2022 WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play Thursday matches, tee times, how to watch

Everything you need to know for Thursday’s matches in Austin.

The PGA Tour has made its way to the Lone Star State. Who’s ready for some match play?

The bracket is packed with most of the world’s best players at this week’s 2022 World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play at Austin Country Club in Austin, Texas. A whopping 63 of the world’s top 69 players, including defending champion Billy Horschel, on site.

The last man in the field, Maverick McNealy, showed that he belongs as he took care of Joaquin Niemann, 8 and 6, in their opening match. Kevin Kisner continued to show he’s one of the best match play players in the world, beating Marc Leishman 4 and 3. In one of the best matches of the day Wednesday, Matthew Fitzpatrick defeated Tommy Fleetwood 1 up.

Here’s everything you need to know for Thursday’s second day of matches at the 2022 WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play. All times Eastern.

Thursday matches, tee times

Time Players
10:20 a.m. Louis Oosthuizen vs. Corey Conners
10:31 a.m. Paul Casey vs. Alex Noren
10:42 a.m. Xander Schauffele vs. Lucas Herbert
10:53 a.m. Tony Finau vs. Takumi Kanaya
11:04 a.m. Abraham Ancer vs. Brian Harman
11:15 a.m. Webb Simpson vs. Bubba Watson
11:26 a.m. Collin Morikawa vs. Sergio Garcia
11:37 a.m. Jason Kokrak vs. Robert MacIntyre
11:48 a.m. Billy Horschel vs. Tom Hoge
11:59 a.m. Thomas Pieters vs. Min Woo Lee
12:10 p.m. Scottie Scheffler vs. Tommy Fleetwood
12:21 p.m. Matt Fitzpatrick vs. Ian Poulter
12:32 p.m. Tyrrell Hatton vs. Si Woo Kim
12:43 p.m. Daniel Berger vs. Christiaan Bezuidenhout
12:54 p.m. Patrick Cantlay vs. Seamus Power
1:05 p.m. Sungjae Im vs. Keith Mitchell
1:16 p.m. Bryson DeChambeau vs. Lee Westwood
1:27 p.m. Talor Gooch vs. Richard Bland
1:38 p.m. Dustin Johnson vs. Matthew Wolff
1:49 p.m. Max Homa vs. Mackenzie Hughes
2 p.m. Brooks Koepka vs. Harold Varner III
2:11 p.m. Shane Lowry vs. Erik van Rooyen
2:22 p.m. Jon Rahm vs. Cameron Young
2:33 p.m. Patrick Reed vs. Sebastián Muñoz
2:44 p.m. Jordan Spieth vs. Justin Rose
2:55 p.m. Adam Scott vs. Keegan Bradley
3:06 p.m. Justin Thomas vs. Marc Leishman
3:17 p.m. Kevin Kisner vs. Luke List
3:28 p.m. Joaquin Niemann vs. Russell Henley
3:39 p.m. Kevin Na vs. Maverick McNealy
3:50 p.m. Viktor Hovland vs. Cameron Tringale
4:01 p.m. Will Zalatoris vs. Sepp Straka

Format

The field of 64 players has been split into 16 groups of four players. Players face everyone within their group in match play Wednesday,Thursday and Friday and earn one point for a win and a half point for a tie. The player with the most points in each group moves on to the knockout rounds. The group tiebreaker is sudden-death stroke play.

The Round of 16 and quarterfinal matches are Saturday, followed by the semifinal, third-place and final matches Sunday.

How to watch

You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTVESPN+ is the exclusive home for PGA Tour Live streaming. All times Eastern.

Thursday, March 24

TV

Golf Channel: 2-8 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 2-8 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 10:15 a.m.-8 p.m.
NBCsports.com and NBC Sports app: 2-8 p.m.

Friday, March 25

TV

Golf Channel: 2-8 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 2-8 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m.
NBCsports.com and NBC Sports app: 2-8 p.m.

Saturday, March 26

TV

Golf Channel: 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
NBC:
2-6 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 10 a.m.-6 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 8:30 a.m.-2 p.m.
NBCsports.com and NBC Sports app: 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Peacock: 2-6 p.m.

