Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Tiger Woods shoots even-par 72 in Farmers Insurance Open Pro-Am

Tiger Woods shoots even-par 72 in Farmers Insurance Open Pro-Am

SAN DIEGO – Tiger Woods’ pro-am round for the Farmers Insurance Open confirmed the 14-time major champion’s reasons for optimism while simultaneously showing the distance he must traverse to win his 80th PGA TOUR title. He had his share of highlights, including approach shots knocked stiff at the first and final holes and a 25-foot eagle putt at the 17th hole, but also missed a frustrating amount of short putts and had a recovery shot bounce backward after striking a tree. Woods hit his driver hard and his irons high, but his final score of even-par 72 seemed to be an accurate assessment of his day. He had several close approach shots, but didn’t consistently give himself birdie putts within 15 feet of the hole. Most of his misses were just off the fairway or green, though. Two tee shots – at Nos. 5 and 16 – were the only egregious misses. The latter was his sloppiest hole of the day. He was visibly frustrated as he walked to his ball after his failed attempt from the trees, rushing his pre-shot routine before hitting his ball on the green. The frustration shows that Woods still has a standard he expects to meet, even if it isn’t as high as it once was. Unlike the years when he was hampered by back pain, he isn’t content to just be able to swing the club. Even though he admitted that his expectations are tempered by the fact that he hasn’t played on TOUR in a year, Woods talked Wednesday about compiling a schedule that best prepares him for the Masters. The year’s first major is on his mind. The clubhead speed and confidence that make him optimistic about this comeback were on display Wednesday. So fresh is this start that it’s easy to forget that Woods played in this event last year, missing the cut with rounds of 76 and 72. His back already hurting, he lasted just one more round before shutting it down. There’s no pain this year. “I haven’t felt this good in years, so I’m excited about it,� Woods said. “I want to start feeling what it feels like to be out here and hit shots, grind out scores, and that’s something that I’ve been looking forward to.� This is just his second official PGA TOUR start since the 2015 Wyndham Championship. Success won’t be measured in a result this week, though. More important will be what happens 5, 10 or 15 starts from now. He hasn’t played more than 10 events since 2015, and his Player of the Year season of 2013 is the last time he made more than 15 starts. Woods would not elaborate on his upcoming schedule, though. The Genesis Open remains the only other tournament to which he has committed. Woods said he’s been playing golf six days per week, and that, unlike last year, he’s unencumbered by limits on how many holes he can play or balls he can hit. He’s still trying to learn how he can swing with the limited mobility that comes with a fused back. Woods no longer works with an instructor, choosing to experiment on his own. “I’d like to meet somebody who can swing it over 120 miles an hour with a fused back. Do you know anybody?� Woods asked rhetorically. “No one understands that, so I have to rely on my own feels and play around with what my body can and cannot do.� How he swung Wednesday, during what he termed a “hit and giggle� affair where entertaining his amateur partners was a priority along with learning a renovated North Course he’s played just once in competition, pales in importance to his performance Thursday, when he tees off at 10:40 a.m. with Charley Hoffman and Patrick Reed on the South Course. Woods is a seven-time champion of this event, and the winner of the 2008 U.S. Open here, but he hasn’t played on a Sunday at the South Course in five years. His victory at the 2013 Farmers Insurance Open was one of five wins that year. Torrey Pines has changed greatly since his first victory here, in 1999. He shot 22-under par that week. Three of the past four years, the Farmers Insurance Open has been won with a score that’s single-digits under par. Both courses have been renovated since Woods’ first win, and the rough was thick enough Wednesday to make searching for balls a struggle. “The greens are definitely very spring, and it’s going to be a challenge this week,� he said. “It’s going to be a little bit harder to make birdies than it has been in the past. It will be a great challenge.� How Woods handles it is of supreme interest this week, but success will be measured in a matter of months, not days.

