SAXX Underwear announces partnership with PGA Tour caddies to support cancer research with hilarious video

For every birdie a caddie’s player makes, SAXX Underwear will donate $100 to the Testicular Cancer Foundation.

Golf caddies are tasked with taking care of their players week in and week out, but the boys on the bag need some support, too.

That’s why the folks at SAXX Underwear have stepped in and partnered with a handful of PGA Tour caddies to help with their own equipment and make a positive difference along the way.

Tour caddies Geno Bonnalie (Joel Dahmen), Aaron Flener (J.T. Poston), John Limanti (Keith Mitchell) and Joel Stock (Will Zalatoris) will wear SAXX underwear, shorts and polos on and off the course, and for every birdie their players make, SAXX will donate $100 to the Testicular Cancer Foundation.

“The Ball Masters” will also have their own caddie house when the U.S. Open heads to Los Angeles Country Club, June 15-18, 2023.

As Bonnalie likes to say, “every set of balls deserves a proper caddie.”

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2023 Wells Fargo Championship odds: Building the perfect fantasy lineup for Quail Hollow, led by Jordan Spieth

Who’s in your lineup this week?

We’re less than 24 hours away from the start of round one at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina, for the 2023 Wells Fargo Championship.

Jon Rahm and Scottie Scheffler, the top two players in the Official World Golf Ranking, have decided to take this week off (all players are permitted to skip one designated event this season).

Max Homa enters the week as the defending champion, although his win came at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm after the venue changed to accommodate the 2022 Presidents Cup being staged at Quail Hollow later in the year. Rory McIlroy, a three-time winner of this event, is the last player to win in Charlotte.

If you’re looking for a fantasy lineup to use this week, you’re in luck. Here’s one of our favorite rosters for the Wells Fargo Championship.

More Wells Fargo betting: Expert picks, odds | Sleepers | Prop bets

2023 Wells Fargo Championship odds: Sleeper picks to win at Quail Hollow

Can a longshot pick take home the title at Quail Hollow?

After a week south of the border, it’s time for another designated event on the PGA Tour. The best players have descended on Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina, for the Wells Fargo Championship.

Jon Rahm and Scottie Scheffler, the top two players in the Official World Golf Ranking, are taking the week off.

Max Homa claimed the Wells Fargo title last year at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm — the championship was moved due to the Presidents Cup being staged at QHC.

Rory McIlroy, who is making his first start since missing the weekend at Augusta, won the 2021 edition over LIV Golf’s Abraham Ancer.

Although big names have dominated the designated events so far this season, let’s take a look at a few sleeper picks that may be worth a shot this week in North Carolina.

More Wells Fargo betting: Expert picks, odds

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Beau Hossler and Wyndham Clark chasing elusive first PGA Tour win, Sungjae Im’s birdie binge among takeaways from third round of Zurich Classic

Here are takeaways from the third round in Louisiana.

AVONDALE, La. — Beau Hossler and Wyndham Clark have achieved all sorts of accolades as golfers from qualifying for the U.S. Open as a teenager for Hossler and being part of a NCAA national championship team for Clark. Both have been successful at maintaining their PGA Tour privileges, but a win has been elusive so far for both of them.

That could change tomorrow in one fell swoop as they have teamed up to shoot 26-under 190 and claim a one-stroke lead over the team of Sungjae Im and Keith Mitchell heading into the final round of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans. Hossler is 0-for-4 in converting 54-hole leads and Clark is 0-for-1. Could having a partner be the difference in finding their way to the winner’s circle?

“Sometimes when you’re alone, it feels like you’re out on an island. When the momentum gets going bad, when you’re on your own, sometimes it’s tough to turn that,” Clark said. “With a teammate, you you can kind of feed off each other and really not allow that momentum to get going in the wrong direction. So I hope tomorrow we’re light and loose like we’ve been all three days.”

On a picture-perfect Saturday in the Bayou, Hossler and Clark each chipped in five birdies in the four-ball, or best-ball, format and posted 10-under 62 at TPC Louisiana, which tied for the low round of the day. Hossler made a few birdies from inside 10 feet and Clark connected from 21 feet at the third and 26 feet at No. 12.

Zurich Classic: Sunday tee times

“That’s a tough hole, and we kind of snagged one,” Clark said. “That was a huge momentum for the back nine.”

Clark and Hossler have held at least a share of the lead after each round this week.

On Sunday, the format switches back to foursomes, or alternate shot, which defending champions Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele were able to exploit to the tune of shooting a remarkable 9-under 63 on Friday. However, they are only a combined 11-under for two rounds of best-ball, settling for 6-under 66 in the third round. Cantlay made just one birdie on the day. They will start six back at 20-under and T-10, and likely will need another special round of 63 or less – and some help – to have a chance to defend.

