Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Top 30 Players to Watch in 2020: Gary Woodland

Top 30 Players to Watch in 2020: Gary Woodland

Gary Woodland broke through with his first major win at the U.S. Open, a sure sign that he’s taking the next step. Woodland is among PGATOUR.COM’s top 30 players to watch entering 2020. Click here for more on all 30 players. Insider Insights PGATOUR.COM’s Insiders offer their expert views on what to expect from Gary Woodland in 2020. TOUR INSIDER by Ben Everill This will be the season Woodland finally becomes a serious threat for the FedExCup. He’s made the TOUR Championship seven times before but last season’s 15th place is his best result. The breakout win in the U.S. Open last season is the catalyst to greater things. That and his relationship with Amy Bockerstette which has helped his mental fortitude. The U.S. Open triumph caused a small hangover last season but with that behind him, Woodland will go from strength to strength. The fall series already procured two top-5s and a captains pick for the Presidents Cup, which was well-deserved. If Woodland ever picks up a few percentage points around and on the greens he would almost certainly become a multiple win threat inside a season, something this four-time winner is yet to accomplish.  STATS INSIDER by Sean Martin Woodland is one of eight players to finish in the top 20 of both Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee and Approach-the-Green last season. It’s good company to keep. Seven of them – Rory McIlroy, Patrick Cantlay, Justin Thomas, Corey Conners, Paul Casey, Jason Kokrak and Woodland – qualified for the TOUR Championship.  FANTASY INSIDER by Rob Bolton The 2019 U.S. Open champion is 35 and in his prime. With his debut in the Presidents Cup capping a career year, he’s also at his peak. He should stay there for a while, too. Plays a lot, misses few cuts and fills up the box score. Fairly known for his muscle, but that’s a bonus. His precision on approach from tee to green truly is his primary weapon.  EQUIPMENT INSIDER by Andrew Tursky Woodland made waves in the equipment world when he signed with Wilson Golf early in 2019. He used an eye-catching set of Wilson Staff Model Blade irons to win the 2019 U.S. Open, and then he put social media into a frenzy when he switched into a Staff Model Blade 2-iron at the 2019 Rocket Mortgage Classic in Detroit. Seriously, his 2-iron is why the “butter knifeâ€� stereotype exists.  STYLE INSIDER by Greg Monteforte Bold, patriotic designs from Puma’s Volition Collection have helped the reigning U.S. Open champ to carve out a unique look compared to the brand’s other TOUR players. These threads benefit a great cause, too, as Volition supports the families of military heroes through the Folds of Honor Foundation. Look for Puma to hook up Woodland with more limited edition shoes in 2020.  BEYOND THE ROPES by Helen Ross Most golf fans know Woodland played basketball at Washburn University as a freshman before transferring to Kansas – where he’d always wanted to play hoops. He did get to play an exhibition game against the Jayhawks where he guarded Kirk Hinrich, who would go on to be drafted in the NBA’s first round. That’s when he decided golf was his future. Ping-pong is another favorite – he started playing after having shoulder surgery as a rookie on TOUR in 2009 and has two tables at his home.  By The Numbers Strokes Gained rankings for Gary Woodland in the 2018-19 season.

Click here to read the full article

Do you like other ways of online gambling besides sports betting? Play some casino games at Miami Club Casino! Follow this link for the best bonus codes.

The Chevron Championship
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Jeeno Thitikul+900
Nelly Korda+1000
Lydia Ko+1400
Jin Young Ko+2000
A Lim Kim+2200
Ayaka Furue+2500
Charley Hull+2500
Haeran Ryu+2500
Lauren Coughlin+2500
Minjee Lee+2500
Click here for more...
Zurich Classic of New Orleans
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy / Shane Lowry+350
Collin Morikawa / Kurt Kitayama+1100
J.T. Poston / Keith Mitchell+1800
Thomas Detry / Robert MacIntyre+1800
Billy Horschel / Tom Hoge+2000
Aaron Rai / Sahith Theegala+2200
Ben Griffin / Andrew Novak+2200
Wyndham Clark / Taylor Moore+2200
Nico Echavarria / Max Greyserman+2500
Nicolai Hojgaard / Rasmus Hojgaard+2500
Click here for more...
