Tracker: Follow Tiger Woods, Justin Thomas’ foursomes match at Presidents Cup

Follow along for shot-by-shot updates from Tiger Woods and Justin Thomas’ foursomes match at the Presidents Cup in Australia.

U.S. playing captain Tiger Woods wasn’t planning on playing too much at the 2020 Presidents Cup at Australia’s Royal Melbourne, but after Day 1 he may have to take out the earpiece more often than he hoped.

Woods and Justin Thomas earned the sole U.S. point during the four-ball matches on Day 1 of the biennial event, and the pairing are back in action on Friday (Thursday night in the U.S.) for the foursomes matches, teeing off at 7:41 p.m. ET against the Internationals’ Hideki Matsuyama and Byeong Hun An.

Follow along for shot-by-shot updates from Woods/Thomas vs. Matsuyama/An as the Americans look to cut into their 4-1 deficit.

PRESIDENTS CUP: Scores | Best photos
MEET THE TEAMS: USA | Internationals

Pre-round

Tiger Woods, Justin Thomas cruise to first point at Presidents Cup

Tiger Woods was on fire in the first match and carried teammate Justin Thomas to a win and the first point of the 2019 Presidents Cup.

Playing captain Tiger Woods made the right decision to send himself out first for the four-ball matches at the 2019 Presidents Cup.

The nine-time Presidents Cup veteran birdied the first two holes on Thursday (Wednesday night in the U.S.) and chipped in for birdie on the fifth hole, leading himself and teammate Justin Thomas to a commanding 4 and 3 victory over the International squad’s Marc Leishman and Joaquin Niemann.

Woods and Thomas never trailed in the opening match to the biennial event, making the turn at 2 up and cruising on the back nine to victory. It was a crucial point for the Americans, who trailed as much as 3-1 for the majority of the first day of play.

As they ended the match, the Americans trailed in three matches and were tied in one.

PRESIDENTS CUP: Scores | Viewer’s guide | Photos

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Tiger Woods yelled ‘go get that!’ at Justin Thomas after chipping in at Presidents Cup

Tiger was fired up after chipping in for birdie.

Tiger Woods is making history in Australia as he’s the first-ever player/captain in Presidents Cup history.

The event, which has the best golfers from the US taking on the best golfers from around the world (but not Europe) in a four-day team competition, is now underway and Tiger is having some fun on the course.

He’s also playing some really good golf.

Tiger chipped in for a birdie on the fifth hole and then quickly told his playing partner, Justin Thomas, to “go get that” ball out of the cup, much like Jordan Spieth did to his caddie a few years at the Open Championship.

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Tracker: Tiger Woods, Justin Thomas’ first round four-ball match at Presidents Cup

Follow along for shot-by-shot updates from Tiger Woods and Justin Thomas’ first round four-ball match at the Presidents Cup in Australia.

Presidents Cup playing captain Tiger Woods will lead the Americans out the gate in the first match of this year’s event at Royal Melbourne, teaming up with Justin Thomas for Day One’s four-ball matches.

Woods and Thomas, who were paired together for three of the four rounds in the Bahamas last week at the Hero World Challenge, take on the International squad’s Marc Leishman and Joaquin Niemann at 5:32 p.m. ET.

This is Woods’ ninth appearance for Team USA (his first since 2013) and Thomas’ second. Thomas is 2-0 in the four-ball format, while Woods is 7-9.

Follow along for shot-by-shot updates from the opening match in Australia.

PRESIDENTS CUP: Viewers guide | Photo gallery
TEAM USA: Meet Tiger Woods’ squad
INTERNATIONALS: Meet Ernie Els’ team

Pre-round

IT’S SHOWTIME.

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How being an assistant captain made Tiger Woods great again

More than anything, the team environment at Presidents and Ryder Cups has allowed Tiger Woods to shed his lone-wolf label.

