Seven former Georgia Bulldogs set to compete at The Open Championship

Tee times: seven former Georgia Bulldog golfers including Kevin Kisner are set to compete at The 2022 Open Championship.

Seven former Georgia Bulldog golf stars are set to compete at The Open Championship. The 2022 Open Championship will be held at The Old Course at St. Andrews in Scotland.

The PGA major tournament runs July 14-17. The Open Championship, or the British Open as it is often called, has a purse of $14 million.

Kevin Kisner, Brian Harman, Sepp Straka, Keith Mitchell, Russell Henley, Harris English, and Chris Kirk are all former Georgia Bulldogs that have qualified for the prestigious PGA Tour event.

When do they all tee off (all times are for Thursday) and what have been some of their recent successes?

5 former Georgia Bulldogs competing in the U.S. Open

Who are the five former Georgia Bulldog golf standouts that are competing in the 2022 U.S. Open golf tournament? Three are in the same group!

The 2022 U.S. Open is being held at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts. The prestigious golf tournament is the 122nd edition of the U.S. Open. It is the PGA Tour’s third major of the season.

The U.S Open is held June 16-19. Amazingly, three former Georgia Bulldogs are all in the same group for the first two days of the event. Has something like that ever happened in the history of the PGA Tour?

The University of Georgia has the strongest presence on the PGA Tour of any college golf program.

Who are the five former Georgia Bulldog golf standouts that are competing in the 2022 U.S. Open golf tournament?

2022 Wells Fargo Championship odds, field, best bets, and PGA Tour picks

Rory McIlroy is among just three players in this week’s field ranked inside the top 20 in the OWGR.

For some of the game’s biggest names, the Wells Fargo Championship served as a springboard for their careers. Rory McIlroy, Rickie Fowler, and Max Homa — who are all in the field this week — earned their first career wins at this event.

However, the regular venue is not being used this week.

Quail Hollow Country Club, the regular host track, will be staging the Presidents Cup later this year so the game’s best players are headed to TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm this time around.

McIlroy, a three-time winner of the WFC, enters the week as the defending champion and betting favorite at +750. He’s among just three players in this week’s field ranked inside the top 20 in the Official World Golf Ranking — McIlroy, seventh, Tony Finau, 18th, and Abraham Ancer, 20th.

Golf course

TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm | Par 70 | 7,160 yards

Key statistics

Driving accuracy
Strokes Gained: Approach
Strokes Gained: Off the Tee

Data Golf Information

Course Fit (compares golf courses based on the degree to which different golfer attributes — such as driving distance — to predict who performs well at each course – DataGolf): 1. TPC River Highlands, 2. Sedgefield Country Club, 3. East Lake Golf Club

Trending: 1. Rory McIlroy (last three starts: T-33, MC, 2), 2. Sepp Straka (T-30, T-3, MC), 3. Corey Conners (T-35, T-6, T-12)

Percent chance to win (based on course history, fit, trending, etc.): 1. Rory McIlroy (5.7 percent), 2. Corey Conners (4.6 percent), 3. Matthew Fitzpatrick (4.1 percent)

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Betting odds

Odds provided by Tipico Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list.

Player Odds
Rory McIlroy (+750)
Corey Conners (+1500)
Tony Finau (+2000)
Tyrrell Hatton (+2000)
Matthew Fitzpatrick (+2000)
Marc Leishman (+3000)
Seamus Power (+3000)
Gary Woodland (+3000)
Keegan Bradley (+3000)
Russell Henley (+3000)
Max Homa (+3000)
Abraham Ancer (+3000)

Betting card for the 2022 Wells Fargo Championship

Jordan Spieth gets up-and-down from bunker to win 2022 RBC Heritage in playoff with Patrick Cantlay

The win is the 13th of Spieth’s PGA Tour career.

Eleven players were within three shots of the lead down the stretch on Sunday, setting up for a thrilling finish along the South Carolina coast.

Jordan Spieth claimed the 2022 RBC Heritage at Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head after a one-hole playoff with Patrick Cantlay for the 13th win of his career.

Spieth was first in the clubhouse, posting a number at 13 under following an impressive Sunday 66 aided by two front-nine eagles. The 28-year-old Texan was one shot behind Lowry, who immediately made double bogey on the 14th to give up the lead to Spieth.

RBC Heritage: Leaderboard | Photos

Just minutes later, Sepp Straka rammed in a putt for birdie on the 17th to briefly tie Spieth before falling back to 12 under with a bogey on the last. Cantlay made a birdie of his own on the par-3 17th to tie Spieth and then missed a 12-footer for the win on 18, forcing a playoff at 13 under.

