Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting The First Look: Bridgestone Invitational

The First Look: Bridgestone Invitational

• COURSE: Firestone Country Club (South), 7,400 yards, par 70. From beginnings as a generous perk from Harvey Firestone to employees of his tire company, the club wound up making its own name as a major host even before joining the World Golf Championships lineup. The South course opened in 1929, with Robert Trent Jones overseeing upgrades for the 1960 PGA Championship captured by Jay Hebert. The PGA of America brought its showcase event back again in 1966 and ’75, by which time Firestone had become home of the World Series of Golf. That event moved under the WGC banner in 1999. • FEDEXCUP: Winner receives 550 points. • CHARITY: The First Tee is the primary beneficiary of World Golf Championships events. In addition, Northern Ohio Golf Charities has designated Akron Children’s Hospital and University Hospitals Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital as the tournament’s signature recipients. In all, the event has donated more than $46 million to Northeast Ohio causes. • FIELD WATCH: Newly crowned Open Championship winner Jordan Spieth joins defending champion and FedExCup No. 2 Dustin Johnson atop a current roster of 78 qualifiers. The field features 33 of the top 35 in the FedExCup standings. … Berths remain available for the RBC Canadian Open winner, plus anyone who enters the top 50 in Monday’s world rankings. … Recent winners Bryson DeChambeau (John Deere Classic) and Xander Schauffele (Greenbrier Classic) are among eight men making their World Golf Championships debut. … Rod Pampling, winner in Las Vegas last November, is playing his first WGC since the 2009 WGC HSBC Champions in China. … Lee Westwood is set for his 58th WGC start, still in pursuit of his first WGC victory. • 72-HOLE RECORD: 259, Tiger Woods (2000). • 18-HOLE RECORD: 61, José María Olazábal (1st round, 1990), Tiger Woods (2nd round, 2000 and 2nd round, 2013), Sergio Garcia (2nd round, 2014). • LAST YEAR: Johnson followed up his breakthrough U.S. Open triumph with another victory on the big stage, using a 66-66 weekend to overtake Jason Day for his third WGC crown. Coming off a post-Open trip to the Bahamas, Johnson showed some early rust before finding his groove again on the weekend. He trailed Day by three with six holes left, but birdies at Nos. 13 and 14 trimmed the gap before a double bogey by Day, who found water at Firestone’s 655-yard 16th hole. Another Johnson birdie at No.17 sealed the win, holding off Scott Piercy’s late charge. Piercy (70) finished one shot back, the second time in three weeks he’d come in as runner-up to Johnson. Day’s 72 left him three behind, sharing third with Spieth, Matt Kuchar and Kevin Chappell. • STORYLINES: Johnson, already a winner at Mexico and Dell Technologies Match Play, has a chance to become the first man to capture three WGC crowns in the same year. Though Tiger Woods owns 18 WGC titles, he never won more than two in a season. … Johnson hasn’t won since the WGC Dell Technologies Match Play, before hurting his back in a slip-and-fall mishap in Augusta. He said last week he’s still feeling effects from the injury. … Spieth, whose triumph at Royal Birkdale moved him to the top of the FedExCup chart and No.2 in the world rankings, returns to action in quest of a third straight victory. He won the Travelers Championship before heading across the Atlantic. … Rory McIlroy, the 2014 champion, hopes to build on an uptick in form at Royal Birkdale that propelled him to a share of fourth. He had missed three of his previous four cuts. • SHORT CHIPS: Shane Lowry, who triumphed in 2015, and Hunter Mahan (2010) are the only Firestone champions in the past 22 years who don’t also have a major title to their names. That includes the last five editions of the old World Series of Golf. … Argentina’s Andres Romero is the only man who comes to Firestone outside the top 125 in the FedExCup standings, though he’s focused more attention on Europe this year and has made just eight PGA TOUR starts. He’s in via his victory at Europe’s BMW International Open. • TELEVISION: Thursday-Friday, 1:30-6:30 p.m. ET (Golf Channel). Saturday-Sunday, noon-1:30 p.m. (GC); 2-6 p.m. (CBS). • PGA TOUR LIVE: Thursday-Friday, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. (featured groups), 2-6:30 p.m. (featured holes). Saturday-Sunday, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. (featured holes). • RADIO: Thursday-Friday, 1-7 p.m.; Saturday-Sunday, 1-6 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com).

