Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting TGL standings, schedule and more: Which team leads the title chase?

TGL standings, schedule and more: Which team leads the title chase?

Looking for the TGL results and standings? Here’s everything you need to stay update with the latest in golf’s newest league.

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2nd Round 3-Balls - T. Kanaya / T. Cone / A.J. Ewart
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Takumi Kanaya-110
A J Ewart+250
Trevor Cone+250
2nd Round 3-Balls - N. Goodwin / Y. Cao / B. Botha
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Noah Goodwin+110
Barend Botha+200
Yi Cao+250
Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Justin Thomas+1100
Joaquin Niemann+1400
Shane Lowry+1600
Tommy Fleetwood+1800
Tyrrell Hatton+1800
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Rory McIlroy+650
Bryson DeChambeau+700
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Shane Lowry+3500
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Presidents Cup: Day 4 match recapsPresidents Cup: Day 4 match recaps

JERSEY CITY, N.J. – Presidents Cup first-timer Daniel Berger provided the clinching half-point for the U.S. team Sunday at Liberty National, giving the Americans their 10th win in 12 meetings against the International Team. Berger, playing in the fourth Singles match of the day, went dormie against THE PLAYERS champion Si Woo Kim on the 15th hole of their match, a guaranteed half-point. Earlier, Kevin Chappell halved his match against Marc Leishman for the first half-point of the day. Chappell was informed by U.S. Captain Steve Stricker on the 16th hole that he had provided the clincher. When he finally finished his match, he was sprayed with champagne by fellow first-timer Charley Hoffman, and then celebrated with other members of the U.S. squad. “What a feeling,” he said after closing out Kim 2 and 1 for the full point. “I’m speechless right now.” The Americans needed just one point coming into Sunday’s 12 Singles matches to clinch the Presidents Cup, having taken a commanding 14.5 to 3.5 lead after the first three days at Liberty National. The Americans are now 10-1-1 in this event. Recaps for all completed matches are below. SINGLES Marc Leishman (International) vs. Kevin Chappell (U.S.), Halved Chappell made an early eagle and birdie to take control early, but Leishman battled back and led after 16 holes. He bogeyed the 17th to square the match, and both players missed birdie attempts inside 20 feet on the final hole. Jason Day (International) def. Charley Hoffman (U.S.), 2 and 1 Day won for the first time in his last 10 Presidents Cup matches. Trailing at the turn, Day won the first three holes on the back nine to go 2 up, then played steady golf the rest of the way. Hideki Matsuyama (International) def. Justin Thomas (U.S.), 3 and 1 Matsuyama struggled for most of the week, but he woke up against the FedExCup champ, making eight birdies and an eagle in the first 12 holes. Thomas played nearly as well, making seven birdies in that stretch. But Matsuyama never provided an opening for Thomas to pounce. Daniel Berger (U.S.) def. Si Woo Kim (International), 2 and 1 Berger clinched the Presidents Cup on the 15th hole when he went dormie for a guaranteed half-point, then closed out Kim two holes later in a well-played match, particular between holes 8 and 12 when the two combined for seven birdies. Berger took the lead on the second hole and never gave it up. Charl Schwartzel (International) def. Matt Kuchar (U.S.), 1 up The South African won the first two holes and maintained the lead for the entire match. Schwartzel had four birdies in his first seven holes and was 5 up through seven, then cruised from there. The loss continued Kuchar’s drought in Presidents Cup Singles, as he’s now 0-4-0.  Louis Oosthuizen (International) def. Patrick Reed (U.S.), 1 up On three separate stretches during the match, Reed held the lead, including after the 16th hole when he was 1 up. But Oosthuizen’s 14-foot birdie putt at the 17th squared it, then his 12-footer at the 18th won it. It’s Oosthuizen’s first Singles win in three attempts in the Presidents Cup. Branden Grace (International) vs. Dustin Johnson (U.S.), Halved The South African, who won all five of his matches two years ago in Korea, denied Johnson the same result with a late rally to halve the match. Johnson led for 13 of the first 16 holes, but he found trouble off the tee at 17 and conceded the hole to square the match. With 4.5 points, Johnson led all players. Adam Scott (International) def. Brooks Koepka (U.S.), 3 and 2 Scott won his first point of the week against the U.S. Open champ while running his Singles record to 5-3-0. Koepka led for most of the match, but Scott won four consecutive holes on the back nine to flip the match in his favor.

