Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Ten shots that tell the story of Scottie Scheffler’s season

Ten shots that tell the story of Scottie Scheffler’s season

A season like the one that PGA TOUR Player of the Year Scottie Scheffler put together is built a little at a time, with a succession of great shots. Some of those, like a near hole-out to go 4 up on world No. 1 Jon Rahm in their singles match at the Ryder Cup, provided no FedExCup points but infused Scheffler with vital self-belief for the season ahead. Others, like his chip-in birdie in the final round of the Masters, are so obviously game-changing they practically come with a thunderclap. And others still, like a crucial putt to ensure making the cut at the WM Phoenix Open, where he collected his first win two days later, can be fully appreciated only in retrospect. These 10 shots tell the story of how Scottie Scheffler put together his successful season. 10. BIRDIE PUTT WM Phoenix Open, second round Par-4 8th, TPC Scottsdale Scheffler was right on the cut line Friday at the WM Phoenix Open. After a so-so 68 on a low-scoring Thursday, the promising but winless PGA TOUR pro had made three birdies, two bogeys and a double in his second round. He was in danger of missing the cut with two holes to play. Facing an early exit, Scheffler, finishing on TPC Scottsdale’s front nine, was far from pleased with his approach from 148 yards at the par-4 eighth hole. But he rammed home the 34-foot birdie putt to create a buffer between him and the cut line. Scheffler signed for a 71 in the second round and made the cut with a shot to spare. Little did he know that the made birdie putt would lead to so many more, and his first TOUR win two days later. His victory at TPC Scottsdale would open the floodgates for an epic season. 9. APPROACH SHOT Ryder Cup, Singles session Par-4 4th hole, Whistling Straits There’s self-belief, and then there’s self-belief. Playing as a Ryder Cup rookie last fall, and the only man on the U.S. Team without a victory, Scheffler drew a tough assignment in the third match of the Sunday singles: then-world No. 1 Jon Rahm. Not to worry. Scheffler jumped out to a 3-up lead, then, from the fourth fairway, hit a towering approach that rode the right-to-left wind before landing, checking, and cozying up to within kick-in range for his fourth birdie in a row to take a 4-up lead. It was the moment when everyone, not just Rahm and his peers, began to appreciate the outsized talents of the 2020 Rookie of the Year. Scheffler would win, 4 and 3, to earn the United States’ first point, and while it would not technically provide any points toward his FedExCup-winning season, it informed what was to come. It also opened the eyes of veteran caddie Ted Scott. Watching the Ryder Cup on TV – and thinking he might retire after having parted ways with Bubba Watson – Scott would gain a new appreciation for Scheffler’s skills and they would join forces at The RSM Classic later that fall. 8. BIRDIE PUTT WM Phoenix Open, third playoff hole Par-4 18th, TPC Scottsdale After shooting 62 in the WM Phoenix Open’s third round, Scheffler’s magic seemed to have left him for the final round. He negated four birdies with four bogeys over the first 12 holes to sit three shots off the lead heading into the final stretch. Still in the honeymoon phase with new caddie Ted Scott, Scheffler, undeterred, birdied four of the last six holes to force a playoff against reigning FedExCup champ Patrick Cantlay. The two matched each other on the first two extra holes, with Scheffler making a clutch 6-footer to extend on the second playoff hole before making his move on the third extra trip down 18. Despite driving the ball into a bunker, Scheffler found the putting surface at a respectable 25 feet. Cantlay, however, knocked his second shot to 11 feet. Scheffler stepped up and sent his putt on its way. When it dripped over the front edge and in, he let out a primal roar. Cantlay missed his birdie try and Scheffler had his first win. 7. BIRDIE PUTT Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, second round Par-3 14th, Bay Hill Club & Lodge Sitting at even par for the tournament and 2 over for his second round through 13 holes, Scheffler was much closer to the cut line