PGA Tour revises 2020 schedule, 6 majors played in 2020-21 season

Assessing the PGA Tour’s revised 2020 schedule, with a look at the betting favorites for the three majors set to be played this year.

The PGA Tour has once again revised its schedule for the remainder of the 2020 season in hopes of playing professional golf amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Below, we look at the new schedule for the remainder of the 2020 season and look ahead to the 2020-21 season, along with a look at the betting odds for the three majors – PGA Championship, US Open, Masters – set to be played this year.

The PGA Tour has been one of the most proactive sports leagues in trying to plan for a resumption of normalcy. While this schedule is subject to further revision, it’s nice to see a light at the end of the tunnel.

2020 PGA Tour schedule

The PGA Tour is planning on a mid-June return to play. Fans won’t be allowed on the courses for at least the first few scheduled events.

  • June 11-14: Charles Schwab Challenge, Colonial Country Club, Fort Worth, TX
  • June 18-21: RBC Heritage, Harbour Town Golf Links, Hilton Head, SC
  • June 25-28: Travelers Championship, TPC River Highlands, Cromwell, CT
  • July 2-5: Rocket Mortgage Classic, Detroit Golf Club, Detroit, MI
  • July 9-12: John Deere Classic, TPC Deere Run, Silvis IL
  • July 16-19: the Memorial Tournament, Muirfield Village Golf Club, Dublin, OH
  • July 23-26: 3M Open, TPC Twin Cities, Blaine, MN
  • July 30-Aug. 2: World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational, TPC Southwind, Memphis, TN
  • July 30-Aug. 2: Barracuda Championship, Tahoe Mt. Club, Truckee, CA
  • Aug. 6-9: PGA Championship, TPC Harding Park, San Francisco, CA
  • Aug. 13-16: Wyndham Championship, Sedgefield Country Club, Greensboro, NC
  • Aug. 20-23: The Northern Trust, TPC Boston, Norton, MA
  • Aug. 27-30: BMW Championship, Olympia Fields Country Club, Olympia Fields, IL
  • Sept. 3-7: Tour Championship, East Lake Golf Club, Atlanta, GA

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2020-21 PGA Tour season

The 2020 portion of the 2020-21 season has also been released. There are six total majors set be played, with both the Masters and US Open taking place this fall and again in 2021.

  • Sept. 10-13: Safeway Open, Silverado Resort and Spa, Napa, CA
  • Sept. 17-20: US Open, Winged Foot Golf Club, Mamaroneck, NY
  • Sept 25-27: Ryder Cup, Whistling Straits, Kohler, WI
  • Sept. 24-27: Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship, Corales Golf Club, Punta Cana, DOM
  • Oct. 1-4: Sanderson Farms Championship, Country Club of Jackson, Jackson, MS
  • Oct. 8-11: Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, TPC Summerlin, Las Vegas, NV
  • Oct. 15-18: The CJ Cup @ Nine Bridges, Nine Bridges, Jeju Island, KOR
  • Oct. 22-25: Zozo Championship, Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club, Chiba, JPN
  • Oct. 29-Nov. 1: World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions, Sheshan International Golf Club, Shanghai, CHN
  • Oct. 29-Nov. 1: Bermuda Championship, Port Royal Golf Course, Southampton, BER
  • Nov. 5-8: Houston Open, Memorial Park Golf Course, Houston, TX
  • Nov. 12-15: Masters Tournament, Augusta National Golf Club, Augusta, GA
  • Nov. 19-22: The RSM Classic, Sea Island Resort, Sea Island, GA
  • Dec. 3-6: Mayakoba Golf Classic, El Camaleon Golf Club, Playa del Carmen, MEX
  • Dec. 3-6: Hero World Challenge, Albany, New Providence, BAH
  • Dec. 11-13: QBE Shootout, Tiburon Golf Club, Naples, FL

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2020 PGA Championship odds

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Friday, April 17 at 12:20 p.m. ET.

