Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Top 30 Players to Watch in 2019: No. 28, Cameron Champ

Top 30 Players to Watch in 2019: No. 28, Cameron Champ

THE OVERVIEW Fans love the long ball. Cameron Champ is further proof. His prodigious length landed him on the cover of Golf Digest magazine after his first tournament as a PGA TOUR rookie. He showed that he’s more than just a sideshow by winning his next start, the Sanderson Farms Championship. As the only rookie to win this fall, Champ is the early frontrunner for the Rookie of the Year Award. He no longer has to worry about keeping his card – he’s exempt until the end of the 2021 season – and has upcoming starts at big events like the Sentry Tournament of Champions, THE PLAYERS Championship and PGA Championship. (Side note: Champ’s tee balls should play nicely on the sloping fairways of Kapalua’s Plantation Course.) His length receives an inordinate amount of attention, but for good reason. He leads the TOUR in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee at 1.483 strokes per round. That accounts for 70 percent of the strokes he gains per round. At the Sanderson Farms, he had an average of 152 yards left to the hole after his tee shot. That was nearly 30 yards closer than the field average. He covered more than two-thirds of the Country Club of Jackson with his tee shots. Hitting it far is nice. Hoisting trophies is better. Champ has done both. — By Sean Martin BY THE NUMBERS How Cameron Champ ranked in Strokes Gained statistics during his last full season on the PGA TOUR: FEDEXCUP UPDATE Current 2018-19 position: 6th Playoff appearances: 0 TOUR Championship appearances: 0 Best FedExCup result: The PGA TOUR rookie has put himself in good shape to reach the TOUR Championship after a fantastic performance in the fall portion of the schedule. SHOTLINK FUN FACT Cameron Champ hit 43 drives of 340 yards or longer during the fall portion of the 2018-19 wrapahead schedule. That’s 22 more drives than the next highest player (Seth Reeves) on that list. INSIDER INSIGHTS PGATOUR.COM’s Insiders offer their expert views on what to expect from Cameron Champ in 2019. TOUR INSIDER: It takes more than long tee shots to win on the PGA TOUR. Champ also used stellar putting to win the Sanderson Farms Championship. He finished second in Strokes Gained: Putting that week. “That’s definitely been a part of my game I’ve worked on extremely hard on on the Web.com Tour last year,â€� he said. “I’ve kind of been a streaky putter at times. (I’m) just trying to slowly grow other parts of my game as well. Short game and putting, but mainly putting, because my ball striking has been so good.â€� — By Sean Martin FANTASY INSIDER: It’s not supposed to be this easy; well, it’s not supposed to look this easy. I slotted the PGA TOUR rookie a conservative 129th in my full-membership fantasy ranking before the season started, but he’s already exceeded even elevated expectations with a seamless rise to the golf’s top shelf, so much so that his debut in our annual Top 30 series already feels low. Make no mistake that his strength off the tee is a bonus because he’s a terrific putter and scorer. His only weakness is inexperience, at least it’s supposed to be. Up next is Kapalua, where the longest drive in recorded history is Davis Love III’s 476-yard poke on the par-5 18th hole in the final round in 2004. With the proper wind (or perhaps not), consider that in jeopardy. — By Rob Bolton EQUIPMENT INSIDER: Champ has extremely high club head speed compared to his contemporaries (leading the Tour at 129.6 miles per hour), and he already has a legendary story about breaking his driver. Just minutes before teeing off on Sunday at the 2018 Sanderson Farms, which he won, Champ broke his Ping G400 Max driver on the range due to his tremendous speed. Luckily, Champ had a backup driver with his specs – 9 degrees with a Fujikura Pro White TS 63X shaft. Also of note, Champ uses two different 4 irons: a Ping i500 4-iron and a Ping iBlade 4 iron. The different constructions allow Champ to properly fill his yardage gaps. — By Andrew Tursky STYLE INSIDER: If any player was born to wear Nike, it is Champ. The combination of his surname, athletic build, and freakishly long drives make him a perfect fit for the image Nike is selling. While Champ won’t wow you with fancy kits, the razor-sharp tailoring of his clothing will continue to get him noticed. — By Greg Monteforte