than the leaders, who sat 9 under. He found the green on the par-3 14th but was still 53 feet from the pin, a three-putt looking more likely than make birdie. Scheffler needed just one putt, however, curling in the monster for what would turn out to be the longest putt he made this season and another illustration that every shot does matter, especially en route to a victory. Scheffler went on to win his second TOUR title by a single stroke. The floodgates were officially open. 6. PAR PUTT Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, final round Par-4 15th, Bay Hill Club & Lodge On a brutal final day at a baked-out Bay Hill, Scheffler found an inner strength others failed to muster. He was in deep trouble on the par-4 15th, in the pine straw and behind a tree, when he tried to hit a punch hook up the fairway. The ball dribbled out only 23 yards into thick rough, leaving 149 yards to the hole from a tough lie. Scheffler did well to get his next shot onto the front of the green but was still 22 feet away. A bogey looked imminent, but when he coaxed that par putt home it kept his momentum alive and he grinded out three more pars – including an up-and-down from 67 yards on the par-5 16th — to finish a shot ahead of Viktor Hovland, Billy Horschel and Tyrrell Hatton for his second win in three starts. 5. EAGLE HOLE-OUT World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play, quarterfinals Par-5 16th, Austin Country Club Runner-up at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play the year before, this time Scheffler had to hole a 6-foot putt on the sixth hole of a playoff against soon-to-be U.S. Open champion Matt Fitzpatrick just to advance to the single-elimination Round of 16. He had survived a tough Round of 16 match against Billy Horschel, prevailing 1 up on Saturday morning, before meeting Seamus Power in the quarterfinals. Scheffler had given up an early two-hole advantage against the Irishman to be tied through 11 holes before wins on 12 and 13 established a buffer. The alum of the nearby University of Texas closed things out in style, holing a 30-yard chip from the upslope short of the green to advance to the semifinals. 4. BIRDIE BUNKER SHOT World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play, championship match Par-5 12th, Austin Country Club For Scheffler, playing in front of family and friends, it wasn’t just a prestigious World Golf Championships on the line. If he could win the championship match, he would become world No. 1. Through 11 holes he seemed near impervious to nerves or discomfort as he set up a commanding 3-up lead and sat just off the side of the par-5 12th green in two shots. Kisner had knocked his third to close range when Scheffler seemed to open the door, dumping his third shot, a short chip, into a small bunker. Was the match about to turn? Nope. With Kisner eying a 6-footer for birdie to cut into the lead, Scheffler jarred his bunker shot for his own birdie to maintain his 3-up advantage. Three holes later he had his third win in five starts and we had a new top player in the world, a title he’s held ever since. 3. APPROACH SHOT The Masters, third round Par-4 18th, Augusta National Golf Club The hottest player in golf seemed unfazed even by playing at Augusta National, and after he birdied the par-5 13th in Saturday’s third round he was 11 under for the week, ahead by five. But Masters nerves were a new challenge, and back-to-back bogeys on 14 and 15 gave the chasers a flicker of hope. He birdied the 17th before a hooked tee shot on the 18th hole that looked like it could change the course of the tournament. His ball wound up in an unplayable lie; after a drop, Scheffler still faced a 250-yard third shot from the pine straw. As three-time Masters champion Nick Faldo mused about what sort of layup Scheffler was contemplating, Scheffler pulled out a 3-iron and gave the ball a mighty lash. As it soared up to the green and ran a little long behind the putting surface, effectively taking a big number out of play, the patrons could only applaud in awe. “You can’t keep this man down,” Faldo said on the broadcast. “I didn’t see that one coming.” Scheffler got up-and-down to avert further disaster, and his well-earned bogey secured a three-shot lead heading to Sunday’s final round. 