Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Web.com Tour reaches 500 alumni wins on PGA TOUR

Web.com Tour reaches 500 alumni wins on PGA TOUR

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – With his victory on Sunday night at the AT&T Byron Nelson, Aaron Wise secured the 500th PGA TOUR title by a former Web.com Tour player. Wise played the Web.com Tour in 2017, compiling six top-25 finishes in 16 starts, including a win at the Wichita Open Supporting Wichita’s Youth in in June. The former University of Oregon standout finished 18th on the Tour’s Regular Season money list to earn his PGA TOUR card for the 2017-18 season, and entered the week in Dallas at No. 56 in the FedExCup standings, thanks to a career-best T2 finish at the Wells Fargo Championship two weeks ago. “It’s incredible to think of the vision Commissioner Beman had for the Web.com Tour, and how pivotal it has been over the last 29 years in preparing, identifying and transitioning the game’s next generation of PGA TOUR stars,� said Web.com Tour president Dan Glod. “Five-hundred PGA TOUR victories by former players is an impressive number and speaks to the depth of talent we see each week on the Web.com Tour. This milestone clearly demonstrates that our members are prepared to win as soon as they reach the PGA TOUR and continue to have sustained success.� The Web.com Tour, which was founded in 1990 as the Ben Hogan Tour, delivered its first PGA TOUR champion in 1991 when Bruce Fleischer won the New England Classic in a seven-hole playoff for the lone victory of his TOUR career. Fleisher made 12 combined starts on the Ben Hogan Tour between 1990 and 1991, recording four top-five finishes – including back-to-back T3 efforts leading into his breakthrough week at Pleasant Valley Country Club in Sutton, Massachusetts. Since that inaugural victory, the Web.com Tour has paved the way for 17 former players to win 23 major championship titles, including the last three PGA Championships (Justin Thomas, Jimmy Walker, Jason Day). In addition to major championship titles, eight former players have won THE PLAYERS Championship at least once in their career, including 2018 champion Webb Simpson. In 2012, Jacksonville, Florida-based Web.com became the umbrella sponsor of the Web.com Tour, with a 10-year agreement in place through 2021. With 50 PGA TOUR cards available for the following season (since 2013), the Web.com Tour has become the path to the PGA TOUR. Twenty-five TOUR cards are reserved for the leading money winners at the end of the 22-event Regular Season. Another 25 are up for grabs at the conclusion of the four-event Web.com Tour Finals that follow the Regular Season in September. “The Web.com Tour is producing high-caliber professional golfers ready to compete on the PGA TOUR, and the reason is clear. People in every profession can succeed if they have determination and backing from the right team and tools,� said David L. Brown, chairman, chief executive officer and president of Web.com. “It is gratifying to partner with the PGA TOUR to help golf’s current and rising stars succeed and achieve their potential. Congratulations to Aaron Wise on the win and thank you for demonstrating the power of the Web.com Tour.� That formula has given way to immediate success for a number of graduates in recent years. During the PGA TOUR’s 2016-17 season, the Web.com Tour’s Class of 2016 featured nine graduates winning 10 times, including Rookie of the Year Xander Schauffele, who became the first rookie in history to win the TOUR Championship. Thus far during the TOUR’s 2017-18 season, five players from the Class of 2018 have earned titles, including Ryan Armour, Austin Cook, Brice Garnett, Andrew Landry and Wise.

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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
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Scottie Scheffler+275
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Adam Scott comes a long way in a year at the Memorial Tournament presented by NationwideAdam Scott comes a long way in a year at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide

