Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Tom Hoge shoots 63 to lead AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Tom Hoge shoots 63 to lead AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — Tom Hoge enjoys being at Pebble Beach even in a frigid wind and relentless rain. He loved it even more Thursday in brilliant sunshine, especially with nine birdies on his card. RELATED: Full leaderboard | Peter Jacobsen’s Pebble Beach farewell Hoge began his day along the Pacific Ocean with a 30-foot birdie putt on No. 10 at Pebble Beach. He made the last of six straight birdies with a 40-foot putt on the daunting eighth hole. It added to a 9-under 63, by four shots his best score at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. “It’s hard to be in a bad mood out here,” Hoge said. “I mean, Pebble Beach and perfect weather is about as good as it gets.” He had a one-shot lead over Seamus Power of Ireland, whose round was equally stout. Power birdied his last four holes at Spyglass Hill, traditionally the toughest of the three courses in benign conditions. It was the only course that played over par Thursday. Jonas Blixt had a 7-under 64 on the Shore Course at Monterey Peninsula. Patrick Cantlay, the reigning FedExCup champion, birdied his last three holes for a 65 on the Shore. Hoge has played just over 200 times on the PGA TOUR without winning, though he’s getting closer. He finished runner-up by two shots in Palm Desert two weeks ago. Whether he gets another shot, that’s still a long way off, with two more courses to get through before Hoge gets back to Pebble Beach. The coastline along the peninsula and the desert tucked amid the Santa Rosa Mountains are nothing alike, although Hoge managed to make one comparison. Scoring is on the low side. Along with very little wind, the area has gone more than a month without rain and the courses are firm, without the greens being too fast because of amateurs in the field. To have greens running firm and fast, they might never finish. “I was in the situation a couple weeks ago in Palm Springs — scores were a little bit better there — but you keep switching golf courses and you fee like you’ve got to keep making birdies the whole way because there’s a lot of great players out here,” he said. “Conditions look pretty good for the weekend, so I know that I’ve got to keep moving forward.” There was no need to check the forecast and hope for the best — and this tournament, that means getting Pebble Beach and Monterey Peninsula on the calmest day and Spyglass in the wind. But it’s supposed to stay gorgeous all week. Cantlay nearly had his round ruined around the turn when he squandered a good start with a pair of bogeys and began the back nine at the Shore by failing to birdie the par 5s. He made up for it with three straight birdies to finish his round, one of them on the 17th when his tee shot was about 6 feet from going into a small creek, and he hit a towering wedge over a pine to 12 feet for birdie. Jordan Spieth, still trying to recover from an intestinal infection, had a 68 at Monterey Peninsula. He had hoped to be at full strength, but probably wasn’t quite there. Otherwise, it was as perfect a day as the Pebble Beach Pro-Am can offer. About one-third of the field broke 70, and no one was terribly grumpy. Power won an opposite-field event last year for his first PGA TOUR victory. He tied for third in the Sony Open in Hawaii and now sits at No. 50 in the world, needing to hold that position for two months to earn an invitation to the Masters. He played in an all-Irish pairing with John Murphy, who went to Louisville and made his PGA TOUR debut, along with Irish amateurs Dermott Desmond and Gerry McManus. That added to a day that felt like more fun than work. “I’m playing in a shirt. Normally I have a sweater and other stuff on,” Power said. “So it was nice, wind was minimal. It was a perfect day for scoring.” His best moment was scrambling for par at the par-3 fifth hole, the last that runs along the Pacific on Spyglass Hill. He went from a fairway bunker on the uphill sixth to 25 feet and made that, and then finished with three more birdies. “It’s always funny with the three courses,” Power said. “It’s great to have a good start but you’re on to a completely different challenge. Tomorrow I’m playing Pebble and it’s going to be a completely different course to today. So kind of makes it easier to reset, and hopefully we can kind of keep doing the same thing tomorrow.”

