Hero World Challenge 2024 odds, course history and picks to win

It’s time for a fun week in The Bahamas.

Golf’s silly season is here, and the first tournament up to bat is Tiger Woods’ Hero World Challenge in Albany. Although the 15-time major champion isn’t in the field, we’ll still be treated with some of the best players in the world including Scottie Scheffler, Justin Thomas, Ludvig Aberg, Wyndham Clark and Patrick Cantlay, among others.

Tony Finau, amid countless LIV Golf rumors circulating around social media, withdrew from the field on Monday.

Because this isn’t an official PGA Tour event, the winner will not earn any FedEx Cup points. One thing is official, however — the money. Sunday’s champion will go home with $1 million of the $5 million purse.

Without further ado, let’s jump into our betting preview and see who we’ll be targeting in The Bahamas.

Hero World Challenge: Tournament hub

Golf course

Albany Golf Course | Par 72 | 7,449 yards

2023 Hero World Challenge
Scottie Scheffler plays his shot from the 18th tee during the final round of the Hero World Challenge at Albany Golf Course on December 03, 2023 in Nassau, Bahamas. (Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

Hero World Challenge betting odds

Player Odds Player Odds
Scottie Scheffler (+220) Sahith Theegala (+2200)
Ludvig Aberg (+850) Jason Day (+2200)
Justin Thomas (+1000) Robert MacIntyre (+2500)
Sungjae Im (+1400) Akshay Bhatia (+2500)
Sam Burns (+1400) Aaron Rai (+2500)
Russell Henley (+1400) Keegan Bradley (+2500)
Patrick Cantlay (+1600) Cameron Young (+2800)
Wyndham Clark (+1800) Sepp Straka (+3000)
Brian Harman (+2000) Nick Dunlap (+3500)
Tom Kim (+2000) Matthieu Pavon (+8000)

[gambcom-standard rankid=”3413″ ]

Gannett may earn revenue from sports betting operators for audience referrals to betting services. Sports betting operators have no influence over nor are any such revenues in any way dependent on or linked to the newsrooms or news coverage. Terms apply, see operator site for Terms and Conditions. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, help is available. Call the National Council on Problem Gambling 24/7 at 1-800-GAMBLER (NJ, OH), 1-800-522-4700 (CO), 1-800-BETS-OFF (IA), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN). Must be 21 or older to gamble. Sports betting and gambling are not legal in all locations. Be sure to comply with laws applicable where you reside.

Picks to win the Hero World Challenge

Justin Thomas

Justin Thomas of the US tees off at the 10th hole during the round 1 of Zozo Championships PGA golf tournament at the Narashino Country Club in Inzai, Chiba prefecture on October 24, 2024 (Photo by TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA/AFP via Getty Images)

Odds: 10/1

Analysis: Woods’ best buddy has finished T-5 or better in four straight appearances at the Hero, including a third-place finish last December. In his last Tour start, the Louisville product tied for second at the Zozo Championship in Japan.

Tom Kim

2024 FedEx St. Jude Championship
Tom Kim walks on the first green during the third round of the 2024 FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee. (Mike Mulholland/Getty Images)

Odds: 20/1

Analysis: In a 20-man field, getting +2000 odds for Tom Kim is too good to pass up. Despite missing the cut in his latest Tour start — Shriners Children’s Open — Kim finished second a week later at the DP World Tour’s Genesis Championship. He’s played in the Hero once, finishing T-10 in 2022.

Robert MacIntyre

Robert MacIntyre of Scotland plays his second shot on the 15th hole during day four of the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship 2024 at the Old Course at St Andrews on October 06, 2024 in St Andrews, Scotland. (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images)

Odds: 25/1

Analysis: Unlike many of the players in this field, MacIntyre has been playing golf this fall. In his last two DP World Tour starts, the Scot finished T-19 at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship and T-7 at the DP World Tour Championship. This will be MacIntyre’s first appearance at the Hero.

There are 17 left-handed golfers who have won on the PGA Tour

Let’s take a closer look at the lefties on the PGA Tour.

About 10 percent of the U.S. population is left-handed but there has only been 17 lefties to win on the PGA Tour.

