Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting TOUR Insider: Time is now for FedExCup lifelines

TOUR Insider: Time is now for FedExCup lifelines

SILVIS, Illinois. – According to Zach Johnson – you’ve just got to “bow upâ€� and “get after itâ€�. With just six weeks left in the FedExCup regular season, the time is now to lock up your spot in the Playoffs. While the big-name winners like Dustin Johnson, Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas and Hideki Matsuyama have long-booked their place in the top 125 and the post season, there are plenty of players on the outside looking in. And at the John Deere Classic, the sense of opportunity is well and truly in the air. With a large chunk of players inside the Playoff zone either out of action or playing on the European Tour this week in the lead up to the Open Championship, the 500 FedExCup points for the winner at TPC Deere Run represent a clear chance to change the trajectory of your season. For some of the guys on the bubble, it might not take a win, it might just take a half-decent result. As such, there is a mixture of optimism and anxiety on the range in Silvis. “Making the FedExCup Playoffs means everything,â€� Smylie Kaufman, who sits in 134th on the points list, says. “Not making the 125 for me – that’s inexcusable. It’s something I need to do.â€� A winner in the fall of 2015, his rookie season, Kaufman did not have to worry about making the Playoffs at this stage last year. But with just one top-10 finish on his resume this season he knows time is running out to make his move. He is still burning about not making it to East Lake last year, falling to 43rd when he was unable to get things going in the Playoffs. “All it takes is one week in the Playoffs. I was the guy last year who was in the top 30 all year and felt like I had a great year, but the guy who was second or third in a playoff event can go right past you and that happened to me,â€� Kaufman adds. “So I learned the hard way last year not making the TOUR Championship sucked. “I think I am the type of player that can get hot at that time of year and then who knows. If I can just get there a lot of pressure would be taken off. My card is not on the line but I want to treat it that way because there will be times in my career it is going to be on the line. “So, I just want to learn from the experiences and see how I handle the pressure.â€� The pressure is certainly different for different individuals. Kaufman has another year of exemption up his sleeve. Guys like Johnson Wagner, who sits 127th, have past champion status to fall back on. He’s won three times before. Others, like last week’s surprise contender Sebastian Munoz, have nothing to fall back on. If you finish between 126-150, you also get conditional status and several starts next season guaranteed. “I’ve won and played well out of that category before although it’s not ideal,â€� Wagner says. “There is a big difference between 150 and 151 and obviously 200 and 201 also. But you can’t put too much pressure on yourself, you’ve just got to get out there and play. “I have been in this position many times and I have definitely overreacted and panicked before. But there is nothing good that comes from that.â€� If you are inside the top 200, you get a trip to the Web.com Finals for another chance at TOUR status. Munoz entered the Greenbrier Classic in 198th. He’s now 140th. “I needed to make a move, and it is great I’ve done that,â€� Munoz said. “But now I am in range of the Playoffs, and I need to bring it home in these next events.â€� It is a move others like Brett Drewitt are hoping to make this week. The Australian Tour rookie sits at 196th and knows just one decent week will allow him the chance to do what he did last year, and get through Web.com Tour Finals. A massive week could have him bypass that altogether. “The trick is to try not to think about it, which is easier said than done,â€� Drewitt says. “But if you do think about it you have to embrace it as an opportunity. That’s what I am trying to do.â€� It is a mindset Johnson, who as a dual major winner and has been in the Playoffs every year since their inception, believes can help. He sits 103rd in the FedExCup, not great, but almost certainly enough to make it once more. “I like the mentality of having my back against the wall. I thrive in that position,â€� Johnson says. “So if they are in that sort of position, you know what, bow up. It’s time to get after it. “It’s one of those situations where the more pressure you put on yourself probably the worse it is. If you just kind of try to simplify it and take it for what it is, it’s an opportunity.â€� For context, just six players played their way into the top 125 with six weeks to go last year, and two of those were past major winners. Jerry Kelly, Jim Furyk, Robert Garrigus, Keegan Bradley, Blayne Barber and Shawn Stefani were the guys to step up in the run home and claim a spot with Stefani coming from the furthest back at 143rd. The unlucky six last year who fell back were Scott Stallings, Nick Taylor, Bronson Burgoon, Tim Wilkinson, Chad Collins and Willy Wilcox. Who will be the most likely to jump in this season … you’ll have to watch to find out!

