Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting What to watch for this week at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur

What to watch for this week at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur

From Anna Davis’ title defense to Ingrid Lindblad embracing the spotlight, here are the biggest storylines as the best amateur women’s players in the world face off at ANWA.

Click here to read the full article

Be sure to check the legality of online gambing in your state! Our partner Hypercasinos.com has a list of which US states allow online gambling.

KLM Open
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen+1600
Haotong Li+2000
Joost Luiten+2200
Sam Bairstow+2200
Laurie Canter+2500
Keita Nakajima+2800
Kristoffer Reitan+3000
Eugenio Chacarra+3300
Ewen Ferguson+3500
Thriston Lawrence+3500
Click here for more...
RBC Canadian Open
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Corey Conners+2000
Shane Lowry+2000
Taylor Pendrith+2500
Robert MacIntyre+3000
Sam Burns+3000
Sungjae Im+3000
Luke Clanton+3500
Mackenzie Hughes+3500
Click here for more...
BMW Charity Pro-Am
Type: Outright - Status: OPEN
Trace Crowe+1800
Pierceson Coody+2000
Mitchell Meissner+2200
Pontus Nyholm+2200
Adrien DuMont De Chassart+2500
Seungtaek Lee+2800
Seonghyeon Kim+3000
Brendan Valdes+3500
Davis Chatfield+3500
Hank Lebioda+3500
Click here for more...
ShopRite LPGA Classic
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Nelly Korda+450
Jeeno Thitikul+650
Jin Young Ko+900
Rio Takeda+1100
Chisato Iwai+1600
Mao Saigo+1600
Somi Lee+1800
Ayaka Furue+2200
Miyu Yamashita+2200
Jin Hee Im+2500
Click here for more...
American Family Insurance Championship
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Alker/Langer+550
Cejka/Kjeldsen+700
Kelly/Leonard+900
Bjorn/Clarke+1100
Cabrera/Gonzalez+1100
Cink/Toms+1400
Stricker/Tiziani+1400
Allan/Chalmers+1600
Green/Hensby+2000
Wi/Yang+2000
Click here for more...
Virginia
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+450
Jon Rahm+550
Joaquin Niemann+650
Tyrrell Hatton+1200
Patrick Reed+1600
Cameron Smith+2000
Carlos Ortiz+2000
Lucas Herbert+2200
Brooks Koepka+2500
David Puig+2500
Click here for more...
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
Click here for more...
US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Rory McIlroy+650
Bryson DeChambeau+800
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Collin Morikawa+2500
Ludvig Aberg+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Brooks Koepka+4000
Hideki Matsuyama+4000
Click here for more...
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
Click here for more...
Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

Related Post

Ryder Cup 2018: Phil Mickelson won’t play on courses with ‘brutal rough’ anymore: ‘It’s a waste of my time’Ryder Cup 2018: Phil Mickelson won’t play on courses with ‘brutal rough’ anymore: ‘It’s a waste of my time’

Phil Mickelson failed to record a single point for the United States in their lopsided Ryder Cup defeat to Europe last weekend and the American says he no longer has any interest in playing courses that feature “brutal rough”. In his 12th Ryder Cup appearance, Mickelson was restricted to only two matches at Le Golf National in Paris. It was the first time he failed to contribute even a half-point to the United States’ cause as the visitors relinquished the Cup after a 17 1/2 to 10 1/2 defeat.

Click here to read the full article

Brittany Horschel opens up about battle with alcoholismBrittany Horschel opens up about battle with alcoholism

