Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting The Royal Blue Golf Club Redefines the Golf Resort Experience

The Royal Blue Golf Club Redefines the Golf Resort Experience

Ten minutes into a warm-up session before my first round at the Royal Blue Golf Club at Baha Mar resort in the Bahamas, I hit a 7-iron from a set of forged Itobori clubs—an exclusive Japanese golf-equipment brand that charges about $12,000 for a fully stocked bag. The opportunity to hit clubs made by Itobori and PXG—as well as current models from Titleist, Taylormade, and Callaway—is possible thanks to Royal Blue’s “better-than-your-own� club rental program. For $350 ($55 more than the club’s standard greens fee), guests can enjoy the “all-in� package, which includes rental clubs, rental shoes (if needed), and two sleeves of Titleist Pro-V1 golf balls.

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Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Jeeno Thitikul+900
Nelly Korda+1000
Lydia Ko+1400
Jin Young Ko+2000
A Lim Kim+2200
Ayaka Furue+2500
Charley Hull+2500
Haeran Ryu+2500
Lauren Coughlin+2500
Minjee Lee+2500
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Zurich Classic of New Orleans
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy / Shane Lowry+350
Collin Morikawa / Kurt Kitayama+1100
J.T. Poston / Keith Mitchell+1800
Thomas Detry / Robert MacIntyre+1800
Billy Horschel / Tom Hoge+2000
Aaron Rai / Sahith Theegala+2200
Ben Griffin / Andrew Novak+2200
Wyndham Clark / Taylor Moore+2200
Nico Echavarria / Max Greyserman+2500
Nicolai Hojgaard / Rasmus Hojgaard+2500
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Mitsubishi Electric Classic
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Steven Alker+700
Stewart Cink+700
Padraig Harrington+800
Ernie Els+1000
Miguel Angel Jimenez+1200
Alex Cejka+2000
Bernhard Langer+2000
Stephen Ames+2000
Richard Green+2200
Freddie Jacobson+2500
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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
Ludvig Aberg+400
Collin Morikawa+450
Jon Rahm+450
Justin Thomas+550
Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
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Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Xander Schauffele+1400
Jon Rahm+1800
Justin Thomas+1800
Collin Morikawa+2000
Brooks Koepka+2500
Viktor Hovland+2500
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Viktor Hovland+2000
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
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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Jeff Roth, 63, to tee it up at Rocket Mortgage ClassicJeff Roth, 63, to tee it up at Rocket Mortgage Classic

