Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Shubhankar Sharma: India’s next big thing

Shubhankar Sharma: India’s next big thing

There was nothing boastful, nothing off-putting. Sipping peppermint tea in the clubhouse overlooking the first tee at Club de Golf Chapultepec, home of the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship, retired Col. Mohan Sharma, having taken off his ever-present straw hat, simply radiated a quiet confidence. “We believe in God; we believe in fate,â€� Mohan said as he discussed his 21-year-old son, Shubhankar. “I think he will be there by himself at the end.â€� Alas, after leading through three rounds, Sharma came back to Earth to finish T9 in Mexico. But Col. Sharma may yet be right. The time horizon for Sharma is a long one, and he may well be there by himself at the end, if by “the endâ€� you mean whenever he reaches golfing maturity. Tomorrow. Next week. Next month. Next year. Sharma, 21, will play in this week’s Valero Texas Open on a sponsor’s exemption. He is attempting to reverse a mini-slump that saw him miss the cut by two at the Masters and Houston Open, and go 0-3 at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play. Still, he has continued to charm. He called his first Masters “fantasticâ€� and “invaluable,â€� praised the course as “superb,â€� and said the fans were “greatâ€� and a pleasure to play in front of. “I just have to play better than what I have been playing now,â€� Sharma said. “But I know I have it in me; I’ve been playing well this whole season. I played well on the European Tour, I had two wins, so I know that my best is in front of me. So, I just have to get there and just a few things here and there and it will be good to get to Texas.â€� METEORIC RISE  Sharma won the Joburg Open and Maybank Championship, European Tour co-sanctioned events, to take the lead in the Race to Dubai and earn his spot in the WGC-Mexico Championship. There, after taking a two-shot lead through three rounds, he found himself in the same threesome with Hall of Famer Phil Mickelson on Sunday, when the occasion finally seemed to catch up with him as he shot 74. But all was not lost. He got to meet Phil Mickelson! (More on that later.) And within days, Sharma had been given a special invitation to the Masters Tournament. A few days after that, Sharma took a share of the lead into the final round of the Hero Indian Open at his home course, DLF Golf & Country Club on the outskirts of New Delhi, only to shoot 75 and finish T7. Again, there was a silver lining: his world ranking was now up to 66th, getting him into the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play. Sharma was rising, which amplified the question many were asking in Mexico: Who is he? The short answer to that question is Sharma is a player with so much upside that PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan, in announcing the appointment of 2019 Presidents Cup Captains Tiger Woods and Ernie Els, mentioned him as a potential International Team member. Arjun Atwal, the first Indian to win on TOUR at the 2010 Wyndham Championship, calls Sharma “an older soulâ€� whose precision game recalls Jim Furyk and Steve Stricker. “He’s going to surprise a lot of people,â€� Atwal said. Anirban Lahiri, who accounted for one of the rare highlights for the International Presidents Cup team at Liberty National last fall, echoed Atwal’s “older soulâ€� assessment of Sharma. “The differentiating factor between him and other 21-year-olds,â€� Lahiri said, “is how he approaches tournaments and his mental ability to focus and separate himself from the noise.â€� Not that he’s completely impervious. Asked about Latin America at Chapultepec, Sharma praised Mexico and added, “It’s obviously a little distracting with so many good-looking girls walking.â€� He admitted to gawking at Dustin Johnson and Jordan Spieth on the driving range, and trying to act normal around the TOUR stars when he encountered them in the hotel gym. “Some of them say hi to me,â€� Sharma said, “which is very nice.