Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting The First Look: 3M Open

The First Look: 3M Open

Brooks Koepka and Phil Mickelson headline the field as Minnesota celebrates its first regular PGA TOUR event in a half-century, enjoying elevated status for what previously was one of the most popular stops on the PGA TOUR Champions. Jason Day and Patrick Reed also fill out the roster that features 11 of the top 30 men in the latest FedExCup standings for the inaugural, as the TPC Twin Cities unveils a bolder layout in anticipation of testing some of the TOUR’s top talent. FIELD NOTES: Kenny Perry, who won last year’s final Champions edition, is back to make a title defense of sorts while Minnesota native Tom Lehman also tees up as a holdover from the event’s previous chapter. … Fellow Minnesotan Tim Herron also was given a spot via sponsor exemption. … Koepka, Mickelson, Reed and Jimmy Walker give the event four members of the 2016 U.S. Ryder Cup winners at nearby Hazeltine. … Robert Garrigus makes his first PGA TOUR start since sitting out three months on suspension. He tuned up with a pair of Korn Ferry Tour starts, grabbing the first-day lead in Utah after a 64. … Viktor Hovland makes his third straight start as a pro since rewriting the U.S. Open’s scoring record for an amateur and finishing T54 in his pro debut at the Travelers Championship. Former Oklahoma State teammate Matthew Wolff likewise is in the field after making his pro debut at the Travelers Championship as well. … Chase Koepka, younger brother of Brooks, also will tee it up on a sponsor invite. He’s spent 2019 on Europe’s Challenge Tour. FEDEXCUP: Winner receives 500 points. STORYLINES: After embracing a PGA TOUR Champions event, two major championships and the Ryder Cup in the past 17 years, Minnesota finally has a PGA TOUR event that will put down roots. The 3M Open marks the TOUR’s first regular stop in the state since the Minnesota Golf Classic played its last edition in 1969. Raymond Floyd, Mike Souchak and Frank Beard were among those winners. … Brooks Koepka, who won the PGA Championship and was second in the year’s other two majors, hopes to right the ship in a regular event. His past two non-majors have seen him finish outside the top 40. … A top-7 performance also would lift Koepka past Matt Kuchar into the FedExCup points lead. … The 3M Open is the second event in as many years to receive a PGA TOUR promotion from another circuit. Last year, the Corales Puntacana Championship made the jump from the Korn Ferry Tour. COURSE: TPC Twin Cities, 7,468 yards, par 71. Recently upgraded in anticipation of the PGA TOUR’s arrival, the longtime Champions venue north of Minneapolis first opened in 2000 and was widely considered one of that circuit’s top layouts. The Arnold Palmer design, with Tom Lehman as a consultant, transformed a former sod farm into a rolling landscape featuring 27 bodies of water, restoring several natural wetlands while framing holes with stands of mature oak and spruce trees. The 3M Championship came to TPC Twin Cities in 2001, enjoying an 18-year run on site. In each of the past seven years, TPC Twin Cities ranked first or second in birdies among 54-hole Champions stops. 54-HOLE RECORD (Champions): 191, David Frost (2010). 18-HOLE RECORD (Champions): 60, Paul Goydos (2nd round, 2017), Kenny Perry (2nd round, 2018). LAST YEAR: Perry closed the event’s PGA TOUR Champions chapter with his third victory in Minnesota, using a second-round 60 to open a five-shot lead before cruising to a three-shot triumph. A 3-under-par 69 was all Perry needed to finish things off, keeping Wes Short Jr.’s closing 63 at arm’s length. Perry also won at TPC Twin Cities in 2014 and ’15, matching Hale Irwin’s standard of three wins in the Champions event. It also was the seventh time in eight appearances that Perry had finished among the top seven at TPC Twin Cities. “It’s going to be so long next year, I probably won’t even recognize it when I come back,â€� he quipped. HOW TO FOLLOW TELEVISION: Thursday-Friday, 2-6 p.m. ET (Golf Channel). Saturday-Sunday, 1-2:45 p.m. (GC), 3-6 p.m. (CBS). PGA TOUR LIVE: Thursday-Friday, 8 a.m.-6:30 p.m. (featured groups). Saturday-Sunday, 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m. (featured groups), 3-6 p.m. (featured holes). International subscribers (via GOLF.tv): Thursday-Friday, 12:00 to 22:30 GMT. Saturday-Sunday, 13:30 to 22:00. RADIO: Thursday-Friday, 1-6:30 p.m.; Saturday-Sunday, 1-6 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com).  

