Six golfers earned PGA Tour cards just as six LIV golfers teed off in shotgun start in Boston

Once a player strikes a tee shot on the LIV Golf Series, he has lost his status on the PGA Tour.

Not sure they should be expecting thank you cards or gift baskets, but when the six newest members of the LIV Golf Series teed off in Boston on Friday for their 1:15 p.m. ET shotgun start, six others earned their PGA Tour cards.

Officially, Cameron Smith, Marc Leishman, Joaquin Niemann, Harold Varner III, Anirban Lahiri and Cameron Tringale were “removed from the 2021-22 FedEx Cup Playoffs and Eligibility Points List,” according to the PGA Tour.

This then elevated Kelly Kraft, Justin Lower, Doc Redman, Austin Smotherman, Matt Wallace and Danny Willett inside the top 125, thus granting them their Tour cards for the 2022-23 season.

The Tour’s announcement specifically mentioned the 1:15 p.m. ET time. Once a player strikes a tee shot on the LIV Golf Series, he has lost his status on the PGA Tour.

Kraft, Lower, Redman were removed from the Korn Ferry Tour Championship on Friday after they earned fully exempt status. They cannot improve their standing on the Eligibility List. Smotherman, Wallace and Willett did not reach the Korn Ferry Tour Finals.

The top 25 finishers at the Finals will earn PGA Tour cards. The final FedEx Cup Playoffs and Eligibility Points List for the 2021-22 season will be finalized at 5 p.m. ET on Sept. 9, 2022.

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Young wins Korn Ferry Tournament, Top 10 for Byrd at AT&T

Clemson, SC-Former Clemson All-American and Anderson, SC native Carson Young won the Panama Championship on the Korn Ferry Tour on Sunday. Young finished with a score of eight-under-par 272 after rounds of 68-65-71-68 on the Panama Golf Club course, …

Clemson, SC—Former Clemson All-American and Anderson, SC native Carson Young won the Panama Championship on the Korn Ferry Tour on Sunday.   Young finished with a score of eight-under-par 272 after rounds of 68-65-71-68 on the Panama Golf Club course, to win his first Korn Ferry Tour event in just his 10th career tournament.

Young was tied for fifth entering the final round, but registered three birdies and just one bogey in shooting the two-under 68 in the final round to win by one shot over Carl Yuan, Brandon Mathews and Jerry Stanger.

Young made a bogey on his first hole of the day, then played his final 14 holes at three-under-par.   With the victory, Young jumped to second place on the  Korn Ferry Tour  season long points list and won $135,000, the largest check of his professional career.

Young turned professional after his senior year in 2017.  He was a four-year starter for Clemson and posted a 73.19 stroke average for 39 career tournaments.  He had 10 top 10 finishes as a Tiger and helped Clemson to the ACC Championship in April of 2016.  He was a member of the All-ACC team in 2016 and 2017 and was a three-time member of the Academic All-ACC team.

Former Tiger Turk Pettit, the 2021 NCAA Tournament Champion, finished tied for 39th at the same tournament with a score of 282.  Former Clemson All-American Ben Martin finished 50th with a 284 score.

 

On the PGA Tour, former Clemson All-American Jonathan Byrd finished in a tie for ninth at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro Am on Sunday with a score of 13-under par 274.  It was Byrd’s top finish of the year and the 48th top 10 of his 20-year professional career.   Byrd had a round of five-under-par 67 on Sunday, tied for the best round of the day.  He birdied three of his last four holes and won $237,075.

The Top 10 finish gets Byrd into the field at next week’s Waste Management Open in Phoenix.

Former Clemson All-American Doc Redman finished tied for 33rd  at the event, while former All-American D.J. Trahan finished tied for 64th.

 

Beware: World No. 1 Dustin Johnson dialed in at Congaree just in time for U.S. Open

Dustin Johnson seems to have regained some game this week, and suddenly he could be a factor at Torrey Pines.

RIDGELAND, S.C. – Fair warning.

Just in time for next week’s U.S. Open, Dustin Johnson is getting dialed in.

