Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting The Chosen One at THE PLAYERS Championship

The Chosen One at THE PLAYERS Championship

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — You claim you expected the Webb Simpson dominance last season. And you totally saw Jason Day overcoming a poor record on TPC Sawgrass a few years earlier.  You even saw the likes of Si Woo Kim and Craig Perks coming from the clouds.  Yeah … right. One of the many reasons THE PLAYERS Championship is such an amazing event is that it doesn’t necessarily give a particular type of player an advantage.  That makes it wildly unpredictable and great theatre.  You need to be on in every facet of the game. Bomb and gouge efforts do not always work at TPC Sawgrass.  But never fear. If you are looking for a great tip on the winner, we have it all worked out for you.  Forget our usually impeccable Power Rankings. The only way to find out who will get their hands on the sensational new PLAYERS Championship trophy is to eliminate those who history says cannot win.  This elite field of 144 players can be whittled down to just one using data from the 45 previous winners and a variety of categories that are essentially designed to give you a can’t miss prospect. Okay, it might be a little subjective. And a fair bit random. And perhaps not perfect. But then again … it might just be pure genius.  1. Winning twice at TPC Sawgrass? Not likely any more. While five players have won twice at the iconic venue only Tiger Woods has done so inside the last 25 years. So recent champions are out. Eliminated: Webb Simpson, Si Woo Kim, Jason Day, Rickie Fowler, Martin Kaymer, Tiger Woods, Matt Kuchar, Henrik Stenson, Sergio Garcia, Phil Mickelson, Adam Scott. 2. Just three players (Jack Nicklaus in the inaugural event in 1974, Hal Sutton in 2000 and Craig Perks in 2002) have won in their first start at THE PLAYERS, so rule out all first-timers. Eliminated: Abraham Ancer, Lucas Bjerregaard, Bronson Burgoon, Cameron Champ, Joel Dahmen, Tyler Duncan, Sungjae Im, Adam Long, Denny McCarthy, Eddie Pepperell, J.T. Poston, Seamus Power, Andrew Putnam, Sam Ryder, Sam Saunders, Martin Trainer, Peter Uihlein, Matt Wallace, Aaron Wise, Wyndham Clark. 3. Scotsman Sandy Lyle (1987) is the only player from Great Britain and/or Ireland to win THE PLAYERS. Clearly a curse exists.  Eliminated: Paul Casey, Tommy Fleetwood, Tyrrell Hatton, Russell Knox, Martin Laird, Rory McIlroy, Ian Poulter, Justin Rose, Shane Lowry, Danny Willett, Matthew Fitzpatrick. 4. Just one of the last 15 champions (Si Woo Kim) at THE PLAYERS came into the event with a negative mark in Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green on the season. This wipes out a healthy chunk. Eliminated: Brian Harman, Ollie Schniederjans, Brian Gay, Jason Dufner, Grayson Murray, Kiradech Aphibarnrat, Stewart Cink, Dominic Bozzelli, Anirban Lahiri, Alex Noren, Scott Langley, Brice Garnett, Kyle Stanley, Daniel Berger, Beau Hossler, Satoshi Kodaira, Ryan Armour, Rory Sabbatini, Harris English, Michael Kim, C.T. Pan, Nick Taylor, Scott Brown, Troy Merritt, Brandt Snedeker, Andrew Landry, Ryan Blaum, Richy Werenski, Adam Hadwin, Charley Hoffman, Alex Cejka, Brendan Steele, Patrick Reed, Billy Horschel, Jimmy Walker, Aaron Baddeley, Ted Potter Jr., Kevin Streelman. 