Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting The best stories and statistics behind the 2018 season

The best stories and statistics behind the 2018 season

Another PGA TOUR season is upon us. The 2018-19 season kicks off Thursday at the Safeway Open. The TOUR Championship ended just eight days ago, but let’s take one last look back before turning the page on the golf calendar. From Tiger’s return to Brooks’ big wins, and Justin Rose’s steady FedExCup-winning season to Francesco Molinari’s emergence as an elite player, there was a lot to take in. Here’s one more look at the season that was. 1. TIGER’S BACK No, not the one that has been operated on four times. Woods’ return to the winner’s circle – and the raucous scene on East Lake’s 18th fairway – will likely be the first thing we remember about this season, and for good reason. Woods’ win elicited images from the days when he was at the height of his powers. It felt like 2000 when Woods birdied six of the first seven holes to pull away from the field. The fans flooding the final fairway was reminiscent of 1997 when galleries in the grips of Tigermania first burst through the gallery ropes to follow him down the final hole. And his emotional victory speech was something that we’d only seen once before, when he won the 2006 Open Championship after his father’s passing. Woods overcame so much to earn his first PGA TOUR victory in five years. The time between victories was filled with pain and suffering for the world’s most famous athlete. His former swing coach, Sean Foley, put it best: “Everyone likes to see a comeback story because we’re all coming back from something.â€� 2. BETTER WITH AGE Golf is increasingly becoming a young man’s game – more on that later – but Rose is bucking that trend with an impressive devotion to improvement. Rose’s desire to keep getting better at his craft, even with millions of dollars in the bank and a U.S. Open trophy and Olympic Gold Medal at home, is inspirational. “From how he eats, to how he trains, to how he breaks down a golf course, he has a very thoughtful approach to maximizing his probability for success,â€� Foley said. “Sometimes people are afraid to change what they do or how they do it. His lack of satisfaction in what he’s doing has really pushed us to look under every rock.â€� Rose climbed to the top of the FedExCup standings and world ranking at age 38. This father of two is excelling at a game that is dominated by kids. He’s the third-oldest FedExCup champion. The four previous FedExCup champions had an average of 25 years old. He’s also the third-oldest player to reach No. 1 in the world ranking for the first time. He finished in the top 10 in 61 percent of his starts this season, the highest percentage this season (Dustin Johnson was the only other player to finish in the top 10 in more than half his starts). Rose did it with a well-rounded game. He was the only player to finish in the top 30 in all four Strokes Gained statistics: Off-the-Tee (14th), Approach-the-Green (29), Around-the-Green (7) and Putting (17). He rose more than 100 spots in the Strokes Gained: Putting standings since last season, one of the biggest single-season gains in the history of that metric. 3. BROOKS’ BIG HAUL Justin Rose walked away with the FedExCup. Brooks Koepka will likely win the PGA TOUR’s Player of the Year Award. Winning two majors in one year all but guarantees that honor. If you want to stump your friends, you can tell them that Wayne Levi was the last person to win the Player of the Year Award over a two-time major winner. Levi won four times in 1990, while Nick Faldo captured the Masters and Open Championship. Faldo played just a handful of TOUR events that year, though, so the players voted for one of their own instead. Koepka won’t suffer that same fate, especially since no one else won more than three times, and none of those three-time winners grabbed a major. It’s been an incredible run for Koepka. He has four PGA TOUR titles. Three of them are majors. Last year’s U.S. Open at Erin Hills was a large, modern golf course that was perfect for his game. Winning this year’s U.S. Open at Shinnecock, one of the game’s historic venues, showed that Koepka’s game is about much more than power. He saved par several times down the stretch with a strong short game. Then he held off Woods to win the PGA Championship. Koepka’s performance in 2018’s majors is especially impressive considering that he missed the first one. Koepka, 28, started the year with a last-place finish at the Sentry Tournament of Champions, where he struggled with an injury to his left wrist. It forced him to the sidelines for nearly four months. He missed the Masters while he recuperated. “When I look at what I’ve done in the past two months, it’s incredible. Looking where I was, sitting on my couch watching the Masters, and to think I would do this, I would have laughed at you and told you there was no way, no chance, and to do it is really incredible,â€� Koepka said. My doctors, physios, trainers, everybody did an unbelievable job even to get back out on the golf course, and to do what I’ve done is very impressive,â€� he said. “I can’t even believe it.