Shaking off recent struggles, the world No. 1 turned in a bogey-free, 6-under-par 65 Thursday to grab a share of the early lead in the first round of the Palmetto Championship at Congaree.

The scary part is his scorecard didn’t include a single birdie on the three par 5s, and he missed two birdie putts inside 8 feet. And his peers should take notice: The last time Johnson opened with a 65 or better on the PGA Tour, he won the Masters. In all, he’s won five of 16 times on Tour when opening with a 65 or better.

“I felt like I’ve been swinging well for a while now, just haven’t really seen the results or seen the scores,” Johnson said. “I made a few putts. I just played solid golf, finally put a round together.”

He’s had a hard time putting anything together this year. His lone top-10 on the PGA Tour came back in February and in his other seven starts, he finished north of 45th three times and missed two cuts, including in his most recent start in the PGA Championship at Kiawah Island.

In one seven-hole stretch, he hit every approach to within 11 feet. He found 10 of 14 fairways and ended his day by chipping in for birdie from 81 feet.

“It was OK,” he said about his putting. “The greens are kind of tricky to read. I missed a short one there on the par-3 fifth. But I hit the putt right where I wanted to, it just broke hard right and I didn’t see that in the putt. I’m happy with the way I rolled it. Obviously 6 under was a good score, but I still missed quite a few short makeable putts.

“The putting’s been off or it’s just like small little mistakes that you shouldn’t make, so sometimes it’s taken a little bit of time away and kind of clearing my head and definitely it helps. Put in a lot of good work last week and I feel like I’m swinging good, so if I can keep the putter rolling it’s going to be a fun week.”

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Johnson shared the lead with Doc Redman, who tied for 42nd in last week’s Memorial and then started this week by withdrawing from the U.S. Open final qualifier in Columbus, Ohio in his first round.

Turns out it was the best thing for him.

“I played 10 holes and then decided I had enough. We had a long rain delay and I was just ready to get home,” Redman said. “I spent Tuesday at home and then drove up Wednesday morning, which is what I needed. Memorial is such a long, hot, brutal week and I played really well the last three days there and so I was just trying to keep that going into this week and play well.

“It’s just been a lot of hard work the past few weeks. I know I’ve been playing well and it’s a pretty cool golf course. I was able to hit some good shots and make some putts and just kind of next thing I know it was kind of going well.”

Jhonattan Vegas stood alone in third with 66. A group at 67 included Patrick Rodgers and a large group at 68 included Tommy Fleetwood.

Among the late starters were Brooks Koepka, Ian Poulter, Tyrrell Hatton and Matt Fitzpatrick.

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What’s up, Doc? Doc Redman leads by 1 at Bermuda Championship

The 22-year-old former U.S. Amateur champion shot 67 on Saturday to claim a 1-stroke lead.

On another wild, windswept day that bewildered players once again, Doc Redman did what he does best – relied on his ballstriking abilities.

“I don’t know if anyone really enjoys playing in the wind, but yeah, I think it speaks to my strengths,” he said on Thursday. “Hitting it solid is really important in the wind and I have a lot of confidence in my irons and my woods and my driver, so I think I welcome it and it’s always a good challenge.”

Redman flighted an iron perfectly at the par-4 11th hole to five feet and rolled in the putt for one of his five birdies on Saturday at Port Royal Golf en route to shooting 4-under 67 in the third round of the Bermuda Championship. Redman improved to 10-under 203 and earned his first 54-hole lead on the PGA Tour, one stroke ahead of Ryan Armour, Wyndham Clark and Kramer Hickok.

Redman, 22, winner of the 2017 U.S. Amateur, is seeking his first Tour title in his 40 Tour start. He’s only recorded three top-10 finishes in his young career, but each time he’s knocked on the door for victory: a solo second at the 2019 Rocket Mortgage Championship; T-3 at the Wyndham Championship in August; and T-3 at the Safeway Championship in September. He’ll bring a simple approach into Sunday’s final round.

“I think just allowing myself to play great, not letting myself get ahead of myself,” he said. “Just kind of trust myself and see what happens.”

