Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Scott Piercy shoots 62 to lead 3M Open

Scott Piercy shoots 62 to lead 3M Open

BLAINE, Minn. — Scott Piercy went on a late birdie binge en route to a 9-under 62 and the first-round lead at the inaugural 3M Open on Thursday. Adam Hadwin and Hideki Matsuyama are each two shots back after a 7-under 64 at the TPC Twin Cities. Seeking his fifth career TOUR win and first since the 2018 Zurich Classic, Piercy birdied one of his first seven holes and eight of his final 11, including a nearly 30-foot putt on No. 16 to get to 8 under. Brian Harman, Sungjae Im, Patton Kizzire and Sam Saunders are among a group three back after shooting 6-under 65. Bryson DeChambeau is among nine players who shot 5-under 66 and are four shots back. Brooks Koepka is among more than a dozen players that shot a 4-under 67. Nate Lashley, who won last week’s Rocket Mortgage Classic in Detroit, finished 2 under. The 3M Open is the first regular TOUR event in Minnesota since 1969; however, the U.S. Open and PGA Championship have each twice been contested at Hazeltine National Golf Club. The 2016 Ryder Cup was also played there and is to return in 2028. The tournament replaces a PGA TOUR Champions event held in the Land of 10,000 Lakes for 26 years. A 36-minute weather delay occurred shortly after Piercy teed off, and showers fell briefly a couple of times during the rest of his round. The winds also picked up at times in the afternoon. Playing in the calm morning, Matsuyama and Hadwin found better success on the soft greens. Matsuyama entered the day ranked 93rd on TOUR, averaging 28.95 putts per round. He had 26 Thursday, including making 13 of 14 from inside 10 feet and four of five from 10 to 15 feet. He did not three-putt a hole. Starting on No. 10, Matsuyama, a five-time tour champion who last won at the 2017 WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, had four straight birdies around the turn to get to 6 under before back-to-back birdies on Nos. 5 and 6, the first an 18-foot putt. His lone bogey was his final hole. Playing two groups behind Matsuyama, Hadwin, 40th in putts per round, was 3 under through nine holes, and birdied four straight holes among his final nine. He made all 15 putts from inside 10 feet and made two of three from between 20 and 25 feet. “Hideki and I are kind of taking out the Fourth of July celebration for Americans so far,” joked Hadwin, a Canadian whose wife is from the United States. “I’ve got a green card, so it’s home for me.” Phil Mickelson had seven penalty strokes, including two on the par-5 18th, and finished 3 over. Minnesota native Tim Herron aced the 208-yard eighth hole.

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Alabama men’s golf coach Jay Seawell talks about his star pupilsAlabama men’s golf coach Jay Seawell talks about his star pupils

