Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Top-ranked Pine Valley to allow women members

Top-ranked Pine Valley to allow women members

Pine Valley Golf Club, long held in high esteem in the golf community for its architectural features and stern test to high-end players, is set to break from tradition and allow women members for the first time.

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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
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PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+450
Bryson DeChambeau+1000
Justin Thomas+1800
Collin Morikawa+2000
Jon Rahm+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2000
Xander Schauffele+2000
Joaquin Niemann+3000
Hideki Matsuyama+4000
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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
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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
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Monday FinishMonday Finish

Welcome to the Monday Finish, where we’re still trying to replicate Jordan Spieth’s bunker shot. Looks like we’re going to be here a while. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1. The aftermath of a milestone is the perfect opportunity for reflection, and it may be time to admit we’ve failed to appreciate the true level of Spieth’s talent. Every little lull in his game, like the two consecutive cuts he missed in May, lead to questions about his game. But Spieth’s victory at the Travelers Championship, and the dramatic fashion in which he did it, serve as a strong reminder that he is a special talent. This was the 10th victory of his career. He’s only 23 years old. It’s impressive for a player to earn his PGA TOUR card before turning 24. Spieth already owns two majors and a FedExCup. The high standard he set in 2015 makes people under-appreciate what he’s accomplished since. He’s won two times in each of the past two seasons, and he ranks high in every possible metric: fourth in the FedExCup, third in the Official World Golf Ranking and second on the U.S. Presidents Cup team rankings. No, he’s not immune to bad weeks, but they should be placed in a larger context. We’re watching Spieth compile a resume worthy of the World Golf Hall of Fame. Those who have talked about Spieth’s slumps may just be too impatient. Since October 2014, he’s never gone more than 12 PGA TOUR starts without a win. Spieth and Dustin Johnson are the only players to post multiple victories in each of the past two seasons. In 16 starts this season, Spieth has seven top-10s, including five finishes in the top three. Spieth’s dramatic hole-out did more than net another PGA TOUR win. It reminded us of what he’s capable of. 2. Spieth’s win continued an impressive run for the 25-and-under set. It used to be that any player in his 20s was considered young, but now we see a growing contingent of players who are racking up victories before they turn 25. There have been 12 wins this season by a player 25 or younger. Eight different players have combined to win those 12 titles. Justin Thomas has three wins this season, while Spieth and Hideki Matsuyama have two wins apiece. The other winners this season who were 25 or younger at the time of their victory are Jon Rahm, Cameron Smith, Si Woo Kim, Daniel Berger and Mackenzie Hughes. 3. Berger may have cost himself a spot on last year’s Ryder Cup team at last year’s Travelers Championship, but this year at TPC River Highlands he all but clinched his spot on Team USA. Berger, who lost a three-shot lead in the final round of last year’s Travelers, made up a three-shot deficit Sunday to catch Spieth before falling in a playoff. The runner-up finish moved Berger to fourth in the U.S. Presidents Cup standings. Berger isn’t short on confidence, or distance, and should fit in quite well as a rookie on the young team. Half of the top 10 players in the U.S. point standings would be representing their country for the first time in professional competition. The five potential newcomers are Berger, Justin Thomas, Kevin Kisner, Kevin Chappell and Brian Harman. The win also moved Berger to eighth in the FedExCup as he looks to make his third consecutive TOUR Championship. He finished 11th in the FedExCup en route to winning the 2015 Rookie of the Year Award, and was 26th last year. 4. Rory McIlroy’s putting woes continue. He finished 17th at the Travelers despite ranking 69th (out of the 74 players who completed 54 holes) in Strokes Gained: Putting “Tee-to-green, I’m right where I need to be,â€� said McIlroy, who ranks 65th in the FedExCup. “(I’m) driving the ball as well as I ever have, and hitting my irons pretty good. If I could sharpen up the short game a little bit and just convert a few more chances I’m giving myself, I feel like I’ll be right there for the next few weeks.â€� Hunter Mahan, who beat McIlroy in the championship match of the 2012 WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play, was one of the players who tied McIlroy last week at TPC River Highlands. Mahan’s game has fallen on hard times. He began the week ranked 215th in the FedExCup and 889th in the Official World Golf Ranking. The T17 was Mahan’s first top-50 finish since he finished 43rd at the Farmers Insurance Open in January 2016. Mahan now ranks 195th in the FedExCup and 723rd in the world ranking. 5. Before Spieth’s bunker shot overshadowed all that occurred last week at TPC River Highlands, the play of Monday qualifier Chase Sieffert was among the week’s interesting storylines. Seiffert, a Florida State teammate with Berger and Brooks Koepka, was one shot off the lead after birdieing his first hole Saturday, but faded to weekend rounds of 72-71 to finish 43rd. He had the opportunity to be the first Monday qualifier to finish in the top 10 this season. Only four Monday qualifiers have posted top-25s. This was the second successful qualifying attempt this season for Seiffert, who finished T74 at The RSM Classic. FIVE INSIGHTS 1. This probably should come as no surprise, but Spieth was among the week’s best from around the green. He finished second in Strokes Gained: Around-the-Green, averaging +1.51 strokes gained per round. It was the best performance around the greens by a winner this season (at a tournament where all four rounds were measured by ShotLink). Rod Pampling averaged +1.30 Strokes Gained: Around-the-Green in his win at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, while Kim averaged +1.23 in his win at THE PLAYERS Championship. 2. Perhaps Spieth’s iron play should get more credit, though. He leads the PGA TOUR in Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green this season, and ranked seventh in that category at the Travelers Championship (+1.25). Spieth average proximity to the hole on approach shots (27 feet, 0 inches) was nearly 15 feet better than the field average (41’, 8â€�). Spieth won despite not having his best stuff with his putter, finishing 31st in Strokes Gained: Putting (+0.57). 3. This was just the fourth time this season that a player has won after losing strokes to the field off the tee. Spieth ranked 56th in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee last week, averaging -0.26 strokes per round. Spieth owns two of the four wins this season by a player who lost strokes to the field off the tee. He also did so in his win at the AT&T Pebble Beach 4. Spieth joined Tiger Woods as the only players in the modern era to win 10 times by the age of 24. Woods won 15 times before he turned 24. It’s impossible for Spieth to match that number, as he’ll celebrate his 24th birthday on July 27. 5. This is the 10th week this season that Spieth has ranked in the top five of the FedExCup. TOP THREE VIDEOS 1. That rake throw. 2. I feel like we’ve seen this before. 3. Until Sunday, this was my favorite Jordan Spieth bunker shot of the week.

