RSM Classic: Players get handle on ‘brutal’ conditions, light up scoreboard

About 40 percent of the 155 players broke par on Thursday despite high winds harshly impacting tee shots, approaches and putts.

Rory Sabbatini didn’t have a good warmup session ahead of Thursday’s first round of the RSM Classic.

The weather wasn’t anything to rave about, either, as a biting chill was in the air and winds were whipping across the Sea Island Golf Club in St. Simons Island, Georgia. And Sabbatini would play the Seaside Course, historically the harder and more exposed of the two tracks used for the tournament hosted by Davis Love III.

So Sabbatini, playing in the first group off, naturally birdied his first four holes and finished with a bogey-free 5-under-par 65 to grab a spot on the first page of the leaderboard.

“I was kind of going, I don’t know what’s going on here but I’m enjoying it,” said Sabbatini, who has overcome issues with his neck and is looking for his first win since the 2011 Honda Classic. “I didn’t feel like I hit the ball particularly well on the range and I didn’t feel like I was putting very good and all of a sudden it clicked on the golf course.

“This is a golf course, when you get opportunities, you’ve got to try to maximize them. Yet still, even with the conditions out there, if you try and maximize them, you’ve got to be careful you don’t mess up what you’re trying to maximize.”

RSM CLASSIC: Leaderboard

Sabbatini wasn’t the only one to get a handle on the tough – or as Zach Johnson said – brutal conditions. About 40 percent of the 155 players broke par despite high winds harshly impacting tee shots, approaches and putts.

Matt Wallace, who is using a local caddie after his regular caddie tested positive for COVID-19, finished with a par on his final hole despite taking a penalty drop and grabbed a share of the lead with a 6-under 64 on Seaside.

RSM Classic 2020
Matt Wallace talks with caddie Dave McNeilly on the 18th hole during the first round of the 2020 RSM Classic at the Seaside Course at Sea Island Golf Club on November 19, 2020 in St Simons Island, Georgia. Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images

“Windy day,” said Wallace, who plays the majority of his golf on the European Tour. “The wind picked up as the day went on. It was really blustery and gusting up a good amount around the 13th, 14th where we go out to sea a little bit. Hitting a 5-iron from 150 yards is not normal, but I’m kind of used to that from being back home, just normally playing on links courses rather than these types of courses.

“Putted great. Got off to a nice start and holed a good putt on the third hole for bogey. Good momentum there. Carried it on till the end there.”

Joining Wallace at the top of the leaderboard was Camilo Villegas, whose 22-month-old daughter, Mia, died in July after battling cancerous tumors on her brain and spine. Villegas matched his career low on Seaside with a bogey-free 64.

“It was tough out here, but I love this place,” Villegas said. “I’ve been coming here since 2000 and it’s one of those stops I don’t like missing. I’ve been feeling good, to be honest.

RSM Classic 2020
Camilo Villegas watches his second shot on the seventh hole during the first round of the 2020 RSM Classic at the Seaside Course at Sea Island Golf Club on November 19, 2020 in St Simons Island, Georgia. Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images

“It was kind of nice this morning. I got on the range and see a little rainbow out there. I start thinking about Mia and said hey, let’s have a good one. She loved colors and rainbows. It was a nice way to start the day. It was a good ball‑striking round, it was a great putting round. I was pretty free all day. Like you said, it’s tough to be free under these conditions, but I found a way to do it.”

Joining Sabbatini at 5 under were seven players, including Cameron Tringale, Adam Long, Keegan Bradley and Doug Ghim, who all posted 5-under-par 67 on the inland Plantation Course.

Ten players, including local favorites Johnson, Harris English and 2015 RSM Classic winner Kevin Kisner, were at 4 under.

“Today was brutal. I mean, I don’t know what other guys are saying, but I played really, really, really good,” said Johnson, who lives within 10 miles of Sea Island Golf Club and played Seaside.

“I had opportunities that I didn’t even capitalize on, but I made some. I made two bogeys from the middle of the fairway straight into the wind, which you’re going to do. It was just very difficult, difficult to judge distance, trajectory. It was a survival test.”

