Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Pick ‘Em Preview: Valspar Championship

Pick ‘Em Preview: Valspar Championship

We got ourselves a baller in the house. PGA TOUR Pick ‘Em Live is just four weeks old, but Rob already has hung up a pair of top 10s. After finishing third of about 5,700 entries at The Honda Classic, he wrangled a 10th among a little over 7,000 at THE PLAYERS Championship. Yeah, only the top five pay, but it’s a good thing – for you, wink wink – that he’s ineligible for prize money. As Rob himself declared at the outset, it’s always easier to win when a new game is launched. Not only is there a learning curve en masse, but traditionally there are fewer people against whom to compete until momentum builds. The expectation – and the plan, naturally – is for PGA TOUR Pick ‘Em Live to grow, but only the top five cash no matter how many are entered. In this week’s Draws and Fades, Rob walks you through his process that led to his performance at THE PLAYERS. It includes an accidental discovery of the difference in the timing of when the odds are updated on the interface (where the game is hosted) and PointsBet’s app. Capitalize on it. The Valspar Championship has us settling into what is a more familiar construct of a field. It’s more difficult to uncover the gems, but that’s why Glass and Rob collaborate for this weekly file in addition to their regular contributions across the FANTASY page. Register for PGA TOUR Pick ‘Em Live here and monitor their progress as Influencers; however, given Rob’s early success, you likely wouldn’t have to scroll or swipe for long to find him on the main leaderboard. For a broader explanation of the format and FAQs, click here. WEEKLONG Outright Rob … Denny McCarthy (+8000) Gosh, it feels good to have the honor again. Even better, with every passing week, I’m feeling the rhythm of the game. There’s no reason not to let a reach ride for a while. Remain patient and let the play develop. I omitted deeper analysis on McCarthy in my preview material, but not because he doesn’t make sense. There are just some guys who get overcovered for stretches for various reasons, so when the opportunity to expand the lens is presented, I take advantage. He’s among the most accurate off the tee and his putting takes the pressure off his mediocre irons. So, in a field with considerable strength at the top, but in a tournament with established competitive balance, I prefer the strong position of opening with a non-winner who has a decently balanced bag and a little mojo. Glass … Russell Knox (+6000) The Jacksonville resident battled through four rounds at par or better in his backyard at TPC Sawgrass before picking up his second top 10 (T6) of 2022. Rolling into Innisbrook on three consecutive T24-or-better finishes on the track, his three best from eight previous trips, suggests he has the digits to crack the code. The Florida grass and weather shouldn’t bother him and neither will be flying under the radar. I’m moving against a massive winner’s trend of succeeding early at this event but his play has been more than steady with five consecutive paydays, including a T7 at Sony on a demanding driving golf course at Waialae. Top 10 Glass … Alex Smalley (+1100) After seeing my dude peg Kisner at +1400 for a top 10 last week, I’m inspired to catch one of my own BIG FISH. Smalley didn’t have to fight the conditions for FIVE days last week and has been churning out results in 2022. Making the cut at Genesis, Honda and Arnold Palmer suggests he’s not intimidated by big ball-striking tracks. He’s in the top 75 of distance, fairways and greens in regulation, all of which plays this week. Let’s ride! Rob … Bubba Watson (+525) Glass is right about one thing, I am a dude who nailed Kisner last week – I also love his approach for Smalley – but I was grateful that the Top 10 bets never unlocked during THE PLAYERS, at least when I was paying attention, which was quite a bit. After a second-round 74, Kisner sat T22, so I may have been persuaded to modify the selection. We’ll never know, it doesn’t matter and I don’t care! Unlike THE PLAYERS where the depth of the field begets strong value deep in the ranks, the Valspar Championship encourages a conservative choice to benefit from a smaller sample size worthy of it. Watson is No. 8 in my Power Rankings. His firepower alone tempers his odds, but that value is strong considering he’s finished a respective T4 and T13 in the last two editions of the tournament. He also was the victim of Harold Varner III’s crazy-long birdie conversion at the buzzer of the Saudi Invite in early February. The home-state vibes and chill atmosphere at Copperhead are bonuses. Top 20 Rob … Vaughn Taylor (+700) As long as this unlocks, I’m going to swing for the fence before the tournament starts, but even if it doesn’t, the strategy of not making contact doesn’t cost as much as a more aggressive decision elsewhere. Consider that