Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play: Day 3 match recaps

WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play: Day 3 match recaps

AUSTIN, Texas — It’s the final day of the Group Stage at the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play, which means the 16 group winners will be decided Friday and advance to single-elimination competition this weekend. We’ll post recaps and identify the group winners as each of the 32 matches are completed Friday at Austin Country Club, so check back often throughout the day. MATCH PLAY: Scores | Group Standings | Bracket Group 12: Henrik Stenson HENRIK STENSON (37) def. JIM FURYK (52), 5 and 4 In a winner-take-all match, Stenson (3-0-0) dominated Furyk (2-1-0) to win the group. Stenson was a bogey-free 7 under in his 14 holes played and was 4-up after Furyk’s bogey at the seventh. Stenson then produced four consecutive birdies on the back nine to snuff out any hopes of a Furyk rally. Stenson hit 10 of 11 fairways and 13 of 14 greens, and advances to the Round of 16 for the first time since reaching the semifinals in 2008 under the old format. Holes won: Stenson 6, Furyk 1. Holes led: Stenson 13, Furyk 0. Said Stenson: “That’s the best round of golf I’ve played all year … It was called the ‘group of death’ and I guess I managed to bring it to the other guys.” PHIL MICKELSON (20) def. JASON DAY (12), 2 up Mickelson (1-2-0) birdied two of the last three holes to beat Day (0-3-0) in a match with no group implications. Holes won: Mickelson 7, Day 5. Holes led: Mickelson 12, Day 2.

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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
Justin Thomas+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2000
Xander Schauffele+2000
Collin Morikawa+2200
Jon Rahm+2200
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Brooks Koepka+4000
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US Open 2025
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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
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Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
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USA-150
Europe+140
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After seven years, Phil’s back in Fort WorthAfter seven years, Phil’s back in Fort Worth

FORT WORTH, Texas – Since Phil Mickelson’s last appearance at Colonial in 2010, he has: • Received induction into the World Golf Hall of Fame. • Won five tournaments, including the fifth major of his career. • Came close to shooting 59, his birdie bid on the final hole at TPC Scottsdale lipping out. • Played on three winning Presidents Cup teams and had an influential hand in Ryder Cup changes that led to a U.S. win last fall. • Changed swing coaches. • Dealt with health concerns, including arthritis and two sports hernia surgeries. However, on Wednesday as Mickelson reoriented himself with Colonial, he wasn’t exactly focused on the changes in his life but the changes on a course in which he’s won twice. “It still always kind of surprises me,â€� Mickelson said after his pro-am round. “Like, no bunker on 13 caught me off guard. Like, wow, I thought there was a bunker behind the green. “Or the bunker on 14 used to be on the right side of the hole. Now it’s on the left. I guess it’s been that way for seven years. I just haven’t really picked up on it.â€� Mickelson said there was “no real specific reasonâ€� for adding the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational back to his playing schedule this year. Considering he’s a two-time winner of this event but has gone four years since his last PGA TOUR win (the 2013 Open Championship), his return to a place with winning vibes needs little explanation. In 2010 when Mickelson last played here, he ranked sixth on the PGA TOUR in driving distance with a 300.4-yard average. This week, he comes in ranked 65th on TOUR with a 293.8-yard average. Of course, he remains one of the TOUR’s most creative players. A few years ago, Mickelson said Colonial’s course redesign in 2009 no longer gave him a power advantage, and thus he took it off his schedule. Does he think Colonial is a better fit for his game now? “Hard to say,â€� Mickelson responded. “I think if you’re playing well, you can play just about any golf course. “The thing about Colonial is that you can’t overpower Colonial. There are only two par 5s. There are no given birdie holes. “But you can be rewarded. You can birdie just about every hole if you hit a good shot, so there’s a lot of reward for well-struck shots here. I think that’s my favorite thing about this course is that very rarely is a well-struck shot penalized.â€� The first time Mickelson won at Colonial was in 2000. He shot a final-round 7-under 63, which ties for the lowest final-round by the eventual winner. A year later, he was victimized by Sergio Garcia’s final-round 63, losing by two strokes. In 2008, Mickelson won again, hitting a memorable wedge shot out of the trees on the 18th hole to set up his clinching birdie. As his ball rolled into the cup, a jubilant fan dove into Crampton’s Lake next to the green. The next year – the first year of the course redesign — Mickelson was unable to defend his title. His wife Amy had been diagnosed with breast cancer earlier that month and Phil immediately suspended his playing schedule. When he returned in 2010, he shot 71-73 and failed to make the cut. His memories of the course focus on his successful rounds here. “I still remember the course prior to it going under some renovation,â€� he said. On Wednesday, he began plotting out a game plan. With wind gusts to 30 mph this week, and potential rain on the weekend, he isn’t sure how aggressive he’ll be. “That’s kind of a momentary … answer, because I think it changes,â€� he said. “I think it changes with the wind, with the pin position each hole. I think it changes with how you feel, what you feel more comfortable with off the tee. “I think that you have to attack this golf course to win. I think the years that I won, I ended up shooting low scores at some point. I know I shot 63 the first time I won it. “You have to kind of get after this course and make birdies, but you also have to kind of pick and choose when to get aggressive.â€� After choosing to return to Colonial this week, he hopes to reignite some of his past glory. A lot has happened since his last visit, but like a reunion of old friends, Mickelson hopes this week’s experience will be fun and memorable.

