What happens when six PGA Tour players share a house for tournament week?

Cards are played, bets are made, trash is talked and at the end of the week, one player wins the tournament.

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SILVIS, Ill. – What happens when six PGA Tour players stay in a house together for a tournament week? Cards are played, bets are made, trash is talked and at the end of the week, one player wins the tournament.

At least that’s how it went at last year’s John Deere Classic. J.T. Poston passed on the hotel and stayed in a large house with Patton Kizzire, Greyson Sigg, Denny McCarthy, Brendon Todd and Ben Kohles, and the majority of the gang are running it back this year at the 2023 John Deere Classic.

“Yes, we have the same house,” said Poston ahead of his title defense. Kizzire, Sigg and McCarthy are back for more action in the PGA Tour fraternity house, with the additions of Chris Kirk and Sepp Straka to replace Todd and Kohles. “A lot of us were in the house last year, and so we jumped on it and got the same one again. A lot of cards and having fun back at the house after the rounds.”

Although all six are competing against one another, the house creates a similar vibe similar to college golf. Even though they’re not on the same team, there’s something to be said for coming home and sharing stories of the round and pulling for your friends. Three of the six players went to the University of Georgia, and four of the six reside in the Peach State, with three calling Sea Island home.

“A handful of us will stay together all the time in Airbnb’s. Rarely do we get one that’s big enough for all of us to hop in and where all of us are playing the same week, so this is kind of unique in that sense where it’s a lot of fun,” explained Poston. “We do that a lot. I mean, the hotels can get old pretty fast, so try to mix it up with some Airbnb’s and house rentals.”

There’s a scorecard for the card games, and of course some cash is exchanging hands, but money isn’t the goal for the games.

“We have some fun with it. It’s more bragging rights with that crowd because we play and hang out all the time, so it’s more just trying to beat your buddy than it is seeing how much money you can win,” said Poston, who noted that Kizzire has the early lead one night in.

Speaking of money, after earning his second PGA Tour victory, Poston picked up the bill for the house much to the joy of his housemates for the week, and he’s hoping to do so once again this year.

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2023 John Deere Classic odds, course history and picks to win

McCarthy finished T-6 at last year’s John Deere Classic.

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Before the best players in the world head over the pond for the Scottish Open and 151st Open Championship at Royal Liverpool, it’s time for the John Deere Classic at TPC Deere Run.

Thanks to its unfortunate spot on the PGA Tour schedule, the field in Silvis, Illinois, is lacking some star power.

Cameron Young, who’s still searching for his maiden victory, is the biggest name in the field and is 16/1 to win. After a few close calls at the Memorial Tournament and Travelers Championship, Denny McCarthy is the betting favorite at 14/1. Last season, he tied for sixth at TPC Deere Run.

Golf course

TPC Deere Run | Par 71 | 7,289 yards

TPC Deere Run
A view of the second hole with the Rock River in the background at TPC Deere Run in Silvis, Illinois. Photo by Brian Spurlock/USA TODAY Sports

Course history

Betting preview

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Rickie Fowler shoots 60 during third round of 2023 Travelers Championship

Rickie with a career round!

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Only 12 golfers in PGA Tour history have shot better scores than what Rickie Fowler did Saturday.

He carded an 10-under 60 on Saturday during the third round of the 2023 Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Connecticut. He made an eagle on the par-4 sixth, his 15th hole of the day, and proceeded to birdie the No. 8 to reach 60. He had a chip from the fringe on his final hole of the day for 59 but narrowly missed.

Fowler was looking to be the first player since Scottie Scheffler in the 2020 Northern Trust to shoot 59 in a PGA Tour event. Jim Furyk shot 12 under at TPC River Highlands in 2016 for the only 58 in Tour history.

During the first round, Denny McCarthy shot 60, so Fowler isn’t the first one to reach that milestone this week.

Fowler started his round on the back nine and picked up birdies at Nos. 12, 13, 15, 17 and 18, turning in 5-under 30. He also birdies Nos. 1 and 2 to sit at 7 under after 11. He rattled off three straight pars before the eagle and birdie to shoot 60, his best round on the PGA Tour.

