Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Winner’s Bag: Billy Horschel, AT&T Byron Nelson

Winner’s Bag: Billy Horschel, AT&T Byron Nelson

Coming off four consecutive missed cuts and ranked 113th in Strokes Gained: Putting, Billy Horschel figured it was time for a putter change at THE PLAYERS Championship. The former FedExCup champion switched to a face-balanced PXG Bat Attack mallet that proved to be a difference maker one week later at the AT&T Byron Nelson, where Horschel defeated Jason Day on the first hole of a sudden-death playoff. Playing the role of pursuer for most of the final round, Horschel jarred an impressive 59-foot bomb on the 14th that moved him into a tie for the lead at 11 under. Horschel would make a number of key putts over the next few holes, including a two-putt birdie from 46 feet on the 16th, and another from 98 feet on the 17th. For the week, Horschel ranked second in the field in Strokes Gained: Putting, picking up a combined 8.412 eight strokes on the field over 72 holes. Horschel’s 350-gram Bat Attack putter was introduced earlier this year and comes equipped with weighted stainless steel wings that are set exactly one golf ball width apart to assist with alignment. Each putter is constructed with a aircraft-grade aluminum body and soft billet milled 304 stainless steel face. Behind the face is a TPE insert that produces a soft, solid feel at impact for consistency across the entire face. Here’s a look at Horschel’s entire PXG bag setup. Driver: PXG 0811X (Fujikura Atmos Tour Spec Black 6X shaft), 9 degrees 3-wood: PXG 0341X (Project X HZRDUS Black 75X 6.5 shaft), 15 degrees 5-wood: PXG 0341 (Project X HZRDUS Black 75X 6.5 shaft), 18 degrees Irons: PXG 0311T (3, 5-PW; True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 shafts) Wedges: PXG 0311T Milled (52-10, 56-10 and 60-07 degrees; True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 shafts) Putter: PXG Bat Attack Ball: Titleist Pro V1x

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Final Round Match Up - Detry/MacIntyre v Poston/Mitchell
Type: Final Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
Detry/MacIntyre -115
Poston/Mitchell-105
Final Round Foursomes - Ventura / Rozner vs Poston / Mitchell
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Poston / Mitchell-140
Ventura / Rozner+165
Tie+650
Final Round Foursomes - Reavie / Snedeker vs Detry / MacIntyre
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Detry / MacIntyre-160
Reavie / Snedeker+190
Tie+650
Mitsubishi Electric Classic
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Ernie Els-120
Jerry Kelly+140
Angel Cabrera+1400
Vijay Singh+2000
Steven Alker+3500
Stewart Cink+15000
Brett Quigley+25000
Alex Cejka+30000
Miguel Angel Jimenez+30000
Bernhard Langer+40000
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Final Round Match Up - Del Solar/Manassero v Peterson/Rosenmueller
Type: Final Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
Del Solar/Manassero-120
Peterson/Rosenmueller+100
Final Round Foursomes - Peterson / Rosenmueller vs Riley / Hardy
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Peterson / Rosenmueller+145
Riley / Hardy-125
Tie+650
Final Round Match Up - Cauley/Tway v Phillips/Bridgeman
Type: Final Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
Phillips/Bridgeman-120
Cauley/Tway+100
Final Round Foursomes - Hoge / Chappell vs Cauley / Tway
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Cauley / Tway+105
Hoge / Chappell+105
Tie+700
Final Round Foursomes - Phillips / Bridgeman vs Del Solar / Manassero
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Bridgeman / Phillips-120
Del Solar / Manassero+140
Tie+650
Final Round Match Up - Gerard/Walker v Cummins/Gotterup
Type: Final Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
Gerard/Walker -120
Cummins/Gotterup+100
Final Round Foursomes - Cummins / Gotterup vs N. Taylor / Hadwin
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Cummins / Gotterup+135
N. Taylor / Hadwin-115
Tie+650
Final Round Foursomes - Mouw / Castillo vs Lashley / Springer
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Lashley / Springer+115
Mouw / Castillo+100
Tie+650
Final Round Foursomes - Taylor / Skinns vs Gerard / Walker
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Gerard / Walker-135
Taylor / Skinns+160
Tie+650
Final Round 3 Ball - HJ Choi / A. Kim / S. Lee
Type: Final Round 3 Ball - - Status: OPEN
Hye Jin Choi+130
Somi Lee+190
Auston Kim+220
Final Round 3 Ball - M. Hensby / R. Gonzalez / B. Langer
Type: Final Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Bernhard Langer+125