2. EAGLE HOLE-OUT U.S. Open, third round Par-5 8th, The Country Club A day after holing out for eagle at the U.S. Open at The Country Club – and getting zinged for misfiring on his celebration with caddie Ted Scott – Scheffler holed out again in the third round, jarring a 102-yard wedge shot at the par-5 8th hole. Scheffler had found the right rough with his tee shot and had to lay up but landed his third behind the pin and watched as the ball backed up and rolled into the cup. The fans went wild for the Masters champion and world and FedExCup No. 1, and this time player and caddie executed a perfect chest-bump celebration. Although the shot gave him the solo lead, Scheffler would ultimately finish tied for second the next day, one behind winner Matthew Fitzpatrick. Still, the shot was yet further confirmation that he can dazzle with any club, anywhere, any time. 1. BIRDIE CHIP The Masters, final round Par-4 3rd, Augusta National Golf Club To win at Augusta National you need a little luck, but you also make your own luck. Despite holding it together for a few opening pars, Scheffler was under assault from tenacious Australian Cameron Smith in the final group. Smith birdied the opening two holes to pull within one before Scheffler pull hooked his tee shot on the par-4 third into pine straw and trees. But thanks to a large scoreboard Scheffler was given line-of-sight relief, allowing him to get a clean look at the green rather than one obstructed by trees. Despite this, his approach with a wedge came up fractionally short of the green and fed back down the steep embankment. Smith’s approach was almost identical, sucking back to just a foot in front of Scheffler’s. Facing a tricky uphill chip, Scheffler played a low, skipping ball into the bank that hit the pin dead center and disappeared for a nerve-settling birdie. Smith was unable to get up and down from the same spot, and the three-shot buffer was back. That cushion allowed Scheffler to play smart golf the rest of the way home to set up a fourth win in six starts and his first major triumph.

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Scottie Scheffler+500
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Xander Schauffele+1200
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Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Viktor Hovland+2000
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Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
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Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
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USA-150
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Here’s how the field qualified for the Valero Texas Open as of 3/26/2021. Check here for updates. Winner – PGA/U.S. Open Championship Jordan Spieth Jimmy Walker Gary Woodland Winner – THE PLAYERS Championship Rickie Fowler Si Woo Kim Winner – The Masters Danny Willett Winner – The Open Championship Zach Johnson Henrik Stenson Winner – World Golf Championship Event Hideki Matsuyama Phil Mickelson Winners of the Arnold Palmer, Memorial, Genesis (Last 3 Years) Jason Dufner Tournament Winner in Past Two Seasons Ryan Armour Keegan Bradley Cameron Champ Corey Conners Austin Cook Tyler Duncan Brice Garnett Brian Gay Branden Grace Lanto Griffin J.B. Holmes Charles Howell III Sung Kang Michael Kim Patton Kizzire Russell Knox Satoshi Kodaira Matt Kuchar Martin Laird Andrew Landry Nate Lashley Adam Long Graeme McDowell Troy Merritt Keith Mitchell Sebastián Muñoz Ryan Palmer Pat Perez Ted Potter, Jr. Andrew Putnam Brandt Snedeker Brendan Steele Nick Taylor Martin Trainer Aaron Wise Career Money Exemption K.J. Choi Luke Donald Jim Furyk Jerry Kelly Hunter Mahan Bo Van Pelt Sponsor Exemptions: 2018-19 FedExCup / 2019 Korn Ferry Tour Category Matt Wallace Sponsors Exemptions – Members not otherwise exempt Padraig Harrington Camilo Villegas Sponsors Exemptions – Unrestricted Sam Bennett Akshay Bhatia Austin Eckroat McClure Meissner Designated Sponsor Exemptions Bernd Wiesberger PGA Section Champion\Player of the Year Carlos Sainz Jr Past Champion of Respective Event Kevin Chappell Charley Hoffman Life Member Davis Love III Top 125 on Prior Season’s FedExCup