NAME ODDS
Rory McIlroy +700
Jon Rahm +1000
Dustin Johnson +1200
Brooks Koepka +1400
Justin Thomas +1400
Tiger Woods +1400
Hideki Matsuyama +2500
Rickie Fowler +2500
Xander Schauffele +2500
Bryson DeChambeau +2800
Patrick Cantlay +2800
Patrick Reed +2800
Tommy Fleetwood +2800
Tony Finau +2800

2020 US Open odds

NAME ODDS
Rory McIlroy +700
Dustin Johnson +1000
Jon Rahm +1000
Brooks Koepka +1200
Justin Thomas +1400
Tiger Woods +1400
Rickie Fowler +2500
Xander Schauffele +2500
Bryson DeChambeau +2800
Hideki Matsuyama +2800
Jason Day +2800
Patrick Cantlay +2800
Patrick Reed +2800
Tommy Fleetwood +2800
Tony Finau +2800

2020 Masters odds

NAME ODDS
Rory McIlroy +650
Jon Rahm +1000
Justin Thomas +1400
Tiger Woods +1400
Brooks Koepka +1600
Dustin Johnson +1600
Xander Schauffele +2000
Hideki Matsuyama +2500
Patrick Reed +2500
Adam Scott +2800
Patrick Cantlay +2800
Rickie Fowler +2800
Tommy Fleetwood +2800
Tony Finau +2800

Get some action on the PGA Tour 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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British Open future sites through 2023

The 149th Open will be the 15th time for Royal St. George’s to host, and the first since 2011 when Darren Clarke took home the Claret Jug.

The 149th Open championship was to be contested at Royal St. George’s in Kent, England, July 16-19, 2020, but on April 6 the tournament was canceled due to the global coronavirus pandemic.

It’s the first time the Open was not held since 1945 because of World War II.

The decision was also made to slide the 149th Open back to 2021 and keep it at Royal St. George’s. This allows the 150th Open to be still be St. Andrews, but in 2022 instead 2021.

The 149th Open will be the 15th time Royal St. George’s will host the event, and the first since 2011 when Darren Clarke took home the Claret Jug.

Future locations

2021

Royal St. George’s, Kent, England, July 15-18

2022

St. Andrews, Fife, Scotland, July 14-17

2023

Royal Liverpool, Hoylake, England, TBD

The 10 PGA Tour events that were canceled this season

The PGA Tour season originally had 49 FedEx Cup tournaments. Now there are 36 on the revised schedule.

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The current PGA Tour season originally had 49 FedEx Cup tournaments. The global coronavirus pandemic forced changes to those plans.

On Thursday, the PGA Tour released its revised schedule, and the new slate shows a total of 36 tournaments.

Ten of the original events have been canceled, including the 149th Open Championship, meaning we’ll only see three majors this calendar year.

Two of those majors – the U.S. Open and the Masters – as well as the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship, slide onto next season’s 2020-21 schedule. Puntacana, an opposite-field event that was supposed to be the same weekend as the WGC-Match Play, is now opposite the Ryder Cup.

Also coming off the PGA Tour’s future schedules is A Military Tribute at the Greenbrier, which had served as the Tour’s season opener. On Thursday, tournament organizers canceled next season’s event as well as the remaining years on a contract that was to run through 2026.

Canceled 2019-20 tournaments

The Players Championship
Dates: March 12-15 (canceled after the first round)
TPC Sawgrass, Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida

Valspar Championship
Dates: March 19-22
Innisbrook Resort (Copperhead), Palm Harbor, Florida

WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play
Dates: March 25-29
Austin Country Club, Austin, Texas

Valero Texas Open
Dates: April 2-5
TPC San Antonio – AT&T Oaks, San Antonio, Texas

Zurich Classic of New Orleans
Dates: April 23-26
TPC Louisiana, Avondale, Louisiana

Wells Fargo Championship
Dates: April 30-May 3
Quail Hollow Club, Charlotte, North Carolina

