Check the yardage book: TPC Summerlin for the Shriners Children’s Open

Check out Puttview’s hole-by-hole maps of the Bobby Weed design in Las Vegas.

TPC Summerlin in Las Vegas, site of this week’s Shriners Children’s Open on the PGA Tour, was designed by architect Bobby Weed with input from Fuzzy Zoeller and opened in 1991.

A desert course playing through arroyos and canyons, TPC Summerlin will play to 7,243 yards with a par of 72. The course ranks No. 4 on Golfweek’s Best list of private courses in Nevada.

Thanks to yardage books provided by Puttview – the maker of detailed yardage books for more than 30,000 courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges that players face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.

Shriners Children’s Open odds, picks and PGA Tour predictions

We take a look at the 2021 Shriners Children’s Open odds and make our PGA Tour picks and predictions to win.

The PGA Tour begins a two-week residency in Las Vegas with the Shriners Children’s Open at TPC Summerlin. Martin Laird returns as the defending champion, but he’ll be challenged by a rather strong field. Below, we look at the 2021 Shriners Children’s Open odds and make our PGA Tour picks and predictions to win.

Viktor Hovland is the top-ranked player in the field at No. 3 in the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings (as of Sept. 27). He’s playing his first event of the 2021-22 PGA Tour season following his loss with Team Europe at the Ryder Cup. Louis Oosthuizen (No. 5) and Paul Casey (No. 7) are also among this week’s betting favorites.

The 7,255-yard, par-71 TPC Summerlin has long hosted the Shriners Children’s Open and its many previous iterations. Course history has been important with Laird winning this event for a second time last year and Kevin Na winning in 2011 and 2019.

2021 Shriners Children’s Open picks – Favorite

Odds provided by Tipico Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds a full list. Lines last updated Monday at 2:54 p.m. ET.

Kevin Na (+3000)

While no faults can be found in the 2021 US Ryder Cup team in hindsight, Na had been considered a snub by many when the team was first announced. He’ll have an early opportunity to prove those beliefs correct, despite the Americans’ lopsided victory, with his third career win at TPC Summerlin.

He tied for the low 72-hole score at the Tour Championship before missing the cut at the Fortinet Championship. The 2020-21 season finale capped a six-event stretch that included two co-runner-up finishes and a T-8 at The Northern Trust to start the FedEx Cup Playoffs.

Na tied for just 43rd last year in his 2019 defense, but he was sixth among those who made the cut with 0.93 Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee per round and had a subpar putting performance. His strong short game can shine at this venue.

2021 Shriners Children’s Open picks – Contender

Brian Harman (+6000)

This is a much higher number for Harman than those we got accustomed to seeing in the 2020-21 season. He enters the week at No. 28 in the Golfweek rankings and with five top-10 finishes on the calendar year, along with top-20 finishes in three of the year’s four majors.

The 34-year-old lefty has played 22 career rounds at TPC Summerlin with an average of 0.92 total strokes gained on the field per round. He finished T-13 last year while ranking third in the field in SG: Putting per round. His play with the driver improved greatly through the season.

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2021 Shriners Children’s Open picks – Long shot

Matt Kuchar (+20000)

Kuchar’s lone top-10 finish of 2021 thus far was a third-place result in the WGC – Dell Technologies Match Play. He’s down to his final eight opportunities of the year to try to extend a three-year streak of at least one professional victory.

He has averaged 1.22 strokes gained on the field over 17 career rounds at TPC Summerlin, including a T-34 finish last year with 0.76 SG: Around-the-Green per round. While the odds are indicative of his fall from regular contender status, this course still suits his strengths in the short game

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Get ready for Graeme McDowell 3.0, debuting this week at the Shriners Children’s Open

McDowell is back and feeling better than ever after a dismal 2020-21 PGA Tour season.

Get ready for G-Mac 3.0.

That’s what Graeme McDowell has dubbed the new release of his game ahead of the Shriners Children’s Open in Las Vegas, not just his debut in the 2021-22 PGA Tour season but also his first PGA Tour start since the Charles Schwab Challenge in May after taking nine weeks off to recover from a right forearm injury.

“I’ve had a mental reset, I’m refreshed and I’m motivated,” he said. “We’re calling it G-Mac 3.0 – 2.0 was after COVID. I’d been on the bike and I trained and I felt really great. 2.0 didn’t work. Now we’re on 3.0, which is continuing the work physically but working more on the mental side of things and be more accepting of where I’m at and just do what I do better and be a better version of the 42-year-old me.”

McDowell, the 2010 U.S. Open champion, is coming off a dismal season in which he made just five cuts in 15 starts on the PGA Tour and fell to No. 236 in the world. It was the first time he dealt with an injury – other than a nagging wrist injury a few years ago – that required him to sit out for an extended period of time. This happened after McDowell tried to ramp up his game by starting to work with instructor Lucas Wald late last year. However, the changes to his swing backfired and may have contributed to his injury.

“I felt like I was looking for something, trying to reinvent it, but you’re not going to reinvent 20 years of a move,” McDowell said. “It was a bit of a science experiment that went sideways. I know my swing well by now. If something goes wrong, it’s usually just a couple of things.”

Back to the drawing board he went and McDowell drew up a new plan after some soul searching.

“The couple of months I was out this summer gave me time to reflect and I’ve come to the conclusion that what’s going to hold me back the next few years isn’t physical, it’s mental,” he said. “There’s nothing wrong with me physically and nothing wrong with my game. Do guys hit it 50 yards past me? Yeah, but guys hit it 50 yards by a lot of people. It’s not just me. I’m long enough to compete on certain courses, my iron play, chipping and putting is good enough to compete anywhere. I have to start doing what I do better instead of looking for some magic potion that doesn’t exist.”

McDowell will continue working hard to stay in top shape. He built a COVID gym in his garage, bikes regularly and wears a waist vest when he pounds the pavement at home.

“I’ll keep looking for the fountain of youth, and keep up my work physically,” he said.

Count him among the players who are glad that fans have returned. He spent a lot of time hanging out with Shane Lowry, renting houses on the road and cooking meals together as they created their own bubble inside the Tour’s bubble. But he struggled without the fan support.

“It was hard and I felt like I didn’t deal with it well. I found I was a guy that needs that little energy the crowd brings. Having those eyeballs on you gives me a narrower focus and natural energy,” he said.

McDowell played the European Tour’s Scottish Open in July and then took nine weeks off to let his forearm injury heal. He returned last month and made the cut at the BMW PGA Championship (T-49) and Dutch Open (T-22), wearing a brace on his upper arm to help combat the soreness as a precautionary measure. He said his game feels solid and he plans to play five events between now and the end of the PGA Tour’s official schedule this calendar year “to get some FedEx Cup points on the board,” and hopefully the QBE Shootout. This is the final year of McDowell’s exemption from his victory at the 2019 Puntacana Championship. Having served as a European Ryder Cup team vice captain at the last two matches, McDowell has set making the 12-man team in Rome in 2023 as a primary goal.

“There’s nothing like playing,” he said. “The last shot I hit was holing a 5-foot putt at 17 in 2014 to come back and beat Jordan Spieth in singles. Rory was behind the green and my wife, Kristin, was there. It was a super-cool memory for me. Hopefully there still will be one more ahead of me.”

G-Mac 3.0 is healthy and ready to go.

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