DUBLIN, Ohio – A year ago Adam Scott was humbled in Ohio. His game had slipped and was at a crossroads. Would he find another gear to get back amongst the contenders on the PGA TOUR or would the 13-time winner fade away into some form of obscurity? While Scott has not added to his win tally in the last 12 months – a resume that includes victories at The PLAYERS Championship and the Masters – he has significantly lifted his game. That trend continued Friday when a 6-under 66 moved Scott to 7 under at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide through two rounds, just two back of the clubhouse lead after the morning wave. A year ago the Australian had slipped far enough down the world rankings that his play at Muirfield Village would be the determining factor in whether he would play his 17th consecutive U.S. Open and 68th straight major championship. Going into Sunday he was sitting well placed at T11 but shot 73 in the final round to tumble to T35. It meant he would have to front up to 36-hole sectional qualifying the following day if he was to keep his streak alive. Frustrated and annoyed Scott had contemplated not bothering. He had just one top-10 to that point in 14 starts on the season and was on the end of playing five straight weeks. But after some anger subsided, pride kicked in, and he decided to have a crack at getting to Shinnecock. Related: Tee times | Watch PGA TOUR LIVE | Down a rib, Merritt makes his move “It was definitely pride. I wanted to be at the U.S. Open. Unsatisfied just mailing it in and sitting on the couch when I could have been given a start,â€� Scott said. “It wasn’t like I was just playing horrible, but I just really couldn’t get anything to go my way. If I did something good, the other part of my game was ordinary. And I guess that had gone on for a while. And it takes its toll on the brain.â€� Scott’s performance at the sectional was impressive. He rushed out of the blocks with a 6-under 66 at the tougher Brookside Golf & Country Club and then held on with an even par 72 at the Lakes Golf and Country Club to be one of 14 qualifiers. He missed the cut at Shinnecock but soon after fueled with confidence again, he finished T17 at the Open Championship and then contended with Brooks Koepka down the stretch before settling for third place at the PGA Championship. Scott tacked on a T5 to open the FedExCup Playoffs and although he fell short of the TOUR Championship the uptick in form continued into the 2018-19 season. He was runner up at the Farmers Insurance Open and also contended at the Genesis Open (T7), the PLAYERS (T12), Masters (T18) and PGA Championship (T8) to sit 36th in the FedExCup heading into this week. And Muirfield Village is a place Scott believes he should have conquered. In his 11 previous appearances he has three top-5 finishes. “It really sets up well for me, and I feel like I’ve played a lot of good golf here over the years, just never four days in a row. It’s just never been quite enough,â€� he said. “But I’ve shot some of my really great rounds of my career here. I remember 62 in ’06 that was such a good round of golf on a very, very difficult golf course that day.â€� The question now becomes can Scott still close out over the weekend. His last win came in 2016. The return to form has been promising, but can he take it up a notch? A year ago he was just trying to get a top-10. Now he wants trophies again. “I did a really good job of it at the PGA, just getting out of my own way on the weekend, and I played really well and I hung in there right to the end,â€� Scott claimed. “It’s funny, and so quickly then the expectation changes and it’s now you need to win tournaments. And it just hasn’t happened. “It’s just about kind of doing what I did at that PGA and staying out of my own way and not really thinking about outcomes and all that cliché mental stuff and just play with a bit of confidence and a bit of fun.â€� Oh and that major streak? It will hit 73 at Pebble Beach in June at the U.S. Open. This time he’s already exempt.

