Sleeper picks for the 2024 Genesis Invitational at Riviera

Will the year of the longshot continue in LA?

A stacked field is in Los Angeles for the PGA Tour’s third signature event of the year, the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club.

Although world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, Viktor Hovland, Patrick Cantlay, Xander Schauffele, Max Homa and Justin Thomas will tee it up Thursday, all eyes will be on Tiger Woods.

Woods hasn’t played an official Tour event since the Masters last spring but did play a few times in December at the Hero World Challenge and PNC Championship.

The 15-time major winner spent Monday night announcing his new apparel line, Sun Day Red.

Although the best players in the world are set to do battle in LA, there are several sleepers to keep an eye on.

Genesis: Picks to win, odds | Best course history

South Koreans Sungjae Im and Si Woo Kim team for gold medal in China, earn exemption from military service

“This has been the longest four days of my career,” Im told reporters. “Every hole felt so important.”

While the focus of the golf world this week was the Ryder Cup in Italy, something equally special was happening in Hangzhou, China, at the Asian Games.

South Koreans Si Woo Kim and Sungjae Im helped their home country win the gold medal in golf. That’s a big deal for one reason: It makes the two PGA Tour pros — Im is ranked 27th in the world while Kim is No. 40 — exempt from serving the two-year mandatory military service that is required in Korea.

Teaming with amateurs Jang Yu-bin and Cho Woo-young, Im, 25, and Kim, 28, cruised to a 25-stroke win over Thailand for the team gold medal Sunday at the West Lake International Golf Course. It was the country’s first men’s golf title in 13 years.

All able-bodied males are obligated to serve between 18 and 21 months in the military once they turn 19. They can postpone the date of their service but without a significant cultural justification, like an Olympic medal, service is mandatory.

Seung Yul-Noh and Sang-Moon Bae are two Korean golfers who won on the PGA Tour before their mandatory service obligation but haven’t been able to regain their form after taking two years away from competition.

Only an Olympic medal, or a gold medal at the Asian Games, is worthy of an exemption in the eyes of the South Korean government. Im and Kim failed to medal at the Olympics in Japan.

Im finished runner-up in the individual portion of the event, a shot back of China’s Taichi Kho, a Notre Dame alum who primarily plays on the Asian Tour. Kim was three shots behind Im, finishing fourth place.

“This has been the longest four days of my career,” Im told reporters. “Every hole felt so important, and I knew every shot counted for our team event. I wanted to fight for every shot and do the best I could until the finish.”

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Viktory for Viktor: How Hovland built a more complete game and made a late birdie for a playoff win at the 2023 Memorial Tournament

Hovland birdied the 17th to eventually force a playoff and earn his fourth PGA Tour win.

Viktor Hovland finally bagged a PGA Tour win at one of the biggest events.

The 25-year-old Norwegian made a two-putt par from 58 feet on the first playoff hole to defeat Denny McCarthy and win the Memorial on Sunday.

“I don’t want it again,” Hovland said of the decisive seven footer he holed, sporting his trademark smile.

Hovland now has won in each of the last four seasons on Tour but fellow pro Edoardo Molinari, who doubles as Hovland’s performance coach, noted that his previous wins have shared something in common.

Indeed, all of his Tour wins had been on tropical islands: in Puerto Rico and twice in Mexico near Cancun plus two more unofficial titles in The Bahamas. It’s ironic given that he grew up in the cold of Norway.

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“Sometimes I tease him that it’s about time he wins on a serious golf course, not at a tourist place,” Molinari said.

Muirfield Village Golf Club, the course that Jack Nicklaus built near his childhood home in Dublin, Ohio, certainly qualifies as “a serious course.” On another warm and sunny day, Jack’s Place, as it is affectionately called, played fast and firm and the greens turned into concrete, but Hovland managed to shoot a final-round 2-under 70 to finish at 7-under 281.

