How to bet Tiger Woods at the Presidents Cup: Analyzing prop bets around the Team USA captain

Previewing the 2019 Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne and looking at the best prop bets centered around Team USA captain Tiger Woods.

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Tiger Woods is set to captain Team USA at the 2019 Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne Golf Club with the first round beginning Wednesday, Dec. 11, at 5:30 p.m. ET. Tiger selected himself as a wildcard pick Nov. 7. Below, we look at the best prop bets centered around Woods as he makes his ninth Presidents Cup appearance and first since 2013.

The No. 6 golfer in the Official World Golf Ranking will make a third Presidents Cup appearance at Royal Melbourne, having played in both 1998 and 2011.


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


Aug 17, 2019; Medinah, IL, USA; Tiger Woods hits his approach shot on the 18th fairway during the third round of the BMW Championship golf tournament at Medinah Country Club – No. 3. Photo Credit: Thomas J. Russo – USA TODAY Sports

Best Props on Tiger Woods for the Presidents Cup

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Monday at 2:40 p.m. ET.

Top Combined Points Scorer (+1800)

Tiger picked up just two points in each of his two previous appearances at Royal Melbourne. He’s 2-0-0 in singles matches, 2-2-0 in foursomes and 0-4-0 in fourballs.

Two of Tiger’s teammates – Justin Thomas and Dustin Johnson – have a higher OWGR ranking, while the rest of his team also ranks inside the top 25. Eight golfers have better odds here. Shoot high with Thomas or Adam Scott of Australia for the International squad and PASS on Tiger.

Who will score the most points for the USA? (+1000)

Woods is tied with Rickie Fowler with the sixth-best odds to lead his team. Johnson, Matt Kuchar and Webb Simpson all have past experience at this venue, having played in 2011. Among them, Simpson fared the best, going 3-2-0 in his matches and picking up three points.

Tiger is coming off a victory at the Zozo Championship and a fourth-place finish at his own Hero World Challenge. I’d rather PASS on Tiger and place a larger wager on Thomas at +500.

Top USA Wildcard Points Scorer (+260)

Woods selected himself, Tony FinauPatrick Reed and Gary Woodland as his captain’s picks. Fowler was named as an injury replacement for world No. 1 Brooks Koepka.

This is my best spot to get action on Tiger at Royal Melbourne. A $10 bet for him to come away with the most points from a group of Reed, Fowler, Woodland and himself returns a profit of $26.

Of the four, he’s the only one with Presidents Cup experience at Royal Melbourne, and he has the top world ranking.

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.

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Patrick Reed rules violation – and subsequent response – to follow him at Presidents Cup

“Next on the first tee, the Excavator,” one spectator bellowed to Patrick Reed on Tuesday, who laughed and said, “That all you got?”

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MELBOURNE, Australia – We have a villain.

The woeful saga that has been the Presidents Cup might get a much needed boost in the edge department this week as lightning rod Patrick Reed will have his rules violation in last week’s Hero World Challenge and subsequent response to the situation follow him around Royal Melbourne Golf Club.

Opposing players on the underdog Internationals team have publicly called on the home crowd to unload on Reed, with one player using the word ‘cheating’ after Reed was caught on camera unlawfully improving his lie in a waste bunker during the Hero with not one but two practice swings.

“It goes from wanting to beat those guys to it now turning personal, so it’s going to be a fun week,” Reed said Tuesday after a practice round at Royal Melbourne Golf Club, home to the 13th edition of the Presidents Cup.

If there’s one player who will enthusiastically accept the role of villain, it’s Reed, the raging bull who has been involved in his fair share of some nasty back-and-forth banter with galleries, been the subject of blowback in media circles, and a punching bag on social media.

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

For example, his putter headcover features a caricature of Reed and his famous “shush” move where he holds one finger to his lips, as he did when he shushed the vocal crowds in the 2014 Ryder Cup in Scotland.

The putter cover for Patrick Reed of the U.S. Presidents Cup team. Photo by Steve DiMeglio/Golfweek

And then there was his first shot Tuesday. As he stood over his ball on the first tee, the silence was broken.