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Tiger Woods grinds out even-par 72Tiger Woods grinds out even-par 72

ORLANDO, Fla. – His spot into the field at this year’s Arnold Palmer Invitational Presented by Mastercard is owed to his win here in 1996. That would be 1996 BT, he was told. Paul Goydos – 53 and still in possession of more all-world dry-humor than the next 25 guys combined – nodded his head and knew what the reporter meant. “Before Tiger,� he said. Yes, 22 Aprils ago, Woods was an amateur and not in the field at Bay Hill, so Goydos was left to deal with mere mortals. He prevailed, too, shooting 275 to edge Jeff Maggert by a shot. It was the first of his two PGA TOUR victories, but it was seven months later when Goydos started to sense that the PGA TOUR he had joined just three years earlier was changing. Woods had won his first tournament, the Las Vegas Invitational, where Goydos had finished joint eighth, but then at the event at Disneyworld, “I played behind him three days and I had never seen anything like it.� Woods won that one, too, then he won the Masters and three other tournaments in 1997 and, well, it was wild. “The crowds, the enthusiasm, the scene,� said Goydos. Now playing regularly on the PGA TOUR Champions, where he has won five times, Goydos still pays attention to the entire landscape and knows that Woods, 42, is seemingly rejuvenated and his healthiest since 2013. There have been young players who’ve talked about how great it is to have a healthy Woods in their presence that they always wished that they could have played against an in-primetime Woods. Goydos chuckles. “Be careful what you wish for,� he said. That’s because, “if he stays healthy, I don’t think these guys have a clue as to what’s coming.� If a ninth Woods victory at Bay Hill is coming, it will have to be from well off the 36-hole lead, because he struggled to an outward 38 and only heated up moderately. With birdies on the inward par 5s – Nos. 12 and 16 – Woods shot level-par 72 to get halfway home in 4-under, seven behind Henrik Stenson (64-69) and Bryson DeChambeau (67-66). He’s just inside the top 20, so there’s a healthy list of players he’ll need to pass, something that will require a lot more birdies than he’s made in two days (eight). Still, despite the lack of noise from his game, there was plenty of commotion from his followers as again, Woods owned the show. It’s a landscape Goydos knows very well. “He moves the needle like Muhammad Ali.� Goydos offered his perspective shortly after a second-round 74 left him at level-par 144, a whopping 11 off the lead, but inside the cut. A small victory for the former champion, who discovered the other day that one part of Woods’ repertoire doesn’t seem to have missed a step. The needle. “He’s sharp, very, very quick,� said Goydos, “and he isn’t afraid to give it.� As he walked across the putting green at Bay Hill, Goydos said Woods noticed him and they made small talk. Quick-witted, Goydos said he loved being out on the PGA TOUR “because where I hit it, there aren’t any divots,� but as he walked away he heard a voice call out. “Hey, Paul,� said Woods, “how many head covers you have these days?� It’s all part of the Woods’ aura, Goydos said, and he suggested that it’s slowly returning after a hiatus of a few years. “It’s his putting green, his driving range, his show,� said Goydos, and if players are starting to talk about how difficult it is to play alongside Woods, that part of the battle is returning to the icon’s side. “Wait till players get a piece of that deal,� said Goydos. “Tiger is used to it.� So quiet for so much of his Friday, Woods provided a little bit of the show-time sizzle that Goydos talked about. The birdies at 12 and 16 were ho-hum, because they ranked as the two easiest holes. But the par-save at the 14th, when his ball was buried beneath the lip of a greenside bunker? Vintage Woods, thanks to a 22-foot putt. The laser iron over the flagstick at the 209-yard, par-3 17th? Solid stuff, even if he did miss the 25-footer? But best of all was the one-two punch at the demanding 18th – a stinger driver that went 323 yards and a splendid approach that took the slope at the back of the green and trickled to 14 feet. Classy stuff when you consider the field average for proximity on the 18th was 42 feet. On this day, Woods’ birdie putt grazed the right edge, but he’s in contention. On a weekend. Again. Goydos lived, kids. “I mean, the guy’s never gotten up before noon on the weekend.�

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