“This week the golf course is arguably harder than most major championship golf courses we play,” Hovland said. “It felt like a major. So it was really cool that I was able to get it done at a place like this…It feels even better after some close calls.”

The seventh-ranked player in the world, Hovland has been a model of consistency with 24 straight cuts made worldwide – and has been knocking on the door at some of the biggest tournaments, including top-10 finishes at the last three majors. He chased Brooks Koepka almost to the finish at the PGA Championship last month, settling for a T-2, his best result in a major and recorded a T-3 in March at the Players Championship. It didn’t take long for Hovland, the winner of the 2018 U.S. Amateur, to establish himself as one of the best ballstrikers on Tour, but his short game admittedly was a weakness. What made this victory special for Hovland was the way he won it: without his best stuff from tee-to-green but a short game that has made great strides and a putter that continually bailed him out.

“It feels great to win one without having to ball-strike it to death,” Hovland said.

He also credited his improved course management. Two years ago, he played a practice round at the U.S. Open with Molinari, the brother of Francesco, the 2018 British Open winner, and a week later he implemented some of his tips at the BMW International in Germany and won the tournament.

“I was impressed with the way his mind worked,” Hovland said.

He hired Molinari to help with his strategy and it has paid big dividends. Speaking ahead of the tournament, Hovland noted that Molinari crunched his numbers and discovered earlier this year that when Hovland attacked greens with pitching wedge and 8-iron, he was short-siding himself 30 percent of the time and the Tour average is 20 percent of the time.

“Because I’m a good iron player it should be closer to 15 percent of the time if not less than that,” Hovland said. “I was putting too much pressure on my short game by being too aggressive.”

“It would be kind of a double whammy for me before,” Hovland said at his winner’s press conference. I would short-side myself and I didn’t have any tools around the green to slow the ball down, and now I can’t even keep the chip on the green. So you’re just always grinding.

“But this week I told myself that when I’m out of position just play for the fatter part of the green and if I miss the green, I still have a shot where I can roll the ball up or slow the ball down enough to get it close to the pin.”

Hovland shot a third-round 69 and started the day one shot behind Rory McIlroy, who stumbled to 75, Si Woo Kim (73) and David Lipsky (77). Three strokes back on the 15th tee, he made birdie there and drained a 28-foot birdie putt at 17, the only birdie at the hole during the final round, to cut his deficit to one. McCarthy, whose putter had been brilliant all day, drove into trouble left at the last and missed a 23-foot par putt for his first Tour title.

Returning to the 18th tee for the first playoff hole, McCarthy overcompensated and drove right and couldn’t reach the green. McCarthy burned the left edge on his 12-foot par putt, bending his knees in disbelief that his well-struck putt wouldn’t drop. Hovland, who ranked third in putting for the week, snuck in a 5-foot putt for the win.

“I’m heartbroken right now,” McCarthy said. “I thought this was going to be the week.”

Entering the final round it was anyone’s tournament with 22 players within three strokes of the lead. For the second week in a row, Scheffler finished a stroke out of a playoff despite a marvelous ball-striking week and a closing 67, which was three strokes better than anyone else in the field. Scheffler, who made the 36-hole cut on the mark at 3 over, ranked first in SG: Tee-to-Green and SG: Approach the Green but ranked 65th — or dead last — in SG: Putting, losing more than 8.5 strokes to the field on the greens for the week.

“I think a little bit of my struggles with the putting have probably helped me sort of elevate my ball striking just because if I’m trying to compete out here I have to – I mean, with the putts not going in, I got to hit it really good and I’ve been able to do that,” Scheffler said.

But not well enough to beat Hovland, who finally won on the U.S. mainland. Back in Norway, Hovland’s star continues to rise but golf’s popularity pales in comparison to skiing and soccer. Asked how well known the name Nicklaus, the winner of a record 18 majors, is back home, Hovland smiled and with the Golden Bear by his side, said, “Not to break your ego, but I don’t think there’s too many people that know about you.”

