Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Schniederjans closes with eagle to take Barracuda lead

Schniederjans closes with eagle to take Barracuda lead

RENO, Nev. — Ollie Schniederjans scored five points with a closing eagle to take a three-point lead Thursday in the Barracuda Championship, the PGA TOUR’s only modified Stableford scoring event. Schniederjans hit a 5-iron approach to 3 feet from 275 yards to set up the eagle on the par-5 18th at Montreux Golf and Country Club. “Eagles are huge in this format,” Schniederjans said. “So, it’s a little more nerve-wracking, 3-footer being three more points. It’s interesting you have putts that are worth more than others.” He finished with 17 points, also making six birdies. Players receive eight points for an albatross, five for eagle, two for birdie and zero for par. A point is subtracted for bogey, and three points are subtracted for double bogey or worse. Denny McCarthy was tied for the lead with a hole to play just before sunset, but lost three points with a double bogey on the par-4 ninth to drop into a tie for second with Aaron Baddeley. Robert Streb was fourth at 13 points, followed by Ryan Palmer and Hudson Swafford at 12, and John Merrick and Tyrone Van Aswegen at 11. The winner will earn a spot in the PGA Championship next week at Bellerive, if not already eligible. Schniederjans is using the event to stay sharp for the PGA. “Just my game is finally coming around,” Schniederjans said. “I really feel in control of my swing for the first time in a while. So, I felt really good coming in. And I kind of wanted to just get playing, because I felt like my stuff was finally in a place. Instead of taking a week off, I kind of wanted to get on a roll, play a little bit before the PGA and roll into next week with some rounds.” Chasing his first tour victory, he’s using his Georgia Tech education to crunch numbers on the high-altitude course. “It’s pretty simple math, but I think it helps,” Schniederjans said. “The wind makes it really tough. I factor in the flight that I’m going to hit, and I do the elevation first. And then I factor in the wind.” McCarthy, playing in the final group of the day off the 10th tee, eagled the par-5 13th and made five more birdies — three on par-5 holes — before the messy finish. The former Virginia player is 149th in the FedExCup standings in his first PGA TOUR season, with the top 125 advancing to playoffs and keeping their tour cards. Baddeley is 135th in the FedExCup race. “I’m not stressed, to be honest,” Baddeley said. “Whether you go to Web finals or whether you finish in the 126 to 150 category, you’re going to get starts and my game’s in a good spot. I’m not stressed. I’m at ease with whatever happens. Just got to go out and play and try and win a golf tournament.” Rod Pampling holed out for eagle from 123 yards on the par-4 14th to get to 15 points, then dropped six points on the final four holes with three bogeys and a closing triple bogey. Norman Xiong, the Nicklaus Award winner at the University of Oregon, scored eight points playing on a sponsor’s exemption. He missed the cuts in his other three PGA TOUR starts since turning pro. Defending champion Chris Stroud had seven points. Geoff Ogilvy, the 2014 winner, also was at seven points along with Hunter Mahan. David Duval, playing on a sponsor’s exemption, scored three points.

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Monday Finish: WGC-HSBC Champions, Sanderson Farms ChampionshipMonday Finish: WGC-HSBC Champions, Sanderson Farms Championship

