Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Reed blasts call to split up pairing with Spieth

Reed blasts call to split up pairing with Spieth

The decision to split one of America’s best Ryder Cup teams of the past several years was blasted late Sunday by Patrick Reed, who said he was “blindsided” when he learned he would not be playing with Jordan Spieth at Le Golf National.

Click here to read the full article

Tired of betting on your favorite sports? Check out some casino game at Bovada! Here's a list of Bovada casino bonus codes that will get you started with some nice bonuses.

Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
Ludvig Aberg+400
Collin Morikawa+450
Jon Rahm+450
Brooks Koepka+700
Justin Thomas+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
Click here for more...
PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Xander Schauffele+1400
Jon Rahm+1800
Collin Morikawa+2000
Brooks Koepka+2500
Justin Thomas+2500
Viktor Hovland+2500
Click here for more...
US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Viktor Hovland+2000
Justin Thomas+2500
Click here for more...
The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
Click here for more...
Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

Related Post

Everybody on the Bland-wagon – Richard Bland oldest to emerge from pool play at WGC-Dell Technologies Match PlayEverybody on the Bland-wagon – Richard Bland oldest to emerge from pool play at WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play

AUSTIN, Texas – Golf has a way of returning to a man, again and again. RELATED: Scores, bracket, tee times | Recaps from Day 3 | Richard Bland explains wild equipment setup, including a 5-wood from 2010 Richard Bland, who got his first win in his 478th start on the DP World Tour last year, and is currently peaking at 49, could tell you all about it. And he knows his late-in-the-game rise has reverberated far beyond the yellow, nylon gallery ropes. “Yeah, obviously the messages that I get from people that, all over the globe, over the last 12 months, has been incredible,” Bland said after beating Lee Westwood 2 and 1 at the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play on Friday. “People that you never will ever meet, and they tell me their kind of story that what I’ve done has inspired them to carry on their journey. They were losing a little bit of hope, and am I going down right path, and it’s given them that extra sort of belief that they are on the right path. “And that’s – reading them is quite emotional,” Bland continued. “I will always keep them. Whenever this phone gets sort of upgraded or whatever, all those messages will stay forever.” Bland has a lot of silver in his 5 o’clock shadow, but who gets to say when it’s finally too late? In a sense, the action Friday, as Bland dispatched his old English boys’ teammate Westwood to set up a knockout-round match against Dustin Johnson, was a microcosm of Bland’s whole career. That is, things looked shaky – until they didn’t. But that’s golf. It serves up the same shot that just left a bad taste, the same tournament that slipped away last year, until a man either gets it right or quits. It was slipping away as Bland missed putts of 7 feet and 9 feet at the 13th and 15th holes, respectively, allowing Westwood to close the gap. Finally, though, when he could afford no more lapses, Bland coaxed in an 8-foot birdie putt on 16 to preserve a 1-up lead. Then he drained a 32-foot birdie on 17 to defeat Westwood 2 and 1 and advance. A moth flitted just above the ball as it made its way to the hole on the decisive putt, and when it dropped, golf’s most unlikely new Cinderella pumped his fist – Bland fury! – and waited for Westwood to line up his own birdie try from 21 feet. It slid by. Bland, who got an exemption into next week’s Valero Texas Open and is trying to play his way into the world top 50 and his first Masters in two weeks (he’s 60th), was moving on. He is the oldest player to win his group since this format began in 2015, topping Phil Mickelson, who was 46 when he advanced to the knockout rounds in 2017. The new darling of Austin, Bland has increasingly enviable problems. He and his wife, Catrin, were supposed to be headed to New York to celebrate her 40th birthday, but that will have to wait. She’s flying from England to Austin and is expected to be here by Saturday night. They will be in San Antonio for the Valero next week, and possibly Augusta, Georgia, after that. Bland’s life has utterly transformed since his playoff win at the Betfred British Masters last year. Since then, he’s had a share of the lead through two rounds at the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines (fading to finish T50) and lost in a playoff to Viktor Hovland at the Dubai Desert Classic in January. More than two decades into his career, he is, somewhat inexplicably, peaking. He’s getting into tournaments, like this one, that once went on without him. How to explain it? He has no idea. “I’m not doing anything different,” he said. He still uses the same mismatched set of clubs, some of them a decade old. He still has the same coach, and still laces up his boots and puts his head down and just gets on with it. Success, though, has finally gotten in the way. “I guess probably someone at 49 shouldn’t be doing this for the first time,” he said. But in the next breath he says if a man stays fit and takes care of himself, why not? “Never,” he said, when asked if he’d doubted himself. “Even when I lost my card in 2018, I always kind of thought one year doesn’t make you a bad player, you don’t become a bad player overnight. Not when you’ve played on the European Tour for 15 plus years. So yeah, I knew what was in front of me going back to the Challenge Tour at 46 years old.” When was the last time Bland hit a 400-plus-yard drive, like Johnson, his next opponent? “Probably never,” Bland said, “but it’s going to be fun. Of course, he’s favorite. Yeah, I’m not, that’s not being negative or anything like that. That’s just realistic. Everybody knows that. “But if I play how I know I can play,” he added, “I would like to think he’s got a game on his hands.” Counting Bland’s Irish caddie, Greg Milne, and his caddie’s kid brother, Rory, who plays college golf in Louisiana, there were four people on the Bland-wagon for this rousing run. The other two: Bland’s brother, Heath, who nearly died from a virus in 2018 and has come all the way back, and his brother’s best friend, Tim. Golf has returned to Bland; life itself has returned to his brother. To mark Heath’s incredible recovery – “He died twice,” Bland said – the brothers were supposed to play Augusta National in 2020. Like so much else during the worst of the pandemic, the trip got canceled. They were supposed to play again this week. That, too, got canceled when Bland did enough to punch his ticket to Austin. “That’s my bad, that one,” he said, laughing. Bland also laughed at the vagaries of the Official World Golf Ranking. “I didn’t play for three weeks, and I think I went up seven spots,” he said. “So, I was kind of thinking, well, if I don’t play for the rest of the year, I might be world No. 1.” The line got a big reaction, but why not? Less than a year shy of PGA TOUR Champions eligibility, Bland is on the kind of rise that would confound even TopTracer. He never lost hope, he’s going down the right path, and whether or not it gets him to Augusta, the other guys have got a game on their hands.