â€� 3. THE YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS “Today was a good day for the old guys, for sure.â€� That’s what Rose said after he and Woods, 42, shared the trophy ceremony at East Lake. Don’t get the wrong idea, though. The youth movement is still alive and well on the PGA TOUR. There were 10 wins by players 25 or younger this season, tied for second-most since the TOUR started keeping age records. There were also 10 wins by the 25-and-under set in 2000, but Woods accounted for nine of those wins. This season’s total of 25-and-under wins fell well short of last year’s record-setting mark (18) but shows that this demographic continues to experience unprecedented success. Jordan Spieth and Xander Schauffele, who combined for five wins last season, were winless, but other players stepped up in their stead. Six players won at age 25 or under – Patrick Cantlay, Bryson DeChambeau, Michael Kim, Jon Rahm, Justin Thomas and Aaron Wise – won this season. Cantlay, Kim and Wise each picked up their first PGA TOUR victory. DeChambeau took his game to another level, winning three times after earning his first victory at last year’s John Deere Classic. Wise qualified for the TOUR Championship at age 22. Only Tiger Woods, Jordan Spieth, Sergio Garcia and Si Woo Kim have made the season finale at a younger age. We also saw Joaquin Niemann earn his TOUR card in just 11 starts. The 19-year-old turned pro this year as the No. 1 player in the world amateur ranking. Golf used to be like baseball or hockey. The top prospects from college and amateur golf used to need a few years to hone their game before becoming stars. Now this quick transition from college to the big time looks more like the NBA. Just making the TOUR before age 25 was a rare accomplishment. Winning before 30 put you ahead of the curve. Not anymore. The Class of 2011’s success was the TOUR’s big story just a couple years ago. Now even younger players are entering the winner circle. Wise graduated high school in 2014! 4. BRYSON’S EMERGENCE He sprays water on his ball to simulate wet conditions. He traveled to Colorado to train with oxygen depletion. And he may be the only golfer who talks about parasympathetic states. Sure, some people will resent the smartest kid in class, especially when he starts using those polysyllabic words. For others, DeChambeau undoubtedly dregs up bad memories of high-school physics class. No matter your thoughts on his analytical ways, he is a unique character who brings a new dynamic to the PGA TOUR. And, most importantly, he can play. DeChambeau joined some select company with his wins in the first two events of the FedExCup Playoffs. Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson are the only other players to win the U.S. Amateur, NCAA Championship and at least four TOUR events before their 25th birthday. DeChambeau and Rory McIlroy are the only players to win multiple Playoffs events before the age of 25. DeChambeau, McIlroy, Jordan Spieth, Xander Schauffele and Justin Thomas are the only players to win in the Playoffs before age 25. 5. THE BIG BALL RULES Koepka and his workout buddy, Dustin Johnson, are just two of the big bashers having success on the TOUR these days. Launch monitors, space-age technology and advanced diet and exercise regimens have all helped players maximize their distance, so it’s no surprise that the long ball is crucial to success. Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee has become the stat that best predicts success on the PGA TOUR. Thirteen of the 30 players in the TOUR Championship finished in the top 20 in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee. Eight of the top 10 in that statistic were at East Lake. Seven of the top 11 in driving distance were at the TOUR Championship, as well. Rory McIlroy led the TOUR with a driving average of 319.8 yards. It’s the second-highest average ever recorded. Hank Kuehne averaged 321.4 yards in 2003. Kuehne finished seven yards ahead of No. 2 John Daly. Only nine players surpassed 300 yards in driving average. A lot has changed in 15 years. McIlroy was less than 1 yard ahead of Trey Mullinax. Sixty-one players averaged 300 or more yards. McIlroy, Koepka and Johnson each hit more than 60 percent of their tee shots longer than 300 yards. More than 30 percent of their tee shots went longer than 320 yards. 