For as long as he can remember, Jay Seawell wanted to be a coach. Even when he was a little kid, he was glued to the TV when the pregame and postgame shows came on TV. By the time he was 15, Seawell was coaching his younger brother’s basketball and soccer teams at the YMCA. “I had my mother help me because I was only 15 and I had to have an adult there,â€� he recalls. Seawell’s first love was basketball but he wasn’t tall enough or talented enough to play the game at the highest level. But he did play golf at South Carolina and that’s when his career goals began to change. “My passion was always in helping people more than it was my own game,â€� Seawell explains. Six months on the mini-tours confirmed his decision – “they didn’t float my balloon,â€� he says. Besides, Seawell jokes, he’s probably the worst golfer in his family; brother David played two years on the Web.com Tour and one on the PGA TOUR, and both his father and brother Daniel are club professionals. “So I just decided to help other people who are really good,â€� Seawell says with a laugh. When an opportunity came to coach at what was then Anderson Junior College in 1991, Seawell took it. He became Augusta State’s head coach in 1998 and for the past 15 years has been at the helm of Alabama’s highly successful program. Under Seawell’s guidance, the Crimson Tide won national championships in 2013 and ’14, and finished runner-up in 2012. Five of his former players are on the PGA TOUR right now – Justin Thomas, Trey Mullinax, Tom Lovelady, Bud Cauley and Michael Thompson. Seawell says Thomas was probably 15 years old when he started recruiting the future world No. 1. He remembers getting a call from someone who said the teenager might be interested in attending Alabama and Seawell followed up immediately. After all, he says, Thomas could have gone anywhere in the country. He had the “buffet in front of him,â€� the coach explains. “The recruitment on him started from him, believe it or not, and that’s the way it happens a lot,â€� Seawell says. “There are a lot of players out there and so he just kind of sent word through a third party who called my phone. … “They said, ‘Hey, I think Justin Thomas would be somebody who’d be interested. They wanted me to know that if you’re interested they would like for me to watch him play.’ “So it kind of was initiated by Justin and his father and of course, when we first saw him we were like, ‘Wow, this is great.’â€� Jay Seawell coaches Justin Thomas during the future FedExCup champion’s time at Alabama.  Cauley’s recruitment was similar. Some people in Jacksonville, Florida told Seawell that he should go watch the 14-year-old play. He was the No. 1 amateur in the country when he committed to Alabama. “He’s slight in stature so he kind of underwhelmed you when you first saw him,â€� Seawell says. “But I don’t know if we’ve ever had anybody work harder at Alabama since I’ve been here.â€� Cauley, who has been sidelined by injuries suffered in a June automobile accident, went on to earn his TOUR card off the non-member money list – joining Gary Hallberg, Scott Verplank, Phil Mickelson, Justin Leonard, Tiger Woods and Ryan Moore as the only players to bypass Q-school. Players like Lovelady and Mullinax flew a little more under the radar but went on to form the nucleus of the 2013 and ‘14 NCAA title teams.  Mullinax, for example, grew up in Birmingham, Alabama so Seawell got to see him develop as a golfer. “I am proud of Trey because it was somebody who technically we took a chance on because he wasn’t maybe as polished as somebody like (Justin),â€� Seawell says. “But I was fortunate enough to see him enough to know that he had a tremendous upside and he’s now becoming, I think he’s a got a great future.â€� Seawell is also impressed with Lovelady’s quick ascent to the TOUR after just one season on the Web.com Tour. “I’m not surprised he made it,â€� he says. “Just how quickly he did it and how quickly he’s kind of adjusted and been able to keep that (status) — that’s been a pleasant surprise to a young man who I’m very proud of.â€� Thompson, on the other hand, was a proven commodity when he came to Alabama after two years at Tulane before the golf team was disbanded in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. He went on to earn All-America honors in 2008, a year after he finished runner-up in the U.S. Amateur. He earned his TOUR card three years later. Seawell admits to being a “rah-rah guy.â€� He says he tends to “holler on the phoneâ€� when a player calls him to commit to Alabama and his three kids look forward to celebratory dinners. “You work really hard and you identify people that you truly believe in and when they tell you, yes, they want to be part of what you’re doing that means they believe in you, too,â€� Seawell says. “I take that very seriously.â€� Thomas has a FedExCup and nine TOUR wins on his resume now, including the 2017 PGA, while Thompson has won once. Cauley, Mullinax and Lovelady are still looking for that first TOUR title. But as much as he enjoys seeing his players succeed, Seawell is most proud of the bond they all have off the golf course. “The network of our guys and the care they have for each other and their games that’s the most I’m proud of,â€� Seawell says. “Trying to help each other and the friendships — I get practice round pictures all the time with them, you know, playing together and things like that. “That’s, that’s the part I love. I’m proud of how good they play, but I’m more proud of that.