the longest odds on the board for a Top 20 are just +1700. Solid, but not necessarily game-changing when all you care about is a top-five finish. Taylor checks the boxes for converging trends, and that’s good enough for me. He finished T18 (2019) and T6 (2021) in the last two editions of the tournament, and he went for a T7 in his last start in Puerto Rico. That top 10 got him into the field this week. He’s one of my Sleepers. Glass … Mito Pereira (+400) Hitting it great here is paramount unless you scramble like Jordan Spieth or Patrick Reed, so I’ll run out fresh blood again with Pereira. His numbers off the tee and into greens stick out for me, and so does his T15 at Genesis (first time) and Honda (T30). I’ll toss in a T25 at Torrey Pines just to reinforce his strength tee to green. There’s no faking it at Riviera or Torrey Pines, so I’ll roll the dice. ROUND 1 Leader Rob … Patton Kizzire (+10000) When I joined Glass on his radio show on the Thursday afternoon of THE PLAYERS, I told him that he knew that I wasn’t going to let him bask for long after he had connected with Rory McIlroy as the R1 leader at Bay Hill the previous week. Tommy Fleetwood answered at TPC Sawgrass, and at four times the kickback. Boom. Quite simply, the strategy paid off. While Fleetwood was in the more fortunate wave, the plan all along was to toss out a guy who went out early. What’s more, and coincidentally, he had been a R1 leader at THE PLAYERS before. As I also explained and promised last week, my strategy henceforth will be to grab a guy in the early wave and remain fluid throughout the day. At Copperhead, I want my choice to navigate The Snake Pit mid-round and not at the end. Holes 16, 17 and 18 always average over par, but the par-5 first hole is one of the easiest on the entire PGA TOUR. Therefore, I want him to pounce on it not only after The Snake Pit but once he’s warm, so in addition to focusing only on the early wavers, I care only about guys starting on No. 10. Kizzire goes off 10 at 8:46 a.m. ET. He’s seventh on TOUR in first-round scoring average (68.15) and tops among the commitments. He’s opened 12 of his 13 starts this season with red numbers. His lowest score among 14 rounds at Copperhead is a 5-under 66 in the opening round of the tournament last year. Glass … Keegan Bradley (+5000) I rode the roller coaster of self-inflicted wounds last week with the big-boy ball-striker at TPC Sawgrass. My pre-tournament OUTRIGHT WINNER (at +8000) found himself one shot off the lead on the back nine, but I had already abandoned ship. I’M WEAK, I KNOW. A fantastic round turned to dust late on MONDAY but his form was never in question. Rob’s man-crush – well, ONE of them – opened here last year with 65, tied the 36-hole record and played from the final group on Sunday. There are many, many worse plays than this on the board this week! 3-Ball Glass … Joel Dahmen (ENTER ODDS HERE) over Andrew Landry and Michael Thompson First-round leader on debut here in 2019 takes on Landry (5 consecutive MC) and Thompson (4 consecutive MC before T60 last week). Dahmen’s T33 extends a run of four straight on TOUR, so I’ll ride the hottest hand of the trio. Rob … David Lipsky (+194) over Sahith Theegala and Bernd Wiesberger Remember, the reward outweighs failure when it comes to a single round, and because we’re credited with coins valued at just one-quarter the odds, go heavy on the risk. A winning bet at +100 yields 25 coins. Double the odds and you bank just 50 coins. In your pursuit of the top five for prize money, the difference is negligible if you lose. But because it’s golf, the law of averages is going to pay you more often than you think it will. I went heavy in all nine of my 3-balls at THE PLAYERS. Four came through for a value of 745 coins, and I was shut out in the finale (out of a possible 655 coins), but that haul represented just shy of only 18 percent of my overall, and I finished 509 coins outside the top five in a week when only two of the top 10 were paid by Cameron Smith’s opening outright line of +3300. (For more detail, jump to my Draws and Fades linked at the top.) So, I’m keeping it simple and leaning on a worldly veteran in Lipsky whose ball-striking is more encouraging than the feel game of his younger fellow rookie, Theegala, and the underachieving Wiesberger, who has only two top 10s in 65 PGA TOUR starts across 10 seasons. Make the Cut Glass … Russell Knox (-225) For reasons stated above, this makes sense. His game thrives tee to green and that’s what is required this week. When in doubt, I prefer riding the heat. Rob … Alex Noren (-200) Kevin Kisner (-180) is the only option with longer odds, but the street loves the Swede, so I might as well hop on the bandwagon. Noren finished T21 in his only appearance here last year. He’s also missed only two cuts in his last 12 starts in tournaments worldwide with a cut. He’s cashed in five straight upon arrival, two of which for a top 10.

