Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting VIDEO: Tiger Woods drains long putt for critical birdie, gives spirited fist pump

VIDEO: Tiger Woods drains long putt for critical birdie, gives spirited fist pump

Tiger Woods is in danger of missing the cut Friday at the Farmers Insurance Open as he struggled on his first nine holes in Round 2 at Torrey Pines’ North Course. Well, if he does end up finding his way to the weekend … we know the catalyst. The 42-year-old has not made any putts of length so far at Torrey – his longest had been maybe a 10-footer – but that changed in a surprise moment Friday. Woods left himself a long putt from the fringe over a ridge for birdie at the North Course’s par-4 first (his 10th of the round), and he promptly drained the snake! And gave a fist pump! Oh yes, we’ve missed this. Woods still has a ton of work to do in order to make the cut, but we’re glad he showed us

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Eugenio Chacarra+3000
Ewen Ferguson+3000
Kristoffer Reitan+3000
Thriston Lawrence+3000
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RBC Canadian Open
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Rory McIlroy+450
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Corey Conners+1800
Shane Lowry+2000
Taylor Pendrith+2200
Sam Burns+2500
Robert MacIntyre+2800
Nick Taylor+3500
Sungjae Im+3500
Luke Clanton+4000
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Luke Clanton-120
Thorbjorn Olesen-110
Tournament Match-Ups - C. Conners vs S. Lowry
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Corey Conners-120
Shane Lowry-110
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Nick Taylor-120
Harry Hall-110
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Keith Mitchell-115
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Sam Burns-125
Sungjae Im-105
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Johnny Keefer-115
Kurt Kitayama-115
Tournament Match-Ups - R. McIlroy vs L. Aberg
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Rory McIlroy-200
Ludvig Aberg+150
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Ryo Hisatsune-120
Taylor Moore-110
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Alex Noren-145
Gary Woodland+110
Tournament Match-Ups - R. MacIntyre vs T. Pendrith
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Taylor Pendrith-120
Robert MacIntyre-110
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Alex Smalley-150
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Ryan Fox-130
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Luke Clanton-400
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Gordon Sargent+115
Tournament Match-Ups - G. Sargent v J. Suber
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Gordon Sargent-125
Jackson Suber-105
Rory McIlroy
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Top 5 Finish-110
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Type: Rory McIlroy - Status: OPEN
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Miss+650
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Type: Ludvig Aberg - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+250
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Type: Ludvig Aberg - Status: OPEN
Make-500
Miss+325
Corey Conners
Type: Corey Conners - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+300
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Top 40 Finish-275
Corey Conners - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Corey Conners - Status: OPEN
Make-450
Miss+300
Shane Lowry
Type: Shane Lowry - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+350
Top 10 Finish+160
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Shane Lowry - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Shane Lowry - Status: OPEN
Make-450
Miss+300
Taylor Pendrith
Type: Taylor Pendrith - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+375
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Taylor Pendrith - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Taylor Pendrith - Status: OPEN
Make-350
Miss+250
Sam Burns
Type: Sam Burns - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+400
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Make-350
Miss+250
Robert MacIntyre
Type: Robert MacIntyre - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+450
Top 10 Finish+225
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Top 40 Finish-200
Robert MacIntyre - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Robert MacIntyre - Status: OPEN
Make-350
Miss+250
Nick Taylor
Type: Nick Taylor - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+550
Top 10 Finish+250
Top 20 Finish+110
Top 40 Finish-165
Nick Taylor - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Nick Taylor - Status: OPEN
Make-275
Miss+200
Sungjae Im