AT&T Byron Nelson
Dates: May 7-10
Trinity Forest Golf Club, Dallas

RBC Canadian Open
Dates: June 11-14
St. George’s G&CC, Toronto, Ontario

The Open Championship
Dates: July 16-19
Royal St. George’s Golf Club, Sandwich, England

Barbasol Championship
Dates: July 16-19
Keene Trace Golf Club, Nicholasville, Kentucky

Moved from 2019-20 to 2020-21 schedule:

Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship
Dates: Originally March 26-29, now Sept. 24-27
Puntacana Resort & Club (Corales), Punta Cana, Dominican Republic

Also listed on the schedule for next season:

U.S. Open
Dates: Sept. 17-20
Winged Foot Golf Club, Mamaroneck, New York

The Masters
Dates: Nov. 12-15
Augusta National Golf Club, Augusta, Georgia

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While quarantined, revisiting the quaint and the quirky of Open Championships gone by

Who could forget Guy McQuitty, a professional who qualified at Turnberry in ’86 then shot 95-87, a stout 42-over par for 36 holes?

In a week when we couldn’t make our way down a padlocked Magnolia Lane, homebound golf fans had to settle instead for memory lane.

Our guides were familiar broadcast voices, many of them — Pat Summerall, Ken Venturi — long stilled. Golf Channel re-aired the 1986 Masters, the Rosetta Stone of major championships that revealed the Sunday strengths of Jack Nicklaus and the comparative frailties even among Hall of Famers in the generation that followed him. Jack was winning too over on CBS, which gave us the epic ’75 Masters, in which he helped Tom Weiskopf and Johnny Miller add to what would ultimately be a combined seven silver salvers. More recent Masters tournaments were also dusted off: ’04, when Phil Mickelson broke his duck and Ernie Els’ heart, and ’19, when an approaching storm moved up tee times and saw Tiger Woods secure his fifth green jacket by Sunday lunchtime (his first jacket was pretty much sealed by Sunday lunchtime too, but that’s another story).

The retro weekend broadcasts — in addition to the Masters YouTube channel, which contains every final round dating back to 1968 — were a welcome fix for quarantined golf junkies who are otherwise denied until November by the COVID-19 crisis. But for me, two streams diverged in a locked down New York City apartment, and I took the one less clicked upon, at least in April. I opted for the only major tournament we know for certain won’t be played this year.

The Open Championship website has every official film since 1970 — Jack won that year too, of course — and it’s a delightful reservoir of the quaint and the quirky. In my quarantine viewing I elected to skip more recent Opens that remain reasonably fresh in the mind, despite the ample wine intake necessary to stomach small town British food those weeks. It’s earlier Opens, those from the ’70s and ’80s, that offer beguiling glimpses of a time when even major golf was less corporate, and pleasant reminders of players long forgotten because they’re either dead or just not brand-building on InstaGrift.

Like “Mr. Lu,” who lost by a shot to Lee Trevino at Royal Birkdale in ’71. Lu Liang-Huan is a mere footnote today, but he was good enough to win titles across four decades. Or Brian Barnes. The 1975 Open film opens with the late legend arriving on the beach at Carnoustie via hovercraft that ferried him across the Firth of Tay from St. Andrews (a reminder that the complete absence of hotels in Carnoustie was still preferable to the monstrosity now sitting behind the 18th green). Or Jack Newton.

He was one of two talented 25-year-olds who made an 18-hole playoff that week at Carnoustie. Tom Watson won, the first of eight majors. Newton also finished second to Seve Ballesteros in the 1980 Masters, but he’s little-remembered now, his career having been cut short at age 33 when on a rainy night he walked into a plane propeller on the runway at the Sydney airport.

Ballesteros, who would have turned 63 last week, features in so many of the old Open films, as though they were poignant home movie reminders of his brilliance. The summer of ’76, when at age 19 he chased Miller around Birkdale for four days before finishing second; the ‘car park champion’ at Lytham in ’79; the conquering matador at St. Andrews in ’84; the sublime fifth and final major back at Lytham in ’88.