But Redman won’t be the only one bidding for his first Tour title. Clark and Hickok, Redman’s closest pursuers, also are seeking to claim their first trophy. Clark overcame a double bogey and hitting just two fairways in the third round to make birdie at No. 17 and post 70. Hickok had a share of the lead with Redman until he bogeyed the last and settled for shooting 69.

“Every aspect of my game I’m really happy with,” Hickok said. “It’s been a tough last couple years, but I’ve been telling people I’m playing the best golf of my life now, so I’m just excited to be able to have the scores be able to show that.”

Doc Redman plays his shot from the 10th tee during the third round of the Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course on October 31, 2020 in Southampton, Bermuda. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

Hickok may have explained best how the wind, which shifted directions and gusted up to 25 miles per hour out of the northwest, wreaked havoc on Saturday.

“It’s the first time I’ve ever used a compass on the greens for the wind because literally you’ve got a putt that’s a half a cup out left and the wind’s off the right, it will blow it left,” he said.

Ollie Schniederjans, who lost his Tour card after finishing No. 180 in 2018-19, made just one start on the PGA Tour during the 2019-20 season at this tournament, where he missed the cut; this time, he’s positioned to have a chance to win it after firing 69 to trail by two.

There are also three crafty veterans who have tasted victory before and are looking to go back for seconds and thirds. Ryan Armour, 44, is looking for his second Tour victory after shooting 70, and has a pretty good idea what to expect on Sunday.

“Doc’s at 10, got a bunch of guys at 9, 8 and 7 and it will be a shootout tomorrow,” he said.

Australian Matt Jones, 40, also is seeking a second career victory joined the fray with a bogey-free 66 to get to 8 under.

“If it blows, I’ll be happy, I’m used to the wind, I grew up in the wind in Australia,” he said. “I’ll get out here and see what it is and then it’s all about managing misses I find out here, leaving it in the right spots so you can have a chance to save par.”

A year after finishing T-3 in Bermuda, four-time Tour winner Brian Gay, 48, signed for 67 that included an eagle at 17, and trails by two strokes.

“I’ve played the par 5s terrible, I’ve hardly made a birdie on any of them,” Gay said. “I joked with my caddie, I said, ‘I don’t birdie the par 5s, I just eagle them.’ ”

Gay is bidding for his first victory in seven years, as he, Armour, and Jones look to join Stewart Cink and Sergio Garcia as 40-and-older winners this season. Expect the wind to blow again and for someone to have to step up and distinguish themselves on Sunday.

“It’s just exciting to have a chance,” Redman said. “For people to say that, that’s kind of all you can hope for because even if you had a three-shot lead, you still have to play tomorrow. I think whoever plays the best tomorrow wins and I think I have a good chance of doing that.”

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Si Woo Kim grabs pole position with ace in what looks to be sprint to the finish at Wyndham

Kim made a hole-in-one and nearly another to take the lead heading into the final round of the Wyndham Championship.

GREENSBORO, N.C. – Si Woo Kim was dialed in with his irons at Sedgefield Country Club on Saturday. He made an ace at the par-3 third hole to assume the lead and nearly made a second hole-in-one at the 12th, settling for a tap-in birdie to regain the lead en route to a two-stroke advantage heading into the final round of the Wyndham Championship.

Kim, 25, signed for an 8-under 62 and is in the pole position at a course where he has fond memories of winning his first PGA Tour title in 2016.

“I feel like pretty similar this year,” he said. “Driving, every shot fairway, and then every shot close to pin, every putt, make the putt.”


Wyndham Championship: Leaderboard | Tee times | Best photos


Kim jumped in front at the third hole when his 8-iron from 161 yards took one hop and disappeared in the hole for an ace. From the tee, Kim could only tell that it was close and his reaction was noticeably subdued.

“If number’s good, that would be good. I (did) not expect that ace, but some guys yelling (at) me and I feel like just tap-in, really close, and some TV guys told me that’s ace and I was so excited,” said Kim, who is making his 10th straight start since the resumption of the Tour season in June.

At the 196-yard 12th hole, Kim’s 5-iron pitched a foot in front of the hole and lipped out, stopping 14 inches away. This time, he reacted, throwing up his arms as if to say, “C’mon, man.”