“Next on the first tee, the Excavator,” one spectator bellowed.

Reed laughed and said, “That all you got?”

After Reed hit a piercing 3-iron stinger into the fairway, he walked over to the fan and said, “That good? That OK?”

All of this potential bad will started during the third round of the Hero. On the 11th hole, Reed was in a waste area, his ball in a depression in the sand.

With two practice swings, Reed improved his lie by flattening small mounds of sand behind the ball. Though a player is allowed to ground his club in the sand, the moving of sand from behind the ball violated Rule 8.1a (4), which states that a player is not allowed to “remove or press down on sand or loose soil” in order to improve the conditions affecting the stroke.

MOREPresidents Cup viewers guide | Photo gallery

After the round, Reed pleaded his case to an official and the public, saying a different camera angle would have shown his actions occurred well behind the ball and should result in no infraction. He also said he didn’t intentionally scrape the sand, but intent isn’t considered in this situation.

Reed was assessed a two-stroke penalty. He finished third the next day, two strokes behind winner Henrik Stenson.

Social media – including from his peers – was not kind. One of the most scathing critiques came from the Internationals’ Cameron Smith.

“If you make a mistake once, maybe you can understand, but to give like a bit of a bulls–t response like the camera angle, I mean, that’s pretty up there,” Smith said at the Australian Open. “I know Pat pretty good and he’s always been nice to me, so I don’t want to say anything bad about him. But for anyone that is cheating the rules, I’m not up for that. I hope the crowd absolutely gives it to not only him but everyone (on the U.S. team).”
Reed took umbrage to the word cheating.

“It’s not the right word to use,” Reed said. “At the end of the day, if you do something unintentionally that breaks the rules, it’s not considered cheating and at the end of the day that’s what it is. If you’re intentionally trying to do something, that would be considered cheating, but I wasn’t intentionally trying to improve a lie or anything like that, because if it was, it would have been a really good lie and I would have hit it really close.

“All the guys on my team know it wasn’t intentional and yeah, it was a breach of rules, therefore, it’s a two-stroke penalty, and you accept the two shots and move on the next day and try to win the golf tournament.”
U.S. playing captain Tiger Woods spoke briefly to Reed following the incident and stressed that it was time to move on.

Patrick Reed at the 2019 Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne on Dec. 10, 2019 in Australia. (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images)

“I’m sure somebody’s going to say something out there,” Woods said. “But I think that in general, all the times I have been to Australia and have played here, the fans have been fantastic. They are the most knowledgeable, the most excitable fans. They love their sport. They are going to come out and it’s going to be bipartisan, as it should be. They are going to root for the Internationals more so than they are us. There’s nothing wrong with that.

“I think Pat will be fine. Pat is a great kid. He’s handled a tough upbringing well, and I just think that he’s one of our best team players and is one of the reasons why all of the guys wanted him on the team.”

Internationals captain Ernie Els understands why some of his players came out and spoke against Reed and urged the fans to chime in. But as Woods said, it’s time to move on.

“These guys are competitors,” Els said. “Obviously they didn’t like what they saw, and they came out and obviously you guys asked them questions about it and they were pretty new questions, and like Tiger, we’re moving on; we’ve got a Cup to play for.

“It’s got nothing to do with us. It’s basically on what’s happened, and I think Tiger’s dealing with it and Patrick’s dealing with that. We’re getting ready to play the Presidents Cup. You know, we think everything’s basically said. There’s nothing more to be said.”

We’ll see. And if there is, Reed will be ready for it. Even fueling off it.

“I’ve always enjoyed being, I guess you would call it the underdog, since you’re the away team,” Reed said. “When you’re on the road, I just think you have more to prove because if you’re not playing that great, the fans are giving it to you, you just have your teammates and yourself out there to pick you up, so it just kind of shows you how strong you really can be.”

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Tiger Woods on Team USA’s ’26-hour ride in a luxurious tin can’ to Presidents Cup

“There was a lot of card playing, a lot of trash talking, a lot of needling,” said Tiger Woods of his Presidents Cup team plane ride to Australia.