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Rory McIlroy, Justin Thomas among Whoop Series E financing investors

Two of golf’s biggest stars join Kevin Durant, Patrick Mahomes and venture capital funds in financing the performance-tracking company.

What do Kevin Durant, Patrick Mahomes, Larry Fitzgerald, Rory McIlroy and Justin Thomas have in common? 

Along with several venture capital funds, Whoop has announced they are private investors in a $100-million round of Series E funding for the human-performance company now valued at $1.2 billion.

In addition to McIlroy and Thomas, several professional golfers, including Billy Horschel and Xander Schauffele, began wearing a Whoop band either on their wrist or around their biceps in 2019. Whoop measures the wearer’s heart rate hundreds of times per second, and when paired with a smartphone app it reveals how hard an athlete has worked by measuring strain. Whoop also tracks how long the wearer sleeps, how restorative that sleep is and how recovered the wearer is when he or she wakes up.

Rory McIlroy
Rory McIlroy typically wears his Whoop 3.0 strap around his left biceps. (AP/Charles Rex Arbogast)

Series E funding is rare and typically occurs when a company wants to stay private for an extended period and delay going public for various reasons.

Appearing on Golfweek’s Forward Press podcast in April, as the COVID-19 pandemic forced the United States and many other parts of the world to shut down, Whoop founder and CEO Will Ahmed said data the strap collects may be able to determine that a user is sick before the individual becomes symptomatic. 

Whoop 3.0 strap
Whoop 3.0 strap (Whoop)

Two months later Whoop gained notoriety when Nick Watney woke up Friday morning before the second round of the RBC Heritage and his Whoop revealed his respiratory rate overnight had spiked. Respiratory rate is the number of times you breathe, something Whoop tracks, and studies showed Whoop wearers who see a significant increase in respiratory rate often are asymptomatically carrying the coronavirus. After requesting that the PGA Tour test him before he played, it was confirmed Watney had COVID-19. 

Nick Watney
Nick Watney, wearing a blue Whoop 3.0 strap on his right wrist, in January 2020 (Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports)

The following week at the Travelers Championship, the PGA Tour announced a partnership with Boston-based Whoop and made bands available to all players, caddies and many tournament officials.

In the weeks that followed, Whoop partnered with the LPGA and Symetra tours as well.

According to a release, Whoop has hired more than 200 people in 2020 and has over 330 employees. It has raised more than $200 million to date.

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U.S. Open: Rory Sabbatini hit one of the all-time bad putts

At Winged Foot on Sunday, Rory Sabbatini lined up a putt completely away from the hole and then watched his ball stop even farther away.

The U.S. Open greens at Winged Foot have been treacherous so far this year, and have already led to some embarrassing moments. … and one true meltdown which led to a golfer withdrawing on Saturday after he needed six putts to put the ball in from four feet out. (Seriously.)

The undulating greens have, at times, demanded golfers take unpredictable routes to the hole. (Zach Johnson did so to spectacular effect earlier in the tournament.)

All this is a long way of setting up what you’re about to see, which on first glance looks like a putt attempt by a golfer who has briefly lost his sense of direction and/or sense of sight.

This is Rory Sabbatini, on the green at Winged Foot, lining up completely away from the hole, hitting his putt … then having it stop dead even farther away than he was for the first putt.

The attempt failed so spectacularly that the announcer, etiquette be damned, burst into laughter. He apologized, but there was nothing to apologize for. This was objectively very funny.

Rory Sabbatini hit one of the all-time bad putts at the U.S. Open and golf fans loved it

Rory Sabbatini tried to play it way up the hill at Winged Foot, and let it roll down to the hole. It … did not work out that way.

The U.S. Open greens at Winged Foot have been treacherous so far this year, and have already led to some embarrassing moments … and one true meltdown which led to a golfer withdrawing on Saturday after he needed six putts to put the ball in from four feet out. (Seriously.)

The undulating greens have, at times, demanded golfers take unpredictable routes to the hole. (Zach Johnson did so to spectacular effect earlier in the tournament.)

