Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Tom Kim wins Shriners Children’s Open for second PGA TOUR victory

Tom Kim wins Shriners Children’s Open for second PGA TOUR victory

LAS VEGAS — Tom Kim closed with a 5-under 67 and completed a bogey-free week in Las Vegas to win the Shriners Children’s Open when Patrick Cantlay fell apart on the final hole Sunday. Kim became the first player since Tiger Woods in 1996 to win twice on the PGA TOUR before turning 21. The 20-year-old South Korean won the Wyndham Championship in August to make the FedExCup Playoffs and he’s been soaring ever since. “I’m having fun playing on the PGA TOUR. It’s awesome,” Kim said. But he needed some help from Cantlay, who could have gone to No. 2 in the world with a win at the TPC Summerlin. They traded birdies along the back nine and came to the par-4 18th hole tied for the lead when it all fell apart for Cantlay. He was first to play and hooked a 3-wood left of the fairway into a desert bush in a ravine. Kim belted driver into the fairway and by the time he finally played his second shot to the green, Cantlay was lying four in the bottom of the pond. Cantlay tried blasting out of the bush to no avail. He took a penalty drop. He then hit out of the desert sand and into the pond. Cantlay finished with a 35-foot putt for triple bogey for a 69 that gave him a share of second place with Matthew NeSmith (66). “I figured the only chance I had was to get it in the fairway,” Cantlay said about his decision to try to play from out of the bush. “I played well — one bad swing at the end. Obviously, I would have liked to have closed the deal out today, but sometimes that’s golf. Kim became the first player since J.T. Poston at the 2019 Wyndham Championship to win a PGA TOUR event without making bogey. The way the back nine was going, no one could afford to drop any shots. Cantlay birdied the 11th and 12th to tie Kim for the lead. Kim responded with birdies on the next two holes to restore a two-shot lead. Cantlay had 30-foot eagle chances on the next two holes, driving the par-4 14th green with a 3-wood and reaching the par-5 15th in two, while Kim had to settle for pars. Cantlay’s 35-foot putt for triple bogey was worth $160,000, but that was small consolation. It was his third disappointment in Las Vegas, the site of his first PGA TOUR win. He lost in a playoff to Kevin Na in 2019 and had a share of the 54-hole lead the following year until a poor final round to tie for eighth. “I hit a lot of good shots,” Cantlay said. “Obviously, the last hole makes the whole week kind of sour.” That left Kim a somewhat muted celebration. “I played solid this week — no bogey for 72 holes,” Kim said. “I got very lucky on the 18th, I’m not going to lie. Patrick played awesome, and to come out with a win I feel fortunate.” Woods was 20 when he won in Las Vegas and then at Disney in just seven tournaments since turning pro. Kim now is the second-youngest player to win two PGA TOUR events before turning 21, a month behind Ralph Guldahl when he won the 1932 Arizona Open for his second win. It’s been quite the year for Kim, who honed his golf in Australia and the Philippines before turning pro. He started this year by winning the Singapore International and finishing runner-up in the Singapore Open on the Asian Tour. After winning the Wyndham Championship, he made his debut in the Presidents Cup by going 2-3-0 for the International Team and delivering one of the biggest moments with a 10-foot birdie putt in Fourballs in a 1-up win over Cantlay and Xander Schauffele. Next up is the ZOZO Championship in Japan for Kim, who goes to No. 15 in the world and becomes the highest-ranked Asian player, moving ahead of Hideki Matsuyama of Japan.