Click here to read the full article

Sleeper Picks: Fantasy golf advice for the WGC-HSBC ChampionsSleeper Picks: Fantasy golf advice for the WGC-HSBC Champions

Hao Tong Li … The lanky 23-year-old is the host nation’s highest-valued golfer at 54th in the Official World Golf Ranking. Each of the top seven Chinese talents are in the field of 78 at Sheshan International. Thanks most to his one-stroke victory over a deep pool of talent at the Omega Dubai Desert Classic nine months ago, he’s 21st in the Race to Dubai standings. Most recently, he’s added a T5 at the Dunhill Links and a T9 at the British Masters. This will be his sixth consecutive appearance in the WGC-HSBC Champions. His personal-best finish is a T7 in 2015. Lucas Bjerregaard … If you don’t pay attention to golf abroad, then this is for you. If you do, then it will feel like cheating to slot him on this page, but at 53rd in the Official World Golf Ranking, he qualifies … barely. While he captured his first European Tour title at the Portugal Masters in September of last year, 2018 has served as his breakout. In 16 starts since finishing sixth at the Volvo China Open, he’s connected for nine top 10s. The headliner was a one-stroke victory over two-time defending champion Tyrrell Hatton at the Dunhill Links. As a result, the 27-year-old Dane sits comfortably at 11th in the Race to Dubai. Matt Wallace … With his trajectory over the last three seasons, it was only a matter of when – not if – he was going to crash a World Golf Championship. The 28-year-old from London is 62nd in the Official World Golf Ranking. He made surreal news in 2016 by winning six times on the Alps Tour, including in five consecutive starts over a four-month period. Come mid-May of 2017, he went wire-to-wire at the Open de Portugal for his breakthrough victory on the European Tour in what was just his fourth career start. This year, he’s added three victories, the most recent of which in Denmark on the first Sunday of September. A T3 at the Volvo China Open in late April also contributes to his current spot at 20th in the Race to Dubai standings. Yuki Inamori … Just 24 years of age and making his PGA TOUR debut after lighting up the Japan Golf Tour with video-game numbers. In his last 15 starts going back six months, he’s finished outside the top 25 just once and ranks first in fairways hit, fourth in greens in regulation, first in scrambling and third in scoring. Currently second on his circuit’s money list with his breakthrough victory at the Japan Open Golf Championship two weeks ago. It included an exemption into the 2019 Open Championship at Royal Portrush. Andrea Pavan … Francesco Molinari established the European record with a 5-0-0 slate at the Ryder Cup and won thrice earlier in the summer, but he’s not the most recent Italian to win on a major tour, Pavan is. The 29-year-old native of Rome secured his first European Tour victory by two strokes in the Czech Republic in late August. He was teammates with Bronson Burgoon at Texas A&M when they won the 2009 NCAA Championship. Pavan subsequently prevailed four times on the Challenge Tour before first scaling to the European Tour as a rookie in 2012. Currently 33rd in the Race to Dubai, this week’s appearance marks his debut in a World Golf Championship

Click here to read the full article