Seve’s are moments not easily forgotten, but the Open films are rife with many curios that have been. Maurice Flitcroft, the unemployed crane operator who gatecrashed a qualifier in ’76 and shot 121. Guy McQuitty, a professional who qualified at Turnberry in ’86 then shot 95-87, a stout 42-over par for 36 holes. He won honorable mention in the official film for not living up to his name and hailing a cab after day one.

Greg Norman of Australia celebrates after winning the title during the final round of the 1986 British Open Golf Championship held on July 20, 1986 at Turnberry, in Ayrshire, Scotland. (Photo by Simon Bruty/Getty Images)

That same Turnberry Open saw an utterly imperious Greg Norman at the height of his powers, quite unlike the luckless figure we see so often in Masters movies. He shot what might be the finest round ever played on Friday that week, three-putting the last for a 63 in weather so foul one wouldn’t even send Brandel Chamblee outdoors in it. That was back when players routinely hit 2- and 3-irons into 450-yard holes, and fairway woods into the par-5s at Augusta National. A bygone era indeed.

That library of old Opens will get many more visits before we finally enjoy the 149th edition 15 months from now. So too will that Masters channel on YouTube, sustenance for another seven months. Sitting at home over the last week, we didn’t get to see if Tiger could defend, if Rory could complete the career grand slam, if Gary Player would boast about outdriving 80-year-old Nicklaus in the ceremonial tee shot. But we will in November, pandemic-permitting.

Until we see another major, we make do with memories. What should have been Masters week was marked by what golf has lost in 2020. But it was also an apt time to revisit everything, and everyone, that shaped and sustained it in the years thus far.

 

Updated betting odds for PGA Tour’s revised 2020 major schedule

Looking at the PGA Tour’s revised 2020 schedule, with updated odds for each of the majors.

The PGA Tour released a revised schedule for the remainder of the 2020 season Monday. Among the updates, the 2020 Open Championship at Royal St. George’s Golf Club was officially canceled and will take place at the same venue in 2021. The other three majors were given new dates beginning in early August 2020. Below, we’ll look at the key dates for the remainder of the 2020 PGA Tour season, along with the updated betting odds for the majors.

2020 PGA Tour key dates

  • UNCONFIRMED: June 15-21 – potential event (formerly US Open week)
  • UNCONFIRMED: July 13-19 – potential event (formerly The Open Championship week)
  • UNCONFIRMED: July 27-August 2 – potential event (formerly Men’s Olympic Competition week)
  • CONFIRMED: August 3-9 – 2020 PGA Championship
  • CONFIRMED: August 10-16 – Wyndham Championship
  • CONFIRMED: August 17-23 – The Northern Trust – start of FedExCup Playoffs
  • CONFIRMED: August 24-30 – BMW Championship
  • CONFIRMED: August 31-Septemeber 7 – Tour Championship
  • CONFIRMED: September 14-20 – US Open
  • CONFIRMED: November 9-15 – Masters

Looking to place a bet on the PGA Tour? Get some action at BetMGM. Bet Now!


2020 PGA Championship dates and odds

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Tuesday, April 7 at 8:30 a.m. ET.

Date: August 3-9

Location: TPC Harding Park

NAME ODDS
Rory McIlroy +700
Jon Rahm +1000
Dustin Johnson +1200
Brooks Koepka +1400
Justin Thomas +1400
Tiger Woods +1400
Hideki Matsuyama +2500
Rickie Fowler +2500
Xander Schauffele +2500

SUBSCRIBE to Golfweek and get the most comprehensive coverage of golf’s greatest athletes. Click here or call 1-800-996-4653 to subscribe.