Click here to read the full article

Are you unsure about the different payment methods on online gambling sites? Our partners site Hypercasinos.com has written a complete guide to payment methods at online gambling sites. Be sure to read this before depositing.

The Chevron Championship
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Jeeno Thitikul+900
Nelly Korda+1000
Lydia Ko+1400
Jin Young Ko+2000
A Lim Kim+2200
Ayaka Furue+2500
Charley Hull+2500
Haeran Ryu+2500
Lauren Coughlin+2500
Minjee Lee+2500
Click here for more...
Zurich Classic of New Orleans
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy / Shane Lowry+350
Collin Morikawa / Kurt Kitayama+1100
J.T. Poston / Keith Mitchell+1800
Thomas Detry / Robert MacIntyre+1800
Billy Horschel / Tom Hoge+2000
Aaron Rai / Sahith Theegala+2200
Ben Griffin / Andrew Novak+2200
Wyndham Clark / Taylor Moore+2200
Nico Echavarria / Max Greyserman+2500
Nicolai Hojgaard / Rasmus Hojgaard+2500
Click here for more...
Mitsubishi Electric Classic
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Steven Alker+700
Stewart Cink+700
Padraig Harrington+800
Ernie Els+1000
Miguel Angel Jimenez+1200
Alex Cejka+2000
Bernhard Langer+2000
Stephen Ames+2000
Richard Green+2200
Freddie Jacobson+2500
Click here for more...
Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
Ludvig Aberg+400
Collin Morikawa+450
Jon Rahm+450
Justin Thomas+550
Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
Click here for more...
PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Xander Schauffele+1400
Jon Rahm+1800
Justin Thomas+1800
Collin Morikawa+2000
Brooks Koepka+2500
Viktor Hovland+2500
Click here for more...
US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Viktor Hovland+2000
Click here for more...
The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
Click here for more...
Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