NEW YORK – In the beginning, Billy Horschel thought his wife was just having fun. A little too much fun at times, perhaps, but what the heck? Brittany Horschel wasn’t the first person to have one too many cocktails — and she wouldn’t be the last, either.    “I thought, she’s just drinking, having a good time with friends,â€� Billy says. “A lot of people don’t know when to stop type thing. No big deal.â€� When he started finding plastic water bottles filled with vodka stashed around the house, though, Billy knew something was seriously wrong. Fifths of Grey Goose and SKYY turned up in the oddest places, too. “That’s when I thought there may be an issue,â€� Billy says. The witty, winsome woman he had married in 2010 all but became a stranger to him. The more Brittany drank, the less engaged she became in the life the two college sweethearts had made together. “One thing he would always say to me is, in the morning, you’re great,â€� Brittany says. “But by the evening, it’s like you’re a different person.â€� Billy said it became hard to even hold a conversation with his wife. Sometimes they were talking about something as simple as what to fix for dinner that night. Or maybe he’d turn serious and try to tell her what a toll her drinking was taking on their marriage. Twenty minutes later, though, in her alcoholic fog, Brittany had already forgotten what they’d discussed. “That frustrated me, and then I went into a shell a little bit of not wanting to communicate with my wife at night,â€� Billy says. He was never sure which Brittany would show up. He calls it a “was she drunk or was she sober type of deal.â€� Brittany finally found the strength to stop drinking. It took years of soul-searching, perseverance and an intervention, but she did it. And on May 22, a day after her husband won the AT&T Byron Nelson, which was his fourth PGA TOUR title, Brittany went public with their private struggle. She hadn’t had a drink in 366 days. “I will keep this simple: ‘I am an alcoholic,’ â€� she wrote in the statement posted on Facebook and Twitter. “I say that now without shame. Admitting that to myself, family and friends has saved my life and saved my marriage.â€� i would like to share why yesterday’s win had some extra emotions for my hubby, @BillyHo_Golf xo pic.twitter.com/2yDyhm8kRR— brittany horschel (@britt_horschel) May 22, 2017 Billy and Brittany first met at a junior golf tournament at Doral in 2004. He was 18; she was a year younger. His cap with the University of Florida logo caught her eye because that’s where she was going to play golf in college.   “I didn’t know who he was, so I thought he was a wannabe Gator,â€� Brittany recalls. “But I thought he was cute, so I kind of followed him around.â€� She introduced herself to Billy on the practice range prior to the final round. The two ran into each other at several other junior tournaments that summer, then started dating when they got to Gainesville. The first 2-1/2 years of their relationship were on-again, off-again. By the second semester of their junior year, though, Billy and Brittany were serious. They moved in together as seniors. “We made our families very nervous,â€� Brittany says with a smile. In truth, theirs was a perfect match. Billy found the independent, strong-willed woman he was looking for in Brittany. He also found a kindred spirit in the golfer, who had pro aspirations of her own that were curtailed by a series of wrist injuries. “Still to this day she understands that I may practice for eight hours at the course and she gets it,â€� he says. “She understands it. Obviously, there’s time where she goes, hey, can you help me out here, can you work your practice around this schedule type deal? “But she understands this is the way we make our living.  This is our life.â€� But Brittany, who played at Florida from 2005-09, never was able to realize her own dream and turn pro. Three surgeries on her wrist prevented her from putting in the time on the range needed to reach the next level. “So, my whole self-being and what I thought I was good at and what I thought I was here on this earth to do, I couldn’t do it,â€� the petite blonde says. “I think that’s the beginning of when I started to feel lost and I never got myself back on track.â€� So Brittany started drinking. First, it was white wine. Then it became vodka. That’s when the problem turned serious. The white liquor was easy to camouflage and difficult to smell. It was no longer social drinking. She was now hiding it. “When I look back now, that’s when I see that it was really unhealthy drinking,â€� she says. “I wasn’t drinking to enjoy a glass of wine. It was by myself.