because there isn’t a set period of time after any round when the window will reopen. As for the strategy, when an outright is as long as Molinari is at Riviera, and there aren’t any others valued more favorably (in your opinion) for a top 10, then you might as well double dip. Although my outright and top 10 match in the tournament for which PGA TOUR Pick ‘Em launches, it’s unlikely to happen again for a while. Regardless, with the promise to have the power to change picks in between rounds, ignoring the chalk for a longshot makes sense early. Once again, however, Glass has other ideas, but I’m used to that. It’s what makes his world go round. Glass … Matthew Fitzpatrick (+360) Value smacks me right in the forehead, so I’ll take it! The Englishman has stacked back-to-back top 10s at Pebble and Scottsdale in his first two TOUR events of 2022. Posted par or better in seven of eight career rounds here with T5 the highlight last year. Top 20 Glass … James Hahn (+650) Let’s gamble. I write Horses for Courses, so let’s get #OnBrand. I get that he’s ICE COLD right now but the 2015 champ hasn’t finished worse than T15 here the last three years. Remember, you can change all of your weeklong picks throughout the week, so riding a longshot isn’t the worst strategy in the business! Rob … C.T. Pan (+850) Gee, partner. Thanks for the advice! I’ll have to remember that. Molinari checks in at +425 here but Pan at twice the payoff is totally worth the early nod. He finished T20 here last year (in his fourth start) and he’s peppered leaderboards at times with top 20s. That’s all well and good, but the 30-year-old always has presented as a go-to on tough tracks. No, it’s not a sure thing, nothing is, but he does some of his best work when par is a good score. Pan isn’t quite at the class-is-permanent level, but he can see it from where he operates. The sequence of variables at Riviera are aligned to prove it. ROUND 1 Leader Glass … Patrick Cantlay (+2500) Saddle up, folks! Ready? Last four first rounds here: 67-68-68-66. Also, a bit hot in ALL FACETS of his game, no? Rob … Luke List (+6000) In full disclosure, either I’m missing something or I don’t have a mechanism for blind confidence. Connecting for the first-round leader, or the leader of any round, is akin to playing the lottery. Sure, you can kind of rule out a percentage of possibilities, but this is just an educated dart. For me, I’ve always espoused steering toward the draw with the better weather and/or wind. When it’s balanced and neutral as it will be throughout Thursday in Pacific Palisades, California, I default to the morning wave, and I’m hardly alone. Softer conditions from overnight moisture that settles and pure greens allow for better scoring. It’s that simple. Cantlay is perched atop my Power Rankings, but he goes out at 12:21 p.m. PT in the opening round. Pass. List tees off at 7:46 a.m., and he starts on the par-5 first hole with that elevated box beside the clubhouse. It’s been the easiest hole on Riviera for forever and it’s among the easiest par 5s on the PGA TOUR annually. He just captured his first TOUR title at Torrey Pines and he’s been among the best performers all season. So, give me the bomber to circle a birdie or even an eagle to ignite his day and keep that rally rolling. Make the Cut Rob … Francesco Molinari (-188) How do you say, “Duh,” in Italian? Not only is he already my outright, but his odds are the longest of the offerings. It’s almost an insult at this point. It’s important to note that, unlike the weeklong props, you will not be able to change this pick after the R1 deadline, but you won’t see an outcome on your home page until the 36-hole cut falls. Glass … Cameron Tringale (-277) Again, sniffing around for some value. I’ll ride his nine paydays from 10 starts at The Riv. Of them, seven are T30 or better, so you might shoehorn him in somewhere else if you need! Oh, and he’s on the “every” this week of his “every other week” streak of big finishes. Matchup Glass … Joaquin Niemann over Robert Streb and Adam Long. Opened his season T6 on Poa at Torrey before jetting off to Saudi Arabia for another top 10 (T8). Dialed in and easily the class of this 3 ball as Long is 0-3 and Streb is 0-7 here. Rob … Talor Gooch over Erik van Rooyen and Chez Reavie It’d be logical to double down on my FRL, Luke List, but the angle here isn’t the same. It’s relative to the group and the potential influence of its dynamics, but I do like the opportunity to take advantage of the vacuum of the morning conditions. I also like putting points on the board early for psychological reasons. With a multiplier of only 25 in R1, it’s not worth reaching. Can’t win the thing on Thursday! Moreover, of the first six wagers we make, this is the easiest to convert, so go ahead and drive to the hoop for the layup. Gooch, who goes off the par-4 10th at 7:13 a.m. PT, is having himself a season. In addition to his breakthrough victory at Sea Island, he’s second on TOUR in both red numbers (34) and sub-70s (30). In three appearances at Riviera, he’s finished a respective T20, T10 and T12 with a scoring average of 69.75. EVR is 0-for-1 with an average of 72.50 in his two rounds. Stallings exploded for a T4 in 2018, but it’s his only top 40 among three paydays in six trips. His scoring average in 30 rounds is 72.37. LATER ROUNDS Don’t forget, if you want to get the maximum chance at points, you’ll need to return prior to rounds 2, 3 and 4 to pick from three categories each round! There will be some variance between tournaments but the choices will come from the markets PointsBet provides. It’s likely most second rounds will see you picking two separate 3-ball results and which player will lead at the halfway mark. Start thinking about which players grind to make cuts, or who is prone to producing rebound rounds. It might be prudent to also think about those who may be mentally moving on to the following week a little early. Round 3 is slated to provide you with six match ups (2 or 3-Balls depending on tournament), from which you’ll have to make three selections. Who are the moving day masters? The final round, which carries the 100-point multiplier, will have you select three matchups from the final six groups of the tournament. As you watch those key players down the stretch remember you can change your weeklong outright winner if your choice has faded! How long will you keep the faith before jumping ship? Will a late change be enough to finish in the cash? If not, well you live to fight another week as we all go back to zero to kick off the next tournament! We hope you enjoy the ride as much as we intend to. Good luck!