2020 US Open dates and odds

Date: September 14-20

Location: Winged Foot Golf Club

NAME ODDS
Rory McIlroy +700
Dustin Johnson +1000
Jon Rahm +1000
Brooks Koepka +1200
Justin Thomas +1400
Tiger Woods +1400
Rickie Fowler +2500
Xander Schauffele +2500
Bryson DeChambeau +2800

2020 Masters dates and odds

Date: November 9-15

Location: Augusta National Golf Club

NAME ODDS
Rory McIlroy +650
Jon Rahm +1000
Justin Thomas +1400
Tiger Woods +1400
Brooks Koepka +1600
Dustin Johnson +1600
Xander Schauffele +2000
Hideki Matsuyama +2500
Patrick Reed +2500

Get some action on the PGA Tour 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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British Open future sites, 2020-2023

The 2020 British Open championship will be contested at Royal St. George’s in England, the 15th time the course has hosted the event.

The 149th British Open championship, often referred to as The Open Championship, will be contested at Royal St. George’s in Kent, England, in 2020.

It will be the 15th time Royal St. George’s will host the Open and the first since 2011 when Darren Clarke took home the Claret Jug.

St. Andrews will host the 150th Open championship in 2021.

Future locations

2020 – Royal St. George’s, Kent, England (July 16-19)

2021 – St. Andrews, Fife, Scotland (July 15-18)

2022 – Royal Liverpool, Hoylake, England (July 14-17)

2023 – Royal Troon, South Ayrshire, Scotland (July 20-23)

British Open returning to Royal Troon in 2023

A century after hosting for the first time, the Open Championship returns to Royal Troon for the 10th time in 2023.

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The British Open was first played at Royal Troon in 1923.

A century later, the Claret Jug is returning to South Ayrshire, Scotland for a 10th time.

The R&A announced Monday that Royal Troon will once again play host for the 152nd Open Championship, held July 16-23, 2023.

“We are very much looking forward to celebrating another milestone in the cherished history of The Open when we mark the 100th anniversary of the championship first being played at Royal Troon,” said Martin Slumbers, Chief Executive of the R&A.

Added Des Bancewicz, Captain of Royal Troon: “We are delighted to welcome the return of the world’s oldest major championship to Royal Troon and regard this as confirmation of the wonderful condition to which our historic links are maintained. The 152nd Open will also provide an excellent opportunity to celebrate 100 years of the Championship’s history at Royal Troon which commenced with Arthur Havers’ victory in 1923.”

Royal Troon last hosted the British Open in 2016, where Henrik Stenson prevailed against Phil Mickelson in one of the most exciting majors in recent memory.  Troon previously hosted in 1923, 1950, 1962, 1973, 1982, 1989, 1997, 2004 and 2016.

This year’s event will be held at Royal St. George’s, followed by the Old Course at St Andrews in 2021 and Royal Liverpool in 2022.

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2020 PGA Tour major odds: Patrick Reed looking to silence critics

Analyzing Patrick Reed’s chances and betting odds of winning another major championship during the 2020 PGA Tour season.

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Will Patrick Reed win a PGA Tour major championship in 2020? Based off BetMGM‘s golf betting odds, I analyze Captain America’s best opportunities to win along with some of the best potential golf betting lines to cash in on Reed’s play this year. This piece is part of a SportsbookWire series, which will look at the PGA Tour’s biggest names and their chances of winning a major championship in 2020.

Patrick Reed’s 2019 PGA Tour Highlights

  • T-5 Rocket Mortgage Classic
  • Won The Northern Trust
  • T-4 BMW PGA Championship
  • 3rd Hero World Challenge

