Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Tiger Woods makes equipment change heading to Riviera

Tiger Woods makes equipment change heading to Riviera

LOS ANGELES — Tiger Woods has made two significant changes to his driver as he prepares for this week’s Genesis Open. Woods, who tees off at 10:22 a.m. Eastern on Thursday with Justin Thomas and Rory McIlroy, returned to a Matrix Ozik TP7HDe X-flex shaft that he last used in the 2015 Wyndham Championship.  “We could all see how bad I was driving it,� Woods said Tuesday in a news conference from Riviera Country Club, where he is playing for the first time since 2006. The more “stout� shaft is also complemented by a driver head change adding nearly a degree of loft to his TaylorMade M3. “It’s a shaft that I knew from years past, so when I picked it up again … I know how it feels and now how it

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Top 30 Players to Watch in 2019: No. 2 Brooks KoepkaTop 30 Players to Watch in 2019: No. 2 Brooks Koepka

OVERVIEW Brooks Koepka thrives on the feeling of being slighted. He fuels up on convincing himself he’s not getting the kudos he deserves. He will probably take the fact he’s not No. 1 in this countdown as some form of motivation. The current PGA TOUR Player of the Year wants to prove people wrong … always. Last season he won two majors – defending his U.S. Open crown and winning the PGA Championship. One was a grind; the other needed plenty of birdies and had to be done under the trying circumstances of an emotional Tiger Woods Sunday surge. Oh and this was done in a season where he missed extended time with a wrist injury. He then kicked off his 2018-19 season with a win at THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES. The takeaway is Koepka can win under most conditions as long as he is switched on and ready to compete. Because if will is involved … he’s got plenty. So the thing to watch with the now 28-year-old is how he takes it up a notch from here. How can he find the villains in his competitive life when people are stopping and taking notice? In the interest of helping we will state something he hasn’t done yet: Win the FedExCup. He’s never finished worse than 35th in the season-long race and has made it to East Lake three of his four full seasons but last year’s ninth place finish remains his best. Can he prove himself the most consistent performer on TOUR? That would certainly put even more polish on an already impressive resume. Last season he made significant improvements in his approach and short game around the greens which allowed for a slight dip in his putting prowess. If he can mirror up the putter with those improvements, he will be the standard others need to replicate. — By Ben Everill Click here to see who else made the Top 30 list. BY THE NUMBERS FEDEXCUP UPDATE Current 2018-19 position: 4th Playoff appearances: 4 TOUR Championship appearances: 3 Best FedExCup result: 9th in the 2017-18 season SHOTLINK FUN FACT Of his 62 rounds played last season, Brooks Koepka shot 69 or better 36 times, a sub-70 percentage rate of 58 percent. INSIDER INSIGHTS PGATOUR.COM’s Insiders offer their expert views on what to expect from Brooks Koepka in 2019. TOUR INSIDER: This guy is quite the case study. He became so good at riding the motivation of being an underdog he now spends more time trying to convince himself he’s still one than embracing the brilliant performer he is. Power coupled with mental strength and an ever-improving short game make Koepka a guy you can never sleep on. Let’s see how he copes with being the guy with the target on his back … I’m guessing well. — By Ben Everill FANTASY INSIDER: Anytime a golfer performs well when expected, I’ve always stated that it’s always nice when he fulfills his projection. After all, golf (and golf prognostication) can be a folly. Meanwhile, longer-term objectives can be easier to see with experienced sets of eyes. So, it comes as no surprise to this analyst that he’d scale to No. 1 in the Official World Golf Ranking because it’s exactly what I suggested was next for him in last year’s Top 30. The knock – that he has echoed – is that he doesn’t win enough non-majors despite having two U.S. Open trophies and a Wanamaker Trophy in possession is like saying that there’s not enough ice cream to go with the sprinkles. — By Rob Bolton EQUIPMENT INSIDER: While Reed may be the current face of equipment-contract-free professional golfers, Koepka is the winningest. Since Nike left the equipment space, Koepka has won two U.S. Opens, a PGA Championship and THE CJ CUP, all without an equipment contract. Most notably, Koepka uses irons that were literally designed for him: Mizuno’s JPX 900 Tour. He started using them in 2017 after Nike left, and he still has them in the bag. Mizuno, however, has come out with a new version of those clubs: JPX-919 Tour irons. Koepka hasn’t made the switch into the new irons yet, but it’s something we might see in 2019. While Koepka opts for TaylorMade metalwoods, Titleist Vokey wedges and a Scotty Cameron putter, he still uses a Nike Vapor Fly Pro driving iron. Maybe that will come out of the bag in 2019, too. — By Andrew Tursky STYLE INSIDER: Koepka is yet another athletic player with explosive power who is a perfect fit for Nike’s cutting-edge apparel and footwear. Although Brooks favors traditional looks and colors, he is quick to adopt new technologies. He was one of the first players to put the laceless Nike Tour Premiere shoe with FastFit lockdown technology into play. Expect more of the same from the three-time major winner in 2019. — By Greg Monteforte

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Harris English leads by two at Sentry Tournament of ChampionsHarris English leads by two at Sentry Tournament of Champions

KAPALUA, Hawaii — A new year, and Harris English keeps right on rolling. RELATED: Leaderboard | Bold predictions for 2021 English finished with a 10-foot birdie to cap off an ideal Friday at the Sentry Tournament of Champions with a 6-under 67, giving him a two-shot lead over a quartet of players that includes defending champion Justin Thomas. Even with a lead, it feels as though the first PGA TOUR event of the year is wide open. With virtually no wind, rare for the Plantation Course at Kapalua, scores remained low and several players were stacked up behind him. That includes Masters champion Dustin Johnson, who hit it close enough all round to make a few putts in his round of 65. “Felt like I got back in the tournament a little bit,” said Johnson, playing for the first time since his Nov. 15 victory at Augusta National. English is among 16 players at the winners-only event who didn’t win last year. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic that wiped out three months on the TOUR schedule, anyone who reached the TOUR Championship qualified this year. English did everything but win, going from No. 369 in the world to among the top 30. And he’s playing like it. He was bogey-free and rarely faced any stress. It’s hard to feel that on the western edge of Maui, and English was entertained by a pair of humpback whales splashing their fins in the Pacific below the course. He was at 14-under 132, two shots ahead of Thomas, PGA champion Collin Morikawa (65), Daniel Berger (65) and Ryan Palmer (67), another player who didn’t win in 2020 and was happy to be here. Thomas lost some of his Aloha spirit on the back nine. He had a one-shot lead at the turn, missed a short birdie chance on the par-3 11th and then struggled to keep it in play. A drive to the left in the native grass kept him from a good birdie opportunity on the short 12th. He hit another one to the left into high grass on the 13th and made his first bogey. Thomas also failed to convert chances on the next four holes, and the 18th was looking grim when he missed a long iron and came up 40 yards short, a perilous spot with a front pin and the grain running hard toward the back. He clipped a sand wedge and it was about to go too far when it hit the pin and dropped 3 feet away. He made that for his only birdie on the back nine and shot 69. He was among 16 players separated by four shots going into the final two days. Xander Schauffele holed an 80-foot eagle putt on the 18th for a 66 and was in the group at 11-under 135 that included Patrick Reed, who had a 68. Another shot behind was the group that included Johnson, Jon Rahm (66) and U.S. Open champion Bryson DeChambeau (67).

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