Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting U.S. Women’s Open storylines: Can Nelly Korda get back in the winner’s circle? How will Erin Hills play?

U.S. Women’s Open storylines: Can Nelly Korda get back in the winner’s circle? How will Erin Hills play?

The 80th U.S. Women’s Open figures to be a tough test at Erin Hills Club. We break down some of the biggest things to watch ahead of the LPGA’s second major of the year.

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How old will Charlie Woods be when he wins his 1st PGA Tour event?
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
23 or over+225
22+400
21+550
20+600
19+700
18 or under+800
Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Justin Thomas+1100
Joaquin Niemann+1400
Shane Lowry+1600
Tommy Fleetwood+1800
Tyrrell Hatton+1800
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Rory McIlroy+650
Bryson DeChambeau+800
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Collin Morikawa+2200
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Justin Thomas+2800
Brooks Koepka+3500
Viktor Hovland+3500
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
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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Fred Funk revisits PLAYERS victory in 2005 Monday finishFred Funk revisits PLAYERS victory in 2005 Monday finish

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Fred Funk returned to TPC Sawgrass’ Stadium Course this weekend, site of his signature PGA TOUR win at THE PLAYERS Championship in 2005. There was plenty to reminisce about. After a string of weather delays on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, this year’s PLAYERS will finish on Monday for the first time since Funk’s triumph, where he completed 32 holes on a marathon final day, becoming the oldest PLAYERS champion at age 48. This year’s field will face a similar challenge, with the third round’s final grouping of Sam Burns, Tom Hoge and Harold Varner III completing nine holes as play was halted Sunday due to darkness. The plethora of contenders – 17 players within four shots of leader Anirban Lahiri – will aim to channel their inner Funk, who weathered gusts up to 42 mph with 2-under play across those 32 holes. Monday’s conditions at TPC Sawgrass aren’t slated to be quite as severe, but winds of 14-16 mph will pose a demanding test on the water-infused Pete Dye layout. As he returned to the scene of his iconic triumph – punctuated with an up-and-down for par from a greenside bunker at the 72nd hole and a hat spike – Funk offered some words of advice to the field. “You’ve just got to stay super focused,” said Funk of the best way to handle a marathon Monday finish. “The biggest thing in these kind of conditions is hitting it solid. If you’re not hitting the ball solid, you have no control, none at all. “It’s not only a big-time tournament, and it’s got the prestige of being the fifth major, but it’s also on a really, really hard golf course. It’s a very visually intimidating golf course in normal conditions, and then when you’ve got conditions like this, you’ve just got to stay super focused.” Monday finishes at THE PLAYERS haven’t just produced the oldest winner in tournament history, but also some of its most memorable finishes. Hal Sutton’s famous “Be the right club today” shot clinched his win on a Monday in 2000, and Tiger Woods won his first PLAYERS on a Monday a year later after a duel with Vijay Singh that saw Singh make a triple bogey and an eagle in the final five holes. It was Woods at the height of his powers, as he won the Masters a few weeks later to complete the Tiger Slam. He held the five largest titles in golf concurrently. Funk, who was men’s golf coach at the University of Maryland before earning his TOUR card, spent the majority of his TOUR career as a resident of Ponte Vedra Beach. The home-field advantage came in handy during the myriad weather delays throughout the week. That Saturday, competition was delayed after Funk completed three holes. He went home for lunch and a nap. “My caddie comes running in; he says, ‘Wake up, wake up. We’re in position on the 10th tee in 20 minutes,’” remembered Funk. “I go, ‘Wow, if I weren’t so close, I would’ve missed my tee time.’ “I just threw on my pants and I went to the 10th tee, and then we play three or four more holes, and back off the course again. So it was that kind of week.” Funk’s defining stretch came midway through the fourth round, as he rattled off four birdies in a seven-hole stretch, punctuated with an aggressive line into the par-3 13th and subsequent 6-foot birdie. “The pin was really tucked left, right by the water, right by the bulkhead,” remembered Funk. “There were like four paces onto the green, and I was left of the hole, closer to the water than it was to the pin. It could’ve gone in the water and it didn’t, and I made birdie there.” After three-putt bogeys on 14 and 15, Funk faced another critical moment with his second shot into the par-5 16th. One of the most historically accurate drivers of the golf ball, Funk split the fairway, leaving 234 yards into the hole. The wind whipped. Funk pulled 3-iron and played boldly. “A little bit of a hook lie, side of the mound, and the wind is howling, and I aimed 10 yards out into water on purpose,” recalled Funk. “I started it dead on line, 10 yards out into the water, and I hit it so solid that the wind didn’t hit it at first. So I’m like, ‘Oh, it’s going in the water,’ and finally the wind slammed it and I got it up on the green, 20 feet for eagle. “A shot you’re normally not going to try in that big of a tournament, but the conditions were so difficult, and the guys I saw later when I saw some replays, they aimed at the middle or left side of the green and played it safe, they got it blown over into the left side of these mounds, and you’re dead over there. “Taking on the pin and taking on shots, I did that all day. I got away with it on some, that probably shouldn’t have.” Funk three-putted for bogey on 17, a result he didn’t mind as much, considering the alternatives – “I’m watching everybody hit it in the water.” With par on 18, he posted 9-under total, then watched as Luke Donald and Scott Verplank failed to make closing birdie to match. Who will follow in Funk’s footsteps and raise THE PLAYERS trophy on a marathon Monday? Time will tell. “I was ecstatic,” said Funk, who recorded eight PGA TOUR victories in addition to nine on PGA TOUR Champions. “It was my signature win.”