The final round presents a great opportunity for the 29-year-old Clark and the 28-year-old Hossler — not to mention several other contending team where one or both partners is seeking a maiden victory — to break thorough for the first time.

“I think the more opportunities you get, the more comfortable you get, and hopefully we can lean on that tomorrow,” Hossler said.

“If the momentum goes in our direction, I hope we just keep riding it,” Clark added.

Here are four more things to know from the third round of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

Fitzpatrick brothers ‘dovetailed’ it around, a bromance brewing on Team Im/Mitchell and more from Thursday at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans

Catch up on Thursday’s action here.

The opening round of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans at TPC Louisiana is in the books, and it was a doozy.

Matt Fitzpatrick and his brother Alex got off to a hot start, signing for a best-ball 10-under 62 and were tied for the clubhouse lead when they walked off the golf course.

The unlikely pairing of Keith Mitchell and Sungjae Im, a story you have to read to believe, was another team that crossed the double-digit threshold and finished the day 10 under alongside David Lipsky/Aaron Rai and Henrik Norlander/Luke List.

However, after 18 holes, Beau Hossler/Wyndham Clark and Brandon Matthews/Sean O’Hair lead at 11 under.

If you missed any of Thursday’s action, no worries, have you covered. Here are several takeaways from the first round of the Zurich Classic.

Zurich: LeaderboardFriday tee timesPhotos

2023 Zurich Classic: The unlikely story behind how Keith Mitchell and Sungjae Im teamed up

“I’ve always been his best friend,” Mitchell said. “I just wanted him to like me back.”

AVONDALE, La. – Did Sungjae Im and Keith Mitchell just become best friends at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans?

“I’ve always been his best friend,” Mitchell said. “I just wanted him to like me back.”

The first-time partners in the PGA Tour’s only two-man team event sure played like bosom buddies during the first round on Thursday at TPC Louisiana, carding nine birdies, an eagle and a chip-in par by Im at the last to shoot a best-ball total of 10-under 62, one stroke of the pace set by Wyndham Clark and Beau Hossler and Sean O’Hair and Brandon Matthews.

“He hit a bunch of laser beams and smiled, and I just tried to help when I could,” Mitchell said.

Im, a 25-year-old two-time winner on the PGA Tour, and Mitchell, 31, first played together in the third round of the 2019 Honda Classic, which Mitchell went on to win for his lone Tour title.

“All he did was just smile and high five and stripe it. I was like, man, this guy is going to be really good,” Mitchell recalled. “So jokingly one day, I was like, hey, we need to play Zurich.”

Unfortunately, Im already had committed to playing with Whee Kim that year. Mitchell figured that was that. In 2020, the tournament was canceled due to COVID-19 and the past two years Mitchell has partnered with Brandt Snedeker, who has been sidelined most of the season with an injury, while Im played with fellow South Korean native Ben An.

“After I’d asked him the first time and he said no, I wasn’t going to ask him again,” Mitchell told Golf.com last week.

About a month ago, Im texted his interest in teaming up this week through his agent and Mitchell, who is playing his 11th tournament in the last 14 weeks, couldn’t resist the opportunity to pair with the No. 18 player in the world.

“When you have the opportunity to play with such a superstar, you say yes,” Mitchell said.

In the lead up to the tournament, Im and Mitchell made a humorous video that was posted to social media, where Im left an invite to be his partner in Mitchell’s locker. Mitchell checked the ‘yes’ box in red Sharpie and wrote in capital letters, “DUH!”

In the comments section to the Instagram post, Im wrote, “Let’s Goooo.”

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They did just that racing to the top of the leaderboard. Starting on the back nine at the Pete Dye-designed layout, Im and Mitchell made five birdies before they both made bogey at the first hole. But they rebounded by playing the next six holes in six under, including a 31-foot eagle at the par-5 seventh by Mitchell, who called it his biggest contribution of the round.

That and teaching Im about college football and in particular his alma mater, the defending national champion Georgia Bulldogs.

“He’s now the biggest Georgia fan in South Korea. He’s a Georgia resident now. That helps,” Mitchell said.

But when Mitchell asked him if he’d join him at a Georgia game this fall, Im demurred.

“Busy,” he said.

“He’d come,” Mitchell said. “He plays golf every week. I don’t think he has time.”

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There were several questionable — to put it kindly — style choices during the first three rounds of the 2023 Masters

A few of these are … yikes.

The 87th Masters Tournament kicked off Thursday morning at Augusta National Golf Club with ceremonial tee shots from six-time winner Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player and Tom Watson.