Related Post

Pick ‘Em Preview: Mexico Open at VidantaPick ‘Em Preview: Mexico Open at Vidanta

Rob would tell you that it’s not supposed to be this easy, but with yet another top 25, how else would you describe it? Having connected for, count ‘em, four ties in 2-balls in the last two rounds of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, Rob finished 23rd of 4,332. That piles onto a third at The Honda Classic, a 10th at THE PLAYERS Championship and a 19th at the RBC Heritage. Suffice it to say that he’s feeling confident about retaining his card. Yuks aside, the strategy to go all-in on 2-balls is why he’s been so lucky. Yes, he was on board with Sepp Straka at +10000 during R2 of the Honda, and Tommy Fleetwood yielded 2,000 coins as the R1 leader at THE PLAYERS but leveraging the 2-balls has been the primary shortcut to the top. Remember, even landing one is worth six or seven single picks at +100. For more proof, consider that Zurich champions Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele paid out at just +850 for their wire-to-wire win. Four of the top-five finishers in PGA TOUR Pick ‘Em Live were on board at that rate, but Jherr24 placed second with the tandem at just (-9999). That entry’s faith in the two-man team of Justin Lower and Dylan Wu (T10) for a Top 10 at +425 and a Top 20 at +270 was rewarded, but it also landed four ties on top of a pair of single picks in 2-balls. It bears repeating the advice that with no leagues, the weekly points reset and with prize money reserved for only the top five, swing for the fence on every opportunity. You just might connect. Register for PGA TOUR Pick ‘Em Live here and monitor Rob’s and Glass’ progress as Influencers. For a broader explanation of the format and FAQs, click here. TOURNAMENT TO WIN Rob … Mark Hubbard (+6000) You don’t need me to tell you that it’s Jon Rahm and then everyone else at the Mexico Open at Vidanta. Oh, wait, I just did. Well, if you’re taking the field, then go long or be gone, especially in a format that allows changes. That Hubbard is “only” a 60-to-1 shot gives you an indication of how flat the pricing is in the belly of this beast. However, it’s also respectful given his recent flourish of top-15 finishes across the top-two tiers of PGA TOUR-sanctioned competition. It’s also why he’s featured in my Power Rankings. Glass … Nate Lashley (+9000) Good vibes began on paspalum with his first Korn Ferry Tour victory at Corales in 2017. The vibin’ continued with his first top 10 on TOUR on paspalum in Puerto Rico the following season. This year, his two best paydays are T7 at Puerto Rico and T15 at Corales. Passing on the paspalum player? Preposterous! TOP 10 Rob … Callum Tarren (+1200) Because of the construct of the field and the blank slate of experience on this unfamiliar course, the PointsBet board will be a dizzying array of green and red arrows and boxes more this week than most. What a time to take a flier. The 31-year-old rookie hadn’t made any noise until February. Since, he’s connected for a T5 on the paspalum in Puerto Rico and a pair of top 20s on the KFT. The Brit is long off the tee and fairly precise with his irons, both handy tools on a long track with four par 5s and the mystery of the greens. You’ll find more on him and others in Draws and Fades. Glass … Brian Stuard (+850) Of his last eight on TOUR, five have painted the top 22, including a T7 at a big ball park at Corales. His record at Mayakoba – Greg Norman’s other course in Mexico used for TOUR events – is excellent as well, as he’s No. 10 on the all-time money list. TOP 20 Glass … Andrew Novak (+500) I’ve had to turn my FREE WHEELIN’ WAYS down on this selection because I haven’t been very good at catching the window to make adjustments during tournaments. Gone are the days of +1000 or better bottles full of lightning. Here are the days of measured, LOCKED-IN selections. Novak has three top-25 finishes on the season and they are ALL ON PASPALUM. If he