Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Wyndham Rewards Top 10 update: Rickie Fowler joins the party

Wyndham Rewards Top 10 update: Rickie Fowler joins the party

Rickie Fowler’s brilliant mental toughness that allowed him to bounce back from severe adversity during the final round to win the Waste Management Phoenix Open has seen the popular star make a big move into the top 10 of the Wyndham Rewards standings.  Fowler went from 65th to 7th in the FedExCup standings with his fifth PGA TOUR title. The top 10 in the standings after the Wyndham Championship — the final event of the PGA TOUR’s regular season — will receive a portion of the $10 million bonus in the new Wyndham Rewards Top 10 competition. First place after the Wyndham Championship will receive $2 million, followed by $1.5 million for second, all the way to $500,000 for 10th place, the final spot eligible for a bonus. “Winning takes care of a lot. Obviously, it’s nice to be back up in FedExCup points because when you don’t play much in the fall you kind of start the calendar year pretty far behind the eight ball and playing catch up,â€� Fowler said. “This is a nice start to get back kind of in the race for that and of course the new Wyndham Rewards at the end of the regular season … and we get to go to Kapalua next year so that’s never terrible.â€� Fowler’s jump of 58 spots in the standings wasn’t the biggest of the week at TPC Scottsdale … that honor went to Branden Grace as he moved a whopping 138 spots. Here are the top 10 biggest moves (tournament result in parentheses) in the FedExCup standings: 138 – Branden Grace (2), 169 to 31 92 – Bubba Watson (T4), 174 to 82 83 – Chris Stroud (T7), 198 to 115 58 – Rickie Fowler (Won), 65 to 7 47 – Jhonattan Vegas (T10), 147 to 100 46 – Russell Knox (T10), 135 to 89 40 – Russell Henley (T15), 172 to 132 36 – Trey Mullinax (T15), 140 to 104 36 – Charley Hoffman (T20), 183 to 147 36 – Max Homa (T26), 210 to 174 LOOKING AHEAD Going into this week’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am just two of the top 10 players in the Wyndham Rewards Top 10 are in the field. No. 2 Matt Kuchar has a chance to take over top spot given he’s just 28 points behind leader Xander Schauffele. No. 10 Cameron Champ is the other top 10 player in the field. Click here for full coverage of the Wyndham Rewards Top 10

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Fred Ridley begins reign as Augusta National chairmanFred Ridley begins reign as Augusta National chairman

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Fred Ridley recalls soaking up the ambience of Augusta National a week before his debut in the 1976 Masters as the U.S. Amateur champion. He was alone under the massive oak tree next to the clubhouse when he turned around and realized he had company. Clifford Roberts, co-founder of the club and the first chairman of the Masters, was standing behind him. “I kind of jumped and thought, ‘Oh God, what have I done?'” Ridley said. “We had a nice conversation. The interesting thing was, we were leaving and he says, ‘Now young man, you’re going to be playing in the Par 3 next Wednesday. You make sure you get some practice over there.’ He loved the Par 3. That was my recollection of the only conversation I had with him.” Forty-one years later, Ridley is the seventh chairman in the 85-year history of Augusta National. He took over Monday when the club re-opened for a new season. Ridley, a 65-year-old business lawyer from Tampa, Florida, succeeds Billy Payne, who is retiring after 11 years. Payne’s tenure was marked by the club inviting female members for the first time, and for creating events geared toward American youth (Drive, Chip and Putt) and two amateur events in Asia and Latin America that offer the winners a spot in the Masters. Payne, who chose Ridley as his successor, becomes chairman emeritus. Starting with that chance meeting with Roberts under the oak tree, Ridley says he has met every chairman who preceded him and knew most of them well. What he took from Payne was the value of relationships and the willingness to share credit. “The worst thing I can do is try to be Billy Payne, other than his accomplishments and his drive to be the best,” he said. Ridley was not specific on any changes or initiatives he had in mind for the club, saying only that he would lean on the principle established by Roberts and Bobby Jones. “That principle here is constant improvement,” Ridley said. “That permeates the culture here, whether it’s the Masters Tournament, whether it’s the member experience, whether it’s growing the game or whatever we do.” Augusta National recently acquired land from adjacent Augusta Country Club that would allow it to expand the par-5 13th hole, which now is 510 yards. “We are looking at whether we’re going to do anything,” Ridley said. “We just haven’t made any decisions.” He also was reserved about how the club felt about the distance the modern professional is hitting the golf ball, referring only to a good relationship with golf’s two governing bodies, the USGA and the Royal & Ancient. “We’re interested in that issue,” he said. “It’s not my place to talk about what’s good and not good for the game. I might have opinions, but I’m not the person to talk about it. What I can talk about is what’s good for Augusta National and our golf course. Going back to the guiding principles, again, I believe that the philosophies that Jones and (Alister) MacKenzie established here are timeless.” Ridley is the second Augusta National chairman, along with Hord Hardin, to have served as USGA president. He has not stayed active with the USGA, where executives are known for their blue blazers, saying that “my jacket has been green for quite some time.” Ridley was USGA president in 2004 when the final round of the U.S. Open was marred by the overly baked condition of the greens at Shinnecock Hills and a pin position at the par-3 seventh that made it impossible for anyone to hold the green without putting water on it. He was not directly in charge of the golf course, but “I was the president, so the buck stops there.” He was chairman of the competition committees at the Masters for the last 10 years, making him responsible for a rules controversy involving Tiger Woods in 2013. Woods hit a wedge off the pin and into the water on the par-5 15th. He dropped from an incorrect spot, which was spotted by a television viewer, David Eger, a former USGA and PGA TOUR rules official. When word got to Ridley, he said he viewed the drop and did not see a violation. Only after more questions were raised did the rules committee realize Woods should been penalized. Woods was given a two-shot penalty but spared disqualification for signing an incorrect card because Ridley said officials made a mistake by not speaking to Woods. “I think anytime you get involved in a complicated situation you learn,” Ridley said. “I think we were pretty transparent when we told the media what happened, what we did, how we resolved it. But yeah, we learn things all the time. I try not to look backward other than to learn.”

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