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MELBOURNE, Australia – It was anything but a silent night as the U.S. team flew from the Bahamas to Australia for this week’s Presidents Cup, a 10,000-mile journey clocking in at just a bit more than 26 hours.

Sure, in the dead of the night, the players, vice captains, caddies and others caught a few winks on the decked out aircraft. A refueling stop in Mexico allowed the players to stretch their legs a bit, as well. But for the most part, to hear how playing captain Tiger Woods put it, there was plenty of tom foolery going on up in the air.

“Up front there was a nice, open area where guys could mingle and have fun,” Woods said Tuesday in his opening news conference with Internationals captain Ernie Els. “There was a lot of card playing, a lot of trash talking, a lot of needling.

“It was nonstop, literally nonstop, for over a day.”

MOREPresidents Cup viewers guide | Photo gallery

And now it will take more than a day after the Americans landed at 12:30 p.m. local time on Monday for them to get their bodies acclimated to Australian time, a 16-hour time difference from the east coast of the states.

“We’re still feeling it,” Woods said at Royal Melbourne Golf Club. “I mean, I know I am. We’ll hit that wall sometime this afternoon and got to push through it and get through the gala dinner tonight. I think by (Wednesday) afternoon, we should all start feeling pretty good.

“Today is an important day for us to just walk and to stretch our legs a bit. Getting in yesterday after a 26-hour ride in a luxurious tin can, it’s nice to actually get out there and feel some fresh air.”

Woods looked a bit groggy for his 8 a.m. presser. The day before, less than six hours off the plane, he didn’t look up to speed, either, at the kickoff of the Presidents Cup Fan Experience on the Melbourne River Walk.

U.S Team captain Tiger Woods hits a shot to a target in the Yarra River during the Fan Experience Opening Celebration prior to Presidents Cup at The Royal Melbourne Golf Club on December 9, 2019, in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Stan Badz/PGA TOUR via Getty Images)

Woods dumped two balls into the Yarra River as he tried to hit a floating green just 75 yards in the distance.

“I’m a bit slow, right now,” Woods said with a smile.

Wood and the rest of the team began to get their legs back under them with practice rounds Tuesday. Woods was grouped with Justin Thomas, Patrick Cantlay and Patrick Reed.

In addition to getting ready as a player, Woods is on point as a captain and has already addressed his team’s role of being a huge favorite in the biennial matches. The U.S. is 10-1-1 in the series and this year’s team has all 12 members ranked in the top 25 in the world.

But Woods was on the U.S. team that lost here at Royal Melbourne in 1998. He’s making sure his team isn’t overly confident.

“I think our strength is that we are a very deep team,” Woods said. “The guys have played well this entire year, and you know, we had 11 out of 12 guys play last week (at the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas), so it was nice for them to shake off some rust. Get a feel for things.

“Each and every Cup, each and every tournament we play in around the world, starts out at zero and this one is the same.”

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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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Opinion: Despite long odds, Internationals have a chance at Presidents Cup

Despite long odds, the Internationals still have a chance to win the Presidents Cup. Steve DiMeglio explains why.

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Remember…

Buster Douglas knocked Mike Tyson’s block off.

Joe Willie and the Jets trampled the Colts in Super Bowl III.

Chaminade chopped down Ralph Sampson.

The Miracle on Ice, the Miracle Mets.

Glorious upsets, one and all. Shockers in sports that give hope to all of us who seemingly have no chance whatsoever of conquering a mighty foe. Timeless reminders that faith lives, that on any given day, anybody or any team can beat anyone.

Or, in the optimistic words of Lloyd Christmas in “Dumb and Dumber”: “So, you’re telling me there’s a chance.”

All of which brings us to this week’s 2019 Presidents Cup in Australia.

On paper, the biennial bout pitting the Americans against the Internationals should start with a standing eight-count. The U.S. is a colossal goliath, with all 12 of the troops ranked in the top 25, five in the top 10. The average ranking for the team at the start of the week is 12.5.