Sunday, March 27

TV

Golf Channel: 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
NBC: 
3-7 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 11 a.m.-7 p.m.
NBCsports.com and NBC Sports app: 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Peacock: 3-7 p.m.

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Quirky first day of WGC-Match Play features romp by Maverick McNealy, the last man in after late WD

“I said I really hope I get a chance to play because I love the way (the course) looks.”

Maverick McNealy was at home in Las Vegas last week clinging to hope he would get into the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play.

After traveling to Texas on Sunday in case he would get in, McNealy got a call Monday night that he was in when Sam Burns, who won last week’s Valspar Invitational, withdrew.

Then McNealy made quick work of Joaquin Niemann in Wednesday’s opening round of pool play at Austin Country Club. McNealy won five of the first seven holes and closed out Niemann, who won the Genesis Invitational earlier this year, on the 12th hole. The 8 and 6 win matched the largest margin of victory in a match since the event moved to Austin in 2016.

“It suits my eye,” McNealy said of the course. “I noticed that immediately when I got out here on Sunday evening, before I was in the field, and I said I really hope I get a chance to play because I love the way it looks.”

WGC-Match Play: Yardage book | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

McNealy’s match wasn’t the lone peculiar one of the 32 played on the Pete Dye-designed course. So it goes with match play.

Back spasms forced Paul Casey to concede his match to Corey Connors after two holes. Jordan Spieth didn’t take his first lead until the 16th hole in his 2 up win over Keegan Bradley. Justin Thomas never led and lost 3 and 2 to Luke List, who won the Farmers Insurance Open in January.

Viktor Hovland made seven birdies but hit three balls into the water and had two three-putts before pulling out a 1 up win over Sepp Straka. Louis Oosthuizen made seven birdies and lost, 2 and 1, to Alex Noren.

And Adam Scott said he won a “pillow match” against Justin Rose. One hole summed up the match – Rose hit his tee shot on the par-3 17th into an unplayable area, took a penalty drop but then holed his shot from the drop area 98 yards away for a par to halve the hole. He lost the final hole with a bogey.

“We gave each other a lot of holes, certainly nothing for me to brag about,” Scott said after his 2-up win. “We played a lot of golf with each other over the years and we certainly didn’t have our best stuff today. But obviously, I’m happy to squeak out a point and kind of keep my hopes alive for the next couple days.”

Kevin Kisner tees off during the first round of the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Erich Schlegel-USA TODAY Sports

What did seem normal was Kevin Kisner, who won the 2019 title and was second in 2018. He won his 17th match at Austin Country Club, the most of any player, by never trailing in a 4 and 3 win against Marc Leishman.

“Just trying to be really annoying,” Kisner said of his match play DNA. “When you’re really annoying it can get under their skin. I don’t have the most firepower but never give a hole away is kind of my MO, and that’s what I love about this golf course, is I can chase the ball out there in the fairways and hole a few putts.”

The second round of pool play continues Thursday. After Friday’s action, the field will be trimmed to 16 players and single elimination will begin Saturday.

And the last player into the field, McNealy, who would have played in the opposite-field Corales Puntacana Championship in the Dominican Republic this week if he hadn’t gotten into the Match Play, got off to a great start in his first WGC start.

“The game feels great,” he said. “I was itching to play. If I hadn’t gotten in this field I would have been really fired up and wanting to go play great down there and make it in every tournament I wanted to play.”

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Bryson DeChambeau’s first drive back on PGA Tour at 2022 WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play ended up in a tent

DeChambeau’s first swing of the day went painfully right.

He’s back.

Bryson DeChambeau is making his first start on the PGA Tour since the Farmers Insurance Open in January after working through injuries to his left hand and hip.

Wednesday is the first set of matches of this week’s 2022 WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play in Austin, Texas, and DeChambeau drew Richard Bland, who’s making his first appearance in the event and averages 292 yards off the tee at 49-years-old.

Well, on the first tee, DeChambeau pulled driver on the par-4 and flared it out to the right. After taking a few bounces, his ball ended up in a tent.

Just how he drew it up.

WGC-Match Play: Yardage book | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

If you remember, Rory McIlroy put a ball in someone’s pool at this event last season.