Fowler moved to 15 under overall, good for a tie for third, with the leaders still having most of the back nine to play.

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Denny McCarthy, Keegan Bradley in control and more from Friday at the 2023 Travelers Championship

Can anyone catch McCarthy and Bradley?

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Earlier this month, Denny McCarthy was in the driver’s seat at the Memorial until a closing bogey forced a playoff against Viktor Hovland. The Norwegian bested McCarthy, and the search for his first win on the PGA Tour continued.

However, through 36 holes of the 2023 Travelers Championship, McCarthy is in prime position to hoist hardware for the first time.

After an opening 10-under 60, McCarthy got around TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Connecticut, in just 65 shots Friday to take a share of the halfway lead at 15 under, alongside Keegan Bradley — who we’ll cover in a minute.

After playing the first nine in even par, McCarthy turned it on once he made the turn, pouring in birdies at Nos. 10, 13, 14, 15 and 18 for a back-nine 30.

“I’ve been playing some nice golf coming into this,” McCarthy said. “Just keep trying to get better every day. Still some things — I’m going to go over to the range. There are still some things I think I can improve on for the weekend.”

If you missed any of Friday’s action in New England, no worries, we have you covered. Here’s everything you need to know from the second round of the Travelers Championship, plus a look at Saturday’s weather forecast.

Travelers: Photos

3 sleeper picks to win the 2023 U.S. Open, including Patrick Reed at 80/1

Reed grabbed a top-20 finish at last month’s PGA Championship.

The best players in the world have arrived at Los Angeles Country Club in California for the 2023 U.S. Open, the third men’s major championship of the year.

Matt Fitzpatrick enters the week as the defending champion thanks to his win over Will Zalatoris and Scottie Scheffler at The Country Club outside Boston last season. Fitzpatrick added another win to his resume earlier this year at the RBC Heritage.

World No. 1 Scheffler is the clear betting favorite at +700 followed by Masters champion Jon Rahm at +1100 and PGA winner Brooks Koepka at +1200.

Big names have dominated major championships for the last few seasons, but that doesn’t mean a longshot can’t win in the City of Angels.

Here are three sleeper picks for the 2023 U.S. Open.

More U.S. Open betting: Expert picks, odds

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Winning is hard: These 14 pros nearly picked up their first PGA Tour win this season

“Second place is just the first-place loser. There is no room for second place.”

With the calendar flipping to June, the PGA Tour counts eight first-time winners this season, including the duo of Davis Riley and Nick Hardy, who teamed up for their first wins at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

It was almost nine on Sunday as Denny McCarthy had a putt to win the Memorial only to be denied his maiden victory by Viktor Hovland.

McCarthy isn’t alone. So far this season, 14 different players have finished runner-up or tied for second 15 times while bidding for their first Tour title. If the Netflix documentary “Full Swing” taught us anything it is that winning is hard. (Don’t drink every time a player says just that or you may not make it through a single episode.)

“The only one who will remember you if you come in second place is your wife and your dog,” World Golf Hall of Famer Gary Player once said, “and that is only if you have a good wife and a good dog.”

NASCAR’s Dale Earnhardt didn’t mince words either, saying, “Second place is just the first-place loser. There is no room for second place.”

Nevertheless, let’s take a closer look at this year’s runner-ups, who were so close to tasting victory and climbing another rung on the professional golf ladder with their first Tour wins.

Viktory for Viktor: How Hovland built a more complete game and made a late birdie for a playoff win at the 2023 Memorial Tournament

Hovland birdied the 17th to eventually force a playoff and earn his fourth PGA Tour win.

Viktor Hovland finally bagged a PGA Tour win at one of the biggest events.

The 25-year-old Norwegian made a two-putt par from 58 feet on the first playoff hole to defeat Denny McCarthy and win the Memorial on Sunday.

“I don’t want it again,” Hovland said of the decisive seven footer he holed, sporting his trademark smile.

Hovland now has won in each of the last four seasons on Tour but fellow pro Edoardo Molinari, who doubles as Hovland’s performance coach, noted that his previous wins have shared something in common.