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Quick look at the Rocket Mortgage ClassicQuick look at the Rocket Mortgage Classic

Time to get revved up for some Motor City action as the PGA TOUR returns to Detroit for the Rocket Mortgage Challenge. Despite a significant history of golf in Michigan and even the Detroit metro area, last season’s tournament at Detroit Golf Club represented the first top level golf in Detroit proper. And it produced perhaps the best feelgood story of the season as Nate Lashley led from the green light to the checkered flag. Lashley was the last player in the field and clearly not expected to contend. The fact he was even playing on the PGA TOUR was seen as a huge achievement given he lost his parents and girlfriend to a tragic plane crash in 2004 as they returned from watching him play in college. It was others who failed to contend. Lashley would eventually win by six shots in a goose bump inducing display. What incredible story awaits us this year? RELATED: Featured Groups, tee times | Power Rankings | Expert Picks THREE PLAYERS TO PONDER THE FLYOVER Detroit Golf Club is an old classic Donald Ross design that invites you to showcase your skills. Hopefully we will see plenty of sublime skills at the 3-1-3 challenge holes. Using the Detroit area code as a base the tournament will offer the chance for players to make significant charitable impact while playing the par-5 14th, the par-3 15th and the par-4 16th during each round. The first golfer to go 3-1-3 will have a $313,000 contribution made in his name towards the Rocket Giving Fund charities connected to digital access and Detroit’s digital divide. In addition, each eagle at 14 earns a $5,000 donation, each ace at 15 earns a $25,000 donation and each birdie at 16 results in a $5,000 donation. Get an in-depth look at the challenge and those holes here. LANDING ZONE The par-4 18th at Detroit Golf Club features a narrow ditch running down it just waiting to swallow a ball and create all sorts of drama for those looking to finish on a high. Last season it was the second hardest hole in the tournament, playing to a 4.113 over the four rounds. Nine double bogeys and two triple bogeys showed you might need a Lashley type lead to be secure as you hit the 72nd tee. From the tee precision is key. You must split the bunkers guarding both sides to have the best chance at holding the toughest green on the course. Those hitting the short grass off the tee actually played the hole fractionally under par… but those that didn’t all had struggles. Here’s a look at how players placed their tee shots and the results they garnered from them. WEATHER CHECK From PGA TOUR meteorologist Stewart Williams: “High pressure will provide hot temperatures as we go through the rest of the week into the weekend with highs in the low 90s. There will be some weak upper level energy moving across the state on Friday that could produce an isolated shower or thunderstorm as it passes. Otherwise dry conditions will continue with partly cloudy to mostly sunny skies expected with light winds averaging 5-10 mph each day.” For the latest weather news from Detriot, check out PGATOUR.COM’s Weather Hub. SOUND CHECK This course, it should be kind of a premium on hitting the fairways, so if the rough is a penalty this week, that’s probably the way it should be.In the mornings I usually have four eggs, five pieces of bacon, some toast and two Orgain protein shakes. Throughout the course of the day, I’ll have a GoMacro bar, a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, and at least two protein drinks on the golf course, and then after the round I’ll have one. After that, I’m snacking when I’m practicing after. Go back to the hotel, eat a dinner, steak, potatoes. Then I’ll have two protein shakes with it there as well. BY THE NUMBERS -46 – Bryson DeChambeau is a combined 46-under par since the Restart to Golf on the PGA TOUR, best of any player entering this week. -14 – Nate Lashley dominated the par 4s at Detroit Golf Club in 2019, playing them a field leading 14 under, tied for the best by a winner on TOUR last season. 5 – Number of rounds of 63 or better this season by Brendon Todd. Todd’s five rounds of 63 or better have come in his last 43 played on TOUR compared to just three rounds of 63 or better in his first 497 rounds on TOUR. 7 – Players in the field who have made the cut in all three of the PGA TOUR events since the Restart to Golf. They are Bryson DeChambeau, Viktor Hovland, Tyler Duncan, Lucas Glover, Mark Hubbard, Doc Redman and Brian Stuard. 51.52 – Percentage the field who hit their drives over 300 yards, marking the third highest percentage of drives over 300 yards of any course last season. 