Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Quick look at the PGA Championship

Quick look at the PGA Championship

For the first time in well over half a century, the PGA Championship returns to May, finding its new home in the middle of the season of championships. Bethpage Black, the tough public track on Long Island, plays host to the world’s best who all want to lift the Wanamaker Trophy on Sunday. But first, they’ll have to tame the par-70 7,459-yard beast… good luck. THE FLYOVER The finishing stretch to any major is always tough, given what is at stake. At Bethpage Black, those wanting to claim the Wanamaker on Sunday will have to negotiate the 490-yard par-4 16th, the 207-yard par-3 17th and then the 411-yard par-4 18th. When the FedExCup Playoffs hit the course in 2012 and 2016, the final three holes all averaged over par. Playing this stretch mistake-free will certainly be a challenge. If you need a birdie… it’s going to take some clutch shots. Perhaps the best chance at scoring will be the final hole, where an aggressive drive into the fairway, that avoids the numerous bunkers left and right, could leave just a wedge. But the green is seriously elevated, meaning distance control becomes tougher. Here’s a closer look at the closing stretch. LANDING ZONE There are plenty of tough holes at Bethpage Black, but the toughest might just be the par-4 10th. At 502 yards, this brute is the first hole of the round for half the field each day… spare a thought for those heading out there early in the cold weather and having to take a 15-minute shuttle ride that might negate some of their warmup. In 2016 at THE NORTHERN TRUST, the hole played to a 4.287 average, yielding just 28 birdies over the four rounds. It was one of the 50 toughest holes on TOUR that season. Here’s a look at where all the drives ended up in 2016. WEATHER CHECK From PGA TOUR meteorologist Stewart Williams: “Scattered showers will be possible early Thursday morning and should end around daybreak with partly cloudy skies expected for the rest of the day. Another fast-moving front may produce scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms Friday afternoon before high pressure finally returns for the weekend. Temperatures will likely moderate into the upper 60s to low 70s Saturday and Sunday with partly cloudy skies. The chance for scattered showers and thunderstorms returns on Monday as the next system approaches. For the latest weather news from Farmingdale, New York, check out PGATOUR.COM’s Weather Hub. SOUND CHECK This is not only a big golf course, but this is going to be a long week the way the golf course is set up and potentially could play. This could be a hell of a championship. BY THE NUMBERS 1949 – The last time the PGA Championship was held in May was 1949. In that year, the same person who won the Masters (Sam Snead), won the PGA Championship. An omen for Tiger Woods perhaps? 264 – Record 72-hole score in the PGA Championship set by Brooks Koepka last year. Koepka was 16-under at Bellerive Country Club. In relation to par, Jason Day’s 20-under 268 from 2015 at Whistling Straits sits on top. Neither is expected to be sniffed this week. 8 – Number of players to win the PGA Championship on their first try. Most recently: Keegan Bradley in 2011. There are 30 players on debut in this championship. 20 – Club professionals in the field. Just one has advanced to the weekend in each of the last two years. The best finish from a club pro came from Tommy Bolt, who was third in 1971. Since the turn of the millennium, the highest finish from a club pro is T31 from Chip Sullivan in 2004. 18 – Number of winners in the 29 PGA TOUR events this season who were inside the top 50 of the World Rankings at time of their victory. 49 of the top 50 (and 99 of top 100) are in the field this week. 10 – Number of different FedExCup champions in the field: Tiger Woods (2007, 2009), Vijay Singh (2008), Jim Furyk (2010), Brandt Snedeker (2012), Henrik Stenson (2013), Billy Horschel (2014), Jordan Spieth (2015), Rory McIlroy (2016), Justin Thomas (2017) and Justin Rose (2018). Only Bill Haas (2011) is not here. SCATTERSHOTS The last time Tiger Woods won the first two majors of the year was in 2002. The venues? Augusta National (Masters) and Bethpage Black (U.S. Open). Brooks Koepka has won three of his last seven majors played. But he has much higher goals in mind. Koepka says he wants to win at least 10. “I don’t see why you can’t get to double digits,â€� Koepka said. “I think you keep doing what you’re supposed to do, you play good, you peak at the right times… I think sometimes the majors are the easiest ones to win.â€� Matt Kuchar leads the FedExCup standings by 468 points over Xander Schauffele on the strength of two wins and a total of six top-10 finishes this season. Only Schauffele (468 behind) and Rory McIlroy (498 points behind) can mathematically move to No. 1 in the FedExCup standings with a win this week. Only three players in the field this week have had prior success at Bethpage Black. Tiger Woods won the 2002 U.S. Open, Lucas Glover won the 2009 U.S. Open and Patrick Reed won THE NORTHERN TRUST in 2016. Nick Watney won THE NORTHERN TRUST in 2012, but is not in the field this week. The cut will cull the field of 156 players to the low 70 scorers and ties after 36 holes. In the event of a tie for first place after 72 holes, there will be a three-hole aggregate score playoff on holes 1, 17 and 18. If a tie still remains, there will be a hole-by-hole playoff beginning on No. 18, and, if necessary, on to holes 1, 17 and 18 repeated until a winner is determined.