Mark Hensby+200
Ricardo Gonzalez+220
Final Round Match Up - Rai/Theegala v Garnett/Straka
Type: Final Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
Garnett/Straka-110
Rai/Theegala -110
Final Round Foursomes - Rai / Theegala vs Garnett / Straka
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Straka / Garnett+105
Theegala / Rai+105
Tie+700
Final Round 3 Ball - R. Yin / C. Ciganda / A. Jutanugarn
Type: Final Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Ruoning Yin+145
Carlota Ciganda+190
Ariya Jutanugarn+200
Final Round 3 Ball - A. Cejka / P. Goydos / MA Jimenez
Type: Final Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Migue Angel Jimenez+110
Alex Cejka+150
Paul Goydos+350
Final Round Match Up - Davis/Svensson v Echavarria/Greyserman
Type: Final Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
Echavarria/Greyserman-135
Davis/Svensson+115
Final Round Foursomes - Echavarria / Greyserman vs Widing / Fisk
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Greyserman / Echavarria-115
Widing / Fisk+135
Tie+650
Final Round 3 Ball - S. Schmelzel / Y. Liu / L. Thompson
Type: Final Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Sarah Schmelzel+140
Lexi Thompson+165
Yan Liu +240
Final Round Match Up - Whaley/Albertson v Thornberry/Buckley
Type: Final Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
Whaley/Albertson-130
Thornberry/Buckley+110
Final Round Foursomes - Whaley / Albertson vs Thornberry / Buckley
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Thornberry / Buckley+130
Whaley / Albertson-110
Tie+650
Final Round 3 Ball - H. Ryu / M. Saigo / L. Duncan
Type: Final Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Haeran Ryu+125
Mao Saigo+190
Lindy Duncan+230
Final Round 3 Ball - P. Broadhurst / M. Tizani / M. Walker
Type: Final Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Paul Broadhurst+135
Mario Tizani+180
Mark Walker+225
Final Round Match Up - Thorbjornsen/Vilips v Lipsky/Wu
Type: Final Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
Thorbjornsen/Vilips-125
Lipsky/Wu+105
Final Round Foursomes - Lipsky / Wu vs Lower / Ramey
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Lipsky / D. Wu+105
Lower / Ramey+105
Tie+700
Final Round 3 Ball - V. Singh / S. Alker / B. Quigley
Type: Final Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Steven Alker-125
Vijay Singh+250
Brett Quigley+300
Final Round Match Up - McGreevy/Stevens v Hojgaard/Hojgaard
Type: Final Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
Hojgaard/Hojgaard-120
McGreevy/Stevens +100
Final Round Foursomes - Shelton / Mullinax vs McGreevy / Stevens
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
McGreevy / Stevens-120
Shelton / Mullinax+140
Tie+650
Final Round 3 Ball - J. Kelly / E. Els / A. Cabrera
Type: Final Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Ernie Els+125
Angel Cabrera+210
Jerry Kelly+210
Final Round Foursomes - Dickson / Crowe vs Thorbjornsen / Vilips
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Dickson / Crowe+160
Thorbjornsen / Vilips-135
Tie+650
Final Round Match Up - Salinda/Velo v List/Norlander
Type: Final Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
List/Norlander-120
Salinda/Velo+100
Final Round Foursomes - Davis / Svensson vs List / Norlander
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
C. Davis / A. Svensson+100
List / Norlander+115
Tie+650
Final Round Match Up - Novak/Griffin v McIlroy/Lowry
Type: Final Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
McIlroy/Lowry-205
Novak/Griffin+170
Final Round Foursomes - Salinda / Velo vs McIIroy / Lowry
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Lowry / McIlroy-285
Salinda / Velo+325
Tie+750
Final Round Match Up - Hisatsune/Kanaya v Capan III/Knapp
Type: Final Round Match Up - Status: OPEN
Hisatsune/Kanaya -115
Capan III/Knapp-105
Final Round Foursomes - Hisatsune / Kanaya vs Hojgaard / Hojgaard
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Hisatsune / Kanaya+135
R. Hojgaard / N. Hojgaard-115
Tie+650
Final Round Foursomes - Novak / Griffin vs Capan / Knapp
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Capan III / Knapp+160
Novak / Griffin-135
Tie+650
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+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Xander Schauffele+1400
Jon Rahm+1800
Justin Thomas+1800
Collin Morikawa+2000
Brooks Koepka+2500
Viktor Hovland+2500
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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
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Shannon Heath-Longino lives a life of community activism at East LakeShannon Heath-Longino lives a life of community activism at East Lake