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Dustin Johnson in cruise control at U.S. OpenDustin Johnson in cruise control at U.S. Open

SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. – The passing of the guard at the 118th U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills came in front of a makeshift stage with USGA insignia. Dustin Johnson (67, 4-under) was on his way to podium to meet the press when he passed Henrik Stenson (70, 1-over), who was on his way off the risers. “Go ahead,â€� Stenson said, patting Johnson on the shoulder. “Tell them you’re invincible.â€� Powering through unanticipated rain and cool weather, Johnson made a 45-foot birdie putt at the seventh hole, suffered just one bogey, and reminded many why he’s the No. 1 player in the word with a 67 that has him 4 under halfway through the tournament. Invincible? He sure looks that way. “I like where par is a good score on every hole no matter what club you got in your hand, what hole it is,â€� Johnson said. “… Around here, the fairways are fairly generous, but with crosswinds on every hole, they’re still tough to hit. Even though you’re in the middle of the fairway, a lot of times with a wedge you’ve still got to hit a good shot just to give yourself a 15- or 20-footer.â€� Stenson and fellow European Graeme McDowell (70, 9-over) said the pea soup weather made them feel like they were playing an Open Championship. But Johnson is reminding that he’s a threat on every type of course as he vies for his second U.S. Open title in the last three years. “We kind of played in it from 15 to about No. 3,â€� Johnson, whose group started on the back nine, said of the bad weather, “and then it kind of let up a little bit for us, and then we got to finish in some nice weather.â€� The leader played the first two rounds with Tiger Woods and Justin Thomas just days after taking back the No. 1 ranking from the latter by winning the FedEx St. Jude Classic. While Shinnecock is dissimilar to TPC Southwind, Johnson hasn’t lost a step. He hit 12 of 14 fairways, many times with his driver, to power his way across a course that played even longer than its stated yardage of 7,440. “Dustin was in complete control of what he’s doing,â€� Woods said. “He’s hitting the ball so flush and so solid. I know it’s windy, it’s blustery, it was raining early, but he’s hitting right through it.â€� OBSERVATIONS FLEETWOOD MAKES MOVE … With the wind and spitting rain, Tommy Fleetwood was only halfway through his round when he began anticipating being done. He survived, then he thrived, making three birdies in his last five holes for a 4-under 66, the best round of the week and enough to get him in contention after an opening 75. “It was windy and it was cold and the rain was coming down,â€� Fleetwood said. “It was literally counting holes down and trying to survive and make pars. Brightened up a little bit, and then I made some birdies towards the end.â€� A four-time winner on the European Tour who came into this week ranked 12th in the world, Fleetwood was 6 over for his first 15 holes Thursday. Now he’s just five behind the 36-hole leader after making putts and reeling off six birdies on an extremely difficult Shinnecock Hills course Friday, one made even tougher by the elements. “You have to keep going,â€� Fleetwood said. “I made a bunch of bogeys on that back nine in a row (Thursday), made one birdie in the last three, and then get a round like today and you’re back in it.