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The first class of the APGA Collegiate Ranking is learning on the jobThe first class of the APGA Collegiate Ranking is learning on the job

Mulbe Dillard IV had a lot on his mind on the six-hour car ride from his home in Jacksonville, Florida, to Raleigh, North Carolina and the Korn Ferry Tour’s REX Hospital Open earlier this month. A newly minted graduate of HBCU Florida A&M, Dillard, 22, was about to make his first start as a professional, having earned a place in the field by virtue of his spot atop the first APGA Collegiate Ranking. Wilson had shipped bags, umbrellas, and caps to the course ahead of time, and he planned to reach town with plenty of daylight to practice. Alas, when he arrived that Sunday afternoon, the back nine of the Hale Irwin-designed par-71 course had been closed. He walked the front and marveled at the long, tumbling fairways and fast undulating greens. He played nine holes Monday, and finally saw the back nine Tuesday. The Wednesday pro-am devolved from a scouting mission to a rubbernecking exercise as Dillard was paired with football legends Torry and Terrence Holt. “I was pretty nervous,” Dillard recalls. “I’ve never really been in this position.” The APGA Collegiate Ranking – which takes the five best seniors from Division I, II or II programs and exempts them into APGA summer events and from Korn Ferry Tour pre-qualifying – is part of the PGA TOUR’s 10-year, $100 million commitment to racial justice. The idea is to extend a shorter, smoother onramp for top Black collegiate golfers yearning to follow in the footsteps of Harold Varner III, Cameron Champ, Joseph Bramlett and others. “My best players are looking at their ranking regularly,” says Howard men’s golf coach Sam Puryear. “I cannot tell you how many conversations I’ve had with them about it. They want to be on that list because they want those shots.” Dillard is one of four FAMU players in the APGA Tour College Ranking, a short list that comes with major bragging rights for HBCU golf coaches like the Rattlers’ Mike Rice. His all-senior team became the first in the history of the program to earn an NCAA tournament berth after carding a 19-stroke triumph in the Mid-Eastern Atlantic Conference championship. This, despite golf not exactly ranking high on the list of student concerns at FAMU – not even in the golf class that Rice teaches in addition to coaching the team. “My introduction to them is, ‘I’m also the head coach of the golf team,’” he says. “And most of them are like, ‘We didn’t even know we had a golf team.’” Rice’s annual budget would barely cover recruiting expenses at a traditional Division 1 golf powerhouse. Florida State, for example, recruits with scholarships, gets sponsored equipment and apparel, and trains on its own course that can be groomed to replicate tournament conditions. Meanwhile, its Tallahassee neighbor FAMU makes do on a public course, with players carrying heavy course loads and working jobs on the side to keep up with expenses. And while a recent deal with TaylorMade and a new practice range will help the Rattlers, so much more is needed to prepare them for pro careers. Tim O’Neal, an HBCU grad and touring pro, says it’s a giant leap from HBCU golf to the professional game. “Like going from high school baseball to triple-A,” he says. “There are some players who have the potential. But if you go to an HBCU, you’re not gonna be playing at a level to go up against a top-five school. Not to say it can’t happen, but it’s gonna be a while you see a guy from an HBCU come out and just dominate.” It’s been 36 years since South Carolina State’s Adrian Stills graduated from Q School; he’s the last Black player from a black college to reach the PGA TOUR. He didn’t have the benefit of the APGA Tour, which seeks to provide playing opportunities for promising minority golfers, and for which he serves as Director of Player Development. Nor did Stills have help from the APGA Collegiate Ranking, which can at least provide players with exemptions and cover travel costs associated with APGA Tour events. In theory that makes HBCU products more competitive with counterparts from predominantly white institutions. In reality, though, those kids get their own boost from PGA Tour University; upperclassmen in the top five of that ranking receive a yearlong Korn Ferry Tour exemption, while the next 10 finishers win free passes into the PGA TOUR’s three international tours. Some coaches and others believe HBCUs need to be given the chance to play against bigger Division I powerhouses more than once a year at the conference tournament. Yet another challenge for HBCU golf programs is that many are under the constant threat of being shuttered. That the Rattlers even have a course at their disposal, in this economy, is a luxury. “Don’t get me wrong,” Rice says. “Southwood is a good course, and I love it. But at a public course, greens are running an 8, 10 [on the Stimpmeter] max. And then you go and play in a bigger event where the greens are running 12 to 14. That’s a huge adjustment.” The system is still in the early stages, and far from perfect. O’Neal believes the APGA Tour Collegiate Ranking formula will require some tweaking to brace players to jump up. Some would like to see it opened to all minorities, not just seniors. At the REX Hospital Open, Dillard exulted after bombing his opening tee shot 310 yards down the fairway. But his round quickly unraveled from there. Thrown by a rainstorm that slowed the greens and stretched first-round play over two days, Dillard shot a 79. It was a rough start for a player who had two top-10s in three APGA starts as an amateur. “It was frustrating,” he says. “That was probably the nerves and, you know, just being a little uncomfortable.” Urging him on were coach Rice; his parents, who flew in from Chicago; and former FAMU teammate and friend Logan Bryant, whom Dillard hadn’t seen since the start of the pandemic. But what ultimately cut through was advice from three-time PGA TOUR winner Johnson Wagner, with whom he’d played a practice round after a chance meeting on the back nine. “He told me this five times, but it didn’t really click until the fourth time,” Dillard says. “I told him how I was sponsor exempt, kind of how I got there, and he was just like, ‘Go for it.’ “I understand what that means,” Dillard continues, “but what does it really mean?” That’s when Charles Raulerson, Dillard’s swing coach and caddie, broke it all down. “You don’t have anything to lose,” he said. “You’re not out here trying to make a list or fighting for your next meal or anything. You’re here to learn and get better. So don’t be scared. Don’t leave anything on the table.” Once Dillard committed to “getting comfortable with everything that made me uncomfortable,” he says, his prospects turned around. Playing with more self-belief in the second round, he fired a 72. And though it proved too little, too late to make the cut, it was proof he could compete. Along with signing his scorecard, he wrote a note to himself: Just go for it. The phrase could well serve as a rallying cry for the next class of Black golfers aiming to land on the APGA Collegiate Ranking.