â€� If you weren’t charmed by Sharma in Mexico, you might want to see your cardiologist. He was playing in his first WGC and his first PGA TOUR event, and admitted it all felt surreal, like he was watching it all play out on TV in the wee hours of the morning back in India. Justin Thomas entered the final round just four back. Big-hitting Johnson was three behind. Then there was Mickelson. Sharma and his caddie, Gurbaaz Mann, nervously approached the popular lefthander on the Chapultepec practice green prior to the third round, hoping to introduce themselves, but Mickelson thought they were members of the media. “Not right now,â€� Mickelson said. “After the round.â€� Sharma laughed as he related the mix-up, because why would Mickelson, who realized his mistake and apologized, think any differently? The kid came to Chapultepec ranked 75th in the world and still dizzy from his rapid ascent after two European Tour co-sanctioned victories. “In the past four months,â€� he said, “my life has totally changed.â€� His arrival in Mexico, economy class from Doha, Qatar, was about as under-the-radar as it gets. But his “arrivalâ€� on the world stage feels indelible for a few reasons. India has over a billion people; what might Sharma mean to them? What might he mean, competitively speaking, to Thomas, Jordan Spieth and the rest of them? Sharma’s ultimate goal is to play the PGA TOUR, and Mexico felt not like a cameo but the curtain opening to a potentially long-running hit show. You could hardly fault him for withering on the greens Sunday, unnerved by the crowds or the presence of eventual winner Mickelson, or both. Still, Sharma hung around to shake every hand, sign every autograph. When the Official World Golf Ranking was released hours later, he would vault from 75th to 66th, and within hours of that he would be granted a special exemption into the Masters to become the fourth Indian to tee it up at Augusta, after Jeev Milkha Singh, Atwal and Lahiri. EXTRAORDINARY FAMILY Anirban Lahiri, who was the highest-ranking Indian golfer until Sharma came along, has known the young phenom since they were kids. Lahiri’s father served in the Indian Army with Col. Mohan Sharma, and their relationship deepened when Dr. Tushar Lahiri, a gynecologist, helped deliver Shubhankar’s sister, Vandini. Back then, Anirban was the country’s top-ranked junior and Shubhankar was just turning 7. The two Army dads got to talking, with the doctor recommending to the Colonel that the latter take up golf with his boy. Col. Mohan Sharma listened well. His confidence in his son is well-founded; this is no ordinary family. Vandini is a published fiction and non-fiction writer at 16, and she covered the Masters for Sports Betting News. Shubhankar was the same age when he left school to turn pro, but he is currently studying political science online; the Colonel says his son is on pace to get his undergraduate degree this summer. Dr. Neena Sharma, Shubhankar’s mother, has a PhD in yoga and alternative healing. When Shubhankar Sharma speaks of golf’s appeal, he talks about the mental side. “The best part is you’re always playing against the course and against yourself,â€� he said in Mexico. Before his run-in with Mickelson, his greatest mental test came at the 2017 Hero Indian Open. About 10 days before the tournament, Sharma came down with a fever that kept him bedridden and unable to practice. He tried to play in the pro-am but withdrew on the third hole and went back to bed. The next day, without a warm-up, he gutted out an even-par 72. “He was in bad shape,â€� said Jeev Milkha Singh, one of his playing partners that day. “He was coughing, taking his medication, his fluids, but his main goal was still to play well.â€� Sharma made the cut the next day, only to run out of gas on the weekend and finish T40. “I’ll never forget that first round,â€� the Colonel said with a smile. “Level par.â€� The start of this season has brought more unforgettable moments. Sharma’s two quick victories to take pole position on the European Tour; meeting and playing against Mickelson at Chapultepec; playing in the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play, the Houston Open and the Masters. Now he heads to Texas again for the Valero at the AT&T Oaks Course at TPC San Antonio. He’s living his TOUR dream in the flesh, in the sun, not on TV in the dark of night. “I couldn’t have asked for a better start,â€� Sharma said of his first two rounds in Mexico. He could have been talking about his career.