MORE: Presidents Cup viewers guide | Photo gallery

The Americans are so deep they replaced world No. 1 Brooks Koepka, who is rehabbing a wounded knee, with No. 22 Rickie Fowler.

The U.S. is 10-1-1 in the series. It won the last match, 19-11, and it could have ended Saturday, making the Sunday singles a dreaded formality. Six of the Americans have won majors. There are only three rookies on the team. And Tiger Woods is not only playing, he’s leading the red, white and blue as captain.

The underdog Internationals? Their highest-ranked player is Adam Scott at No. 15, their lowest, Haotong Li, at 64. The average ranking is a hair below 40. Only three of their players have won a tournament this year. Only Scott and Louis Oosthuizen have won majors.

The Internationals have lost by at least three points in six of the past seven meetings. They have a record seven rookies on the team, which is the youngest in the event’s history. Jason Day, one of their leaders and best players, withdrew with a bad back.

Blowout city, right?

Well, remember …

Jack Fleck beat Ben Hogan to win the U.S. Open.

Appalachian State pipped Michigan in the Big House.

And David did kill Goliath with a single stone.

As long as the odds, a case can be made for the Internationals to pull off a stunner. Yes, even as hard as that may seem.

For starters, the U.S. isn’t exactly going to Oz whole. The intimidating Koepka is out. Dustin Johnson hasn’t played since August because of knee surgery. Fowler has played just once since August because of his wedding and then illness at the end of his honeymoon. Bryson DeChambeau is getting used to his Hulk-like body. Long plane rides aren’t good for Tiger.

Speaking of which, consider the travel itinerary.

Eleven of the 12 Americans played the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas last week and faced a 10,000-mile journey to Melbourne that will clock in around 26 hours. In four instances when the Americans traveled such distance to play, blowouts weren’t there at touch down. They were routed in Australia in 1998. Tied in South Africa in 2003. Won by four in 2011 in Australia and had to go to the last hole of the last match Sunday to win in 2015 in South Korea.

Make no mistake, the plane ride is a factor. So, too, will be the jet lag – there is a 16-hour time difference from the East coast. Meanwhile, six of the Internationals played in the Australian Open in Sydney, a scant 500 miles from Melbourne. And you can bet captain Ernie Els made sure his other six players made plans to be well acclimated by the start of the competition.

Plus, Royal Melbourne Golf Club, the site of the USA’s lone defeat in this event, is a fast-and-firm track rife with obstacles that dilute the Americans’ superior power game. And few know more about the course than Els.

Add in the law of averages. And the fact that Els’ seven rookies don’t have scar tissue from past defeats. And the Fanatics will be leading a boisterous home crowd.

Even so, the USA will be heavily favored to continue this one-sided affair.

But remember …

North Carolina State deflated Phi Slama Jama.

Stephen F. Austin shocked Duke at Cameron Indoor Stadium.

And the aptly named Upset, at more than 100-1, dealt the great Man o’ War the only loss of his career.

So, yes, I’m telling you there’s a chance.

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Americans are heavy favorites, but Tiger Woods will be tested after journey

While he’s leading a favored U.S. Team, Woods was on the team that lost at Royal Melbourne in 1998 and he hasn’t forgotten.

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Tiger Woods was cold to the idea when he was first approached to be a Presidents Cup captain a few years back, a time where he didn’t know what his troublesome back – and thus his life – held for him in the future.

“I wasn’t in the right physical state or mental state to be thinking about it,” Woods said. “I didn’t know if I could ever be a part of the game of golf again.”

Well, he’s become a major part of the game once again, the game’s biggest star both on and off the course, just as he was for nearly 20 years after turning pro in 1996 before injuries put his career in jeopardy.

Lately, however, he’s all over golf’s map – host of last week’s Hero World Challenge, where he finished fourth in the star-studded field, and now as captain and player for the U.S. team as it faces the Internationals in this week’s Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne in Australia.

A lot of hats to wear, Woods said. Being an assistant captain at the 2016 Ryder Cup and the 2017 Presidents Cup and the persuasion from past captains and assistants ignited his itch to be a captain.