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All in the family: Justin Thomas’ golfing roots trace back to his grandfatherAll in the family: Justin Thomas’ golfing roots trace back to his grandfather

Nearly eight decades ago, a young boy trounced through the woods in search of work. Neither of his parents played golf, but this son of an auto mechanic had heard that caddying could be a good source of extra income.   It was 4 miles from his house to Avon Fields Golf Course in Cincinnati, Ohio. He made the commute on foot.   “I didn’t mind the walk over in the morning, but the walk home in the dark was spooky,� Paul Thomas said. He punctuates this sentence with a laugh, an acknowledgement that this scene – a 10-year-old boy walking through dark woods on the way home from work – is a remnant of a bygone era.    Paul didn’t have his own golf clubs, so he played his first rounds with the rental sets available at Avon Fields. The course let caddies play on Mondays. He remembers winning the caddie championship a few years later in the pouring rain.   These were the humble beginnings of a golfing genealogy that produced one of today’s top players. Paul Thomas begat Mike Thomas who begat Justin Thomas, the winner of the 2017 FedExCup and the defending champion at this week’s PGA Championship.   Paul Thomas turned pro as a teenager, but not for the same reasons his grandson made a similar move at age 20. Justin was a phenom who’d prepared his entire life for the pro ranks. Paul left school early to make a living.   “I was forced out (of school) because of finances, and that was the first opportunity at halfway decent employment,� Paul said. “I know it sure didn’t pay much in those days.�   Paul was a lifelong club pro, but also an accomplished player who competed in the same events as Palmer, Nicklaus and Hogan. Before Justin Thomas won golf’s richest prize, Paul would regale him with tales from professional golf’s hardscrabble days. Hearing about his grandfather’s brushes with the game’s greats stoked Justin’s passion for the game.   “He’s told me the same stories a million times, but I never tell him to stop,� Justin said. “I keep all his voicemails.�   His grandparents’ presence behind the 18th green was the reason Justin got emotional before hitting the final putt of his four-stroke victory at last week’s World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational. Paul and Phyllis Thomas had never been on-hand for one of their grandson’s nine PGA TOUR victories. Paul enjoyed ice cream for breakfast in player dining before watching Justin conquer the same Firestone course where he played the PGA Championship in 1960. Paul made the cut with a second-round 72 that even bested the great Ben Hogan by a stroke. As the courses have gotten longer and the crowds have grown larger, it’s become harder for Paul and Phyllis to watch their grandson play golf. They follow closely from their home in Columbus, Ohio, though. Paul was one of the first to call Justin after he won last year’s PGA at Quail Hollow. Paul felt the tension when Justin stepped to the tee at the watery par-3 17th and celebrated when his grandson’s 214-yard 7-iron stopped within 2 feet of the hole. “He stood up there like a man and just staked it,� Paul said. Paul could appreciate such a shot because he grew up in an era that demanded toughness. He took a crack at the TOUR as a 25-year-old in 1957, back when professional golf was still gaining traction and players caravanned across the country to play for pittance. Paul Thomas (center) stands next to his son Mike and grandson Justin. (Submitted photo) “I wasn’t nowhere near good enough. I was just scraping it together, anyway,� Paul said. “The TOUR was just getting organized. It was nothing like it is today. You’d enter one tournament from the last one.�   Paul served as an assistant pro at several clubs before becoming the head professional at Ohio’s Zanesville Country Club in 1963. He was 31 years old, and already had been a professional for 13 years.    He held the post for more than a quarter-century while remaining one of the top players in the Central Ohio PGA. He played with Arnold Palmer on the PGA TOUR Champions, made the cut in three U.S. Senior Opens and even beat former U.S. Open champion Tommy Bolt in an 18-hole exhibition.   Paul was an old-school instructor – “I don’t believe in theory because no two people are the same,� he said – whose students included two future LPGA Tour winners, Tammie Green and Michele Redman, and Mike Thomas, the second-oldest of his four sons.   