Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting U.S. Open Final Qualifying results: Who advanced to The Country Club in Brookline

U.S. Open Final Qualifying results: Who advanced to The Country Club in Brookline

Final Qualifying for the U.S. Open is known as the “Longest Day in Golf,” and players compete for 36 holes across various sites in their quest to earn the right to compete in the year’s third major. The U.S. Open is traditionally known as the most democratic event in golf, as players with a handicap index of 2.4 or lower are eligible to sign up for qualifying. Local Qualifying for the 2022 U.S. Open was held at 109 sites between April 25 and May 23. Those who advanced have earned the right to compete in 36-hole Final Qualifying, held at 11 sites; two on May 23, nine on June 6. Some players began their journey at Local Qualifying. Some begin at Final Qualifying. Others are directly exempt to the U.S. Open, which will be held June 16-19 at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts, outside Boston. Based on strength of field at each Final Qualifying site, the number of spots awarded in the U.S. Open field will vary by site. Keep it here for updates from all 11 Final Qualifying sites, as professionals and amateurs alike jockey for the opportunity to compete against the world’s best at the U.S. Open. May 23 Caledonian Golf Club; Chiba Prefecture, Japan 28 players for 3 spots Qualifiers Tomoyasu Sugiyama (Japan); 69-66-135; 9-under Daijiro Izumida (Japan); 68-68-136; 8-under Todd Sinnott (Australia); 68-70-138; 6-under (advanced via playoff) Full leaderboard Notes: Tomoyasu Sugiyama will make his second PGA TOUR start; he debuted at the 2021 ZOZO Championship, finishing T57. He stands No. 279 on the Official World Golf Ranking. In 2021, he won the Japan Tour’s Bridgestone Open and Japan Challenge Tour’s JAPAN PLAYERS CHAMPIONSHIP CHALLENGE. Daijiro Izumida will make his first career PGA TOUR start. He stands No. 627 on the Official World Golf Ranking. His most recent OWGR-recognized victory came at the 2018 RIZAP KBC Augusta on the Japan Tour. Todd Sinnott will make his first career PGA TOUR start. He stands No. 415 on the Official World Golf Ranking. He won this year’s TPS Victoria hosted by Geoff Ogilvy on the ISPS Handa PGA Tour of Australasia. The 30-year-old also won the 2017 Leopalace 2021 Myanmar Open, co-sanctioned by the Asian Tour and Japan Golf Tour. — Lakewood CC and Royal Oaks CC; Dallas, Texas 98 players for 13 spots Qualifiers Kurt Kitayama (Chico, California); 65-66-131; 11-under Matthew NeSmith (Aiken, South Carolina); 62-69-131; 11-under Jinichiro Kozuma (Japan); 68-63-131; 11-under Sean Crocker (Palm Beach Gardens, Florida); 64-67-131; 11-under Andrew Novak (St. Simons Island, Georgia); 65-67-132; 10-under Mackenzie Hughes (Canada); 65-68-133; 9-under Rikuya Hoshino (Japan); 66-67-133; 9-under Ben Silverman (Juno Beach, Florida); 64-69-133; 9-under Nick Taylor (Canada); 65-68-133; 9-under Travis Vick (Hunters Creek Village, Texas); 68-65-133; 9-under Scott Stallings (Oak Ridge, Tennessee); 67-67-134; 8-under Davis Shore (Knoxville, Tennessee); 65-70-135; 7-under (advanced via playoff) Roger Sloan (Canada); 66-69-135; 7-under (advanced via playoff) Full leaderboard

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The new custom driver that has Phil Mickelson atop the PGA ChampionshipThe new custom driver that has Phil Mickelson atop the PGA Championship

Kiawah Island is the longest course in major championship history so it should be no surprise that a new driver has been key to Phil Mickelson’s success halfway through the PGA Championship. Mickelson, 50, held the lead after Friday’s morning wave thanks to rounds of 70-69. He ranked first in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green, in the top 10 of Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee and averaged 298 yards off the tee. This is the first week that Mickelson is using a custom Epic Speed head that effectively has 5 degrees of loft. The shaft is 47.9 inches, pushing up against the USGA limit of 48 inches. “It’s like working with a long-drive competitor at that point,” said Gerritt Pon, Callaway’s senior club performance analyst. “He’s not using it for accuracy. He’s using it for distance. Interestingly enough, he’s the type of player who does not necessarily lose accuracy with the longer shaft. Some lose a tremendous amount, some actually gain a little bit, but he’s the type of player who doesn’t lose accuracy. But he gains speed. “To swing the longer shaft, he’s trying to hit up on the ball a little more than with a normal shaft. He’s creating a lot of loft at impact to launch it high, so the main things that had to be accomplished was making the driver low-spin and fast.” Mickelson’s new Epic Speed, which was built especially for him, features Callaway’s aerodynamic Cyclone head shape. A second screw was added to the front of the head to lower the center of gravity. “With faster swing speeds, you see more benefit from the aerodynamically-designed head,” Pon said. “He has a driver that is fast, easy for him to draw, mitigates the left miss (for a left-hander) more than some of our other models that are popular on TOUR, and is very low spin.” Mickelson tested an 8.5-degree model of the Epic Speed that was lofted down to 6.5 degrees but that head created too much spin. He wants his draws to spin under 2,000 rpms and his fades to spin under 2,400, Pon said. If Mickelson were right-handed, the increased number of offerings available may have made it easier to find a match for him. Making a head that fit Mickelson meant designing a new head in CAD and then working with the foundries to have it produced. That is typically an eight-week process, Pon said. “We started with a baseline of the Epic Speed, which was a long time in the making, and then modified it with Phil in mind,” Pon said. “This particular model of the Speed is pretty new. Even though it looks like the same Epic Speed, it’s a customized version for a left-hander who’s trying to swing a long shaft with low loft and low spin. “So basically Phil Mickelson.”

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