All this is a long way of setting up what you’re about to see, which on first glance looks like a putt attempt by a golfer who has briefly lost his sense of direction and/or sense of sight.

This is Rory Sabbatini, on the green at Winged Foot, lining up completely away from the hole, hitting his putt … then having it stop dead even farther away than he was for the first putt.

The attempt failed so spectacularly that the announcer, etiquette be damned, burst into laughter. He apologized, but there was nothing to apologize for. This was objectively very funny.

Golf fans loved it:

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Quick Hits with Rory Sabbatini: Best shot ever was an ace at Augusta

Veteran PGA Tour pro talks about the best shot of his career and says it didn’t come in a tournament, but rather in the Par 3 Contest.

A year ago, Rory Sabbatini posted a T-5 finish in the AT&T Byron Nelson, a tournament that originally was on the PGA Tour calendar for this week. The coronavirus pandemic obviously changed those plans.

That T-5 was one of his five top-ten finishes over the last two seasons. Sabbatini did also team up with Kevin Tway to win the QBE Shootout, an unofficial event, in December.

Born in South Africa, he played his college golf at the University of Arizona and turned pro in 1999. He’s won six PGA Tour events and over the course of his pro career, Sabbatini has won more than $34 million in on-course earnings.

When asked about his best shot ever, Sabbatini says it was a hole-in-one, the first one ever got, in the Masters Par 3 contest. It’s one of 94 all-time aces in the Par 3 contest.

Check out this edition of Quick Hits.

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For more Quick Hits With, click here.

Waste Management Phoenix Open odds, predictions, picks and PGA Tour best bets

Here’s why Jon Rahm and Xander Schauffele are among our picks for the Waste Management Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale.

The PGA Tour’s Waste Management Phoenix Open will bring us right up to kickoff of Super Bowl LIV between the San Francisco 49ers and Kansas City Chiefs Sunday evening at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami. First, Rickie Fowler returns to TPC Scottsdale in Scottsdale, Arizona, to battle another loaded field led by world No. 3 Jon Rahm.

The key stats for the Waste Management Phoenix Open are:

  • Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green
  • Strokes Gained: Ball Striking
  • Bogey Avoidance
  • Good Drives Gained
  • Strokes Gained: Scrambling

My model at Fantasy National looks at the most recent 24 rounds on courses featuring Bermuda Greens.

Waste Management Phoenix Open – Tier 1

Jon Rahm during the Farmers Insurance Open. (Photo Credit: Orlando Ramirez – USA TODAY Sports)

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Monday at 9 p.m. ET.

Jon Rahm (+600)

Rahm is the betting favorite at BetMGM, and for good reason. Not only is he the top-ranked golfer from the Official World Golf Ranking, but he’s coming off a runner-up finish to Marc Leishman at last week’s Farmers Insurance Open. He hasn’t finished worse than 10th in his last five worldwide events.


Looking to place a bet on this tournament? Get some action on it at BetMGMBet Now!


Xander Schauffele (+1800)

Schauffele was one of the biggest disappointments of the week at Torrey Pines, as he missed the cut for the first time since the Northern Trust in August. He returns to TPC Scottsdale having tied for 10th last year (with Rahm). He also tied for 17th in 2018. Schauffele ranks ninth in the stat model, ranking in the top 10 of four-of-the-five key stats.

Waste Management Phoenix Open – Tier 2

Byeong Hun An during the Wyndham Championship. (Rob Kinnan – USA TODAY Sports)

Byeong Hun An (+6600)

An is the leader of the stat model; the 49th-ranked golfer in the world ranks fourth in the field among those with at least five rounds played at TPC Scottsdale in total strokes gained per round, according to Data Golf. He’s still seeking a PGA Tour win, but he hasn’t finished worse than T-23 in three appearances at this event.

Ryan Moore (+6600)

Moore missed the cut at this event the last two years. He enters this year’s tournament ranked eighth by the stat model, and he’s coming off a T-6 at the American Express. His ball-striking and play off the tee are well suited to this venue.