Mitsubishi Electric Classic
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Steven Alker+700
Stewart Cink+700
Padraig Harrington+800
Ernie Els+1000
Miguel Angel Jimenez+1200
Alex Cejka+2000
Bernhard Langer+2000
Stephen Ames+2000
Richard Green+2200
Freddie Jacobson+2500
Click here for more...
Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
Ludvig Aberg+400
Collin Morikawa+450
Jon Rahm+450
Justin Thomas+550
Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
Click here for more...
PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Xander Schauffele+1400
Jon Rahm+1800
Justin Thomas+1800
Collin Morikawa+2000
Brooks Koepka+2500
Viktor Hovland+2500
Click here for more...
US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Viktor Hovland+2000
Click here for more...
The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
Click here for more...
Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

Related Post

Everything you need to know for 2022Everything you need to know for 2022

A new year is upon us and, to serve you, the good reader of PGATOUR.COM, we offer this primer to get you ready for the PGA TOUR in 2022. We’ll get you caught up on the current PGA TOUR season and let you know about the biggest changes ahead. Enjoy. It’s going to be a great year. Q: What are some of the highlights of the season thus far? It was an eventful fall. Rory McIlroy earned his historic 20th PGA TOUR win. Hideki Matsuyama added a win in his homeland to his reign as Masters champion. Max Homa once again proved that Twitter is just his second-best skill, winning for the third time in less than three years. Young stars Sam Burns, Sungjae Im and Viktor Hovland added to their impressive resumes and Lucas Herbert became the latest Aussie to win on TOUR. But the name to know is Talor Gooch. He’s the FedExCup leader and a player who looks ready to reach the next level. He has played six times this season, and finished T11 or better in all but one of those starts. That includes his first PGA TOUR win at The RSM Classic, the final official event of 2021. Gooch had six rounds of 64 or better in the fall; no one else had more than three. One of those came in the RSM’s final round, where he shot an impressive 64 after starting the day with the first 54-hole lead of his TOUR career. Gooch’s win is a testament to patience and perseverance. He won just a few days after turning 30, and five years after a tough start at Q-School had him wondering if he’d need to work at Best Buy to fund his career. Former Oklahoma State teammate Wyndham Clark calls Gooch “a gamer.” Some of Gooch’s best finishes have come alongside the game’s biggest names. After having his appendix removed in the midst of the 2018 season and starting 2019 with conditional status, he finished third at the Farmers Insurance Open. Only Justin Rose, the reigning FedExCup champion and World No. 1, and Adam Scott beat Gooch that week. He tied Hideki Matsuyama, while McIlroy, and Jon Rahm and Jason Day finished directly behind him. Gooch finished fifth at this year’s PLAYERS, the tournament with the game’s strongest field, behind only Justin Thomas, Lee Westwood, Bryson DeChambeau and Brian Harman. And earlier this fall, Gooch shot a final-round 62 in THE CJ CUP @ SUMMIT to get in the mix with McIlroy, Collin Morikawa and his fellow Oklahoma State alum, Rickie Fowler. Oh, and in case you somehow missed it, Tiger Woods is swinging a golf club once again. Though he said his future is as a part-time TOUR player, just seeing him play alongside son Charlie again was one of 2021’s top moments. Q: Speaking of Tiger … This will be the year that his incredible career is immortalized in the World Golf Hall of Fame. He’s one of four people who will be inducted March 9 – the eve of THE PLAYERS Championship – at PGA TOUR Headquarters in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. Also being inducted this year are former PGA TOUR Commissioner Tim Finchem, three-time U.S. Women’s Open champion Susie Maxwell Berning and former U.S. Women’s Amateur champion and course developer Marion Hollins. Among the items that Woods donated for display in the World Golf Hall of Fame are trophies from all four majors – his three wins in 2000, as well as the 1997 Masters – and lesser-known items, like a plaque from his