1,895 – Number of birdies the field made last season at Detroit Golf Club, marking the second-most of any course. SCATTERSHOTS Flash Gordon… After a T3 finish last week at the Travelers Championship, 23-year-old Will Gordon accepted Special Temporary Membership on the TOUR and now looks to ride the momentum. The 2019 SEC Player of the Year shot a career best 61 at Travelers on the way to his second top-10 from eight starts. Will Peter Kuest, James Nicholas or Sahith Theegala be able to follow in his footsteps this week as young stars trying to pave their own path? Health and Safety… The PGA TOUR has been committed to learning from an operational standpoint and adjusting its extensive COVID-19 health and safety protocols in place in order to mitigate risk and promote the health and safety of all involved, including players, caddies, staff and volunteers. With that in mind, the TOUR made the following changes last week: additional testing for those traveling on the charter flight between events; potential withholding of the stipend program if a player tests positive after not following protocols; the return of the TOUR fitness truck to encourage use of on-site facilities; in the COVID-19 pre-tournament testing process, players, along with all other individuals “inside the bubble,” will now not be allowed on host facility property until first being cleared with a negative in-market test. Course deets… Donald Ross designed both courses at Detroit Golf Club (1916) with renovations done by Robert Trent Jones, Arthur Hills and Bruce Hepner. It plays to a Par 72 at 7,340 yards. There are 87 bunkers but just one water hazard. There has been some re-routing for the tournament, including using a hole from the South Course. The South’s first hole will function as the tournament’s third hole and will be played from the North Course’s first hole tee box. The usual eighth hole and ninth holes, will be No. 1 and No. 2 for the tournament. The oak tree located to the right side of the tee box on the original No. 1 was bent by Native Americans to mark the trail when traveling from Detroit to Saginaw. Major pedigree… Three major winners have been head pros at Detroit Golf Club. Nine years before he was hired at DGC, Alec Ross won the 1907 U.S. Open, posting four rounds in the 70s to win by two strokes at Philadelphia Cricket Club (his brother and course designer Donald finished 10th). Following Ross as head pro was Horton Smith, the inaugural Masters winner (1934) who would win again in 1936. And after Smith was Detroit native Walter Burkemo, who had won the 1953 PGA Championship at nearby Birmingham Country Club. George Bayer also held the job for some time, a four-time PGA TOUR winner known for long drives. He finished inside the top-15 at the Masters, PGA Championship and U.S. Open during his career. For more things to know about DGC check this out.

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Crowded leaderboard after Round 1 in JacksonCrowded leaderboard after Round 1 in Jackson

JACKSON, Miss. – Sometimes you get the best results when you least expect it. That was certainly the case for Andrew Landry during Thursday’s opening round of the Sanderson Farms Championship. Battling allergies and an achy shoulder, Landry started the round with low expectations – and then proceeded to light the course on fire, making birdies on the first four holes, and then holing out for eagle from 113 yards on the next to reach 6 under par after five holes. He cooled off after that, and finished with a 6-under 66, good for a spot atop the very crowded leaderboard with Ryan Armour, Conrad Shindler, J.J. Spaun, and Wyndham Clark. And if you had asked Landry what he expected before he teed off, well, he probably didn’t expect to see his name that high up. “Honestly, I wasn’t feeling that up to par going into the day, with my whole golf game and the way I’m feeling,â€� he said. “I’ve been sick the last week. … I’ve been blowing snot out and just nasty stuff.â€� To add to that, he said, “I slept on my shoulder wrong and didn’t really get to practice the last two days. It’s been kind of hurting.â€� So, distractions can help the golf game? “It actually does,â€� said Landry, smiling. “Kind of gets your mind off it, where you don’t have any expectations and you can go out and free up and play golf.â€� Landry’s remarkable opening nine (he started on the back) began with a 6-iron to 4 feet for birdie on the par-3 10th, and ended with a chip-in birdie on No. 18. His back-nine score of 29 included two hole-outs and just nine putts. “It’s fun doing that,â€� he said. “Hitting shots like that and making putts. You just go black out, and it gets really fun.â€� He made two bogeys on his inward nine, but capped the day with a birdie on his final hole, No. 9. Landry, 30, has two Web.com Tour victories but is chasing his first PGA TOUR win. He nearly became an overnight sensation during the 2016 U.S. Open, when he shot the lowest-ever first-day U.S. Open round at historic Oakmont, 66, and then played his way into the final pairing on Sunday. He faltered that day, shooting 78, but that week told him he belonged on this kind of stage. “It’s just a belief system, knowing that you can come out here and play golf and have fun doing something you love,â€� Landry said. “Just believing in yourself. That’s the biggest part of this whole entire job, believing yourself that you can do it and sticking to your game.