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What’s in the bag: Dustin Johnson, 2019 WGC-Mexico ChampionshipWhat’s in the bag: Dustin Johnson, 2019 WGC-Mexico Championship

Dustin Johnson made a few alterations to his equipment setup ahead of the 2019 WGC-Mexico Championship after winning in Saudi Arabia earlier this month. He switched from a TaylorMade M6 driver to an M5 driver, he opted for a TaylorMade P-790 3-iron instead of a P-790 UDI 2-iron, and he changed his wedge setup. Johnson used 54- and 60-degree TaylorMade Hi-Toe wedges in Saudi Arabia, but in Mexico he used 52- and 60-degree TaylorMade Milled Grind wedges, and he added in a 64-degree Hi-Toe wedge. Driver: TaylorMade M5 (10.5 degrees) Shaft: Fujikura Speeder 661 Evolution 2.0 Tour Spec X-Flex Fairway Wood: TaylorMade M5 Titanium (15 degrees) Shaft: Project X HZRDUS 95 grams 6.5-flex Irons: TaylorMade P-790 (3-iron), TaylorMade DJ Proto (4-PW) Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 Wedges: TaylorMade Milled Grind (52 and 60 degrees), TaylorMade Hi-Toe (64 degrees) Shafts: KBS Tour 120S Putter: TaylorMade Spider Tour Black Grip: SuperStroke Pistol GT 1.0 Golf Ball: TaylorMade 2019 TP5x (No. 1)

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Captain’s picks: Those that worked, those that didn’t, and those that defined careersCaptain’s picks: Those that worked, those that didn’t, and those that defined careers

Two legends of the game are keeping a very close eye over this fall portion of the new PGA TOUR season. Tiger Woods and Ernie Els are trying to figure out just who should join their respective teams in the Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne on Dec. 12-15. And this time – more than ever before – the importance of those picks could be paramount. For the first time in tournament history, the captains will have four captain’s picks, up from the previous years where just two were added to the squads. Previous captains have used the selections a myriad of ways. To add experience – such as Phil Mickelson on the last two U.S. teams. To add a young star of the future – such as Jordan Spieth in 2013 or Ryo Ishikawa in 2009. Or to add a course specialist from the host country. Plenty of times the picks have worked. Others have failed. And on some occasions they’ve been part of a bigger picture in the player’s career. As we head towards Woods and Els making their picks in early November, let’s look back at some of the picks that have turned to gold, the ones that were more like stone, and the ones that helped define careers. PICKS THAT WORKED David Duval (U.S. Team) in 1996 Before Duval became a major winner and world no. 1, he was a young star on the rise who couldn’t quite close the deal for a win. In his first full season on TOUR in 1995, Duval had eight top 10s, including three runner-up finishes. In 1996 he had five top-three finishes. With one of his close calls coming the week before the second Presidents Cup at the Robert Trent Jones Golf Club, Duval certainly entered the event in great form and seemed an inspired pick from U.S. Captain Arnold Palmer. The 24-year-old Duval certainly lived up to the hype – going 4-0-0 during a close-fought Cup. Paired with Mark O’Meara twice in Four-ball and once in Foursomes, Duval helped dispatch players such as Steve Elkington, Frank Nobilo, Craig Parry, Ernie Els and Mark McNulty. In Sunday singles, with the U.S. starting with a one-point advantage, Duval dispatched Peter Senior in the second match of the morning to maintain his unbeaten record. The U.S. would eventually win 16.5-15.5 — making his contribution to the week imperative. Said Duval: “I just told myself I wasn’t going to get beat, I just wasn’t. I was going to do everything I could not to get beat. I was going to try to win every match and I was going to try to win them very quick.â€� Frank Nobilo and Greg Turner (International Team) in 1998 The Kiwi duo of Nobilo and Turner played a big part of the lone International Team win in the Presidents Cup. Captain Peter Thomson already had four Australians on his team at Royal Melbourne, so he looked to the smaller nation of New Zealand, just across the Pacific Ocean, for his picks. He knew both players had experience in Australian conditions. The pair won both of their Foursomes sessions, beating the super team of Mark O’Meara-David Duval from the previous Cup and then Justin Leonard-Davis Love III. In the match against O’Meara (a two-time major winner) and Duval (the No.3 golfer in the world), the Kiwis were given no chance. But Nobilo’s 40-foot putt on the last hole clinched a famous upset. Overall Turner played his part by going 2-1-1 and Nobilo picked up two points with a 2-2-0 record as part of a 20.5-11.5 rout. Said Nobilo: “It did have the elements of a perfect storm. We were desperate for a win and we nearly had won in 1996 (a one-point U.S. win) when we really came together. So, we felt confident in 1998. Maybe they helped us, certainly the course helped us, but we truly had a great team chemistry that year. Such a cool experience.