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2022 Honda Classic prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player at PGA National

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour. Just ask Sepp Straka.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour, folks. Just ask this week’s winner, Sepp Straka.

The 28-year-old native of Vienna made PGA Tour history as the first Austrian to win on Tour with a birdie on his final hole on Sunday to claim the 2022 Honda Classic at PGA National. The win is Straka’s first on Tour and his first professional victory since the 2018 KC Golf Classic on the Korn Ferry Tour.

Straka will take home $1,440,000, with runner-up Shane Lowry earning $872,000. Check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned this week at the 2022 Honda Classic.

MORE: PGA Tour all-time money list

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Honda Classic prize money

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Sepp Straka -10 $1,440,000
2 Shane Lowry -9 $872,000
3 Kurt Kitayama -8 $552,000
4 Daniel Berger -7 $392,000
T5 Gary Woodland -4 $309,000
T5 Alex Noren -4 $309,000
T7 Matthias Schwab -3 $260,000
T7 Chris Kirk -3 $260,000
T9 Keith Mitchell -2 $194,000
T9 Brian Stuard -2 $194,000
T9 John Huh -2 $194,000
T9 Lee Hodges -2 $194,000
T9 Sam Ryder -2 $194,000
T9 Adam Svensson -2 $194,000
15 Mark Hubbard -1 $146,000
T16 Cameron Young E $106,533
T16 Nick Taylor E $106,533
T16 C.T. Pan E $106,533
T16 Brooks Koepka E $106,533
T16 Kevin Streelman E $106,533
T16 Billy Horschel E $106,533
T16 Beau Hossler E $106,533
T16 Dylan Frittelli E $106,533
T16 Martin Contini E $106,533
T25 Christiaan Bezuidenhout 1 $62,800
T25 Bill Haas 1 $62,800
T25 Taylor Pendrith 1 $62,800
T25 Matthew NeSmith 1 $62,800
T25 Chase Seiffert 1 $62,800
T30 Callum Tarren 2 $43,133
T30 Lucas Glover 2 $43,133
T30 J.J. Spaun 2 $43,133
T30 Denny McCarthy 2 $43,133
T30 Trey Mullinax 2 $43,133
T30 Louis Oosthuizen 2 $43,133
T30 Rick Lamb 2 $43,133
T30 Mito Pereira 2 $43,133
T30 Ian Poulter 2 $43,133
T30 Dylan Wu 2 $43,133
T30 Andrew Kozan 2 $43,133
T30 Nick Watney 2 $43,133
T42 Brian Gay 3 $27,600
T42 J.T. Poston 3 $27,600
T42 Davis Riley 3 $27,600
T42 Jhonattan Vegas 3 $27,600
T42 Rickie Fowler 3 $27,600
T42 Lee Westwood 3 $27,600
T48 Danny Willett 4 $20,286
T48 Stephan Jaeger 4 $20,286
T48 Brendon Todd 4 $20,286
T48 Martin Trainer 4 $20,286
T48 Rory Sabbatini 4 $20,286
T48 K.H. Lee 4 $20,286
T48 Mackenzie Hughes 4 $20,286
T55 Peter Uihlein 5 $18,160
T55 Brett Drewitt 5 $18,160
T55 Vaughn Taylor 5 $18,160
T55 Russell Knox 5 $18,160
T55 David Lipsky 5 $18,160
T55 Alex Smalley 5 $18,160
T55 Roger Sloan 5 $18,160
T55 Samuel Stevens 5 $18,160
T55 Curtis Thompson 5 $18,160
T64 Justin Lower 6 $17,280
T64 Patrick Rodgers 6 $17,280
T66 Bronson Burgoon 7 $16,800
T66 Garrick Higgo 7 $16,800
T66 William McGirt 7 $16,800
T66 Aaron Rai 7 $16,800
T70 Ryan Palmer 8 $16,320
T70 Joshua Creel 8 $16,320
T72 Robert Streb 12 $16,000
T72 Austin Cook 12 $16,000

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Sepp Straka makes PGA Tour history with Honda Classic win as heavy rain on final hole sets up thrilling Sunday finish

Heavy rain on the final hole set up for a thrilling finish on Sunday evening.

Daniel Berger entered the final round of his hometown tournament with a five-shot lead, the largest 54-hole lead in the tournament’s 50-year history. Just a few holes later on Sunday at the Honda Classic he was in a dogfight with a hungry pack of chasers.

