Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting U.S. epitomized team spirit in Presidents Cup win

U.S. epitomized team spirit in Presidents Cup win

U.S. epitomized team spirit in Presidents Cup win

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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+1100
Justin Thomas+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2000
Xander Schauffele+2000
Collin Morikawa+2200
Jon Rahm+2200
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Brooks Koepka+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 qualifier MJ Daffue keeps dream in sightMonday qualifier MJ Daffue keeps dream in sight

JACKSON, Miss. - Life is full of contradictions. Take MJ Daffue, the 31-year-old who shot a second-round 69 (10 under par total) for the lead halfway through Friday's second round at the Sanderson Farms Championship. His last name, pronounced Duffy, looks nothing like it sounds, making him the Brett Favre of golf. RELATED: Full leaderboard Also, while most pros hope to play four good rounds to have a good week, Daffue, who has Monday-qualified nine times in his last 14 tries (including here) on the PGA TOUR and Korn Ferry Tour combined, keeps having to play five. "You've got to make birdies and get through," Daffue said. "I guess every round to me, I just take it as a Monday qualifier." He made five birdies and two bogeys at the sun-splashed Country Club of Jackson and was leading after the morning wave. He is bidding to become the first Monday-qualifier to win on the PGA TOUR since Corey Conners at the 2019 Valero Texas Open. He's trying to "stick to the process." That's a cliché, of course, but it's really Daffue's only choice. He's 861st in the Official World Golf Ranking. This is his fifth TOUR start. His career best: a T22 at the Workday Charity Open at Muirfield Village, where he faded with a final-round 73. His wife, Kamie, a speech pathologist who works with the deaf, is back in Houston with their 6-week-old boy Oliver. Yep, Daffue and Rory McIlroy became new dads at just about the same time. And nope, you couldn't find two guys further apart on golf's pecking order. So, yeah, a win? It would be completely crazy. Life-changing. And he can't think about it. If you haven't heard of Daffue, join the club, but it's most likely because of something that happened off the golf course, not on it. Before what can only be described now as a freak accident, Daffue was a promising junior golfer in South Africa who at 11 played with Retief Goosen and mixed it up with TOUR winners like Dylan Frittelli. He came to America and was a two-time Southland Conference Golfer of the Year at Lamar. He also met Kamie, a native Texan, got married, and turned pro in 2012. All was well. With Daffue's family so far away, her family became his family, so when her mother, Jill Badeaux, was hit by a car and killed while walking away from the dentist's office in 2013, he was devastated. He drove home from a Hooters Tour event in South Carolina to comfort his wife, but wasn't sure how to process the grief himself. Having grown up in a military family, he says, he only knew to keep a stiff upper lip. "I didn't really know how to deal with it," he said, "so I just kind of put it to the side." Alas, bottling it up didn't work; soon he was living and dying with every shot, too wound up to let his talent shine on the course. The results showed; while peers like Frittelli were establishing footholds on TOUR, Daffue's path may as well have been lined with banana peels. Today, having had time to think about it, especially as he and Kamie were forced to put down their corgi during the first months of the coronavirus pandemic, Daffue realizes he hadn't allowed himself to properly grieve. "I just had to talk to people," he said. "I'm a very outgoing guy. I don't really wear my emotions on my sleeve, but I just had to sit down and look at everything on the whole. The point where it started to change was golf was everything to me, and the pastor at our church told me, ‘If you're nothing without golf, you're not going to be anything with golf.' "That's just how it works," Daffue added. "So I had to really see where I need to find my happiness. It's in friends, and serving people, and helping people where I can, being friendly, trying to make someone's day, something like that." He says he considers himself a better person, and a better golfer, than before. This weekend would be a really good time to show that to the world. He's playing with a local caddie, Austin Rose, who played for Mississippi State and is a member at Country Club of Jackson. They were introduced by Dusty Smith, who was an assistant coach at Lamar and is now the head men's golf coach at Mississippi State. All the pieces are coming together for MJ Daffue. He just can't think about it. Not yet.

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Julian Suri surges to APGA Tour lead in his backyardJulian Suri surges to APGA Tour lead in his backyard

Former European Tour winner and local St. Augustine resident Julian Suri has surged to the lead after the first round of the Advocates Pro Golf Association Tour tournament at the Slammer & Squire Course of the World Golf Village. MORE ON APGA TOUR: Dent following in father’s footsteps | College star sees APGA as key to next level Suri, who grew up just a short drive from the World Golf Village and was a two-time Florida state high school champion before becoming an All-American at Duke University, notched up six birdies and two eagles during a sublime 10-under 62 on Thursday. The 29-year-old leads by two over Georgia’s Tim O’Neal (64) while Kentuckian Patrick Newcomb sits third in the 36-hole event after his round of 65. Cincinnati’s Kevin Hall, who lost his hearing as a toddler, is part of a tie for fifth at 4-under. Suri, an American with both Indian and Mexican heritage, had a huge 2017 where he won on the secondary Challenge Tour in Europe in May before taking out the Made In Demark event on the European Tour in August. After a T19 finish in the 2018 PGA Championship, Suri reached a peak of 60th in the world but has slipped back to 265th after battling through some nagging injuries, including a hernia. His best PGA TOUR finish from 13 career starts was a T8 at the 2018 Houston Open. O’Neal, who won the APGA event earlier this year at Torrey Pines that was played during the Farmers Insurance Open, had eight birdies and an eagle that were only offset by two bogeys. The 47-year-old veteran African American has played seven TOUR events over the last few decades, his last as the Charlie Sifford Memorial Exemption player at the 2019 Genesis Invitational. The APGA was established in 2010 as a non-profit organization with the mission to bring greater diversity to the game of golf. In addition to conducting up to eight tournaments awarding $250,000 in prize money annually, the APGA conducts the Charlie Sifford Player Development Program to aid young minority golfers.

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Cut prediction: The Honda ClassicCut prediction: The Honda Classic

2021 The Honda Classic, Round 1 Scoring Conditions: Overall: +1.43 strokes per round Morning wave: +0.97 Afternoon wave: +1.9 Current cutline (top 65 and ties): 81 players at +1 or better (T63) Top 3 projected cutline probabilities: 1. 2 over par: 39.5% 2. 1 over par: 32.8% 3. 3 over par: 15.9% Top 10 win probabilities: 1. Matt Jones (1, -9, 25.4%) 2. Russell Henley (T2, -6, 11.9%) 3. Aaron Wise (T2, -6, 8.3%) 4. Cameron Davis (T4, -4, 6.0%) 5. Sungjae Im (T15, -2, 4.7%) 6. Cameron Tringale (T9, -3, 4.3%) 7. Steve Stricker (T4, -4, 2.6%) 8. Chris Kirk (T15, -2, 2.6%) 9. Joaquin Niemann (T27, -1, 2.6%) 10. Shane Lowry (T9, -3, 2.3%) NOTE: These reports are based off of the live predictive model run by @DataGolf. The model provides live "Make Cut", "Top 20", "Top 5", and "Win" probabilities every 5 minutes from the opening tee shot to the final putt of every PGA TOUR event. Briefly, the model takes account of the current form of each golfer as well as the difficulty of their remaining holes, and probabilities are calculated from 20K simulations. To follow live finish probabilities throughout the remainder of The Honda Classic or to see how each golfer's probabilities have evolved from the start of the event to the current time, click here for the model's home page.

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