Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Sepp Straka wins The Honda Classic in dramatic finish at PGA National

Sepp Straka wins The Honda Classic in dramatic finish at PGA National

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. – The Honda Classic beckoned Sunday morning with the potential to be a runaway, with Daniel Berger, a local boy, in the lead by five. That’s a pretty commanding advantage at most places. The Champion Course at PGA National, though, stands as a brutish bouncer at the door. It simply wouldn’t allow such a thing. RELATED: Full leaderboard | What’s in Straka’s bag? Instead, we got drama – heaps of it, in fact – and a late rain shower, an uncharacteristic off-day from Berger (74) and a first-time winner in Sepp Straka. Straka, a Georgia Bulldog by way of Austria – how many Austrians do you know with a Southern drawl? – started terribly with a missed 2-footer for par at the first hole, but finished brilliantly. He made birdies on three of his last five holes, played the Bear Trap in 1 under, shot 4-under 66 and became the first Austrian-born player to win on the PGA TOUR. Oh, and now a Masters invitation beckons, as well. It was a lot to take in for a 28-year-old who moved to Valdosta, Georgia, at age 14 and later became a Georgia Bulldog. “It’s crazy,” Straka said. “It’s a lifelong dream of mine just to be heading to Augusta in a month or so. It’s still surreal. I’m sure it’ll sink in here before long, but yeah, it’s just crazy.” Tied with Shane Lowry as he arrived at the par-5 18th hole in the day’s penultimate group, Straka ripped a 334-yard bullet off the tee, hit 6-iron from 192 yards safely onto the putting surface in a sudden downpour, and cozied his 48-foot putt for eagle just 9 inches short of the hole. He tapped in for birdie to finish at 10-under 270. Behind him in the wet left-side rough stood Lowry, the gritty Irishman who captured the 2019 Open Championship at Portrush. He had done so much good all day, played so well, but Lowry struggled in the rain, a poor third shot leaving him 43 feet to try to force extra holes. The birdie putt drifted off short. Lowry shot a bogey-free 67. Afterward, he accepted his ill-timed fate, chalking it up to that lottery we know as golf. But he did say having to play the entire 72nd hole in a driving rain – there was no electricity in the storm, so golfers played on – was “as bad a break as I’ve got in a while.” Lowry turned in a beautiful card – 15 pars and three birdies on a golf course where danger lurks at every corner – but in the end he failed to make birdie over his final seven holes, and therein was the difference. In the end, it was hard to figure out who was happier: Straka, the first-time winner in his fourth TOUR season, or all of his fellow Bulldogs who stuck around to watch him win. “I think it validates a lot for him,” said fellow Bulldog Chris Kirk, who is Straka’s standing partner in Tuesday practice games on TOUR. Kirk was in the mix until he was derailed by a triple bogey at the 15th hole, the start of PGA National’s Bear Trap. He tied for seventh. “Obviously, he knows how great of a player he is – we all know how great of a player he is – but getting that first win, it’s unreal, for sure. Making it to the PGA TOUR is one thing. Winning out here is a completely different story. It’s incredible.” Kirk said Straka is one of the best driver and 3-wood players that he knows, and winning was just a matter of time. Straka tied for 10th at the Olympic Men’s Golf Competition last summer, representing Austria, where his father is from, and hoped to ride some momentum out of that. But his fall wasn’t very good. He started working with instructor John Tillery in December, just to “fine-tune” some things. And his play of late has been much better. Starting five shots back on Sunday did little to slow him. “This course is crazy,” Straka said. “There are no gimme holes at all. … You want to stand on that 15th tee with a chance to win, and we were there.” Straka would birdie the par-4 16th (19 feet) to tie for the lead, and he then made one final birdie at the last. He led the Honda field in driving accuracy (47 of 56 fairways), hit 15 greens on Sunday, and when he missed, scrambled well all week (13 of 17, which ranked third). Berger’s five-shot cushion heading into Sunday was the largest 54-hole lead in tournament history. By the time he and Lowry stood on the sixth tee, they were tied. Lowry got there with birdies on the first and fourth holes, and Berger got there with a double bogey at the par-5 third and bogeys at the fifth and sixth. The goal for Lowry was to slowly cut into Berger’s big lead. When Berger played his first six in 4 over, Lowry was a co-leader. It came a lot sooner than he had expected. “I was ready for anything out there today,” Lowry said. “I feel like mentally, I’m very good at the minute. And yeah, before I knew it, I was leading the golf tournament. It was great. I really enjoyed it. Quite nerve-wracking.” Berger can be tougher than sandpaper, too, a competitor who loves the arena, much like Lowry. He holed a bunker shot for birdie at the par-3 seventh and, as hard as he fought, he would not make another until he holed a 28-foot chip at the par-4 14th. He went down swinging, hitting 3-wood right into the water guarding the par-5 18th, which led to bogey and a fourth-place finish. It was Berger’s third top-four at his hometown TOUR event. “I didn’t play well, so I didn’t win the golf tournament,” Berger said. “That’s unfortunate, but I actually felt good. I just didn’t hit the shots that I needed to at the right time. “That’s the way golf goes. There are plenty of guys that hit great shots today, and that’s why they’re winning golf tournaments.”