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Schauffele in contention after driver ruled non-conformingSchauffele in contention after driver ruled non-conforming

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AUGUSTA, Ga. – We are just days away from the 2019 Masters Tournament. Here are some notes and observations from Monday at the Masters. FedExCup, No. 1’s and majors Since the 2011 Masters – the first major since Tiger Woods’ lengthy stay of 281 weeks atop the world rankings ended the previous fall – there have been 24 major winners. Just one was ranked No. 1 the week of his victory: Rory McIlroy at the 2014 PGA Championship. Eight other winners were ranked inside the top 5 during that stretch, including McIlroy, who was No. 3 when he won the 2012 PGA. Jordan Spieth was inside the top 5 in each of his three major wins. PGA TOUR Player of the Year Brooks Koepka was ranked No. 4 going into last year’s PGA, the most recent of his three major wins. Since 1986, when the Official World Golf Ranking was established, just four Masters winners have been No. 1 – Ian Woosnam in 1991, Fred Couples in 1992, and Woods in 2001 and 2002. 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Fowler’s weekend total of 132 was lowest in the field by two shots and nearly 10 shots better than the field average. He birdied four of his final seven holes to post the best finish of his Masters career. “A lot of confidence was taken from last year,â€� he said Monday. “I’ve been in similar positions before going into the weekend and either not had the Saturday or not had the Sunday I wanted. I did a good job of obviously putting together a good round on Saturday to put myself in position and fought through a maybe not perfect front nine to allow myself keep moving forward.  The way I executed on the back nine Sunday last year was definitely something I pull from, and it was a lot of fun to be in the mix, birdieing 18, to make Patrick earn it a bit. But was just a little bit too far back, and Patrick put together a strong week of golf.â€� Fowler has flashed strong form heading into this year’s Masters. He is eighth in this season’s FedExCup after winning the Waste Management Phoenix Open, his fifth PGA TOUR title. He also finished runner-up to Keith Mitchell at The Honda Classic. Fowler, who prefers playing the week before a major, finished T17 at the Valero Texas Open last week. He loves Augusta National because of the creativity it demands. Combine that with his confidence from last year’s finish and he feels like it could add up to his first major title. “Last year was big, executing that final nine and hitting shots when you’re under the gun and in that moment and under all that pressure,â€� he said. “Compared to four (or) five years ago, yeah, I’m more ready than I’ve ever been. Not saying that I can sit up here and tell you I’m definitely going to go win, but I like my chances.â€� – Sean Martin Rose’s stellar record Justin Rose has a stellar record at the Masters, but the margins are so slim at Augusta National that even the smallest advantage can pay huge dividends. For Rose, that help comes in the form of his longtime caddie, Mark Fulcher. Fulcher is carrying the bag for the first time this year after having heart surgery. That will be a big help should Rose find himself in contention at Augusta National, something he’s done quite often. Rose is a two-time runner-up at the Masters. He finished four shots behind Jordan Spieth in 2015, then lost a playoff to Sergio Garcia two years later. Those are two of Rose’s five top-10s in 13 appearances here. He’s never missed the cut at the Masters and has finished outside the top 25 just twice. His worst finish in the past five Masters is T14. “Where Fooch is going to earn his money and earn his position on the bag and earn his importance on the team is on Saturday and Sunday,â€� Rose said. “Basically when emotions start to get more intense and there’s more variability from that point of view, that’s when I’m going to rely on him more and more,â€� Rose said. “If I had anybody caddie for me Thursday, Friday, I would probably be in very good shape and be very comfortable.  It’s when the going gets tough, that’s when I think someone who knows you so well and we have so many positive experiences out there under pressure that we can draw on together; that’s where Fooch is going to come into his own for me.â€� Rose is No. 12 in this season’s FedExCup standings after a victory at the Farmers Insurance Open. His love affair with Augusta National started immediately. He played his first Masters in 2003. He executed a difficult two-putt on his final hole Friday to make the cut on the number. That was a victory for a 22-year-old. He held the 36-hole lead the next year but shot 81 in the third round. “(It) was obviously disappointing but just really taught me a lot about this golf course,â€� he said. “Gave me such great valuable experience and insights into how to play it, how not to play it and how it can kind of trick you and bully you a little bit at times. Fifteen years later, Rose arrives at Augusta National as the reigning FedExCup champion and No. 1 player in the world ranking. Improved putting, especially green-reading, is one key reason for his ascension to the top of both metrics. His skill on the greens will undoubtedly come in handy on Augusta National’s slick putting surfaces. – Sean Martin Fleetwood: ‘Winning is what it’s all about’ Tommy Fleetwood has flirted with winning this year but hasn’t quite gotten it done, with a T5 at THE PLAYERS Championship and T3 at the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard. Both results, he said, were disappointing, and the same could be said for the disparity between his Thursday-Friday scoring average this season (68.17) and Saturday-Sunday average (71.75). But he made no apologies for going for the right-pin at the 17th hole at THE PLAYERS on Sunday, when his ball found the water on the way to a bogey and a T5 finish. “I was two behind with two to play, and you know, there was only one way I was ever going to get close, and it was to go for it,â€� Fleetwood said Monday at Augusta. “It didn’t come off, but I didn’t really think anything of it. And you know, people’s reaction was great, really. I don’t know why people would expect me to play for the middle of the green if I had a chance of catching Rory.