Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Talor Gooch continues strong form at Farmers Insurance Open

Talor Gooch continues strong form at Farmers Insurance Open

SAN DIEGO – They say the appendix is a useless body part but Talor Gooch wondered if his mojo went with his into the medical waste bin after it was removed last season. But any sense of that notion is gone now as he backed up his fourth-place finish at the Desert Classic with an impressive tie for third at the Farmers Insurance Open. It has rocketed the 27-year-old to a career high 27th in the FedExCup and given him every opportunity to make his first FedExCup Playoffs. In his rookie PGA TOUR season in 2017-18 the Oklahoma native was by no means playing amazing but still found himself inside the top 125 on the FedExCup list heading into summer. While he had failed to post a top 10 he had started to grow in confidence, particularly after a T13 at the Wells Fargo Championship. And then the appendix had to come out. “Up to that point I was playing decent and I think I made one cut after that,â€� Gooch said. “That kind of threw me off a little bit.â€� He decided against taking a minor medical exemption and instead tried to fight his way through. But it was apparent he came back a little early and the results dropped. His poor finish meant he missed the FedExCup Playoffs but did manage to stay inside the top 150 to gain conditional status this season. Starts from this position are hard to come by. Gooch had to Monday qualify into the Sony Open in Hawaii where he missed the cut only because he hit the wrong ball and was penalized. Rather than dwell on a potentially very costly mistake he surged his way up the leaderboard at the Desert Classic and booked a ticket via his finish to Torrey Pines. Now he’s booked another start next week at the Waste Management Phoenix Open. “Last week was the first time I was in contention and I kind of came through the final round and that obviously gave me a lot of confidence,â€� he said. “Never having done it before, now kind of doing it … I know I can do it now. It feels good. “There’s no doubt that the physical parts have been there the last couple weeks and then it’s just a matter of getting out of your own way. I’ve figured out how to do that the last couple weeks and hopefully we can keep doing it.â€� The goals have certainly lifted now. Forget top-10s, he’s now thinking wins. He’s not a complete stranger to success having won the 2017 News Sentinel Open on the Web.com Tour. A win on the PGA TOUR would take away all the uncertainty of when starts are coming his way. “I think the results would indicate I’m closer to winning,â€� Gooch said. “It’s a funny game as far as winning. People kind of got numb to how hard it is to win out here because of Tiger over the last couple decades. “You have to have things go right, you have to be there in that position a lot as well … If I can get that first one out of the way, then hopefully they start tumbling after that.â€�

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Joakim Lagergren+375
Ricardo Gouveia+650
Connor Syme+850
Francesco Laporta+1200
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Oliver Lindell+1600
Jorge Campillo+2500
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Top 5 Finish-120
Top 10 Finish-275
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USA-150
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A year in the making, the Stallings-Mullinax pairing finally pays offA year in the making, the Stallings-Mullinax pairing finally pays off