â€� Said Turner: “Fair to say we weren’t raging favorites. In some ways, it unburdened us.â€� Justin Leonard (U.S. Team) in 2005 Picking Leonard – the next man on the points list — was an easy decision for U.S. captain Jack Nicklaus. Not to mention Leonard had won twice in 2005, and was a past champion of THE PLAYERS Championship (1998) and The Open (1997); he’d also played on three Presidents Cup teams prior and had been a hero in the 1999 Ryder Cup. At the Robert Trent Jones Golf Club, Leonard proved his worth, partnering with Scott Verplank four times and going 2-1-1. With the score tied entering Sunday Singles, Leonard was charged with starting off the U.S. cause. He smashed Tim Clark 4 and 3, setting the tone for the American win. Said Leonard: “We’ve all played some match play and team events, and I think we all learn to enjoy that, enjoy that pressure, and if we didn’t enjoy it and thrive under it, we probably wouldn’t be on this team.â€� Mike Weir (International Team) in 2007 With the 2007 Presidents Cup played in Canada for the first time at Royal Montreal, International Team captain Gary Player dove down to 20th on the points list to select local Mike Weir. Picking a hometown hero has not always worked for the Internationals in the Presidents Cup (International captains picks selected to play in their home country have a 8-12-3 record overall), but this time it did. While Weir’s efforts — he earned 3.5 points with a 3-1-1 record — could not help the Internationals win the Cup, it did come with a giant-killing singles win over Tiger Woods. And it invigorated the home fans who did all they could to help the International cause. The problem was the Internationals trailed 14.5-7.5 heading to Singles. Said Weir: “For me being from Canada, to have this kind of support, it’s overwhelming, really, and I’m having a tough time putting it into words what it really means to me because it’s so shortly after. But when I look back on my career, this may be something, maybe even more special than the Masters, the support I’ve gotten here.â€� Phil Mickelson (U.S. Team) in 2015 and 2017 Mickelson has never missed a Presidents Cup, but he’s needed a captains pick the last two iterations (and will need another one this season to continue his streak). In both 2015 in South Korea and 2017 in New Jersey, Mickelson showed his worth with unbeaten 3-0-1 records. In 2015, the U.S. won by a single point, making Mickelson’s contribution incredibly important. In 2017, the team was dominant but Mickelson played the role of mentor, bringing rookie Kevin Kisner into the fold and providing him with extra confidence. Said Mickelson (2015): “That meant more to me than anything, having the players be involved and having me on this team. I’ve had so much fun being around them.â€� Said Mickelson (2017): “I had a great partner in Kevin Kisner, who was able to keep me relaxed, get the best out of me. We played very well together. We are a good pairing.â€� PICKS THAT DIDN’T WORK John Huston (U.S. Team) in 1998 The first Presidents Cup played on foreign soil for the Americans was one they’d rather forget – especially for Huston. Jack Nicklaus made the diplomatic decision and picked the next two players up on the points list when finalizing his team – Fred Couples and Huston. But in a week where the Internationals destroyed most of the U.S. Team, it was especially tough for Huston, the only player not to register any points. He had three different partners in team play but lost with Jim Furyk, Mark Calcavecchia and a young Tiger Woods. He was then pummeled 3 and 2 by Shigeki Maruyama in Singles. Nick O’Hern (International Team) in 2007 Picking the left-handed Australian was seen as an astute move from International captain Gary Player. O’Hern was next up on the points list and was flashing half-decent form, having won in his native Australia late in 2006. Most importantly, he was the Tiger tamer. O’Hern had beaten Tiger Woods at the 2005 and 2007 World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play. Sadly for the Aussie, he could not replicate his heroics in Montreal. O’Hern would go 1-4-0 for the week – two of