DETROIT – Jeff Roth was hard to miss in a loud orange golf shirt, light blue shorts and PGA-crested Titleist staff bag as he hit balls at Detroit Golf Club on Wednesday. He has a squat, unchiseled build that harkens to an earlier era, and is the only person in the field this week who’s 63, making him the club pro equivalent of Bernhard Langer and the bookend to big-hitting Bryson DeChambeau. While DeChambeau and others have flirted with 200 mph ball speed, Roth is at 140. He will be playing a very different game when the Rocket Mortgage Classic begins Thursday. “The obvious – making the cut and playing the weekend,” he said of his goals for the week. “I’ve got people coming in from New Mexico, California, and of course I’ve got family and friends here in Michigan. My daughters are putting together a couple of Fatheads of me, so it’s gonna be pretty cool. I’m really looking forward to it.” All told, he added, his gallery might number 50-70 friends and family. Older players are having a bit of a moment. Phil Mickelson won the PGA Championship at nearly 51. Tim O’Neal, 48, won The John Shippen tournament earlier this week to earn his place in the field at the Rocket Mortgage. Dick Mast, 70, Monday-qualified for this week’s DICK’s Sporting Goods Open on PGA TOUR Champions. And now we have Roth, who admires them all. A resident of Farmington, New Mexico since 2010, Roth teaches at Michigan’s Boyne Golf Academy in the summer. He is, to borrow a movie title from 10 years ago, a human hot tub time machine. He played collegiately for Arizona in the 70s and made his first PGA TOUR start at the 1983 Buick Open won by Wayne Levi at nearby Warwick Hills Golf and Country Club. His game didn’t blossom until the 90s. He qualified for the Rocket Mortgage by winning the 2019 Michigan PGA Professional Championship; his spot in the field was held over a year because of the pandemic. If you haven’t heard of him, then maybe you’re not from here; Roth has won six Michigan majors. TOUR pro aspirations? Yeah, he had those, but once he settled down with his wife, Maureen, they began to fall away. “Plus,” he added, “I just wasn’t that good.” He made five of 20 cuts on TOUR. Still, not everyone has played in six PGA Championships in four decades, from 1988 to 2020. Roth has stood the test of time, and will have 40 years on players like Davis Thompson and Joaquin Niemann this week. “We figured when they met that it was the oldest and the youngest in the field,” said Thompson’s caddie Damon Green, who competed against Roth at the 2011 U.S. Senior Open at Inverness. Green’s recollections of that week are commonplace amongst those who have seen the Roth magic up-close. Green was longer off the tee, sometimes by a lot, but Roth wouldn’t go away. “I was outdriving him by 40 yards,” he said, “and then he hit his hybrids inside my wedges and short irons. It was impressive. My brother turned into a Jeff Roth superfan that week. “He’s very accurate,” Green continued, “and very disciplined.” He has to be, since he has no margin for error. Roth is so short, relatively speaking, that when he played in the 2020 PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park, he couldn’t reach six of the par-4s in two. “So it was a par 76 for me,” he said. He shot 74-75 and missed the cut by eight shots. And yet it would be foolish to write him off this week. “I was always a long hitter,” said friend and college teammate Dan Pohl, who had a 30-plus-year PGA TOUR career before he built Pole Cat Golf Course in Mt. Pleasant, Michigan. “Jeff was a thinker who manages himself around the course very well. He doesn’t make many mistakes. “Now at 64,” Pohl said with a laugh, “we make mistakes just getting up in the morning, but he’s still got the passion and the want to play at this level. He doesn’t have anything left to prove.” Roth wears his staying power like a badge of honor. “We grew up in an era where longevity was part of the formula for being a good player,” he said. “It’s just my opinion, but I don’t think today’s players look at it like that. I think they look at it where a career could be like five to 10 years. I don’t know if that’s the money, I don’t know if it’s that the physical part of what they put into it is so much greater than what we did. “Nobody trained like that in my era, so there were probably fewer injuries,” he continued. “Or you never heard about them because you just played through them.” If he could be gifted the career of Jay Haas or two-time U.S. Open champion Curtis Strange, Roth added, he would take Haas, “because he’s still playing, still grinding, still lovin’ it. “That to me is what it’s all about,” he said. Roth will go off the first tee at 8:45 a.m. Thursday, with much younger Mark Anderson and younger still Daniel Wetterich. Roth will have a nice gallery in tow, Fatheads included. He figures his personal par will be 73, which means he’ll have to shoot around 6 under to make it to the weekend. He’s still playing, still grinding, and still lovin’ it.

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Top 5 most viewed videos of 2020Top 5 most viewed videos of 2020

What were we watching in 2020? What moments defied expectations and practically screamed to be shared and clicked again and again and again? We were fascinated by golf balls diving into holes - and in one case coming out like it was scared of the dark. We loved the interplay between Tiger Woods and his incredibly talented doppelganger, 11-year-old son Charlie. And we thrilled at the Dustin Johnson-Jon Rahm mano-a-mano at the BMW Championship. Herewith, the five most watched moments of the year. RELATED: Top read stories of 2020 5. Tiger’s eagle bounces out of the hole He made it. He didn't make it. Tiger Woods' 141-yard approach shot at the Farmers Insurance Open took two hops and fell in the hoop. And then, a microsecond later, it popped back out as if it had crawled back up the cup lining. "Unbelievable," said Nick Faldo. 4. Charlie Woods’ first-ever eagle Charlie Woods, 11, had won junior events in South Florida but no one knew the extent of his game until the televised PNC Championship. When he hooked a 5-wood around a stand of trees to a few feet from the pin, Tiger's tiny partner had made eagle on his own ball. 3. Dustin Johnson's incredible birdie on No. 18 at BMW Up and over a ridge, swinging right and downhill, then turning left at the hole - it's hard to overstate the difficulty of Dustin Johnson's 43-foot birdie putt on 18 in the final round of the BMW Championship. Then he made it, forcing a playoff with Jon Rahm. 2. Rory McIlroy sticks approach with Tiger Woods tending flag With Rory McIlroy practicing in the group behind Tiger Woods at the Genesis Invitational, and sizing up his approach shot from far back in the fairway, Woods jokingly tended the flag. McIlroy hit, and the shot was so good Woods could only laugh. 1. Jon Rahm's 66-foot birdie putt to win playoff at BMW Jon Rahm should have been shaken by Dustin Johnson's crazy 43-foot birdie putt to force a playoff at the BMW Championship. Instead, Rahm returned to 18 and made an even harder putt from 66 feet and on a similar line to end it. Said NBC's Dan Hicks, "Is this really happening?"

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