One place they can find common ground is the official website of being left-handed, lefthandersday.com, where it appears the struggle is real:

“August 13th is a chance to tell your family and friends how proud you are of being left-handed, and also raise awareness of the everyday issues that lefties face as we live in a world designed for right-handers.”

August 13, 2024, marked the 33rd annual International Lefthanders Day. On that site, you can purchase things such as left-handed scissors. For left-handed golf clubs, you’re probably better off looking elsewhere.

Fifteen non-righties have combined to win 86 times on the PGA Tour, led by you-know-who, Phil Mickelson.

With Brian Harman’s win at Royal Liverpool in 2023, there have now been three lefties to win the Open Championship, joining Bob Charles (1963) and Phil Mickelson (2013).

Safe to say Robert MacIntyre is not a fan of the Road Hole at St. Andrews: ‘Blow it up’

“I don’t think there are many worse holes in world golf.”

Robert MacIntyre is the best Scottish golfer in the world, but he’s not a fan of one of the game’s most famous holes in his home country.

MacIntyre tied for 25th at the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship on Sunday at St. Andrews, but he could’ve placed higher if not for stumbling in both weekend rounds at the Road Hole, the par-4 17th. He made a double on Saturday and then had a bogey on Sunday, after which he had plenty to say about the hole.

“Blow it up,” he grumbled. “I don’t think there are many worse holes in world of golf. It needs to be a hole you are able to hit a golf shot into and not one where you just hit it onto the green and try to get up and down.”

Tell us how you feel, Bobby Mac.

If air raid sirens all of the sudden sound around St. Andrews in the future, no need to fear. It’s just MacIntyre coming to do some course renovations.

Can Tyrrell Hatton win the Alfred Dunhill Links thrice? He swears he’s trying

This was Hatton’s lowest-ever round on the DP World Tour.

Catch me if you can. Tyrrell Hatton unleashed such a sustained bombardment on the Old Course during round three of the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship, the newly unveiled statue of Auld Tom Morris situated nearby was probably left nursing a shrapnel wound.

On a delightful autumn day in the cradle of the game, Hatton, a two-time winner of this title, barged his way to the top of the leaderboard with a thrilling, course-record equaling 11-under 61. That gave him a mighty 22-under aggregate and a one-shot lead over Nicolas Colsaerts.

At his happy hunting ground, Hatton prospered once again. In the pleasantly benign conditions, which left the Old Course as vulnerable to an ambush as a newly born gazelle that’s surrounded by a lurking pack of hyenas, Hatton went on the attack.

As well as an eagle on the fifth, the 32-year-old birdied six of his last seven holes during a rousing rampage that would certainly have been worth the entry fee. If there was one, of course. The Dunhill Links is free for the first three days.

Dunhill Links: Leaderboard

This was Hatton’s lowest-ever round on tour and beat the 62 he conjured en route to winning the first of those two Dunhill Links titles in 2016.

“I felt like I was trying harder than I normally would for that birdie putt on the last,” he said of a 10-footer for a three which saw him finish with a flourish.

“I think I struggled when I played in the St. Andrews Links Trophy as an amateur and I didn’t do too well on my first two appearances at the Dunhill either. But since winning in 2016, it’s been pretty good to me. It’s a special place to play golf.”

Colsaerts served up something special too down the road at Kingsbarns. The 41-year-old former Ryder Cup player, who is down in 695th place on the world rankings, put on a show with a seven-under 65 which included an albatross two on the par-five 16th, his seventh.

At one point, Colsaerts, who only received an invitation to the event six days ago, was five shots clear of the rest but a double-bogey on his ninth, combined with Hatton’s menacing advance back at St. Andrews, saw that advantage obliterated.

It was still another fine shift at the office, though, for a man who is chasing a first tour win since he landed the French Open in 2019.

“Super special,” he said of that two which was executed with a 6-iron. “Listen, I would have been quite happy with a tap-in three but that was the cherry on the cake.”

Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen, meanwhile, made playing Kingsbarns look like a piece of cake. Well, eventually.

The Dane began with a bogey on the first but then charged off like a horse that had bolted and fired 12 birdies in an 11-under 61 that propelled him into contention on 17-under.

“It was a funny way to start but then my putter got really hot,” said Neergaard-Petersen, who earned a swift promotion to the DP World Tour by winning three times on the Challenge Tour this season.