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Atlanta Drive-150
New York+115
Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler-110
Rory McIlroy+150
Xander Schauffele+185
Ludvig Aberg+250
Bryson DeChambeau+300
Collin Morikawa+350
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Justin Thomas+350
Viktor Hovland+350
Brooks Koepka+400
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The Masters 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+500
Rory McIlroy+600
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Jon Rahm+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+1800
Xander Schauffele+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Hideki Matsuyama+2500
Joaquin Niemann+2500
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LIV / PGA 'Merger' Specials
Type: First LIV Player To Win On New Combined Tour - Status: OPEN
Any Other Player+500
Jon Rahm+500
Tyrrell Hatton+600
Bryson DeChambeau+800
Joaquin Niemann+900
Cameron Smith+1400
Brooks Koepka+1800
Sergio Garcia+2000
Dean Burmester+2200
Abraham Ancer+2500
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PGA Championship 2025
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Scottie Scheffler+500
Rory McIlroy+700
Xander Schauffele+1000
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Brooks Koepka+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+1600
Viktor Hovland+1800
Collin Morikawa+2000
Patrick Cantlay+2500
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+500
Rory McIlroy+750
Xander Schauffele+1000
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Jon Rahm+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Brooks Koepka+1800
Collin Morikawa+1800
Viktor Hovland+1800
Hideki Matsuyama+3000
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+550
Rory McIlroy+700
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1200
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Viktor Hovland+2000
Brooks Koepka+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
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USA-170
Europe+165
Tie+1100

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Homa, Finau ready for Sunday challenge at The American ExpressHoma, Finau ready for Sunday challenge at The American Express

LA QUINTA, Calif. - Tony Finau and Max Homa earned their first PGA TOUR cards as part of the 2014 Korn Ferry Tour graduating class. Their career arcs, before and after that inflection point, vastly differ. Finau, 31, spent seven years on mini-tours before earning his 2014 Korn Ferry Tour card. He has finished no worse than No. 53 in the FedExCup in six full TOUR seasons. Homa, 30, earned his TOUR card within 18 months of graduation from the University of California-Berkeley. He spent time bouncing between the TOUR and Korn Ferry Tour, but is now playing some of the best golf of his career. Each player has won on TOUR - Finau at the 2016 Puerto Rico Open, Homa at the 2019 Wells Fargo Championship. They'll meet in Sunday's final threesome at The American Express - alongside fellow co-leader Si Woo Kim - as they chase the title at PGA WEST (Pete Dye Stadium Course). All three players stand 15-under through 54 holes in the Palm Desert. Finau and Homa are no strangers to overcoming adversity in their careers. Finau, a father of four, recalls earning $21,000 for winning a 2011 mini-tour event at PGA WEST, the majority of earnings allocated to his parents and Q-School entry fees. He battled constant self-imposed questions regarding whether he'd ever succeed on TOUR. He broke through to earn Korn Ferry Tour status via 2013 Q-School, and he hasn't looked back. Homa underwent a severe slump on TOUR during the 2016-17 season, making just two cuts in 17 starts and finishing near the bottom of the leaderboard on several occasions. "When I hit rock bottom, I found a shovel and kept digging," Homa once described his struggles. The American Express could be viewed as a microcosm of Homa's career. He made a triple-bogey 7 on the Stadium Course's par-4 10th hole during Friday's second round, but rallied to salvage a 2-under 70 and stay within striking distance. After a double bogey at No. 7 during the third round, Homa refused to fade, playing his final 11 holes in a bogey-free 5-under - including an up-and-down from 109 yards to save par at the finishing hole. Homa's ‘relentless' ethos endures - the word is even tattooed on his arm. "I did not know the lows I would see in golf," reflected Homa after a third-round, 7-under 65 at PGA West, located approximately 140 miles from his hometown of Valencia, California. "But that word always rang true in my head. I always told my college teammates about how you have to be relentless, you have to be a bulldog, you've just got to be tough. "I had to put myself in those actual shoes where I had to be tough, and it's just always been a word that just meant a lot to me. That's how I see a lot of life; I just feel like everybody should just be as relentless as they can in pursuit of whatever they want." Finau has also remained in relentless pursuit of his second TOUR title, shaking off a series of near-misses since his breakthrough Puerto Rico Open victory, continuing to play his way into contention. He has accrued 41 career top-10s on TOUR. Like Homa, Finau suffered a double bogey in the third round at PGA West - finding water with his tee shot on the par-3 13th hole. The Utah native rallied with three consecutive birdies to assume his share of the lead into Sunday. "It is tiring," admitted Finau on answering to a nearly five-year winless drought, "but I welcome that challenge. I have for the last couple seasons. I challenge myself every time I play to prove that I can do it again, and I know I can. I feel like the skill set's good, at a high level. I'm going to have a lot of opportunities to win tournaments. "That's, to me, what the exciting thing is. Every time I don't close a tournament, I'm never thinking, ‘Wow, I've let another one slip. I'm never going to have this opportunity again.' For me, it's like, ‘What did I learn? How can I take what I learned into the next opportunity?' And I've got another opportunity tomorrow." Through the at-times uncertainty in an uncertain world of professional golf, Finau and Homa have continually proven themselves capable of weathering any storm. And they'll welcome Sunday's challenge in the Palm Desert.

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No. 14: Henrik StensonNo. 14: Henrik Stenson

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