Points List Scottie Scheffler Tony Finau Abraham Ancer Byeong Hun An Brian Harman Joel Dahmen Danny Lee Tom Hoge Adam Hadwin Harry Higgs Robby Shelton Maverick McNealy Doc Redman Denny McCarthy Henrik Norlander Xinjun Zhang Sepp Straka Harold Varner III Cameron Tringale Cameron Davis Vaughn Taylor Patrick Rodgers Brian Stuard Kyoung-Hoon Lee Scott Harrington Matthew NeSmith Ryan Moore Sam Ryder Adam Schenk Sam Burns Scott Brown Beau Hossler Lucas Glover Luke List Scott Stallings Rory Sabbatini Tom Lewis Bo Hoag Top 125 (Prior Season Nonmember) William Gordon Erik van Rooyen Major Medical Extension Chris Kirk Charl Schwartzel Kevin Stadler Sean O’Hair Wesley Bryan John Huh Seung-Yul Noh Kelly Kraft D.A. Points 2018-19 Top 125 FedExCup/2019 Top Finishers Korn Ferry Tour (reordered) Peter Malnati Doug Ghim Kyle Stanley Kramer Hickok Anirban Lahiri Cameron Percy Kristoffer Ventura Michael Gligic David Hearn Chesson Hadley Hank Lebioda Chase Seiffert Roger Sloan Vincent Whaley Bronson Burgoon Rob Oppenheim Joseph Bramlett J.J. Spaun Sebastian Cappelen D.J. Trahan Jhonattan Vegas Kiradech Aphibarnrat Brandon Hagy Rafa Cabrera Bello Rhein Gibson

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FedExCup Playoffs primer: How the new format worksFedExCup Playoffs primer: How the new format works

Welcome to the FedExCup Playoffs. Now in its 13th season, this competition rewards consistency as well as success during the regular season, while also offering hope for players who can get hot in the three-event Playoffs to make a charge up the standings. With some significant changes in the schedule and format, the question becomes: Who will own August? How it works The top 125 in regular-season FedExCup points qualify for the Playoffs. The points structure for the first two events will be quadrupled. At THE NORTHERN TRUST, 55 players will be eliminated, with the top 70 advancing to the second event, the BMW Championship. From there, 40 more players will be eliminated, with the top 30 moving on to the Playoffs finale, the TOUR Championship. This is similar to previous Playoffs, albeit with one less Playoffs event. It’s at the TOUR Championship where the biggest change has been made. Instead of a points reset used in the previous format, the new format for East Lake starting this season involves a strokes-based bonus system called FedExCup Starting Strokes. Each player will start with a score (relative to par) corresponding to his position in FedExCup points after the BMW Championship. Here’s the breakdown: This will allow each player to know exactly where he stands throughout the tournament, eliminating the guessing game and the scenarios of past Playoffs. With the implementation of this change, the player with the lowest total score will be the FedExCup champion and be credited with an official victory in the TOUR Championship. Players to watch A look at the top five in the FedExCup standings going into the Playoffs: THREE MORE TO WATCH Tiger Woods — He’s the defending TOUR Championship champ, but despite that Masters win, there’s no guarantee he reaches East Lake. He starts a precarious 27th in the standings and his health and stamina will be tested with three starts (he hopes) in three consecutive weeks. Still, his track record on this year’s three courses is unmatched by any player in the Playoffs. Justin Rose — The defending FedExCup champ won at Torrey Pines this season, but after that, the season’s been less productive. Vying to become the first to successfully defend the FedExCup. Will enter the Playoffs ranked 10th. Dustin Johnson — Has four wins in the Playoffs (tied with Rory and Tiger for most) and 18 career Top 10s (most of any player). And yet he’s never been able to lift the FedExCup trophy. Has hit a cold stretch the last five starts. Starts the Playoffs ranked 7th in points. The courses What’s at stake FEDEXCUP TITLE: The biggest prize in golf is even bigger this season, with the winner receiving a $15 million bonus – a 50 percent increase from last season. Just three of the previous 12 winners have entered the Playoffs as the top seed – Tiger Woods in 2007 and 2009, and Jordan Spieth in 2015. After a 38-week regular season, it’s now a three-tournament sprint to the finish. PRESIDENTS CUP: This