After taking a free drop, DeChambeau scrambled to make bogey and halve the hole.

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NASCAR driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr. loves his golf but his ‘driving’ needs some work

Stenhouse is a two-time winner of the “Golf Guys Tour,” which includes as many as 24 other NASCAR drivers.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr.’s tee shot barely missed the fairway on the fifth hole at Austin Country Club, but he scrambled to make a par.

He may not have been a match for his playing partner, PGA Tour standout Marc Leishman. Unlike the 38-year-old Australian, who is competing in the World Golf Championship-Dell Technologies Match Play tournament that starts Wednesday, Stenhouse was just happy to be here. He’s always happy to be anywhere there’s a golf course.

He was away from his day job as a long-time NASCAR driver but couldn’t wait to come to ACC to play six holes with Leishman.

NASCAR met the PGA Tour on Tuesday without any crashes on hairpin turns and only a bogey here and there. The left-handed Stenhouse is no weekend hacker, carrying a single handicap and having played as a freshman on his high school golf team in Mississippi.

Leishman and other PGA golfers Talor Gooch and Abraham Ancer had planned to head out to the Circuit of the Americas track in southeast Austin.

WGC-Match Play: Matches to watch | Yardage book

They were going to be treated to rides in Stenhouse’s Chevy Camaro before taking a few golf shots off the steep Turn 1 at the track. Talk about your elevated tee boxes.

“I’m looking forward to it,” said Leishman, who has six career PGA Tour wins and is ranked 42nd in the world with six career PGA Tour wins. “I wouldn’t say I’m a massive race car fan, but I enjoy watching it.”

Stenhouse watches all the golf he can and was considering heading to Augusta to catch a round at this year’s Masters in two weeks.

The 34-year-old NASCAR racer who drives the No. 47 Chevy in Sunday’s EchoPark Texas Grand Prix at COTA, took a turn — a slightly less dangerous one than his regular gig but no less challenging — at golf. He’s got a decent enough short game, but his driving could use some work.

He’s not exactly unfamiliar with the sport. He usually plays up to 30 rounds in a year but one year squeezed in 60.

“My index is a 3.0,” Stenhouse said.

He’s always had an affinity for the game since his playing days for his DeSoto Central High School team in Olive Branch, Mississippi. He once shot a 71 at the Desert Mountain course in Phoenix, but he’s still looking for that elusive first hole-in-one.

He absolutely loves the sport and might have stuck with it if his father hadn’t taken him aside and told him to pick one. Golf or racing.

“I picked racing,” he said.

Match Play on the move? The PGA Tour hopes not.

It was a fortuitous choice as he’s been driving in the NASCAR series for 10 years with two career wins at Daytona and Talladega. Just last weekend he was leading in the last NASCAR Cup Series event at the Atlanta Motor Speedway until he blew out a tire and left the race after the ensuing wreck.

But his passion for golf has never wavered. In fact, he’s so engrossed with the second sport that he and two dozen other NASCAR drivers have put together their own golf league and compete for big prize money.

Well, relatively big.

“I’ve won our league twice,” Stenhouse said. “How much did I make? Close to eight grand. … I guess I’m not an amateur golfer anymore.”

He and as many as 24 of his fellow racers, including NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Larson and Denny Hamlin, are avid golfers and lock heads in their “Golf Guys Tour” at least once a month. Both he and Larson have won their own golf league twice. They were set to fly out to Charlotte for a league round on Wednesday before returning to Austin.

“Yeah, we’re pretty serious,” Stenhouse said. “We’ve even got a rules committee and meetings.”

Their league includes all manners of handicaps including a few with an index of 24 or higher. Stenhouse said Larson quit the golf league for a time, devoted his free days to dirt racing, but the allure of golf was too great and brought him back.

The golf provides a much-needed escape from the pressures of his real job and some camaraderie with his fellow drivers like Hamlin and Danny Hemric.

“It allows me to clear my mind,” Stenhouse said. “I can leave my phone in the bag and just kind of relax.”

Before he’s back in his Chevy calmly racing at 200 mph and negotiating turns while weaving in and out of traffic, kind of like Mo-Pac at rush hour.