those losses to Woods and his partner — as the U.S. cruised to a 19.5-14.5 victory. Lucas Glover (U.S. Team) in 2009 Glover getting a pick from Fred Couples at TPC Harding Park in 2009 for the U.S. Team was a no-brainer — he was next up on the points list and had won the U.S. Open that season. Unfortunately for Glover, he contributed just a half-point to the U.S. cause. In three team sessions he was paired with Stewart Cink and lost them all. He then scratched out a half in the Sunday singles against Vijay Singh. The good news? The U.S. Team still won handily. Robert Allenby (International Team) in 2011 With the Presidents Cup returning to Royal Melbourne for the first time since the Internationals’ famous 1998 victory, there was plenty of confidence among captain Greg Norman and his team. Norman used his two picks that year to take two Melbourne locals – Aaron Baddeley and Robert Allenby. The latter had spent countless hours of his life on the course and was seen as a potential secret weapon. But it turned into a nightmare for Allenby. He was the only player on either team not to register a point. His 0-4-0 record helped the U.S. power to a 19-15 win. Emiliano Grillo (International Team) in 2017 To be fair to the Argentinean star, there were no success stories in the 2017 International Team, who were just a half-point away from being beaten prior to Sunday Singles. But Grillo, one of Nick Price’s picks, was the only player in the competition to fail to trouble the scorers. His 0-3-0 record was finished off with a 6 and 4 loss to Rickie Fowler. PICKS THAT CHANGED CAREERS Adam Scott (International Team) in 2009 When Greg Norman picked a slumping Scott in 2009, it raised plenty of eyebrows. After winning the AT&T Byron Nelson 18 months earlier, Scott had just one other top-10 finish the rest of the season — and that was in the next tournament. In 2009, things really went south. After a tie for second in Hawaii in January, Scott finished no higher than a tie for 33rd and missed 10 cuts in 19 starts, including a run of six consecutive missed cuts. By October, he had bottomed out at No. 76 in the world and was wondering if it was all worth it. When Scott managed just a 1-4-0 record in another loss to the U.S., critics had a field day. But hindsight now shows just how important Norman’s pick was. His show of confidence set the ball rolling, allowing Scott to once again believe in his ability to beat the best. In December he won the Australian Open and began his climb back, eventually winning the 2013 Masters and getting to world No.1 in 2014. Said Scott: “It was big of Greg to pick me. He really stuck his neck on the line for me. It thrust me on to a stage where I couldn’t hide and where my game was exposed. It gave me a clear indication of what I needed to work on to turn it all around.â€� Jordan Spieth (U.S. Team) in 2013 There is little doubt Spieth would have become a star even without Fred Couples bypassing 10 others higher on the points list in 2013, but the show of faith certainly helped the 20-year-old’s confidence. So too did making a hole-in-one in a practice match with Tiger Woods. His 2-2 record wasn’t the best on a U.S. Team that won 18.5-15.5 but it certainly didn’t hurt their cause. The youngster showed he belonged among the game’s elite … and two years later Spieth would win five times in the 2015 season, including two majors. Said Spieth: “It’s an honor. Just to hear from the best players in the world, some of the things that they have said, and they have come to me and said it. It’s inspirational for me, it really is. I’ve played a few rounds with Phil, now Tiger today. I know you guys have questioned them about it and they have been very, very nice about what they have said, and it means a lot to me.â€� Sangmoon Bae (International Team) and Bill Haas (U.S. Team) in 2015 The 2015 Presidents Cup in Korea came down to the final singles match, which turned out to be between two captain’s picks. On the U.S. side was Haas, picked by his father Jay. For the Internationals, it was local hero Bae. Bae came into the singles unbeaten at 2-0-1. On the other side, Haas hadn’t set the world on fire with a 0-1-1 record. But the form guide would ultimately turn in this critical match. With the Cup on the line, Bae faced a tough uphill chip around the 18th green knowing he needed to win the hole to give his team a share of the Cup. With Haas in a greenside bunker, anything was still possible. Sadly for Bae, he chunked the chip and it rolled back to his feet allowing the winning shot to be played by Haas. For Haas, who had won the FedExCup four years later, it was a career highlight to deliver the Presidents Cup for his dad; their emotional hug on the 18th green is one of the defining images of the Presidents Cup. For Bae, it was also an emotional ending to a wild week – and a temporary end to his pro career as he soon embarked on his mandatory two-year military service. Said Bae: “I wanted to make the winning point for the team, but at the end of the day, our team lost, so I was very sad and disappointed about it.