Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Zach Johnson with his worst practice-swing fail yet at The Players

Zach Johnson with his worst practice-swing fail yet at The Players

An old problem resurfaced for Zach Johnson at the Players. The problem, oddly enough, is this habit he has of accidentally hitting the ball with a practice swing.

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Hideki Matsuyama+800
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Tony Finau’s miracle 68 at the MastersTony Finau’s miracle 68 at the Masters

AUGUSTA, Ga. — First, there was the hole-in-one during the Par 3 Contest. It was the 12th of his young golfing life and certainly the biggest, considering it happened on the hallowed grounds of Augusta National. Certainly a great reason to celebrate. Then there was the jog down the tee box, the 180-degree turn to see his family, then the dislocated left ankle when he misstepped while backpedaling, followed by his instinctive reaction to reach down and pop the ankle back in place (“I saw where it was and I knew where it needed to be,” he explained). If you’ve seen the video, it probably made you cringe. If you haven’t seen it … well, it’s not for the faint-hearted. Then there was the pain and uncertainty, a restless night in bed with his foot iced and elevated. It was the eve of his first Masters start, but instead of green jacket dreams, he tossed and turned, worried simply about his playing status. Would he have to WD? Had he suffered any major damage? Then there was the 6 a.m. wake-up call, followed by the 7 a.m. MRI, then the 8 a.m. results. His doctor had good news: A couple of torn ligaments but nothing major. Cleared to play if he didn’t mind the pain. No worries — this was a guy who grew up fire-knife dancing, which his mother taught him as a nod to their Samoan heritage. A high ankle sprain wasn’t going to keep him from the first tee. With an early afternoon tee time, he arrived at the range well in advance, testing the heavily taped ankle against the powerful swings that makes him one of the PGA TOUR’s longest hitters. He couldn’t put full weight on his left foot on some shots, so he made some on-the fly adjustments. Yet could he hold up on a course that’s deceptively hilly? Eighteen holes later, he had his answer: A 4-under 68 and a share of second place in his Masters debut. Oh, and one last thing — a visit to Butler Cabin to tell his story on national TV. This was 24 hours in the life of Tony Finau. “Nothing short of a miracle,” he said. Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised — beware of the wounded animal and all that. Finau acknowledged that worrying about his ankle alleviated any pressure he might have felt about making his Masters debut. It helped narrow his focus, despite all the gallery members who innocently kept the topic front and center by asking about his health and wishing him good luck. “Mind over matter,” Finau said. “I felt like I did a pretty good job of making the pressure because I had to worry about my foot. … I was able to stay in the moment.” We also shouldn’t be surprised because Finau, ranked eighth in the FedExCup standings and 34th in the world, is one of the TOUR’s bright young stars. His length off the tee and improving short game makes him a threat at any time. Consider the key element of Thursday’s six-birdie, two-bogey round: his putter. He led the 87-man field in strokes gained: putting, gaining 5.199 strokes on the field. In fact, he was 1.5 strokes better on the greens than Jordan Spieth, who shot a 66 to lead Finau and Matt Kuchar by two strokes. “Honestly, I’m not really surprised,” Finau said. “I like the golf course and my foot started to feel better the more I played. And you know, my story’s quite crazy and I’m sure most of you guys knows it by now. “I feel like my back’s been up against the wall my whole life, so something like this is just another part of the story, I guess. But to sit up here and say I’m surprised? Not really.” His backstory may be new for anybody who only watches the Masters, but for golf fans, it’s a familiar and heartwarming one. Growing up in humble surroundings in Utah, the first PGA TOUR player of Tongan and American Samoan descent. Four brothers and two sisters — and a desire to grow his own big family. He and his wife Alayna have four children. Hard worker. Good guy. PGA TOUR winner. One paragraph doesn’t do it justice. But perhaps the fire-knife dancing does help explain how Finau so successfully dealt with the pain Thursday. “I started doing fire-knife dancing when I was four,” he said. “If you catch it on the wrong side of the stick, you burn your hands. It’s kind of a hook and a knife on top of it. So you could also cut yourself — and I did a lot of that as a kid. … “I look at myself as a pretty mentally tough person, and I think I showed that today in my round — just able to put my head down and just play.” It helps that he’s also one of the most athletically gifted players on TOUR, perhaps on the same level as Dustin Johnson. Ironic that it was just a year ago that DJ also suffered a pre-tournament injury when he slipped on some stairs and injured his back, forcing him to withdraw. Finau was spared the same fate Thursday morning, but he did learn a lesson about how to celebrate — and more important, how not to celebrate. “A pretty embarrassing moment,” he said. “I feel like I’m a good athlete and to see myself kind of roll an ankle on an easy little backpedal wasn’t really athletic. “It’s kind of blown up on social media and I’ve seen the video replay over in my head millions of times overnight. It is what it is. Embarrassing moment but scary moment at the same time.” Finau said it will be the last time he celebrates in that manner. It’s doubtful, however, that this will be the last time he’s in contention at Augusta National. Just imagine what he can do on two good ankles.

