Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Quick look at Arnold Palmer Invitational

Quick look at Arnold Palmer Invitational

THE OVERVIEW ORLANDO, Fla. — When it comes to Tiger Woods and his comfort zone at the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, a remarkable sense of symmetry surrounds his total of eight victories. To wit, there have been eight different standings after Round 1 and eight different players who have been his runner-up: Davis Love III, Phil Mickelson, Michael Campbell, Stewart Cink, Bart Bryant, Sean O’Hair, Graeme McDowell and Justin Rose. Where the story has achieved a semblance of consistency is Woods’ blueprint for success at Bay Hill. In his eight wins, he has fired a solid sub-par second round (scoring average: 66.63) to roar inside the top 10, then assumed even greater control in Round 3 (scoring average: 68.36) to get into at least a share of first (seven times) or second. That, in turn, has afforded Woods a position he relishes — the chance to pretty much go head-to-head against a reduced list of competitors. The result has been vintage Woods as his final-round scoring average in the eight wins is 68.63, while the 12 players who have been second to Woods through 54 holes and the one who led him (O’Hair) have a fourth-round average of 72.31. Uncanny stuff, especially when you consider that some high-octane names have been in position through 54 holes to outplay Woods here — Love, Sergio Garcia, Bubba Watson and Rickie Fowler, to name a few. Yet for all of that, Woods will be the first to polish some caution onto his story here. Mostly due to injuries, Woods hasn’t played in the last four tournaments at Bay Hill and the eight times when hasn’t won, he pretty much has been well back — five times outside the top 20, just once inside the top 10. “Just because I won here eight times doesn’t mean I’m going to win this week,â€� Woods said Tuesday, just three days after tying for second at the Valspar Championship. “I’ve got to do some serious homework (Wednesday) and really get to know and get the feel of how this golf course is playing this particular year.â€� THREE PLAYERS TO PONDER Jason Day Playing for the first time in a month, he’ll be well-rested on a course that’s treated him well (2016 win). Tommy Fleetwood Six top-10 finishes in his last nine worldwide starts for the new special temporary TOUR member. Rory McIlroy Hard to believe: In his last eight starts on American soil, he has exactly zero top-10 finishes. THE FLYOVER Want to make a birdie down the stretch at Bay Hill? Your best bet is the 511-yard par-5 16th. Last year, it was the only hole among the closing five holes at Bay Hill to play under par (4.393 stroke average). In fact, of the 900 holes on TOUR last season, it was the eighth easiest. THE LANDING ZONE The 458-yard par-4 18th isn’t the toughest closing hole in Florida – that belongs to the 18th at TPC Sawgrass – but it’s still one of the toughest on the PGA TOUR. A year ago, it ranked as the fourth toughest, playing to a stroke average of 0.283 over par as water on the right side challenges approach shots. Here’s a look at where all tee shots landed last year. WEATHER CHECK From PGA TOUR meteorologist Stewart Williams: “Below normal temperatures can be expected through Thursday as high pressure builds over the gulf and slowly moves east across Florida. Temperatures will be quite cool each morning, with lows in the low to mid 40s and highs generally in the upper 60s to low 70s each day. The high will shift east on Friday, producing more of a southerly flow. This will provide a quick warming trend with highs returning to the low 80s this weekend.â€� For the latest weather news from Orlando, Florida, check out PGATOUR.COM’s Weather Hub. SOUND CHECK “I thoroughly enjoyed being around him, being with him and we had so many great times — none more so than last time I won here. We were over there, I’m cleaning out my locker, and he’s over there having his ice tea thing and so he’s just sitting there and, hey, grab a seat. Absolutely, yes, sir. So we sat down, we just started to BS and have a great time together and I’m going to miss those times, for sure.â€�  BY THE NUMBERS 122.5 – Average clubhead speed off the tee for Tiger Woods this season. That’s more that 4 mph faster than his average in 2013 when he won five events. His average driving distance of 303.4 yards is 10 yards longer than his 2013 average. 0.478 – Strokes above par average for the field at the opening three holes at Bay Hill last year. That was the highest average of any opening three holes on TOUR last season. 72.890 – The field stroke average last year at Bay Hill. The 0.890 strokes above par made it the fifth toughest course on the PGA TOUR last season. 3,008 – Balls in the water at Bay Hill since 2003. The par-5 sixth has accounted for 21 percent of those balls (636). SCATTERSHOTS Australians enter on a two-year winning streak, with Jason Day winning in 2016 and Marc Leishman winning last year (when 10 Aussies were in the field). This week, there are six Aussies teeing it up – Day, Leishman, Stuart Appleby, Adam Scott, Cameron Smith and Curtis Luck. Matt Every’s two career PGA TOUR wins have been at Bay Hill. If he wins this week, he would become the first player to post his first three TOUR wins at the same tournament since 1934, when Leonard Gallett won his third Wisconsin PGA event. Bay Hill has some of the toughest par 3 holes on the PGA TOUR. When Tiger Woods won in 2013, he played the par 3s in 1 over – the worst par-3 performance of any Bay Hill champion in the last five years. On the flip side, Matt Every had the best performance at 3 under while winning his second consecutive Arnold Palmer Invitational in 2015. University of California junior Collin Morikawa is in the field this week thanks to the Arnold Palmer Cup exemption. The 20 participants of the Arnold Palmer Cup – a Ryder Cup-style tournament featuring the top male university/college golfers – vote on the player who best represents the “Arnold Palmer Legacy.â€�

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Xander Schauffele+900
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McDaniel’s wild coast-to-coast week, solid play continues at Travelers ChampionshipMcDaniel’s wild coast-to-coast week, solid play continues at Travelers Championship

CROMWELL, Conn. – If fans didn’t quite grasp the intrigue involved in the 14th pairing in Saturday’s third round of the Travelers Championship, it’s understandable. But to study the backdrop of Brooks Koepka teeing up it alongside Chip McDaniel is to appreciate the great flavor that runs through this game of professional golf. Koepka, of course, is at the top of the golf world, a four-time major winner who needs no introduction. McDaniel, on the other hand, is pretty much on the opposite end of the golf world, a player without status who got here via a Monday qualifier and most certainly needs an introduction. Related: Leaderboard | McDaniel’s trek from the U.S. Open to the Travelers Championship Except to one another, because when Koepka went out for a nine-hole practice round at the U.S. Open last week, he discovered McDaniel, a local and sectional qualifier, was with him. So, in effect, they were renewing acquaintances in Round 3 of the Travelers. But dig deeper and you’ll understand there’s a reason why these two should connect. Nothing was handed to Koepka when he turned professional in 2012, so he traveled the European minor-league circuit, worked his way up, and – cue the John Houseman soundtrack – he earned it, a PGA TOUR card for the 2015 season, that is, and the riches that have followed. Koepka takes pride in that route, so when he heard McDaniel’s story, he smiled. “You never know what’s going to happen,â€� said Koepka. “Hopefully, he gets his card and we see him out here consistently.â€� That is the plan for the quiet and unheralded McDaniel, who outscored Koepka, 68-72, to add another layer of flavor to this recent whirlwind he’s been on. Having made the cut at the U.S. Open and here at the Travelers, McDaniel will improve his FedExCup standing for non-members and be in position to earn a spot into the Korn Ferry Tour Finals. “I know what’s at stake, what I’m playing for,â€� said McDaniel, who will head to the Detroit area Sunday night after the final round and tee it up in a Monday qualifier for next week’s Rocket Mortgage Classic. “But I feel pretty much in control.â€� That comfort is owed in large part to his golf, which is solid, and impressed even Koepka. But as McDaniel signed his third-round card, a small crowd drifted into the area behind the TPC River Highlands clubhouse and quickly got a sense that this young man’s saga has captivated his family. McDaniel’s girlfriend, Sara Baker, arrived Friday night, having flown from Lexington, Ky. to Hartford, Conn., via Detroit. McDaniel’s brother, Todd, and his wife, Madison, also made the trip, but the punctuation mark arrived as Chip played the eighth hole – his parents, Todd and Jennifer, arrived, having driven 14 hours through the night. “We figured we’d surprise him,â€� said Todd, the father. “We mustered the energy to make the trip, but he was playing with the No. 1 player in the world.â€� Understand, there’s good reason why Todd and Jennifer had to “musterâ€� the energy to make the 860-mile drive. After all, they had only made it back home to Clay County in Kentucky last Wednesday after driving to and from Pebble Beach to watch Chip in the U.S. Open. That, folks, was about a 5,000-mile round trip. “And we didn’t have much time to plan that one,â€� laughed Jennifer, as Chip had only earned his U.S. Open spot in early June. “But we can’t see him play that often, so when we can we want to take advantage.â€� Todd and Jennifer worked a visit to the Grand Canyon into their trip to Pebble, then included a stop at Yosemite National Park to their return itinerary. But watching Chip play his last 11 holes in 3 under to sneak inside the top 30 through 54 holes, all while paired with a four-time major winner, was every bit the main attraction to the proud parents. The Chip McDaniel saga is also being embraced by his traveling entourage. “I have full faith in him,â€� said Baker, who met her boyfriend while they were students at the University of Kentucky. When Chip made the cut at the U.S. Open, Sara flew Friday night to be there for the weekend. “But there was a little less stress this week,â€� she laughed. As for Jacob Cook, the trusty caddie who played alongside McDaniel at the University of Kentucky, where he is a redshirt junior, he knows they will be flying toward Detroit Sunday night, that they took a red-eye from San Francisco to Boston last Sunday, then drove to Ellington Ridge CC Monday to qualify at a course they had never seen. Just don’t ask him all the intricate details of this coast-to-coast whirlwind of a golf adventure. “I’m just along for the ride,â€� Cook laughed. “It’s been fun.â€�

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2021-22 Medical Extensions2021-22 Medical Extensions

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