â€�   STENSON BOUNCES BACK … Henrik Stenson crushed a driver 311 yards and blistered a 3-wood some 288 yards to reach the par-5 16th hole in two shots. He made the eagle putt from just inside 20 feet, the highlight of an even-par 70 that has him at 1 over and five behind the leader. “I still don’t feel like I’ve played that great tee-to-green,â€� Stenson said after hitting 12 of 14 fairways. “I’ve hit a lot of fairways and a lot of greens, but it’s still been — you know, not the quality of strike that I would have liked to have and the control of the direction all the time. But certainly, when we needed two good swings on 16, we managed to find them.â€� As great as his eagle was, Stenson credited a par save at the long, par-4 12th hole as the key to his round. He holed a par putt of 14 feet, 7 inches to keep the round going. “I feel like I battled well, I holed out well,â€� he said. “A lot of tricky par putts these last two days, and just kept it together nicely.â€� FURYK FIGHTS HARD FOR 73 … Jim Furyk, 48, hasn’t played well as he prepares to take on the Ryder Cup captaincy in France, but his second-round 73 has him at 4 over and in the mix again at Shinnecock. The 2003 U.S. Open champion said he didn’t drive the ball well, which is normally one of his strengths, but, “I made a lot of good, solid par putts and was able to keep the round going.â€� A few of the pars he described as “magical.â€� (Not normally a Furyk word.) This, despite being caught completely off-guard by the bad weather. “No one in our group had an umbrella or a rain suit,â€� he said. “… When we were getting up this morning there was a zero percent chance of rain. I think when we got here I heard someone say it jumped to 15 percent. And then it rained for two hours.â€� Like other medium-length hitters, Furyk reported struggling to reach some of the longer par-4s. “Into that damp breeze, and with the rain, the ball was going absolutely nowhere,â€� he said. NOTABLES JUSTIN THOMAS – FedEx Cup No. 1 and world No. 2 fought hard while playing alongside Johnson and Woods, making short birdie at the par-3 seventh hole to give himself some wiggle room in making the cut. Signed for a second-round 70 to go into the weekend at 4 over. SERGIO GARCIA – With a new caddie on the bag shot a second-round 79 and at 14 over has no hopes of making the weekend. JON RAHM – Never looked comfortable at Shinnecock and struggled to a 77 (+15) to become the second member of the Spanish Armada group, after Garcia, to miss the cut by a mile. RUSSELL HENLEY – Held a share of the first-round lead but faded slightly with a second-round 73 to go into the weekend at 2 over and six shots off the lead. Made a triple-bogey 7 at the third. TIGER WOODS – Butchered the first hole again, his double-bogey 6 making him 5 over there in two days on the way to a second-round 72 to finish +10. Likely to miss the cut. QUOTABLES He definitely didn’t have it, but, really, he didn’t play that poorly.When we were getting up this morning there was a zero percent chance of rain. I think when we got here I heard someone say it jumped to 15 percent. And then it rained for two hours.  SUPERLATIVES Low round: 66, by Tommy Fleetwood.

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