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MELBOURNE, Australia – When the last Presidents Cup was held in the shadow of the Statue of Liberty in 2017, Tiger Woods was recovering from surgery and only permitted to hit 60-degree wedges. His future in the game was very much in doubt. The thought of him as a playing captain just over two years later seemed preposterous.

It was a sad day for golf to see Woods relegated to a cart driver, asking players if they liked mayo or mustard on their sandwich. It was a role that in the past would have seemed beneath someone of his stature in the game. And yet Tiger’s two stints as an assistant captain at the 2016 Ryder Cup and 2017 Presidents Cup may have been critical moments in his revival as both a player and person.

Woods embraced the job of serving as a Team USA pop-pom waver. No job was too small, and he spent countless hours plotting pairings and determining which matchups should go out first. Brandt Snedeker, who was a member of the victorious 2016 U.S. Ryder Cup team, recounted how he spent more than 90 minutes on the phone with Woods one night, and it wasn’t the only time the 15-time major winner dialed him up.

MOREPresidents Cup viewers guide | Photo gallery

“Got to the point where I was joking around, like ‘You’re calling me more than my wife is right now. We need to figure something out,’ ” Snedeker cracked.

Apparently Woods has evolved to sending early-morning text messages.

“You definitely get more texts between 1 and 4 am than any captain, that’s for sure,” Thomas said. “He takes it very seriously. … It’s like any time we’re together he’s asking me questions, and I’m like, ‘Dude, we already talked about this. You don’t need to go too into it.’ I understand he wants to be so perfect and wants to do all this, but being in Florida and hanging out a decent bit, I’m kind of a good sounding board to where he can kind of ask me some stuff but, no, he’s done a good job.”

The 2019 U.S. Presidents Cup team poses for a team photo at Royal Melbourne Golf Course on December 11, 2019 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images)

More than anything, the team environment allowed Woods to shed his lone-wolf label. For years, the biennial team competitions felt more like a burden than an honor to Woods. Instead, he enjoyed passing on some of his course knowledge to younger players in the pod he managed, such as Patrick Reed, and he even showed he could not only dish out jokes but take one, too. It was Zach Johnson who famously passed out “Make Tiger Great Again” T-shirts to his teammates.

“It’s not the Tiger we knew,” said NBC/Golf Channel commentator Paul Azinger. “He was uncomfortable if you were comfortable with him; now, he’s uncomfortable if you’re not comfortable with him. Tiger didn’t want to let anyone close to him. He came back and reinvented his personality with the players. These guys are so comfortable with him. They love him and he loves them back.”

TEAM USA: Meet Tiger Woods’ squad
INTERNATIONALS: Meet Ernie Els’ team

The friendships that were forged in those team rooms between Woods and Rickie Fowler and Justin Thomas led to them calling up Woods and urging him to play with them back home in Jupiter, Florida, as he attempted to resurrect his career. Those rounds prepared Woods for his return to the PGA Tour. Azinger thinks Thomas is Tiger’s best friend on Tour now. These young guns, who grew up idolizing Woods, wanted to go head to head with him and after a Tour Championship, Masters title and Zozo Championship victory they may be regretting what they wished for, but they contributed to making Woods great again.

This week, Woods is the first Presidents Cup playing captain since Hale Irwin in 1994. He’s back in his element in the team room. On the flight from the Bahamas to Alcapulco he yukked it up, playing $100 hands of high card, low card, according to one passenger on the team plane. Drinks were flowing until the plane departed from Alcapulco and Captain Woods laid down the law – no more alcohol for the week. That is, he said, until the victory celebration on Sunday.

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Justin Thomas is one of the leaders Tiger Woods will count on, now and in the future

Justin Thomas is a leader and it won’t just be at the Presidents Cup. Tiger Woods has faith in the PGA Tour pro.

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After a Paris pasting the first two days of the 2018 Ryder Cup, the red, white and blue was thoroughly black and blue.