7. FRANCESCO’S CAREER YEAR It’s never too late to join the ranks of the big hitters. Francesco Molinari showed us that with his career year in 2018. Molinari has long been a world-class player, but he joined the ranks of the game’s elite this year, and increased driving distance played a large part in his ascension. Molinari, 35, has gained nearly 20 yards in the past three years, including a nine-yard gain since last season. He did it by hitting the gym – “I was more of a couch guy,â€� he said – and tweaking his swing and equipment. Molinari also is hitting his irons about 8 yards farther. How important is an extra 20 yards off the tee? Mark Broadie, the inventor of the Strokes Gained: Statistics, said it can decrease a player’s score by three strokes per tournament. Molinari picked up his first PGA TOUR win (Quicken Loans National), his first major (Open Championship) and qualified for the TOUR Championship for the first time. He had four worldwide wins before this year. He won three times in 2018, including the European Tour’s flagship event, the BMW PGA Championship. Molinari also credited this season’s success to putting instructor Phil Kenyon, with whom he started working earlier this year, and performance coach Dave Aldred. 8. ANCHORS UP The USGA’s anchor ban took effect on Jan. 1, 2016. Two years later, we saw two players whose careers were derailed by the ban re-enter the winner’s circle. Webb Simpson and Keegan Bradley both won for the first time in years. Simpson did it with a record-setting performance at THE PLAYERS. It was his first win since October 2013. Bradley’s win at the BMW Championship was his first since 2012. Ironically, they both led the field in Strokes Gained: Putting during their win. Both players now use the arm-lock method, where the putter’s shaft runs up their left arm. Simpson’s win at THE PLAYERS inspired Bradley to keep persevering with the new putter. “Webb, to me, he’s my idol,â€� Bradley said. “I always tell him, everything he does is perfect. I love the guy. And what I saw him do at THE PLAYERS was inspiring for me because not only did he win the tournament and putt well, but he’s putting better than he did with the belly putter.â€� 9. JT’S DEFENSE This season, Justin Thomas authored the best defense in the FedExCup’s history. He won three times – the CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES, The Honda Classic and World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational – en route to a seventh-place finish in the FedExCup. He was just the second player to finish in the top 10 of the FedExCup in the season following his victory. So much for concerns about how Thomas would follow up his career year of 2017, when he won five times, including the PGA Championship. Thomas sought out Jordan Spieth after the season for advice on how to deal with the increased pressure and expectations that follow such a successful season. No one has won more over the last two years than Thomas. This season may not have included a major, but Thomas was proud of his increased “It’s been a really consistent year, and I take a lot of pride in that,â€� said Thomas, who finished in the top 25 in 20 of 23 starts, including 10 top-10s. “I feel like I’ve gotten better as a player this year. I don’t have as many wins and I didn’t win a major, but statistically I think I’ve improved in about every category, which is huge.â€� Below, find some noteworthy numbers and statistics from last season. Every shot on the PGA TOUR is important. More than one-third of PGA TOUR events were either decided in a playoff or won by a single stroke. The average margin of victory was 2.4 strokes. The largest winning margin was eight shots. Dustin Johnson (Sentry Tournament of Champions), Francesco Molinari (Quicken Loans National) and Michael Kim (John Deere Classic) each won by a touchdown and two-point conversion. There were 37 scores of 62 or lower this season, highlighted by Brandt Snedeker’s 59 at the Wyndham Championship. Snedeker is one of five players to shoot 62 or lower multiple times this season. Kevin Na is the only player to do it three times. Na and Fleetwood did it multiple times in the same event. 59, Brandt Snedeker: Wyndham Championship, first round 62, Brandt Snedeker: FedEx St. Jude Classic, second round 61, Kevin Na: Fort Worth Invitational, fourth round 62, Kevin Na: Fort Worth Invitational, first round 62, Kevin Na: BMW Championship, second round 61, Webb Simpson: A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier, first round 62, Webb Simpson: Wyndham Championship, fourth round 62, Brian Gay: AT&T Byron Nelson, second round 62, Brian Gay: Wyndham Championship, third round 62, Tommy Fleetwood: BMW Championship, second round 62, Tommy Fleetwood: BMW Championship, third round Lowest 72-hole scores 257 (27-under), Michael Kim, (63-64-64-66), John Deere Classic 259 (21-under), Francesco Molinari, (67-65-65-62), Quicken Loans National 259 (21-under), Brandt Snedeker, (59-67-68-65), Wyndham Championship 260 (20-under), Justin Rose, (66-64-66-64), Fort Worth Invitational 260 (20-under), Justin Rose, (66-63-64-67), BMW Championship 260 (20-under), Keegan Bradley, (66-64-66-64), BMW Championship Low finish by a winner 62 (8-under), Francesco Molinari, Quicken Loans National 63 (7-under), Bubba Watson, Travelers Championship 64 (8-under), Rory McIlroy, Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard 64 (7-under), Gary Woodland, Waste Management Phoenix Open 64 (6-under), Justin Rose, Fort Worth Invitational 64 (6-under), Kevin Na, A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier 64 (6-under), Keegan Bradley, BMW Championship Largest 54-hole lead 7 strokes, Webb Simpson, THE PLAYERS Championship 6 strokes, Dustin Johnson, World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions* 5 strokes, Ryan Armour, Sanderson Farms Championship 5 strokes, Michael Kim, John Deere Classic * – Did not win Biggest come-from-behind victory (entering final round) 8 strokes, Justin Rose, WGC-HSBC Champions 6 strokes, Satoshi Kodaira, RBC Heritage 6 strokes, Bubba Watson, Travelers Championship 5 strokes, Paul Casey, Valspar Championship Most consecutive rounds of par or better 24, Patrick Reed 24, Justin Thomas

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Emergency 9: Fantasy advice for Round 1 of Valspar ChampionshipEmergency 9: Fantasy advice for Round 1 of Valspar Championship

Here are nine tidbits from the first round of the Valspar Championship that gamers can use tomorrow, this weekend or down the road. The Copperhead Course at Innisbrook Resort and Golf Club in Palm Harbor, Florida plays to 7,340 yards and is par-71. Know Thy Enemy These were the top-10 picked golfers in the PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO. Each week there are always a few from the list above that don’t fire in Round 1. This week is not the exception as Stenson (74), Finau (74), McIlroy (74) and Spieth (76) did not pay off for investors on Thursday. People’s Choice: Sergio Garcia It looks like the #NappyFactor supporters are out in full force this week, and I’m on board as well. Garcia’s nous and ability to work the ball sticks out on difficult courses and the Copperhead Course more than qualifies. His opening round of 70 was one of 20 pros at -1 and included four circles against three squares without any “others”. The leaderboard today, similar to the parking lots and galleries, is packed tightly. Morning Show Corey Conners has appeared in this column a couple of times over the early part of the new season, so his name shouldn’t be unfamiliar to the regulars here. He opened with 67 (-4), the lowest round of the day, and was perfect until a bogey on his final hole. His key stat was ranking second in Strokes Gained: Putting. He’s made cuts in nine of 10 starts but the rookie’s best finish is just T29. Afternoon Edition Whereas Conners has never played this event, Nick Watney is more than comfortable on the Copperhead Course. He’s cashed in all of his previous 10 tries. He signed for the low round of the afternoon wave, 68 (-3), and that will put him in an excellent position to keep that perfect record intact. He’s posted five consecutive rounds in red numbers after his T14 last year. The key to his round today was sitting in the top 10 for both fairways hit (T9; 10 of 13) and GIR (T8; 12 of 18). Weather Report Suite The Copperhead Course played brutally difficult to open the proceedings. The greens are still growing in after being completely regrassed after the 2015 edition and are playing firm. The grain in the TifEagle Bermuda also makes for plenty of second-guessing on speed of putts. Throw in blustery and gusting winds and the field couldn’t hit 50 percent GIR. Even with four par-5 holes, there wasn’t much scoring throughout the afternoon with only 27 players breaking par. There were six pros that didn’t make a birdie today, including Ryder Cup studs Stenson, Ian Poulter (78) and Ross Fisher (76). Rory McIlroy and Jordan Spieth each made one. The course played +1.861 strokes above par. #Hard. The Tiger Factor The interesting question entering this week was how Tiger Woods would fare on a course he hasn’t played in over 20 years. His opening round 70 (-1) was under par and in his words, the hardest test of his season to date. He’s three shots off the lead and wasn’t near hitting top gear. His trusty flat stick ranked third in putts-per-GIR. The harder it plays, the better his chances as nobody grinds out rounds like he does. Collateral Damage I’m still trying to figure out how Sam Burns (T28, E) beat Woods by two shots two Sundays ago at The Honda Classic. He’s been the exception rather than the rule of Woods’ playing partners. I argued that the more experienced players could handle the circus but Stenson and Spieth didn’t keep up today. Stenson’s 74 was only his second round above par from 13 rounds and his worse by two. Spieth opened with 76 here last year and bounced back for 68. Last week he opened 70-67, so he’s a quick fix. Of his last nine rounds here, five are in the 60’s. I’m not panicking with either of these studs. Worry? Who Me? I’m trying to find angles to embrace as Rory McIlroy looks to get back into the top 10, let alone the winner’s circle. It’s not like he’s forgotten how to play the game but gamers are starting to wonder when the switch is going to flip. He teed it up three weeks in a row in February