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Injured Jason Day shoots 67 after wife tells him to ‘suck it up’Injured Jason Day shoots 67 after wife tells him to ‘suck it up’

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Jason Day may have hurt his back while kissing his daughter, but that didn’t mean his wife was going to give him sympathy about an ill-timed injury. “You need to suck it up,â€� Ellie Day told her husband Friday morning. A kick in the pants propelled him to the top of the leaderboard at Augusta National. One day after he considered withdrawing, Day shot 67 and shared the Masters lead when he walked off 18. He sits at 7-under 137, as do Francesco Molinari and Brooks Koepka. Back pain is nothing new for Day. He’s struggled with it since he was 13 years old. But this time it reared its head at the worst possible time, after an affectionate gesture toward his only daughter, 3-year-old Lucy. The pain reared its head after he bent down to give Lucy a kiss as he headed to the first tee. He received treatment on the second and fourth holes, but limped around Augusta National during his first-round 70. The pain was worst on practice swings, and while walking Augusta National’s hilly terrain. He was able to block it out after addressing the ball. The discomfort also had its benefits. “It’s almost a blessing in disguise,â€� he said. “It just brings down the expectation of going out there and trying too hard. … I’m hoping that I can take the same attitude — even though I feel pretty healthy now — into the next two days and play well.â€� The pain has become part of daily life. Day said he blows into balloons each morning to put his ribs back in place. “Sometimes I wake up and I feel like I’m 50. Sometimes I wake up and I feel like I’m 70. And sometimes I wake up and feel like I’m 18 again,â€� he said. “It just comes and goes, and that’s just how it is. “I’m just doing whatever I can to feel good. So, if blowing in balloons is what I need to do to feel good, then I will do it all day long.â€� Day received additional treatment both Thursday evening and Friday morning. With his back feeling better, he shot the second-lowest score of his career at Augusta National. He birdied all four of the par-5s and added birdies at Friday’s hardest hole, No. 5, and the par-3 16th. It was just three weeks ago that Day’s back problems forced him to withdraw six holes into the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard. He needed an epidural before competing in the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play Championship, where he went 0-3. On Thursday, he told his caddie that he would withdraw if the pain didn’t abate. He was able to continue, and now feels confident that he can continue his pursuit of the green jacket. He was runner-up here in 2011 and finished third two years later. “I feel a lot more optimistic now today than I did yesterday,â€� Day said, “I’m hoping that, bar some outrageous thing that could possibly happen, I’m hoping that, I feel this good going into Saturday and Sunday.â€�

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