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Weight of a nationWeight of a nation

 AUGUSTA, Georgia – The famous Masters scoreboard halfway down the first hole at Augusta National has the flags of 20 nations proudly flying above it. It is a nod to the global reach of the tournament that began with just four international players in the inaugural 1934 tournament (a Canadian and three Englishmen) and will this week see 23 different countries represented. That’s right, they now don’t have enough flag poles to even fit the 23 countries whose players will vie for the coveted green jacket, such is the global boon. The Masters has been very active in reaching corners of the globe not traditionally enamored with golf – pushing their amateur championships through Asia and Latin America. Of the 87 players in the field this year, 47 of them are from outside the USA. Of the 23 countries, 12 of them have never won the Masters. Nine of those have never won a major championship. Six of them have never won a PGA TOUR event. It wasn’t until the 25th playing of the Masters that Gary Player broke the American stranglehold on the event. In 1980 at the 44th Masters Seve Ballesteros pushed the winning countries to three and by the turn of the millennium Germany, Scotland, England, Wales and Fiji had joined the party. Mike Weir broke the drought for Canada 15 years ago and Angel Cabrera gave Argentina a thrill in 2009. And it was five years ago that Adam Scott smashed an Australian curse at Augusta National. With eight previous runner-up results by Australians – Greg Norman personally having three heartbreaking losses – the weight of a nation was bearing down on the Aussies every year. When Scott made his famous birdie on the 72nd hole, he instinctively yelled “C’mon Aussieâ€� in celebration – a cry born in years of frustrations for his nation. “It got annoying and frustrating knowing the same questions were going to come every year,â€� Scott once said. “Without fail all of us would be asked when it would happen, how would it happen, what needed to be done. “So to be the guy to finally do it was pretty special.â€� The history for the 12 nations chasing a first green jacket certainly shape the level of pressure. Australia felt it through past failures and a strong history in golf. It is getting to that point for the Irish who will only be represented by Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy this year. McIlroy has single-handedly ensured Northern Ireland is just a Masters away from a career slam. With the personal pressure dwarfing that coming from his nation, he doesn’t yet see it as the Australians did. McIlroy winning would be huge, but it might not shift the global landscape of golf like some other potential winners. And to this point, given their freshness to golf at the highest level, expectations are not yet high. But as every year passes… the want grows. Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama most certainly does feel the intensity from outside. Barely a tournament goes by without him being asked about being the first player from his nation to break through. He smiles when asked and tries to deflect the so-called pressure. But relief will certainly factor in his emotions if and when he does claim major glory. Joining Matsuyama are Yuta Ikeda, Satoshi Kodaira and Yusaka Miyazato all hoping to create history for Japan. But perhaps an even bigger dent would come if Haotong Li, Yuxin Lin or Shubhankar Sharma could prevail. “China or India – that’s almost three billion people combined. That would be massive,â€� Marc Leishman mused. “That could be insane for the future of golf.â€� Lin, the winner of the Asia-Pacific amateur, is just 17. But he has already seen a marked difference in how golf is in his home country. Olympic participation kick-started things, and now there are two players (Zecheng Dou and Xinjun Zhang) playing on the PGA TOUR. A major winner could push things into overdrive and produce an avalanche of talent. “Back when I started, the facilities and stuff were kind of bad. We were hitting like off mats, and it’s really hard to find a property where you can actually hit off grass, so it’s going to be like really expensive,â€� Lin explained. “But nowadays, the China Golf Association, they’re starting to build some practice bases. Wonderful facilities, it’s just easier for the kids right now to practice. “To win would definitely have a major impact on the sport back in my country.â€� For Sharma, who was given a special invite thanks to his impressive form so far in 2018, becoming India’s first major champion would be epic. But he doesn’t see it as a burden – rather an opportunity. “There’s no pressure at all. I think everyone back home is happy I’m competing at this level, and hopefully I’ll keep coming back here for many years to come,â€� Sharma said. “I’m actually very happy that I’m getting a lot of attention. A lot of people back home are following me, and if I can get a good finish this weekend, maybe even win a green jacket, it will be great for the game.â€� COUNTRIES FIGHTING FOR FIRST MASTERS Thailand – Kiradech Aphibarnrat Japan – Yuta Ikeda, Satoshi Kodaira, Hideki Matsuyama, Yusaka Miyazato Korea – Si Woo Kim China – Haotong Li, Yuxin Lin Northern Ireland – Rory McIlroy Italy – Francesco Molinari Sweden – Alex Noren, Henrik Stenson Chile – Joaquin Niemann Belgium – Thomas Pieters India – Shubhankar Sharma Venezuela – Jhonattan Vegas Austria – Bernd Wiesberger

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