Green, whose seven wins included one major, the 1989 du Maurier, lists Paul as the biggest influence on her career. Mike Thomas was a good amateur and an all-Ohio Valley Conference honoree at Morehead State before following his father into the club pro ranks.   Mike, too, enjoyed a lengthy tenure at one club, Harmony Landing Country Club outside of Louisville, and Justin reaped the benefits. The members were supportive of their head pro’s son, allowing him full use of the course and practice facility.   “You could tell when he was 7, 8, 9, 10 years old, he had something. You could tell that there was a big possibility there,� Paul said. “I remember telling him a long time ago that, as well as he drives the ball, don’t spend your time hitting those irons. Get out there and hit the sand wedge and the pitching wedge.�   The Thomas men all have strong short games. The putter was one of the strongest clubs in Paul’s bag. Mike was influenced by his father’s devotion to that aspect of the game, and he enjoyed practicing shots that he could see go in the hole. And Justin followed his father to the chipping green, a constant site of competition between three generations of Thomas men.   Paul won’t take credit for his grandson’s success, though.   “I would say the most help I ever gave him was playing with him and talking to him,� he said. “His dad is his only teacher, and that’s the way it should be.� Paul’s stories “influenced Justin’s love and passion� for the game, Mike said. Paul’s success as a player helped him teach course management and the art of playing the game. The older Thomases could be overly technical, though, so Mike tried to keep his instruction of Justin simple, focusing on the fundamentals. And after struggling to meet his father’s high standards, Mike also wanted to ensure his son had fun on the course. “My dad will be the first to tell you that he was pretty hard on me,� Mike Thomas said. “He had fun, but when it came to competition he was hard on himself. He was hard on himself, so he was hard on me. “That was a different era. Those guys truly did dig it out of the dirt.� Paul was born in 1931 in Ashland, Kentucky, a steel town on the border of West Virginia, but his family moved to Cincinnati when he was 5. Two of his early assistant-pro jobs took him to York, Pennsylvania, and Tequesta, Florida, where he worked for Ohio native and established PGA TOUR winner Dow Finsterwald at Tequesta Golf Club. Tequesta is a short distance from Jupiter, where Justin Thomas and a parade of other PGA TOUR players now live.   In 1958, Paul returned to Cincinnati to work as an assistant pro at Western Hills Country Club. He quickly established himself as one of the state’s top players. He won that year’s Southern Ohio PGA Championship to qualify for the PGA Championship. He never made it to the national championship, though.   Paul was declared ineligible because his membership to his new PGA section hadn’t yet transferred. Finsterwald, his old boss, won with a final-round 67, finishing two shots ahead of Billy Casper. Paul’s favorite player, Sam Snead, finished third.   There would be other PGA Championship chances earned, however. Paul played at Firestone CC in 1960 and Olympia Fields in ’61, and he also competed in the 1962 U.S. Open at Oakmont.   He missed the 54-hole cut at Firestone but had good company: Hogan, weeks after nearly winning his fifth U.S. Open, also failed to qualify for the final round.   Thomas remained a stalwart in his PGA section, twice winning the Central Ohio PGA Championship. His best success came in his 40s and 50s; he finished T15 in the 1983 U.S. Senior Open and played with Palmer in the final round of the Citizens Union Senior Golf Classic in Lexington, Kentucky. Thomas trailed Palmer by just a stroke entering the final round, but shot a 77 to Palmer’s 67. Those numbers have long since faded. The memory hasn’t.   Paul, 86, still plays a handful of times per week and gives the occasional lesson. He’s shot his age every year since turning 64. And, of course, he watches his grandson succeed in the family trade.   “After he showed that he was going to make it, I told him, ‘Only you can screw this thing up. It’s up to you to make something out of yourself,’� Paul said. “And he sure did.�

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Adapt and go with adidas Golf’s new Go-To Adapt jacketAdapt and go with adidas Golf’s new Go-To Adapt jacket