â€� Jay Seawell celebrates on the putting green with former Alabama athlete and TOUR player Trey Mullinax.  And here are 18 things Seawell says you might not know about his Crimson Tide TOUR veterans. 1. Justin broke into our practice facility while he was being recruited. Well, maybe not broke in. He was 15 or 16 years old and he and his father were heading back to Louisville for Thanksgiving after a tournament. They didn’t break the glass or anything. But everything was closed because it was a holiday and so he and his father jumped the fence because they wanted to see the place. That was before I’d ever met him. 2. Bud grew up a Florida fan. After Bud signed with us, I went to a tournament and he drove up to the course with a UF license plate on the front of the car. I remember saying, Bud, do you think you can get rid of that now? And he’d went, ‘Oh my gosh, I forgot it was on there.’ 3. When I first started recruiting Justin, he always wore long pants. He was one of the few guys who did that. He said, I’m going to be like the professionals and wear long pants. But as he got older and it got hotter and hotter, he tended to find a way to put on a pair of shorts. 4. Michael loves to restore cars. He’s got a 1965 or ’66 Mustang that he’s taken apart and rebuilt probably two or three times just because he may have left a screw out or whatever it may have been. 5. Justin drove to school in a 3- or 4- or 5-year-old Honda Civic. But he’s kind of gone way past that. I texted him after he won his first tournament. I said, do you think you’re going to get rid of the Honda Civic now? He said, ‘Oh, yes.’ I think he has a tradition. If he wins I think he goes and looks at leasing a car. He may buy one, I don’t know. But I said, we’ve come a long way from that Honda Civic.   6. Tom has been Justin’s roommate for several years. Bud has lived with them, too. 7. Bud’s dad was a Navy diver. That’s where I know Bud gets his toughness from.   8. When we won the 2013 NCAA Championship at the Capital City Club in Atlanta, we had a van that had a TV and DVR and a DVD player in it. And they literally watched that Will Ferrell movie “Semi-Proâ€� every single day. It was about a 30-minute ride from the hotel to the golf course and so it just stayed on the whole way. Guess that inspired them to win the championship. 9. Justin is a great practical joker as y’all have seen on the TOUR. Our practice facility is the Jerry Pate Golf Center and we used to have a wild cat there that we befriended. His name was Jerry Cat and she really acted like a dog. That’s the only reason she was able to stick around out there because I am not a cat guy. Anyway, she’d lay down at the side while you hit balls or whatever. And for some reason Justin liked to chase her. She’d see him coming and he’d do it almost daily. 10. Trey actually got run over by a car while he was riding his bicycle to class. The driver of the car was texting and driving and didn’t see him. The pedal went into Trey’s leg, so he has about a 4- or 5-inch scar in his calf. He called one of his teammates, Bobby Wyatt, to come get him and Bobby asked him why he didn’t just walk. Trey goes, I don’t think I can. I’ve got my bike lodged into my leg. 11. Tom’s father passed away right before his senior year. He always puts his initials on his golf ball before he plays. 12. Bud? Man, that guy loves rap. We called him “Little Williamâ€� –  really not because of his size, just because it’s kind of a good rapper name. 13. Trey’s dad used to be a NASCAR off-track racer. That’s why Trey has a great NASCAR slang voice. 14. Tom was an incredibly talented baseball player when he was in high school. It may be his first love. He always had a ball and a couple of gloves in his car and at any moment while we were practicing some of the guys might be throwing the ball back and forth. 15. Trey finished second to Rory McIlroy in driving distance this year. But we had another guy on our team, Scott Strohmeyer, who literally may be the longest hitter in golf. So we had both of those guys in camp one year and we were doing a thing with Scott on Trackman and I said Scott, I need you to hit one hard. The ball speed on the Trackman was 199.7 and he flew it 345 in the air. And Trey goes, let me go now, Coach. And poor Trey, he only hit about 315, 320 and it was the most underwhelming 315 in the history of golf. That’s kind of who Trey is. He loves to compete. 16. Hurricane Katrina was a devastating natural disaster. But you know, there’s always good that eventually does come out of something like that and for us it was that Michael Thompson got to come to Tuscaloosa, which was good for a lot of people. 17. Michael also restored an old Ford truck, if I’m not mistaken, and cranked it and it caught on fire. Right there in the driveway. 18. While Justin was here, he developed an incredible friendship with our football coach, Nick Saban. Coach would come out in the spring and Justin tended to be one of the last guys to ever leave the facility. And so Coach would come out late in the afternoon just before the sunset and they’d chip together. Their friendship continues to grow. After Justin wins, Coach will call him and I think Justin actually called Nick maybe an hour or two after the national championship game. They’ve become pretty good friends.