5. THE PLAYERS hasn’t historically been kind to the old-timers. Just six of 45 winners were in their 40s. Unlikely to get a veteran reclaim past glories here.  Eliminated: Jim Furyk, Zach Johnson, Ryan Palmer, Scott Piercy, Vijay Singh, Vaughn Taylor, Bubba Watson. 6. Just two winners (Craig Perks and Tim Clark in 2010) have made THE PLAYERS their first TOUR win. So rule out all players who are still seeking their first TOUR wins. Eliminated: Byeong An, Rafa Cabrera Bello, Bud Cauley, Corey Conners, Talor Gooch, Brandon Harkins, Tom Hoge, Sung Kang, Jason Kokrak, Kelly Kraft, Haotong Li, Luke List, Trey Mullinax, Thorbjorn Olesen, Patrick Rodgers, J.J. Spaun, Harold Varner III 7. Prior form at TPC Sawgrass counts. 21 of the last 27 champions had at least one top-15 finish at THE PLAYERS before they went on to win the event. This includes 12 of the last 14 winners.  Eliminated: Patrick Cantlay, Austin Cook, Bryson DeChambeau, Tony Finau, Branden Grace, Russell Henley, Charles Howell III, John Huh, Patton Kizzire, Keith Mitchell, Ryan Moore, Jon Rahm, Chez Reavie, Cameron Smith, Scott Stallings, Brian Stuard, Michael Thompson, Kevin Tway. 8. Four of the last six winners of THE PLAYERS had previously won a major. That trend looks to continue.  Eliminated: Emiliano Grillo, Chesson Hadley, J.B. Holmes, Chris Kirk, Kevin Kisner, Danny Lee, Marc Leishman, Hideki Matsuyama, Kevin Na, Xander Schauffele, Jhonattan Vegas, Nick Watney, Gary Woodland.  9. Each of the last 16 PLAYERS winners entered that week’s tournament ranked among the top 75 golfers in the world. Not since 2002, when Craig Perks won THE PLAYERS as the world’s 256th-ranked golfer, has someone outside the top 75 won at TPC Sawgrass. Eliminated: Charl Schwatzel 10. Of the last 25 PLAYERS champions, only three of them ranked outside the top 100 on TOUR in scoring average leading into the event.  Eliminated: Jordan Spieth 11. Amazingly, 13 of the last 15 winners had felt the sting of TPC Sawgrass prior to their win, posting a round of 76 or higher. It helps to have felt that pain. (Five of them had scores above 80!) Eliminated: Justin Thomas 12. While our resident fantasy guru Rob Bolton’s Power Rankings are usually eerily accurate, his strike rate at THE PLAYERS is not as good. Since starting in 2010 only three of the nine winners were inside his top 10 leading into the tournament. Sorry Rob, we don’t trust you this week! Eliminated: Lucas Glover 13. Just three winners have won the previous week before THE PLAYERS, so rule out last Sunday’s Arnold Palmer Invitational Presented by Mastercard champion.  Eliminated: Francesco Molinari 14. Seven of the last eight PLAYERS Champions had a season prior to winning where they won at least $4.5 million.  Eliminated: Keegan Bradley, Louis Oosthuizen 15. Just four times out of 32 since the introduction of the official world rankings has the man at No.1 won THE PLAYERS. Two of those times was by Tiger Woods. That’s just a 12.5percent strike rate. Eliminated: Dustin Johnson That leaves us with just one player left. The chosen one. The player who avoids all 15 of our carefully researched categories. As such we can anoint him now. The 2019 PLAYERS Champion just happens to be a guy who is the current PGA TOUR Player of the Year. A guy who won two majors last year. A guy who shot the course record at TPC Sawgrass last year… Brooks Koepka.