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Quick look at Houston OpenQuick look at Houston Open

THE OVERVIEW HUMBLE, Texas — The Houston Open will always hold a special place in Steve Stricker’s heart, even after the 51-year-old officially hangs up his spikes on the PGA TOUR. Stricker missed 11 cuts in 21 starts during the 2005 season — he missed 27 cuts the two years prior to that — and briefly contemplated giving up the game. Unsure what he was going to do next, Stricker received a sponsor exemption the following year from the Houston Open and finished third. His best finish since a win at the 2001 WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play began a torrid stretch for Stricker that saw him win nine times in the next 12 years and move as high as third in the Official World Golf Ranking. “It was a good momentum tournament for me, a good finish, provided a lot of confidence moving forward through a difficult time that I had the previous three years,” Stricker said. “So it’s always nice to be back here and I remember that tournament meaning a lot to me back in 2006.” Since that momentum-building week, Stricker has made it a point to play Houston on a regular basis. The tournament has acted as his final warm-up before the Masters, but with Stricker turning 50 last year and becoming PGA TOUR Champions eligible, the 12-time winner is teeing it up on TOUR this week in a last-ditch effort to make the field at Augusta National. “Played all four of the majors last year and I’m not in any of them this year, so I’ve got some work cut out if I want to play in some of those,” Stricker said. “It’s a long shot to come here and win, but hopefully play well and see what happens.” Stricker isn’t short on confidence at the moment, having won his last two PGA TOUR Champions starts — his other start was a runner-up finish — including a three-shot victory last week at the Rapiscan Systems Classic. Even with the near-immediate success he’s enjoyed on the PGA TOUR Champions, Stricker admitted he’s struggling to figure out the best balance when playing opportunities on both Tours. On one hand, he’s 51 years old and no longer needs to play a full TOUR schedule, but his competitive nature keeps telling him otherwise. “It’s getting harder,” Stricker said. “When I go out and win on the Champions Tour, should I be out there more? You can tell me, should I be out there more or should I be out here? I’m taking any advice I can get because that’s been the hardest part, where I should play. I’m fighting with myself with that a lot of times. What’s the right thing to do? I still feel like I’ve got game enough to win and play well out here, and that’s what keeps me coming back out here.” Last year, Stricker made 13 starts on the PGA TOUR to six on the PGA TOUR Champions. He said the plan this year is to try and do something similar and split his time. The tentative plan is to play THE PLAYERS Championship, Fort Worth Invitational, FedEx St. Jude Classic and attempt to get a sponsor exemption into the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide. He’ll also try and qualify for the U.S. Open and hope his strong play gets him into the PGA Championship. For now, though, he has his sights set on trying to make the field at Augusta. “I would dearly love to win again out here on this Tour, and that’s my goal so that’s why I continue to come out here,” Stricker said. “And the major stuff, that will all take care of itself if you play well.” THREE PLAYERS TO PONDER JORDAN SPIETH Of the top four players in the world, he’s the only one who hasn’t won a TOUR event this season. A win in Houston would be a massive confidence booster before the Masters. PHIL MICKELSON Broke the win drought in Mexico. Based on his past form in Houston and the way he’s been playing, a strong week would reinforce the good vibes. JUSTIN ROSE Finished T15 last year in Houston. Has quietly put together a strong start to the season with four top 10s in his first five starts. THE FLYOVER The par-4 18th at Golf Club of Houston is the kind of closing hole that can make or break a tournament. With a lake bordering the entire left side of the hole, players have the option to take a more aggressive line and carry a large portion of the water, or lay back and face a daunting mid-iron approach to a left-back hole location. As if the water on the left isn’t enough, bunkers on the right side of the fairway keep players honest, capturing balls from those who attempt to bail out to the safe side of the hole. The closing hole played as the most difficult on the course last season with a 4.310 average score. THE LANDING ZONE The 480-yard par-4 5th at the Golf Club of Houston was the second-most difficult hole on the course last year. Players need to avoid the water running down the left side of the hole. Here is where all tee shots landed last year. 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In total, he outperformed the field by +12.5 strokes with the putter during last year’s win. 40 – Padraig Harrington has hit 40 balls in the water at the Golf Club of Houston, nine more than the next player (Mickelson, 31) since 2006. 624 – Since 2006, the 18th hole at GC of Houston has yielded the second most balls in the water (624) on the final hole on TOUR. It’s one of three closing holes on TOUR with 600 or more shots finding the water 541 feet 10 inches – Last season, Russell Henley made 541 feet 10 inches of putts en route to victory, marking the most feet of putts made by a PGA TOUR winner in the ShotLink era (since 2003). 15 – The number of Phil Mickelson’s under-par rounds that have been on the weekend at Golf Club of Houston, the most of any player. 30 – From inside five feet, Jordan Spieth misses a putt every 30 holes played this season compared to one in every 45 holes played last season.

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