Type: Sungjae Im - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+550
Top 10 Finish+250
Top 20 Finish+115
Top 40 Finish-175
Sungjae Im - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Sungjae Im - Status: OPEN
Make-275
Miss+200
Luke Clanton
Type: Luke Clanton - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+650
Top 10 Finish+300
Top 20 Finish+120
Top 40 Finish-165
Luke Clanton - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Luke Clanton - Status: OPEN
Make-250
Miss+180
Mackenzie Hughes
Type: Mackenzie Hughes - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+650
Top 10 Finish+300
Top 20 Finish+120
Top 40 Finish-140
Mackenzie Hughes - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Mackenzie Hughes - Status: OPEN
Make-250
Miss+180
Harry Hall
Type: Harry Hall - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+700
Top 10 Finish+325
Top 20 Finish+130
Top 40 Finish-140
Keith Mitchell - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Keith Mitchell - Status: OPEN
Make-250
Miss+180
Keith Mitchell
Type: Keith Mitchell - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+700
Top 10 Finish+325
Top 20 Finish+130
Top 40 Finish-140
Harry Hall - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Harry Hall - Status: OPEN
Make-250
Miss+180
Alex Noren
Type: Alex Noren - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+800
Top 10 Finish+375
Top 20 Finish+150
Top 40 Finish-130
Alex Noren - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Alex Noren - Status: OPEN
Make-225
Miss+165
Ryan Fox
Type: Ryan Fox - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+900
Top 10 Finish+400
Top 20 Finish+175
Top 40 Finish-130
Thorbjorn Olesen - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Thorbjorn Olesen - Status: OPEN
Make-225
Miss+165
Thorbjorn Olesen
Type: Thorbjorn Olesen - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+900
Top 10 Finish+400
Top 20 Finish+175
Top 40 Finish-130
Ryan Fox - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Ryan Fox - Status: OPEN
Make-225
Miss+165
Wyndham Clark
Type: Wyndham Clark - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+900
Top 10 Finish+400
Top 20 Finish+175
Top 40 Finish-115
Alex Smalley - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Alex Smalley - Status: OPEN
Make-225
Miss+165
Cameron Young
Type: Cameron Young - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1000
Top 10 Finish+450
Top 20 Finish+180
Top 40 Finish-115
Kurt Kitayama - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Kurt Kitayama - Status: OPEN
Make-225
Miss+165
Gary Woodland
Type: Gary Woodland - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1000
Top 10 Finish+450
Top 20 Finish+180
Top 40 Finish-110
Wyndham Clark - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Wyndham Clark - Status: OPEN
Make-225
Miss+165
Johnny Keefer
Type: Johnny Keefer - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1000
Top 10 Finish+450
Top 20 Finish+180
Top 40 Finish-115
Gary Woodland - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Gary Woodland - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Matt Wallace
Type: Matt Wallace - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1000
Top 10 Finish+450
Top 20 Finish+180
Top 40 Finish-110
Alex Smalley
Type: Alex Smalley - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1100
Top 10 Finish+475
Top 20 Finish+190
Top 40 Finish-115
Kurt Kitayama
Type: Kurt Kitayama - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1000
Top 10 Finish+450
Top 20 Finish+180
Top 40 Finish-115
Chris Gotterup
Type: Chris Gotterup - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1100
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Top 20 Finish+225
Top 40 Finish-110
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Top 40 Finish-115
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Top 5 Finish+1200
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Top 20 Finish+225
Top 40 Finish-105
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Top 10 Finish+550
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Top 40 Finish+110
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Bryson DeChambeau+450
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Joaquin Niemann+650
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Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
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Shane Lowry+1600
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Rory McIlroy+650
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Hideki Matsuyama+4000
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Rory McIlroy+500
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U.S. team takes largest lead ever against Europe at Ryder CupU.S. team takes largest lead ever against Europe at Ryder Cup