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Scottie Scheffler has changed little at all after two victories, his bank account aside

“Life off the course is still pretty much the same for me,” said the man who has won more than $3.6 million this year.

Winning has clearly changed Scottie Scheffler.

He’s pocketed more than $3.6 million after winning both his first and second PGA Tour events in his career in Phoenix and Bay Hill.

So he’s splurged.

“Lots of chips and queso,” he cracked Tuesday afternoon.

And that’s about it. Tex-Mex enchiladas aside, Scheffler ain’t changing a damn thing. He knows what works for him and sticks to that routine. He’s very plain-spoken, not given to excess in his game or his personality.

Scheffler’s about as unflappable as they come and an immense talent, which goes a long way in explaining why he found the winner’s circle on the Tour twice and flirted with three major championships in just his third full year.

But when he was pressed to name any outlandish luxury he splurged on since his great financial windfall, he admitted he’s not much for extravagance.

In fact, he still drives his father’s old 2012 Yukon, well over 180,000 miles on the odometer notwithstanding.

WGC-Match Play: Matches to watch | Yardage book

And why does he still drive the car he drove in high school at ritzy Highland Park, of all places, and at the University of Texas when he’s already cashed in $5.3 million on the Tour behind only Players Championship winner Cam Smith’s $5.8 million this year?

“It runs,” he said.

The 25-year-old Dallas native is a bottom-line kind of guy. Whatever works. And this approach has definitely worked in his favor in his results-based profession because he eventually broke through in his third full season on the Tour and finished first in his 65th career tournament, capturing the Waste Management Phoenix Open. Three weeks later, he won the Arnold Palmer Invitational for his second victory in three starts.

Tom Kite can relate.

The unofficial host for the World Golf Championship-Dell Technologies Match Play tournament remembers the relief he felt when he finally won his first Tour event much later than he anticipated. It took him four years before he won in Philadelphia in 1976, and even though he’d go on to win 18 more tournaments, including a U.S. Open, in a Hall of Fame career, “it was a relief.”

“I thought I’d win in Year One,” Kite said. “Certainly in Year Two. I was sure I’d win in Year Three. I finally did. And then it took me another year and a half until I won my second.”

Even with the long wait, Kite said he never ever thought he couldn’t win on the Tour.

“I never doubted myself,” he said. “Eventually it happened.”

Same for Scheffler. Change anything? Forget it.

“Not really,” he said. “Life off the course is still pretty much the same for me.”

And why change? He’s got both the temperament and the touch to complete an all-around spectacular game with both power and precision and enters his second crack at the Dell Match Play as the No. 5 player in the world. He’ll tee off at 12:30 Wednesday afternoon against Ian Poulter, a match play master.

Yeah, it’s a far cry from the end of 2018 when he sat at No. 1,589 in the official world golf rankings.

He won on the Korn Ferry Tour, exploded onto the PGA Tour scene and did so well on the stage he was an at-large selection to the U.S. Ryder Cup team. Had to be completely in awe and intimidated by the aura of the event at Whistling Straits, right?

Hardly.

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As a potentially risky captain’s pick over Patrick Reed or Sam Burns, a nonplussed Scheffler produced 2 1/2 points for the winning American team in an expert pairing with him and Bryson DeChambeau. He sank the pivotal 16-foot putt to defeat Tommy Fleetwood and Viktor Hovland, chest-bumping his partner in celebration afterwards, which is news-breaking stuff for a player who’s slightly less stoic than any of the presidents on Mount Rushmore.

We’ve even learned he cried after captain Steve Stricker phoned him to tell him he’s on the team. Next thing we know he’ll be performing on “Dancing with the Stars.”

In head-to-head singles play in the Ryder Cup when the Americans routed the Europeans 19-9, Scheffler took on undefeated Jon Rahm, currently the best player in the world, in the first match of the day Sunday. Scottie’s heart rate might not have even registered. Scheffler smoked him, winning the first four holes en route to a 4-and-3 victory.

Now after playing as a rookie at the Masters and in the Ryder Cup, Scheffler almost expects to win.