As for the home contingent? Well, it’s Robert MacIntyre who is flying the flag on the fringes of the top 20 after a 65 at the Old Course lifted him to 12-under.

David Law, who was just one shot off the lead at halfway, slithered back to 10-under with a 75 at Carnoustie.

A double-bogey on the 17th for MacIntyre was a bit of a scunner but a closing birdie made supper taste better.

The 28-year-old then spent ages signing autographs and taking selfies with his adoring public. In fact, the meet and greet was almost as long as a bloomin’ Dunhill round.

“I used to be one of them (autograph hunter) when I went to the Scottish Opens,” he said of his admirable attention to duty.

“At times, you don’t want to do any of it. But as long as the kids get looked after, then that’s the most important thing.

“You never know. There could be someone in the crowd who is hopefully going to take over from other Scottish guys on tour.”

There was another issue for MacIntyre to address; the cursings and cussings that can be par for the course in this infuriating pursuit.

There have been growing grumbles in some quarters about the Scot’s occasional, colorful outbursts, which are now amplified as his profile grows and he earns more exposure on TV.

On Friday, he was grouped with Hatton, a self-confessed compulsive swearer, in a pairing that produced the kind of bonfire of the profanities you’d get at a reunion of squaddies.

“Look, it’s live sport, it’s heat of the battle,” said MacIntyre of his various effings and jeffings. “I’m trying my best to improve it. The other side of it is that I’m Scottish. It’s part of our vocab.

“I’m trying my hardest to perform as best as I can. I double-bogeyed 18 on Friday, so I’m going to be angry. And what am I going to do when I’m angry? I’m probably going to swear to myself. It’s not to anybody else. It’s to myself.

“I double-bogeyed 17 today. I’m going to swear to myself and call myself things. I’m not meaning to offend anyone. But every now and again it’s going to come out.”

And on that note, it was time for MacIntyre to eff, sorry, head off.

This video of Robert MacIntyre hitting driver off the deck at the BMW PGA Championship is NSFW

Is this the best driver-off-the-deck video you’ve ever seen?

After winning twice on the PGA Tour this season — at the RBC Canadian Open and Genesis Scottish Open — Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre is back on the DP World Tour, playing in the BMW PGA Championship at the Wentworth Club. On Thursday, MacIntyre hit driver off the deck on the par-5 17th, sending social media into a frenzy.

Yes, the shot was spectacular, but credit to the cameraman for getting this outrageous angle. The low ball flight, the peeling shot shape. It’s just too good.

MacIntyre signed for a 5-under 67 on Day 1, tied with Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry.

Is this the best driver-off-the-deck video you’ve ever seen?

https://twitter.com/robert1lefty/status/1836770736725242274

Robert MacIntyre withdraws from 2024 BMW Championship

The Scotsman, who entered the week at No. 12 in the FedEx Cup, was making his debut at the BMW Championship.

CASTLE ROCK, Colo. — Robert MacIntyre withdrew from the third round after playing nine holes at Castle Pines Golf Club on Saturday, citing a lower back injury. He was 2-over par for the day and 1-over for the tournament at the time.

The Scotsman was making his debut at the BMW Championship, the second leg of the FedEx Cup playoffs. He entered the week at No. 12 in the FedEx Cup season-long point standings and should be safe to advance to the Tour Championship next week at East Lake in Atlanta.

MacIntyre notched his first PGA Tour title at the RBC Canadian Open in June and then won his national title last month with a 72nd-hole birdie to capture the Genesis Scottish Open. He’s improved from No. 56 at the end of last year to a career-best ranking of No. 15 in the Official World Golf Ranking entering this week.

BMW Championship: Leaderboard | Photos | Tee times

The 28-year-old MacIntyre opened with rounds of 72-71 and was paired with Tony Finau in Saturday’s third round. He’s the second player in the 50-man field to withdraw this week, following Hideki Matsuyama, who pulled out with a lower back injury as well before he began his second round.

Scot Robert MacIntyre admits his Open struggles have brought him back to earth with a bump

The left-hander celebrated long into the night after triumphing in his home Scottish Open.

TROON, Scotland — Robert MacIntyre admitted Royal Troon had brought him back down to earth as he struggled to replicate last week’s heroics.