“It’s a lot of moving parts,” Woods said of his dual roles these two weeks, “but something I’ve been looking forward to for a long time. Putting things in boxes has always been something I’ve been good at.”

At 43, he’s the youngest captain in the event’s history and he will join Hale Irwin as the only playing captains in the event. When he was named captain in March 2018, Woods joked he wanted to make the team as a player. Guess who got the last laugh? He was ranked 149th in the world at the time. Four months later he contended in the British Open, a month later he finished second in the PGA Championship, a month after that he won the Tour Championship.

Then he won the Masters in April and his record-tying 82nd PGA Tour title in the Zozo Championship in October. Thus Woods, the captain, deservedly used one of his four discretionary picks on Woods, the player, who is now world No. 6.

Woods will lead a heavily favored U.S. squad – all 12 players are ranked in the top 25; only three of the Internationals are in the top 25. The U.S. leads the series 10-1-1. It won the last match by eight points.

But don’t think Woods will kick back Down Under. He was on the team that lost at Royal Melbourne in 1998. And he has most everyone involved with the team on speed dial.

“I already know he’s going to be a great captain just for how serious he’s taken it so far and how much he wants this for us,” Justin Thomas said. “The conversation and the communication started a while ago in terms of what we’re going to do, things that I can do to help, things that he feels he can do.”

What Woods already has done is open up all lines of communication.

“I’ve stressed this the entire time, be open and honest, be frank with me,” he said. “I’ve had a lot of offline conversations with all the players. It’ll remain in a locked box, it’s just between you and me. If you want to share with the team, share with the team. If you don’t, it’s between us.”

One thing Woods will be monitoring is Woods. He’s playing successive weeks and endured a 26-hour, 10,000-mile journey from the Bahamas to Australia. The last time he played back-to-back was during the FedExCup Playoffs, when he withdrew with an oblique injury after the first round of the Northern Trust and then tied for 37th in the BMW Championship.

The following week he had the fifth surgical procedure on his left knee to remove cartilage. After working his knee back into shape, he flew to Japan and won the Zozo. The response of his left knee in Japan gave him “confidence that it will hold up in the long run down in Australia.”

But one can’t forget last year when Woods won the Tour Championship, flew to Paris for the Ryder Cup that night and fell flat that week against the Europeans, going 0-4.

“The emotional stress and the emotional release of finally winning an event coming back from my back surgery, that took a toll on me a bit,” Woods said after last year’s back-to-back. “So this is a totally different animal.”

Well, some say the Internationals are easy prey. Woods doesn’t see it that way. Neither does Adam Scott, the highest-ranked player, at No. 18, on the Internationals.

“It’d be great to stick it to Tiger and the entire American team,” Scott said. “He’s the ultimate competitor. There’s no way he’s not doing everything possible coming down here as a captain, and a player, to win this event. There’s no way he wants to be captain of a losing U.S. team.

“It’s going to be very difficult, but we have to believe we can beat him and I believe we can win.”

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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.

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Rory McIlroy on Patrick Reed’s penalty: Some just want to ‘kick him when he’s down’

Rory McIlroy gave his opinion about the rules controversy surrounding Patrick Reed that occurred during the Hero World Challenge.

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Rory McIlroy believes Patrick Reed should be given the benefit of the doubt regarding the controversial two-shot penalty Reed incurred at the Hero World Challenge. But he thinks Reed has become an easy target for some critics.

“I think it’s hard because you try to give the player the benefit of the doubt,” McIlroy said during an extensive interview on Golf Channel’s Morning Drive on Monday. “He’s in there and he’s trying to figure out which way to play the shot. Obviously he’s moved some sand so it is a penalty. But I keep saying, I don’t think it would be a big deal if it wasn’t Patrick Reed. It’s almost like a lot of people within the game, it’s almost like a hobby to sort of kick him when he’s down.”

The live shot and slow-mo versions of Reed’s two practice swings at the Hero in the Bahamas have now been dissected millions of times. Upon reviewing the clips again Monday in the studio, McIlroy said, “I certainly don’t think there was intent there. … It’s very hard for me not to think he didn’t feel what he was doing. It’s a hard one. But again, I’d rather try to give someone the benefit of the doubt. And just say, look, it was a mistake, take your penalty and move on. And yeah, it’s going to make things difficult for him down in Australia this week.”