â€� By 2012, Billy realized his wife’s drinking had gone beyond the oops-I-had-one-too-many stage. Even so, Brittany managed to quit cold turkey when she was pregnant with their first child, Skylar, who was born two days after Billy won the FedExCup in 2014. “Looking back, I think it’s because I felt like I had another purpose in my life, you know, and that was to keep this child healthy,â€� says Brittany, who had suffered a miscarriage the previous year that both she and her husband feel, in retrospect, contributed to her issues with alcohol. Her new-found sobriety would be short-lived, though. A few glasses of wine led to a few more and a few more and suddenly Brittany was self-medicating again. Billy pleaded with his wife to stop. Even a couple of weeks on the wagon would be a good start, he told her. And then Billy would find another one of those water bottles. “At the beginning I would get upset,â€� he says. “Towards the end, it was just sort of like I couldn’t get upset because I was beyond that. It was a frustration.  “I would tell her, I love you. You are such an unbelievable woman. You are a great mother. You have so many great skills. And I tried — when we had conversations, when I would find the bottle, I would try towards the end to reiterate that to her.  “It just wasn’t getting through.â€� As things escalated, Billy even went so far as to threaten to divorce Brittany. Six times, in fact. Not that he wanted to – his love for her was too strong. His commitment too deep. “But I just was trying anything I could to break her out of the funk,â€� he says. Brittany just kept drinking. Her self-esteem was at rock bottom. She convinced herself Billy didn’t love her. She thought her friends didn’t care, either. “That was all my distorted views of everybody from the what the alcohol had done,â€� she says. “I had gotten myself into a depression. Really, I felt I was a tiny, tiny person in a corner all by myself.  “So our relationship definitely (suffered) — I wouldn’t even call it a relationship. Just two people living together.â€� Eventually, Brittany got to the point that she would have a drink, usually vodka and orange juice, as soon as she would get up in the morning. She would continue to drink all day, “almost to numb myself,â€� Brittany says.   “I remember the professionals, the counselors, the therapists, everybody saying that she had to drink because she had a level she had to maintain,â€� Billy recalls. “If she got below that level, she felt bad. Her body sort of like didn’t know how to function without the alcohol.â€� Finally, though, Brittany got scared. That’s why the intervention worked. from my journal 1 year ago today…”why would you give up everything for one thing, when you can give up one thing for everything?”— brittany horschel (@britt_horschel) May 26, 2017 It was May of 2016. The week after THE PLAYERS Championship. Brittany had just returned from a trip with several girlfriends, who came back and told Billy they thought she might have a problem. Within 24 hours, Billy had set everything up. Brittany’s traveling companions were there, along with a doctor and another friend who is a licensed therapist. “I needed somebody,â€� Billy says. “… I needed some more backing, really, from people that cared about her, people that she cared about as well, to sort of help me help push through that wall to get to Brittany.â€� Billy doesn’t remember how he got Brittany to the intervention that night. But once they walked in the door, she knew what was about to happen. She was at peace with it, too. “I was ready,â€� Brittany says. “They all had their little speeches, for lack of a better word. And I think one person got through theirs and I was on board.â€� Billy said he’d actually sensed for a month or so that his wife wanted help. “I kept saying, ‘Hey, there’s something you are not telling me’,â€� Billy recalls. “’Is there something you need to tell me? I’m here for you, I’m going to love you no matter what. We can figure anything out.’ “I was trying to get her to open up and tell me that she was an alcoholic. Unfortunately, she wasn’t able to. So, the intervention, it was great because she was not defensive at all and she was ready to go.â€� Brittany was hoping to find a treatment center near their home in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, so she could be close to her family. But the couple eventually settled on a rehabilitation facility in southeastern Florida.   The therapy was intense and included family members as Billy and his wife learned communication skills and how to rebuild their relationship. She was there for two months with only one visit home. “It was the hardest thing to do to leave Skylar but it was also the best possible thing I could have done,â€� Brittany says. Happy Daddy’s Day @BillyHo_Golf. We love you so much. Thank you for everthing you do for us. #FathersDay pic.twitter.com/Ych04RRuvW — brittany horschel (@britt_horschel) June 18, 2017 Billy, meanwhile, took on the role of Mr. Mom. Skylar was his No. 1 priority, of course. He also paid the bills and did laundry. He even moved the family into a new home. His dad, who basically came to live with him while Brittany was in rehab, was a huge help. Billy rarely had time to practice or hit the gym — and he was good with that. His family came first. “I was in a different realm than I’ve ever been,â€� he explains. “It goes from waking up and going to work out and practice every day, to waking up to take care of my daughter.