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Reed’s changes paying off at the Wells Fargo ChampionshipReed’s changes paying off at the Wells Fargo Championship

WILMINGTON, N.C. – Notes and observations from Saturday’s third round of the Wells Fargo Championship at Eagle Point Golf Club, where Patrick Reed shot a 5-under 67 to take the solo lead at 8 under par. Europeans Alex Noren and Jon Rahm each shot 69 and were one back, while FedExCup leader Dusin Johnson also fired a 67 and was still in contention, four behind. For more coverage from Eagle Point, click here for the Daily Wrap-up. REED KEEPS IT SIMPLE Patrick Reed has five PGA TOUR victories at age 26, so it’s not like he’s been struggling. But he wasn’t seeing the ball go in the hole as much as he wanted this season. He made cuts but didn’t contend, and was an early casualty at the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play. Then he started missing cuts, failing to make the weekend rounds three times in April alone. He decided to make a change. Rather than consulting with his caddie and his trusty green-reading book before every putt—a practice that may soon be outlawed, anyway—Reed decided to go back to the way he did it as a highly decorated amateur at Augusta State. See putt. Hit putt. “I decided just to be more of a kind of see and react guy rather than being so technical, and having Kessler [Karain, his caddie] in there and looking at the book and trying to get the perfect line,” said Reed, who is averaging 27 putts per round at Eagle Point this week. “Go back to how I putted in college, kind of just see the putt and go knock it in.” That simple plan paid dividends Saturday as Reed tied the low round of the day. The putter has been his friend as he tries to win for the first time since The Barclays last year, and has helped him get up and down 16 times in 19 chances, best in the field. He’ll need more of the same Sunday, what with 18 players within four of the lead—and the chase pack featuring the likes of Rahm, Johnson and Phil Mickelson (69, 4 under). WIND CHANGES YET AGAIN This week was always going to be about the wind at Eagle Point, which is serving as a one-year host while Quail Hollow preps for the PGA Championship in August. If it didn’t blow, Eagle Point would yield low scores, but boy, has it ever blown. “We’ve had three different wind directions now,” said Graeme McDowell, who shot a third-round 70 and is at 4 under par, just four off the lead. “It started a southeast, went to a southwest, and today was even a little northwest. On one, for example, I hit 3-iron to the green as opposed to wedge.” McDowell laughed. “That’s a pretty big difference.” The ninth hole no longer played into the teeth of the wind, and the green (or the adjacent pond) on 18 was easily reached in two shots. Still, while Eagle Point played the easiest it has all week, yielding 67s by Reed, Dustin Johnson and Seung-Yul Noh, it wasn’t easy. The best players in the world essentially fought the course to a draw, averaging 72.228 strokes in round three. “You come to a place like this that no one’s ever seen before, and you get three different wind directions in three days, I kind of like it when that happens,” McDowell said. “It makes everyone think; it makes strategy more important. Caddies are more important. Practice rounds are more important. This is refreshing, this week.”   SHOT OF THE DAY MICKELSON MAKES MOVE Phil Mickelson has flirted with winning in North Carolina plenty of times. He finished second to Payne Stewart at the 1999 U.S. Open at Pinehurst, and second to Rory McIlroy at the 2010 Wells Fargo at Quail Hollow. His Wells Fargo record since then: T9 in 2011, followed by T26, 3, T11, T4 and T4. But he’s winless in 19 previous starts in the Tar Heel State. He’s still knocking on the door. “I enjoyed it, I played well,” Mickelson said after shooting a third-round 69 to get to 4 under for the tournament and onto the first page of the leaderboard. “I had a lot of opportunities to take it even lower and really move up the leaderboard, but it was a good solid day.” After failing to birdie any of the par 5s in the second round, Mickelson birdied two of them, and birdied two par 3s as well, in the third. His round could have been even better but for a few gaffes, the last of which coming when he left his third shot in the bunker on 18. He got up and down to salvage par, but will need an extra-special round Sunday to break the streak. “It’s probably not what I needed to get right where I wanted,” Mickelson said, “but at least if I get it going tomorrow I have a good chance.” CALL OF THE DAY MOLINARI’S UNLIKELY INSPIRATION Francesco Molinari shot an even-par 72 to fall from the outright lead into a tie for fourth place. 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If he wins the Wells Fargo at Eagle Point on Sunday, perhaps his winner’s speech will make mention of the two Gonzalos, Higuain and Fernandez-Castano, and an odd bit of reverse psychology.

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Expert Picks: THE NORTHERN TRUSTExpert Picks: THE NORTHERN TRUST

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