Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Tiger Woods ‘not quite as sharp’ as he wants entering The Open Championship

Tiger Woods ‘not quite as sharp’ as he wants entering The Open Championship

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland – Last year’s Open Championship showed Tiger Woods that he could win another major. Now he’s seeing how difficult it is, after four back surgeries and 43 years on this earth, to recover from winning one. “It took a lot out of me,â€� Woods said Tuesday about his historic win over a star-studded leaderboard at Augusta National. His abbreviated preparations for The Open Championship are proof. Woods’ body has forced him to cut down on his practice, even for the game’s biggest events. He admitted Tuesday that his game is “not quite as sharp as I’d like to have it right now.â€� RELATED: Koepka’s caddie’s experience | Tee times | Expert Picks | Power Rankings | Five things: Royal Portrush Such a statement from Woods, especially two days before the start of a major, would have been unfathomable years earlier. He popularized the word “peakingâ€� in the game’s lexicon and won majors by being a calculating tactician who steadfastly stuck to a measured gameplan to outlast his competition. He hasn’t played since the U.S. Open, though. He took a two-week trip to Thailand between the Opens and started working on his game after returning home July 2. Listening to Woods talk Tuesday, it is obvious that he only has so many swings left and he wants to use the remaining ones strategically. “If I play a lot, I won’t be out here (on TOUR) that long,â€� he said. He’s played just three tournaments since winning the Masters in April, and two of them were majors. The Masters was his 15th major and 81st PGA TOUR victory, leaving him one short of Sam Snead’s record. With such a limited schedule, Woods is still trying to find his form with two days remaining before The Open Championship. He’s content with the state of the short game, but not comfortable hitting the variety of trajectories that are necessary to navigate the links. Woods said he won’t play Wednesday. He will hit the range during the last day of pre-tournament preparations. “And hopefully that will be enough to be ready,â€� said Woods, who’s never played Royal Portrush. His only time in Northern Ireland came during his pre-Open fishing and golf trips in the late ‘90s with Mark O’Meara and the late Payne Stewart. Data and analytics allow players to dissect courses in unprecedented way, but it’s been seven years since a professional tournament was played here (the Irish Open) and more than six decades since The Open last came here. Woods admitted Tuesday that he still has “quite a bit of homework to do.â€� He’ll also lean heavily on caddie Joe LaCava, who’s put in extra steps to prepare for the myriad conditions that can be encountered during a single round on the links. It would’ve once seemed unfathomable for Woods to arrive at a major with holes in his game, but this is the new normal. He laughed when he was asked if anything “out of the normâ€� was ailing him. His response proved that his daily aches and pains are enough to deal with. Woods, of course, still has to be considered a contender. The lack of response from Brooks Koepka to a practice-round request is proof. Koepka’s caddie, Ricky Elliott, is an invaluable asset this week after growing up in Portrush. Woods sent a text after the U.S. Open asking if they could play a practice round. “I heard nothing,â€� Woods said. The Open Championship offers Woods his best opportunity to win another major. Links golf requires precision, not power, and approach play has always been his specialty. Players aren’t forced to carry the ball exorbitant distances. They can plot their way around the course and run the ball along the ground. Tom Watson’s performance at Turnberry in 2009 provides proof. Woods used crafty course management to win his three claret jugs, avoiding St. Andrews’ merciless pot bunkers in 2000 and 2005, and hitting just one driver in his 2006 victory at Royal Liverpool. Woods has to rely on such guile more than he did in recent years. He used to dominate with his length. Now he needs to play a craftier game. He would rank 65th in driving distance if he had enough rounds to qualify for the PGA TOUR’s statistical rankings. “He seems to have lost a bit of ball speed this year, which I think is a conscious decision, to take some pressure off his back,â€� Padraig Harrington said in May. “He realizes if you’re still leading greens in regulation, it’s obviously shown that he doesn’t need that ball speed.â€� Portrush, however, requires a more aerial approach than most links courses. Irish links are known for more dramatic elevation changes than their cousins across the Irish Sea. This week’s forecast, which calls for cool and rainy weather, doesn’t help Woods, either. A record heat wave made Carnoustie play firm and fast last year. That allowed Woods to take a tactical approach, hitting stingers off the tee and leaning on his strong iron game (Woods was third in Strokes Gained: Approach last season). Woods started the final round four shots off the lead, but he grabbed the lead when he reached 7 under par with a bogey-free front nine. He played Nos. 11 and 12 in 3 over, though, and finished three shots behind Francesco Molinari. Woods, who played alongside Molinari in the final round, said the loss would “sting.â€� The lessons paid off, though. “It was my first time there in contention with the chance to win a major championship in a very long time,â€� Woods said Tuesday. “And I learned a lot. I applied what I learned at Bellerive. Didn’t make that many mistakes, shot a great final round just wasn’t good enough to chase down Brooksie. And then at Augusta just kind of put it all together and was just very patient.â€� How long will we have to wait to see Woods win again? His health will determine that answer.