â€� Said Haas: “It feels really amazing now the way it all worked out. … to be in this position and the way it all worked out was a very great moment for me and my dad, and certainly the whole team.â€� CAPTAINS’ PICKS OVER THE YEARS 1994 Internationals Fulton Allem, South Africa (1.5 points, 1-3-1) Tsukasa Watanabe, Japan (1 point, 1-2-0) United States Jay Haas (3 points, 3-2-0) Phil Mickelson (3 points, 2-1-2) 1996 Internationals Robert Allenby, Australia (2 points, 2-3-0) Peter Senior, Australia (1 point, 1-2-0) United States David Duval (4 points, 4-0-0) Kenny Perry (2 points, 2-2-0) 1998 Internationals Frank Nobilo, New Zealand (2 points, 2-2-0) Greg Turner, New Zealand (2.5 points, 2-1-1) United States Fred Couples (2.5 points, 2-2-1) John Huston (0 points, 0-4-0) 2000 Internationals Robert Allenby, Australia (1 point, 1-3-0) Steve Elkington, Australia (2 points, 2-2-0) United States Paul Azinger (1 point, 1-2-0) Loren Roberts (2 points, 2-1-0) 2003 Internationals K.J. Choi, Korea (2 points, 2-3-0) Tim Clark, South Africa (2 points, 2-3-0) United States Fred Funk (1.5 points, 1-2-1) Jay Haas (2.5 points, 2-1-1) 2005 Internationals Trevor Immelman, South Africa (1 point, 1-3-0) Peter Lonard, Australia (2 points, 2-2-0) United States Fred Couples (1.5 points, 1-2-1) Justin Leonard (3.5 points, 3-1-1) 2007 Internationals Nick O’Hern, Australia (1 point, 1-4-0) Mike Weir, Canada (3.5 points, 3-1-1) United States Lucas Glover (2 points, 2-3-0) Hunter Mahan (2 points, 2-3-0) 2009 Internationals Ryo Ishikawa, Japan (3 points, 3-2-0) Adam Scott, Australia (1 point, 1-4-0) United States Lucas Glover (0.5 points, 0-3-1) Hunter Mahan (2.5 points, 2-1-1) 2011 Internationals Robert Allenby, Australia (0 points, 0-4-0) Aaron Baddeley, Australia (1.5 points, 1-3-1) United States Bill Haas (1.5 points, 1-3-1) Tiger Woods (2 points, 2-3-0) 2013 Internationals Marc Leishman, Australia (2 points, 2-2-0) Brendon de Jonge, Zimbabwe (2 points, 2-3-0) United States Webb Simpson (3 points, 2-1-2) Jordan Spieth (2 points, 2-2-0) 2015 Internationals Sangmoon Bae, Korea (2.5 points, 2-1-1) Steven Bowditch, Australia (1 point, 1-2-0) United States Bill Haas (1.5 points, 1-1-1) Phil Mickelson (3.5 points, 3-0-1) 2017 Internationals Emiliano Grillo, Argentina (0 points, 0-3-0) Anirban Lahiri, India (1.5 points, 1-1-1) United States Charley Hoffman (1 point, 1-2-0) Phil Mickelson (3.5 points, 3-0-1)

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Brandt Snedeker’s battle to return to the courseBrandt Snedeker’s battle to return to the course

The hardest part is the uncertainty. Every other time Brandt Snedeker has been sidelined by an injury, like when he was on crutches after having hip surgery, not once, but twice, there was a target date to hold onto. In six weeks, the doctors would tell him, you’ll be hitting balls again. Or, maybe four, they’d say. But there was always a timeline so Snedeker could plan his PGA TOUR comeback. This issue with the manubrium joint in his chest is different, though. Doctors told him he had two options – rest and let it heal or have surgery to insert a metal plate attached to the upper and lower sternum. Snedeker, not surprisingly, chose rest. And therein lies the problem. Doctors can’t tell him definitively when he’ll have rested enough. It’s a wait-and-see proposition made more frustrating by the fact that otherwise, he feels fine. “It’s not restricting my everyday life whatsoever,� Snedeker says. “I’m able to work out. I’m able to do everything I want to do. It’s just the vibration of hitting golf balls that causes pain. “The only way I’m going to figure it out is hitting golf balls again and I need to try and give it as much time as possible to heal.