Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Quick look at the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational

Quick look at the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational

THE OVERVIEW FORT WORTH, Texas – Want to know how to play a golf course? It’s usually wise to ask a club member. Or a PGA TOUR pro. Ryan Palmer checks both those boxes at Colonial. Not only has he been a dues-paying member since 2010 with hundreds of rounds under his belt, Palmer also has three top-5 finishes in the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational. That includes last year when he was the tournament leader eight holes into the final round. He eventually tied for third, four strokes behind playing partner Jordan Spieth, who birdied his last three holes to claim the title. “It was awesome being in that atmosphere,â€� Palmer said. “… I just remember some of the putts Jordan would make. I still tell him today, some of the putts he made, you just don’t make. I play all the time with all the members and nobody makes ‘em.â€� In other words, executing shots remains the most important factor in winning. But having a little course knowledge doesn’t hurt. And no one in the field knows Colonial better than Palmer. Since 2009, Palmer has recorded 19 rounds in the 60s here – second most behind two-time winner Zach Johnson’s 26. “I know exactly what to do on each hole,â€� Palmer said. While Palmer doesn’t want to reveal all his secrets, he did provide a few this week that some of the Colonial newcomers – including rookie Jon Rahm and last week’s winner, Billy Horschel (who played Colonial as an amateur but is making his first start here as a pro) — will likely appreciate. Take the 408-yard par-4 10th and the 387-yard par-4 17th. “I know 10 and 17 play short in the second shots,â€� Palmer said. “Don’t tell anybody else that.â€� Too late. How about the 190-yard par-3 13th? “I know 13, the wind is never into you,â€� Palmer said. “It may feel like it, but it’s never into you.â€� Or the 389-yard par-4 second. “I know when you can’t carry the No. 2 bunker on the right,â€� Palmer said. “I know when you can’t get to the left bunker.â€� Or the 483-yard par-4 third. “I know when you can carry the three bunkers on 3 in certain winds.â€� How well does Palmer and his caddie James Edmondson (also a member and a multiple club champion) know Colonial? They rarely reference their yardage books. “We just get the number and we go,â€� Palmer said. “I know how to hit certain drives off this golf course. It helps me a little bit knowing I can kind of freewheel it and let go and hit driver everywhere.’’ “This course is a bonus knowing a lot of things because it’s such a shot-making golf course. You know, a lot of times players say this golf course takes the driver out of their hands. Well, it’s in my hands all day just because I’ve done it enough.â€� On Sunday night, he’s hoping something else will be in his hands – the giant Leonard Trophy inscribed with the names of all Colonial champions. THREE PLAYERS TO PONDER Jordan Spieth No surprise he’s already won once at Colonial. Will not be a surprise if he wins multiple times here. Billy Horschel No one has won the DFW Double in consecutive weeks, but Horschel has a habit of stringing wins together. Phil Mickelson Has won twice at Colonial but making his first start here since 2010.  Glad to see you back, Phil! THE FLYOVER A closer look at the Horrible Horseshoe – hole Nos. 3 (483-yard par 4), 4 (247-yard par 3) and 5 (481-yard par 4) – the toughest three-hole stretch on the course and one of the toughest on the PGA TOUR. Since 2003, the stroke average for those three holes is a cumulative 0.465 strokes over par. Last year, the three holes ranked among the toughest four holes on the course (along with the par-4 ninth).  