Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Zack Sucher leads by 2 at Travelers Championship

Zack Sucher leads by 2 at Travelers Championship

CROMWELL, Conn. — Zack Sucher found wrestling with chronic leg problems on the PGA TOUR harder than wrestling alligators. The 32-year-old from Alabama says he’s finally feeling healthy again after knee surgery sidelined him for 13 months following the 2017 Travelers Championship. He shot a 5-under 65 in the rain Friday morning at TPC River Highlands and his 11-under 129 total held up in the afternoon sunshine for a two-stroke lead midway through the Travelers. Sucher, who said he grew up in south Alabama doing “swamp stuff” like wrestling alligators, also played high school basketball. Chronic leg problems from that sport led to the surgery for a torn knee tendon and cartilage. Sucher worked his way back and is playing in just his fourth TOUR event this year. He gained a share of the lead on his final putt Thursday night and kept that momentum going with a 30 on his front nine Friday. “It’s nice,” he said. “First year I can remember in a long time where I’m pain free and it’s feeling really good.” Chez Reavie and Keegan Bradley were two shots back. Reavie, coming off a third-place tie last week in the U.S. Open, shot a 64. Bradley had a 66, making an eagle in the rain from about 80 yards on the par-4 15th. “I was talking to my caddie about how wet it was and it was going to skid,” he said. “We landed a little short of where we normally would and it went right in the hole.” Jason Day made some adjustments to his putting game after an even-par first round. He made four straight birdies after opening with a par, shot a bogey-free 63 and was among seven players at 7 under. “Birdieing four early in my round kind of settled everything, because I was on the outside looking in,” he said. Defending champion Bubba Watson was 5 under. He switched putters after a first-round 69 and had a 66, with bogeys on his final two holes. He had six birdies, including four in a row to start the back nine, rolling in putts from 28 feet on the 11th and 38 feet on the 12th. “Knowing that we can make birdies in a hurry around here, you know that you have a shot,” he said. “Tomorrow, the wind is expected to pick up in the afternoon, so come up and do the same thing, shoot another 5 under. Always, 15 under is going to be around the lead.” Brooks Koepka said exhaustion after his runner-up finish at Pebble Beach played a role in his 71 on Thursday. He shot a 66 on Friday to get to 3 under. “I feel good and I feel like I had way more energy today which was nice,” he said. Patrick Cantlay lipped out a 2-foot putt on 15, but made a 43-footer on the 17th to just make the cut at 2 under. Two-time champion Phil Mickelson was among the big names left on the outside of the ropes this weekend. Mickelson, playing in Connecticut for the first time since 2003 and looking for the 45th win of his career, shot a 67 on Thursday, but had a 76 in the second round. He hit his first tee shot onto the cart path and out of bounds to the right and then missed an 18-foot bogey putt. He hit his second shot on the 17th hole into the water and ended up shooting a 41 on his front nine. “It was a little bit of a surprise,” Mickelson said. “I have not played great the last three months but I really keyed in on something about 10 days ago that I thought my performance at the U.S. Open and this week was going to be a lot better. Some of the shots I hit and the way I struck it yesterday, I thought I was going to have a really good day and get myself into contention, so that front nine kind of threw me for a loop.” Jordan Spieth, the 2017 winner, shot 73 and 69 and also missed the cut. “I just didn’t play well,” Spieth said. “No parts of my game are really where I want them to be. I’ll get some time off here, I’m not sure how much and kind of get away from the game a little bit and get a reset and try to finish the year strong.”

