Hideki Matsuyama highlights notables to miss cut at Wyndham Championship

The ramifications of missing the cut at the Wyndham Championship on Friday, for some, meant the start of the offseason.

GREENSBORO, N.C. — The ramifications of missing the cut at the Wyndham Championship on Friday, for some, meant the start of the offseason.

Only the top 70 in the season-long FedEx Cup advance to the playoffs next week after 44 regular season events. For Ben Griffin, who entered the week at No. 68, and Austin Eckroat, the “Bubble Boy” at No. 70, they could read the writing on the wall as they struggled to the finish of their morning round in the same threesome.

“The last three holes we tried to determine how many hole-outs we both needed to make the cut, and none of us had a hole-out. I thought I had a good chance of a hole-out on 8,” Griffin said. “But we were joking around towards the end. There’s not much you can do with when you’re four or five out with a few holes to go except try to have fun out there.”

Hope is not completely lost for these two, who will have to sit and wait, hope and pray that they hang on to their precarious rankings. After 36 holes, Griffin still was projected to be Memphis bound at No. 70 while Eckroat is going to need more help as he’s projected to be No. 72.

In all, 74 players moved on to the weekend with a 36-hole total of 2-under 138, including two-time champion Brandt Snedeker, who birdied the final two holes to earn a weekend tee time at 3 under. However, Ben Taylor, Garrick Higgo, K.H. Lee, David Lingmerth, the four players who entered the week Nos. 71-74 in the FedExCup standings, missed the cut and have been eliminated from playoff contention.

Here are some of the notable players this week that weren’t so lucky.

Here are 7 big names who missed the cut at 2023 Rocket Mortgage Classic

This was Thomas’ third missed cut in his last four starts.

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DETROIT – Golf is a fickle game.

One year you hit it on a string like Tony Finau did last year en route to a five-stroke victory. This year? Not so much.

One week, you play well enough to win a major as Hideki Matsuyama and Webb Simpson have done before. This week? They’re exiting early.

One day, you can make birdies galore and shoot 62 like Justin Thomas did last Saturday at the Travelers. This week? Thomas made fewer birdies combined in two days work and is hitting the road.

But 84 of 156 golfers shot at least 4-under 140 for 36 holes at Detroit Golf Club and are sticking around for the weekend to see if they can claim a PGA Tour title at the Rocket Mortgage Classic.

Here’s a closer look at some of the notable names that missed the cut this week.

Watch: Playing alongside notorious slow-play hater Brooks Koepka, Brian Stuard waggles forever at Honda Classic

Curious to know what Brooks thought about the pace of play today.

We’ve all been there. Countless swing thoughts fluttering around in our minds that we freeze above the golf ball like looking at the target was equivalent to starring at Medusa herself.

Brian Stuard seemed to have the same problem on No. 9 Saturday at the Honda Classic.

Stuard, who was paired with Brooks Koepka — a player known to trash talk slow play — was getting ready to hit his approach into the green and nothing happened. It was like a record was skipping on a player with the same line repeating over and over again.

Waggle, waggle. Look. Waggle, waggle. It’s honestly tough to watch.

Curious to know what Koepka thought about the pace of play Saturday.

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Brian Stuard leads at the end of start-stop day at Barbasol Championship

Brian Stuard nearly put together a flawless round on a start-stop opening day at the Barbasol Championship.

When the focus turned away from the British Open late Thursday afternoon, it shifted back stateside to Kentucky. Unfortunately, right about the time the first round of the year’s final major was wrapping up, the Barbasol Championship was stalling out.

Two weather delays at Keene Trace Golf Club in Nicholasville, Kentucky, prevented the first round from coming to a tidy close on Thursday, and when darkness stopped play for a third time, some players had as many as six holes left.

At the top of the leaderboard, however, Brian Stuard had managed to get in a full round. He came out of the gate with five birdies in his first six holes and had a perfect round going until he got to No. 18, where he made his only bogey of the day. He finished with an 8-under 64 and leads by one shot.

“I think it’s one of those courses where you feel like if you kind of get it going, you can make some birdies,” he said of Keene Trace. “The greens are rolling great and they’re soft, so you can attack. Like you said, it’s just one that you know you’ve got to make a bunch of birdies and just try to have at it.”

That’s a good thing considering that 2019 Barbasol champ Jim Herman won at 26 under. Last year’s tournament fell victim to COVID-19.