Under Rule 8, which addresses playing the course as the player finds it, a player is prohibited from improving conditions affecting a stroke.

Under Rule 8-1a, actions that are not allowed include the removal or pressing down of sand or loose soil. Reed did that twice, though the second movement is irrelevant.

The two-stroke penalty proved costly, turning Reed’s 72 into a 74 in the third round. He would go on to finish with a final-round 66 and in third place, two shots back of winner Henrik Stenson.

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Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne viewer’s guide

Check out where you can watch the 2019 Presidents Cup and the schedule of events for the week at Royal Melbourne.

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The 2019 Presidents Cup at the Royal Melbourne Golf Club officially begins Dec. 12 with the first round four-ball, but the festivities begin earlier in the week.

Beginning Dec. 8 and concluding Dec. 9, the Junior Presidents Cup will be held at Royal Melbourne. Practice rounds for both Presidents Cup teams will be held Dec. 9-10 with both teams holding additional practices on Dec. 11. The first round gets underway on Dec. 12.

The time in Melbourne, Australia, is 16 hours ahead of Eastern Standard Time, which essentially puts live golf in prime time for viewers in North America. The event times are listed locally. Further down, the TV times are listed for Eastern Standard Time.

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

Presidents Cup schedule of events

Sunday, Dec. 8

7 a.m. local time: The morning four-ball matches of the Junior Presidents Cup followed by afternoon foursome matches.

After play: Junior Presidents Cup Captains’ Pairings in the Media Center.

Monday, Dec. 9

7 a.m.: Final round of the Junior Presidents Cup with 12 singles matches.

5 p.m.:  Junior Presidents Cup Closing Ceremonies at Crown Riverwalk.

Practice round for Presidents Cup participants.

Tuesday, Dec. 10

8 a.m.: International Team practice rounds begins.

9 a.m.: U.S. Team practice rounds begins.

Following practice rounds: Captain’s Press Conference in Media Center.

Wednesday, Dec. 11

9:30 a.m.: U.S. Team practices.

10:30 a.m.: International Team practices.

4 p.m.: Captain’s Pairings for Round 1 announced.

Thursday, Dec. 12

9:30 a.m. Thursday local time/5:30 p.m. Wednesday EST: First round, four-ball.

Immediately following Thursday play: Captains’ pairings for Friday matches announced.

Friday, Dec. 13

11 a.m. Friday local time/7 p.m. Thursday EST: Second round, foursomes.

Immediately following play: Captains’ pairings for Saturday morning matches.

Saturday, Dec. 14

7 a.m. Saturday local time/3 p.m. Friday EST: Third round, four-ball.

10 a.m.: Captains’ pairings for Saturday evening matches

Noon: Fourth round, foursomes.

Immediately following play: Captains’ pairings for Sunday’s singles matches announced.

Sunday, Dec. 15

10 a.m. Sunday local time/6 p.m. Saturday EST: Final round, singles matches.

Immediately following play: Closing ceremony celebration

TV, streaming information

All times are in Eastern Standard Time.

Wednesday

5:30 p.m. – midnight, Golf Channel

Thursday

7 p.m. – midnight, Golf Channel

Friday

3 p.m. – 2 a.m., Golf Channel
2:30 – 6 p.m., NBC (replay)

Saturday

6 p.m. – midnight, Golf Channel
1 – 6 p.m., NBC (replay)

Fast facts

Dates: Dec. 12-15.
Venue: Royal Melbourne Golf Club.
Length: 7,055 yards. Par: 71.
Points needed to win: 15½.
Defending champion: United States.
Series: United States leads, 10-1-1.

Format: Nine matches of foursomes, nine matches of fourballs, 12 singles matches. Each is worth one point.

Last time: The Americans won for the seventh straight time, building such a big lead they only needed one point from 12 singles matches to secure the victory. They wound up with a 19-11 victory at Liberty National, where President Donald Trump attended the final round.