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Madelene Sagstrom beats the heat, takes Olympic golf leadMadelene Sagstrom beats the heat, takes Olympic golf lead

KAWAGOE, Japan (AP) — Lexi Thompson had to bring in a team manager the last three holes when her caddie succumbed to the heat. Players walked down sunbaked fairways using umbrellas, some of them occasionally holding a bag of ice on their heads. Madelene Sagstrom had a hot start of her own Wednesday in women’s golf. With a tough pitch to 4 feet for par on the final hole, the Swede kept bogeys off her card on a day of searing heat for a 5-under 66, giving her a one-shot lead over top-ranked Nelly Korda of the United States and Aditi Ashok of India. Extreme heat is nothing new for most of the top players, with an LPGA Tour schedule that includes stops in Singapore and Thailand. This ranked right up there. The heat index topped 100 degrees Fahrenheit (37.8 Celsius), and at that point caddies were allowed to remove their bibs. Heat wasn’t the only problem. A tropical storm is approaching, and the current forecast is for a 70% chance of heavy rain on Saturday, a slighter higher chance on Sunday. The competition must finish by Sunday when the Olympics close. Heather Daly-Donofrio, an International Golf Federation technical delegate in charge of the women’s competition, said players have been informed about the possibility of a 54-hole event. That depends on the weather, and a decision likely won’t be made until after the second round at the earliest. The extreme heat ruled out any thought of playing 27 holes apiece over the next two days because of player health. “It’s hot, I’m not going to lie. It’s very hot,” Sagstrom said. “But it’s manageable. Most of us have been in Asia, played a lot of golf over here, so we know what to do. You drink a lot of water, you have cooling towels, umbrella, just maintaining the energy and not go crazy. I think at this point it’s harder for the caddies than it is for the players.” No need to explain that to Thompson. She was walking up the 15th fairway when she said her caddie, Jack Fulghum, turned to her and said, “Do I look white to you?” “I didn’t really notice. But he just didn’t look good,” Thompson said. “I just want him to be healthy, that’s all.” She had him sit down off the green and brought in Donna Wilkins, who works in player services for the LPGA Tour and is on the staff for Team USA at the Olympics. Thompson birdied three straight holes, closed with a bogey and shot 72. Sagstrom managed just fine, opening with a 4-foot birdie, using her power to set up a two-putt birdie on the par-5 fifth and navigating a Kasumigaseki course that was drier and faster than it was for the men last week. Of her five birdies putts, the only one outside 10 feet was a 15-footer on the par-3 10th. Korda, who reached No. 1 in the world by winning her first major six weeks ago at the Women’s PGA Championship, overcame a pair of early bogeys with enough birdies to not fall behind, and she eventually worked her way up the leaderboard with a 67. One of her bogeys was on the par-3 fourth hole, playing 205 yards. She hit 5-iron that never strayed too far from the flag, landed well short of the hole and didn’t stop rolling until she faced a birdie putt from 40 feet. She three-putted. Korda had talked to a few of the American men about Kasumigaseki and heard all about how soft it was. The opening two rounds of the men’s competition was delayed by storms. “The greens have definitely firmed up from the men,” he said. “I remember JT (Justin Thomas) was saying how soft it was. And you can kind of see it on the color of the greens. They’re getting a little browner, and there’s some spots that just like ricochet.” As for the heat? That was more wearisome than worrisome. Korda says she was drinking a bottle of water on each hole, almost to the point of being sick of drinking water. “You have to keep yourself hydrated and you kind of lose it a little out there,” Korda said. “Like when I was teeing up some balls, I definitely felt a little lightheaded. But kept myself in it.” Jin Young Ko, who was at No. 1 in the world for nearly two years until Korda replaced her, was among those at 68. Inbee Park, the Olympic gold medalist from Rio de Janeiro in 2016, couldn’t get a putt to fall on the back nine and had to settle for a 69. Danielle Kang and Sei Young Kim also were at 69. The surprise was Ashok — or maybe not considering this is the Olympics. She was 18 and fresh out of high school when she made her debut in Rio and opened with a pair of 68s before fading on the weekend. Now she’s off to another good start, even after having to hit so many hybrids into the par 4s. She was tied for the lead until missing the 18th green to the left and failing to save par. Ashok remembers the reaction from Rio when she started well, which speaks to how much influence an Olympic golfer can have on a country where cricket is king. “My social media following just blew up,” Ashok said. “I think a lot of people were trying to figure out what golf was so that they could understand how I was playing and if I had a chance to win a medal.” She has won three times on the Ladies European Tour since then and became the first player from India on the LPGA Tour. No matter. “People still remember me as the girl who did well at the Olympics,” she said. “Just knowing that kind of motivates me this week, too.”

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