Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Power Rankings: 2018 Zurich Classic of New Orleans

Power Rankings: 2018 Zurich Classic of New Orleans

Sometimes, no matter the motivation, you just need to go for it. Suffice it to say that the inaugural edition of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans as a two-man team competition found the target in 2017. The reaction from the 160-man field was overly positive and Kevin Kisner’s eagle on the last hole of regulation to force a playoff gave the new format its first “moment.” Not too shabby. This year’s groundbreaking introduction at TPC Louisiana is walk-up music chosen by each of the 80 teams. It’s optional, but given the love affair that most (all?) golfers have with other sports in which it’s a constant if not an expectation, and with the tournament’s unique exploration to attract talent and fans, any usual respectful greetings and applause sans tuneage on the opening tees might seem out of place this week. Once again, there are fascinating connections among the commitments. I’ve segregated 10 with intrigue. Scroll beneath the ranking for five others considered as well as more on the format and the host course. POWER RANKINGS: ZURICH CLASSIC OTHERS CONSIDERED Daniel Berger & Gary Woodland Jason Dufner & Pat Perez Rafa Cabrera Bello & Sergio Garcia Russell Knox & Martin Laird Louis Oosthuizen & Charl Schwartzel PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO omits the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, so Tuesday’s Fantasy Insider will be presented in an abridged format. In last year’s foray and in less-than-ideal conditions during the last three rounds, Jonas Blixt and Cameron Smith prevailed in a four-hole playoff with Kisner and Scott Brown. Both teams hung up 27-under 261s after two rounds each of alternate shot and best ball. The winners were the only duo in the field without a bogey or worse on their card. They set the bar. Tournament organizers have reversed the alternating order of play this year. Rounds 1 and 3 will be best ball, while alternate shot will be used for Rounds 2 and 4. The low 35 teams and ties at the conclusion of 36 holes will survive the cut. Unlike last year, the secondary (MDF) cut no longer applies. Per standard membership provisions, both winners will receive two-year PGA TOUR exemptions or the customary one-year extension in fully exempt status (not to exceed five years beyond this season) if already exempt through 2019-2020. The winners will also receive berths into THE PLAYERS, PGA Championship and all remaining invitationals this season. They’ll also gain entry into the 2019 Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua. FedExCup points and earnings will be distributed just as ties for any place in the final standings are currently determined. The winners will share first- and second-place values and receive 400 FedExCup points and $1,036,800 apiece. Because of the format, Official World Golf Ranking points are not rewarded. This means that the Zurich Classic of New Orleans essentially is a free play from contributing to one’s divisor. If there was a common thread among the winners and contenders at TPC Louisiana last year, it was variety. All shapes and sizes were represented on the final leaderboard, and that’s exactly what any tournament and every golfer wants. The par-72 stretching 7,425 yards is inviting off the tee. Precision on approach is rewarded properly on greens averaging just 5,225 square feet because they’re segmented with undulations that must be respected. The longest rough is trimmed to two inches. Prepped to run at 12 feet on the Stimpmeter because persistent rainfall often assists in pumping the brakes, the overseeded bermuda greens actually might touch that goal this week. The only reasonable threat for inclement weather is forecast for Thursday’s opening round. Thereafter, drier air will take hold. Daytime highs might not reach 80 degrees and wind is not expected to be a factor throughout. It’s going to be beautiful. In benign conditions, 30 under par cannot be ruled out in this format. All members of the teams that finish inside the top five in the tournament will earn exemptions into next week’s Wells Fargo Championship if not already eligible to compete. ROB BOLTON’S SCHEDULE PGATOUR.COM’s Fantasy Insider Rob Bolton covers numerous angles in between tournaments. Look for his following contributions this week. MONDAY: Rookie Ranking, Qualifiers, Reshuffle, Medical Extensions, Power Rankings TUESDAY*: Sleepers, Facebook Live, Fantasy Insider WEDNESDAY: One & Done * – Rob is a member of the panel for PGATOUR.COM’s Expert Picks for PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO, which also publishes on Tuesdays.

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Freddie Jacobson+2500
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Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
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Xander Schauffele+350
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Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
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Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
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Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
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For G-Mac, it all started at the workingman’s clubFor G-Mac, it all started at the workingman’s club