Someday when she has time, Shannon Heath-Longino just might write that book. She can tell about the time her grandmother rode in the back of a pickup truck, shouting into a bullhorn, ‘‘Y’all didn’t kill me. I’m still here," after her apartment was firebombed. About attending rallies in Washington, D.C., and watching her grandmother get arrested as she watched in a stroller. Or, the President and Congressmen her grandmother befriended during her quest to bring change to Atlanta. Someday, Heath-Longino may find the time. When she is not advocating for affordable housing for low income families and women's issues. Or speaking at national conventions. Or attending meetings for one of the three volunteer boards on which she serves. Someday, when she's not being a wife, mother of three and bank vice president. Maybe then Heath-Longino will have time to put pen to paper and tell the life story of her grandmother, Eva Davis, the dynamic Black woman living in one of Atlanta's most distressed housing projects who came to partner with the city's most powerful businessman, Tom Cousins, to transform East Lake Meadows into a mixed-income residential development that is a model for innovative urban planning nationwide. Heath-Longino lived that life with Davis, the woman she calls Mama, the woman who raised her from the time she was two weeks old until she was a senior in high school. And with everything she does today, Heath-Longino honors the legacy of her grandmother, who died of ovarian cancer in 2012. "She was a mom, not just to me and her family, but she was a mom to a community," Heath-Longino said. "She was a mom to a movement of betterment." Each year, when the TOUR Championship is played at East Lake Golf Club, as it is this week, the story of that movement, the revitalization of what was once a neighborhood with sub-standard housing and plagued by drugs and crime, is showcased. And Wednesday, prior to the start of the FedExCup Playoffs finale, the PGA TOUR will announce a $100 million commitment to support racial equality and inclusion. (East Lake) motivates people to … be beyond what society tells you that you can be. PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan announced the TOUR's efforts on Wednesday at East Lake Golf Club. They will be led by Marsha Oliver, the TOUR's Vice President for Community & Inclusion. "We are committed to using the TOUR's platform to focus on the systemic issues that are affecting the communities in which we play," Monahan said Wednesday. "Not all communities have the same needs or the same issues that lead to racial inequities - that's one reason change is so complicated - so we're being intentional in each market to identify the root cause of the issue and partner with those who we believe can most authentically and effectively bring about change. "One of the biggest ways you'll see us working is to re-target our charitable giving to nonprofit organizations whose services directly address the inequities and disparities that affect African-American citizens as well as underrepresented and underserved populations in the communities where we play." East Lake serves as a shining example of how golf can enact change in a community. Cousins, the Chair Emeritus of the East Lake Foundation, is proud of the work Davis started and Heath-Longino continues to do in her hometown. "While we have continued to work together to recognize and celebrate her grandmother's amazing legacy in East Lake," he says, "Shannon has become a force for change in her own right as a staunch advocate for affordable housing for low income families and equitable opportunities for students in East Lake and across the city of Atlanta." Community activism was something Heath-Longino learned early in life. As a toddler, she remembers boarding busses with Davis and various Atlanta civil rights leaders and going to Washington, D.C., to rally for women's welfare rights. "And there were a couple times I got arrested in the stroller with her," Heath-Longino says with a laugh. As an 8-year-old, she was operating a tape recorder and writing the minutes as he grandmother presided over the East Lake Meadows Residents Association. She helped with the rent strikes Davis organized that persuaded the Atlanta Housing Authority to fund a day care center, sidewalks and better streetlights there. She went door-to-door and campaigned for the candidates Davis supported. "She put me to work very early," recalls Heath-Longino, whose family was the second of 650 to