first hole-in-one (at age 6!) and his MVP trophy from the 1992 Western High School golf team (we’re guessing he was a unanimous selection). Q: Are there any new rules I need to know about for 2022? I’m glad you asked. Golf’s newest rules will impact players’ performance with the longest and shortest clubs in their bags. The USGA and R&A announced in October that the new year will see a new local rule that caps driver length at 46 inches. Previously, clubs could be up to 48 inches long. Phil Mickelson used a 47.9-inch driver in his victory at the PGA Championship, and Bryson DeChambeau had a 48-inch driver in the bag for his Thanksgiving-week match against Brooks Koepka. DeChambeau will only be able to use it in his long-drive competitions from now on. Don’t worry, this rule does not cover all levels of golf. You can still pull out the big stick in your club championship. This is a local rule, which allows any tour to apply it to their competitions. The PGA TOUR will enact the rule in 2022. Another local rule taking effect Jan. 1 will render greens-reading books a thing of the past on the PGA TOUR. Players and caddies will use a “committee approved” yardage book that contains only general information about a green’s contours. Players can add notes to the books, but those must be based on first-hand observations on the course or during a telecast. Players cannot use tools or devices to measure the slope of greens and cannot add notes to their yardage books based on the use of such tools. “The purpose of this local rule is to return to a position where players and caddies use only their skill, judgment and feel along with any information gained through experience, preparation, and practice to read the line of play on the putting green,” read a memo sent to players by the PGA TOUR. Q: Where can I watch my golf? CBS, NBC and Golf Channel will still have your weekly telecasts. The biggest change is coming to PGA TOUR LIVE, which is moving to ESPN+. LIVE’s coverage will be tripled to more than 4,300 hours of live streaming. All PGA TOUR LIVE coverage will be available to ESPN+’s more than 17.1 million subscribers. The change will be evident right away. For the first time, PGA TOUR LIVE will cover the two Hawaii events that kick off the new year. Even more changes will be seen when the TOUR returns to the mainland. Beginning with The American Express, the third event of 2022, LIVE will feature four live feeds per tournament: the main feed, marquee group, featured groups and featured holes. The main feed will bring the best action from across the course. The marquee group will showcase every shot from the players in a single, premiere group. Featured groups, the traditional PGA TOUR LIVE stream, will concurrently show two top groups, while featured holes will show shots hit on the par-3s and iconic holes. When network television coverage begins, the four streams will pivot to two featured groups and two featured holes. If you have any more questions, this FAQ page is a good place to start. Q: Where are the majors being held? I don’t need to tell you where the first one is being played. The next three are visiting venues that are returning to the major rota after several years away. The PGA Championship is returning to Southern Hills for the first time since Woods’ win there in 2007. That event will be remembered for two things: Woods’ absolutely brutal lip-out on the final hole of his second round that denied him the first 62 in major history, and his duel down the stretch with Woody Austin. Southern Hills will have a much different look this year after undergoing a dramatic renovation from Gil Hanse. The U.S. Open returns to the Country Club of Brookline for the first time since Curtis Strange’s win in 1988, the first of his two consecutive U.S. Open wins. Brookline is best known as the scene of Francis Ouimet’s historic upset of Harry Vardon and Ted Ray in 1913 and as the scene of the United States’ record-setting comeback in the 1999 Ryder Cup. After a one-year delay, the 150th Open Championship will be played at St. Andrews, a fitting venue for a landmark Open. The one-year delay caused by the COVID-19 pandemic means it will have been six years since St. Andrews’ last Open, a win by Zach Johnson in a playoff over Louis Oosthuizen and Marc