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Thomas sets U.S. Open recordThomas sets U.S. Open record

ERIN, Wis. – Erin Hills may have been formed thousands of years ago by glaciers that plowed through the Wisconsin heartland, but the course was deconstructed Saturday by a kinetic wunderkind yielding space-age technology. Justin Thomas, all 5-foot-10 and 160 pounds of him, didn’t even need the longest club in his bag to bludgeon the closing holes of this 7,818-yard course. His 9-under 63, which set the record for lowest score in relation to par at a U.S. Open, will be remembered for three 3-wood shots he hit on the back nine Saturday. He drove the 288-yard, par-4 15th with that fairway wood (but missed the 6-foot eagle putt), then hit that same club twice to carry his ball onto the green of the 667-yard, par-5 18th. He stood in the final fairway, debating between hooking a 2-iron into the green or hitting a high, cut 3-wood. He settled on the 3-wood because a mishit would leave him an easier recovery shot. The fans cheered when he cast aside the iron in favor of the lumber. His ball carried more than 290 yards in the air before landing softly on the putting surface and rolling 8 feet past the hole. He made the putt to cap his record round. “I was hitting a 3-wood to lay-up, and he wasn’t that far ahead of me,� said his playing partner, Jonathan Randolph. “I knew he could get it there. I didn’t know he could hit it that high and that soft.� Thomas made nine birdies, an eagle and two bogeys Saturday, and finished the round with four consecutive 3s. A par at No. 16 and 26-foot birdie putt on the 17th were sandwiched between his impressive showings on 15 and 18. “I was in a great zone out there,� Thomas said. “I was hitting it well, I was putting it well, I had some great up-and-downs. Everything has been flowing. I’m sure once I sit down and relax tonight it will maybe set in a little bit more.� We’ve already seen several scoring records broken at a soft Erin Hills, but Thomas’ brought the most excitement to the tournament as it allowed him to break free from a crowded leaderboard. There were sometimes a half-dozen players tied for the lead Saturday before Thomas pulled away. He was two strokes ahead when he walked off the golf course, but will start Sunday’s final round one shot behind leader Brian Harman. “The finish was awesome,� Thomas said. “I’d love to have another one of those.� If he does, he could walk away with his first major title. There will be lighter traffic on the leaderboard Sunday, as only six players will be within three strokes of Brian Harman’s lead. Erin Hills, with wide fairways that are unprecedented for a U.S. Open, has allowed players to mash drivers like Mike Trout. It’s a perfect fit for Thomas, one of the most violent swingers on the PGA TOUR. His ability to generate so much distance from his small frame has been the topic of several magazine instructional articles, as if an average player could hope to make solid contact by replicating an impact position that sends Thomas onto his tippy-toes. He’d only managed to shoot 2 under par in the first two rounds at Erin Hills, though. His first-round 73 included a triple-bogey on the par-4 eighth hole and left him on the cut line. He shot 69 in the second round, but still started Saturday six shots off the lead. He’s No. 2 in the FedExCup thanks to three victories this season, including a record-setting performance at the Sony Open in Hawaii. He eagled the final hole of his first-round 59 at Waialae Country Club, then set or tied the PGA TOUR’s 36-hole and 54-hole scoring records before breaking the 72-hole record. The U.S. Open would be the 24-year-old’s biggest, of course, and not only because of the significance of winning one of golf’s Grand Slam events. The final round of the U.S. Open traditionally falls on Father’s Day, and Thomas’ dad, Mike, has been integral part of his golf career. He’s the head pro at Harmony Landing in Goshen, Kentucky, and his son’s longtime instructor. Mike’s dedication to his work meant that his Father’s Days weren’t spent watching his national championship from the couch, though. “My Father’s Day tradition was working 10-12 hours at the club, for our big Parent-Child tournament,� Mike said. “This one was going to be good as soon as he made the cut. I get to spend the day with my son. That’s good enough for me.� The Thomases are a family with a long golf lineage. Justin’s grandfather, Paul, also was a club professional. He competed in one of the most memorable U.S. Opens in history, the 1962 affair at Oakmont. Paul missed the cut, bowing out before young Jack Nicklaus defeated Arnold Palmer in a playoff. Now Paul’s grandson has cemented his name in the championship’s record book. The golf ball from Saturday’s round will need to find a home alongside the other memorabilia in Harmony Landing’s pro shop that commemorates Justin’s success The front counter’s display case holds flags and gloves and other memorabilia that highlight the many accomplishments of Thomas’ decorated career. There are also more than 10 dozen golf balls, one from each of Thomas’ victories dating to his earliest days. A major trophy would undoubtedly make a nice addition.

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