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Looking back at the heritage of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-AmLooking back at the heritage of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – It goes beyond the winner’s prize, which has changed over the years and been used in different manners. Tom Ryan set up most of the house at the Black Pearl in Newport, Rhode Island, with his set of crystal for winning in 2003 alongside Brad Faxon. Air Force Chaplain Father John Durkin in 1971 used his prize, a Chalice, for more sacred reasons with communicants at Scott Air Force Base in Illinois. It goes beyond thinking that there is a blueprint for success, because there isn’t. D.A. Points, for instance, chose a laugh-a-minute route to victory with Bill Murray in 2011. Art Wall Jr., on the other hand, did quite well on two occasions by teaming with classic chalk – Gene Littler in 1954, Charlie Coe in 1959. And it goes way beyond lining up tools for amateurs to use on stage. Tom Brady tossed footballs. Justin Timberlake strummed a guitar. Years earlier, Francis Ouimet strolled along with an aura. Then there was Tommy Smothers and his yo-yo. It goes beyond all of that and lands at this: there is nothing like the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, of which it emphatically can be said, “Often imitated, never duplicated.” “Growing up, I understood it to be a great event, but when I found myself in that position (2014), I thought it was the coolest thing,” said Jim Renner, whose 18th-hole experience in the final round that year personifies what this tournament is all about. Then 30, Renner had a chance to win the tournament – if he made this 6-foot birdie at the final hole. The crazy thing is, he wasn’t thinking in those terms. “I knew we (Renner and amateur partner John Harkey) were in contention and his birdie putt (of 10 feet) might do it for us,” said Renner. “(John) had made an incredible (third) shot, under the circumstances, and I was so pumped he made it.” Harkey’s birdie-net eagle did spell victory for the team, but Renner recalls that watching Harkey’s smile sort of woke him up. “All of a sudden I remembered I had to make my birdie putt,” said Renner. As fate would have it, Renner did make his putt to get to 10-under, but Jimmy Walker made par at 18 to preserve his one-stroke win. To Renner, the tie for second was good for $580,800, but the pro-am title was worth “the wall,” a plaque at Pebble Beach’s first hole where team winners of this annual tournament are inscribed. “Whoever thought I would be on the wall at Pebble?” said Renner. “But that’s what that tournament is all about.” What “it’s all about” remains in line with what Bing Crosby envisioned in 1937 when he put up the $10,000 purse and invited a group of his friends from entertainment, golf, and business – worlds, by the way, in which “Der Bingle” was equally comfortable and masterful – to play in a little pro-am at Rancho Santa Fe in Southern California. Writing for Sports Illustrated in 1961 in advance of the 20th edition of Crosby’s iconic pro-am, Alfred Wright said “it has grown in stature and importance, but it has never lost the spirit that motivated (it).” In advance of the 75th playing of the tournament at Pebble Beach (with Monterey Peninsula’s Shore Course and Spyglass Hill in supporting roles), one could say that sentiment holds true. The voices of the game’s best speak fervently about melding the “pro” with the “am” when it comes to this tournament. For example, while Tom Watson is connected eternally to Pebble Beach for the unforgettable chip-in at the par-3 17th to win the 1982 U.S. Open, he feels equally passionate about his 28 trips to the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Those visits included two individual wins and nine other top-10s, but first he’ll point to “the wall” and 1941. That was the year Leonard Dodson won with Raymond Watson – a “very good 12 (handicap) who plays to several strokes less,” writers reported. Raymond Watson was Tom’s father. And Michael Watson, who played the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am 15 years ago and helped by 28 shots to get his team a top-10, is Tom’s son. A sweet circle of life, in golf terms. “These are the kind of events that define the PGA TOUR,” said Tom Watson, explaining why he requested an exemption to play with Michael in 2007. “I want to be part of that any time I possibly can.” There is a long list of the game’s greatest players who shared Watson’s love of the event, and those who won savor it. Sometimes, the winning team had major sex appeal – like Fred Couples and George Brett in 1987. Or that most popular pairing of Byron Nelson and Eddie Lowery in 1955. And don’t sleep on 1948, when Ben Hogan won with Johnny Dawson. Sometimes, the winning team involved a legend who didn’t mind having fun with golf writers and teasing partners. “He’s my thief,” Lee Trevino quipped to reporters about Don Schwab after they prevailed in 1972. Said Johnny Miller after winning in 1974 with Locke de Bretteville in a competition halted at 54 holes, “That’s another reason why I’m glad they stopped it (at 54 holes). My partner was starting to choke.” Johnny being Johnny, of course, because de Bretteville’s play in miserable conditions was quite good. But if ever a sense of pressure could have entered the pro-am picture, it was in 2001 when Phil Mickelson and his teammate Kenny G collapsed at the 72nd hole. Lefty needed an eagle to win or a birdie to tie Davis Love III, and a par would seal the team deal. He made double bogey. Kenny G needed net par to clinch the team title. He made double bogey. The team title ended in a tie between Tiger Woods (with Jerry Chang) and the Mickelson-Kenny G duo. Imagine leaving folks hanging and not pursuing a Tiger-Phil playoff? Then again, the payoff at the AT&T – four days of misfits, mis-hits, and mischievous – renders a playoff meaningless. The fun has been had. Want a poster to highlight what the tournament’s all about? Drift to 1987 and the edge of that priceless real estate that is No. 16 at Cypress Point. Jack Lemmon’s tee shot had come to rest in an ice plant on the edge of the cliff, well short of the green. He chose to play it, but first, a safety net. As Lemmon got in position, Clint Eastwood got a grip on Lemmon. Peter Jacobsen, Lemmon’s playing partner, took hold of Eastwood, and Greg Norman, Eastwood’s partner, held to Jacobsen. It’s a timeless photo of a veritable human chain that reinforces the notion that this tournament is less about golf as an individual sport and more about golf as a unifying affair. Consider Lemmon’s 25-year quest that went unfulfilled – he never made the cut that he so desired. Consider that Johnny Weissmuller once gave the crowd of thousands what they wanted – his ball stuck in a tree, he climbed up, got the ball out, and let out a “Tarzan” cry while hanging from a branch. Consider how Crosby once stood so nervously over a 6-foot birdie putt on 17 – to give his team the lead – that in his herky-jerky pre-shot routine, he accidentally tapped the ball backward, so he now had a 9-footer for par. He missed it, and Crosby never did win his own pro-am. Nor did Lemmon. Nor did Weissmuller. Nor did Eastwood or a parade of other notables. But that isn’t the point. The point is all of them found boundless joy in this AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, where golf is the common ground that can even unite a Catholic priest with a colorful gent such as “Champagne” Tony Lema. When he won at Pebble Beach in 1964, Lema played through heavy rain and wind on the final day where the best score was 73. A closing 76 was enough to win, but Lema – who would win four more times that year, including the Open Championship at the Old Course at St. Andrews – said it was his partner, Father John Durkin, who kept him together. “The influence of Father John Durkin on me certainly helped,” said Lema. “Among other things, I couldn’t swear. Oh, I did once, but he pretended not to hear.” (Yes, that’s the same Father John Durkin who would win the pro-am with Lou Graham, but that partnership only developed out of tragedy – the airplane crash in July of 1966 that killed Lema, his wife, the pilot and co-pilot.) Lema and Father Durkin played together three times – in 1964, 1965 and 1966 – and while never did they take the team title, their partnership went beyond the golf course. Father Durkin often said Mass at the Old Mission Church in Carmel, and Lema helped as an altar server. Communion wine and Champagne. An odd combo. Only at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am could they be mixed so tastefully and beautifully.