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WGC-Mexico, second round: Leaderboard, tee times, TV scheduleWGC-Mexico, second round: Leaderboard, tee times, TV schedule

It’s a very colorful leaderboard at the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship with players from six different nations in the top 10. Here’s what you need to know ahead of Round 2. Round 2 tee times Round 2 leaderboard HOW TO WATCH/LISTEN TELEVISION: 2 — 7 p.m. (Golf Channel) PGA TOUR LIVE: 12:15 — 7 p.m. RADIO: 1 — 7 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on Sirius XM and PGATOUR.COM) NOTABLE PAIRINGS (All times are ET) Justin Rose, Rickie Fowler, Jordan Spieth 11:39am off the 10th tee Justin Thomas, Dustin Johnson, Jon Rham 12:51pm off the 1st tee Sergio Garcia, Alex Noren, Tommy Fleetwood 1:03pm off the 1st tee Bubba Watson, Phil Mickelson, HaoTong Li 1:15pm off the 1st tee MUST-READS Talking equipment with new Callaway staffer Sergio Garcia How does nearly being 8,000 feet above sea level affect yardage? Rafael Campos returns home with support for Puerto Rico Open

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From triple-bogey to trophy: A look at the last 10 players to win after making triple in the first roundFrom triple-bogey to trophy: A look at the last 10 players to win after making triple in the first round