� Snedeker tried to play through it. After all, the doctors told him he couldn’t do any more damage. But he had to withdraw from the Open Championship, the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational and the PGA. And when he found himself almost flinching when he hit golf balls on the Sunday prior to the Wyndham Championship, Snedeker knew enough was enough. Even though he was ranked 57th in the FedExCup, which he won in 2012, the eight-time TOUR champ decided to call it a season. “You’ve got to be smart and not risk developing a huge problem in your golf game by trying to play through something for a few weeks,� Snedeker says. “It was just time to make sure I got healthy and figure out what was going on with my body. “The last thing I want to do is go out there and not be able to practice the way I want to practice and not put the time in and go through the motions, which is how you create bad habits and lose confidence. “And if you lose confidence at golf, it’s hard to get it back.� So, Snedeker hasn’t hit a golf ball in four weeks. He probably could chip and putt but he’s chosen not to because he doesn’t want to chance trying too much, too soon. “My biggest fear right now is setting myself back,� Snedeker says. He takes medication to try to get the inflammation in the joint to subside. He’s changed his diet an estimated 180 degrees, cutting out sugars and carbohydrates to help it calm down, too.   “It’s been pretty miserable, I’m not going to lie,� Snedeker says. “It’s no fun not being able to eat stuff I like to eat.� Snedeker also wears a bone stimulator for 30 or 40 minutes every day. He describes it as a wrap that goes around his chest. There’s a “halo-looking� device, he says, that sends electric currents into the joint to stimulate healing. “I am doing everything I can to get this thing to heal up and solidify but it’s just such a weird injury, freak thing to have happen,� he says. “With no real trauma to cause it, it’s been a head-scratcher for just about every doctor I’ve been to see.� While being on the sidelines has been difficult professionally, Snedeker has enjoyed the unexpected time with his wife Mandy and their two children, 6-year-old Lily and Austin, who turns 5 next month. He’s been able to devote more time to the Brandt and Mandy Snedeker Foundation that helps children in middle Tennessee, too. “It’s been great to be home with the kids and be a dad again and see what every day life’s been like for them,� Snedeker says. “But I think they’re probably getting tired of me by now.� His absence has not gone unnoticed on TOUR, either. So many of his peers have called and texted to check up on him that Snedeker says he’s been “overwhelmed.� And he’s kept up with his friends on TOUR as a spectator, watching the broadcasts on TV, even though it reminds him of what he’s missing. Snedeker hasn’t been surprised by what he’s seen in the first two Playoffs events. He expected Dustin Johnson, who won THE NORTHERN TRUST, to rise to the occasion in the Playoffs. “He kind of has ebbs and flows like that every year and I thought he was due for another good run,� he says. “It’s pretty impressive to watch … the way he played the back nine and made birdies when he had to.� And Jordan Spieth has been playing “unbelievable golf,� Snedeker says, contending just about every week. Justin Thomas’ rise hasn’t been lost on the 36-year-old, either. “One thing I always thought about Justin, if he ever figured out how to save those shots in a round, he was going to be tough to beat because he makes so many birdies and he’s such a dominant player when he’s playing like that,� Snedeker says. “I guess the switch kind of flipped over this year. “You don’t win a major championship being able to limit your mistakes and he’s kind of figured it out.� Snedeker won’t be playing the BMW Championship next week at Conway Farms for just the second time in the 11-year history of the FedExCup. Ditto for the TOUR Championship at East Lake, which he won in 2012 on the way to pocketing the $10 million bonus. So Snedeker knows all too well what he is missing. “Those are two of my favorite tournaments,� Snedeker says. “Conway’s a great test. … Seems like every year we’ve been there there’s always drama going on, on the last hole. “And East Lake’s such a cool place. It’s kind of bittersweet not being there. … It’s such a cool feeling being there in that event.� Sometime in the next two weeks, though, Snedeker will have an MRI that will hopefully enable him to put together a plan for his return to competition. But he’s not going to get ahead of himself. “It will be a slow process,� Snedeker explains. “It won’t be go hit balls today, play 18 tomorrow. It will be a ball count kind of thing try to see judge how the sternum is going to feel going back into full bore again. “Hopefully I’ll be better suited to handle the stress and the forces I put on my body when swinging a golf club.� And he’ll know when it’s time.

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