Indeed, all of his Tour wins had been on tropical islands: in Puerto Rico and twice in Mexico near Cancun plus two more unofficial titles in The Bahamas. It’s ironic given that he grew up in the cold of Norway.

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“Sometimes I tease him that it’s about time he wins on a serious golf course, not at a tourist place,” Molinari said.

Muirfield Village Golf Club, the course that Jack Nicklaus built near his childhood home in Dublin, Ohio, certainly qualifies as “a serious course.” On another warm and sunny day, Jack’s Place, as it is affectionately called, played fast and firm and the greens turned into concrete, but Hovland managed to shoot a final-round 2-under 70 to finish at 7-under 281.

“This week the golf course is arguably harder than most major championship golf courses we play,” Hovland said. “It felt like a major. So it was really cool that I was able to get it done at a place like this…It feels even better after some close calls.”

The seventh-ranked player in the world, Hovland has been a model of consistency with 24 straight cuts made worldwide – and has been knocking on the door at some of the biggest tournaments, including top-10 finishes at the last three majors. He chased Brooks Koepka almost to the finish at the PGA Championship last month, settling for a T-2, his best result in a major and recorded a T-3 in March at the Players Championship. It didn’t take long for Hovland, the winner of the 2018 U.S. Amateur, to establish himself as one of the best ballstrikers on Tour, but his short game admittedly was a weakness. What made this victory special for Hovland was the way he won it: without his best stuff from tee-to-green but a short game that has made great strides and a putter that continually bailed him out.

“It feels great to win one without having to ball-strike it to death,” Hovland said.

He also credited his improved course management. Two years ago, he played a practice round at the U.S. Open with Molinari, the brother of Francesco, the 2018 British Open winner, and a week later he implemented some of his tips at the BMW International in Germany and won the tournament.

“I was impressed with the way his mind worked,” Hovland said.

He hired Molinari to help with his strategy and it has paid big dividends. Speaking ahead of the tournament, Hovland noted that Molinari crunched his numbers and discovered earlier this year that when Hovland attacked greens with pitching wedge and 8-iron, he was short-siding himself 30 percent of the time and the Tour average is 20 percent of the time.

“Because I’m a good iron player it should be closer to 15 percent of the time if not less than that,” Hovland said. “I was putting too much pressure on my short game by being too aggressive.”

“It would be kind of a double whammy for me before,” Hovland said at his winner’s press conference. I would short-side myself and I didn’t have any tools around the green to slow the ball down, and now I can’t even keep the chip on the green. So you’re just always grinding.

“But this week I told myself that when I’m out of position just play for the fatter part of the green and if I miss the green, I still have a shot where I can roll the ball up or slow the ball down enough to get it close to the pin.”

Hovland shot a third-round 69 and started the day one shot behind Rory McIlroy, who stumbled to 75, Si Woo Kim (73) and David Lipsky (77). Three strokes back on the 15th tee, he made birdie there and drained a 28-foot birdie putt at 17, the only birdie at the hole during the final round, to cut his deficit to one. McCarthy, whose putter had been brilliant all day, drove into trouble left at the last and missed a 23-foot par putt for his first Tour title.

Returning to the 18th tee for the first playoff hole, McCarthy overcompensated and drove right and couldn’t reach the green. McCarthy burned the left edge on his 12-foot par putt, bending his knees in disbelief that his well-struck putt wouldn’t drop. Hovland, who ranked third in putting for the week, snuck in a 5-foot putt for the win.

“I’m heartbroken right now,” McCarthy said. “I thought this was going to be the week.”

Entering the final round it was anyone’s tournament with 22 players within three strokes of the lead. For the second week in a row, Scheffler finished a stroke out of a playoff despite a marvelous ball-striking week and a closing 67, which was three strokes better than anyone else in the field. Scheffler, who made the 36-hole cut on the mark at 3 over, ranked first in SG: Tee-to-Green and SG: Approach the Green but ranked 65th — or dead last — in SG: Putting, losing more than 8.5 strokes to the field on the greens for the week.

“I think a little bit of my struggles with the putting have probably helped me sort of elevate my ball striking just because if I’m trying to compete out here I have to – I mean, with the putts not going in, I got to hit it really good and I’ve been able to do that,” Scheffler said.