From Oslo to Ohio, they do know that Hovland is the champion of the Memorial at Jack’s Place.

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5 prop bets and position plays for the 2023 Memorial Tournament, including Rory McIlroy or Xander Schauffele to win at +550

McIlroy has back-to-back top 20s at the Memorial, and Schauffele hasn’t finished outside the top 20 since Bay Hill.

After a week in the Lone Star State, the PGA Tour is in Dublin, Ohio, for the 2023 Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village.

The field is loaded and features the top five players in the Official World Golf Ranking: Scottie Scheffler, Jon Rahm, Rory McIlroy, Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele.

Scheffler enters as the betting favorite at +600 followed by Rahm at +750 and Cantlay — who’s a two-time Memorial champion — at +1000.

Billy Horschel is the defending champion thanks to his four-shot win over Aaron Wise last season.

There are a few players taking the week off, including Tony Finau and Max Homa. Players are allowed to miss one designated event this season.

Here are five prop bets and position plays for the 2023 Memorial Tournament.

 More Memorial betting: Expert picks, odds | Sleeper picks

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5 sleeper picks to win the 2023 Memorial Tournament, including Sahith Theegala at 50/1

Theegala finished 5th at last year’s Memorial.

The field at this week’s Memorial Tournament is stacked. The top five players in the Official World Golf Ranking — Scottie Scheffler, Jon Rahm, Rory McIlroy, Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele — are all set to tee it up come Thursday morning.

Rahm won this event in 2020 while Cantlay has claimed the title twice, 2021 and 2019. Billy Horschel is the defending champion thanks to his four-shot win over Aaron Wise last season.

Scheffler is the betting favorite at +600 followed by Rahm at +750 and Cantlay at +1000.

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Although big names will be all over the leaderboard this week, we wanted to take a look at five sleeper picks with a shot to win come Sunday.

Let’s start with a fan favorite.

More Memorial betting: Expert picks, odds

Tom Kim, Stewart Cink, Max Homa among notable names to miss the cut at 2023 RBC Heritage

Here’s a closer look at those on the wrong side of the cutline in Harbour Town, South Carolina.

Post-Masters hangover?

Well, not for 2023 Masters champ Jon Rahm, the first golfer to play the week after winning a green jacket since Jordan Spieth in 2015.

Rahm shot 72-64 over the first two days at Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head, South Carolina, and is inside the top 20.

Speaking of Spieth, the defending champion at the RBC Heritage shot 68-67 and is in the top 10.

Rahm and Spieth are among the 41 (out of the top 50) players in the Official World Golf Ranking in the field at the $20 million designated event.

The leader heading into the weekend is Jimmy Walker, who shot his second straight 65 to lead by three shots over Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele and Justin Rose.

Here’s a closer look at those on the wrong side of the cutline, which came in at 2 under, on this Friday night.

Conversations with Champions: Si Woo Kim’s ‘aggressive’ birdie chip-in highlights fourth PGA Tour title at 2023 Sony Open in Hawaii

Conversations with Champions is presented by Sentry.

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Si Woo Kim now has four wins on the PGA Tour, the most recent came Sunday after he birdied the last two holes to snatch victory away from Hayden Buckley.

Kim started the day three shots off the lead and posted his second 64 of the weekend to charge up the leaderboard. Playing a group ahead, he watched as Buckley failed to get up-and-down on the last hole to post a birdie that would’ve forced a playoff.

The 27-year-old Korean, who calls Dallas home these days, claimed to be a “little shaky” over the last four holes but also “was trying to get confidence and keep calm.”

No doubt the shot of the week was the chip-in for birdie on the par-3 17th hole, which came just moments after Buckley birdied the 16th.

“Right before that, I heard a noise and I knew he made it, so it was kind of tough lie into the greens, so I had to hit aggressive,” Kim said. “So I just hit it aggressive and goes in. Yeah, it was exciting.”