The Oban-based left-hander celebrated long into the night after triumphing in his home Scottish Open last Sunday but it has been a different story in Ayrshire this week.

After battling to make the Open cut on Friday, the 27-year-old again found the going tough in the third round, carding a 1-over 72 to sit on six over.

The back nine proved particularly challenging as he registered three bogeys, although he escaped with a par on the 18th after being forced to innovate and play a shot right-handed.

MacIntyre said: “A lot of people have been struggling this week.

“After yesterday’s (first) four holes, I thought I’d be sitting on my couch in Oban right now, not playing golf. It was a big effort last night and, coming out today, I didn’t have everything going.

“But that’s golf. Last week you were the champion and this week you’re just bottom of the pack.”

MacIntyre was pleased to take four on the last after his tee shot landed just to the left of a deep fairway bunker.

Playing conventionally would have meant having to stand in the sand trap, well below the level of the ball, and so he decided to play right-handed with the clubhead turned around.

He struck his shot cleanly enough to get close to the green, albeit with aid of a ricochet off the grandstand, and from there he got up and down.

MacIntyre said: “I got a good bit of luck to miss the bunker but then you get up there and you’ve got no shot.

“I couldn’t even stand in the bunker and hit it. I just thought, why not hit it right-handed?

“As long as it was up the right, it was fine. The only place I couldn’t go was left, so I kind of aimed at the right TV tower.”

MacIntyre admitted such a trick was not something he had practiced.

“Full swipe at it – I’ve not done one, I don’t think, in my life,” he said.

Despite lost sleep, Scottish stars in mix after Open Championship’s first round at Royal Troon

A ruffled golfing mind can make a restless pillow.

TROON, Scotland — In theory, sleeping should be a fairly straightforward process. All you have to do, after all, is lie on your back and shut your eyes. It’s so easy, even a corpse can do it.

But trying to nod off the night before you make your Open Championship debut? Well, that’s a different matter altogether.

“I tried to get to bed around 7.30, 8 p.m. last night because I knew it was going to be an early start,” said Scottish amateur Calum Scott.

“I tried to get comfortable in bed and see if I could close my eyes, but it took me a while. I was probably up until midnight, so I didn’t get much sleep.”

A ruffled golfing mind can make a restless pillow. He would’ve slept better last night, mind you. A spirited level-par 71 on a tough, testing day left this particular Scott as the leading Scot. He was even better than Robert MacIntyre.

BRITISH OPENLeaderboard | Photos | How to watch

It was an admirable effort from the Walker Cup player, who harnessed the conditions and some early nerves to fine effect.

“The first few holes were a little shaky,” conceded Scott, who earned his place in the field through The Open Amateur Series. “It was tough with the crowds out there. It was something I haven’t experienced before.

“I was a little uncomfortable at the start, but once I got the past the nerves, the noise and the other distractions, I settled in and played some really good golf.”

A particular highlight was a birdie on the Postage Stamp, par-3 eighth – what Rory McIlroy would’ve given for that – while a birdie putt from 12 feet under the towering gaze of the grandstands on the 18th provided a finishing flourish.

The hearty round of applause for a job well done was fully merited. A post round 40 winks was probably justified too.

“Birdies at the Postage Stamp and the 18th?” he smiled. “I couldn’t have asked for anything better.”

While Scott trotted off for a kip, MacIntyre returned to his own digs in a chipper mood after a dogged 1-over 72.

On a day when one or two big names suffered a few devastating dunts to their ambitions, the newly crowned Genesis Scottish Open champion’s exercise in damage limitation brought an upbeat self-assessment.

“I thought it was almost perfect,” said MacIntyre, who has recorded two top-10 finishes in his previous four Open appearances.

“The putter didn’t turn up today, but I thought tee to green was absolutely superb. You can’t win it on the first day, but you can play yourself out of it. I thought 1-over was a good round of golf.”

After a relatively barren day on the greens, MacIntyre plonked in a six-footer for birdie on the 18th to give himself a late lift.

“I had loads of chances from inside the 12-feet range,” he said of the ones that got away. “I thought I rolled them well and they went the opposite way. But that’s Troon. It’s very subtle.

“It’s an old school links golf course where the greens are very flat but they just kink left to right. With the crosswinds, as well, when you’re hitting a putt, the ball will move in the wind. But that putt on the last was big.”