AVONDALE, La. – It was a year ago in the first round of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans that Trey Mullinax and Scott Stallings first discussed a partnership. They each had different partners at the time. Stallings was with Australian Aaron Baddeley. Mullinax, a late addition to the field, played with Jonathan Randolph. But that didn’t stop Mullinax and Stallings from looking ahead to 2019. “We just kind of decided last year, hey, if we’re in next year, we’re just going to play together,� Mullinax said. “Been about a year in the making.� It probably felt like the completion of Thursday’s round was also a year in the making. A 7-1/2 hour weather delay in the middle of the day meant that Mullinax and Stallings started early and finished late. But it was worth it, as they finished 18 holes just before darkness with a 11-under 61 in the Four-balls format to take the clubhouse lead. Martin Laird/Nick Taylor are the closest finishers at 10 under, with Brian Gay/Rory Sabbatini are also at 10 under with four holes left. “Kind of an odd day,� Stallings said. “Obviously we played a lot more this morning than we thought we were going to, but to play 18 holes … and we not birdie the same hole and come out at 11 under – if you told us that at the beginning of the day, we’d have definitely taken it.� The lengthy delay left them with a “lot of nothing� to do while waiting for the lightning to clear and the course condition to improve. They sat in the car, went to the fitness trailer, grabbed a bite off-course and watched TV. But the biggest impact was having to reschedule their movie plans to watch “Avengers: Endgame.� “Extremely happy we can go see that movie tonight,� Stallings said. “We were supposed to go at 7:30 to 3-D but now we changed it to 10:00 and we got IMAX,� added Mullinax. “We got a little upgrade,� Stallings said. If you’re getting the impression these guys are close, you’d be spot-on. They’ve played lots of practice rounds together, and their friendship obviously extends beyond the course. Mullinax just had his first child, and Stallings – who had two children – has been giving him tips on fatherhood. Stallings’s penchant for fitness even has Mullinax working out more. “I’m trying to get a little bit bigger like him,� Mullinax said. “I can’t do as many push-ups and bench as much as he can, but he’s a pretty strong boy.� The two have been serious about their preparation for the Zurich Classic. Last week at the RBC Heritage, they held an alternate-shot nine-hole practice to get use to playing with the other’s golf ball. This week, they’re renting a house together. Their respective families are not in town. It’s strictly a boys’ golf week at TPC Louisiana. “We had this house booked a while ago,� Mullinax said. “And both our wives and families are like, yeah, we’re not going. We’re out,� Stallings added.

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Jason Day back in the winner’s circleJason Day back in the winner’s circle