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Kamaiu Johnson captures 2022 Mastercard APGA Tour ChampionshipKamaiu Johnson captures 2022 Mastercard APGA Tour Championship

SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS – APGA Tour star Kamaiu Johnson fired a sizzling five-under par 67 in the final round, including a clutch birdie on the final hole, to register a narrow, come-from-behind victory and capture the 2022 Mastercard APGA Tour Championship at TPC San Antonio Tuesday afternoon. One of the APGA Tour’s most recognizable players, Johnson won the $50,000 first prize – the largest in APGA Tour history – and APGA Tour Player of the Year honors as the winner of the season-long Lexus Cup Point Standings. The birdie on 18 put Johnson at 7-under-par for the tournament. Both Marcus Byrd of Kennesaw, Georgia, and Daniel Augustus of Bermuda had birdie putts on 18 to force a playoff. Neither player was able to convert, giving Johnson the one-stroke victory. The triumph also earned Johnson an exemption into early-stage events of the PGA TOUR Latinoamerica series with an opportunity to retain status based on performance. The Lexus Cup title also includes a full scholarship into Korn Ferry Tour Qualifying School in September. Johnson’s rise to prominence came about in January of last year, when his PGA TOUR debut via exemption into the Farmers Insurance Open was ended early in tournament week by a positive COVID-19 test. The golf world rallied in support of the 29 year-old Tallahassee, Florida, native and he was invited to three PGA TOUR events in the ensuing months, fulfilling his dream of competing at the highest level. The victory is Johnson’s fourth APGA Tour win in the last three years having also won the Tour Championship in 2020. The winner of the APGA Tour’s Las Vegas stop each of the past two years, Johnson shot a 70-67-137, delivering the best round of the day at TPC San Antonio, the 7,106-yard, par-72 home of the PGA TOUR’s Valero Texas Open. On the par-5 18th, Johnson found a bunker 97 yards from the pin with his second shot. His sand wedge flew just beyond the hole and spun back to one foot, giving him a tap-in birdie. Two strokes back at the start of the day, Johnson started his round with a bogey but then notched birdies on five of the next eight holes to seize the lead. “It was definitely the shot of the day,” he stated about his third on 18. “Things have been trending in the right direction and I’m happy that it came together today at the Tour Championship. My goal was to win twice on the tour this year and take the Lexus Cup. I’ve been working hard with my team and I got it done.” Byrd and Augustus each won $15,000 from the $150,000 purse, also the largest in history for the APGA Tour, which has grown dramatically in recent years, now comprising 18 events offering over $800,000 in prize money. Willie Mack III of Grand Blanc, Michigan, the 2021 Mastercard APGA Tour Champion and Lexus Cup Player of the Year, finished fourth at 71-69-140. Tim O’Neal of Savannah, Georgia, and Joseph Hooks of Farmington Hills, Michigan, tied for fifth at 142. The Mastercard APGA Tour Championship was the 12th tournament of the landmark 2022 season. TPC San Antonio is the eighth TPC property to host the APGA Tour this year as part of its partnership with the PGA TOUR. The next tournament stop is the APGA Tour Cisco Invitational at famed Baltusrol Country Club in Springfield, New Jersey. This is a new event in 2022 and will have an invitational field of 18 players competing for the prize money of $125,000. The tour then heads into its four-event Farmers Insurance Fall Series in the St. Louis, Houston, Philadelphia and Los Angeles markets.

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