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2nd Round 3-Balls - K. Onishi / M. Creighton / M. Anderson
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Matthew Anderson+140
Myles Creighton+185
Kaito Onishi+210
2nd Round 3-Balls - T. Rosenmueller / M. Andersen / J. Goldenberg
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Thomas Rosenmueller+100
Matthew Anderson+170
Josh Goldenberg+340
2nd Round 3-Balls - K. Velo / B. Thornberry / W. Heffernan
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Kevin Velo+110
Braden Thornberry+145
Wes Heffernan+375
2nd Round 3-Balls - P. Peterson / P. Knowles / H. Thomson
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Hunter Thomson+135
Paul Peterson+140
Philip Knowles+300
2nd Round 3-Balls - N. Norgaard / G. Sargent / J. Keefer
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Johnny Keefer+110
Niklas Norgaard+120
Gordon Sargent+550
2nd Round 3-Balls - A. Rozner / V. Covello / W. Wang
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Antoine Rozner-230
Vince Covello+400
Wei-Hsuan Wang+425
2nd Round 3-Balls - T. Kanaya / T. Cone / A.J. Ewart
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Takumi Kanaya-110
A J Ewart+250
Trevor Cone+250
2nd Round 3-Balls - N. Goodwin / Y. Cao / B. Botha
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Noah Goodwin+110
Barend Botha+200
Yi Cao+250
Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Justin Thomas+1100
Joaquin Niemann+1400
Shane Lowry+1600
Tommy Fleetwood+1800
Tyrrell Hatton+1800
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Rory McIlroy+650
Bryson DeChambeau+700
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Shane Lowry+3500
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Cameron Young’s ‘Sliding Doors’ momentCameron Young’s ‘Sliding Doors’ moment

Cameron Young was not quite a year old when “Sliding Doors” hit theaters in 1998, but the Gwyneth Paltrow romantic comedy resonates with the PGA TOUR rookie and his wife, Kelsey. As in the movie, his present circumstances – 17th in the FedExCup after two runner-up finishes, most recently at The Genesis Invitational last week – go back to one seemingly innocuous moment. Without it, one could argue, he wouldn’t be on the PGA TOUR yet, let alone in pole position for Arnold Palmer Rookie of the Year. It was August of 2020, and Young was a frustrated, if highly decorated amateur who had reached an inflection point as he contemplated whether to leave home in Florida for a Korn Ferry Tour Monday qualifier for the Pinnacle Bank Championship in Omaha, Nebraska. Burnt out, he decided to skip it. Life at this level was a thankless grind. Maybe he wasn’t good enough. Of course, no one would think that of him today, just as no one would have suggested it when he was a kid. A dynamo on the New York amateur scene, Young was the youngest winner of the Westchester Amateur at 14, youngest winner of the Ike Championship at 18 – a title he successfully defended – and the first amateur to win the New York State Open in 2017. He got a scholarship to join Will Zalatoris at Wake Forest, where he won twice as a freshman and was a three-time all-conference performer. Zalatoris recalls a nine-hole practice round in which Young, running late, joined them on the fourth hole, made a flurry of birdies and eagles, then began thinking aloud where they might all decamp for dinner. “Didn’t hit a single ball warming up,” Zalatoris says, “didn’t hit a single putt …’” After college, Young was antsy to turn pro and reach the PGA TOUR, like contemporaries Collin Morikawa, Matthew Wolff, Viktor Hovland, and Zalatoris. Young medaled at PGA TOUR Canada qualifying school in March of 2020, but then the world, and his career, ground to a halt. “That was the day they announced shutting all golf down for the foreseeable future thanks to COVID,” he says. “So that’s in March and you wait around until May and you’re hoping at end of May you will play in Canada and then it’s June, July, and then that tour is cancelled. “Sitting there for those months, stuck, was awful.” When golf in some capacity started back up his only avenue was the Korn Ferry Tour Monday qualifiers and mini tour events, a life Young called “miserable.” He yearned to compete on a bigger stage. “People don’t always realize how fine the lines are,” he says. “At that level everyone is good, everyone is trying to do the same thing and unless you do something special you won’t get anywhere. You can shoot 65 every week and you don’t get anything, not that I did that, but I did play three Mondays in a row and two mini tour events in between them and I went back and did the math. My scoring average was like 66.8 for those three weeks and I made just $100 and didn’t qualify out of any of the Mondays.” The frustration informed his decision to skip a trip to Omaha for another Monday qualifier in August. Having spent so much time on the road, he felt it was time to regroup at home with Kelsey in Florida. “It was either Thursday or Friday night,” he says of his Gwyneth Paltrow/Sliding Doors moment, “and I told her, ‘I’m not going. It’s the last one of the season – what’s the point? I’m done.’ I didn’t want to go; I was fed up with playing really well and getting nothing for it. But to her credit she said, ‘You’re right. It’s the last one of the season. So why don’t you go? You can have a break after.’” Looking for a second opinion, Young called his coach and father, David, PGA of America Professional and the head pro at Sleepy Hollow Country Club in Scarborough, New York. That’s where Cameron had learned the game from the age of 4. It was where he would jump off the train from school, grab a wedge and balls, and milk the last minutes of daylight. Now, though, his life had gotten complicated. This wasn’t the first time he’d wanted to quit; Young says that as he matured, he began to rely on his father’s patient counsel more and more. (He still plays regularly with his dad, whom he first beat when he shot 68 at age 12, and mom Barbara, a very good player who has caddied for Cameron.) This time, David, like Kelsey, advised Cameron to play on. So Young begrudgingly packed a bag and told Kelsey he’d see her in 36 hours. He wouldn’t come home for six weeks. A life-changing run Young got through the Monday qualifier in Omaha, despite sleeping through his alarm and making it to the course just 25 minutes prior to his tee time. He then finished T11 in the tournament proper. Players who finish in the top 25 on the Korn Ferry earn another start the following week, so Young was off to the Portland Open, where he tied for 14th. After so much frustration, it was finally happening. He finished T6 at the Albertsons Boise Open (T6) and almost won the Nationwide Children’s Hospital Open in Columbus Ohio but settled for a runner-up finish. He missed the cut in the Korn Ferry Tour Championship, but thanks to his decision to play in Omaha, and his subsequent heater, he now had a place to play going forward. He had Special Temporary Membership. And just in time. Before Omaha, he was unsure how he was going to fund his upcoming entry fees and travel. “I think I had more golf planned for the next two weeks than I had money to pay for it,” Young says. “I had like five grand to my name. I was literally drafting an email for the membership at Sleepy Hollow for potential support. If I was a shot or two worse, I wouldn’t have got in the following week so you think of all the six footers that kind of bounced in or fell off the lip. That’s how cutthroat golf is. That’s the difference from being here on the PGA TOUR to being God knows where.” After a tough start last season, Young became the 10th back-to-back winner in Korn Ferry Tour history at the AdventHealth Championship (May 23) and NV5 Invitational presented by Old National Bank (May 30). He shared the lead once and led outright for the other seven rounds, a Korn Ferry Tour record, and would finish 19th in the regular season points list to punch his ticket to the PGA TOUR. “After the first win I think I moved to 26th on the list and a TOUR card all of a sudden became possible in my mind,” he says. “It was the rejuvenation of the season I needed. I went from feeling that I didn’t know what I was doing to thinking, I’m right there. My mentality changed and from there it was easier.” The momentum from his first win carried straight through to his second, and although he badly wanted a third win and with it an automatic promotion to the PGA TOUR, he would take on two more top-10s. “The KFT is a great place to develop,” Young says, “a great place for the next guys to come through, but the hard part is no one wants to be there. You are so happy when you get there because it means you can get to the PGA TOUR, but as soon as you earn status out there you are trying to leave as fast as you can. “The mood on the range on the KFT is so different to the PGA TOUR.” Fast start as a rookie It was such a grind to make it to the PGA TOUR, Young vowed to do whatever it took to stick. In his second start of this season, at the Sanderson Farms Championship, he finished second to former junior Ryder Cup teammate Sam Burns. A couple of weeks on the periphery of contention followed. Young was in the mix at The American Express before a final-round 77. He shot a third-round 64 at the Farmers Insurance Open. Then he came to The Genesis Invitational at The Riviera Country Club. It was a stacked field, but the big-hitting rookie liked the course and predicted he would do well. “I’m going to have a couple good chances to win coming up because I’m playing pretty good and simple golf,” Young said Wednesday, as