Leishman. Oosthuizen won there in 2010, and Woods claimed the preceding two Opens at St. Andrews. This will be the 30th Open held at St. Andrews, and little has changed since its first one in 1873. The list of winners at St. Andrews includes many of the game’s greatest players, such as Woods, Jack Nicklaus, Sam Snead, Bobby Jones, Nick Faldo, Seve Ballesteros and Peter Thomson. Q: What else do I need to know about the schedule? The biggest change may lead many PGA TOUR players to spend a fortnight in Scotland this summer. As an outgrowth of the PGA TOUR’s strategic alliance with the DP World Tour, the Genesis Scottish Open is now co-sanctioned by the two circuits. The Genesis Scottish Open will be played July 7-10 at The Renaissance Club in North Berwick, Scotland, one week before The Open at St. Andrews. The Scottish Open will count both towards the FedExCup and the Race to Dubai. Two events in the U.S., the Barbasol Championship and Barracuda Championship, also will be included in both season-long races. Another schedule change will see the Farmers Insurance Open end on Saturday, Jan. 29, to avoid conflicting with the NFL’s conference championship games. There will still be professional golf on Torrey Pines’ South Course that Sunday, however, as the APGA’s annual Farmers Insurance Invitational will be expanded to 36 holes and conclude Sunday on the South. In May, the Wells Fargo Championship will move from Quail Hollow Club for just the second time, but for good reason. The event will be conducted at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm in Potomac, Maryland, to allow Quail Hollow to prepare for the 2022 Presidents Cup. The only other time that the Wells Fargo wasn’t played at Quail Hollow was in 2017, when the course hosted the PGA Championship won by Justin Thomas. A week before the Wells Fargo, the TOUR will play a new event, the Mexico Open, at Vidanta Vallarta in Vallarta, Mexico. Though it is in first year as a TOUR event, Mexico’s national championship dates back to 1944. In June, the TOUR will return to Canada for the first time in three years after the previous two RBC Canadian Opens were canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic. McIlroy is still the defending champion after his thrilling 2019 win that included a final-round 61. Q: Anything new with the FedExCup? Yes, there is. The Playoffs kick off with a new event at a familiar venue, and the TOUR’s debut in a new state. The TOUR’s annual trip to TPC Southwind will now be the opening event of the FedExCup Playoffs. The FedEx St. Jude Championship will be the first of three Playoffs events, followed by the BMW Championship and the TOUR Championship. The 2022 BMW will be played at Wilmington Country Club in Wilmington, Delaware; it will be the first PGA TOUR event played in Delaware. The FedExCup’s first prize also has been increased to $18 million. The total FedExCup payout for 2022 has increased $15 million to $75 million. Q. The U.S. Team kicked butt in the Ryder Cup. What’s next for them? Their sights turn to the Presidents Cup on Sept. 20-25 at Charlotte’s Quail Hollow. A familiar venue will be a welcome sight for the home team after its close call at Royal Melbourne in 2019. Davis Love III, a UNC alum, will lead the U.S. Team after captaining the 2012 and 2016 Ryder Cup teams. There will be new selection criteria for Love’s squad. Only six players will earn automatic spots. The captain will get to choose half the team. U.S. players have been earning points since fall 2019, but points are tripled this season, which means there’s still plenty of moves to be made in the standings. Trevor Immelman will assume the International captaincy after a successful stint by his countryman, Ernie Els. While the International Team didn’t win in 2019, Immelman will be seeking to continue the positive momentum from the previous Presidents Cup. Immelman has his own ties to Quail Hollow. He was runner-up in the 2006 Wells Fargo Championship, a finish that he said helped him to take a “big step” in his career. He won the Masters the following year. Immelman’s close friend, fellow South African Rich Davies, lives on the course, as well. Davies was a kicker at Clemson in the 1980s, and through him Immelman has become a fan of the Tigers and friends with coach Dabo Swinney.