“It was a good start, but in all honesty, it doesn’t really mean much,” Stuard said of the round. “I need three more good rounds to put myself in contention, I guess. It’s nice to start off well. Yeah, I need three more, so just got to keep going.”

The chasers are plenty. Eight men stand at 7 under, with three of them still needing to finish the first round: Patrick Rodgers, Will Grimmer and Stephen Stallings Jr.

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James Hahn, playing close to his childhood home, shares 54-hole lead at Safeway Open

NAPA, Calif. – James Hahn has a secret advantage at this week’s Safeway Open. He’s sleeping at his childhood home in Alameda, a suburb of Oakland, where his parents moved to from South Korea when he was 2 years old. “Bought it for dirt cheap and …

NAPA, Calif. – James Hahn has a secret advantage at this week’s Safeway Open. He’s sleeping at his childhood home in Alameda, a suburb of Oakland, where his parents moved to from South Korea when he was 2 years old.

“Bought it for dirt cheap and it’s worth a lot more now,” he said. “But it’s good because I have my family there and the last thing I want to do is be alone in a hotel room having a million thoughts go through my mind and try to play out all the scenarios. It’s easier just to watch – what were we watching the other day? – some Peppa Pig with my daughter. You know, most guys don’t have that luxury of watching Peppa Pig, but I do.”

Hahn, 38, has been making the hour-long drive to Silverado Resort and Spa and he’ll have a late tee time on Sunday after shooting a bogey-free 6-under 66 on the North Course to share the 54-hole lead with Cameron Percy and Brian Stuard at 16-under 200.

Hahn’s father leased the driving range at Galbraith Golf Course from the city of Oakland – the facility later was renovated by Johnny Miller and re-named Metropolitan Golf Links – and it’s where Hahn took up the game at age 4 and developed his homespun swing through trial and error.

Hahn played his college golf at Cal-Berkeley but despite enjoying the Northern California hospitality, the Safeway Open has never been good to him: He missed the 54-hole cut last year, the 36-hole cut twice, making a T-41 in 2015 his best result in four previous starts.

“My wife said a couple weeks ago, ‘Why do you go to Silverado?’ I go, ‘Why not? I go see my family, it’s a great golf tournament, love supporting the local events.’ She said, ‘You never played well there, why would you want to play there?’ ” Hahn recounted. “It might have a little to do with low expectations and coming out here and finally seeing the breaks and seeing the putts go in. I think that has a lot to do with it.”

SAFEWAY OPEN: Leaderboard | Tee times, TV info

It didn’t hurt that Hahn made three of his five birdies on the par-3s during the third round.

“I mean, those par 3s are tough out there. The one that I didn’t birdie was hole 7. I skanked a 4-iron to 25 feet and hit a great putt,” he said.

Hahn has won twice previously on Tour, most recently at the 2016 Wells Fargo Championship. He’s playing this week on a major-medical exemption after being sidelined for eight months in 2019 with an elbow injury. Hahn has 14 starts remaining to retain his playing privileges, which could create added pressure, but doesn’t seem to be bothering Hahn one bit.

“It’s the same as trying to win a golf tournament, I can tell you that, because you’ve heard it before, winning takes care of itself. It takes care of a lot of problems,” he said. “You know, the medical is just something in the back of my mind, to be honest with you. I come out every week trying to win a golf tournament, so if I can keep my focus there, I think I’m doing things right.”

Hahn will have his hands full on Sunday as 28 golfers are within four strokes of the lead, ranging from 18-year-old Akshay Bhatia to a pair of 40-somethings in Percy, one of the co-leaders, and Stewart Cink, 47, who birdied six of the first eight holes en route to shooting 65 and trails by two strokes. Cink hasn’t won since the 2009 British Open playoff over Tom Watson, but said, “I remember what it’s like. I mean, it was 11 years ago when I won The Open Championship, but I feel like it was yesterday. I remember that day, after it was all said and done, looking back and thinking I really didn’t do anything all that special today, I was just myself and that’s the key.”

Stuard, 37, has one Tour title at the 2016 Zurich Classic of New Orleans. He reeled off three birdies in a row starting at the third and canned a 7-foot birdie at 18 to cap off a 66. Stuard is riding a hot putter this week – he ranks fifth in Strokes Gained: Putting – into the final round.