â€� In other words, the goal at the THE PLAYERS, like the goal at the Masters at Augusta National, where he will make his third career start, is to win. Fleetwood has a missed cut and a 17th-place finish at the Masters, last year. If he gets in contention this weekend, he said, he will not throttle back. “Not that golf will ever define me as a person, but I’m never going to look back on my career and say, ‘Oh, I finished third at THE PLAYERS, that was a good week,’â€� he said. “Or, ‘Oh, I finished top five at the Masters, I made a couple of nice pars on the last to finish top five.’ That’s probably something I’ll never say to my kids or grandkids. That’s not something to be that proud of.” “Winning is what it’s all about,â€� he added, “not for anything than to win tournaments and big tournaments, THE PLAYERS or the majors, and you know, I want to win them, not for a financial standpoint of anything. It would just be nice to have on my resumé.â€� – Cameron Morfit Bryson and his wedges After a terrific 11-start stretch that included four wins, three other top-10s and no finish outside the top 20, Bryson DeChambeau’s results have tailed off after the West Coast Swing. His best result was a T-20 at THE PLAYERS Championship, while the other three were T-40 or worse. In seeking answers, DeChambeau and his team took a hard look at his equipment — and they may have found the problem going into his second Masters start as a pro. “I’ve had some disadvantages with a couple of the irons I’ve had for a little bit,â€� he said. “… I’ve been fortunate to win a lot of tournaments using the equipment that I’ve had so far and it’s been great. By no means is it bad at all, but there’s always that little bit of room for improvement. So we’ve been working quite heavily this past week in trying to figure out some things that could give me an advantage this week.â€� DeChambeau didn’t reveal the specific issues, but he alluded to his wedges. Like his regular irons, they utilize one-length shafts, but he’s evidently had some issues trying to dial those in. He currently ranks 105th in Strokes Gained: Around The Green; last year, he ranked 78th. “We are now starting to understand how shafts truly work, what they do based on the mass of the club and the design of the shaft and how it creates a certain launch condition, which has been super beneficial for us in the one‑length wedges because that’s always been something I struggled with,â€� DeChambeau said. “I’ve done really well with it but I’ve struggled in being able to control it as well as a guy like Kevin Na or someone out here that’s an incredible wedger.â€� But now the problem might be solved. “Based on the stuff we found out last week,â€� he said, “we have a way to make the wedges in the one‑length set perform just like a variable‑length set.â€� – Mike McAllister Mitchell: I was nervous just walking across the range No first-timer has won the Masters since Fuzzy Zoeller in 1979, but that’s not what Keith Mitchell was thinking about as he walked onto the driving range for the first time Monday. He was just trying to put one foot in front of the other. “I’ve been fortunate enough to attend the tournament before,â€� said Mitchell, who broke through for his first PGA TOUR win at The Honda Classic and is 19th in the FedExCup. “And to play here in college when I was at the University of Georgia. But it was very different today walking out on the range and being on the other side, and I thought I was prepared for that moment, but I wasn’t.  “It just kind of ‑‑ just walking, I was nervous just simply walking across the range,â€� he continued, “and then I started hitting some putts and some balls and I started feeling better.â€� Like so many before him, Mitchell has matured on his own time, a long-hitter who was not a star in college and who had to figure it out on the Web.com Tour. He announced his arrival on the big stage, though, when he held off superstars Rickie Fowler and Brooks Koepka at The Honda at PGA National last month. At the Masters, the stage gets even bigger. He estimated that he was a spectator for four or five Masters Tournaments growing up, and played the course four times in college. He also played it once after winning Honda. “So five times before this week,â€� he said. “The fifth time was the first time I actually was paying attention to where putts were breaking, where I should lay up to. Before I was just so excited to be on the grounds, I would just hit my shot and go to the next one and just try to soak it all in, and I did a great job of that, but I didn’t do a very good job of preparing for the Masters.  “You always want to be here, but it’s hard to put yourself in that position if you aren’t. When I came a couple weeks ago, it was a totally different ball game stepping off stuff and hitting chips from different areas and realizing how fast some of these putts can be.â€� – Cameron Morfit Playing their way in For the fourth consecutive year, a PGA TOUR winner played his way into Augusta National by winning the event the previous week. Corey Conners did it on Sunday by winning the Valero Texas Open, which for the first time in tournament history was held the week before the Masters. In the previous three years, all at the Houston Open, the eventual champs were not yet in the Masters field until their victories – Jim Herman in 2016, Russell Henley in 2017 and Ian Poulter last year. Herman and Henley each missed the cut at their Masters appearances, while Poulter finished T-44. – Mike McAllister

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