“Just little missed right, but that was a really tough hole and really thankful made that birdie,” he said.

Kim, whose other victory was at the 2017 Players Championship, had 11 birdie putts inside 10 feet on the day and tacked on three birdies in a row beginning at 15 to improve to 18-under 192 and move two clear of Rob Oppenheim and Doc Redman.

But playing in this Nascar-crazed state, the South Korean is going to have to keep his foot on the pedal in what is setting up to be a sprint to the finish at the regular season finale of the 2019-20 season. For the third straight day, preferred lies were utilized due to wet conditions. Ball-in hand combined with receptive greens, accessible hole locations and slower green speeds left Sedgefield CC vulnerable and the pros took advantage. Zach Johnson and Jim Herman shot 61s, Kim and Oppenheim had 62 and Redman had a 63.

Oppenheim and Redman, who practiced together earlier this week at Old Chatham in nearby Raleigh, are both bidding for their first wins. Oppenheim, 40, turned professional 18 years ago, didn’t earn his PGA Tour card until five years ago, and has played in every Tour event that he’s been eligible for.

“You can’t do this as long as I have without loving it,” he said after bettering his career low by two strokes despite a bogey at 18.

He entered the week No. 145 in the FedEx Cup standings, but is now one of three players projected to leap into the top 125 (along with Johnson and Peter Malnati; Russell Knox, Charl Schwartzel and Fabian Gomez would drop out). He’s never qualified for the Playoffs, which begin next week at TPC Boston, not far from where he grew in Andover, Massachusetts, and where he made his Tour debut in 2006. He called earning a spot in the Northern Trust field, which is limited to the top 125 in the FedEx Cup standings after this week, his main goal at the beginning of the season. This is old hat for Oppenheim – Bubble Boy has got to be his nickname,” declared PGA Tour XM Radio’s John Rollins.

“It’s what we play for, to kind of put ourselves in these situations and see how you handle it. I haven’t been in this situation, I’ve never been in one of the last two or three groups on Sunday, but I’ve been in plenty of situations where I’ve been fighting to keep my job or trying to get out here,” said Oppenheim, whose best career finish in 76 Tour starts is T-8 at the 2017 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

Redman, 22, won the 2017 U.S. Amateur and is a native Tarheel, who was state 4A champion as a high school senior, and is looking to become the third North Carolinian to win the Wyndham Championship in the last six years. He made his only bogey of the tournament at the first hole of the third round before carding four birdies on each side and equaling his career low on Tour.

With so many young, talented players on Tour, including last week’s major champion Collin Morikawa, Redman’s name can get lost in the shuffle in the discussion of young guns. He offered a simple game plan to follow Sunday in order to hoist his first Tour trophy.

“I think just allowing myself to play great, not letting myself get ahead of myself,” he said. “Just kind of trust myself and see what happens.”

Kim also has a couple of savvy veterans who know a thing or two about swooping in from behind to steal a title on payday. Five-time Tour winner Billy Horschel posted a 65, his 22nd consecutive round of par or better here, and trails by three. Seeking his third win of the season, Webb Simpson, the 2011 Wyndham champion and runner-up a year ago, matched Horschel’s 65, but they lost ground as five of the top eight players on the leaderboard either set or tied their career low rounds on the Tour.

“It’s probably the best I’ve played in a long time,” said Simpson, who enters the final round five back in a tie for seventh. “I just didn’t capitalize when I needed to.”

With overnight showers expected, Sedgefield Country Club should be there for taking again during the final round. When asked how low he would need to go on Sunday, Kim said, “Maybe a lot, but I don’t want to think about the score because if I think (that) I have to shoot 6 under, 7 under, that’s too much pressure. Just keep my playing and then hopefully, yeah, go low.”

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Hits and misses at the Rocket Mortgage Classic: Stars show out in Round 1

There were some surprise performances — good and bad — in the first round of the Rocket Mortgage Classic.

The PGA Tour’s 2020 Rocket Mortgage Classic teed off Thursday with beautiful weather and perfect scoring conditions at Detroit Golf Club.