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Waste Management Phoenix Open – Longshots

Rory Sabbatini during the 2020 Sony Open. (Kyle Terada – USA TODAY Sports)

Rory Sabbatini (+10000)

Sabbatini slipped to 88th by the OWGR with last week’s missed cut at the Farmers. It snapped a streak of seven straight made cuts dating to the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. He’s second-best in the field in Bogey Avoidance, and he’ll be able to capitalize on the many scoring chances at TPC Scottsdale.

Adam Hadwin (+11000)

Hadwin has made the cut here each of the last four years with a top finish of T-12 in 2017. The Canadian hasn’t played since finishing in a tie for 68th at the RSM Classic while attending to the birth of his first child. He has slipped to 52nd in the world in his time off and now has fresh motivation at a familiar venue.

Complete odds

Player Odds
Jon Rahm +600
Justin Thomas +800
Webb Simpson +1400
Hideki Matsuyama +1600
Rickie Fowler +1600
Xander Schauffele +1800
Bryson DeChambeau +2500
Matt Kuchar +2500
Gary Woodland +2800
Tony Finau +2800
Sungjae Im +3000
Brandt Snedeker +3300
Bubba Watson +3300
Collin Morikawa +3300
Branden Grace +4500
Viktor Hovland +4500
Cameron Smith +5000
Jordan Spieth +5000
Ryan Palmer +5000
Chez Reavie +6000
Byeong Hun An +6600
Daniel Berger +6600
Jason Kokrak +6600
Kevin Na +6600
Matthew Wolff +6600
Russell Knox +6600
Ryan Moore +6600
Corey Conners +7000
Brian Harman +8000
J.B. Holmes +8000
J.T. Poston +8000
Keegan Bradley +8000
Vaughn Taylor +8000
Andrew Landry +9000
Andrew Putnam +9000
Billy Horschel +9000
Brendan Steele +9000
Bud Cauley +9000
Ted Hoge +9000
Charley Hoffman +10000
Emiliano Grillo +10000
Harry Higgs +10000
Lanto Griffin +10000
Rory Sabbatini +10000
Sung Kang +10000
Zach Johnson +10000
Adam Hadwin +11000
Beau Hossler +11000
Max Homa +11000
Harold Varner III +12500
Harris English +12500
Joel Dahmen +12500
Kiradech Aphibarnrat +12500
Martin Laird +12500
Russell Henley +12500
Sebastián Muñoz +12500
Aaron Wise +15000
Carlos Ortiz +15000
Charl Schwartzel +15000
Dylan Frittelli +15000
Nick Taylor +15000
Patrick Rodgers +15000
Scott Piercy +15000
Sepp Straka +15000
Talor Gooch +15000
Chesson Hadley +17500
Jimmy Walker +17500
Luke List +17500
Nate Lashley +17500
Sebastian Cappelen +17500
Adam Long +20000
Adam Schenk +20000
Brian Gay +20000
Brian Stuard +20000
Cameron Tringale +20000
Danny Lee +20000
Grayson Murray +20000
Kevin Chappell +20000
Kevin Streelman +20000
Kevin Tway +20000
Kyle Stanley +20000
Matt Jones +20000
Sam Burns +20000
Sam Ryder +20000
Sean O’Hair +20000
Tyler Duncan +20000
Chris Kirk +22500
Aaron Baddeley +25000
Austin Cook +25000
Brice Garnett +25000
Chris Stroud +25000
J.J. Spaun +25000
John Huh +25000
Kyoung-Hoon Lee +25000
Mark Hubbard +25000
Ryan Armour +25000
Si Woo Kim +25000
Troy Merritt +25000
Wyndham Clark +25000
C.T. Pan +30000
James Hahn +30000
Jamie Lovemark +30000
Keith Mitchell +30000
Lucas Bjerregaard +30000
Luke Donald +30000
Matt Every +30000
Patton Kizzire +30000
Peter Malnati +30000
Steve Stricker +30000
Tom Potter, Jr. +30000
Trey Mullinax +30000
Greg Chalmers +35000
Mackenzie Hughes +35000
Scott Harrington +35000
Brandon Hagy +40000
Hudson Swafford +40000
K.J. Choi +50000
Kevin Stadler +50000
Kyle Westmoreland +50000
Roger Sloan +50000
Satoshi Kodaira +50000
Scottie Scheffler +50000
Seung-Yul Noh +50000
Bo Van Pelt +75000
Colt Knost +75000
Marty Jertson +75000
Martin Trainer +100000