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland – Roughly 180 steps outside the main entry gate for The Open Championship is a small clubhouse. Rathmore Golf Club is the home for the Valley course, the little brother to what the members call the “Big Club,â€� Royal Portrush with its more famous Dunluce course that will get all the TV attention this week. The fact that Rathmore’s clubhouse is outside the ticketed confines of the Open is not particularly intentional, but it is somewhat symbolic. After all, when Rathmore opened in 1947, it was considered an artisans club, one created for the greens staff, the bar staff, the kitchen staff and any others of service to the more elite and well-heeled Royal Portrush. In essence, Rathmore is the affordable club. Or as Graeme McDowell calls it, “the workingman’s club.â€� Up until recently, membership requirements were strictly limited to those in the BT56 – the postal code for Portrush. Fortunately, the McDowell family qualified. The father, Kenny, took up the game in his 30s, carving out time to play despite working three jobs. He quickly introduced his three sons – George, Graeme and Gary – to the game. With four golfers itching to play as much as possible, there was no way the McDowells could afford Royal Portrush. Thankfully, there was an option. “There’s no point beating around the bush here – as a family, we simply couldn’t afford to be members of Portrush,â€� Graeme wrote in a recent blog post for EuropeanTour.com. “In fact, if we had lived in a part of the world where golf was more expensive, I would never have played the game. It’s that simple.â€� On Wednesday, when asked about Rathmore, G-Mac — who used to do his homework in the clubhouse locker room — was even more succinct. “We were lucky … it was cheap,â€� he said. Besides playing golf, Kenny McDowell soon became heavily involved with Rathmore’s junior program. It was a chance to spend more time with his boys – and his middle son loved the atmosphere. “All I ever wanted to do was compete and be at the golf club and hang out,â€� Graeme said. “It certainly kept me out of trouble. Kept me from getting into any other stuff.â€�   It was an older Rathmore junior – Ricky Elliott – who emerged as the city’s best junior player. Graeme wanted to be like Ricky, and when Ricky opted to play collegiately in the United State (at Toledo), Graeme decided to do the same (at Alabama-Birmingham). It was a big turning point in Graeme’s career, realizing that golf could take him places that had previously been beyond his imagination. It reached the pinnacle at the 2010 U.S. Open, when McDowell celebrated his first major victory on the 18th green at Pebble Beach with a big hug from his dad on, fittingly, Father’s Day. That Sunday night at Rathmore, the hour was late when McDowell sank his final putt. Legally, the club was not supposed to stay open past 11 p.m. But with the tournament creeping into 2 a.m. local town, the Rathmore members closed the windows to keep their cheers and the interior lights from disturbing the neighbors. Two days later, McDowell and his dad arrived in Portrush via private jet. That night, they celebrated again, this time in the Rathmore clubhouse. He brought his U.S. Open trophy – and the trophy now resides in a display case in the entry hallway to the club, along with other mementoes from McDowell and Rathmore’s other notable players. “To bring the U.S. Open trophy back to the club of Rathmore was special,â€� McDowell wrote in his blog “I mean that with no disrespect to Royal Portrush in any shape or form. This is about my roots.â€� “This club wouldn’t be the same if not for Graeme,â€� said Stephen Murdock, who started his one-year term as Rathmore’s captain in late March. “He’s a Rathmore man rather than a Royal Portrush man.â€� And now the Open Championship is being held right outside Rathmore’s door. It’s a dream of a lifetime for the hometown boy, but one McDowell might’ve missed had he not finished inside the top 10 at the RBC Canadian Open, grabbing one of the Open qualifying spots that week. He was already planning to attend at a charity event to start the week, a fundraising breakfast for the Portrush Royal National Lifeboat Institution. Graeme’s mother had asked him to speak. “Yes, boss, I’ll be there,â€� joked McDowell, who doubted he would stay in Portrush the rest of the week had he not qualified. He couldn’t stand the thought of being on the sidelines for his hometown Open, a moot point now, of course. At the breakfast, McDowell signed autographs, posed for photos and fielded questions from the crowd of 270. Someone asked him if he would trade his U.S. Open trophy for a chance to win the Claret Jug at Royal Portrush with an 8-foot putt on Sunday. The percentage on the PGA TOUR from that distance is about 53 percent. McDowell, utilizing the math skills that once had him contemplating a degree in engineering, mentioned he’d rather have a 6-footer, which is a 70 percent conversion rate. Only then would he “think about it.â€� On Tuesday, McDowell invited Murdock and Royal Portrush manager Wilma Erskine to be his guests at a golf writers’ dinner that was honoring McDowell with an award. Erskine mentioned that she had taken over as manager from a former squadron leader. “I don’t think we’ve ever had a squadron leader around here,â€� Murdock joked as he sat near the members’ bar at Rathmore. “Got a few binmen and punters.â€� Although Rathmore is on the outside looking in this week, club members have been pleased with the way the R&A has made them feel like part of the tournament. An R&A liaison has checked in frequently to ask if they needed anything, and the R&A supplied a free weekly ticket to each Rathmore member, along with discounts for family and friends. The Valley course gave up a couple of its holes to be included in this week’s Open setup – two replacement holes were built — as well as other holes for infrastructure purposes and the driving range. So from that sense, Rathmore is truly part of the Open. “In no way have we been marginalized,â€� Murdock said. Portrush resident Darren Clarke, the 2011 Open champ and Royal Portrush member, will get to hit the first tee shot in Thursday’s opening round. McDowell, the Portrush native, will tee off about 2-1/2 hours later. That might be the only R&A decision that Rathmore members are second-guessing. “I know Darren hitting the first tee shot is only fitting,â€� Murdock said, “but if you ask anyone around here, Graeme should hit the first tee shot. I will say that on the first tee at 10 past 9 on Thursday morning, the stands will be of Rathmore members.â€� Rathmore has been a lively hangout this week, catching fans who are going in or – more likely – leaving the tournament grounds and want to stop for one last drink and perhaps look at G-Mac’s hardware. Earlier this week, a sign out front said, “Everybody welcomed,â€� and indeed anybody could walk in, provided they sign a guest book. But a complaint was lodged by another Portrush establishment, arguing that Rathmore was technically a private club and thus could not invite “everybody.â€� So the police came to the club Wednesday and asked for the sign to be removed. It’s too bad, given that the workingman’s club has long welcomed locals who want to play golf but couldn’t afford the big club inside the main gate this week.