It's not how you start. It's how you finish. Cameron Smith showed that at last year's Sony Open in Hawaii. Smith won despite playing his first two holes in 4 over par, including a triple-bogey on his second hole of the tournament. Smith is the only player in the ShotLink era (since 2003) to win after playing his first two holes in 4 over par. He's also one of just 10 players since 1990 to win after making a triple-bogey (or worse) in the opening round. Smith is in strong company, as Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Rory McIlroy, Greg Norman, Davis Love III and Sergio Garcia have also done it. It may come as no surprise that Mickelson is the only player on the list twice. It makes sense that this group includes many of the best players from the past 30 years. It's hard to win after spotting the field three shots on a single hole. Let's look at the last 10 players to win after making a triple (or worse) in the opening round and how they recovered from such a tough start. Cameron Smith 2020 Sony Open in Hawaii – 2nd hole No winner in the ShotLink era has gotten off to a worse start. Smith bogeyed his opening hole at Waialae, then tripled the next one. Smith had to hole a 14-footer just to save bogey on his first hole. Then he hit "maybe the worst shot I've ever hit on TOUR." His tee shot on the second hole, a 425-yard, par-4, was "the biggest, quickest snap hook you've ever seen in your life," he said. It traveled just 177 yards. He had to lay up, then knocked his 110-yard third shot over the green. He chunked a chip, hit his next one to 7 feet and missed the putt. Smith birdied three of his final four holes to shoot 70, then shot of 65-66-68 before winning a playoff with Brendan Steele. "There's no point in worrying about what you've just done," Smith said, "You may as well be focused on what you can do." Rory McIlroy 2016 Deutsche Bank Championship – 12th hole It had been more than a year since his last win, and there was nothing about his start to the 2016 Deutsche Bank Championship that made it look like his drought would come to an end this week. He bogeyed his second hole of the tournament and was facing a 14-footer for triple on the next one. He made it, then went bogey-free on his next 15 holes to salvage an even-par 71. He started the final round six back, but shot 65 in cool, windy conditions to beat Paul Casey by two. "It’s just incredible, this game, how quickly things can change and how quickly things can turn around," McIlroy said. "It’s been a great lesson for me this week not to get down on myself, to stay patient. After three holes on Friday, there was so much going through my head and none of those things involved sitting beside a trophy at the end of the week." McIlroy won the TOUR Championship two weeks later to claim his first FedExCup. His season had gone from mediocre to memorable in a matter of weeks. Phil Mickelson 2009 TOUR Championship – 14th hole Mickelson was cruising along at 1 under par for his first 13 holes of the 2009 TOUR Championship. Then he arrived at the 442-yard, downhill 14th hole (now East Lake's fifth hole). The trouble didn't come off the tee. Mickelson blasted a 321-yard tee shot into the middle of the fairway, leaving himself just 125 yards to the hole. He dumped that approach shot into the front greenside bunker, however. It took him six strokes to hole out from there. He bladed the bunker shot over the green, then hit his next shot back into the same bunker. He left the next shot in the sand before blasting out to 8 feet and two-putting. His first-round 73 left him seven shots off the lead. He played the next three rounds in 12 under par, six strokes better than anyone else in the field. His final-round 65 was the best of the day by two strokes. Adam Scott (2016 Honda Classic) is the only player since to win after making a quadruple-bogey. Phil Mickelson 2007 Deutsche Bank Championship – 9th hole What a week it was. Before the tournament, he visited Kennebunkport, Maine, for golf with President George H.W. Bush. After the second round, Mickelson watched the Red Sox' Clay Buchholz throw a no-hitter at Fenway Park. Then Mickelson won the second event of the inaugural FedExCup Playoffs. Mickelson, who was paired with Tiger Woods and Vijay Singh in the opening round, had a birdie and an eagle in his first four holes. He gave it all back on the ninth hole, though. "I certainly made a big mistake on 9," he said. "It was just a sloppy swing. I felt like there was so much fairway out there. I just didn’t give it the attention it needed. I hit just a terrible shot and ended up making triple." It was his only over-par hole of his first-round 70, and one of just three he had for the event. He shot 64-68-66 in the final three rounds to finish two ahead of Woods, Arron Oberholser and Brett Wetterich. Mark Calcavecchia 2007 Valspar Championship – 17th hole Calcavecchia had just birdied the opening hole of the Snake Pit to get back to even par in the first round of the 2007 Valspar Championship. Then he got bit. On the 208-yard 17th, his tee shot came to rest nearly 50 yards left of the hole. He hit his next shot into a greenside bunker and blasted out. But three putts from 14 feet left him with a triple-bogey. He bogeyed 18 for a first-round 75 that left him 10 shots off the lead and tied for 112th place. Calcavecchia, 46, charged into a share of the 54-hole lead with a Saturday 62 that tied the course record. He missed a 5-foot par putt on the 72nd hole, but still won after Heath Slocum missed his 4-footer for par. It was the last of Calcavecchia's 13 wins, which includes the 1989 Open Championship. His 75 tied the highest first-round score by a winner in the last 30 years. Only two players since have won after shooting 75 in the first round (Jon Rahm, 2020 BMW Championship; Brooks Koepka, 2018 U.S. Open). Vijay Singh 2004 RBC Canadian Open – 11th