After jumping out to a 3-0 lead in the opening session, the Americans lost the next eight matches – tying a Ryder Cup record for futility – and trailed their European rivals 10-6 heading into Sunday’s singles at Le Golf National.

Was a comeback improbable? No, for the U.S. overcame the same deficit on home soil in 1999. Was a comeback unlikely? Absolutely, especially seeing as the U.S. players were having a grim time getting a handle on the tight course with plenty of nasty rough.

And the Americans knew the opposition’s heart and soul, Rory McIlroy, would be in the leadoff position to thump any faint hopes they clung to heading into Sunday.

MOREPresidents Cup viewers guide | Photo gallery

Climbing the fringes of the Eiffel Tower would have been an easier proposition.

U.S. captain Jim Furyk needed someone to stare down McIlroy and supply a spark for his team. Furyk had plenty of stars to choose from, including Tiger Woods, Jordan Spieth, Brooks Koepka, Dustin Johnson and Rickie Fowler.

Instead, and without hesitation, Furyk tabbed a Ryder Cup newbie.

“I was nervous,” Justin Thomas said about the assignment. “It was one of the best honors I’ve gotten without receiving a trophy. It was pretty cool that it was my rookie year in the Ryder Cup, and my captain had that kind of faith in me.

“We needed to go out and get a point.”

Thomas rewarded his captain’s faith by defeating McIlroy in a titanic tussle that ended on the final hole when McIlroy conceded after hitting into a bunker and then water. Thomas proved his mettle, especially when, after winning the first hole, he didn’t wilt when McIlroy took the lead by winning holes 2, 3 and 4.

Thomas’ 1-up victory, however, only stalled the inevitable, as Europe wrapped up its beating for the cup, 17½-10½. But from the ashes, a leader was born, as Thomas was one of the few bright spots leaving the City of Lights.

“He’ll be one of my horses down in Australia,” said Woods, who will captain the American forces against the Internationals in the Presidents Cup this week at Royal Melbourne. “He’s going to be one of the more dominant players over the next decade or so. He’ll be one of the leaders on the team and on future teams.

“He’s extremely fiery. That’s what we want, a bunch of guys like that.”

Hearing that, coming from the man he’s idolized since first picking up a cut-down golf club, made Thomas smile. While he excels in an individual sport, he thirsts for and thrives in team competitions. It always has been that way for Thomas, from his high school days through his winning ways for the Crimson Tide.

A force on Tour

In Maui ahead of the 2016 Sentry Tournament of Champions, Thomas said as much when he revealed he’d rather be on a winning Ryder Cup team than capture a major championship. He came close to making it to Hazeltine that year in which the U.S. romped over Europe. The following year, he took care of winning a major – the 2017 PGA Championship – and played in his first Presidents Cup.

He quickly displayed his might by posting a 3-1-1 record as the Americans won the Presidents Cup in a rout. Then he made his Ryder Cup debut a success as he teamed with Spieth to win three of four matches and toppled McIlroy.

“I’m going to count on him in Australia and I have no doubt he’ll deliver,” Woods said. “I’ve seen his growth as a player because I practice with him quite a bit at home. I’ve seen him grow and develop as a player. He understands how to play the game a little bit better. Just look at the results.”

TEAM USA: Meet Tiger Woods’ squad
INTERNATIONALS: Meet Ernie Els’ team

In 2017, he won the PGA and the FedEx Cup during a five-win campaign. This year, he won the BMW Championship during the FedEx Cup Playoffs in August and the CJ Cup at Nine Bridges in Korea in October.

With his latest victory, Thomas joined Woods, McIlroy, Spieth and Jack Nicklaus as the only players in the past 60 seasons to win 11 times on the PGA Tour before turning 27.

And Thomas, 26, has won 10 times since the start of the 2016-17 season, the most on Tour.

“When he came out on Tour, I was off the Tour,” Woods said. “But he’d come over to the house, we’d go out for dinners, and we practiced a lot (in Florida), and you knew he was going to be a force out here.”