and never went lower than 68 and had more rounds above par than below it. This is his first trip to Innisbrook, and I thought a change of scenery and difficult track would be right up his alley. His opening round 74, with only six fairways and seven GIR, was saved by his ability to get up-and-down. He needed 14 putts on the seven greens he hit but just 12 on the 11 he didn’t. Please hold me. Study Hall For those of you who are invested with Bryson DeChambeau (No. 13 overall), it was mentioned during the broadcast that his back was bothering him. His opening round 76 didn’t inspire. … Kevin Na withdrew before his tee time in the afternoon wave. There are plenty of you who were pinched today that shouldn’t be tomorrow. … Jimmy Walker (69) and Luke Donald (70) signed the only clean cards on the day. 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Jon Rahm re-energized for Torrey Pines test post COVID-19Jon Rahm re-energized for Torrey Pines test post COVID-19

SAN DIEGO – Jon Rahm would’ve been forgiven for not wanting to watch the final round of the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday but the Spanish star was indeed an interested television viewer from his COVID-19 isolation. The five-time PGA TOUR winner was odds-on to make it a sixth triumph when he fashioned a six-shot lead through 54 holes at Muirfield Village before a positive COVID test result forced his immediate withdrawal from the tournament. Instead of pout, or get angry, Rahm meditated and practiced mindful reading while keeping an eye on the Sunday showdown between Collin Morikawa and eventual winner Patrick Cantlay. Both shot 1 under on Sunday so theoretically defending champion Rahm would’ve had to play pretty poorly to not close the deal. “These are circumstances that happen in life, and they were still competing for the event, and I’m still a student and avid fan of the game, so, yeah, I was watching. To be honest, I was kind of wondering how close they were going to get to 18 under at the same time,” Rahm said with a cheeky sincerity from Torrey Pines. When first sent to isolation, Rahm faced the prospect of not being able to get to the U.S. Open site until the eve of the event but back-to-back negative test results on Friday and Saturday allowed him to break from containment a little earlier. In the meantime he’d flown on a private medical jet from Ohio to his home base in Arizona but had to keep clear of his newborn son and his parents who had flown from Spain to visit their grandchild. “I was a little bit scared because, even though I was feeling fine, I didn’t want to give the virus to anybody in my house. I didn’t want to possibly give it to our young son,” Rahm said. “The hardest part out of all this was for just over 10 days not being able to even spend any time with my little one. Adding to that… I wasn’t there when my parents met my son, and I hadn’t seen my parents in over a year, almost a year and a half. Those are the hard parts about this virus in life.” Rahm revealed that he had indeed been vaccinated for COVID-19 prior to the Memorial Tournament but was still in the 14-day window before one is considered fully vaccinated. While there were some calls for the Spaniard to be able to play on in Ohio, perhaps as an isolated single, the man himself says that would have been completely unfair. “To all the people criticizing the PGA TOUR, they shouldn’t. We are in a pandemic, and even though this virus has very different forms of attacking people, you never know what reaction you’re going to get,” Rahm said. “So the PGA TOUR did what they had to do. The CDC rules are there for a reason. There are players that missed the World Series last year. There are other athletes that have missed events. I’ve heard a lot of different theories: I should have played alone; that’s nonsense. The rules are there, and it’s clear.” And so his attention turns to Torrey Pines where he won the Farmers Insurance Open in 2017 and has gone T29-T5-2-T7 since on the venue. He was also engaged on the trails just north of the course and counts the area as one of the most special in his life. As the world No. 3, Rahm is the highest ranked player in the game without a major championship but enters the U.S. Open as the man to beat. “I still have the memory of all those great golf shots I played. I’m going to choose to remember that. I’ve been playing really good golf all year,” Rahm said. “Two weeks ago, it’s finally clicking all together like I was waiting for it to happen. Finally everything was firing on all cylinders. Not that I’m expecting to play that perfect again, but I know that I can play at a really high level. “I wish I was a little bit more prepared… but once you tee off Thursday, it doesn’t matter. You go do a job. Was it 13 years ago Tiger won on pretty much a broken knee without really being prepared? Once the gun goes off, it doesn’t matter. So in that sense, I’m still confident.”

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