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JACKSON, Miss. – As the son of 21-time PGA TOUR winner Davis Love III, Dru Love grew up on golf courses, surrounded by TV cameras. “I’m used to having cameras around,� Dru Love said. “But to have them on you because you’re in the lead – that’s different.� That first occurred during Friday’s second round of the rain-delayed Sanderson Farms Championship at the Country Club of Jackson, when the younger Love birdied seven of his first 12 holes to vault his name to the top of the leaderboard at 8 under par. The cameras from the Golf Channel showed up, along with a few more spectators. His swing quickened, and he gave two shots back on the way in. Still, he shot 5-under 67 and sits at 6 under par going into the weekend, four shots behind clubhouse leader Ryan Armour. It’s the first time in six PGA TOUR starts he has been this high on the leaderboard after 36 holes, and another step, he hopes, in his journey to earn playing status on the PGA TOUR or the Web.com Tour. 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I got a little out of my routine, got a little quick on those last couple of holes, and I’ll learn from that and do better (Saturday) if I get in that same position.� Dru might have one big-name golfer in his gallery Saturday – his father. Davis Love III shot 72 Friday and is at even-par after 36 holes, one shot off the projected cut of 1 under. OBSERVATIONS Armour followed his first-round 66 with a 4-under 68 Friday and leads at 10 under, one shot clear of Tyrone Van Aswegen, who made 10 birdies and shot Friday’s low round of 65. Thirty players had not finished their second rounds when play was stopped for the day because of rain and lightning. The second round will restart at 7:50 a.m. (Central) Saturday morning, with the cutline projected at 1 under par. 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The birdie binge has surprised the South African native. “I’m usually more of a steady kind of golfer,� he said. “But when you’re playing well, and feeling good you make more, I guess.� Two of his birdies were chip-ins, and he took just 22 putts in the round. Keep an eye on Vaughn Taylor this weekend. The three-time TOUR winner, who last won in 2016 in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, shot a bogey-free 66 Friday to get to 8 under and right in the hunt. Defending champion Cody Gribble improved on his opening-round 75 with a 3-under 69, but it was not enough to make the projected cut. Peter Malnati, the 2015 champion here, struggled to a 74 Friday after a first-round 67, but at 3 under he should be around for the final two rounds. Former U.S. Open and Masters champion Angel Cabrera (70-72) is expected to make the cut. Other major winners who probably won’t be playing on the weekend include Davis Love III (72-72), Retief Goosen (74-71), and Shaun Micheel (80-69). It wasn’t recorded as a putt in the official TOUR statistics because he putted from the fringe and not the surface of the green, but the longest shot made with a putter on Friday was likely the 60-footer for birdie Matt Every drained on No. 18. QUOTABLES “It’s a complete guessing game. 150 yards is a perfect pitching wedge, but sometimes it will go 170 and sometimes it will go 130. That’s what happened on No. 8. I had a perfect number for a pitching wedge and I hit it, and it just came out dead. That’s what happens in this rough here. You’ve just got to hit the fairways.� – Dru Love, on hitting from the Bermuda rough at Country Club of Jackson “I feel better at 41 than I did at 31. The way we take care of ourselves is a lot different than when when I first turned pro at age 23. We thought we could burn the midnight oil. You don’t do that anymore. With nutrition and fitness, it’s definitely different.� – Leader Ryan Armour, on how he competes at 41 with the younger players “I hit a bad shot and then an even worse shot after that. Just like that, you have a double.� - Tyrone Van Aswegen, explaining his double-bogey 6 on the 16th hole Friday – and just about every other double-bogey ever made by any golfer anywhere. SUPERLATIVES Low Round – 65, by Tyrone Van Aswegen, who made 10 birdies, a bogey and a double. Longest Drive – 410 yards by Monday qualifier Scott Strohmeyer on hole No. 5. Longest Putt – 50 feet, 1 inch, by Daniel Summerhays, for par on No. 16. Toughest Hole – For the second straight round, the par-4 16th played as the most difficult, with a 4.373 average. It yielded nine birdies, but there were also five double-bogeys and two ‘others’ made there during the yet-to-be-completed second round. Easiest Hole – The par-5 11th played to a 4.504 average, with five eagles, 61 birdies and only seven bogeys. 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