Click here to read the full article

Power discussion: Big hitters talk about their craftPower discussion: Big hitters talk about their craft

Blasting a tee ball well past the 300-yard marker on the range? Yeah, most of us can’t sniff that distance. Consequently, we’re in awe when the most powerful pros do it with such regularity – and usually with accuracy – in the heat of competition. The benefits are as huge as the drives. Brooks Koepka, one of the favorites entering this week’s The Honda Classic, claimed last season’s PGA TOUR Player of the Year award thanks in part to his ability to overpower golf courses. Rookie sensation Cameron Champ, already a winner this season, may be taking power to a new level. Rory McIlroy’s won a FedExCup; Dustin Johnson, Sunday’s winner in Mexico City, has spent more than 80 cumulative weeks since 2017 as world No. 1. Admit it — we all dig the long ball in golf. We also like talking about the long ball. And who better to discuss it than players who actually send those tee shots into orbit? We recently asked some of the TOUR’s most prolific bombers to weigh in on a variety of long-ball topics. “Did you talk to Cameron?â€� asked Luke List, who knows a thing or two about long-distance drives. “He’s in a class of his own.â€� Yes, Luke, we did talk to Cameron. In fact, here’s the lineup for our not-exactly-roundtable discussion (the interviews were conducted individually) along with a quick look at their power credentials: CAMERON CHAMP – Currently tied for third in driving distance average (316.3 yards) in his rookie season. Longest career drive on TOUR: 409 yards at Plantation Course in Kapalua last month. TONY FINAU – Ranked top 10 in driving distance each of his first four seasons. Longest career drive on TOUR: 414 yards at Firestone in 2018. DUSTIN JOHNSON – Ranked inside top-5 in driving distance in first 10 seasons on TOUR. Longest career drive on TOUR: 463 yards at TPC Boston in 2011. EQUIPMENT INSIDER: Why Dustin constantly switches drivers BROOKS KOEPKA – Ranked top-10 in four of his five seasons. Longest career drive on TOUR: 420 yards at Firestone in 2017. RORY McILROY – Driving distance leader in the previous two seasons. Longest career drive on TOUR: 452 yards at Trump National Dural in 2013. BUBBA WATSON – Four-time driving distance leader. Longest career drive on TOUR: 442 yards at Firestone in 2012. GARY WOODLAND – Ranked top-10 in driving distance six times. Longest career drive on TOUR: 450 yards at Plantation course in Kapalua in 2012. GROWING UP LONG Most of the players realized at an early age that they had the unique gift of outdriving opponents. FINAU: “As a junior, I was always longer than everybody I played with, but you never know how long you are until you start playing against men, adults. When I was 14, 15, and I noticed I was still hitting it further than the competition that was a lot older than me, guys who were in their 20s, in college and stuff, that’s when I knew I was long.â€� KOEPKA: “I always had speed ever since I’ve been little, 12, 13. I knew I was a long hitter.â€� WATSON: “As a junior, you just start hitting past everybody and you just saw it. I’ve never tried to hit past everybody; it’s just what happens.â€� JOHNSON: “As long as I can remember, I knew I hit it far. I never thought I was really long. I still don’t feel like I’m really long. I just hit it like I hit it. As a kid playing in tournament and high school golf and amateur golf, I was always one of the longer guys, but for me, it was just normal.â€� CHAMP: “10 to 12 years old, in that range is kind of when I first noticed. Obviously, it was nicer being further up as a kid.â€� WATSON: “My dad just said, hit it hard as you can. And so that’s just what I’ve always done.â€� FINAU: “My dad taught us from the green back, chipping and putting — we learned how to do that before anything else. And then I’ve learned how to hit a wedge and a 9, all the way up until the last club I ever learned how to hit was my driver. … I’ve swung hard at it for a long time since I was a kid. With my build and my long arms, I generate speed really from nothing.â€� WOODLAND: “That’s how I learned how to play — you’d go to the driving range and see how far you can hit it. I didn’t get a lesson until I was in high school, so I grew up hitting it a long way, and it was cool and fun and that’s what we did.