He admits he feels more prepared to win a major now after having cut his teeth in them. He’s played in nine majors, made the cut in seven and already has posted four top 10 finishes. Three of those came last year in the PGA Championship, U.S. Open and British Open.

“I will say that, yeah,” he said of being better prepared. “I always felt like I could (win a tournament), but once you accomplish that goal, it’s a little bit different. Mistakes definitely don’t weigh on me as much as they had in the past.”

Others agree.

“Scottie is an unbelievable talent,” said Billy Horschel, the defending Dell champion who held off Scheffler 2 and 1 to win in the final. “He’s going to win a lot of tournaments. I thought he would have done it quicker, but he’s a next-generation talent. I see him winning a major.”

Kite agrees and thinks it may happen sooner or later.

“He’s got major-championship game,” Kite said. “He’s matured.”

And even a less than spectacular game off the tee shouldn’t hurt his chances, not in today’s game.

“You don’t have to drive it straight any more,” Kite said. “You only have to drive it far. Driving it crooked isn’t a weakness any more.”

Just three-plus years later after that low seeding of 1,589th in the rankings, the former Texas All-American has risen to fifth in the world and first in the FedEx Cup standings.

Oh, and he’s gotten married, too, about a year ago. His wife of 15 months, Meredith Scudder, travels with him regularly.

“We get a ton of alone time,” he said. “It’s just the two of us. Feels really like we’re a team. So marriage for me has been awesome.”

You see. Nothing much of anything fazes Scottie Scheffler. Expectations. New marriage. Pressure. Majors. Ryder Cup.

He’s bulletproof.

That said, it’s clear he’s much more at ease in the media center, much more quick to smile, much more relaxed and even willing to crack a joke or two.

And Kite, for one, expects so many more victories to come for Scheffler.

“Yeah, he’s doing OK,” he said. “I think he’s able to afford dinner.”

Tex-Mex for sure, maybe with extra guacamole. Heck, he might even splurge.

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Will WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play move away from Austin Country Club? It’s a possibility the PGA Tour is hoping to avoid.

Some members of the Austin Country Club don’t want to extend the deal beyond 2023.

AUSTIN, Texas — Will this be the second-to-last World Golf Championship-Dell Technologies Match Play tournament at the Austin Country Club?

Some at the ACC think so because the contract between the club and the PGA Tour expires after the 2023 event and more than a few of the 650 members don’t want to extend it. No negotiations have begun on contract talks.

“I understand that some don’t like it,” one ACC member said, citing the four weeks the course is shut down for overseeing and tournament preparation. “There’s the inconvenience factor and not just the four weeks but the construction going on. Some of them don’t abide by golf etiquette, and some people lose their minds over it. But I do think they have a chance (to re-up).”

So does Jordan Uppleger, the tournament’s executive director, who said he believes there’s still a solid chance the partnership is renewed sometime this year. Told there were rumors that the Dell tourney might move to the Barton Creek Country Club, Upplegger said, “That’s bull. There’s nothing to it. Our goal is to keep it at Austin Country Club. We’re bound and determined to make it happen. Our stance is that extending it is important, and we’ve not looked at other sites.”

WGC-Match Play: Matches to watch | Yardage book

2021 WGC - Dell Technologies Match Play
Bryson DeChambeau hits his approach on No. 12 during the second day of the 2021 WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play at Austin Country Club. The Pennybacker Bridge, one of the signature landmarks of Austin, spans Lake Austin in the background. (Photo: Erich Schlegel-USA TODAY Sports)

It’s hard to believe the Tour is not looking for a Plan B, like Barton Creek or the Hills of Lakeway or another city. Uppleger did allow that there’s “a subset of members who don’t like it, but a lot of people do. And they’re not as vocal. It’s fair to say some older members oppose it.”

But he insists the event has made an indelible mark on Austin, including $5 million in charity donations since 2015, honors the legacy of Harvey Penick and offers great entertainment for members and their kids with a growing younger demographic that could overtake the older set.

One member estimated at most half the membership is over the age of 50, the contingent most opposed to the tournament.

“That younger demographic sees the lasting impact it made. I’d add the membership support for this tournament is better than any other tournament on the Tour.”