year’s competition at Royal Melbourne is in December, but the automatic top eight spots for both teams will be determined after the BMW Championship. For the U.S. Team, rankings are based on accumulated FedExCup points; for the International Team, the Official World Golf Ranking determines the top eight. Some big names are currently on the outside looking in – including U.S. Captain Tiger Woods, currently ranked 12th. Woods and International Team Captain Ernie Els will make their Captain’s Picks during the Fall portion of next season’s schedule. PLAYER OF THE YEAR: So you think Brooks Koepka has it wrapped up for the second straight year? He certainly is in the driver’s seat, but perhaps Rory McIlroy – who counts THE PLAYERS Championship as one of his two wins this season – can make some noise to join Tiger as the only two-time FedExCup champs. Or maybe Gary Woodland gets hot and adds the FedExCup title to his U.S. Open victory. Could be enough to sway some votes. ROOKIE OF THE YEAR: This one should definitely be decided by what happens in the next three weeks. Sungjae Im has been arguably the most consistent, but Collin Morikawa, Matthew Wolff, Adam Long and Cameron Champ each has a victory. The goal is to get to East Lake … and then make your final argument there. MORE BENEFITS: Reaching certain plateaus in the FedExCup standings triggers various invites to tournaments in the following season. Here’s a list: Playoffs fast facts Nine players have qualified for the Playoffs in each of the first 13 seasons: Charley Hoffman, Charles Howell III, Matt Kuchar, Phil Mickelson, Ryan Moore, Justin Rose, Adam Scott, Brandt Snedeker, Bubba Watson. Phil Mickelson is the only player to qualify for the BMW Championship (top 70) in each of the previous 12 seasons. Mickelson enters this year’s Playoffs ranked 33rd, so he’s essentially assured of advancing to the BMW for a 13th consecutive season. Mickelson also has made more birdies (651) than any player in Playoffs history. Dustin Johnson is the only player to qualify for the TOUR Championship in 10 of the first 12 FedExCup seasons. Phil Mickelson and Justin Rose had reached East Lake nine times since 2007. Jason Day has a recorded a top-25 finish in 29 of 39 Playoffs events (a 74.4 percent clip). That’s the most top-25 finishes for any player in Playoffs history. Day also is the most under par (227 under) and has the most sub-70 rounds (84). Since 2009, Tiger Woods is the only No. 1 seed entering the TOUR Championship to win the FedExCup. More Tiger: His 68.27 career stroke average in the FedExCup Playoffs is the best among all players with a minimum of 40 rounds played. Since 2012, Jon Rahm has a stroke average of 68.60, the best among all players with a minimum of 30 rounds. Rahm and Justin Thomas each played all 16 rounds of the 2017 Playoffs at par or better – the only ones to have done that in any Playoffs stretch (Thomas won the FedExCup title that year). Lowest rounds in Playoffs history: Jim Furyk’s 59 at the 2013 BMW Championship; Zach Johnson’s 60 at the 2007 TOUR Championship. Four players have shot a round of 61 in the Playoffs. Just two players have drives of 400-plus yards in the Playoffs – Dustin Johnson, 463 yards at the 2011 Dell Technologies Championship/Rd. 4 (TPC Boston); and Rory McIlroy, 403 yards at the 2017 THE NORTHERN TRUST/Rd. 4 (Glen Oaks). Charles Howell III has the longest putt in Playoffs history – 88 feet, 5 inches on the 12th hole at the 2011 BMW Championship (Cog Hill). Billy Horschel is the lowest-ranked player entering the Playoffs to win the FedExCup. He entered the 2014 Playoffs ranked 69th, then fell to 80th after missing the cut at THE NORTHERN TRUST. He then finished T-2 at the next event before winning the last two events that season. Bubble busters: 34 players who started the BMW Championship outside the top 30 in points have played their way into the TOUR Championship. Geoff Ogilvy was the lowest-ranked player, starting 69th before moving up to 24th after the 2011 BMW. Twelve rookies have qualified for the TOUR Championship in the FedExCup era, most recently Aaron Wise last season. Xander Schauffele has the best rookie finish in the final FedExCup standings (third in 2017).

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