â€� WATSON: “It was just the way I was brought up. Just swing for the fences as a kid and it developed into the longer swing past parallel. This was before John Daly. I didn’t even know who John Daly was. 1984 was when I got my first club.â€� FINAU: “I didn’t know how to hit it straight, but I knew how to hit it far. And then when I did hit it straight, I was winning golf tournaments, so that was a lot of fun.â€� WOODLAND: “I hit baseballs like I was George Brett growing up. Everything on that left side firing forward. I put everything on my right side, fire it forward. That’s how I learned how to hit it hard.â€� WATSON: “Jim Furyk said one time that he was taught trying to hit fairways and I was taught the opposite. Try to hit it long and if you get good, we’ll figure out how to hit fairways. And so we were just taught different ways.â€� NATURE OR NURTURE Amateur partners and curiosity seekers alike want to know – is there a secret to hitting it far? Length off the tee, for some, is simply natural ability, although a certain pro from Northern Ireland insists it can be developed through proper training. KOEPKA: “You can’t create speed — you either have it or you don’t. You might be able to gain a few [yards through training] but you’re not going to gain 20, 30 yards.â€� CHAMP: “You can maybe pick up a few yards, but you’re not going to do much. I mean, I know when Sean’s (Foley) worked with Justin Rose, obviously he’s gained, 5-10 yards. But it’s not a thing you can just go work out or do this swing technique and gain 20 yards.â€� WOODLAND: “A lot of it’s natural. Just being lucky. I have a strong lower base, played a lot of baseball, learned how to transition power, transition weight and that’s really what it comes from, the force I have in my lower legs and everything loading up on the right side going forward.â€� McILROY: “If you go back and look at my stats from when I started on TOUR, I averaged 292, 293. And I average 20, 25 yards longer than that now. It’s something I’ve had to work at, something I’ve learned how to do. That’s between gym work and TrackMan and stuff on my swing. So that’s why I think hitting it long is a skill. I don’t think it’s a natural-born talent you have because I certainly wasn’t long when I was growing up and I developed it over the years. If I can do it at 5-9, 160 pounds, anyone can do it.â€� WATSON: “It’s natural. If I had a swing coach, I’d say my swing coach taught me, but I don’t have one, you know? I think it’s natural because if you look at like J.B. Holmes, his swing is compact, but J.B. is just strong, right? He’s built like an ox. It’s all about the lag of a swing and the power coming through impact.â€� CHAMP: “I’m pretty flexible for the most part. … It’s kind of how I move my hips so fast, it creates the lag by itself. I don’t really have to do anything. It doesn’t look like I’m swinging very hard, but I’m just creating the speed. It’s kind of like a whiplash, my hips move so fast that I create the downforce in the leg.â€� KOEPKA: “There’s only so much you can do. I mean, you’ve got to be able to use your legs, load them, and a lot of it’s just legs. Yeah, mechanics can get you a few miles an hour, but you can’t create that much speed. If you don’t have speed, you’re not going to get speed. It’s not like you can swing it a 100 mph and then all of a sudden swing it 120. Equipment can help you a little bit, but you either have it or you don’t.â€� WOODLAND: “I don’t know if there’s a secret. Obviously, you need speed, you need a lot of things, but hitting it on the center of the face is a huge deal. I can swing as hard as I want, but if I don’t hit center contact, I’m not going to hit it as far.â€� JOHNSON: “The best thing that I can tell them is to get to the gym. But you’ve got to get something that’s specific to you, not just go work out. You need to get an evaluation of your body and know where you’re lacking in strength or lacking in mobility to understand what you can do to improve as far as to get stronger and get some more club head speed. But you’ve got to do it the right way. You can’t just go into the gym and start lifting weights and think you’re going to hit it further.â€� WATSON (when asked how to hit it farther): “I say, ‘You can’t.’ As an older golfer, if I’m teaching a kid, I can kind of guide them in the direction. But if I’m teaching an older pro-am partner, I would say that, you’re going to have to work on the timing. Comes down to timing, comes down to hitting the ball in the center of the club face. Just a lot of things that have got to go right. As you’ve seen the greatest players in the world, everything has to be working right or that long ball goes way off-line. So it’s not easy. That’s why I believe it’s just more God-given talent or God-given swing that’s created it.