That said, the PGA Tour would be wise to give each member two tickets with the option to buy more instead of no free tickets. That would buy a lot of goodwill and might grease the chances for another extension. Currently, members have the option of buying eight tickets at $730.69 apiece.

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2022 WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play: Five matches worth watching on Wednesday

Five matches you don’t want to miss on Wednesday.

The world’s best players are bound for Austin, Texas, for a unique stop on the men’s professional golf schedule.

Austin Country Club plays host to the 2022 World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play once again this week, and with eight of the top-12 players in the world (as well as 63 of the top 69) set to compete, there are some matches that stand out among the rest.

Wednesday’s slate alone features a pair of Ryder Cup dogs, a major championship clash, a battle for Southern Californian supremacy and a potential Presidents Cup preview.

Check out the top five opening day matches to watch in Austin.

WGC-Match Play: Wednesday tee times | Odds and picks | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

Filling out the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play bracket, previewing the week in Austin, and more

This week on the Twilight 9 podcast: Filling out the Match Play bracket, best bets, picks, and more

After weather dominated the Players Championship, the week we just had in Tampa, Florida, was wonderful and ended on time Sunday afternoon — kinda.

Sam Burns was able to take down PGA Tour rookie Davis Riley in a playoff to claim his second-straight Valspar Championship title and third win in the last 12 months. With his win, Burns decided to take a little vacation before the year’s first men’s major, withdrawing from this week’s WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play, joining Cameron Smith and Rory McIlroy as some of the big names not traveling to Austin.

But, this week on the Twilight 9 podcast, the focus wasn’t on the Snake Pit, it was on the March Madness-like bracket that was announced Monday. So many stacked groups, so many options, and we ran through them all.

On the show, we went through each group, chose a winner, and continued until we had a champion — and that name might shock you.

We also went through our favorite picks for the week, including Max Homa claiming Group 8.

Follow Twilight 9: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Google Podcasts

Highlights include:

6:08: Viktor Hovland is becoming the king on content
14:20: No Phil Mickelson at the Masters
25:00: WGC-Dell Match Play preview
30:25: Best bets and picks
38:10: Filling out the bracket

Follow the guys on Twitter: Riley | Andy

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2022 WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play odds, best bets and PGA Tour picks

With four straight top 20s entering the week, can Max Homa work his way through group 8?

Can you smell that? How ’bout feel it? Yes, the first men’s major championship of the year is within shouting distance, and it’s going to be hard to wait another two weeks for the Masters.

But before the players take that special drive down Magnolia Lane, it’s time to head to Austin, Texas, for the WGC-Dell Match Play.

Several of the game’s biggest names, including Rory McIlroy, Sam Burns, and recent Players champion Cameron Smith, are not in the field this week. However, after a layoff stemming back to the Farmers Insurance Open, Bryson DeChambeau is one of the 64 names in this week’s March Madness type bracket.

Golf course: Yardage book for Austin Country Club

Key statistics

Strokes Gained: Approach: Pete Dye design? It’s probably good to start with iron play.

Putting: Bermuda: There’s a reason why Kevin Kisner seems to reach the final four of this event every year. When you can consistently make putts that your opponent thinks you’re gonna miss, it’s demoralizing.

Data Golf Information

Course Fit (compares golf courses based on the degree to which different golfer attributes — such as driving distance — to predict who performs well at each course – DataGolf): 1. Harbour Town Golf Links (home of the RBC Heritage), 2. Colonial Country Club (home of the Charles Schwab), 3. Sea Island GC (Plantation)

Trending: 1. Justin Thomas (last three starts: 6, T-33, T-3), 2. Scottie Scheffler (T-7, 1, T-55), 3. Matt Fitzpatrick (T-9, MC, T-5)

Percent chance to win (based on course history, fit, trending, etc.): 1. Jon Rahm (5.1 percent), 2. Justin Thomas (4.8 percent), 3. Viktor Hovland (3.5 percent)

Latest Twilight 9 podcast episode

Like golf? How about two idiots talking PGA Tour, golf betting, and everything in-between? Oh, and a lot of laughs along the way. Listen to the Twilight 9 podcast!

