Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Veteran resurgence continues for Garcia and Cink

Veteran resurgence continues for Garcia and Cink

LAS VEGAS - Sergio Garcia was putting with his eyes closed on the way to victory last week at the Sanderson Farms Championship but they were wide open when he holed out for a timely eagle on Friday at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. The veteran Spaniard connected from 111 yards with his lob wedge on the par-4 6th hole at TPC Summerlin to reinvigorate his charge up the leaderboard and put him in position for back-to-back wins on TOUR. After a first round 5-under 66 had him sitting four shots off the pace, Garcia made an early second-round climb with four birdies in his opening seven holes only to then stall with seven straight pars. RELATED: Full leaderboard | Fowler makes putter switch But his magical eagle boosted him to double digits under par and a closing birdie helped him to a 64 and 12 under total, just two back of early pace-setters Patrick Cantlay and Martin Laird. "I hit a really nice shot just right of the hole a with a tiny little draw. Obviously saw the ball bounce just right of the hole and spun," Garcia said of the hole-out. "From where I was you couldn’t quite see it, so I saw a little bit and I thought it hit the hole or hit the flag and I thought it stayed next to it. Obviously the little amount of people that were there, they kind of went crazy. It was nice to know that it was in." Garcia's win in Jackson last week was his first on the PGA TOUR since the 2017 Masters and first anywhere in over a year. The 40-year-old knows when opportunities come you need to take advantage so he doesn't intend to step off the gas this weekend. "When you have one of those good moments, you try to enjoy it as much as possible and hopefully make the most out of it," he said. Joining him at 12 under is another veteran who recently arrested a form slide. Stewart Cink won the Safeway Open last month for his first victory since 2009. The renewed purple patch continued with a T12 last week and now he is once again in the mix. Cink was dropping putts from everywhere and had two eagles during his 8-under 63 on Friday. All up he made 133 feet, seven inches of putts Friday which had him gaining four shots on the morning wave in Strokes Gained: Putting. "It wasn’t like it was a ton of bombs, but I hit it 15 feet a lot and a lot of those went in," the 47-year-old Cink said. "I’ve made some changes in my game the last month or so and it's paid off really quickly with a win, and now it’s just fun to get out there and wail on the driver and see the shots. Golf is a fun game when you got things going right, and hopefully let it last a long time."

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Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
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Haotong Li+450
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Matthew Jordan+1400
Joost Luiten+2500
Ewen Ferguson+3500
Mikael Lindberg+3500
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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
Ludvig Aberg+1800
Justin Thomas+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
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Ryder Cup 2025
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USA-150
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Quick look at the DEAN & DELUCA InvitationalQuick look at the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational

THE OVERVIEW FORT WORTH, Texas – Want to know how to play a golf course? It’s usually wise to ask a club member. Or a PGA TOUR pro. Ryan Palmer checks both those boxes at Colonial. Not only has he been a dues-paying member since 2010 with hundreds of rounds under his belt, Palmer also has three top-5 finishes in the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational. That includes last year when he was the tournament leader eight holes into the final round. He eventually tied for third, four strokes behind playing partner Jordan Spieth, who birdied his last three holes to claim the title. “It was awesome being in that atmosphere,â€� Palmer said. “… I just remember some of the putts Jordan would make. I still tell him today, some of the putts he made, you just don’t make. I play all the time with all the members and nobody makes ‘em.â€� In other words, executing shots remains the most important factor in winning. But having a little course knowledge doesn’t hurt. And no one in the field knows Colonial better than Palmer. Since 2009, Palmer has recorded 19 rounds in the 60s here – second most behind two-time winner Zach Johnson’s 26. “I know exactly what to do on each hole,â€� Palmer said. While Palmer doesn’t want to reveal all his secrets, he did provide a few this week that some of the Colonial newcomers – including rookie Jon Rahm and last week’s winner, Billy Horschel (who played Colonial as an amateur but is making his first start here as a pro) — will likely appreciate. Take the 408-yard par-4 10th and the 387-yard par-4 17th. “I know 10 and 17 play short in the second shots,â€� Palmer said. “Don’t tell anybody else that.â€� Too late. How about the 190-yard par-3 13th? “I know 13, the wind is never into you,â€� Palmer said. “It may feel like it, but it’s never into you.â€� Or the 389-yard par-4 second. “I know when you can’t carry the No. 2 bunker on the right,â€� Palmer said. “I know when you can’t get to the left bunker.â€� Or the 483-yard par-4 third. “I know when you can carry the three bunkers on 3 in certain winds.â€� How well does Palmer and his caddie James Edmondson (also a member and a multiple club champion) know Colonial? They rarely reference their yardage books. “We just get the number and we go,â€� Palmer said. “I know how to hit certain drives off this golf course. It helps me a little bit knowing I can kind of freewheel it and let go and hit driver everywhere.’’ “This course is a bonus knowing a lot of things because it’s such a shot-making golf course. You know, a lot of times players say this golf course takes the driver out of their hands. Well, it’s in my hands all day just because I’ve done it enough.â€� On Sunday night, he’s hoping something else will be in his hands – the giant Leonard Trophy inscribed with the names of all Colonial champions. THREE PLAYERS TO PONDER Jordan Spieth No surprise he’s already won once at Colonial. Will not be a surprise if he wins multiple times here. Billy Horschel No one has won the DFW Double in consecutive weeks, but Horschel has a habit of stringing wins together. Phil Mickelson Has won twice at Colonial but making his first start here since 2010.  Glad to see you back, Phil! THE FLYOVER A closer look at the Horrible Horseshoe – hole Nos. 3 (483-yard par 4), 4 (247-yard par 3) and 5 (481-yard par 4) – the toughest three-hole stretch on the course and one of the toughest on the PGA TOUR. Since 2003, the stroke average for those three holes is a cumulative 0.465 strokes over par. Last year, the three holes ranked among the toughest four holes on the course (along with the par-4 ninth).  THE LANDING ZONE The 445-yard par-4 12th is the most difficult hole on the back nine at Colonial. Last year, it yielded just 47 birdies while playing to a stroke average of 4.102. Along with having to navigate a dogleg left, players often face a headwind on their approach shots. Check out the scattershot chart of all the tee shots struck at the 12th hole last year. WEATHER CHECK It’s going to be hot (98 degrees on Friday!). It’s going to be windy (gusts of 30 mph!). And there’s a chance of thunderstorms at least one day. Seems like that’s usually the case at Colonial, although Sunday could feel slightly different than the other three days. TEMPS: Temperatures could soar into the high 90s for the first three rounds, with heat indexes possibly reaching the lower 100s. A cold front could make things slightly more tolerable on Sunday. RAIN: Scattered thunderstorms are in the forecast for the final two rounds, with an increased chance to 60 percent on Sunday. WINDS: One of Colonial’s primary defenses is wind, and there should be plenty this week, with gusts from the south reaching 30 mph. Could be interesting on Sunday if the cold front brings a shift in the wind direction from the north. For the latest weather news from Fort Worth, Texas, check out PGATOUR.COM’s Weather Hub. SOUND CHECK “They are everything you want in three holes of golf. We’re going to be very smart. We’re going to play conservative. We would love to make birdie on ‘em, but we’re going to make sure we put ourselves in position to make par.â€� – Billy Horschel on Colonial’s Horrible Horseshoe. ODDS AND ENDS 1. A LITTLE BIT OF SPAIN. Jon Rahm won the Ben Hogan Award in 2015 and 2016, so he’s been to Fort Worth. But he never was able to play Colonial during his visits. This week was the first time he’s seen the course, and he said it reminds him of some of the courses in his native Spain, particularly Valderrama. “Visually a little different, but it’s very similar,â€� Rahm said. “You have to hit a lot of irons off the tee in Valderrama and it’s precision golf. You have to keep it in the fairway and hit those tiny greens. In that sense, it does remind me of lot (like Colonial).â€� 2. MUSIC TO HIS EARS. Billy Horschel will be listening to rock band Kings of Leon this week. That’s what he was listening to last week in Irving, and his week ended with a win at the AT&T Byron Nelson. “Didn’t matter what song it was,â€� Horschel said. “Any song that stuck in my head that week.â€� Three years ago when Horschel won the final two Playoffs events of the season to claim the FedExCup, he was listening to British pop band Bastille, particularly one specific song (although he couldn’t recall the title). “It was funny because going to the course every day at the TOUR Championship, I was listing to Alt Nation on Sirius XM and that song came on every day when I was driving to the course, which was so ironic. “Driving to the course the final round and I’m like, ‘Oh man, the song is not coming on today.’ I pull in the parking lot and it came on and I sat in my car until it finished playing.â€� 3. BACK-DOOR KING. Last week, Matt Kuchar tied for ninth, having moved up the leaderboard on the weekend after making the cut in a tie for 17th. Since 2010, Kuchar has 32 “back-doorâ€� top-10 finishes in which he started the final 36 holes outside the top 10. That’s the most of any player in that span. One of those other “back-doorâ€� finishes came last year at Colonial, when Kuchar was tied for 44th after 36 holes but shot 63-68 on the weekend to tie for sixth. WATCH THE PREVIEW