The U.S. will need Thomas to be a force – both on the course and in the team room. Koepka, the world’s No. 1 player, is out as he nurses a bum knee. Johnson will arrive in Oz having played zero tournaments since August following knee surgery. Fowler will have played just once since August.

And there’s no Spieth, who was a leader in the past four team events. But Spieth has no doubts about Thomas leading the U.S. troops.

‘No-fear mentality’

Spieth would know, for no one on the Tour has played more golf with Thomas than he has. The two met when they were 14 and they’ve stayed close.

“Guys certainly look at him as a leader, whether with a pep talk or making noise with his clubs,” Spieth said. “He has taken that role into the team room as a young leader. He has a no-fear mentality. He embraces being in those situations, that he’s going to stomp-on-their-throats kind of stuff.

“As someone who has played alongside him and ahead and behind him in team events, it’s pretty awesome to see. That kind of makes everyone else more comfortable, that you have that kind of presence out there with you.”

That’s just Thomas being Thomas. While he admits he felt he should stay in the background of the team room as a rookie, the feeling didn’t last.

“I don’t think it matters if you’re a rookie or a veteran when it comes to motivational stuff,” Thomas said. “That’s what I learned at Alabama, in high school, on the Walker Cup team. I’ve always enjoyed team golf. I like the role of trying to pump someone up.

“I want to talk to guys and get our team morale up. I always tell the captains that I’m there for them and I’ll do whatever they want me to do.”

In other words, he was built for these team competitions, circles them on his calendar, lists them as one of his goals.

“It’s the best,” Thomas said of wearing the team colors. “It’s a feeling you really can’t describe. I feel like a different person, almost like I’m immortal, if you will. It’s kind of bizarre.

“When I’m standing on that tee and they say my name and then say United States and I’m out there as one of the 12 guys playing for the team and captain and country, I feel better than I actually am. It’s pretty surreal.”

And at the same time, all very real.

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2019 Presidents Cup odds, lines, picks and best bets: Which side wins at Royal Melbourne?

Previewing the 2019 Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne Golf Club, with golf betting odds and picks for outright winner and the best props.

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The 2019 Presidents Cup takes place this week at The Royal Melbourne Golf Club in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Twelve of the top golfers from the United States tee off against 12 of the best from outside of Europe. Below, we analyze the tournament odds and prop bets, with golf betting picks and tips.

The first round will start Wednesday, Dec. 11, at 5:30 p.m. ET.


Looking to place a bet on this tournament? Get some action on it at BetMGM. Sign up and bet at BetMGM now!


Presidents Cup Teams

Captains Tiger Woods (USA) and Ernie Els (International) selected the following teams:

Team USA International Team
Dustin JohnsonJustin Thomas Hideki MatsuyamaAdam Scott
Matt KucharXander Schauffele Louis OosthuizenMarc Leishman
Webb SimpsonPatrick Cantlay Abraham AncerHaotong Li
Bryson DeChambeauTiger Woods C.T. PanCameron Smith
Gary WoodlandTony Finau Joaquin NiemannAdam Hadwin
Patrick ReedRickie Fowler Sungjae ImByeong Hun An

The entire US team ranks in the top 25 of the Official World Golf Ranking, while only three members of the International side are in the top 25.

Presidents Cup Tournament Winner

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

Team USA has won the past seven Presidents Cups and leads the all-time series against the International side at 10-1-1. Fortunately for the global squad, which is led by three Australians, its only Presidents Cup victory was at this venue in 1998.

The INTERNATIONALS are getting juicy +250 odds for the tournament victory. Team USA is a -250 favorite. Look for Adam Scott (No. 18), Marc Leishman (No. 28) and Cameron Smith (No. 52) to lead the Internationals to victory on home soil.

Presidents Cup Prop Bets

Internationals +3.5 Points (-125)

After losing 19-11 in 2017, look for the Internationals to keep it closer this time out. Their previous two losses in 2015 and ’13, were decided by one and three points, respectively.