From Sunday’s post-round news conference, here’s everything Si Woo Kim said after winning the 2023 Sony Open in Hawaii.

Q: Getting this victory so early in the year, what does this do for the attitude as you move forward?

SWK: It’s like first time winning like first event, so I think this is, can’t be better than this. So this is really exciting, and hopefully a lot of the seasons left. Hopefully trying to get more confidence and then like hopefully get more wins.

Q: You start the day 12-under par, three shots back. Shoot 64. How good did you play today?

SWK: It was feel great and then like first three holes like was on fire. … So knew it’s going to be like chance to winning, so I just trying to kept calm, and calm was like little like less back nine, but I was keep trying to calm. Was lucky chip on 17. I think that helps; 18 got more confidence. Was really comfortable on the last hole.

2023 Sony Open in Hawaii
Si Woo Kim poses with the trophy during the final round of the 2023 Sony Open in Hawaii at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu, Hawaii. (Photo: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports)

Q: Tell us about 17. I thought you drew a pretty good lie off the back of the green there.

SWK: No, it was like not as rough much, but like into the green have to be like carry on the green so it was little tricky. But I knew it, he made a birdie. I heard the noise so I have to hit it aggressive. So I have nothing to lose, so I just hit it aggressive.

Q: The bunker shot at 18 out the fairway bunker, that was a really good shot, too.

SWK: I’ve been there like yesterday, like pretty much ten yards farther, so I knew how to hit it and I knew how like bunker feel was there. So I think that makes me more like comfortable, and then, yeah, I just hit the great shot.

Q: How special was this? Your wife is here? She was here to give a big hug and kiss. K.H. came out. Ben An. How special is this one?

SWK: I like all the Korean players, so we win a lot of like last couple years, so we helping more trying to get more motivation. So I think that really helps for all the Korean players see each other. And then, yeah, my wife here, feel like we’re honeymoon because we came here another early last week. Yeah, it was everything comfortable.

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Winner’s Bag: Si Woo Kim, 2023 Sony Open in Hawaii

Check out the clubs that got the job done in Hawaii.

A complete list of the golf equipment Si Woo Kim used to win the PGA Tour’s 2023 Sony Open in Hawaii:

DRIVER: Callaway Paradym Triple Diamond (8.5 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 6X shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Si Woo Kim’s driver – $599.99″ link=”https://pga-tour-superstore.pxf.io/3P240r”]

FAIRWAY WOODS: Callaway Paradym Triple Diamond (15 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 8X shaft, (18 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 9X shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Si Woo Kim’s fairway wood – $349.99″ link=”https://pga-tour-superstore.pxf.io/NKgjyq”]

IRONS: Callaway X Forged CB (3-PW), with KBS Tour V 125 X shafts

WEDGES: Callaway JAWS Raw (54, 60 degrees), with KBS Tour V 125 shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Si Woo Kim’s wedges – $179.99 each” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/BXjvoq”]

PUTTER: Odyssey 2-Ball Ten broomstick

BALL: Callaway Chrome Soft X

[afflinkbutton text=”Si Woo Kim’s golf ball – $49.99 per dozen” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/Zd2M3k”]

GRIPS: Golf Pride MCC

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Si Woo Kim steals 2023 Sony Open in Hawaii title with clutch late birdies

The win is Kim’s fourth on the PGA Tour.

Si Woo Kim said he had nothing to lose, so he played aggressively on his chip shot on the 17th hole during the final round of the Sony Open in Hawaii. He picked a great time to chip in for birdie.

“It can’t get better than this,” Kim said.

The 27-year-old South Korean tied for the lead with a dramatic chip-in at the par 3 and added a two-putt birdie from 42 feet at 18 to match the low score on Sunday.