SHEBOYGAN, Wis. — The pressure and drama so typical of the Ryder Cup finally arrived on Saturday, with one big difference. The suspense was whether Europe could try to make a game of it. The Americans held their own over the final hour as Dustin Johnson completed a perfect week of team play and Scottie Scheffler delivered the biggest putt of his young career. That staked them to an 11-5 lead, their largest ever against Europe and their biggest in the Ryder Cup since 1975. No one has ever come back from more than a four-point deficit in Ryder Cup history. That’s the order facing Europe, which has yet to win a session at Whistling Straits. The Europeans tried, getting another big win from Jon Rahm and a clutch moment from Shane Lowry, who holed a 10-foot par putt on the 18th green and was pumping his arms so furiously in celebration that he finally dropped his putter on the ground. So much was as stake. So little was gained. “We’re not in a good position and it’s going to take a beyond monumental effort,” said Ian Poulter, who has failed to deliver a point in two matches. “So we need a couple of miracles.” “We’re out there fighting as hard as we can,” Lowry said. The Americans routed Europe again in foursomes Saturday morning — a third straight 3-1 margin — to build a 9-3 lead. And while Europe was ahead in three of the afternoon fourballs, Scheffler’s 15-foot birdie putt on the 15th hole and his nifty up-and-down for birdie on the next hole carried him and Bryson DeChambeau to victory in the final match on the course. Next up is the final session of 12 singles matches, historically an American strength. They need to reach 14 1/2 points to win back that gold trophy. “I think we have a lot of guys on this team that really hate losing, and so individual matches tomorrow, I think guys are going to be fired up and ready to play,” Scheffler said. “Hopefully, finish this thing off.” The U.S. team led 12 1/2-3 1/2 going into Sunday in 1975 when it played against only Britain and Ireland. Dating to the modern era of 1979, when continental Europe joined the party, its largest lead was 10 1/2 -5 1/2 in 1981 at Walton Heath. The six-point lead ties the modern record Europe set in 2004 at Oakland Hills in a record rout. Rahm was unbeaten in team play. The world’s No. 1 player, looking every bit the part, teamed with Ryder Cup record-setter Sergio Garcia to win foursomes in the morning and then held out to beat Brooks Koepka and cold-putting Jordan Spieth in fourballs. Right when it looked as though the Americans might square the match, Rahm made a 30-foot birdie on the 16th hole and Spieth missed from 12 feet — the sixth time in fourballs he missed from that range or closer, including one that mysteriously circled the entire cup and came out. Even so, the climb is steeper than some of the wild dunes dotting the landscape of this rugged terrain along the Lake Michigan shores. The top five players in the world have gone 15-0-2 in team play at this Ryder Cup. The problem for Europe is four of those players are Americans. Johnson became the first American since Larry Nelson in 1979 to go 4-0 in team play. He went out twice with Collin Morikawa, the two-time major champion who drove the sixth green and delivered plenty of big putts of his own in the afternoon fourballs. Johnson was the only American to play all four matches. A 9-3 lead through three sessions made it easy for U.S. captain Steve Stricker to rest Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay, who won another foursomes match, and Justin Thomas, who delivered another clutch shot into the par-5 16th to set up a foursome win with Spieth. The goal for the Americans after their best opening day in 46 years was to wipe the slate clean and play as though the Ryder Cup was just starting. For a time, it started to feel as if this Ryder Cup was over. Johnson and Morikawa never trailed in either of their two matches. Schauffele and Cantlay flipped their match during a six-hole stretch in the middle of their round. Spieth and Thomas rallied from an early 3-down deficit. Already the leading points-scorer in Ryder Cup history, Garcia won both his matches with Rahm, the latest European version of a Spanish Armada. He now has won 25 matches, breaking the record held by Nick Faldo. “What we did is not enough, not (with) the situation we are in,” Garcia said after his morning foursomes match. It felt better in the afternoon, a board finally filled with mostly European blue. But when it ended, Europe had not made up any ground from the morning.