Top Combined Points Scorer: Adam Scott (+1200)

Scott will have the crowd behind him as the top golfer from the host nation. He didn’t play in 1998 (when the Internationals got their lone win in the event, also in Melbourne), but he has won both the Australian Open and Australian PGA Championship and has spoken highly of wanting to win at the famed Royal Melbourne as a potential career highlight.

Who will score the most points for the USA? Patrick Reed (+900)

Expect the best from Reed, who has excelled in the Ryder Cup format against Europe, and in the 2017 Presidents Cup. He’s coming off another controversy at last week’s Hero World Challenge in which he was penalized two strokes for improving his line of play in a waste bunker.

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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Tiger Woods continues trolling Justin Thomas with over-the-top intro

Justin Thomas has been Tiger Woods’ punching bag at the Hero World Challenge.

Tiger Woods has spent his entire weekend at the Hero World Championship trolling fellow Presidents Cup team member Justin Thomas, and he saved the best prank for Saturday’s final round.

Woods and Thomas have been paired together in three of the tournament’s four rounds. On Wednesday, Woods made a show of outdriving the 26-year-old star, stopping to inspect the ball before he swaggered ahead to his own monstrous drive. In the third round, Woods received a glorious introduction on the first tee, while his playing partner’s accolades were ignored and he was introduced as “Justin Thomas.”

On Sunday, however, the announcer on the first tee went through an exhaustive list of Thomas’ accomplishments, even making sure to inform the crowd that Thomas as Mr. Golf in the state of Kentucky in 2009. Thomas thought the whole thing was hilarious.

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Tiger Woods trolls Justin Thomas after one-upping him with monstrous drive

Woods outdrove the 26-year-old Thomas, then paused to inspect his ball, before confidently striding away.

The only thing better than the Big Cat being back is the Big Cat being back with a little swagger. 

Tiger Woods is paired up with Justin Thomas at the Hero World Championship in the Bahamas today, and after Thomas hit a huge drive during the round, Woods stepped up and smashed one that flew past his.

Thomas is 26 years old, and last year averaged over 300 yards per drive. He’s a big hitter. Woods is 44, but he’s the Big Cat, so it doesn’t matter.

Even better, Woods then walked over to Thomas’ ball on the fairway, and pretended to look down and inspect it to see if it was actually his ball. He then confidently strode away, because he’s Tiger Woods and he gets to do that.

BIG CAT SWAGGER.

What can Thomas do there? There’s nothing you can do. You applaud Woods, and maybe ask him to sign his can of Monster Energy Drink for you later.

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10 best men’s college players of the decade

Adam Woodard breaks down the top 10 male college golfers of the decade plus a few other honorable mentions.

College golf has increasingly become a window into the next generation of PGA Tour stars. It has helped tremendously that the NCAA Championship has been televised since 2014. That brought college stars right into golf fans’ living rooms, showing exactly the level of play that’s out there.

To reflect on the top college players of the past decade is to play a game of “remember them when.” The resumes are deep on these players, and each made a contribution to his team or his program that was beyond meaningful. These players raised the bar in college golf, and showed just how deep the talent pool is.

Here are the top 10 men’s college golfers of the decade followed by a few honorable mentions (in alphabetical order).

Top 10

Patrick Cantlay, UCLA

Patrick Cantlay during the 110th U.S. Amateur at Chambers Bay in University Place, Washington.

Cantlay spent 55 weeks as the No. 1 player in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, a record he held until Jon Rahm broke it in 2016. He turned pro in 2012 after his sophomore season at UCLA, but it was his freshman season that caught the nation’s attention. Cantlay won four events in the 2010-11 season, including the NCAA San Diego Regional, and finished second at the NCAA Championship, where he led the Bruins to match play. In two years Cantlay had 14 top 10 finishes and 24 rounds in the 60s.