International team: Byeong Hun An, Abraham Ancer, Adam Hadwin, Sungjae Im, Marc Leishman, Haotong Li, Hideki Matsuyama, Joaquin Niemann, Louis Oosthuizen, C.T. Pan, Adam Scott, Cameron Smith.

U.S. team: Patrick Cantlay, Bryson DeChambeau, Tony Finau, Rickie Fowler, Dustin Johnson, Matt Kuchar, Patrick Reed, Xander Schauffele, Webb Simpson, Justin Thomas, Gary Woodland, Tiger Woods.

Tale of the tape: The entire U.S. team is among the top 25 in the world. The International team has only three players in the top 25.

Key Statistic: Only five players from the last American team are at Royal Melbourne.

Notable: Royal Melbourne is where the International team won for the only time in the Presidents Cup in 1998.

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19th hole: Only women can save the Presidents Cup

Making the Presidents Cup a co-ed event would give it a unique flavor while elevating women’s golf.

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It’s only a slight exaggeration to suggest that the Presidents Cup faces an existential crisis when its 13th edition gets underway Thursday in Australia, since the previous 12 playings have been about as competitive as a one-legged man in a butt-kicking contest.

There have been 10 U.S. wins, one tie, and one victory for the Internationals, their lone highlight now so distant that Stuart Appleby is the only member of that winning team still not eligible for the senior circuit. The International squad is awfully close to being golf’s equivalent of the ’76 Tampa Bay Bucs, which went 0-14 then lost the first 12 games of the next season too.

Several factors promise a more entertaining Cup this time: the majestic Royal Melbourne as a venue, Tiger Woods as a playing captain, and the likelihood that voluble Aussie fans will remind Patrick Reed of the game’s rudimentary rules. Even with that, will another U.S. victory sound a death knell for an event whose results are as lop-sided as the Christians-Lions battles in ancient Rome?

Not so fast, says Frank Nobilo, who played on three International teams and twice served as assistant captain. He points to how uncompetitive the Ryder Cup was for decades before the tide turned in the 1980s. “Look what it has grown into today,” Nobilo says.

“I think the Presidents Cup is going through a tender stage purely because of the lack of strength at the top of the ’80’s and ’90s,” he adds, pointing to an era when world No. 1’s didn’t hail from America or Europe, like Greg Norman, Nick Price, Ernie Els and Vijay Singh. “Those times will come again and it will be less fleeting when it happens.”

Nobilo also notes the value of the Presidents Cup isn’t measured simply in points won and lost, that it has a positive trickle-down effect to junior programs akin to Olympic golf and the Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship.

Defeat for Team USA may constitute a win for the Presidents Cup itself, much as how yachting’s America’s Cup grew in stature only after 1983, when the U.S. lost for the first time in 132 years. But is an International victory sufficient? Does even a more competitive Presidents Cup have an identity other than being not the Ryder Cup? It may be time to rethink the event, regardless of whether Woods or Els leads his troops to victory in Melbourne.

My two cents: make the Presidents Cup co-ed, adding the best women to the squads. It would give the event a unique flavor while elevating women’s golf. The LPGA Tour is a global circuit, but too many of its finest players are ineligible for the Solheim Cup, being neither American nor European. Let’s see an alternate shot format where Jin Young Ko plays off Adam Scott’s drives, and Tiger plays off Lexi Thompson’s.

A co-ed Presidents Cup would pair men and women in a genuine competitive setting, not a hit-and-giggle like the long defunct Wendy’s 3-Tour Challenge. It would also make real the prospect of superstar golfers playing for a female captain. Golf could use some optics like that.

It’s been 40 years since the Ryder Cup was resuscitated when the old downtrodden Great Britain & Ireland team morphed into a triumphant European squad, but the Ryder Cup also had the advantage of its dull decades coming long before the dawn-to-dusk TV coverage of every swing. The Presidents Cup enjoys no such luxury and won’t survive many more years of mundanity. It may be time to consider that its saviors may not be guys like Woods and Els, but women like Nelly Korda and Sung Hyun Park.

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