the best field of the season so far prepared to tee it up. “I am blessed that throughout my life I’ve always had a couple of weeks when I’ve been really good and typically it’s been good enough to win and I’m living under the assumption that that will continue.” Sure enough, Young opened 66, 62, which in any other year would have grabbed the headlines. Joaquin Niemann opened 63-63 and went on to win the tournament by two over Young and Collin Morikawa. Young now heads to The Honda Classic at PGA National, where he once claimed a huge American Junior Golf Association victory in 2013. The good vibes continue and as we’ve seen, when Young is in form, he tends to maintain momentum. And he’s home in Florida with family, including newborn son Henry. He ranks second on TOUR in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee (+.812) and fourth in driving distance (320.2). He has more drives of 320+ yards than anyone else on TOUR, with his 183 well ahead of Joseph Bramlett’s 157. World No.1 Jon Rahm has 113. Young is also 7th in birdie average with five a round. His run of results has him 53rd in the world, up from 526th on May 1, 2021. If he can find a way into the top 50, it would mean a berth in THE PLAYERS Championship and possibly the Masters. “I’m looking forward to playing at PGA National again,” Young says. He is aware of his ranking but says he’s trying not to dwell on it, instead focusing on what has been working in his game. “If you told me before the season that I’d be at this point now I certainly wouldn’t have believed you,” he says. “I would have been thrilled with it, I’m sure. Now, we just keep going and see what happens. At the end of the day, I know I’m somewhat lucky to be out here. Although I’m confident I would have found a way, I’ve seen how one moment can change your life. I don’t intend to take anything for granted.”

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Louis Oosthuizen in good form entering the Presidents CupLouis Oosthuizen in good form entering the Presidents Cup

SYDNEY, Australia – South African Louis Oosthuizen fell just short of winning the Australian Open but has positioned himself as the potential spearhead for Ernie Els ahead of the Presidents Cup. Already the only player on Els’ International Team with a winning record in the biennial team competition against the U.S., Oosthuizen produced a huge eagle on the final hole at The Australian Golf Club to make local Matt Jones sweat. RELATED: Inside the International’s dominating 1998 win | Internationals hoping for South African omen Jones – a former winner of the Houston Open – ultimately survived a drama-filled trip down the par-5 18th to secure his second national championship at the course he grew up on. Oosthuizen’s eagle left him with the round of the day, a 5-under 66 and finished at 14 under. But Jones dropped in a testy 5-foot par put after going from bunker, to woodchips, to a tight lie short of the green to win by a shot. Still, Oosthuizen showed he will be a force at this week’s Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne against Tiger Woods and his formidable U.S. Team. “I used this week as preparation for next and obviously I’ll take a lot of confidence out of this and hopefully we can pull it off next week,â€� Oosthuizen said. “I’m ready. Game face is on now and I’m ready.â€� Marc Leishman was the next best member of the International Team and finished in a tie for 10th. Cameron Smith was tied for 27th and defending champion Abraham Ancer was 33rd. “We’re ready to go, and looking forward to it,â€� Leishman said. “I’m pleased with the way I drove the ball and then the way I chipped. I putted well; I just wasn’t reading the greens awesome, but off the tee and around the greens I was pretty pleased with. “If I could take that over into next week and sharpen my irons up a little bit, should be good to go. It’s been a pretty easy week this week energy-wise, so we are excited about next week and hopefully we can play well.â€� Adam Scott and C.T. Pan failed to make the cut although Els was not concerned with their form. Byeong Hun An, Joaquin Niemann, Hideki Matsuyama, Haotong Li, Adam Hadwin and Sungjae Im all rested this week. “My long-term view is long-term form. I’ve picked guys who have played well for a long term.  One week or one round is not going to change anything in my view,â€� Els said. “The guys are quality players; they’ve made great strides in making the team and I believe in them. If they have a bad round or a bad tournament, it’s not changing my view on that.â€� Jones, fellow Australian Aaron Pike and Japanese amateur Takumi Kanaya all booked spots in the 2020 Open Championship at Royal St George’s from July 16-19 as the highest three players not already exempt.

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