“I feel like if I drive it well tomorrow and, you know, get the putter rolling, then we’ll see,” he said.

Percy, 46, has never won on the Tour, coming closest when he lost a playoff when Jonathan Byrd made an ace to claim victory in Las Vegas in 2010. He was the first player in the field to get to 16 under when he canned a 32-foot birdie putt at No. 10, but he required two late birdies to cancel out two bogeys coming home.

What would victory mean to the Australian journeyman pro?

“It would mean the world to me. Yeah, it would be fantastic,” he said. “It would mean I get to go to Augusta, which is a goal. I’ve never been to Augusta, which is the biggest goal you have when you come over here. I just thought I’d get there, I haven’t got there yet, so it’s a big deal.”

Sam Burns, the 36-hole leader, struggled to shoot 72, and shares fourth with Harry Higgs (70) and Kristoffer Ventura (66); all three are seeking their first Tour title.

Russell Knox, who along with Mark Anderson has played bogey-free this week, leads a group of five golfers at 14 under. Sahith Theegala, playing on a sponsor exemption and making just his fourth Tour start as a professional, surged into contention by shooting 64 to get to 13 under.

Phil Mickelson (T-43) won’t be part of the trophy hunt on Sunday. He posted consecutive bogey-free rounds for the first time since 2016, but declared his 2-under 70 on Saturday his worst round in three months.

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Rocket Mortgage Classic third round hits and misses

What we liked and didn’t like from the third round action at the Rocket Mortgage Classic in Detroit.

The wind kicked up just a touch, but the scores still kept falling on Saturday during the third round of the PGA Tour’s Rocket Mortgage Classic at Detroit Golf Club.

No player put us on a 59 watch, but 21-year-old rising star Matthew Wolff gave everyone a lesson with his second straight round of 8-under 64, putting him at 19-under and atop the leaderboard entering Sunday’s final round. That gave the former Oklahoma State star a three-shot lead over Bryson DeChambeau and Ryan Armour.

Wolff wasn’t the only player to make some noise on Saturday. Here are the hits and misses from the third round.


Leaderboard | Live blog | Photos


Hit: Wesley Bryan

He put himself into contention with an early 65 that got him to 13 under. If you don’t know who Bryan is, you should. The 2017 RBC Heritage winner is the kind of fun player golf needs. He’s capable of epic smack talk during a round and he and his brother, George, have an awesome YouTube channel, Bryan Bros, where they perform crazy trick shots. It’ll be hard not to root for him.

Hit: Bryson DeChambeau

Clearly he was hurt by me assigning him a fake “miss” after the second round in order to spur him on. DeChambeau birdied two of his first four holes then went cold until he birdied the 13th and 14th. He almost drove the 399-yard green on the 13th. His second straight 67 wasn’t bad. At 16 under, he’s easily within striking distance of Wolff. But he could be running away with this thing. How a guy with this kind of power and talent doesn’t go full Tiger Woods on the field every week completely puzzles me.

Miss: Webb Simpson

The world’s sixth-ranked player shot 64 in the second round and was in position to take control of the tournament with a solid round on Saturday. But he struggled to a 1 under 71 on a day when 34 players were 3 under or better, even if there was a little wind. Simpson dropped out of a tie for the lead and is six shots back at 13 under.

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Hit: Ryan Armour

Great shooting by the — ugh — Ohio State graduate, who posted a 67 to put himself in prime position, tied with DeChambeau. Nice job by the … the … Buck … eye. Ugh. Hard to get that out. Wonder if he’ll refer to Detroit Golf Club as “that course up north” if he wins.

Miss: Brian Stuard

Brutal. The former Oakland University golfer from Jackson, Michigan started the round in great position at 9 under, just three shots back. He shot 73 and eliminated any chance of winning. His driver betrayed him. He made three bogeys and a killer double bogey on the par-5 10th hole, when he hit out of one fairway bunker into another. Golf is just mean sometimes.

Hit: Hideki Matsuyama

The world No. 23 had the move of the day when he shot up 42 spots into a tie for 13th when he fired a 65 to reach 12 under. Like world No. 17 Tony Finau, who shot 66, Matsuyama played early and took advantage of the smoother greens.

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Brian Stuard will miss rush of home fans in Rocket Mortgage Classic

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, there are no fans at Detroit Golf Club. That’s something Brian Stuard will miss at the Rocket Mortgage Classic

Former Oakland University standout Brian Stuard’s version of the 2020 Rocket Mortgage Classic is going to look much different this time around.