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For Team Woods at the PNC, the fun surpasses the painFor Team Woods at the PNC, the fun surpasses the pain

ORLANDO, Fla. – Want to plug 100,000 watts into a 220-volt outlet? Get Tiger Woods on a birdie run. After a slow start to the opening round of the PNC Championship at Ritz-Carlton Golf Club, Team Woods – Tiger and his 13-year-old son, Charlie – caught some fire, bringing a burst of energy to the year-end event. Despite a stretch where the birdie train would stall midway through the back nine, Tiger and Charlie managed to shoot 13-under 59, and trail 2020 champions Justin and Mike Thomas, their Florida neighbors, by two shots heading to Sunday’s final round. (The event is 36 holes, with a Scramble format.) The Woods and Thomas teams played alongside one another on Saturday, making for plenty of laughs along the way, and will play alongside each other on Sunday as well, a request that PGA TOUR officials said was made by television. The last group tees off at 11:05 a.m. (Vijay Singh and his son, Qass, were first to the clubhouse at 13 under.) The Thomases and Woodses are a close bunch, and the barbs were plentiful across 18 holes. Charlie was wearing a Snoopy hat, so Mike Thomas, the elder statesman in the group and a PGA club professional who has helped to coach Charlie, called him “Snoopy” all day. Charlie had struggled early, but came through big at the par-4 seventh hole when he rolled in a putt from 18 feet. As he walked to the next tee, Justin Thomas saddled up alongside and said, “Welcome to the Father-Son, Charlie.” It’s a family affair all around, with Joe LaCava on Tiger’s bag and his son, Joe Jr., on Charlie’s bag. Jani Thomas, Mike’s wife and Justin’s mom, is caddying for Mike. And hey, Charlie didn’t want to leave out Justin’s caddie, Jim “Bones” Mackay, in naming who is part of the family. For the players, the needle stays out, constantly. “Before we even got out here, the texts were flying,” Tiger Woods said. Charlie rolled his left ankle earlier this week, and at times on Saturday he walked with a more pronounced limp than his ailing dad, who has been dealing with plantar fasciitis on top of the right leg and ankle injuries that have slowed him since his 2021 SUV crash in Los Angeles. Both played out of a cart for most of the day. After his tee shot at the third, Charlie immediately grabbed for the back of his ankle. A few holes later, at No. 5, he hit a tee shot and went to the ground. Charlie even has tried wearing different shoes to help. “On some shots,” Charlie said, “it hurt a lot. Walking was tough … it was all right. It wasn’t that bad.” His father, who once won a U.S. Open on a broken leg, can tell his son a little something about pain, having endured multiple back, knee, leg and ankle surgeries just to keep playing. On Saturday, the best pain reliever was the fun the two were having being together on the golf course. The crowd loved it, too. For Tiger, just being here after a year in which he played only nine official rounds always was going to be a bonus. “It’s about us having an opportunity to bond,” Tiger said. “We do this at home all the time, and you know, you guys are now seeing what we do all the time at home. We just have fun. We needle each other. We encourage each other. It goes back and forth. “It’s just an amazing relationship, and it just deepens the bond between father and son.” Like his dad sometimes has to do, Charlie hung in there on Saturday without having his best stuff. Some holes, Charlie would hop on one foot after his drives – he ripped one on the par-4 ninth long enough that his dad never even needed a tee ball – and on others he came up with different swings and followthroughs to help ease the pain. Charlie made his best contribution with the putter, No worries, especially when your partner happens to be the GOAT. Once Tiger chipped in for eagle from just off the back of the green at the par-5 fifth, Team Woods – or “Team Ice Pack,” as Tiger jokingly referred to them after the round – was off and flying. Charlie, who joined his dad on the interview stand for the first time Saturday evening, was impressed by his dad’s play. “I mean, he played great today,” Charlie said. “He had to carry me all day.” A year ago, Team Woods shot 15-under 57 on Sunday, finishing runner-up to John Daly and his son, John II. In many ways, despite making birdie on only one of their first three holes, this day felt very similar to where they’d left off. “We just got rolling,” Tiger said. “I had a little bit of a chip-in (for eagle at 5) and all of a sudden a couple putts fell, and we were just trying to give ourselves as many opportunities getting in the fairway, iron shots and putts, and we just got rolling.” From the par-3 fourth hole, where Tiger made a 30-footer up the hill for birdie, through the par-4 11th, Team Woods played eight holes in 9 under. Team Thomas pulled back ahead with their second eagle of the day at the 14th, and the cushion stayed at two shots when both teams birdied the closing, par-5 18th, where Team Woods missed a long look for eagle. Two years ago, after Team Thomas won the PNC in their debut, Justin and Mike playfully made their way over to Tiger’s house on Christmas wearing the wide Willie Park belts that are awarded the tournament champions. So one might say there is a little extra motivation for Team Woods on Sunday to try to catch them. After all, Tiger Woods has a short memory.

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