As evidenced by the range of weather at the BMW Championship, Mother Nature can be a bit moody this time of year. Hot and humid one minute; cool, windy and light rain the next. Being able to adapt to the unpredictable conditions is the difference between an enjoyable stroll around the course and a good walk spoiled. Having a reliable ‘go-to’ layering piece that provides protection in a variety of conditions is the key to comfort and performance. Recognizing this, adidas Golf has released the new Go-To Adapt Jacket for fall. Constructed from a mix of polyester and fleece, the Go-To Adapt was created to give players a grab-and-go option when heading to the course. The polyester on the upper chest, back, and shoulders allows heat to escape as temperatures rise while the fleece-lined fabric over the midsection keeps the core warm for those early morning tee times. “Golfers are used to having apparel that works for the two temperature extremes,� said Christine Cowen, global director of apparel, adidas Golf. “But there are days when you need to be able to transition, for example, from a cooler morning to a warmer afternoon. That’s why we created the Go-To Adapt Jacket; to be the ideal mid-weight option that provides optimal stretch where you need it as well as enhanced breathability. It’s that reliable and perfect piece that can take you through your day, on course and off.� The Go-To Adapt Jacket is loaded with performance and comfort features. One of the more unique aspects is the telescope cuff. Having the ability to roll up the sleeves of a pullover or jacket is a must on the course. Too often this leads to stretched out sleeves that are a distraction during the swing. The telescope cuffs on the Go-To Adapt are designed to stretch in a way that allows them to be rolled up and down throughout the day without losing their shape. Articulation is also built into the sleeves in the elbow area to offer freedom of movement during the swing. “It’s heavy enough that if it’s a little bit cool it keeps you nice and warm. It doesn’t restrict you when you are swinging,� said Sergio Garcia. Combined with the fleece-lined shell is a water-resistant fabric which helps to ward off light showers. For heavier rains, the Go-To Adapt can effortlessly be worn under a waterproof jacket for an extra layer of warmth. A droptail hem provides extra coverage against wind and rain. Plus, front-zip pockets make for an easy place to store a scorecard or hand warmers on a chilly day and internal headphone pockets allow for tunes to be taken on the go. The Go-To Adapt Jacket is available in a range of classic and fashion colorways. The traditional grey, navy blue, white, and black colorways are as versatile as the jacket itself. For those looking to punch up their looks, a spicy Aero Red and an energetic Bright Blue make stylish statements. A women’s version with a more feminine cut and thumbholes on the telescope cuff is also available in four colorways.

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Numbers to Know: Wyndham ChampionshipNumbers to Know: Wyndham Championship

Welcome to this week's edition of Numbers to Know, where we will take a closer at Jim Herman's victory at the Wyndham Championship. It was Herman's third PGA TOUR victory, moving him closer to pitcher Sandy Koufax on the list of all-time great athletic alumni from the University of Cincinnati. Let's get started. 1. FAST AND FURIOUS: Herman shot 61-63 on the weekend, tying the PGA TOUR record for lowest final 36 holes by a winner. Stuart Appleby also shot 65-59 in the final two rounds of his victory at the 2010 The Greenbrier Classic. Herman had the lowest weekend score at the Wyndham by two shots. Zach Johnson, who shot 126 in the final two rounds, was the only player within three shots of Herman over the final two rounds at Sedgefield. Herman missed just two fairways and four greens over the final two rounds. He led the field in greens hit (63 of 72) and was fourth in driving accuracy (46 of 56). 2. EAGLE HAS LANDED: Herman led the field with three eagles last week. That included a 131-yard hole-out on the par-4 ninth Thursday and two putts made on the par-5 fifth hole: a 25-footer in the second round and a 59-footer Sunday. Herman has two of the four longest holed shots for eagle by a winner this season, including the longest holed shot for eagle by a winner on a par-4 and par-5 this season. 3. MAKING THE MOST OF IT: Herman has two top-25 finishes in the past two seasons. They're both victories. Talk about making the most of your opportunities. He has missed two-thirds of his cuts over that span, including 11 of 18 this season entering the Wyndham Championship. In the past 10 years, only two players have had multiple seasons where they won while also missing more than half their cuts. Herman is one, performing the feat in each of the past two seasons. Scott Stallings is the other. He did it three times, winning in 2011, 2012 and 2014 while also missing more than half his cuts in each of those campaigns. 4. TEN TO ONE: Here's more proof that Herman makes the most of the times he is in contention. Herman has 10 top-10s in 195 PGA TOUR starts. Of course, three of them are victories. Since 1983, only one player with at least three PGA TOUR wins and 100 starts has a higher percentage of his top-10s that are wins. His name is Tiger Woods. The below chart shows players who didn't contend often but were able to win when they did. And it also is another example of Tiger Woods' incredible career. 2. MAKING A MOVE: The Wyndham Championship has been the PGA TOUR's regular-season finale since the FedExCup began in 2007. Herman entered last week ranked 192nd in the FedExCup, making him the lowest-ranked player to win the Wyndham in the FedExCup era.

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