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‘Open the floodgates!’: Scottie Scheffler attempts to follow tradition to three quick wins‘Open the floodgates!’: Scottie Scheffler attempts to follow tradition to three quick wins

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Scottie Scheffler was a fine young player with a bright future but no victories on the PGA TOUR. That seems like ages ago. It was only last month. Today, Scheffler could become world No. 1 with a third victory in four starts at THE PLAYERS Championship. He would need Jon Rahm to finish worse than 10th and Collin Morikawa worse than a three-way T2, but the fact remains, Scheffler has opened the proverbial floodgates. “I don’t really think about getting over the hump or monkey off the back or anything like that,” he said from TPC Sawgrass, where he missed the cut last year in his PLAYERS debut. “I will say second time around it definitely felt a little bit different being in contention.” To recap: Scheffler, who seemed destined to win when he dusted Rahm at the Ryder Cup in September, beat Patrick Cantlay in a playoff at the Waste Management Phoenix Open last month. It was lifechanging. There were tears. Then he tamed brutal conditions to win the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard last weekend. It was his second win in 21 days. His heater has been impressive, but not unpredictable. In fact, there’s a long history of players who have validated that first win with a second in short order. David Duval, the 13-time TOUR winner who now plays on PGA TOUR Champions, even strung together three Ws in three starts when he broke into the winner’s circle in October and November of 1997 after a series of frustrating close calls. No one has replicated that since, but a handful of players have been where Scheffler is now. “The first time I won, I went on a bit of a heater, too,” said Webb Simpson, who broke through at the 2011 Wyndham Championship, was T10 at The Barclays, and won the Deutsche Bank Championship at TPC Boston. “It was actually a bit similar to what’s going on with Scottie.” Two wins in three starts? Try identical. History, though, shows they’ve got company. Justin Rose won the 2010 Memorial, finished T9 at the Travelers Championship, and won the AT&T National. Again, two victories in three starts. (He led the Travelers by three but shot a final-round 75, leaving him one round from three straight wins, otherwise known as the full Duval.) “I’m kind of glad he’s got the monkey off his back,” Rose said. “He’s still a young guy, it’s not like it was a big monkey or anything, but he’d been in the hunt quite a few times. I felt the relief at the Memorial. I was 30 years old, I’d played on the European Tour and I’d won a lot, I’d probably won 10 times in my career, but still, the U.S. media, I feel, are very stats driven. “It’s about your batting average, or your 3-point shooting percentage, whatever it is,” Rose continued. “And obviously we’ve all been used to the stats Tiger put up, so when you’re not winning, it gets frustrating. I was aware of my inability to finish some situations and what that might look like on paper, so to start to reverse that was a relief but also confidence-building.” Rose had three runners-up and four third-place finishes on TOUR before finally getting his first win. Scheffler, the 2019 Korn Ferry Tour Player of the Year and 2020 PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year, played well enough to qualify for East Lake in each of his first two seasons despite his lack of a victory. He had 17 top-10s before breaking through, including two seconds and three thirds. Duval had seven runner-up finishes in three seasons before busting the doors down. Winning tends to alter people’s perceptions of the close calls. Winning twice or more in short order, early in your career, changes the narrative completely. Xander Schauffele got his first two TOUR wins, including the TOUR Championship, in eight starts in 2017. Later that year Patton Kizzire got his first win at the OHL Classic at Mayakoba, then won again at the 2018 Sony Open in Hawaii – two victories in a span of four starts. Adam Scott got his first three TOUR wins, including the 2004 PLAYERS Championship, in a stretch of 13 starts. Jimmy Walker collected his first three trophies in eight starts in 2013—14. The outlier, of course, was Tiger Woods, for whom the floodgates opened immediately. He won twice in his first eight professional starts in 1996, made it three-for-nine at the Tournament of Champions to begin ’97, and nabbed his first major title at the Masters that April. The open-floodgates phenomenon is not unique to the TOUR, and in fact intensifies the further you climb down golf’s hierarchy. Sungjae Im began his Korn Ferry Tour career with a quick win and runner-up in 2018 to lead the money list wire-to-wire. Mito Pereira won in back-to-back weeks last year and was the 12th in KFT history to get the three-win call-up to the PGA TOUR. The floodgates are even busier in college. Maverick McNealy, one of Scheffler’s teammates on the juggernaut 2017 U.S. Walker Cup team (Collin Morikawa, Will Zalatoris, et al), was a sophomore at Stanford when he shot 65 to win the Southwestern Intercollegiate for his first college victory. He won the Olympia Fields/Fighting Illini Invitational the next week. It was the start of a heater in which McNealy won six times in 13 starts for the Cardinal. “I remember writing in my journal, ‘It’s way more fun playing to win than playing to not screw up,’” McNealy, who’s 21st in the FedExCup, said from TPC Sawgrass. “It definitely comes in waves. I’ve had stretches where I haven’t missed the center of the driver face for a month and a half. I’ve had stretches where I couldn’t miss a putt for like a month. “Unfortunately,” continued McNealy, who has two career runner-up finishes on TOUR, “they haven’t lined up together at this point; hopefully they will. There’s so much random variance in this game, you just kind of have to ride it out. When you’re on a heater you gotta ride it out as long as you can, and when you’re off a heater you’ve got to shallow it out and get back on one.” McNealy didn’t win in his first year at Stanford; he equates his pro career thus far as four years of being a freshman. But as Scheffler reminds, that can change. Confidence builds. The hot hand is real. Winless today, McNealy could be a multiple winner and FedExCup No. 1 next month. Life comes at you pretty fast – especially when the floodgates open.

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Nonstop maintenance is part of Tiger Woods’ new realityNonstop maintenance is part of Tiger Woods’ new reality

ST. LOUIS — There were unsubstantiated rumors floating around Monday that Tiger Woods was on the Bellerive Country Club practice range beating golf balls at 6 a.m. A local TV station even went with the story despite having no video footage or confirmation. As it turned out, the rumors were exactly that. Woods, after finishing the WGC-Bridgestone in Ohio on Sunday flew to St. Louis afterward and took Monday to chill out for a day — without hitting a golf ball. “I needed that day off,’’ Woods sid Tuesday. “I spent a few times in the ice bath just trying to get some inflammation down and just trying to get ready for the rest of the week. I did a lot of stretching and did a light lift as well and

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