THE LANDING ZONE The 445-yard par-4 12th is the most difficult hole on the back nine at Colonial. Last year, it yielded just 47 birdies while playing to a stroke average of 4.102. Along with having to navigate a dogleg left, players often face a headwind on their approach shots. Check out the scattershot chart of all the tee shots struck at the 12th hole last year. WEATHER CHECK It’s going to be hot (98 degrees on Friday!). It’s going to be windy (gusts of 30 mph!). And there’s a chance of thunderstorms at least one day. Seems like that’s usually the case at Colonial, although Sunday could feel slightly different than the other three days. TEMPS: Temperatures could soar into the high 90s for the first three rounds, with heat indexes possibly reaching the lower 100s. A cold front could make things slightly more tolerable on Sunday. RAIN: Scattered thunderstorms are in the forecast for the final two rounds, with an increased chance to 60 percent on Sunday. WINDS: One of Colonial’s primary defenses is wind, and there should be plenty this week, with gusts from the south reaching 30 mph. Could be interesting on Sunday if the cold front brings a shift in the wind direction from the north. For the latest weather news from Fort Worth, Texas, check out PGATOUR.COM’s Weather Hub. SOUND CHECK “They are everything you want in three holes of golf. We’re going to be very smart. We’re going to play conservative. We would love to make birdie on ‘em, but we’re going to make sure we put ourselves in position to make par.â€� – Billy Horschel on Colonial’s Horrible Horseshoe. ODDS AND ENDS 1. A LITTLE BIT OF SPAIN. Jon Rahm won the Ben Hogan Award in 2015 and 2016, so he’s been to Fort Worth. But he never was able to play Colonial during his visits. This week was the first time he’s seen the course, and he said it reminds him of some of the courses in his native Spain, particularly Valderrama. “Visually a little different, but it’s very similar,â€� Rahm said. “You have to hit a lot of irons off the tee in Valderrama and it’s precision golf. You have to keep it in the fairway and hit those tiny greens. In that sense, it does remind me of lot (like Colonial).â€� 2. MUSIC TO HIS EARS. Billy Horschel will be listening to rock band Kings of Leon this week. That’s what he was listening to last week in Irving, and his week ended with a win at the AT&T Byron Nelson. “Didn’t matter what song it was,â€� Horschel said. “Any song that stuck in my head that week.â€� Three years ago when Horschel won the final two Playoffs events of the season to claim the FedExCup, he was listening to British pop band Bastille, particularly one specific song (although he couldn’t recall the title). “It was funny because going to the course every day at the TOUR Championship, I was listing to Alt Nation on Sirius XM and that song came on every day when I was driving to the course, which was so ironic. “Driving to the course the final round and I’m like, ‘Oh man, the song is not coming on today.’ I pull in the parking lot and it came on and I sat in my car until it finished playing.â€� 3. BACK-DOOR KING. Last week, Matt Kuchar tied for ninth, having moved up the leaderboard on the weekend after making the cut in a tie for 17th. Since 2010, Kuchar has 32 “back-doorâ€� top-10 finishes in which he started the final 36 holes outside the top 10. That’s the most of any player in that span. One of those other “back-doorâ€� finishes came last year at Colonial, when Kuchar was tied for 44th after 36 holes but shot 63-68 on the weekend to tie for sixth. WATCH THE PREVIEW