â€� OBSERVATIONS Spaun’s 66 included seven birdies and several long par putts. All told, he made 103 feet of putts, including 77 feet worth on his inward nine. Armour’s 66 was his best first-round score since he shot 67 on Day 1 of last year’s Sanderson Farms Championship. He’s obviously hoping for a better second round this year – last year he shot 77 on Friday and missed the cut. Local favorite Jonathan Randolph held a share of the early first-round lead– for about 10 minutes. Randolph, who grew up in the Jackson area and considers CCJ his home course, birdied Nos. 13 and 14 to get to 6 under par and a share of the lead in the morning wave, but he then bogeyed 15 and made double-bogey at No. 16. He finished with a 3-under 69. The double on the par-4 16th came after he dumped his second shot from the right rough into water left and short of the green. “I’ve played that hole 100 times, and I knew as soon as I hit it,â€� Randolph said of his water ball. “I told my caddie, ‘You can’t do stupid stuff like that and win this golf tournament.’â€� The last two champions of this event, Cody Gribble (2016) and Peter Manalti (2015), were in the same threesome – and posted decidedly different results. While Gribble struggled to hit fairways and shot 3-over 75, Manalti made seven birdies to shoot 5-under 67 and stand one shot off the lead. NOTABLES WYNDHAM CLARK – A recent University of Oregon grad who is in this week’s field on a sponsor’s exemption, birdied five straight holes (Nos. 11-15) on the way to his 66. He also had an eagle on No. 3. This is his sixth PGA TOUR event, but he does not have status on the PGA TOUR or Web.com Tour. Does he feel pressure to play his way in? “My first few starts, I felt pressure to play well and earn my status that way, but, honestly, this event is to get me ready for Q School, which is next week. If I happen to play great, that’s awesome, and I don’t need to get to Q School.â€� DAVID HEARN – His 68 included birdie putts of 42, 12, 28, and 18 feet. All told, he made 157 feet of putts – tops in the field on Day 1. DRU LOVE – He shot 1-under 71, which was one better than his father, Ryder Cup captain and 21-time PGA TOUR winner Davis Love III. This is the sixth TOUR event they have played in together, and Thursday marked the first time son’s score has bested father’s in the same round. QUOTABLES “I’m just a medium hitter, but I drive the ball awesome. I truly believe I hit driver as the best club in my bag. I like to hit it every hole. There’s holes you can’t hit it, and that’s OK, but whenever I have the opportunity to hit driver I hit it.â€� – First-round co-leader Andrew Landry   “The greens are so pure right now, like marble floors, so if you’ve got good lines and good speed, good things are going to happen.â€� – First-round co-leader Conrad Shindler, whose round included a 25-foot eagle putt on No. 3   “It’s always important, I mean, disregarding the weather. But I saw that stuff. It’s coming. To get off to a good start can only help.â€� – First-round co-leader Ryan Armour, on the importance of a good start in Thursday’s sunshine, with cold and wind forecast for the weekend SUPERLATIVES Low Round: 66, by Ryan Armour, Andrew Landry, J.J. Spaun, Conrad Shindler, and Wyndham Clark. Longest Drive: 381 yards, by Brandon Hagy, on No. 6. Longest Putt: Talor Gooch (71) drained a 51-foot, 6-inch birdie putt on No. 16, for one of just five birdies made there Thursday. Toughest Hole: The par-4, 453-yard 16th hole played to an average of 4.356 and yielded just five birdies. Ten of the 32 double-bogeys posted on Thursday came at 16. Easiest Hole: The par-5, 554-yard third hole played to an average of 4.447. There were three eagles made there, and more than half the field (71 players) made birdie there. CALL OF THE DAY SHOT OF THE DAY BEST OF SOCIAL MEDIA

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Monday Finish: Adam Long proves it’s anyone’s gameMonday Finish: Adam Long proves it’s anyone’s game

Playing alongside a Hall of Famer and Canada’s brightest star, unheralded rookie Adam Long, 31, rolls in a 15-foot birdie on the 72nd hole to shoot 65 and pull off a stunning victory over Phil Mickelson and Adam Hadwin at the Desert Classic. Welcome to the Monday Finish, where Long won to earn spots in select fields like THE PLAYERS Championship, Sentry Tournament of Champions, the Masters, and the PGA Championship. He also jumps to the front of the line in the Rookie of the Year race. As ever on TOUR, one week can change everything. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1. It’s anyone’s game. We’ll say it again: There’s staggering depth on the PGA TOUR, where anyone can win in any given week. Long had one professional victory, on the Hooters Tour in 2011. A TOUR rookie this season, he was 20 over par in his previous five starts, which included four missed cuts. His best result was a T63 at the Safeway Open last fall. He was supposed to be an alternate at this week’s Farmers Insurance Open. (He’s in now!) In light of all that, how do you explain his final-round 65 at the tough PGA West Stadium Course, the second-best round of the day, to reach 26 under par and win? “I had nothing to lose,� said Long, who birdied the first two holes to settle his nerves.  