â€� THE JOY OF DISTANCE The guys share their thoughts of what it’s like to hit one on the screws. KOEPKA: “When you hit one, you know it’s going and that’s high, just stays up there. It keeps going. I don’t think there’s a better feeling.â€� FINAU: “It’s euphoria for sure. There’s a special feeling when you hit it solid and you see it in the air and know it’s going in the middle of the fairway and know it’s going to be way out there. It’s really cool. And then when you’re playing with competitors and their tongues are kind of sticking out with how far you can hit it and how straight you can hit it. It’s a feeling that never gets old.â€� McILROY: “You can feel when you hit one right on the clubface and it feels a little better. It almost feels like you don’t hit anything.â€� WATSON: “You don’t really feel the ball. The ball’s almost like a marshmallow because you hit it dead center on the club face where it’s going to have less feel to it because you smash everything.â€� FINAU: “It’s almost like a hole-in-one kind of thing — not that you want to celebrate it, but it’s a momentum-builder for me. Whenever I’m hitting my driver good and hitting it in the fairways, I know I have a big advantage. That feeling never gets old, the feeling of a solid drive. It’s something that’s very special.â€� WOODLAND: “For a long time I got annoyed by that’s what I was known as, but … until you prove everybody else differently, everybody knew me as the guy who hits it a long way. So it’s nice for people to start realizing I can play a little bit more well-rounded game. But people like it — it’s entertaining. They want to see you hit it a long way, want to see your cover bunkers and the noise and the sound. It does add some excitement.â€� McILROY (on 350-yard drives): “Geez, I probably hit a 100 of them every day when I’m practicing. It’s nothing out of the normal.â€� MEMORABLE ONES Each player was asked to ID the drives that stick out in their memory banks. FINAU: “There’s a couple. I drove a 520-yard par-5 in Utah, about two-club downwind. My brother and I both drove the hole, and that’s always memorable because anytime anybody asks me what’s my longest drive, well, it’s over 500 yards. And then, my first PGA TOUR event, it was the U.S. Bank Open, which was in Milwaukee at the Brown Deer Golf Course. No. 16 is about a 385-, 390-yard hole with a lake in front of it. The no-brainer thing to do is everybody just lays up. But I drove that green all four days as a 17-year-old. I Monday-qualified into the tournament, drove the green all four days. It’s like 360 over the water, and I flew it onto the green all four days. I remember after I drove the green the first two rounds, they decided to put some stands back there so people can actually watch on the weekend because I made the cut. The people came and watch me. So when I got there in the third round, I told my caddie, ‘Hey, I, I want you to hand me the iron when we get to the tee box’ so then all these people would be disappointed. We get to the tee box. I pulled out my 4-iron and people are just, ‘Ooh,’ and I just look back and shake my head. I pulled out my driver, people went nuts and then I end up hitting that onto the green., So that adrenaline, that was a cool feeling, even up to this point.â€� McILROY: “16 at Valhalla on the last day [of the 2014 PGA Championship, which he won]. It’s a 500-yard hole, soaking wet, and I think I had a 9-iron into the green. I was pumped up. I was in contention. Just one of those drives that you hit and you’re like, ‘Yeah, that was good.’â€� WATSON: “No. 10 at Maui a few years ago [at the Sentry Tournament of Champions]. It was downwind and I just reared back and hit driver and it just caught it. I knew I could get over [the waste area] with a halfway decent hit. But I hit it really good and it flew obviously with that wind, it flew all the way to the green, went about 10 feet, 12 feet from the hole. So that one because you had to fly it to the green. That’s the only way to get it to the green. So it’s one of those, it just came off perfect. The hit, the wind — everything was perfect for that situation.â€� JOHNSON: “The 18th hole at the U.S. Open at Chambers Bay [in 2015]. It felt good, and it was straight and into a really small fairway.