In the final round of the 2017 World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions in Shanghai, Justin Rose shoots a back-nine 31 for a 67 and an epic comeback victory over Dustin Johnson (77) at Sheshan International Golf Club. Meanwhile, Ryan Armour, 41, also torches the back nine for his first PGA TOUR victory, a five-shot romp at the Sanderson Farms Championship. Welcome to the Monday Finish, where both Rose and Armour proved it’s not how you start, it’s how you finish. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1.) There was some spooky, Halloween juju at work in Shanghai. First, rookie Dou “Marty� Zecheng beat Matt Kuchar in Ping-Pong. (Kuchar, who finished T31 at 1-under, would beat Zecheng by 10 on the golf course.) Then, world No. 1 Dustin Johnson fell apart at Sheshan, opening the door for Rose. By now you know that Rose, who began the final round eight shots behind, matched the third-best comeback in TOUR history. And Johnson matched the biggest collapse. But to get a sense for just how unusual Sunday was, consider that Johnson, the No. 1 player in the Official World Golf Ranking, chunked iron shots on the 14th and 15th holes. One such shot is rare enough. But two? Johnson failed to birdie the par-5 14th and bogeyed the par-4 15th. More weirdness: There was no reason for Rose’s family to stay up to watch him play for second, but they were up, anyway, and saw him finish first. Rose’s daughter, Charlotte, stirred at 3 a.m., waking up Rose’s wife, Kate, who turned the TV on just in time to catch the finish.  2.) Johnson can take inspiration from Kyle Stanley. The guess here is Johnson won’t be too distraught, given that the wind was gusting up to 25 mph and he hasn’t exactly made a habit of such finishes. But if he needs a silver lining, here it is: Before Rose, Kyle Stanley was the last player who came from eight back to win, at the 2012 Waste Management Phoenix Open, where leader Spencer Levin soared to a 75. The week before that, Stanley had lost a five-stroke lead in the final round of the Farmers Insurance Open. In other words, watch out for Johnson in his next start, which would most likely come at the Sentry Tournament of Champions, which he won in 2013. 3.) Rose was right: He does have time Players are often asked to reflect on their career arcs, and after losing the Masters to Sergio Garcia in a playoff last April, Rose said he felt like he would have more chances to win the Green Jacket. He is 37, but in winning his eighth TOUR title one year after winning the gold medal for England at the Rio Olympics, he’s got a nice little streak going. “All players pride themselves on winning,� Rose said, “and I’ve won every year since 2010. I was very aware that that was slipping away from me this year.� More superlatives: Rose’s performance at Sheshan was positively Nick Faldo-like, with the plot echoing the 1996 Masters: An Englishman (Rose, Faldo) shoots 67 to reel in a faltering superstar (Johnson, Greg Norman) who after spending multiple weeks at No. 1 in the world loses a six-shot lead and then some by soaring to a shocking number (77 for Johnson, 78 for Norman).   4.) Good things come to those who wait. Armour blinked back tears after picking up his first TOUR win in his 105th start. That seems like a long wait, and Armour, 41, didn’t even have a place to play as recently as 2013. “It’s a big monkey off my back,� Armour said after shooting four rounds in the 60s, after which he was permitted to kiss a chicken (or at least the Sanderson Farms trophy). His breakthrough is just the latest reminder that no sport offers more second chances than golf. Kevin Chappell won in his 180th TOUR start at the Valero Texas Open last season, a feel-good story that was nevertheless eclipsed by Sergio Garcia winning the Masters, marking his first major triumph in his 74th major start. Garcia’s stirring victory came seven months after Henrik Stenson, 40, got his first major victory in his 42nd major start at The Open. That’s a lot of late-bloomers. Perhaps there’s hope for the rest of us. 5.) It’s not how you start. It’s how you finish. Rose spun his wheels with an even-par 36 on the front before kicking into high gear with five birdies and a back-nine 31, but he was hardly the only player to see a drastic improvement after making the turn. Armour did most of his damage on the back at Sanderson Farms for the entire week. He made 17 birdies on the back, compared to 11 on the front, and drained over 273 feet of putts on the back, where he outperformed the field by +7.05 in strokes gained: putting. FIVE INSIGHTS 1. With 550 FedExCup points, Rose, with one start so far this season, moves into third in the FedExCup race, just six points behind Safeway Open champion Brendan Steele. Pat Perez, who is enjoying a late-career awakening, leads the FedExCup with 627 points. 2. Dustin Johnson’s 77 was his worst round since a final-round 82 at the 2010 U.S. Open, and marked just the seventh time in his career that he has failed to make birdie or better in a round. Still, the last time he didn’t make a birdie wasn’t that long ago: the first round of the 2017 Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide. 3. Tony Finau, who led the TOUR with 50 rounds in the 60s last season, finished T11 at the WGC-HSBC, where he notched his fourth round in the 60s in three starts in 2017-’18. Armour, meanwhile, shot four rounds in the 60s in winning the Sanderson Farms at the Country Club of Jackson, the only player at either tournament to break 70 all four days. 4. Armour made 441 feet, 3 inches of putts at Sanderson Farms, 12th most by a winner in the ShotLink era. His average driving distance of 264 yards was the shortest by a Sanderson Farms winner since 2003. He laid up on 17 of 20 par 5s, which was the third-highest lay-up percentage (85%) by a winner on TOUR since 2003. Second highest was Jim Herman at the 2016 Shell Houston Open (88.2%). First highest was Ben Curtis at the 2012 Valero Texas Open (90.5%).   5. With two 41-year-old winners (Armour at Sanderson Farms, Pat Perez at the CIMB Classic) and one 37-year-old (Rose at WGC-HSBC) so far, the average age of the winners over this season’s first five events is 35.4. That’s in stark contrast to last season, when 20-somethings accounted for 28 victories (of 47 total tournaments), the most since 1970. TOP THREE VIDEOS