For the biggest tournament of the year, apparel brands often outfit their players with the best stuff they offer. Over the years, we’ve seen some great fits — but we’ve also seen some terrible ones.

Thursday morning consisted of more of the latter.

Viktor Hovland, for example, played the opening round in what resembled a splatter painting you would see posted on the walls of a kindergarten room.

Here are some of the worst style choices we saw on the first three days in Georgia.

Masters 2023 leaderboard: Get the latest news from Augusta

The Masters 2023: These four pros officially qualified through the March 27 OWGR cut-off

There’s still one chance to get in: winning the Valero Texas Open.

The field for the Masters grew by four on Monday.

Jason Day, Harris English, Keith Mitchell and Min Woo Lee punched their tickets to the season’s first major, which begins April 6, by being in the top 50 in the Official World Golf Ranking on March 27 and having not previously qualified for the tournament to be held at Augusta National.

Day, 35, reached the quarterfinals of the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play on Saturday before losing to Scottie Scheffler. It continued an impressive run of good form for Day, who started the year 112th in the OWGR. But since the calendar flipped, Day has recorded five top-10 finishes and jumped to No. 33. Day missed last year’s Masters, snapping a string of 11 straight appearances. He has notched four top-10s at Augusta National, including T-2 in 2011 and third in 2013.

English, No. 44, sat out last year’s Masters after opting to have surgery on a torn labrum in his right hip in February 2022. Ranked 14th at the time, he missed five months and then struggled to pick up where he left off. The 33-year-old English plummeted to 90th after a missed cut at the WM Phoenix Open this February, but on the back of a T-2 finish at the Arnold Palmer Invitational earlier this month, the Valdosta, Georgia, native will make his fourth trip down Magnolia Lane.

Mitchell, No. 46, who like English played his college golf down the road in Athens for the Georgia Bulldogs, is returning to the Masters for the first time since 2019, when he notched his lone PGA Tour win at the Honda Classic. Two top-5 finishes in February – T-4 at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and fifth at the Genesis Invitational – lifted Mitchell, 31, who is on a run of six straight made cuts, inside the top 50.

Min Woo Lee, No. 47, is set to make his second Masters appearances after finishing T-14 in his debut last year. He has recorded nine top-15 finishes worldwide in his last 11 stroke-play starts since a third at the Spanish Open late last year. The 24-year-old Aussie shared the lead early in the final round of the Players Championship in March before tumbling to a 76 and T-6 finish.

Another Aussie was the hard-luck loser in the OWGR.

Someone had to be No. 51 and it’s Lucas Herbert. He started the year at No. 60 and had a pair of third-place finishes in the Middle East to improve to 45th but then backed up to No. 56 and even getting to the quarterfinals at the WGC-Match Play wasn’t enough to get him on the right side of the OWGR before the cut off.

That leaves just one more avenue to qualify for the Masters. The winner of this week’s Valero Texas Open, if he hasn’t otherwise qualified, is exempt into the field, which currently is at 89. Last year, J.J. Spaun took advantage of this route by winning at TPC San Antonio.

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Players Championship: Keith Mitchell had an all-time bad break when he drove his ball in the water, slammed club in frustration seconds before horn blows

This is both hilarious and terrible luck.

You want to talk about bad beats, well, Keith Mitchell suffered one of the worst ones in recent memory Friday.

Seconds before the horn blew to suspend play for the day due to inclement weather at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, during the second round of the Players Championship, Mitchell hit his tee shot on the par-4 5th, his 14th hole of the day.

He slammed his club in frustration as his ball sailed toward the water, eventually finding the hazard right of the fairway.

If he just waited two seconds, he would have been able to play the shot Saturday morning.

Play is scheduled to resume at 7 a.m. ET.

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2023 Players Championship odds: Sleeper picks for TPC Sawgrass including Keegan Bradley at 50/1

Bradley has finished inside the top 10 in two of his last four Players starts.

The 2023 Players Championship is the fourth designated event on the PGA Tour in five weeks. Another loaded field is set to take on TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, beginning Thursday.

Jon Rahm, Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy, the top three players in the Official World Golf Ranking, are playing together for the first two rounds. The star-studded group will tee off at 7:56 a.m. ET Thursday.

Despite all the star power, there are several names further down the odds list that deserve some consideration.

And if you don’t believe a sleeper could contend come Sunday, here are a few names that finished inside the top five over the last two years: Lee Westwood, Brian Harman, Anirban Lahiri, Kevin Kisner and Keegan Bradley.

In fact, let’s start with Bradley on this list of sleeper picks for the 2023 Players Championship.

More Players betting content: Expert picks to win