Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Tony Finau, Jon Rahm pair up again at WGC-Workday Championship at The Concession

Tony Finau, Jon Rahm pair up again at WGC-Workday Championship at The Concession

BRADENTON, Fla. - The last time we saw Tony Finau and Jon Rahm they were arm in arm at The Genesis Invitational in Los Angeles. Finau had just suffered another agonizing close call, this time a two-hole sudden-death playoff loss to Max Homa, and Rahm had made his way out to the green to console him. It was a sweet moment, and rare, but there's a backstory. "It's funny that we're playing together this week," Finau, 31, said after bouncing back with a 4-under 68 in the first round of the World Golf Championships-Workday Championship at The Concession on Thursday. "We've kind of been hanging out a bit. I'm living in Scottsdale now, and we've gotten closer this past year." Rahm also shot 68; the two friends sit just two off the lead. Hideki Matsuyama, the third member of the group, triple-bogeyed the last hole and shot 72. How did Finau and Rahm get so close? Geography, for one. Finau used to be just a Utah guy but last year moved to Scottsdale and joined the Silverleaf Club, where he and Rahm practice and play. They not only walked off the green at the Genesis arm-in-arm, they flew across the country together on Monday, Florida-bound. They didn't talk golf but played cards - a game called Tens. "I'm going to say it right now, if you don't get along with Tony Finau, there's something seriously wrong with you," said Rahm, 26. "He's a standup guy, great guy, and we spend a lot of time together back home. A lot of practice rounds, a lot of golf. I just like hanging out with him." As for being there for Finau after his agonizing playoff loss, Rahm shrugged. It's just what friends do. "I've been very fortunate to win both playoffs I've been a part of," he said. "I haven't had any moments like that on a Sunday. For the most part every time I've had a tough moment (my wife) Kelley has been there, my parents have been there, so I've had family around. We can't have family around, so that's why I was there to have a familiar face." Finau, whose 21 top-five finishes since the start of the 2016-17 season are the most among players without a victory over that span, said he didn't recall what was said but appreciated the gesture. "I'm not one to play a victim card, but after that day it's a little bit bitter," he said. "To feel like you played good enough to win and fall short again, it's just nice to have someone to lean on. He's been in situations where he's won and lost and knows what it feels like at the highest level. He was able to console me for those few seconds and I was appreciative of that." It was a tender moment between competitors, but a better way to describe this friendship is: Game recognize game. "I feel like we both have that short swing and for the most part hit a fade, so we play golf courses very similarly," Rahm said after driving into trouble and bogeying the par-4 finishing hole at The Concession on Thursday. "I have a lot of respect for Jon and his game," said Finau, who made a scrambling par after taking an unplayable lie off the tee on 18. "It started a few years back when I told him I was moving to Scottsdale. We ended up playing some golf together through the quarantine, and kind of just got a lot closer through that experience. But he's a good dude." Finau, a one-time TOUR winner, is ranked 13th in the world and sixth in the FedExCup. He's also a father of four with wife Alayna. Rahm, a five-time TOUR winner, is ranked second and is 13th in the FedExCup. He and wife Kelley Cahill are expecting their first child later this year. "Tony keeps telling me just trust your instincts and you'll know what to do when it comes," Rahm said. The two will continue to practice and play together back home, and continue to battle together at The Concession. They may even start flying together more, Finau said. True, golf can be cruel, but a sweet friendship refreshes the soul. Win or lose, golf or cards, Finau and Rahm have a good thing going.