Follow the Twilight 9 Podcast:
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Betting odds

Odds provided by Tipico Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds a full list.

Player Odds
Jon Rahm (+1300)
Justin Thomas (+1500)
Scottie Scheffler (+1500)
Viktor Hovland (+1500)
Dustin Johnson (+2000)
Patrick Cantlay (+2000)
Xander Schauffele (+2000)
Collin Morikawa (+2000)
Paul Casey (+3000)
Louis Oosthuizen (+3000)

Betting card for the 2022 WGC Dell Match Play

Last week’s results: Valspar Championship

Viktor Hovland – Top 10: Miss
Louis Oosthuizen – Top 20:
Miss
Matthew Fitzpatrick – Top 20:
Cash (+170)
Shane Lowry – Top 20:
Cash (+130)
Jason Kokrak – Top 20:
Miss
Russell Knox – Top 20:
Miss
Kevin Kisner – Top 20:
Miss

Down two units on positions plays, six units on outrights at Valspar.

Up 16.69 units on position plays, and up 31.5 units on outright plays in 2022.

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Don’t call it a funk: Collin Morikawa insists recent putting blips are no big worry heading into WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play

“You put it as a funk; I put it as a learning experience,” Morikawa said.

AUSTIN, Texas — We should all be so lucky to have bumps in the road as smooth as the ones Collin Morikawa has recently traversed.

Yes, the five-time PGA Tour winner has slipped a little in recent weeks, but from what? The University of California star opened the 2021-22 PGA Tour season by placing in the top seven in the first five events he played, including a pair of runner-up finishes at the CJ Cup and the Genesis Invitational. So the bar was high, to say the least.

But Morikawa did miss the cut at the Players Championship, something he’s only done seven times as a PGA Tour pro, and struggled to a T-68 at the Valspar Championship last week.

So what’s created this mini-funk of sorts, one that’s seen him slip from the top of the last two leaderboards?

“You put it as a funk; I put it as a learning experience,” Morikawa said Tuesday in advance of this week’s WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play at Austin Country Club. “What’s weird about the past couple weeks from Players and Valspar is that I felt some of the best golf I had felt warming up and getting ready for the tournament. But then there are just like little pieces that when I actually tee it up on Thursday that I’m missing from when I compare it to a really good round or a really good tournament.

“It’s so frustrating because I feel like I can hit all those shots but then they’re just not put together.”

Collin Morikawa of the United States reacts to chipping in for an eagle on the third hole during the third round of the Hero World Challenge at Albany Golf Course on December 04, 2021, in Nassau. (Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

Morikawa mentioned that his putter has let him down a bit in recent weeks, but he’s certainly not overly concerned about overhauling anything. In fact, he thinks this week’s match-play format might allow him to get more aggressive with the putter.

But either way, don’t call it a funk. He’s still the second-ranked player in the world, and enters this event as the second seed.

“I wouldn’t say it’s like a little funk. For me, it’s just making sure I wake up and realize, okay, I can’t take anything for granted out here,” he said. “I have done that in the past, and I hate myself for doing that, but sometimes — this is a little different. This is just not thinking through some shots, not going through the full process of actually doing my due diligence when I’m over the shot.

“In a format like this, I can’t get lazy just because it’s match play. If I miss that putt, that doesn’t mean I just am carefree. I want to go out there and give it all I got and see what happens.”

Morikawa would like to improve on last year’s performance at the event when he was knocked out during the group stage. His feelings when he left Austin last year, now those could be considered a funk.

“It was pretty sad. It was pretty sad. I felt like my game was — playing pretty well. At Players, I didn’t play great, I think a couple weeks before this. And just game still felt fine, showed up, practice rounds were good, and then you get your seed, and I think I went 0-2-1,” Morikawa said. “It’s defeating, but it happens. That’s what match play is, right? You have to be prepared to beat your guy every single day, and I just was giving away way too many mistakes, and in match play you just can’t do that.

“I think the hard thing is you can’t worry about anyone else out there. You can’t worry about, oh, this guy might have shot even and won his match and then I shot 5-under and I lost. All you have is control over what you’re doing and who you’re playing.”

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