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Monday Finish: Twice the winsMonday Finish: Twice the wins

In the final round of the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational, Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama birdies the last three holes for a sizzling 61 and a dominant five-stroke victory over runner-up Zach Johnson. Meanwhile, Chris Stroud racks up 20 points in the final round to cop his first PGA TOUR win at the Stableford-scoring Barracuda Championship. Welcome to the Monday Finish, where Matsuyama, 25, ties the course record at Firestone South for his third win this season; and Stroud, 35, collects his first TOUR win in 290 starts. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1. Matsuyama is on the way to becoming Japan’s first truly global star. Nine countries were represented in the top 12 on the Bridgestone leaderboard, but Matsuyama’s clubs spoke loudest and Japan was on top. After starting the day three shots back, he made eagle at the par-5 second hole and kept going from there, hitting the afterburners to assure his third win this season and fifth overall in the 100th TOUR start of his career. He extended his lead as the Japanese player with the most wins on TOUR, a record he already held over Shigeki Maruyama (three). 2. The FedExCup may require math, but Matsuyama knows all too well that it requires something else, too: at least one more trophy. “In order to win the FedExCup, you have to win one of the playoff tournaments,â€� said Matsuyama, who moved from third to first in the FedExCup points standings with the victory in Ohio. “And hopefully I can do that and keep the momentum going.â€� It would be tough to have any more momentum than he currently has; his 61 marked the best final-round performance by a winner in the history of the WGCs—by three shots. 3. Although there have now been 25 wins (in 39 events) by a player in his 20s on TOUR this season, Rory McIlroy, 28, has accounted for none of them. Still, McIlroy, who tied for fifth, did not sound terribly despondent after notching his sixth top-10 this season. “I thought I saw some improvements in my game from when I got here on Wednesday,â€� he said. “Thought my wedge play got a little bit better as the week went on. Putted pretty well, even when I missed putts out there, they were scaring the hole, so that was good. Drove the ball well.â€� Yeah, you could say that. McIlroy hit 52 of 56 tee shots over 300 yards and led the field in driving distance (343.9). The reigning FedExCup champion moved up 10 spots in the standings to 43rd; is playing one of his favorite courses in Quail Hollow at the PGA Championship this week; and knows there’s still plenty of time to find his A game as he breaks in a new caddie. 4. Chris Stroud’s father was right. Stroud got a call from Dad saying the Barracuda’s Stableford format—two points for birdies; minus one for bogeys—might reward him for all the birdies he’d been making. It did. Stroud, who returned to his counter-balanced long putter, racked up 20 points in a wild final round that included nine birdies, an eagle and three bogeys. He not only got that elusive first win after prevailing in a three-man playoff, he earned a spot in this week’s PGA and, more importantly, collected 300 FedExCup points to move up to 76th in the standings. “Huge,â€� Stroud said of his big move. “I think coming into this week I was sitting at 142. And we’re all nervous coming in, because we know getting the top 125 is huge.â€� 5. Rookie Richy Werenski, 25, was disappointed after failing to secure his TOUR card for next season. Still, he was encouraged to make it all the way into a sudden-death playoff despite not having his best stuff. What’s more, he moved to 122nd in the FedExCup, so at least he’s inside the cutoff line with just two weeks remaining before the first playoff event, THE NORTHERN TRUST at Glen Oaks Club in Old Westbury, N.Y., Aug. 24-27. “Lately I feel like I’m playing pretty good,â€� said Werenski, a Massachusetts native who went to Georgia Tech. “It’s only a matter of time I’m back in this position.â€� FIVE INSIGHTS 1. Matsuyama ranked first in strokes gained: tee-to-green in the final round, with a career-best 6.582. It was also the best final-round performance by a winner on TOUR this season, besting Kevin Chappell at the Valero Texas Open (6.355), Jason Dufner at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide (5.659), and Jon Rahm at the Farmers Insurance Open (5.168). 2. While he was dominant from tee to green, Matsuyama also made massive strides in his putting. Year to date, he is just 167th in Strokes Gained: Putting (-.306) and 194th in putts made from outside 10 feet (46/375, 12.27%). At the Bridgestone, though, he ranked a much-improved 15th in SG: Putting (.759) and T16 in putting from over 10 feet (9/42, 21.43%). 3. With his runner-up finish, Zach Johnson moved up from 40th to 28th on the U.S. Presidents Cup points list. That’s still a far cry from the top 10, but he’s got the putter rolling again. He was first in SG: Putting (2.258) and third in putting from outside 10 feet (13/46, 28.26 %) at Firestone. 4. Charley Hoffman (third place, six back), who fired a final-round 66 at Firestone, has broken par in 22 of his last 24 rounds dating to the first round of the U.S. Open. He was third in sg: putting (1.617) at the Bridgestone, and moved from 12th to 11th in the FedExCup. He is one of just three players to get at least as far as the BMW Championship for all 10 years of the playoffs. 5. Thomas Pieters (71, solo fourth, eight back) notched his fourth top-five finish in 16 starts this season. As a Special Temporary Member, he is eligible for unlimited sponsor exemptions the rest of the season as he tries to earn his TOUR card for 2017-’18. He was T3 in greens in regulation (72.22%) and fourth in proximity to the hole (26’ 11’’) at the Bridgestone. TOP 3 VIDEOS 1. Charley Hoffman is on TOUR to win and he let us know on Sunday. 2. David Hearn hit a gem of a tee shot in Sunday’s final round of the Barracuda Championship. 3. Poetry in motion.

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