There were some surprise performances — good and bad — in the first round of the first major sports event to be played in Michigan since the coronavirus pandemic shut down much of the sports world.

Here are the hits and misses from the tournament’s opening round.

Hit: Doc Redman

The 22-year-old picked up where he left off last year, when he shot 19 under and finished second, six shots behind winner Nate Lashley. Redman, who shot 5-under-par 67 in each of his final three rounds last year, opened with a 65 this year and was the early clubhouse leader at 7 under, eventually joined by Scott Stallings and Kevin Kisner. He caught fire on the back nine. He bogeyed the 10th hole, then birdied seven of his final eight holes with great approach shots that gave him short putts.


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


Hit: Bryson DeChambeau

Let’s make this simple. If DeChambeau ends up winning this week, you’re going to see a lot more, shall we say, Rubenesque golfers on Tour who are trying to emulate his daily diet of nearly 3,500 calories that starts with four eggs, five pieces of bacon and two protein shakes for breakfast. The world’s No. 10 golfer is the odds-on favorite this week and he verified that with an up-and-down 66 that included four bogeys and a 375-yard drive that led to an eagle.

Hit: Rickie Fowler

The Rocket Mortgage pitchman did his sponsor proud after tying for 46th last year. He has been fighting blisters and swing changes while missing the cut in his past two tournaments. But he seemed to put it all together with seven birdies for a 67. “I just need to clean up the driving a little bit,” he said. “Iron play was great. … It’s nice to see the ball rolling off the putter how I want it to. Been putting some work in there.”

Miss: Nate Lashley

It was bad enough the defending wire-to-wire champion made three bogeys on his way to an opening 71, but he did so while playing with Fowler and Webb Simpson, who shot 67 and 68, respectively. Lashley admitted not having fans was an adjustment. “No, not really any nerves,” he said. “Probably not enough nerves. It almost feels like, with no fans out here, it almost feels like it’s not a golf tournament, so I need to maybe get some nerves for tomorrow and get a little adrenaline going.”

Hit: Webb Simpson

The world No. 6 is the highest-ranked player in the field and he lived up to his billing with a 68. Other top-20 players like DeChambeau (66), No. 15 Tyrrell Hatton (68) and No. 17 Tony Finau (69) played well and No. 7 Patrick Reed shot 70. Having good players play well on the course can only encourage top players to play in Detroit in the future.

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Hit: Peter Malnati

The 33-year-old solid journeyman birdied four of five holes on his first nine, including the tough 18th green with a 54-foot putt. He made the turn at 32 and finished with six birdies and no bogeys. Great stuff for the winner of the 2016 Sanderson Farms Championship.

Miss: Peter Malnati

He also gets a miss for having the talent to earn $3.6 million, yet having considered a career in sports writing after he briefly worked as a reporter covering high school sports in Tennessee. He gets a double miss for earning a degree in communications at Missouri because he said a journalism degree “was too hard.” It’s not. Ask any ink-stained wretch in the media room.

Hit: Brian Stuard

There’s got to be something about Detroit Golf Club that suits the former Oakland University golfer from Jackson. He tied for fifth last year and he kept the mojo going with a first-round 68 that he kicked off with an eagle from the fairway on the par-4 10th hole.

Miss: Ryan Brehm

Tough break for the former Michigan State golfer who three-putted twice and made three bogeys on his way to a 38 on his first nine. He battled back with three birdies on his second nine and shot 71. Brehm is a really long hitter with tons of talent who just needs the right tournament to break through. He has a lot of work to do in the second round if he’s going to make it happen in his home state.

Hit: Area 313

DeChambeau and Jamie Lovemark both made eagles on the 14th hole and birdies on the 16th hole, which means they’re both a hole-in-one away from triggering a $313,000 donation in their name to the tournament’s “Changing the Course” initiative of bridging the digital divide for Detroit residents. As part of the “Area 313 Challenge,” any player who makes a 3, 1 and 3 (eagle, ace, birdie) on the 14th, 15th and 16th holes, respectively, over four rounds will earn a donation from the tournament toward the initiative. Now they just have to get an ace on the 15th hole. No pressure, guys.