After starting 4 over through his first six holes, Berger welcomed Shane Lowry, Sepp Straka and Kurt Kitayama to the mix, setting up for a thrilling finish on Sunday in the rain at PGA National.

Playing in the penultimate group, Straka took the clubhouse lead with a tap-in birdie on the 18th to reach 10 under and ultimately claim the title. The win is Straka’s first on the PGA Tour and first professional win since the 2018 KC Golf Classic on the Korn Ferry Tour. Born in Austria, Straka is the first Austrian to win on the PGA Tour.

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5 Olympics golf storylines you missed overnight: A weather delay, Sepp Straka shines and a hatless Rory McIlroy

For those of you who couldn’t make it through the time difference and the weather delay, we at Golfweek are ready to catch you up.

For those of you who couldn’t make it through the time difference and the weather delay, we here at Golfweek are ready to catch you up on the opening round of the Tokyo Olympics men’s golf competition.

After making its return in 2016, golf is once again part of the Summer Olympics. Prior to that, it had last been an Olympic sport in 1904.

Kasumigaseki Country Club outside Tokyo is the host venue of the event and is one of Japan’s most exclusive private clubs. The East Course, which is where the Olympics are being played, opened in 1929, but Tom and Logan Fazio completed renovations to the track in 2016.

Here’s what you missed while sleeping:

Sepp Straka ties Olympic record, takes clubhouse lead in men’s competition in Tokyo Summer Games

With his twin brother, Sam, on the bag, Sepp Straka took advantage of ideal scoring conditions and wrote nine 3s on his scorecard

Last week, Sepp Straka missed the cut in the 3M Open in Minnesota.

On Thursday, he tied an Olympic record.

Straka, who in fact missed six of his last seven cuts before heading to Japan to represent Austria in the Tokyo Summer Games, shot a bogey-free, 8-under 63 to grab the clubhouse lead in the first round of the men’s golf competition.

With his twin brother, Sam, on the bag, Straka took advantage of ideal scoring conditions and wrote nine 3s on his scorecard at the East Course at Kasumigaseki Country Club in Saitama, about 35 miles northwest of downtown Tokyo.

Straka’s 63 tied the lowest round shot in the Olympics. Matt Kuchar of the U.S. and Marcus Fraser of Australia each shot 63 in the 2016 Rio Games when golf returned to the Olympics for the first time in more than a century.

Straka lipped out his birdie attempt on the last that would have set the record.

“That’s special,” Straka said when he was told he tied the record.

So was his round.

Straka didn’t have a 5 on his card as he roughed up the East Course softened by overnight rains and ruled on the pristine greens. While the heat was in the 90-degree range, the winds were in the 2-mph range and only five of the 60 players in the field were over par midway through the first day.

Straka said he was getting too technical with his putting, so he simplified his routine by limiting his practice strokes and putting more by feel. Sure worked.

“I hadn’t played great over on the PGA Tour the last few weeks, but my putting was really the reason and I just switched up my routine on my putting and it’s worked out,” he said. “It was just a steady round. I really hit the ball well. I didn’t put myself into trouble and the putter was pretty hot today.

“I felt like my game was in a pretty good spot. Those first few weeks before Travelers when I missed the cut my irons were bad, but my short game was really good. So, I worked on my irons a lot and then my short game got bad. So that’s when I missed the last couple cuts. But just changed my putting routine up a little bit and it worked really well, and my irons have been pretty good the last few weeks, so I felt pretty good about my game.”

Among the early finishers, Straka leads by two shots. At 65 were Carlos Ortiz of Mexico and Thomas Pieters of Belgium, who was fourth in the Rio Games in 2016.

The U.S.’s Xander Schauffele got off to a slow start and ended with a bogey en route to a 68 and Justin Thomas couldn’t buy a putt and didn’t make a birdie to shoot 71. Reigning British Open champion Collin Morikawa was 2 under through 11 holes and Patrick Reed was 4 under through 10 holes.

Among the best scores of those still on the course included Viktor Hovland of Norway (5 under through 11) and Jazz Janewattananond of Thailand (6 under through 13).

Pieters had been under the weather leading into the tournament and didn’t feel great when he got up for the first round. But his health improved when he got to the course and then when his scorecard filled up with circles.