PGA Tour odds to win a major in 2020

Name Official World Golf Ranking Odds Last PGA Tour win (Solo) Last major
Brooks Koepka 1 +200 July 2019 2019 PGA Championship
Rory McIlroy 2 +250 Nov. 2019 2014 PGA Championship
Jon Rahm 3 +350 Jan. 2018 NA
Justin Thomas 4 +450 Oct. 2019 2017 PGA Championship
Dustin Johnson 5 +200 Feb. 2019 2016 US Open
Tiger Woods 6 +400 Oct. 2019 2019 Masters
Patrick Cantlay 7 +500 June 2019 NA
Justin Rose 8 +400 Jan. 2019 2013 US Open
Xander Schauffele 9 +500 Jan. 2019 NA
Tommy Fleetwood 10 +600 NA NA
Patrick Reed 12 +1100 Aug. 2019 2018 Masters

Reed’s odds are appealing as a recent major champion. He has the same odds as Matt Kuchar and is priced just below the likes of Paul Casey and Louis Oosthuizen. He has been in the mix on Sunday at all four of the majors in recent years, and is a nice betting play at better than 10-to-1 odds to claim his second career major championship in 2020.


Looking to place a bet on Patrick Reed to win a major in 2020? Get some action on it at BetMGMSign up and bet at BetMGM now!


Where is Patrick Reed’s best chance of winning a major in 2020?

Event 2020 Venue Best career result Odds
Masters Augusta National Won (2018) +5000
PGA Championship TPC Harding Park T-2 (2017) +6600
US Open Winged Foot 4th (2018 +6600
Open Championship Royal St. George’s 10th (2019) +5000

Reed followed up his 2018 Masters win with a T-36 last year. His 10th-place finish at The Open last year drops his odds in 2020, though he had previously missed the cut in two of five tries. Though he missed the cut at each of the last two PGA Championship’s following his co-runner-up finish in 2017, the odds at TPC Harding are enticing.

Will Patrick Reed win a major in 2020?

The price is right for Reed, who typically sees suppressed odds as a well-known name. He struggled at the recent Presidents Cup following controversy at the Hero World Challenge, but he has been well-fueled by added motivation over his career. He’s a good play at +1100 odds to win at least one of the four majors without needing to specify the exact location.

Top PGA Tour bets to win a major in 2020

Get some PGA Tour betting action 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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2020 PGA Tour major odds: Phil Mickelson priced among the longshots

Analyzing Phil Mickelson’s chances and betting odds of winning another major championship during the 2020 PGA Tour season.

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Will Phil Mickelson win a PGA Tour major championship in 2020? Based off BetMGM‘s golf betting odds, I analyze Mickelson’s best opportunities to win along with some of the best potential golf betting lines to cash in on Phil’s play this year.

This piece is part of a SportsbookWire series, which will look at the PGA Tour‘s biggest names and their chances of winning a major championship in 2020.

Phil Mickelson’s 2019 PGA Tour Highlights

  • T-2 Desert Classic
  • Won AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

PGA Tour odds to win a major in 2020

Name Official World Golf Ranking Odds Last PGA Tour win (Solo) Last major
Brooks Koepka 1 +200 July 2019 2019 PGA Championship
Rory McIlroy 2 +250 Nov. 2019 2014 PGA Championship
Jon Rahm 3 +350 Jan. 2018 NA
Justin Thomas 4 +450 Oct. 2019 2017 PGA Championship
Dustin Johnson 5 +200 Feb. 2019 2016 US Open
Tiger Woods 6 +400 Oct. 2019 2019 Masters
Patrick Cantlay 7 +500 June 2019 NA
Justin Rose 8 +400 Jan. 2019 2013 US Open
Xander Schauffele 9 +500 Jan. 2019 NA
Tommy Fleetwood 10 +600 NA NA
Phil Mickelson 65 +2000 Feb. 2019 2013 Open Championship

Heading into his seventh year since his last major title, Mickelson has the same odds as Chez ReavieIan Poulter and Matt Wallace to win one in 2020. He’ll turn 50 years old in mid-June, and he faded down the stretch in 2019, after claiming career victory No. 44 at Pebble Beach.


Looking to place a bet on Phil Mickelson to win a major in 2020? Get some action on it at BetMGMSign up and bet at BetMGM now!


Where is Phil Mickelson’s best chance of winning a major in 2020?