â€� WOODLAND: “It was my rookie year, my first tournament of the year, Sony Open [in Hawaii]. I was right on the cut line. I hit driver almost every hole then. So I hit driver on 15 at Sony and drove the green. Now I wouldn’t even think about anything more than a 4-iron, but I drove the green, hit it up over the out of bounds. My first hole I ever saw on the PGA TOUR, I drove 10 at Sony that year. That was the first shot I ever hit, and I was like, this is actually easy when the golf courses are short.â€� CHAMP: “15th hole in Utah when I won on the [Web.com Tour]. It’s a very, very tight hole for me and somehow all four days I hit it right down the middle because I have to basically aim at the OB and tried to play it off of it. Every day I hit it dead straight kind of where I was aimed. One day, it went 430 after I hit the cart path.â€� KOEPKA: “Hnmm, no certain drives where I’m like, man, I crushed it.â€� BOMBERS ON BOMBERS Which other big hitters impress these guys – and is there an unofficial competition among the bombers? KOEPKA: “Bubba is really impressive in how he can work the ball and control it and still hit it that way. The ball shape is 40, 50 yards, sometimes even more. And the fact that he can find a fairway, it’s pretty impressive. It’s just fun to watch. He’s very creative and he’s good at what he does.â€� WATSON: “I think they’re more impressed with the curve that it actually goes in play and that I’m trying to do it, you know?â€� FINAU: “Pound for pound, the longest guy I’ve ever played with is Justin Thomas. When I played with him on the [Web.com Tour] and in our rookie year out here. He’s gotten a lot bigger and a lot stronger now that he’s on TOUR. He’s maybe 160 pounds and can fly the ball 310. That’s kind of ridiculous. You know, you look at guys like me and DJ and Gary, we’re bigger, stronger guys, just built a lot bigger. We’re taller. I’m probably seven inches taller than JT, but every time I play with him, to see his length, how high he can launch a golf ball, how far it can fly it for his size, it’s pretty cool.â€� WOODLAND: “When we were younger, Tony and I played a lot of Monday qualifiers together. We played a lot of golf together when we were trying to get out here and we tried to hit it a long way. Now we both laugh. We’re both just trying to hit the fairway now. We’re just trying to find it because we know we can hit our irons as far as anybody. If we get it into play, we’ll be all right.â€� KOEPKA: “I could care less if a guy hits it 50 short of me. Oh, I’ll let them know when I walk by them. I’ll just stop at this ball and look back at them, just for fun. Especially if I know them, if they’re a good dude. If I don’t know the guy, I’m not going to say anything. But there’s plenty of people that are longer than me.â€� WATSON: “It’s truly a friendship out here. I love seeing it. Playing with Dustin, seeing some of the shots that Dustin can hit. What does he got, 19 wins? I mean, he’s about to be a lifetime member with one more. [DJ notched his 20th on Sunday at the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship and will be eligible for lifetime membership after his 15th season]. So watching him play, watching him hit, it’s just impressive.â€� FINAU: “We all know what matters most and that’s what your scorecard shows. But we know who all the guys that are longest out here and I think we enjoy playing with each other and at certain stages throughout the season, some guys will just be hitting it further than other guys. You know, like I played with Gary last year and through a couple of months, he was hitting it further than I was. And then towards the end of the season, I was hitting it further than him. So sometimes you go through stretches where you’re just swinging a little better, you’re hitting it more solid. … We know that we have a distinct advantage because of our length, but at the end of the day you’ve got to put in the hole.â€� WOODLAND: “I haven’t played with Cameron. Tony said he’s the longest one we’ve seen. If Tony’s saying it, I’ll take his word for it.â€� FINAU: “He’s a whole different animal. He’s not as big as me either, a lot smaller, but he generates a lot of power and really fun and impressive to watch.â€� CHAMP: “Obviously distance is a great advantage, but if you can’t do all the other things, it doesn’t really matter.â€� Editor’s note: PGATOUR.COM staff writer Cameron Morfit contributed to this story.

Click here to read the full article