2. Maybe Phil gets 50 wins, after all. Mickelson said he would reach 50 wins on TOUR after he picked up No. 43 at the World Golf Championship-Mexico Championship nearly a year ago. It seemed optimistic, given that he’d just broken a nearly five-year win drought going back to the 2013 Open Championship. Now, though, who knows? After predicting some rust in his first start of the 2019 calendar year, Mickelson threatened 59 before settling for a 60 in the first round. He shot his lowest 54-hole score, led the field in driving distance (318.2 yards), and at 48 looked uber-competitive. OK, so he didn’t win, settling for his 36th career runner-up after failing to birdie the last hole. He fell to 25-for-40 when entering the final round with the lead/co-lead, including failures to win six of the last seven times he held the lead going into the final round. But give him even an average putting week in the desert (he was an uncharacteristic 64th of 73 players who made the cut in Strokes Gained: Putting) and Mickelson practically waltzes to victory. Maybe 50 wins isn’t such a crazy idea, after all. 3. Hadwin is a desert demon. The co-runner-up continued to cement his status as Canada’s best player. Hadwin’s third top-10 finish of the season puts him 13th in the FedExCup, and was his third straight top-three finish in the Desert Classic. He was runner-up last year, too, when he shot a third-round 59. He also delighted the throngs of Canadians who flock to the desert to escape the winter chill. The bad news, which was not all that bad, was that he missed a five-foot putt on 12 that would have given him a four-shot lead, then went 1-over the rest of the way to come up just short. “It’s golf,� Hadwin said. “I made a bunch of putts all week and then honestly I was kind of battling it a little bit swing-wise. I didn’t quite have it like I did the first three days.� 4. Chipping and putting told all. Long was 6-for-6 in scrambling in the final round, chipped in twice on the back nine (No. 12/15’8’’ and No. 15/20’6’’), and needed just 98 putts for the week, fewest of anyone. That was also tied for the fewest putts on TOUR this season, with Kiradech Aphibarnrat at the WGC-HSBC Champions. Long played tidy golf, from start to finish. Now consider Mickelson, who rode a putting revival to a solid season in 2018 but missed a four-footer to start the final round Sunday. He later missed twice from 5-7 feet, gave up 3.2 strokes on the greens for the day, and admitted, “I felt awful with the putter.� 5. Long (shot) gave others hope. No knock on Long, but if he can win, a lot of others have to feel hopeful that they can, too. After all, many boasted credentials equal to or greater than the winner going into last week. Long was 13th on the Web.com Tour Regular Season money list last season, earning his call-up to the TOUR, and had a career-best finish of T63 at the Safeway Open, his only made cut this season. Prior to the Safeway he had just one TOUR start, at the 2011 U.S. Open.   Yes, the Desert Classic put wind in Long’s sails, but it should invigorate others, too, starting with his 20 fellow rookies and those who have been knocking on the door for years. FIVE INSIGHTS 1. Long is the first player to win in his sixth TOUR start or earlier since Smylie Kaufman at the 2015 Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. After coming into the Desert Classic with a career low of 66, he shot three scores of 65 or better last week, including first- and third-round 63s. 2. Mickelson has failed to convert in six of the last seven tournaments in which he has held at least a share of the 54-hole lead, and this marked the second straight time he has taken a two-shot lead into the final round and not won (2016 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am). 3. Hadwin led the field in par-5 scoring average (4.13). He is 84-under for his last 16 rounds in the tournament, and 96-under in his last 20. 4. With 98 putts, Long led the field but was only one of three players to take 100 or fewer strokes on the greens. The others were Sam Burns (T18) and Brian Stuard (T40), who took 100 each. 5. Defending champion Jon Rahm finished sixth in his attempt to become the first back-to-back winner in the desert since Johnny Miller in 1975-’76. Daniel Berger (68, T12) enjoyed his best finish since his T6 at the U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills last summer. Talor Gooch (4th/-24) earned his first top-10 finish in his 33rd TOUR start. WYNDHAM REWARDS The Wyndham Rewards Top 10 is in its first season and adds another layer of excitement to the FedExCup Regular Season. The top 10 players at the end of the FedExCup Regular Season will earn bonus payouts from the Wyndham Rewards Top 10. There were no changes in the top 10, but Adam Long made a massive leap from 205th at the start of the week, when he was ahead of just 13 other players, to 12th. Meanwhile, co-runners up Phil Mickelson and Adam Hadwin move up to 28th and 13th, respectively.

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