move into the housing project when it opened in 1971. That number swelled to thousands when you consider how many people made up the families that lived in each apartment, and Davis made it a point to meet everyone. She organized building captains, who in those days before social media helped get the word out on tenant association meetings, food banks and other community activities. "So, her networking system became crazy where she didn’t have to leave the house to know what was going on, whether it was drugs being sold, prostitution, somebody getting killed, or the police," Heath-Longino says. "The residents trusted her, where her phone rang nonstop because she made it, gave everyone her phone number, even on the flyers." Davis' sphere of influence was wide and included President Jimmy Carter and the late Congressman John Lewis, among other politicians. Atlanta mayors Maynard Jackson and Andrew Young and civil rights pioneer Hosea Williams - who used to let Heath-Longino distribute turkeys to the families of East Lake from the back of a U-Haul truck - were frequent guests in Davis' home. Community involvement became second nature to Heath-Longino after watching her grandmother. "She taught me leadership, ... taught me individuality because what she did and what we do in life isn’t always popular. It’s not always accepted. It’s not always the cool thing," Heath-Longino said. "As a child, she wanted to make sure I had the confidence to know that the more you try to do what’s right sometimes that’ll mean the lonelier you will be." When the time came for the dramatic reimagining and redevelopment of East Lake, not everyone in the project was happy, though. Davis' apartment was firebombed by drug dealers twice in advance of tenants' association meetings, and Heath-Longino found herself standing outside, scared and shivering in the cold night air, with her grandmother. "I thought that would shut her up, but that ignited her, that put more firepower," Heath-Longino says. "We, her kids, were like, ‘Mama, can’t you just let it go?' "But she called someone with a pickup truck and got a bullhorn from somewhere. She rode around the neighborhood and got on the bullhorn and she told them, ‘Y’all didn’t kill me. I’m still here.'" Heath-Longino, then in her early 20s and serving on the East Lake planning committee, saw similar resolve from her grandmother when communication broke down with Cousins' team on the East Lake project. Davis didn't think the tenants were being included in the decision-making process about floor plans and carpet or whether to have gas or less expensive electric utilities. So she filed an injunction that halted construction for about a month. Finally, Cousins stepped in to resolve the impasse. One Sunday afternoon, he came to Davis' house, bringing a bottle of wine and "prawns that looked like drumsticks," Heath-Longino remembers. Davis asked her granddaughter to get Cousins a wine glass but said she'd make her own drink. She told Cousins he wouldn't be able to handle it. "He said, ‘Try me, Eva,'" Heath-Longino recalls. "And she said, ‘It’s moonshine.' And he said, ‘Well, I want the good stuff. I don’t want this. I want the good stuff. That’s the good stuff you got.' And that’s actually how the ice was broken, where they both laughed and got the drinks. "They started talking about business, talked about life. He must have stayed with her about four hours that day. It was just the two of them and me running back and forth to make sure if they had everything. "But I tell you that started a good friendship. And he kept up with her on a regular basis and that kind of mended things. He went back to his team and that moved everything forward, but that started a friendship, a lifelong friendship that the both of them kept until she passed." Heath-Longino, who served in the Army before graduating from Alameda College with a degree in sociology, calls Davis a visionary, a person before her time. But her granddaughter has taken Davis' mission into the present at East Lake and beyond. While Heath-Longino was bussed to schools in Buckhead from the fifth grade through high school, making a 30-mile trip that took two hours each way, her children, twin boys Caleb and Corbin and their sister Ckyla, are all alumni of the Drew Charter School at the Villages of East Lake not far from where she grew up. It's one of the highest performing schools in the Atlanta area and Heath-Longino serves as Vice Chairman on the Board of Directors. Three years ago, Heath-Longino partnered with the East Lake Foundation to start the Eva Davis Scholarship. To date, 