Get some action on this tournament by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @EstenMcLaren and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

Waste Management Phoenix Open odds, predictions, picks and PGA Tour best bets

Analyzing the golf betting odds to win the 2020 Waste Management Phoenix Open, with PGA Tour betting odds, picks, predictions and best bets.

The PGA Tour’s Waste Management Phoenix Open will bring us right up to kickoff of Super Bowl LIV between the San Francisco 49ers and Kansas City Chiefs Sunday evening at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami. First, Rickie Fowler returns to TPC Scottsdale in Scottsdale, AZ to battle another loaded field led by world No. 3 Jon Rahm.

The key stats for the Waste Management Phoenix Open are:

  • Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green
  • Strokes Gained: Ball Striking
  • Bogey Avoidance
  • Good Drives Gained
  • Strokes Gained: Scrambling

My model at Fantasy National looks at the most recent 24 rounds on courses featuring Bermuda Greens.

Waste Management Phoenix Open – Tier 1

(Photo Credit: Orlando Ramirez – USA TODAY Sports)

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Monday at 9 p.m. ET.

Jon Rahm (+600)

Rahm is the betting favorite at BetMGM, and for good reason. Not only is he the top-ranked golfer from the Official World Golf Ranking, but he’s coming off a runner-up finish to Marc Leishman at last week’s Farmers Insurance Open. He hasn’t finished worse than 10th in his last five worldwide events.

Xander Schauffele (+1800)

Schauffele was one of the biggest disappointments of the week at Torrey Pines, as he missed the cut for the first time since The Northern Trust in August. He returns to TPC Scottsdale having tied for 10th last year (with Rahm). He also tied for 17th in 2018. Schauffele ranks ninth in the stat model, ranking in the top 10 of four-of-the-five key stats (Good Drives Gained).

Waste Management Phoenix Open – Tier 2

(Photo Credit: Rob Kinnan – USA TODAY Sports)

Byeong Hun An (+6600)

An is the leader of the stat model; the 49th-ranked golfer in the world ranks fourth in the field among those with at least five rounds played at TPC Scottsdale in total strokes gained per round, according to Data Golf. He’s still seeking a PGA Tour win, but he hasn’t finished worse than T-23 in three appearances at this event.


Looking to place a bet on this tournament? Get some action on it at BetMGM. Bet Now!


Ryan Moore (+6600)

Moore missed the cut at this event each of the last two years. He enters this year’s tournament ranked eighth by the stat model, and he’s coming off a T-6 at The American Express. His ball-striking and play off the tee are well suited to this venue.

Waste Management Phoenix Open – Longshots

(Photo Credit: Kyle Terada – USA TODAY Sports)

Rory Sabbatini (+10000)

Sabbatini slipped to 88th by the OWGR with last week’s missed cut at the Farmers Insurance Open. It snapped a streak of seven straight made cuts dating back to the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. He’s second-best in the field in Bogey Avoidance, and he’ll be able to capitalize on the many scoring chances at TPC Scottsdale.

Adam Hadwin (+11000)

Hadwin has made the cut here each of last four years with a top finish of T-12 in 2017. The Canadian hasn’t participated in an event since finishing in a tie for 68th at The RSM Classic while attending to the birth of his first child. He has slipped to 52nd in the world in his time off and now has fresh motivation at a familiar venue.

Get some action on this tournament by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @EstenMcLaren and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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Sony Open odds, predictions, picks and PGA Tour best bets

Analyzing the 2020 Sony Open in Hawaii, with PGA Tour betting odds, picks, predictions and best bets.

This week’s Sony Open in Hawaii sees the PGA Tour’s first full-field event since the RSM Classic in late November. The 7,044-yard, par-70 Waialae Country Club hosts the tournament yet again in Honolulu, Hawaii.