hole This win came during the finest season of Singh's career, when he won a career-high nine times. He broke the heart of a nation at Glen Abbey, beating native son Mike Weir in a playoff. Singh won despite making TWO triple-bogeys on the same hole, Glen Abbey's 11th, that week. He signed for 7s on the 452-yard hole in both the first and third rounds. He was 7 over par on the 11th hole that week and 16 under par on the other 68 holes. He is the only player since 1983 (when the TOUR started keeping hole-by-hole stats) to win while making multiple scores of triple-bogey or worse. An incredible comeback in the first round made this win possible. He played a seven-hole stretch on his back nine in 7 under par, shooting 28 on that side en route to a first-round 68. Davis Love III 2003 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am – 2nd hole A week earlier, a fellow TOUR player asked Love if he'd ever double-hit a chip shot. He hadn't. "So, of course, the next round I play, I double-hit a chip and it cost me a triple." It was part of a topsy-turvy first round for Love at Poppy Hills. He eagled his opening hole but was 3 over after 15 holes. He birdied his final three holes to salvage an even-par round. "You forget about it and move on," Love said. "Unfortunately, I've made a lot of triples." He played his final 54 holes in 14 under par to beat Tom Lehman by one. Sergio Garcia 2002 Sentry Tournament of Champions – 13th hole Garcia shared some big goals at the start of the season-opening event. Woods had completed the Tiger Slam less than a year earlier but Garcia wasn't afraid to express his desire to win the money list on both sides of the Atlantic. "That's the expectations," Garcia said in his pre-tournament press conference. "You've got to try to take them as high as you can so you're able to reach the closest to that goal." Garcia's season got off to a topsy-turvy start, however. He made five birdies and an eagle in the first round but also had a triple and four bogeys. His 73 beat just six players in the 32-man field and was 10 shots behind leader Mike Weir. Garcia shot 9-under 64 in the final round to force a playoff with David Toms. Garcia holed a 10-foot birdie putt on the final hole of regulation, then did it again on the first playoff hole. It was Garcia's third win in his last 11 PGA TOUR starts. "I'm leading the money list," Garcia said. "When I get old I can say to my nephews, ‘I was the money leader - for at least one week.'" Tiger Woods 2001 Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard – 8th hole A month before completing the Tiger Slam, Woods had to answer questions at Bay Hill about a slump. He'd won 17 times in the previous two seasons, but had gone a whopping five starts in 2001 without a victory. "I’m scoring better than I did last year," Woods said. "The only problem is I just haven’t got the right breaks at the right time, and you need to have that in order to win." He got one on the final hole of the tournament. First, he had to overcome a mistake on his second-to-last hole of the opening round. Woods made triple on his 17th hole Thursday, hitting his approach into the pond that fronts Bay Hill's eighth green. He knocked his next shot into a bunker behind the green. With a bad lie in the sand, he couldn't find the green with that shot either. He finally chipped to 4 feet before one-putting for a 7. He shot 71 in the first round, then fired 67-66 in the next two rounds to take a one-shot lead over Sergio Garcia into the final round. When Woods arrived at 18 on Sunday, he was tied atop the leaderboard with Mickelson. Woods pulled his tee shot left of the fairway. His ball was headed towards the OB before bouncing off the neck of spectator Tony DeKroub. Woods took advantage of the good fortune, hitting his 195-yard approach to 15 feet and sinking the birdie putt to nip Mickelson. Woods won THE PLAYERS and the Masters in his next two starts. Greg Norman 1990 Doral-Ryder Open – 3rd hole Norman's career was defined by Sunday struggles and clutch shots that denied him titles. Not this week. On the final day of the 1990 Doral-Ryder Open, he shot a course record before chipping in on the first hole of a playoff. Norman had eight birdies in his first-round 68. He also made triple-bogeyat the third hole after hooking his tee shot into the water. "It was ugly," he said. "It wasn't too far in and I started to go in the water to hit it. I took my shoes and socks off but before I knew it, I was up to my knees in mud. I figured I'd better take a drop." He was still just three shots behind leader Jim Gallagher, Jr. Norman fell seven off the pace after shooting 73-70 in the next two rounds, however. He made a Sunday charge with a course-record 62 on Sunday before winning his playoff with Paul Azinger, Mark Calcavecchia and Tim Simpson. The first paragraph of Sports Betting News said it all. "Greg Norman, who has discovered so many remarkable methods of losing golf tournaments, finally found an equally spectacular way to win one on Sunday," it read. David Frost 1990 USF&G Classic – 15th hole Unfortunately, it wasn't long before Norman faced more heartbreak. Three weeks after Doral, Robert Gamez holed a 7-iron on Bay Hill's 18th hole to beat Norman. Then Frost clipped Norman by a shot in New Orleans after holing a bunker shot on the 72nd hole. Norman shot a final-round 65, the lowest score of the tournament. He finished eagle-birdie-bogey-birdie, hitting his approach on 18 to 9 inches. He looked like he was headed for at least a playoff, if not a victory, after Frost found the bunker off the tee and by the green. Then he sank his sand shot to cap off a back-nine 31. "What can you say? He hit a great shot," Norman said. Frost won despite a triple on the par-5 15th in the first round. His 71 was still just two shots off the lead.

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