Encompassed by the COVID-19 pandemic, his new normal isn’t just social distancing, extra hand sanitizer and wearing a face mask — it’s playing in his home state without family and friends cheering for him.

The PGA Tour’s Rocket Mortgage Classic, which begins Thursday at the Detroit Golf Club, isn’t allowing spectators, meaning Stuard’s girlfriend, parents and close pals won’t be able to walk the course, embrace him when his round is complete or take him out for dinner afterward.


Leaderboard | Tee times, TV | Odds | Fantasy picks | By the rankings


“It’s definitely the biggest difference,” the Jackson native said. “I mean, last year was something that I never really experienced before, having that many friends and family be able to watch and support me. It’s going to be a little bit different this year, a little quieter, but it’s still great to be back.”

Stuard, 37, tied for fifth at last year’s event by shooting 17-under-par 271 alongside Patrick Reed and four others. He was given about 100 tickets for his inner circle but, despite the added noise, never felt preoccupied.

This year, he didn’t get any tickets and won’t have the masses shouting his name when he tees off at noon. He’d rather have his family and friends around but also understands there will be fewer personal influences.

“I’m not sure if it will be better or worse for me this week, but last year was something that, like I said, I’ve never experienced that before playing a tournament in Michigan, having that many friends and family there,” Stuard said. “It’s just going to be tough to duplicate that obviously, but that’s kind of the goal, just to hopefully play well again.”

Since golf returned from its COVID-19 pause, Stuard has played in all three Tour events: Charles Schwab Challenge (tied for 43rd), RBC Heritage (tied for 52nd) and Travelers Championship (tied for 20th).

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To succeed at the Rocket Mortgage Classic, he’s focused on accuracy rather than distance off the tee box. He averages 281.4 yards per drive, ranking him No. 215 among his competitors.

“Every fairway’s pretty much tree-lined,” he said. “You would rather be 150 in the fairway than 100 in the trees. I think accuracy is important every week, (but) I think this week is a little more important than some.”

He’s placing value on controlling the ball entering the greens because the surrounding grass is thicker than most courses.

At the 2019 Rocket Mortgage Classic, Stuard’s four-round scores were 66, 72, 65, 68. Nate Lashley won the inaugural event with a 25-under-par 263 to collect $1.3 million.

Stuard’s only Tour victory came in 2016 at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans. In 243 career events, he has two second-place finishes and 19 in the top 10. Three of his top-10 finishes came last season.

He has two top-10 finishes this season, tying for fourth in the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open and tying for 10th in The RSM Classic. He holds 100-1 odds to win this week.

And if Stuard is going to pull off an upset and notch his first victory in four years, he’ll have to do it without family and friends by his side.

“There’s definitely a desire to win again,” he said, “but I’m just trying to do as well as I can each week and hopefully I get a couple more chances to close the deal. But like you said, there’s always that desire to get back in the winner’s circle.”

Evan Petzold is a sports reporting intern at the Detroit Free Press. Contact him at epetzold@gannett.com or follow him on Twitter @EvanPetzold.

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AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am odds, predictions, picks and PGA Tour best bets

Analyzing the golf betting odds to win the 2020 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, with PGA Tour betting odds, picks, predictions and best bets.

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The PGA Tour shifts back to the West Coast for this week’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Dustin Johnson, ranked fifth by the Official World Golf Ranking, leads the field as he’ll tee it up on the mainland for the first time since August’s Tour Championship.

The key stats for the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, which will cycle through Pebble Beach Golf Links, Spyglass Hill Golf Course and Monterey Peninsula Country Club, are:

  • Strokes Gained: Approach
  • Strokes Gained: Around the Green
  • Strokes Gained: Scrambling
  • Birdies Gained
  • Par 4 Scoring: 350-400 Yards
  • Proximity from 125-150 Yards

My model at Fantasy National looks at the most recent 24 rounds on courses shorter than 7,200 yards.

AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am – Tier 1

(Photo Credit: Kyle Terada – USA TODAY Sports)

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Monday at 8 p.m. ET.