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Viktor Hovland goes back-to-back at World Wide Technology ChampionshipViktor Hovland goes back-to-back at World Wide Technology Championship

PLAYA DEL CARMEN, Mexico – For the last two days at the World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba, you can’t miss a Norwegian. RELATED: Final leaderboard | The clubs Hovland used to win And that’s not, specifically, Viktor Hovland – although we’ll get to him soon – instead a throng of about 15 Norwegian fans who planned a trip around the event at Mayakoba in order to cheer on their countryman. Hovland gave the crew plenty to root for over the weekend at El Camaleón Mayakoba Golf Course and on Sunday he won for the third time on TOUR. He set the 72-hole scoring record in the process and became the first every back-to-back champ of the event. The group, all members of the same golf club in Norway, make an annual trip to Mexico. Hovland said he had no idea who they are, but when he played at Mayakoba three years ago he did see them once before. Oslo, Norway, is about 5,200 miles from Playa Del Carmen, but for the last two days, anyway, Hovland felt the love. “The Norwegian people are very patriotic and it’s cool to see that I can get so much support even in Mexico, which is pretty far away from Norway. They were great,” said Hovland, the fifth consecutive international winner on the PGA TOUR. “They applauded good shots and obviously cheered a little bit extra when I made a putt. It was really nice. I want to thank them a lot.” The crew was in full voice Sunday to cheer on the 24-year-old, who overcame what seemed like the universe working against him this week to take this one across the finish line. He won by four over Carlos Ortiz, who put on a show for the Mexican faithful. This is Ortiz’s second runner-up result in three years at Mayakoba. Hovland’s week started with a broken driver, a product of Danny Lee doing some speed training exercise on the range Wednesday. He had to borrow James Hahn’s, which worked out just fine – he was T2 in Driving Accuracy for the week. Hovland had his best-career effort in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee last season, so he said it’s unlikely he’ll put the new driver specs into his bag full-time, but there’s no denying that something clicked this week. “I could see myself using maybe this setup at certain courses for sure,” said Hovland. Then Hovland opened his second round by hitting his approach no more than “four steps right of the pin.” But it landed on a sprinkler head and went into the trees. Lost ball. “When something like that happens, you just kind of go, ‘Oh, man, come on, like really, is that (going to) happen?” said Hovland. “I was able to get over that pretty quickly.” Hovland righted the ship on Saturday with a 9-under 62 (perhaps since nothing odd happened that day) and was untouchable Sunday. He became the first golfer to win the same event in back-to-back years since Brooks Koepka at the PGA Championship in 2018-19. Hovland put on as complete a performance as any through the early part of the 2021-22 PGA TOUR season – despite plenty of obstacles in his way – and is projected to move to fourth in the FedExCup standings. “I wouldn’t say the third round that I played is my best round ever. I didn’t like, tell myself, ‘Oh, man, I’m playing the best golf of my life,’ but it’s just kind of putting everything together into four rounds and making very few mistakes,” said Hovland. “I would say I’ve definitely had better ball-striking weeks, but to put a good ball-striking week with good short game and good putting is something that I haven’t done very often.” On Sunday Hovland was 3-under for his first nine holes, and despite to bogeys on the back nine, he came in with a 4-under 67 to close the door. “I was coming in with some high expectations, but obviously for it to end like this and win by four shots, it’s been a cool week,” said Hovland. “Couldn’t ask for it to go any different.” Justin Thomas, playing in the group ahead of Hovland and Talor Gooch, finished third at 18 under, while another Ryder Cupper, Scottie Scheffler, finished fourth. Scheffler, who played alongside Bryson DeChambeau and defeated Hovland and Tommy Fleetwood on Saturday at Whistling Straits, said Hovland’s game has been “proven” over the last couple of seasons. “He’s a great ball-striker and a really good putter as well and obviously a very talented guy,” said Scheffler. “I’m sure this won’t be the last time you’ll see him on top of the leaderboard.” And with every appearance on top of a PGA TOUR leaderboard, you can bet there will be even more fans from Norway cheering him on.

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