Hit: Detroit Golf Club

Another perfect day, another round of perfect scoring conditions. But before anyone pulls out the calculator and figures out the leaders are on pace to shoot 28 under, let’s pump the brakes. Don’t forget Lashley opened with a 63 last year and finished at 25 under, but was the only one to get into the 20s. DGC won’t need the 2004 greenskeeper at Shinnecock to save the course. It won’t take much for the scores to come down if the rough gets a touch higher and the greens get a bit faster. And even if they don’t, who cares? Eagles and birdies are fun.

Contact Carlos Monarrez at cmonarrez@freepress.com and follow him on Twitter @cmonarrez.

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2020 Rocket Mortgage Classic Live Coverage, PGA Tour, Leaderboard, TV Channel, How to Watch

The PGA Tour is back again this weekend with The Rocket Mortgage Classic live from Detroit Golf Club, watch it right here.

The 2020 Rocket Mortgage Classic will get underway on Thursday with Round 1. While it won’t be the high profile tournament as weeks past we’ll still get to see some of the top-10 players in golf.

The current leader is Doc Redman (-7) in the first round followed by Peter Malnati (-6)and a group of seven tied for third, including Rickie Fowler (-5).

2020 Rocket Mortgage Classic Round 1

  • When: Thursday, July 2, 2020
  • Live Coverage: 3:00 p.m. ET
  • TV Channel: Golf Channel
  • Live Stream: fuboTV (watch for free)

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As always we’ll have the live leaderboard going as the tournament gets started so be sure to check back here for live updates throughout the weekend!

Rocket Mortgage Leaderboard

1. Doc Redman (-7)
T2. Scott Stallings (6)
T2. Peter Malnati (-6)
T2. Emiliano Grillo (-6)
T5. James Hahn (-5)
T5. Chris Kirk (-5)
T5. Rickie Fowler (-5)
T5. Lucas Glover (-5)

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2020 Travelers Championship odds, predictions, picks and PGA Tour best bets

Analyzing the golf betting odds to win the 2020 Travelers Championship, with PGA Tour betting odds, picks, predictions and best bets.

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The Travelers Championship begins Thursday at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Conn., as the PGA Tour’s best move on from Webb Simpson’s victory at last week’s RBC Heritage. Below, we look at the BetMGM betting odds and make our best bets for the Travelers Championship.

Another loaded field is in attendance as Patrick Cantlay, who ranks sixth in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings, makes his first appearance out of the midseason break. Defending champ Chez Reavie and three-time winner Bubba Watson are also in attendance. Charles Schwab Challenge champ Daniel Berger withdrew from the field Sunday night following his T-3 finish at the RBC Heritage.

TPC River Highlands measures just 6,841 yards and plays to a par of 70 with Bentgrass greens.

2020 Travelers Championship Betting Picks – 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 Monday, June 22 at 3:10 p.m. ET.

Paul Casey (+2800)

Casey will tee it up for the first time since The Players Championship was canceled. He has three top-5 finishes here in the last three years and another runner-up result in 2015. No one with at least five rounds played at TPC River Highlands averages more than Casey’s 2.46 strokes gained per round on the field, according to Data Golf.


Looking to place a bet on the 2020 Travelers Championship? Get some action on it at BetMGM. Bet Now!


Marc Leishman (+4500)

Leishman took last week off following a missed cut at the Charles Schwab Challenge. The Farmers Insurance Open champ was the runner-up at the Arnold Palmer Invitational ahead of the break. He ranks first in this field in Strokes Gained: Ball Striking and Par 4 Efficiency: 400-450 Yards on courses shorter than 7,200 yards and featuring Bentgrass greens, according to Fantasy National.

2020 Travelers Championship Betting Picks – Tier 2

(Photo Credit: Brian Spurlock – USA TODAY Sports)

Ian Poulter (+7000)

Poulter has scored in the 60s in six of his last eight rounds, including all four at Harbour Town Golf Links last week. His minus-16 resulted in just a T-14 finish last week in what turned out to be a shootout at the RBC Heritage. He hasn’t played here since a 43rd-place finish in 2013, but he’s a value at these odds due to his current form.