27 Drew graduates have benefitted. Another source of pride was a years-long bureaucratic struggle to get the name of East Lake Boulevard SE changed to Eva Davis Way. "If I didn't do it - and she’s buried not too far from East Lake — she said every time I come down Candler Road, she'd jump out and scare … me," Davis' granddaughter says, laughing. A senior vice president at Truist Bank, Heath-Longino works in the Affordable Housing Finance/Asset Management Division. She has worked in the industry for more than 25 years and continues to be a voice for those her grandmother served who didn't have a place at the table. "Every neighborhood has a story," Heath-Longino explains. "And I want them to know our neighborhoods have stories. East Lake is my story. And East Lake is a big story, but there are other stories. And I just like people to take time to get to know the people in the story. "I just want it to really touch people who read it for years to come, because it motivates people who are the underdog. It motivates people who are born in circumstances beyond their control. It motivates people to not allow people to put them in a box. It motivates people to be their own circumstances and to challenge their inner selves, to be beyond what society tells you that you can be." Heath-Longino has regularly been among the fans at the TOUR Championship and sometimes plays the golf course along with other members of the East Lake Women's Alliance that she helped organize. It's a far cry from peering at what once seemed like "forbidden fruit" through holes in the green mesh fence that used to circle the course and picking up errant golf balls that felt like gold. There is more to the mission than golf, though. "It's a group of professional women who are decision-makers," Heath-Longino says. "They can be at Coca-Cola. They can be at the Falcons. They come from diverse backgrounds, but to basically let people know that the impact of the PGA [TOUR] and the impact of volunteerism, the impact of us as human beings. "No matter how well we do in life, there’s someone who’s always behind us who are in need. There’s someone coming behind us that doesn’t have the resources. And I was always taught you have to reach back and help those that are coming behind you because someone had reached back and helped me." Sounds like a good idea for a book.

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Presidents Cup Insider: Presidents Cup hopefuls down to their last shotPresidents Cup Insider: Presidents Cup hopefuls down to their last shot

The final piece of the puzzle is upon us. On Aug. 18, the last day of the BMW Championship, we learned the identities of the 16 players – eight and eight – who had qualified on points for the U.S. and International Presidents Cup Teams that will play at Royal Melbourne, Dec. 12-15. Eight more (four and four) will be added at the discretion of the captains (Tiger Woods and Ernie Els, respectively) next week, making the World Golf Championships – HSBC Champions and Bermuda Championship the last chance to make an impression. This year, though, there’s a twist: It’s possible, given Brooks Koepka’s knee injury, that he won’t be able to play, in which case Woods would get five captain’s picks. Someone could still come out of nowhere with a dominant performance this week, but absent that, here are the most likely players to get the call, plus a few longshots. U.S. TEAM Tiger Woods A lock. (He knows the captain personally!) Looked like he might make the team on merit after he won the Masters Tournament, but he missed the top eight. Healthy again, won the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP. Gary Woodland spoke for many when he said Woods would be “dumb� not to pick himself. Woods is 24-15-1 in eight Presidents Cup appearances. Gary Woodland Great chance. Strange to think this 35-year-old hasn’t played on a Presidents or Ryder Cup team, but he will likely rectify that after a solo fifth at the ZOZO, where he played the final 36 holes with Captain Woods. “I feel pretty good about my chances,� said Woodland, who was coming off a T3 finish at THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES the previous week. Rickie Fowler Good chance. Terrific player, great teammate, popular guy, and has been a fixture on U.S. teams for years. Hasn’t played much this fall as he was busy getting married on the beach, but it’s almost impossible to imagine him not making the team. Tony Finau Good chance. Only T59 at ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP, but a T9 at Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, where