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Bad back and all, Max Homa rides his Presidents Cup momentumBad back and all, Max Homa rides his Presidents Cup momentum

RIDGELAND, S.C. – Max Homa is a lifelong California guy, so he is very familiar with the concept of riding a nice wave. He still is feeling the ripple effect of finishing a perfect 4-0 in last month’s Presidents Cup, his first foray into team cup competition as a professional. The week prior to that, he won his fifth PGA TOUR title, capturing the Fortinet Championship in jarring fashion with a miraculous chip-in birdie at the 72nd hole. At 31, he and his wife, Lacey, are about to be first-time parents. They are having a boy, due Nov. 2. This week at THE CJ CUP in South Carolina will pretty much be it until December, when he returns to play the Hero Challenge, Tiger’s event in the Bahamas. You could say Homa is in a great place, though on Thursday at Congaree Golf Club, in the first round of THE CJ CUP, he wasn’t. Not health-wise, anyway. Homa has been dealing with back tightness for a few weeks, since the PGA TOUR stop in Las Vegas, and in Thursday’s opening round, a number of factors – cool temperatures, walking 18 holes for the first time in a while, a shot from an awkward lie in a bunker at the par-4 11th – stiffened him up so badly he barely could retrieve his ball from the hole. Each time he slowly bent down, he looked like a man about to be knighted. So on Friday, he decided to just take care of depositing putts into the hole – he did so seven times for birdies – and leaving the fetching to his caddie, Joe Greiner, who was happy to do it. The scene – Homa knocking down a putt, then exiting the green – produced some lighter moments in his group, and wasn’t lost on one of his playing partners, Jordan Spieth. It was Spieth who poured in a long eagle putt at Royal Birkdale on Sunday on the 15th hole of the 2017 Open Champoinship who, in the heat of the frenetic moment, yelled to his caddie, Michael Greller, “Go get that!” “Jordan said he and Greller are going to do it (Saturday),” Homa said, smiling. Homa’s iron play has been spot-on for two days, and Friday he was able to add better driving to his repertoire, which produced a second-round, 6-under 65 that lifted him into a tie for 18th. He made two crazy scrambling pars to start his round, then settled in nicely, hitting approaches to 3 feet at the third, rolling in a 16-footer for birdie at the fourth, and hitting close irons into Nos. 5 and 7, a pair of par-3 holes. He at times moved a bit gingerly, but when he finally stood over the golf ball, he made the game appear easy. “For me, it all starts off the tee here,” Homa said. “All of a sudden I was playing out of the fairway and my irons feel really good. I found myself with a few kick-ins. It was just nice to get moving. I played so poorly yesterday. It was nice to feel I was going in the right direction for longer than two holes.” Homa will be riding the high of last month’s Presidents Cup for some time, saying it provided him a “highlight reel in your head of cool moments.” Week to week in regular tournaments, those meaningful moments can be few and far between. It is difficult to get into contention. But at Quail Hollow in his first Presidents Cup, every shot had something on the line, giving Homa the sense that every match felt like the back nine on Sunday. “This week, I have to play incredibly well the next two days just to be in position to where I could maybe have some sort of highlight moment where you feel that nervous,” he said. “Four matches-worth, that’s good for the future Rolodex of things you go through when, maybe at a major, or Sunday of a tournament, when you have a big moment you can sort of harken back to.” Scottie Scheffler, the World No. 1, knows the value of taking momentum earned in a team setting and using it to one’s individual benefit. It was last autumn that he was a captain’s pick on the U.S. Ryder Cup, and delivered a huge point on Sunday when he took down then-World No. 1 Jon Rahm in singles. A year on, Scheffler has won four times, including the Masters, and he is World No. 1. “I think those tournaments are some of the most pressure you can feel as a player, and so any time you can succeed in those conditions and play really well, you’re going to see a surge in confidence,” Scheffler said Friday at Congaree. “Max is a guy who has performed well out here for a number of years and won some tournaments. I’m sure you’ll see his trajectory continue to go upwards.” At 31, and having his paid his dues for a number of seasons, Homa is enjoying his view as he continues to climb the hierarchy of the game. When the PGA TOUR stages its elevated events beginning in 2023, Homa will have ample opportunity to climb even higher. Once his weekend ends at Congaree, Homa will be switching from a “making-birdies” mode into a “changing-diapers” mode. He cannot wait to meet his new son. What does he look forward to most? “Being able to mold a person, in a way, is a big responsibility, and it’s also very cool,” he said. “And I’m also excited for the things that I don’t even know that I’m supposed to be excited about … I’m excited for that.” Friday, he was excited that his back was good enough to get him around in 65 shots. He trails the leaders by six, but hopes to have a weekend good enough to be highlight-reel worthy.

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Brooks Koepka WD from TOUR Championship with wrist injuryBrooks Koepka WD from TOUR Championship with wrist injury

ATLANTA – Brooks Koepka has withdrawn from the TOUR Championship with a left wrist injury. Koepka was 3 over par on the day and 1 under for the tournament when he withdrew after a par at the 12th hole. Video showed him releasing the club and shaking out his left arm after hitting his tee shot at the par-3 11th hole, and buckling over, his left arm on his leg, after hitting a fairway bunker shot. An eight-time PGA TOUR winner, including four major championship titles, Koepka won the Waste Management Phoenix Open for the second time earlier this season and came to Atlanta looking to move up from 20th in the FedExCup. He is one of the six players to qualify on points to play on U.S. Ryder Cup Captain Steve Stricker’s team that will take on the Europeans at Whistling Straits in three weeks. Koepka will receive the prize money for finishing 30th in the 30-man field at East Lake.

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