Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Reavie leads Travelers Championship by six shots thanks to back-nine 28

Reavie leads Travelers Championship by six shots thanks to back-nine 28

CROMWELL, Conn. – There is the natural reaction, as soon as the third-round scorecard is signed, to peek ahead to Sunday’s finale, to build up an enthusiasm for what is on the horizon. Then there are those times like Saturday at TPC River Highlands, when players scratch their heads, stare quizzically, and search for answers to the question, “What the heck just happened?â€� Related: Leaderboard | McDaniel’s wild week continues It wasn’t an easy one, especially for Zack Sucher. The journeyman who started the third round with a two-stroke lead in the Travelers Championship, conceded he knew this much: “The front nine was a lot of fun.â€� Indeed, it was – four birdies, out in 31, and leading by five. But it’s the next stretch of holes in question. What happened there? Sucher offered that it was “rough,â€� Chez Reavie called it “stunning,â€� while Keegan Bradley said “it was surprising,â€� then added, “but it proves anything can happen out there.â€� Oh, how Bradley was proven correct, because Reavie, who bogeyed the sixth hole to fall six behind Sucher, his playing competitor, caught fire, carding eight birdies over his final 11 holes – including a back-nine 28 to complete a round of 7-under 63 – to build a six-shot lead over Bradley (69) and Sucher (71). The bulk of that turnaround came on the first three holes of the outward nine, as Reavie went birdie-birdie-birdie to Sucher’s bogey, double-bogey, double-bogey. An eight-shot swing that even had Reavie, who is at 16-under 194, lost to explain. Where he wasn’t lost for words was when he was asked the last tournament in which he had such a large 54-hole lead. “Never,â€� said the 37-year-old veteran of 12 PGA TOUR seasons. “Junior golf, maybe.â€� Truth is, Reavie is navigating new waters here. His only other 54-hole lead came in 2008 at the RBC Canadian Open, when he held on for what is his only PGA TOUR win in 277 starts. That was so long ago, Reavie’s competition is either off the TOUR (Anthony Kim) or has settled into PGA TOUR Champions competition (Billy Mayfair, Mark Calcavecchia, Scott McCarron). Just don’t think the lack of victories translates into a pushover, because nothing is further from the truth. “He’s a little bulldog. He’s an MMA fighter trapped in a golfer’s world,â€� said longtime caddie and loyal friend Justin York. “He hates to lose more than he likes to win.â€� York concedes that the stunning turnaround will be remembered for the way in which Sucher started the back nine (he hit a tree on 10 and drove it just 154 yards; his tee ball on 11 landed up against the lip of a bunker; his third shot on 12 was flopped into a bunker), but what shouldn’t be overlooked is how Reavie remained stoic. The 5-foot-9-inch, 160-pound Corey Pavin-like competitor rolled in birdies from 24, 11 and 3 feet during that stretch, then kept the foot on the gas with birdies at 13, 15, 17 and 18. “We just stuck to our game,â€� said York, who has been on Reavie’s bag for nearly six years. While Reavie could have gotten caught up in the struggles of Sucher, who went out in 31 and came home in 40, the fact that he did not is a tribute to him. “It was like last week at the U.S. Open,â€� said York. “We played the fourth round with Brooks (Koepka) and Brooks birdied four of the first five, while we were 1 over. But Chez knows he isn’t Brooks, he can’t play Brooks Koepka’s game, so he just focused on playing his.â€� Koepka did shoot 68 to finish second, but significantly, Reavie came home in 71 for a share of third, his best-ever finish in a U.S. Open. So, it didn’t surprise York that Reavie remained settled and focused while all sorts of craziness was going on around him on that back nine. A plan was in place, and Reavie has one for Sunday’s bid at a second PGA TOUR win. “If I go out and shoot 5- or 6-under, if someone catches me, they’re going to play a hell of a round. That’s my goal. Go shoot 5- or 6-under.â€�

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Ancer takes 1-shot lead over DeChambeau at Dell Technologies ChampionshipAncer takes 1-shot lead over DeChambeau at Dell Technologies Championship

NORTON, Mass. — Abraham Ancer of Mexico opened with three straight birdies on his way to a 6-under 65 to take a 1-shot lead Sunday over a familiar figure going into the final round of the Dell Technologies Championship. It wasn’t Tiger Woods, but the guy playing with him — Bryson DeChambeau, who is coming off a four-shot victory in the first FedExCup Playoffs event and shot 63 while playing with Woods for the first time in a tournament. DeChambeau and Tyrrell Hatton (69) were one shot behind. It figures to be another frantic Labor Day finish on the TPC Boston. Ancer, at No. 92 in the FedExCup just hopeful of getting into the top 70 to advance to the playoff event next week outside Philadelphia, was at 13-under 200. A victory would assure a trip to the TOUR Championship and a spot in the Masters. Even with 18 holes left, that’s a long way off. Ten players were within four shots of the lead, a group that included Justin Rose, Rory McIlroy and Jordan Spieth. Woods had to settle for a 69 that left him in a tie for 16th, six shots behind. At least he saw plenty of good golf. DeChambeau has become of his regular practice partners, though they had never been in the same group until Sunday. DeChambeau opened with two birdies and finished even stronger, with short birdie putts on the 16th and 17th, and then a 5-iron from 237 yards that stopped rolling 2 feet from the hole for an eagle. “He’s my childhood idol,” DeChambeau said. “I’ve admired him my whole entire life. And to be finally able to play with him under tournament conditions, it was different. I was a little nervous, for sure. But I was able to get out there and execute shots and worry about my game and focus on hitting the best shots possible. And I was able to play really well like that.” Not since Vijay Singh in 2008 has anyone captured the opening two FedExCup events. DeChambeau led by four shots at Ridgewood Country Club last week and never was seriously challenged. This time, the 24-year-old Californian will have to come from one shot behind against a 27-year-old playing in only his 49th PGA TOUR event. Hatton had the lead until his approach on the par-4 12th went off a cart path and into the trees, and a search party of some three dozen fans and volunteers never found it. He did well to escape with a double bogey, and then finished with a birdie for a 69. Justin Rose (70) and Cameron Smith (67) were another shot behind, followed by Emiliano Grillo (64) and Kyle Stanley (66). McIlroy was making a charge until hitting into the water on the 16th hole and missing a short putt at the 18th. He had to settle for a 68 and was in a group at 9-under 204 that included Beau Hossler (68), Ryder Cup hopeful Tony Finau (67) and Spieth (68). On another gorgeous day that allowed for good scoring, Spieth didn’t make a birdie until the seventh hole, dropped two shots on the tough stretch of the back nine, answered with two birdies and at least gave himself a chance. Spieth has yet to win this year, and with two events left, still has not secured a spot in the TOUR Championship. More than being six shots behind, Woods has to climb past 15 players. He handled the par 5s, but didn’t make much else and spent some 45 minutes on the putting green after his round. “I didn’t get a lot out of my round today,” Woods said. Looking ahead to Monday, he said he would need a round like he saw from DeChambeau. “I’ve got to make a bunch of birdies, get off to a quick start and just get rolling early,” Woods said. “Kind of do what Bryson did today.” Ancer knows what it’s like to be among the chaotic atmosphere that Woods brings to a tournament. He played in the group ahead of Woods in the third round of the Quicken Loans National, heard the cheers and delivered a 62 that hardly anyone saw. He didn’t play his best from the final group, but it wouldn’t have mattered with Francesco Molinari closing with a 62. Ancer got hot again, putting for birdie on every hole except No. 12, where he made a mental mistake by hitting 3-wood off the tee into a breeze and into a bunker. He was able to advance it only 100 yards on the 510-yard par 4. Even with seven birdies and a 65, Ancer missed three birdie chances inside 10 feet, including a 5-footer on the par-5 18th.

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