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The one and only Bubba WatsonThe one and only Bubba Watson

PACIFIC PALISADES, Calif. – Bubba Watson had just joined Ben Hogan and Arnold Palmer as a three-time winner of the Genesis Open, but he wasn’t entertaining talk of comparisons. “I’m the first and I’m the only Bubba Watson,â€� he said. He sure is. Watson is perhaps arguably the most unlikely player in the history of the game of golf to reach 10 PGA TOUR wins – which he did with his two-shot triumph at Riviera Country Club on Sunday. The self-taught, freewheeling, idiosyncratic left-handed Floridian rips at the ball like it assaulted his mother and needs to be punished. He can curve it every which way in the air and spin it six ways from sideways on the greens. Nothing about what he does is conventional. And that includes off the course. Watson rarely looks you in the eye and suffers from anxiety at times in crowded places. He’s a self-confessed “head caseâ€�. His attention span is about as long as his driver shaft, yet he manages to concentrate long enough to produce stellar shots. And while his fellow competitors hit the range or a post-round ice bath this week, Watson visited Hollywood talk shows and played in the celebrity game at the NBA All-Star Weekend. He’s different. Clearly. But it wasn’t any of the above that had Watson stranded on nine TOUR wins for two years – instead it was an illness that he still refuses to disclose. “My sickness is minor compared to others. My dad passed away from cancer. I have nowhere near cancer. It’s nothing,â€� he says. But whatever it was – it stripped weight from Watson and dropped him to around 160 pounds from his highs of around 210 and ideal weight of around 185. It made him weak and tired. And he was unable to produce the swashbuckling golf he is used to. Consequently, season 2016-17 was his worst on record, finishing 75th in the FedExCup and having his world ranking slide outside the top 100. “My ball speed, my swing, everything changed,â€� he said. “It was the lowest point I’ve ever been at in the game of golf. The last year-and-a-half, almost two years, give or take, it’s been a struggle because I want to be at the top. “I was top‑10 in the world for a few years there… so not being there… you feel like, is this it, is this my old man moment where I can’t play golf again?â€� He was feeling so sorry for himself that he even contemplated retirement. “I was close,â€� he said to that prospect. “My wife was not close. My wife told me ‑‑ my wife basically told me to quit whining and play golf. She’s a lot tougher than I am.â€� It’s why tears came out on the 72nd hole when he clinched the win. Watson has always been emotional in these moments – but this time it was about the climb back. It was about hitting double digit wins – a number he never thought possible. “Nobody thought that Bubba Watson from Bagdad, Florida, would ever get to 10 wins, let’s be honest. Without lessons, head case, hooking the ball, slicing the ball, can’t putt,â€� he said. “This day and age, to get 10 wins on the PGA TOUR, the greatest tour in the world… I am thrilled. “I never thought I could get there. So you try to set something that you never think you can get to and if I got to it, that’s my Hall of Fame. If you all vote me in or don’t vote me in, I could care less. That doesn’t matter to me, I got my 10 wins.â€� Now that his weight has returned, and so has his ability to play “Bubba Golfâ€�, he can set his sights on even more. Perhaps he can join Lloyd Mangrum and MacDonald Smith as four-time winners at the Genesis Open in 2019… or perhaps 2020 if he keeps his two-year-cycle going. “We don’t know if I’m ever going to win again, if I’m going to win 100 times, we just don’t know. I cherish this one because it’s my latest,â€� he said. But remember – don’t compare him to the greats. “I’m never going to compete with any of those guys with any titles, any records, anything,â€� he says. “I just enjoy playing the game of golf and I love putting trophies in my trophy case.â€� Odds are he will need more space in that case.

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