doesn’t get off to a hot start, I’ll have to stand guard for the window to open! Rob … Brian Stuard (+400) As Glass and I compare notes during tournaments, we’ve arrived at his realization above. If the Top 20 unlocked last week, I also missed it, but it’s not the first time. The Top 10 has unlocked, but it’s usually only for a short period of time and very early on the East Coast of the U.S. or very, very late in the west where I live. Anyone have a time share on Oahu to donate to our cause? I’m also concurring with his move toward Stuard, just not as aggressively. Callum Tarren (my Top 10) is at +500 for a Top 20, but again, I may not get the chance to adjust, and that has influenced this decision. I’ll add that Stuard’s success of late also has occurred on paspalum, and that he’s been in a groove since February, so it’s more than just about his fit in these climes and on this grass. ROUND 1 LEADER Glass … Jon Rahm (+1600) Since he’s no longer No. 1 in the world, I’m expecting him to come out of the gate on fire. He starts on the back side as the fourth 3-ball off. The back nine has three par 5s, which should have him licking his chops. Crosswinds can develop later in the day, so I’ll saddle up on fresh greens and likely calmer sea breezes during the morning hours. Rob … Aaron Rai (+5000) See: Glass. Rai goes out in the first threesome off No. 10, so his perspective and conditions will be just a little bit cleaner than Rahm’s on the scorable back side. The Englishman delivered on cue with fellow rookie David Lipsky last week (T4), so he should hit paspalum percolating. Of course, and this never can be overstated, the biggest advantage to getting on a guy at the gun is the power to adjust sooner than anyone else. MAKE THE CUT Rob … Chase Seiffert (-160) The longest odds on the board yield just 16 coins. As has been my narrative throughout this game, I’ll take ’em. Seiffert is one of my Sleepers, so I already have the confidence that he’ll do more than just fulfill this prop. He’s cashed in four straight upon arrival, two of which for a top 25. The kicker is that he’s sticking with only PGA TOUR commitments thus far despite conditional status, so it’s not in his cards to go all-in and leave Banderas Bay without a little booty. Glass … Tyler Duncan (-175) Backed up his T12 at Harbour Town with T14 (and a Top 20 cash for me) last week at Zurich. Quietly rolling along with T35 or better in five of his last six as he continues to paint fairways and greens. 3-BALL Glass … Brendon Todd (+210) over Patrick Reed and Sebastián Muñoz We haven’t seen Reed since the Masters and Munoz since Match Play so I’ll ride the guy who won’t need to worry about shaking off any rust. Todd is 48-under in his last three visits in the last three seasons at Mayakoba. That makes him a horse for a Greg Norman course. Rob … C.T. Pan (+125) over Chez Reavie & Kevin Tway If you haven’t caught on, Glass and I submit our R1 3-balls blind. Due to the tight window in scheduling this conversation – we actually make our selections live with each other on Tuesday nights; it’s a hoot – we guess for which ones PointsBet will have a market on Wednesday. We’ve been decent at it, missing on only a couple of occasions, but for those that stick, it may seem odd that neither of us is taking a risk on what essentially is an inconsequential kickback. So it goes. As I reviewed the tee times for the Mexico Open at Vidanta, it’s evident how many favorites will populate the board, so I figured I’d lean into one likely to land in the middle third of odds for whichever golfer is the favorite. I’m going to assume it’s Pan. I’ve guessed wrong multiple times, so that’s always intriguing given my experience and how I process the action. Whatever the case, Reavie is slumping and Tway has been playing through a wrist injury. NOTE: While Glass and Rob typically stick with their selections as detailed in Pick ‘Em Preview, they are allowed the right to make changes at any time.