The key stats for this week are:

  • Strokes Gained: Approach
  • Bogey Avoidance
  • Good Drives Gained
  • Eagles Gained
  • Strokes Gained: Par 4s

My model at Fantasy National is set to the most recent 36 rounds for each golfer in the field played on par-70 courses under 7,200 yards in length and featuring Bermuda grass greens.

Sony Open – Tier 1

(Photo Credit: Adam Hagy – USA TODAY Sports)

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Tuesday at 8:45 a.m. ET.

Webb Simpson (+1200)

Simpson leads my stat model and is the best in the field in both SG: Approach and SG: Par 4s. He’s third in the field with an Official World Golf Ranking of No. 12, and he shares the second-best odds with Patrick Reed. The five-time PGA Tour champ didn’t play here last year, but he was T-4 in 2018 and T-13 each of the three previous three years.

Marc Leishman (+4500)

Leishman tied for third here a year ago, and he hasn’t finished worse than T-47 in any of his last five tries. He ranks seventh in the field by the OWGR measure, but he’s 13th by the odds at BetMGM. He’s a good value pick following last year’s top finish and a solo third at the Safeway Open in September early in his 2019-20 campaign.

Sony Open – Tier 2

(Photo Credit: Kyle Terada – USA TODAY Sports)

J.T. Poston (+5000)

Poston is coming off a T-11 finish in the 30-man field at last week’s Sentry Tournament of Champions. He has missed just one cut in nine events since vaulting into the top 100 of the OWGR with his first career win at last season’s Wyndham Championship. He leads the field in Bogey Avoidance, and he ranks seventh in Good Drives Gained and fourth in SG: Par 4s.


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Rory Sabbatini (+8000)

Sabbatini is one of many in the field returning to competitive play for the first time since the RSM Classic. He’s coming off a 2019 calendar year in which he had six top 10s against just four missed cuts for his most successful season since his last PGA Tour win in 2011 at The Honda Classic. This is a similarly short venue, and he’s made the cut in four of his last five appearances with a T-6 result in 2015.

Sony Open – Longshots

(Photo Credit: John David Mercer – USA TODAY Sports)

Luke List (+15000)

List didn’t play this event last year following a missed cut in 2018, but he did finish T-13 in 2017. He enters the week ranked 145th in the world following three missed cuts to start his 2019-20 season, but he did have two runners-up last year. He also finished second at the 2018 Honda Classic amid a stronger field.

Mackenzie Hughes (+25000)

Hughes isn’t much of a course fit (49th in Eagles Gained and 57th in SG: Approach), but this number is far too high for a former PGA Tour champ. A $1 sprinkle at these odds returns a profit of $250.

Get some action on this tournament by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @EstenMcLaren and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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How much each team earned at the 2019 QBE Shootout

Check out how much each team earned at the 2019 QBE Shootout.

Kevin Tway and a red-hot Rory Sabbatini all but ran away in the better-ball format of the 2019 QBE Shootout at Tiburón Golf Club at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Resort on Sunday in Naples, Florida.

The pair shot a 12-under 60 to win by two strokes over Jason Kokrak and J.T. Poston at 31-under 185. Tway and Sabbatini made eagle on No. 14 to take the lead for good, adding clutch birdies on holes Nos. 15, 17 and 18 to close out the tournament.

Check out the total payouts below for all 12 teams at the $3.5 million 2019 QBE Shootout.

QBE Shootout prize money

Position Player To par Earnings
1 Tway/Sabbatini -31 $870,000
2 Poston/Kokrak -29 $545,000
T-3 Varner III/Palmer -28 $295,500
T-3 Todd/Horschel -28 $295,500
5 Poulter/McDowell -27 $229,000
T-6 Wolff/Hovland -26 $195,000
T-6 Putnam/Conners -26 $195,000
T-8 Kisner/Hoffman -24 $182,500
T-8 Watson/Howell III -24 $182,500
10 Reavie/Chappell -21 $175,000
11 Kizzire/Harman -20 $170,000
12 Thompson/O’Hair -8 $165,000

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