Dustin Johnson (+650)

Johnson returns to the USA following a runner-up finish at the European Tour’s Saudi International. He’s back in form following a lengthy injury layoff and a T-7 result at the 30-man Sentry Tournament of Champions in Hawaii to open 2020. He’s a two-time winner of this event and leads the week’s stat model. He scores particularly well on the shorter courses and ranks second in birdies gained.


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Brandt Snedeker (+2200)

Snedeker, the 2015 champ, suffered a rare missed cut at least week’s Waste Management Phoenix Open following a T-3 at the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines. He’s one of the best in the field at putting on the difficult Poa Annua greens, and he’ll benefit from playing the shorter venue.

AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am – Tier 2

(Photo Credit: Mark Konezny – USA TODAY Sports)

Kevin Na (+6600)

Na has played this event just one of the last three years when he finished T-20 in 2018. He missed the cut last week to fall to 28th in the OWGR, but he remains a strong value play in a weaker field. He’s an expert scrambler, and his lack of distance will be mitigated here with none of the three courses topping 7,000 yards.

Kurt Kitayama (+6600)

Kitayama, ranked 68th in the world, will play his first PGA Tour event since the WGC-HSBC Champions in early November. The European Tour regular is coming off a T-6 at the Omega Dubai Desert Classic. His last professional victory was last year’s Oman Open after he won twice in 2018.


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AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am – Longshots

(Photo Credit: Orlando Ramirez – USA TODAY Sports)

Matthew NeSmith (+12500)

NeSmith, 26, will make his debut at this event. He sat out last week’s tournament after a three-event stretch composed of a T-32 at the Sony Open, T-17 at The American Express and a T-30 at the Farmers Insurance Open.

Brian Stuard (+17500)

Stuard ranks 10th by the week’s stat model. He has been strong on approach and around the greens. He’s also fourth in the field in three-putt avoidance on Poa Annua greens. He comes into the week ranked 145th in the world following a missed cut in Phoenix, but this event routinely produces longshot champs.

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Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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RSM Classic odds, predictions, picks and PGA Tour best bets

Analyzing the 2019 RSM Classic and which golfers are the best options for the event. Who will win at Sea Island GC?

The PGA Tour’s final full-field event on the 2019 calendar takes place this week in Glynn County, Ga., at Sea Island Golf Club with the RSM Classic.

The key stats for this week via historical data from Fantasy National are:

  • Strokes Gained: Around-the-Green
  • Strokes Gained: Approach
  • Strokes Gained: Short Game
  • Strokes Gained: Scrambling
  • Par 4 Efficiency: 400-450 Yards

My model looks at the most recent 50 rounds for each golfer in the field.

RSM Classic – Tier 1

Photo Credit: Adam Hagy – USA TODAY Sports

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Tuesday at 1 p.m. ET.

Webb Simpson +900

Simpson is the top golfer in the field with a rank of 12th by the Official World Golf Ranking. He finished solo third here last season and finished T-7 at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in his most recent event. He leads the stat model with top-five ranks in four of the five key stats.

Kevin Kisner +2200

Kisner won at Sea Island in 2015. After missing the cut the following year, he was T-4 in 2017 and T-7 last season. Ranked No. 34 in the world, he’s third in the field in par-4 efficiency from the key distance. He has gained more strokes per round at this venue than anyone other than Simpson (minimum 20 rounds played) since 2010, according to Data Golf.

RSM Classic – Tier 2

Photo Credit: Mark Konezny – USA TODAY Sports

J.T. Poston +5000

Poston missed the cut here each of the last three years, but he’s coming off of a T-24 at the HSBC Champions and T-27 at the Zozo Championship in far stronger fields.


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Brian Stuard +8000

Stuard ranks third by my stat model this week with a top rank of 11th in the field in SG: Around-the-Green. He finished T-23 last week at the Mayakoba Golf Classic and tied for fourth at the Shriners earlier this year.

RSM Classic – Longshots

Photo Credit: Orlando Ramirez – USA TODAY Sports

Luke List +10000

List finished in a tie for fourth last season and tied for 13th in the fall of 2016.

Mackenzie Hughes +15000

The 2016 champion missed the cut each of the last two years, but he’s priced near the bottom of the board with a $10 bet returning a profit of $1500. He missed the cut at the OHL Classic the week before his 2016 victory so his current poor form isn’t a huge concern.

2019-20 winners: Joaquin Niemann – A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier (+2800)

Get some action on this tournament by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @EstenMcLaren and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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