Click here to read the full article

Expert Picks: Charles Schwab ChallengeExpert Picks: Charles Schwab Challenge

How it works: Each week, our experts from PGATOUR.COM will make their selections in PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf. Each lineup consists of four starters and two bench players that can be rotated after each round. Adding to the challenge is that every golfer can be used only three times per each of four Segments. Aside from the experts below, Fantasy Insider Rob Bolton breaks down the field at this year’s Charles Schwab Challenge in this week’s edition of the Power Rankings. For more fantasy, check out Rookie Ranking, Qualifiers and Reshuffle. RELATED: Play Pick ‘Em Live THINK YOU’RE BETTER THAN OUR EXPERTS? The PGA TOUR Experts league is once again open to the public. You can play our free fantasy game and see how you measure up against our experts below. Joining the league is simple. Just click here to sign up or log in. Once you create a team, click the “LEAGUES” tab. Then click on “FEATURED,” and then on the PGA TOUR Experts league that populates. SEASON SEGMENT

Click here to read the full article

Kim’s comfortability gets him another victoryKim’s comfortability gets him another victory

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – The birdie putt on the seventh hole Sunday was from 24 1/2 feet. When it dropped, Si Woo Kim knew he stood alone atop THE PLAYERS Championship leaderboard. Then something unexpected happened in the pressure-packed environment on one of golf’s most challenging tests. Kim got comfortable. Wait, let’s amend that. Kim – the youngest active player on the PGA TOUR — got comfortable. Comfort is not supposed to be an option, not here, not at TPC Sawgrass, and especially not for 21-year-olds with limited experience in these matters. THE PLAYERS Stadium Course is meant to rattle your cages, test your mettle, fray your nerves. But on a Sunday afternoon when the heat is usually ramped up, Kim became the coolest player on the course. Calm. In control. “Once he got the lead,” said his caddie, Mark Carens, “that was the least pressure he felt.” So for his final 11 holes, while his chasers struggled to keep pace and make him sweat, the Korean-born Kim — who now lives in Dallas, Texas – offered up a steady ship, deftly relying on his scrambling ability to bail him out of any precarious situations. He never stumbled, eventually producing a bogey-free 69 and a 10-under total – good enough to make him the youngest champ in PLAYERS history. The statistic that most reflects his winning round was easy to find: Kim missed 10 greens in regulation, and successfully scrambled each time. “If you are on your game and playing well, that’s the things you do,” said Louis Oosthuizen, his playing partner Sunday. “You up-and-down when you’re in trouble. You don’t give shots away. If you can do that around this golf course, you can outscore everyone. “And he played like someone that was doing it for five or six years, like it was just another round of golf. … Never once did he look flustered.” That’s surprising, given his age. But then, he seems to be a player who’s ahead of the curve. Kim gained his TOUR card through q-school at age 17 1/2 – and then had to wait a half-year before reaching the mandatory age of 18 to play on TOUR. After spending two years on the Web.com Tour, he regained his TOUR card for the 2015-16 season and made a big early impression on his caddie. In his fourth start, he opened with consecutive bogey-free rounds (sound familiar?) en route to a tie for 17th. “It was unbelievable,” Carens said. Then at the Wyndham Championship last August, in just his 23rd start on TOUR, Kim shot a second-round 60 – he missed a 50-foot putt on his final hole for a 59. He eventually won that week in convincing fashion, by five strokes in a final round that seemed eerily familiar to how THE PLAYERS unfolded. Once Kim snagged the lead, he never let it go. He credits the week at Sedgefield with helping him deal with Sunday’s pressure. He said knowing he had a two-year exemption on TOUR freed him up to be more aggressive. (Of course, by winning THE PLAYERS, he now has another five years.) “Because of that experience,” Kim said through his interpreter, “I could be relieved and I could be very stable. I just focused on myself and I didn’t try to think about others’ scores.” There wasn’t much to think about, honestly. Oosthuizen and Ian Poulter supplied the most pressure, both making their biggest moves at the par-5 11th. Oosthuizen eagled the hole to go to 7 under; Poulter birdied it to reach 9 under. But Poulter quickly gave the stroke back on the next hole and Oosthuizen stumbled with consecutive bogeys. Both had the edge on Kim in experience, especially in dealing with intense situations – Oosthuizen’s an Open champ, Poulter’s a Ryder Cup star. But they could not match Kim on Sunday at TPC Sawgrass, instead finishing tied for second. “You have to take your hat off,” Poulter said. “You have to respect some good golf, and that’s exactly what he’s done.” The performance this week speaks for itself, but in some ways, Kim’s win was most unexpected. Consider his Strokes Gained numbers. Ranked 205th on TOUR Off-the-Tee. Ranked 203rd in Approach-the-Green. Ranked 183rd in Putting. Ranked 204th Tee-to-Green. Ranked 203rd Total. His only solid category was Around-the-Green, in which he ranked 41st. The Golf Channel’s Brandel Chamblee called it “perhaps the greatest upset you’ll ever see” going strictly on statistics. Yet, added Chamblee, TPC Sawgrass “puts everybody on edge, pretty much turns it into a scrambling contest – and he won it.” But perhaps we shouldn’t view this win as unexpected. Perhaps Kim is the next great Korean star, following in the footsteps of another PLAYERS champ, K.J. Choi. After all, at age 21, he’s done something that not even his fellow 20-somethings Jordan Spieth and Rory McIlroy can claim – winning at TPC Sawgrass. Unlike Spieth and McIlroy, though, Kim must one day put his golf career on hold to fulfill the mandatory military service for his country. Considering how he played this week, how bright his future is now, it will be a shame to see him go. Hopefully it won’t happen soon. Plenty of opportunities – big opportunities – await, including the Presidents Cup later this year. The International Team appears to have a new star to lean on. “He’s still young and he was just so calm today,” said Oosthuizen, an International fixture. “He’s going to be great to have as a teammate.” Having just spent 18 holes with the young man, it’s evident Oosthuizen would rather be playing with him than against him.

Click here to read the full article