But not well enough to beat Hovland, who finally won on the U.S. mainland. Back in Norway, Hovland’s star continues to rise but golf’s popularity pales in comparison to skiing and soccer. Asked how well known the name Nicklaus, the winner of a record 18 majors, is back home, Hovland smiled and with the Golden Bear by his side, said, “Not to break your ego, but I don’t think there’s too many people that know about you.”

From Oslo to Ohio, they do know that Hovland is the champion of the Memorial at Jack’s Place.

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Rory McIlroy hits one of the greatest drives of all-time to win match against Denny McCarthy at WGC-Dell Match Play

You’ll have to see it to believe it.

Earlier this week, Rory McIlroy said he was in favor of the USGA and R&A proposal to roll back the golf ball for professional and top amateurs.

“I think it’s going to help identify who the best players are a bit easier,” he said.

Well, there’s no question McIlroy is one of the best players in the world. He has been for more than a decade. On Thursday, during his match against Denny McCarthy in the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play at Austin Country Club, McIlroy hit one of the best drives of all-time.

And that’s no exaggeration.

McIlroy and McCarthy’s match reached the 18th hole with the Northern Irishman 1 up. He had the first shot, and his smashed his driver with 188 mph ball speed. It finally landed 349 yards away on the front of the green. It ended 3 feet, 9 inches from the hole. You’ll have to see it to believe it.

That tee shot is the only one through the first two days to end up on the green.

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McCarthy’s shot ended up short of the green, and his second shot landed outside of McIlroy’s. McCarthy conceded the match, and McIlroy won 2 up.

Earlier in their match on the par-5 12th hole, McIlroy had a drive that traveled 420 yards.

However, the highlight of the day was his incredible tee shot on the 18th.

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2023 Valspar Championship odds, course history and picks to win

Fleetwood flashed some form at TPC Sawgrass last week and grabbed a top 20 at the Valspar in ’22.

The last stop of the Florida Swing is here, as the PGA Tour is in Palm Harbor, just outside Tampa, for this week’s Valspar Championship at Innisbrook Resort’s Copperhead Course.

Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas headline the field while Sam Burns is looking to win his third straight Valspar title.

Spieth, a past champion of this event (2015), is coming off back-to-back solid outings after missing the weekend in LA — T-4 at the Arnold Palmer Invitational and T-19 at the Players.

With many of the world’s best on the sidelines this week thanks to the Valspar’s location on the schedule, Sunday may be a life-changing moment for someone in the field.

Golf course

Innisbrook Resort (Copperhead Course) | Par 71 | 7,340 yards

Course comparisons (according to Data Golf): 1. The Concession Golf Club, 2. Sea Island GC, 3. TPC Twin Cities

Valspar Championship
“The Snake Pit” statue at the 16th tee box warns golfers of the notorious final three holes at the Copperhead Course at Innisbrook Resort in Palm Harbor, Fla. Photo by Rob Schumacher/USA TODAY Sports

Course history

Betting preview

2023 Honda Classic: Odds, course history, players to watch and picks to win

Can Shane Lowry get his revenge at PGA National after coming oh-so-close last year?

After back-to-back designated events and a long run on the West Coast, the PGA Tour is headed to Florida for the next month, starting with the Honda Classic at PGA National in Palm Beach Gardens.

Due to its place in the schedule, the field is underwhelming.

Sungjae Im and Billy Horschel are a few of the big names while Sepp Straka returns to defend his title.

This year will mark the end of Honda’s sponsorship of the event as the Tour narrows down the list of potential replacements.

Pierceson Coody, the 2022 PGA Tour University No. 1 and two-time Korn Ferry Tour winner, will make his first start on Tour as a professional.

Golf course

PGA National | Par 70 | 7,125 yards | Tom Fazio design

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Course comparisons (according to Data Golf): 1. Ridgewood Country Club, 2. Grand Reserve Country Club, 3. CordeValle GC

PGA National Champion
No. 11 at PGA National’s Champion Course in Florida (Courtesy of PGA National)

Course history

Odds, picks to win