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Sleeper Picks: Shriners Children’s OpenSleeper Picks: Shriners Children’s Open

Talor Gooch (+500 for a top 10) … A consequence of him withdrawing early from last week’s Sanderson Farms Championship is that he’ll soar under more radars in Vegas this week. But he shouldn’t. The 29-year-old splashed into this season with a T4 at Silverado, his best finish of calendar-year 2021. It’s redundant to cite that he does it all inside the ropes and throughout his bag, but it doesn’t mean that that should go unnoticed every time, either. Recorded his first-ever top 25 at TPC Summerlin in 2017 when he chased a dreadful 77 in the third round with a 64 in the finale to climb 39 spots for a T16. Scott Piercy (+1000 for a Top 10) … It’s been a challenging couple of years for the 42-year-old, but despite him salvaging his card at the buzzer last season and his position at 197th in the Official World Golf Ranking, he really isn’t a Sleeper at the Shriners. For one, he’s a homegrown talent from Las Vegas who made three starts in the tournament before his rookie season of 2009. Since he’s connected for four top 10s among eight top 25s, including a T19 last year. He also opened this season with a T11 at Silverado, so he didn’t exhaust all his energy locking up fully exempt status. Nate Lashley (+1200 for a Top 10) … If you squint in places, TPC Summerlin could resemble TPC Scottsdale where he’s finished T3 (2020) and T17 (2021) a mere car ride from his own pillow, so it’s proof that he can excel in the desert. He sat T19 entering the final round here last year before blowing up for a closing 75 to finish T52. For what is now his fourth appearance, the 38-year-old brings the mojo of consecutive top 20s to open the new season. He didn’t qualify for the 2021 FedExCup Playoffs but he’s fully exempt by virtue of his win at the 2019 Rocket Mortgage Classic and extended eligibility due to the pandemic. Alex Smalley (+1200 for a Top 10) … If you tuned into the Sanderson Farms Championship, you likely learned that PGA TOUR rookie Sahith Theegala eked into the Korn Ferry Tour Finals via his equivalent of non-member FedExCup points. To wit, his 97.917 points would have slotted him 199th among members. After a timely surge in the Finals to secure his card, Theegala held at least the co-lead after every round before fading for a T8 in Mississippi. Smalley doesn’t have as strong a pedigree, but he, too, barely cracked the field at the Finals as his equivalent of 108.961 points would have positioned him 195th among members, and he needed a T29 at the regular season-ending Wyndham Championship to clear the hurdle. After rising in the Finals to join Theegala in the class of 27 rookies, the Duke University product missed the cut at Silverado and opened with 76 at Country Club of Jackson. However, he responded with a bogey-free, 9-under 63 in the second round to survive the cut on the number (en route to a T31), and then open-qualified for the Shriners with a bogey-free, 9-under 63 at Boulder Creek Golf Club. He’s a fighter personified. Harry Hall (+2500 for a Top 10) … The recently betrothed 24-year-old from England is making his third career PGA TOUR start. He was a Sleeper in each, so it’s apropos that the third time presents as the charm in the shadows of his collegiate stomping grounds at UNLV. After missing the cut at the 2020 Farmers Insurance Open, he finished T47 at The American Express to kick off his 2021. Middling results followed on the Korn Ferry Tour until he broke through for victory in Wichita in June. He’s a terrific putter but this endorsement leans strongly on the intangibles of his confidence and familiarity of the local connection on the coattails of a joyous life experience. Odds were sourced on Oct. 5, 2021. For live odds, visit betmgm.

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