Bearsden’s Ewen Ferguson, the winner of the BMW International Open a couple of weeks ago, opened with a 3-over 74 while local lad Jack McDonald marked his Open debut with a 76.

Out in the very first group of the 152nd championship, with past Troon winners Justin Leonard and Todd Hamilton for company, McDonald relished the experience in his own backyard.

“I played really well tee to green to be honest but I had a few three-putts in there,” said McDonald, who nabbed a Troon tee-time in a play-off at the final qualifying shoot-out at Dundonald a couple of weeks ago.

“Todd just kept saying to me, ‘come on, knock this in and get the crowd going’. It almost felt like I just needed that one putt to go in, but I just couldn’t do it.

“I kept going at it, though, and kept committing to everything. It was all about controlling the emotions of playing in my first major. I could’ve been a few shots better. But that’s golf.”

Genesis Scottish Open winner Robert MacIntyre said ‘there may be some alcohol in the system’ when he tees off at 2024 British Open

“When I tee the ball on Thursday, I’ll try to win the championship. There might be some alcohol still in the system but I will try my best”

TROON, Scotland — The drive from The Renaissance Club, site of last week’s Genesis Scottish Open, in North Berwick to Royal Troon is slightly more than two hours depending on the traffic near Glasgow. But Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre, who won in his homeland on Sunday with a dramatic birdie on the final hole, won’t be making the trip on Monday. Probably not Tuesday either.

MacIntyre said as much in his winner’s press conference and he stuck to his words, canceling his Monday press conference ahead of the 152nd Open, which was scheduled for 3 p.m. BST (10 a.m. ET). He won’t meet with the media now until Wednesday at noon local time (7 a.m. ET). He’ll be too busy celebrating winning his personal major.

“How I come down from this, I don’t think I will,” he said on Sunday. “I think I will just try and ride the wave, and next week, yeah, it’s Open Championship. That means, again, a lot to me. But you’ve got to celebrate the good times because it doesn’t happen a lot and this is one I said I wanted. This, I’m going to celebrate hard and I’ll pitch up when I tee the ball on Thursday, whatever time I tee off, I’ll try to win the championship. There might be some alcohol still in the system but I will try my best.”

MacIntyre, who won for the second time this season as a rookie on the PGA Tour, might be fighting a bit of a hangover from the sound of it.

“Look, I’m going to celebrate this win with my friends and family, everyone that’s there. I don’t think they are going to be home for a bit tonight,” he said on Sunday. “We’ll celebrate this one now.”

Winner’s Bag: Robert MacIntyre, 2024 Genesis Scottish Open

A complete list of the golf equipment Robert MacIntyre used to win the PGA Tour’s 2024 Genesis Scottish Open.

[anyclip-media thumbnail=”https://cdn5.anyclip.com/uY1XMI0Bw5FJFJUVd3fD/1705913411657_248x140_thumbnail.jpg” playlistId=”undefined” content=”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”][/anyclip-media]

A complete list of the golf equipment Robert MacIntyre used to win the PGA Tour’s 2024 Genesis Scottish Open:

DRIVER: Titleist TSR2 (9 degrees), with Graphite Design Tour AD DI 7 X shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Bobby Mac’s driver” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/rQYX65″]

FAIRWAY WOOD: Titiest GT3 (15 degrees), with Graphite Design Tour AD DI 8 X shaft

HYBRID: TaylorMade Stealth 2 (19 degrees), with Graphite Design Tour AD DI Hybrid 105 X shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Bobby Mac’s hybrid” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/5gon99″]

IRONS: Titleist 620 CB (4-9), with True Temper Dynamic Gold X100 shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Bobby Mac’s irons” link=”https://pga-tour-superstore.pxf.io/Vm7Nra”]

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM10 (46), SM9 (50 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold X100 Onyx shafts, (56, 60 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Golf S400 Onyx shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Bobby Mac’s wedges” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/eKYNVD”]

PUTTER: TaylorMade Spider Tour

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Bobby Mac’s putter” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/an7eab”]

BALL: Titleist Pro V1

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Bobby Mac’s golf ball” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/Gm7gzr”]

GRIPS: Golf Pride Z-Grip Cord (full swing) / SuperStroke Zenergy Pistol (putter)