Event 2020 Venue Best career result Odds
Masters Augusta National Won (2004, 2006, 2010) +4000
PGA Championship TPC Harding Park Won 2005 +6600
US Open Winged Foot 2nd/T-2 (1999, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2009, 2013) +6600
Open Championship Royal St. George’s Won (2013) +10000

Mickelson’s best odds unsurprisingly come at Augusta National, where he has three of his five career major victories. His worst odds come at Royal St. George’s, where he tied for second in the 2011 Open Championship.

Will Phil Mickelson win a major in 2020?

Lefty’s best major result last season was a T-18 finish at Augusta in April. He missed the cut at The Open and has now missed the weekend in four of his last 10 major appearances. He’s worth a small-unit wager as a longshot at The Open based on his past success at the venue, but he should be avoided everywhere else with less appealing odds.

Top PGA Tour bets to win a major in 2020

Get some PGA Tour betting action 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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2020 PGA Tour major odds: Justin Rose remains a top contender

Analyzing Justin Rose’s chances and betting odds of winning another major championship during the 2020 PGA Tour season.

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Will Justin Rose win a PGA Tour major championship in 2020? Based off BetMGM‘s golf betting odds, I analyze Rose’s best opportunities to win along with some of the best potential golf betting lines to cash in on his play this year. This piece is part of a new SportsbookWire series, which will look at the PGA Tour’s biggest names and their chances of winning a major championship in 2020.

Justin Rose’s 2019 PGA Tour Highlights

  • Won Farmers Insurance Open
  • 3rd Wells Fargo Championship
  • T-3 US Open
  • T-5 Hero World Challenge

PGA Tour odds to win a major in 2020

Name Official World Golf Ranking Odds Last PGA Tour win (Solo) Last major
Brooks Koepka 1 +200 July 2019 2019 PGA Championship
Rory McIlroy 2 +250 Nov. 2019 2014 PGA Championship
Jon Rahm 3 +350 Jan. 2018 NA
Justin Thomas 4 +450 Oct. 2019 2017 PGA Championship
Dustin Johnson 5 +200 Feb. 2019 2016 US Open
Tiger Woods 6 +400 Oct. 2019 2019 Masters
Patrick Cantlay 7 +500 June 2019 NA
Justin Rose 8 +400 Jan. 2019 2013 US Open
Xander Schauffele 9 +500 Jan. 2019 NA
Tommy Fleetwood 10 +600 NA NA

As one of six major champions currently in the top 10 of the Official World Golf Ranking Rose is priced accordingly, with Thomas, Cantlay, Schauffele and Fleetwood possessing longer odds. He’ll turn 40 years old July 30, and has six worldwide wins over the last three years.


Looking to place a bet on Justin Rose to win a major in 2020? Get some action on it at BetMGMSign up and bet at BetMGM now!


Where is Justin Rose’s best chance of winning a major in 2020?

Event 2020 Venue Best career result Odds
Masters Augusta National T-2/2nd (2015, 2017) +1800
PGA Championship TPC Harding Park T-3 (2012) +2000
US Open Winged Foot Won (2013) +2000
Open Championship Royal St. George’s T-2 (2018) +2000

Rose has three top-10 finishes in majors over the last two years, including two at the U.S. Open. He hasn’t missed the cut in a major since the 2017 PGA Championship. The Englishman had a disappointing showing the last time The Open was at Royal St. George’s, as he finished just T-44 in 2011. His best odds for 2020 come at the Masters, where he missed the cut in 2019 to snap a streak of five straight top-20 showings there.

Will Justin Rose win a major in 2020?

Rose fits the mold for the generic “win a major” bet. He has top placings in each of the four events and is frequently in the mix on Sunday, on the first page of the leaderboard. Back him to claim his second victory, with Augusta National the most likely venue.

Top PGA Tour bets to win a major in 2020

Get some PGA Tour betting action 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.

[lawrence-newsletter]

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