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Kristoffer Reitan+3000
Thriston Lawrence+3000
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Rory McIlroy+450
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Corey Conners+1800
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Taylor Pendrith+2200
Sam Burns+2500
Robert MacIntyre+2800
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Sungjae Im+3500
Luke Clanton+4000
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Type: Alex Noren - Status: OPEN
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Johnny Keefer
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Top 10 Finish+475
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Top 40 Finish-115
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PUNTA CANA, Dominican Republic — Rafael Campos holed out for birdie with a putter from off the front of the 18th green for birdie and a share of the lead Saturday with Joel Dahmen in the PGA TOUR's windy Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship. RELATED: Leaderboard | Joel Dahmen, Rafael Campos search for first TOUR win at Corales Campos, the 32-year-old Puerto Rican player whose family has a home in the Dominican, shot a 3-under 69 to match Dahmen at 10-under 206 at Corales Golf Club. "I didn't want to chip it, so I'm like, `Just hit a putt and hopefully lag it up there close," Campos said about his closing birdie. "It was one of those days. That was a bonus for sure. I was struggling all day and I'm really happy where I'm at right now. I'm glad it's done." Ranked 427th in the world, Campos is trying to break through in his 37th PGA TOUR start. "Tomorrow's going to be a little bit more of the same," Campos said. "I was looking at The Weather Channel and we're going to still have the same wind direction, which makes the course really tough. You only get to play five holes downwind, the rest are pretty much into the wind. … It's going to be exciting. I'm excited to play." Dahmen had a 68. The 33-year-old former Washington player also is winless on the TOUR. "You have to stay patient, but you also have to take advantage of the opportunities,” Dahmen said. “I took advantage of the par 5s and just kind of hang onto your hat on 16, 17 and 18. These are tough holes coming in." Danny Willett (67) and Michael Gligic (68) were a stroke back. Emiliano Grillo (65) and Thomas Pieters (69) were 8-under, and defending champion Hudson Swafford (68) was 7-under with 2019 winner Graeme McDowell (70), Charley Hoffman (68), Sepp Straka (69), Roberto Castro (70) and Fabrizio Zanotti (72). Swafford won in September when the event was held a week after the U.S. Open, earning a spot in the Masters this year because Punta Cana was not an opposite-field event. The winner this year will not be rewarded with a Masters spot because the tournament is being played opposite the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play.

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"He's got big-show game," says Walker, who played the Korn Ferry Tour and is now the golf coach at Div. II Lynn University in Boca Raton, Florida. "He has a couple of intangibles, one of which is the length. For a thin guy he has plenty of clubhead speed and can move it. That's going to be one of his major assets. We're making sure he's committing to and hitting the right shots. "The maturation in his game, especially the last six or seven months, has been awesome," he continues. "His background - Kamaiu is a fighter. He's worked for what he's got. Nothing was handed to him, so I think he's used to being in a situation where you've got to go get it." Still, Walker adds, no one should jump to conclusions based on this week. "I don't expect him to be 100% comfortable in that environment because he's never been there before," he says. "I hope this turns into more opportunities for him because he's a great kid. There will be no failure no matter what he shoots in this tournament." Johnson isn't sure who he will play a practice round with, although he's pretty certain he'll meet fellow Farmers ambassador Rickie Fowler, who gave him and Mack a shout-on social media when their endorsements were announced. Johnson occasionally ran into FSU golfers Daniel Berger and Brooks Koepka when he was living in Tallahassee, but the local kid and the collegiate superstars were essentially living in different worlds. "There just hasn't been a lot of money in Black golf," says Johnson, who also represents Titleist and Cambridge Mobile Telematics, a software company in Massachusetts. Those companies plus Farmers, the APGA, the TOUR, and NBA star Stephen Curry's support for HBCU Howard Univerity's golf teams, not to mention other initiatives, are helping to change that. "I think we're definitely moving in the right direction," Johnson says. Back in Tallahassee recently, he visited Sykes, who says of his old, white FSU cap that he has to keep everything Johnson ever touched because the kid is going to be famous. He marveled at Johnson's staff bag with his name on it, a sure sign that Kamaiu had made it. My-My, indeed. Sykes regrets not being able to attend the Farmers because of the pandemic. Brown, who also taught Johnson so much on and off the course, died suddenly at 81 earlier this month. Employed by the city of Tallahassee, he worked at Gaither and passed shortly after shooting his age. The pool of pioneering minority golfers shrinks each year, and Gaither, one of the first courses to allow Blacks, will soon be entered into the historic registry. There is much work to be done; there are fewer Black players than in the 1980s, the heyday of Thorpe, Calvin Peete and others. The APGA Tour will play at Torrey North again this Saturday while Johnson plays the Farmers on the South, determined as ever to make the TOUR his home. There is, he says, no Plan B.

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