Welcome to the Monday Finish where we literally have finished on a Monday after Jason Day outlasted Alex Noren in a six hole playoff that stretched over two days. Here are observations and insights from the week at Torrey Pines where the return of a big cat and an epic finish had everybody talking.  FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1. Jason Day is ready to make his push back towards the top of the golfing world. The now 30-year-old has seemingly put a tough 2017 behind him and is driven to make his move. Last season he lacked motivation. He almost didn’t care that Dustin Johnson took his mantle. But his mind is back now. He does care. He’s fired up. He wants to be the best. He wants to dominate. And his 11th PGA TOUR win this week is the start of that chase. With Day, Johnson, Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas, Jon Rahm and Rory McIlroy among players looking for a huge year in 2018 and the return of Tiger Woods… wow. 2. Alex Noren should have already been on everyone’s radar before this performance given he has nine European Tour wins and not that long ago was inside the world top 10. But if he was under the radar on American soil the Swede certainly made sure fans won’t be forgetting him any time soon. He produced some great shots when they mattered down the stretch on a tough lay out and more than held his own in Sunday’s playoff holes. His Monday morning shot that found the water was just a fraction off being perfect and setting up a great look at eagle. He went down swinging. In his first season as a member of both the PGA TOUR and the European Tour he is a serious threat at both the FedExCup and the race to Dubai. 3. Tiger Woods is back. Hallelujah. Rounds of 72-71-70-72 left him seven shots off joining a playoff and giving him a shot at an eighth Farmers Insurance Open title but it was certainly a success. It was his first PGA TOUR event in a year and just second official event since August 2015 after back fusion surgery. Torrey Pines played hard this week and Woods sprayed the ball off the tee. Yet still he made the weekend when others would have been looking at rounds of 80. The building blocks are there for one last push towards the all-time TOUR win record. He needs three more wins to tie Sam Snead’s 82. It was also amazing to see the deep galleries around the veteran star. Can’t wait to see him back at the Genesis Open in a few weeks. “I think he’s going to win this year, personally, once he figures (driver) out, once he gets some more competitive rounds under his belt,â€� Jason Day said of the return. 4. There was a lot of chatter about slow play on Sunday at Torrey Pines and while pace of play is always something most of us want to see set at swift – there were some extenuating circumstances that should be highlighted to balance the argument. Things could have certainly been quicker but… Firstly the round was played in three-balls, always slower than two balls obviously. There were wind gusts up around 25 mph making decisions much harder. Greens at Torrey are poa, which gets bouncy, and necessitates marking from closer than usual to be sure you see the breaks etc. C.T. Pan had a horror hole on the par-3 3rd hole, having to return to the tee box after his first shot was deemed unplayable in a canyon. His next effort also found the canyon, forcing his caddy to run down the hill to decide if it was playable. It wasn’t. Long story short he made an eight and multiple groups were backed up on the tee behind him. The final group was in a three-way match play style situation fighting for the win, making every shot worth plenty. That being said, J.B. Holmes certainly took a lot of time before his approach to the 18th hole, leaving Noren waiting, which proved tough. Holmes was unapologetic however as he needed an unlikely eagle to have a chance to win and was trying to figure out how to make it. 5. Ryan Palmer was looking to end an eight-year win drought but ended up just short after making par on the first playoff hole. He secured his PGA TOUR card on a major medical extension at the CareerBuilder Challenge last week and now that he has moved to 31st in the FedExCup he is looking good for a push to the Playoffs. His last appearance there was in 2016 and his last time at the TOUR Championship was 2014 when he finished a career high 14th in the FedExCup. Since 2011, he has the most top-five finishes on TOUR without a win (19) so here’s hoping he can continue to surge towards a breakthrough. FIVE INSIGHTS 1. This was the 17th playoff at the Farmers Insurance Open and first since Jason Day prevailed in a four-man playoff in 2015. In 50 years of the event being played at Torrey Pines, this is just the third playoff to last three holes or more. 2001 – Phil Mickelson def. Frank Lickliter II and Davis Love III (three holes); 1985 – Woody Blackburn def. Ron Streck (four holes). The playoff is the fifth this PGA TOUR season and third in a row. The last time there were three straight playoffs on the PGA TOUR was in 2015 (Travelers Championship, The Greenbrier Classic, John Deere Classic). 2. Day now has 11 PGA TOUR victories after breaking a 20-month drought. He became the ninth player to win the Farmers Insurance Open more than once joining Tiger Woods (1999, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2013), Phil Mickelson (1993, 2000, 2001), Tommy Bolt (1953, 1955), Arnold Palmer (1957, 1961), Steve Pate (1988, 1992), J.C. Snead (1975, 1976), Brandt Snedeker (2012, 2016) and Tom Watson (1977, 1980). 3. Only 11 players were under-par on Sunday, and the field average was 74.779. Since 2000, it was the tournament’s third-highest Sunday scoring average, with the highest being 2016 (77.901) and second-highest being 2008 (74.788). The average of 74.779 is the second-highest single-round scoring average this season. The highest came in the third round of THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES (74.792 / +2.792). 4. Tiger Woods hit 17 fairways, the fewest in his career in a 72-hole tournament. He still finished T23. His stats line looked this way. R1 (South) – Eight of 14 fairways, 12 of 18 greens in regulation, 31 putts.  R2 (North) – Three of 14 fairways, nine of 18 greens in regulation, 24 putts.  R3 – Three of 14 fairways, nine of 18 greens in regulation, 26 putts.  R4 – Three of 14 fairways, 12 of 18 greens in regulation, 29 putts.  Total – 17 of 56 fairways, 42 of 72 greens in regulation, 110 putts.  His proximity to the hole was 40 feet, 10 inches leaving him ranked T52 of the 78 players to make the cut. 5. With world No. 1 on offer, defending champion Jon Rahm ran out of gas after his big few weeks including his win at the CareerBuilder Challenge. He carded a final-round 77 and finished T29. After moving to 10-under with a birdie on No. 10 on Saturday, he played his final 26 holes in 8-over and made eight bogeys, one double bogey and two birdies. Rahm’s weekend scores of 75-77 – 152 is the second-highest 36-hole total of his PGA TOUR career. His high score in consecutive rounds is 72-82 – 154 in the second and third rounds of the 2017 PLAYERS Championship. It is only the third time Rahm has carded two over-par rounds on the weekend. He shot 73-75 at the 2017 Masters, and he shot 73-75 at The Open Championship in 2016.

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