he shot a third-round 62, was probably enough. Went 2-1-0 as a captain’s pick, including a 6-and-4 thumping of Tommy Fleetwood, at 2018 Ryder Cup. Given what a rough week it was for the Americans, that performance stands out. Patrick Reed Good chance. Didn’t play well at 2018 Ryder Cup, but it wasn’t a good course for him and he wasn’t on form. Traditionally beyond tough to beat in team golf, he won THE NORTHERN TRUST in August and finished a respectable T17 at the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP. Could do himself a big favor with a solid result at WGC-HSBC Champions this week. Kevin Na Decent chance. He would be a rookie, and a T46 at the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP and T20 at THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES didn’t help his cause, but the fact remains he’s one of the hotter players in the game. When he won the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open it was his third victory in a span of just 30 starts, but he may need Woods to get that fifth captain’s pick. Phil Mickelson, Kevin Kisner, Chez Reavie Longshots. Kisner would probably have to win HSBC this week, although his WGC history is strong as the Dell Technologies Match Play champion. Reavie also finished in the top 15 in points, and also could make things interesting with a win at HSBC. Mickelson, Kisner’s partner at Liberty National two years ago, has played on every U.S. Presidents and Ryder Cup team since 1994, but even he admits he hasn’t done enough to justify a pick. And even winning the HSBC might not help him now. Now whether he winds up in Melbourne as an assistant captain …   INTERNATIONAL TEAM Jason Day Great chance. He’s easily the biggest name not to qualify on merit for the International Team, and the odds that he will be left out are remote. Hasn’t showed much form, but a victory in the star-studded MGM Resorts The Challenge: Japan Skins (Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy, Hideki Matsuyama) prior to the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP was at least something.  Sungjae Im Great chance. The PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year last season, Im is tireless (35 starts last season), so if he gets hot, he could play every session. His short game is streaky, which may be why he hasn’t won, but consistency from tee to green yields results (seven top-10s, 16 top-25s last season) and makes him an attractive pick. What’s more, Im, 21, has a T3 (ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP) and solo second (Sanderson Farms Championship) already this season. Joaquin Niemann Great chance. Like Im, Niemann, 20, who won A Military Tribute at the Greenbrier to open the new season, will figure prominently into the International Team’s future and present. The first TOUR winner from Chile looks like a great bet to start learning the nuances of team golf at Royal Melbourne in December. Adam Hadwin Decent chance. The man from Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, finished T4 at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, and backed it up with a solo second at the Safeway Open, his best finish on the PGA TOUR since winning the 2017 Valspar Championship. “I feel like I’m continuing some of the momentum coming from last year,� Hadwin, 10th in the FedExCup, said at the Safeway, where he made eight birdies in the final round. Byeong Hun An Decent chance. An is a big talent who probably should have won by now, given how often he’s flirted with victory, but the fact remains he’s in form. He’ll be hard to ignore after a third-place finish at the Sanderson Farms Championship and two more top-10s at THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES, in his native South Korea, and ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP. Branden Grace Sliver of a chance. Went 4-0-0 (largely with partner Louis Oosthuizen) at the 2015 Presidents Cup in South Korea. Also went 1-2-2 at the 2017 Presidents Cup, one of the better records amongst the International Team as they struggled mightily. Alas, Grace just isn’t in form and may have to win this week’s Bermuda Championship to justify a pick. Ryo Ishikawa, Jazz Janewattananond, Erik Van Rooyen, Justin Harding Longshots. A resurgent Ishikawa might have the best chance, as he’s won twice on the Japan Golf Tour this year and has played on two Presidents Cup teams. Realistically, though, all would probably have to win this week in Shanghai, or come darn close, to find their way to Melbourne.

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