“Didn’t play my way out of the tournament the first day, so that’s good. I was not in good ways yesterday, so I kind of didn’t expect this today,” he said. “I felt horrible this morning even when I woke up, so but maybe it’s just because I was thinking about bad shots or places not to hit it, I was just my caddie told me hit it there and I did it and that was, I kept it simple.

“When you get to the course and you realize this is like once every four or five years, it hits you every time. I’m a bit better, yeah.”

So is Straka.

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Oh, brother — Sepp Straka changes up his caddie for the Tokyo Olympics

The Austrian native will play in the Olympics for his home country this coming weekend before boarding a plane and flying back to Atlanta.

After narrowly missing the cut by one stroke at the 3M Open in Minneapolis this past weekend, former University of Georgia golfer Sepp Straka boarded a plane on Monday for Tokyo.

There, the Austrian native will play in the Olympics for his home country this coming weekend before boarding a plane and flying back to Atlanta.

“They do have the lay-flat seat that I’m going to be enjoying,” Straka said of his hectic trip around the globe. “But I’m really looking forward to it.”

Straka, who was born in Vienna and played for the Austrian National Team as an amateur, qualified in late June for his country because of his No. 44 Olympic Golf Ranking.

He will play the four-round tournament with twin brother, and former Bulldog player, Sam, as his caddie.

The 28-year-old Strakas were junior stars in Austria before the family moved to Valdosta just before the brothers attended Georgia in 2012.

Sepp could have elected to stick with his PGA Tour caddie Jon Turcott but instead decided that his Austrian affiliation with Sam, who has caddied on the PGA Tour for such players as former Bulldog Chris Kirk, was too good to let pass in this memorable moment.

Sepp Straka chips onto the 18th green during the first round of The Honda Classic golf tournament at PGA National (Champion). Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports

“It was pretty easy,” Sepp said of his choice of teaming with his brother. “The Austrian connection is obviously pretty big to have him on the bag as an Austrian as well is pretty cool. It’s a special tournament and I just really felt like it would be a cool moment for us to experience together.”

Sam has filled in as a caddie for Sepp in the past, but nothing will mean more, Sepp says, than the duo representing Austria.

“He’s caddied for me a few times and it’s always special to have him on the bag. To go to the Olympics with me will be something we’ll remember forever.”

The 60-player field tees off Thursday morning at the Kasumigaseki Country Club 30 minutes outside of Tokyo. Medals will be awarded on Sunday.

The tournament was impacted during the weekend after the United States’ Bryson DeChambeau and Spain’s Jon Rahm were disqualified after testing positive for COVID-19. One-time Georgia player Patrick Reed was selected as DeChambeau’s replacement.

Strict protocols face all athletes during an Olympic Games that were delayed by a year and still do not allow fans because of the pandemic.

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Straka and other golfers will be only be allowed to go from their residence to the golf venue, but he is hopeful that he can explore a bit of the Asian culture during his week-long stay.

“I’ve always wanted to explore Asia, Japan in particular,” Straka said. “I’m a big food guy and I love Asian food, so that’s always been a dream to go over there. That will be special on top of the Olympics.”

For Straka, the winter Olympics were a bigger event in Austria’s colder climate, but he noted that he’d tune in for the summer Games while in Vienna.

He was no doubt inspired on Sunday by Austrian cyclist Anna Kiesenhofer who won the country’s first gold medal since the 2004 Olympics in Athens, Greece.

“It’s just such an honor to play for Austria,” Straka said. “I’ve played for Austria in some team events and it’s just so awesome to play for something bigger than yourself.”

Sepp Straka becomes third PGA Tour player to withdraw from Valspar Championship after positive COVID-19 test

Sepp Straka became the third PGA Tour player to withdraw from this week’s Valspar Championship after testing positive for COVID-19.

Sepp Straka became the third PGA Tour player to withdraw from this week’s event in Florida after receiving a positive test for COVID-19 on Tuesday. Nelson Ledesma will take his place in the field.

“Straka will have the PGA Tour’s full support throughout his self-isolation period under CDC guidelines,” according to a statement released by the Tour.

On Monday, the Tour announced that Will Gordon and Brice Garnett had both tested positive. Gordon was replaced in the field by J.J. Spaun, while Tim Wilkinson replaced Garnett.

Straka most recently finished T-29 alongside partner Josh Teater at last week’s Zurich Classic of New Orleans. In 20 starts on Tour this season, Straka has made 15 cuts, finishing inside the top-25 five times, including top-10 finishes at the Vivint Houston Open and Corales Puntacana Resort and Club Championship.

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