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Jason Kokrak (+9000)

Kokrak disappointed a lot of bettors last week with a missed cut following a T-3 finish in the Tour’s return to play. He has struggled in 19 career rounds here, including missed cuts in each of the last two years, but he’s regained value at this price and excels in proximity to the pin from this week’s key approach distance of 150-175 yards.

2020 Travelers Championship Betting Picks – Long shots

(Photo Credit: Brian Spurlock – USA TODAY Sports)

Dylan Frittelli (+15000)

Frittelli grabbed attention Sunday while taking the early lead with a closing 62 before the leaders teed off. He has broken 70 just three times in his last 12 rounds, but the odds don’t reflect his most recent performance.

Doc Redman (+22500)

Redman ranks in the top 10 of the field in all three of SG: Ball Striking, Good Drives Gained and Proximity from 150-175 Yards on short courses with Bentgrass greens. The 22-year-old makes his debut at TPC River Highlands off of a T-21 finish last week.

Get some action on the 2020 Travelers Championship 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.

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The American Express odds, predictions, picks and PGA Tour best bets

Analyzing the sports betting odds to win the 2020 American Express, with PGA Tour betting odds, picks, predictions and best bets.

The PGA Tour is in La Quinta, Calif. this week for The American Express. Tony FinauPaul Casey, Francesco Molinari and Rickie Fowler highlight those in the field for the event hosted by Phil Mickelson. Below, we look at the best PGA Tour bets to win the 2020 American Express

The event is played on three courses and features a 54-hole cut. All three tracks were designed by Pete Dye and play to a par of 72. The key stats for the week are:

  • Strokes Gained: Approach
  • Par 4 Efficiency: 350-400 Yards
  • Opportunities Gained
  • Proximity: 100-125 Yards

Pay added attention to golfer success on Dye-designed courses with Bermuda greens.

The American Express – 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 Tuesday at 3 a.m. ET.

Sungjae Im (+1800)

Im debuted at this event with a T-12 result last year. He enters the week 35th in the Official World Golf Ranking following last week’s T-21 finish at the Sony Open in Hawaii. He’s still looking for his first PGA Tour victory and will be one of the more motivated golfers in a rather weak early-season field.

Kevin Kisner (+2800)

Kisner enters the week as the sixth-best golfer in the field by the OWGR measure, but he’s seventh by the odds at BetMGM, representing moderate value for the three-time PGA Tour champ. He made the cut here each of the previous three years, but with a top finish of T-25 (2017). Only four golfers who made the cut last week gained more strokes per round on approach than Kisner’s 0.85.

The American Express – Tier 2

(Photo Credit: Butch Dill – USA TODAY Sports)

Chez Reavie (+6000)

Reavie’s coming off a missed cut last week in Hawaii, but he made the weekend each of the last four years in La Quinta. His best finish was a T-12 in 2017. The 37th-ranked golfer in the world ranks third in the field in Opportunities Gained on Pete Dye courses with Bermuda greens.


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Bud Cauley (+6600)

Cauley leads this week’s field with 2.01 strokes gained per round over seven rounds played on the Stadium Course in La Quinta, according to Data Golf. He missed the cut last week in his first event since a T-9 finish at the Houston Open. He was T-3 here in 2017 with T-14 finishes in 2016 and 2018 before missing the weekend last year.

The American Express – Longshots

(Photo Credit: Kyle Terada – USA TODAY Sports)

Cameron Davis (+10000)

Davis finished T-9 at 7-under par in Hawaii last week. It was a Saturday round of 71 which was the difference for the 36-hole co-leader. He averaged 0.85 strokes gained per round on approach, but it was his 2.00 SG per round tee-to-green which had him contending. Davis finished T-28 here a year ago.

Doc Redman (+12500)

Redman’s worth a roll of the dice as our deepest shot for the week with a $10 bet returning a profit of $1,250 with a tournament win. He missed the cut last week for his third MC in nine events to begin the 2019-20 PGA Tour season, but his runner-up finish at last year’s Rocket Mortgage Classic was in a much stronger field than the one slated to tee off this week.

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