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World’s top 5 set to play Charles Schwab ChallengeWorld’s top 5 set to play Charles Schwab Challenge

The Charles Schwab Challenge, the first event in the restart of the 2019-20 PGA TOUR season, will welcome a stellar field. The tournament has announced that the top five players in the Official World Golf Ranking are scheduled to appear at Colonial – the first time that’s happened at the Fort Worth, Texas, event since 1986. RELATED: Season restart looks to be race to FedExCup Playoffs | Ultimate catch-up guide to 2019-20 season No. 1 Rory McIlroy, the reigning FedExCup champ, and No. 4 Justin Thomas are playing at Colonial for the first time in their TOUR careers. No. 2 Jon Rahm is making his fourth start and No. 3 Brooks Koepka is making his second. No. 5 Dustin Johnson is making his third Colonial start, but his first since 2014. Thomas and McIlroy are among the top nine players in the FedExCup standings — led by Sungjae Im — who have committed to play. Of the top 20 in the standings, 17 will be at Colonial, including defending champ Kevin Na, who is 11th. “Our field is deep,â€� Charles Schwab Challenge tournament director Michael Tothe told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. “It’s really come together nicely.â€� The tournament was originally slated for May 21-24 but was moved to June 11-14 after the COVID-19 pandemic forced a raft of schedule changes for the PGA TOUR. The Charles Schwab Challenge will be the first full TOUR event to be staged since the season went on hiatus after the pandemic took hold during THE PLAYERS Championship in March, forcing its cancellation after the first round. It will be played without onsite access for fans and under strict health and safety protocols. “Golf fans are hungry to watch some golf,â€� tournament chairman Rob Hood told the local media. “I think the whole world will be watching Fort Worth, Texas.â€� Of the world’s top 20 ranked players, 15 are scheduled to play at Colonial, including reigning Open Championship winner Shane Lowry, making just his second start on American soil this season. The Irishman has been in Florida during the pandemic and will play mostly in the U.S. for the next few months. “I think this is a good opportunity for golf to be one of the first sports to get back on TV and maybe people are so starved and deprived of live sport that it might get a few more people into the game,” Lowry told Irish reporters. Na, who shot a 62 in the second round last year, looks forward to defending his title. Justin Rose, the 2018 winner, also is scheduled, as are local draws Jordan Spieth (the 2016 winner) and Colonial member Ryan Palmer. “It’s basically going back to work for me and what I love to do,â€� Na told CBS. “I miss it. I miss the competition.â€� Players who are returning to Colonial after lengthy absences include Bubba Watson (making his first start since 2008) and Jason Day (making his first start since 2011). Big-hitting Matthew Wolff is making his Charles Schwab Challenge debut on a tight course that generally favors shot-making. Also in the field is two-time champion Phil Mickelson, who will be making his 16th start in the event but just his second since 2010. Mickelson played in last week’s The Match: Champions for Charity, where he and partner Tom Brady lost to Tiger Woods-Peyton Manning. “This is the best shape that I’ve been in,” Mickelson said recently on The Dan Patrick Show. “I feel like I’ve had a really good last few months to get my game back and be sharp. I’m excited to go play.” Mickelson won Colonial’s plaid jacket in 2000 and 2008. His 2008 victory famously included a clutch approach to the green from the left trees on the 72nd hole before he buried a birdie putt for the title while a fan cannonballed into the lake behind him in celebration. Speaking on his Callaway Golf Podcast, the now soon-to-be 50-year-old had obvious enthusiasm for golf’s return and hoped the sport would get further prominence in the wider community that continues to navigate its way through unchartered waters due to the pandemic. “The thing that I’m excited about seeing the PGA TOUR return is what this could do for the game of golf,â€� Mickelson said. “Because right now the courses where I’m playing in San Diego and Arizona, they’re packed because people are wanting to get outside, they want to do sports, (and) they want to hang with their friends. And the only place to do it safely is on the golf course. “I have a feeling that the summer rounds are going to skyrocket, hopefully we’ll get a lot of new golfers or people who only play once or twice a year playing a few times a week maybe, or a month. “We are going to see a lot more people walking. I’ve noticed that our clubs, without carts, everybody is walking, enjoying the time … this could be a thing that helps the game of golf because it offers something during this pandemic that other sports don’t which is a safe environment to be with your friends, and be interactive and have some competition and some comradery.â€�

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