â€� While Billy had planned to take a complete sabbatical from the game, several friends who are also addicts encouraged him to play. If he didn’t, they warned, Brittany might feel guilty. So, Billy played twice, tying for 32nd at the U.S. Open at Oakmont and missing the cut at the Open Championship at Royal Troon. But he skipped four other events that he usually played, events that he usually plays well in. “In a two-month span, besides playing two events, I only maybe practiced five or six days in a 64 or 67-day span,â€� Billy says. “It was really strange for me.  “But at the same time, it was the right thing to do to be there for my little one, make sure my home life was running, do everything I could to make sure Brittany had everything she needed when she came home.â€� And Billy, one of the more gregarious and open players on TOUR, still managed to keep what was going on his life private.    “It was no one’s business for the time being,â€� he says. “So that’s the way it was.â€�  Still, Billy’s absence didn’t go unnoticed. Scott Vail, a good friend who caddies for Brandt Snedeker, texted him during the FedEx St. Jude Classic to see what was up. TOUR veteran Scott Piercy also was worried. Billy finally told both what had happened. And once Brittany posted on Facebook and Twitter last month, there were no more secrets. Her husband was gratified by the support he felt the following week at the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational. “Listen, the PGA TOUR is a big family,â€� Billy says. “When anyone is going through something, whether it was Brittany’s alcoholism, Stewart Cink’s wife’s cancer, whatever players deal with out there, players and their families do a really good job of showing support to that individual.â€� Brittany’s revealing social media posts were completely her idea. She wanted to explain why her husband had been so emotional as he broke that three-year victory drought. She wanted to come clean about the off-course struggles to which he had alluded in his post-round interview. “To get emotional that way, in a way I’ve never done before in my previous three wins,â€� Billy says. “I knew what that day meant. It was a year to that day that we had the intervention. It was a year to that day that Brittany had taken her last drink.â€� So she emailed Billy and his agent, Sherry Whay, and asked them to look at the statement. Her husband expressed some reservations, but she told him she was ready to go public in hopes that her story would help others. “So it was a big step, it was an encouraging step by her,â€� Billy says. The reaction has been overwhelmingly positive. People have reached out to Brittany from all over the world. When he signs autographs after a round, fans tell Billy about their own struggles. “A mom or a dad may say, Hey, that was really unbelievable what your wife did,â€� he says. “…  And they are like, I want to let you know, I’m five years sober or I’m 10 years sober or my son or my daughter is sober as well.â€� “I think you find most people can connect to somebody that’s an alcoholic, either their family, friends,â€� Brittany notes. Chris Herren, a highly touted high school basketball player in the mid-1990s who fell victim to drug abuse, even reached out to the Horschels via Twitter. He has been clean since 2008 and now helps guide addicts toward sobriety through The Herren Project. Brittany and Billy had been thinking about starting a foundation, as well, and now they have their cause. They were in New York on Wednesday doing a series of interviews with national media outlets, including an appearance on “Good Morning America.â€� “We want … to help young families and women struggling with addictions,â€� Brittany says. “And then I would love to keep doing speaking engagements and just be somebody that’s available to people to talk to and reach out for help.â€� Brittany, who knows her battle for sobriety will be on-going, stops short of saying she’s surprised by how far she’s come during the last 13 months. But she is proud of the woman she has become. “I’ve gained my self-confidence back, my self-worth,â€� she says. “So, no, I’m not surprised. I knew I could do it.â€� At the same time, she will admit to being a little surprised that Billy stuck by her. She knows she tested every ounce of his commitment. She knows she embarrassed him – although he won’t say so – and she’s forever grateful for his help. “I kept apologizing to him down at recovery,â€� she says. “(But) one thing that he said to me is just the respect he had for me for getting help and fighting this. … “And I gained so much respect and love for him for everything that he stuck through. I love him even more for getting me help because I couldn’t do it for myself.â€�

Click here to read the full article

The unique connection between Tony Finau and the Summerhays familyThe unique connection between Tony Finau and the Summerhays family

A trip to Australia and the opportunity to represent one’s country aren’t the only perks for the participants in the Junior Presidents Cup. The 24 players on the U.S. and International teams get to interact with the elite players who will compete in this year’s Presidents Cup, set for December at Royal Melbourne. While many juniors will be meeting their heroes for the first time, Preston Summerhays is accustomed to being around the PGA TOUR’s best. That’s what happens when your father is a former TOUR player and successful swing coach. Preston, the reigning U.S. Junior Amateur champion, already knows several of the players who will compete for captains Ernie Els and Tiger Woods. Summerhays’ father, Boyd, was once the top-ranked junior in the country. He played college golf at Oklahoma State, where his teammates included Charles Howell III and Bo Van Pelt, and played 29 events on the PGA TOUR from 2004-06 before injuries ended his career. Now he is the instructor for Tony Finau, J.J. Spaun and Wyndham Clark. Golf success runs in the Summerhays’ genes. The family has featured multiple generations of successful players. Preston and his sister, Grace, who competed in this year’s U.S. Girls’ Junior, are continuing that tradition. Preston is waiting to see if the TOUR player with whom he has the closest relationship, Finau, also will be in Australia in December. Finau FaceTimed Preston shortly after that U.S. Junior. Am win. They’ve played hundreds of rounds together. Preston calls him “a great influenceâ€� on his career. “He cares about our family. He always wants to know how we’re doing, how we’re progressing,â€� Preston said. Finau wasn’t the only TOUR player to offer congratulations. Brooks Koepka sent a text to Boyd from The Open Championship. Rory McIlroy congratulated Preston before teeing off in the first round of a recent PGA TOUR event. Finau, who finished ninth in the final U.S. points standings, is a favorite to earn one of Woods’ four Presidents Cup captain’s picks next month (the top eight earned automatic spots on the roster). He bolstered his candidacy with a ninth-place finish at last week’s Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, where he led the field in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green. He now has four top-10s in his last five TOUR starts. Finau is a strong candidate to get a pick because of his consistent play and strong ball-striking. He has 25 top-10 finishes in the previous three PGA TOUR seasons and has played in the past three TOUR Championships. His average FedExCup finish in those three seasons is 10.7. He finished in the top 25 in both Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee and Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green last season. Finau’s strong debut in international team competition also helps his candidacy. He was one of just four Americans with a winning record at last year’s Ryder Cup. He went 2-1 at Le Golf National, including a 6-and-4 win in his singles match with Tommy Fleetwood. If Finau is picked, it will mean double duty for Boyd Summerhays. He has been coaching Finau since 2014, after his own professional career came to an end. Finau graduated from the Korn Ferry Tour that year. He’s been on the PGA TOUR ever since, never finishing outside the top 50 in the FedExCup. “Boyd’s been a great mentor to me, he’s been a great teacher and he’s been a great friend,â€� Finau said. “We’ve been through a lot together. He’s helped me fine-tune my game, fine-tune my golf swing and fine-tune the mental side of my game. He’s been a huge part of what I’ve been able to accomplish.â€� Finau said his instructor’s son possesses “the confidence to be a champion.â€� “I’ve played a lot of rounds of golf with him, and to see him play, and to see kind of his swag, and taking his game to another level this summer has been a lot of fun to watch,â€� Finau said. Preston also plays with many of the TOUR players who live in his hometown of Scottsdale, Arizona. That experience has undoubtedly paid dividends. “Preston’s always known he is good because he’s been winning junior tournaments, but when he plays with TOUR players he also gets to see how far he has to go,â€� Boyd said. “He’s very confident in himself, but he still has the humility because he knows what he has to do better. … It gives him a clear picture of what he has to do.â€� Finau hails from Utah, as does the Summerhays family (though Boyd and his family have since moved to Arizona). The Summerhayses are a golf family, through and through. Boyd’s grandfather, Pres, was the head coach at the University of Utah. Boyd’s father, Lynn, was the captain of Utah’s golf team. Boyd’s uncle Bruce won on PGA TOUR Champions, and Bruce’s daughter, Carrie, played on the LPGA. Boyd’s younger brother, Daniel, has two runners-up on the PGA TOUR and now plays on the Korn Ferry Tour. Boyd encouraged Preston to play other sports, and not simply fall into the family’s preferred pursuit, but the pull toward golf was too strong. Preston’s first memory of the game is accompanying his father to the course with a loaf of bread to feed the ducks while his father practiced. Boyd’s playing career came to an end after playing several events on the Mackenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada in 2012. Preston was 9 years old when caddied for his father in a tournament in Canada. “The bib was down to his knees,â€� Boyd said. Preston videoed Boyd’s rounds, starting his commentary of each shot with, “Here we are in Canada.â€� Preston has won the past two Utah Amateurs, becoming the first player to go back-to-back since his uncle, Daniel, in 2000-01. Preston was the youngest winner in the tournament’s history when he won in 2018. Preston also turned heads last year when he shot 65-60 to qualify for the U.S. Amateur; it was the lowest qualifying score for that championship since 2011. The Junior Presidents Cup is the next step in his promising career.

Click here to read the full article