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Adam Scott showing signs of ending slump at AT&T Byron NelsonAdam Scott showing signs of ending slump at AT&T Byron Nelson

Life off the course has been pretty good for Adam Scott, who with his wife, Marie, and daughter, Bo Vera, welcomed a son, Byron, last summer. On the course? That’s another story. Good results have been hard to come by for the 13-time PGA TOUR winner, who nevertheless may be starting to play his way out of a year-long slump. He shot three rounds in the 60s and finished T11 at THE PLAYERS Championship last week. It was a welcome uptick for a player who has no top-10s in 11 TOUR starts this season; is 110th in the FedExCup; has dropped to 65th in the world from ninth a year ago; and is in danger of snapping his streak of 67 straight major championship starts, second to only Sergio Garcia. “I have to back it up,â€� Scott, 37, said at THE PLAYERS. “I need three or four good weeks in a row now, but you can’t have three or four good weeks in a row without the first one.â€� Next up: This week’s AT&T Byron Nelson at Trinity Forest Golf Club, the linksy, windswept Coore/Crenshaw design in South Dallas. This is the tournament Scott won in 2008, albeit on a different course, and he has great reverence for its namesake, who passed away in 2006. So much reverence, it informed Adam and Marie’s decision on what to name their son last August. At his press conference at Trinity Forest on Wednesday, Scott recounted his first-ever meeting with Nelson at the 2002 Masters. The legend was sitting on the first tee of the Par 3 Contest when a slightly nervous Scott, then 21, approached to introduce himself. “Before I could say ‘Mr. Nelson,’â€� Scott said, “He said, ‘Adam, it’s nice to see you here, you’re going to have a great career.’ I was pretty touched by the fact that he even knew who I was.â€� In truth, the surfing town Byron Bay and poet Lord Byron also played a role in his son’s name, but Scott never forgot the gentleman golfer Nelson. “If my Byron can be anything like that,â€� Scott said. “Doesn’t have to be a champion golfer, but if he can be a gentleman, I’d be very, very proud.â€� A good omen for this week? Sure. And then there’s this: Scott and Texas golf go together like Wranglers and cowboy boots. He’s won the Houston Open (2007), the Nelson (2008), the Valero Texas Open (2010) and the Fort Worth Invitational at Colonial (2014), completing a rare Texas Slam. Another good omen. Trinity Forest, alas, is a course unlike any other in Texas. “I don’t know anything about it,â€� Scott said. “I mean, obviously, I won at the other course, but things change It’s time to move on. I don’t know that it was a sacred site for the golf tournament. “Hopefully this is a good move,â€� he added, “and it’s important, too, that the Byron Nelson tournament continues to move forward and be fresh, because it’s been named after a great player and you don’t want to see — you want to see it go from strength to strength, so hopefully moving venue will spice things up a bit for it.â€� The spiciest news for Scott is the fact that he may be emerging from the putting doldrums. He is part of a mini-revival of former anchored-putting experts that includes new PLAYERS champion Webb Simpson (first in strokes gained: putting last week) and Keegan Bradley, who tied for seventh and was 22nd in strokes gained: putting. Scott made over 330 feet worth of putts at TPC Sawgrass, which was 27th best in the field. He was 28th in strokes gained: putting (+.590). For a guy who was 193rd in that statistic going into THE PLAYERS, who merely aspires to be average on the greens, that’s pretty good. Trying to keep up with his putting travails isn’t easy, even for him. There’s a pattern, though: He makes a change, putts well, and then, after a while, the ball stops finding its target. His enviable swing is out of reach for most amateurs, but with putting he is like many fellow TOUR pros and virtually every weekend player who would try everything and anything, as long as it’s legal. An old cross-country ski with a modified claw grip attached to the bindings via one of Harry Vardon’s old pipe cleaners? Sure. Let’s give it a go. Scott started his career with a standard-length putter, winning, among other tournaments, THE PLAYERS in 2004. He used a long putter for victories at the 2011 World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational and 2013 Masters. Then, a month after Scott became the first Australian to win at Augusta National, the USGA announced it would ban anchored putting in 2016. That’s when things started to change. “It’s not a very nice thing; the vibe on the course every week was people yelling we’re cheating,â€� Scott said. “And that was a horrible situation to be in. And then the constant questioning in that 12 months before of what are you going to do, what are you going to do, when are you going to do it, how are you going to do it, all that stuff was quite frustrating.â€� The frustration, he added, began to creep into his game. “No doubt I didn’t putt very well the back half of ’15,â€� Scott admitted, “and it was more out of frustration. For a while I didn’t have to think about putting, and all of a sudden I’m thinking about putting, and thinking for me is never really a good thing.â€� Fed up with his results and the implication that he was doing something wrong, Scott went back to a standard-length putter in the fall of 2015. He practiced, trying to remember the feeling of the thing. Christmas came and went. Then New Year’s. Then something unexpected: Scott won The Honda Classic and WGC-Cadillac at Doral to come out roaring in the 2016 Florida Swing. What had happened? Was he better with the standard-length putter? It didn’t last. By last fall, Scott was struggling again. He skipped the first FedExCup Playoffs event, THE NORTHERN TRUST, to be back in Australia for the birth of his son, and his surprise return for the Dell Technologies Championship to try to extend his season didn’t work out (MC). He went 1-3-0 for the International Presidents Cup Team at Liberty National. This season brought more of the same. “Just me being a little too stubborn,â€� Scott said. At the Wells Fargo Championship, two weeks ago, he finally went back to the long putter he used to win the 2011 WGC-Bridgestone. He braced the grip against his left arm like others have done, and it worked. Although Scott missed the 54-hole cut at Quail Hollow Club, he putted better. Then came TPC Sawgrass, the most encouraging week yet. Those crucial 15-foot par saves that keep a round going? He made one or two of them each day. “It keeps the round going,â€� he said. “And I just haven’t been doing that consistently, and it makes it hard, always on the back foot.â€� Assuming his stroke traveled to Texas with him, the 65th-ranked Scott is in prime position to crack the top 60 in the world by either May 21 or June 11, thereby earning entry into the U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills. Otherwise, it’s off to sectionals. But that’s background noise. Scott has another Byron in his sights, this time on a course that evokes the Open Championship, a tournament he’s always played well. Given the trajectory he’s on with his new/old putter, you’d be smart to keep an eye on him.

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