Kim’s 6-under 64 at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu propelled him to a one-stroke victory over Hayden Buckley and his fourth career PGA Tour title. It’s an impressive tally, which includes the 2017 Players Championship, but Kim still has work to do to catch his bride, Ji Hyun Oh, who turned professional in 2014 and has seven wins on the KLPGA to her credit. The couple tied the knot on December 19.

“Feel like we’re (on our) honeymoon because we came here early last week,” he said.

Kim said he was going to approach the final round of the Sony Open with a different mindset, trying not to focus so much on winning the tournament.

“Just play the golf,” he said.

Whatever that entailed, it worked. Kim, who trailed by three strokes at the start of the day, came out firing with birdies on the first three holes and marked six circles on his card in his first 12 holes to assume a one-stroke lead over Buckley.

In September, Kim represented the International team in the Presidents Cup. After playing a practice round with teammate Adam Scott, he adopted Scott’s putting style and use of a broomstick-length putter that week. It came in handy as he knocked off Justin Thomas of the U.S. in a singles match en route to going 3-0-1 in the competition. Kim tried to downplay the significance of his victory over Thomas, calling it “just a lucky day,” but later conceded it gave him a boost of confidence.

“My game was little down like at the end of the season, but I think that kind of like gave me momentum,” he said.

On Sunday, Kim chased down Buckley, the 54-hole leader, who started with a birdie but then his putter cooled off and he made his first bogey of the day at No. 11, missing from 5 feet, to fall one stroke behind Kim.

“I feel like the putting was a little shaky,” Buckley conceded.

Buckley’s putter temporarily woke from its slumber as he holed a 17-foot birdie at 12 and a 29-foot birdie at 14 to vault into first. But it was shaky down the stretch, especially inside 15 feet. Buckley lipped out a 4-foot par putt on the left at 15 to drop back into a tie for the lead at 16 under but rebounded with a birdie one hole later.

Buckley’s 16-footer at 16 reclaimed the lead momentarily. Just when it appeared that Buckley had the edge to grab his first title, Kim answered with his chip-in from 28 feet over the 17th green. His celebratory fist pump rivaled that of Tiger Woods in his prime.

“Right before that I heard the noise, I knew he made it,” Kim said of Buckley’s birdie putt at 16. “It was a tough lie — into the grain — so I had to be aggressive and I had nothing to lose and it went in.”

Kim drove into the left fairway bunker at 18 but his second shot, a 5-iron from 236 yards, at the par-5 was a beauty, bounding on to the green and stopping 42 feet short of the hole. He got down in two putts for the go-ahead birdie. Kim shot a pair of 64s on the weekend to finish with a 72-hole total of 18-under 262. Buckley, whose runner-up finish marked a personal best in 40 career Tour starts, signed for a final-round 68. He had a chance to tie and force a playoff but his 12-foot birdie putt at 18 slid by on the left. Chris Kirk, who was trying to end a winless drought of nearly eight years, shot 68 and finished third.

“Winning on the PGA Tour is the hardest thing to do, and sometimes you just get beat,” Buckley said. “I feel like that’s what happened today.”

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‘I was pretty pissed off’: Justin Thomas responds to Si Woo Kim shushing the crowd at the 2022 Presidents Cup

“But we won the Cup so that’s all that matters.”

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Justin Thomas and Si Woo Kim went out first in the Sunday singles matches at the 2022 Presidents Cup, and the pair of The Players champions didn’t disappoint.

Thomas held a 2-up lead at the turn but started to leak a little oil on the back nine, and Kim was there to take advantage with birdies on Nos. 10 and 11. Tied on the par-4 15th, Kim made an 7-footer for par to keep the match squared, let out a fist pump and proceeded to shush the crowd.

Thomas saw the whole thing while he walked to the 16th tee and didn’t take too kindly to Kim’s gesture to the fans.

“Honestly, at the time, I was pretty pissed off,” said Thomas, who lost the match 1 down to remain winless in Presidents Cup singles. “No, it’s one of those things, I think when you’re in the moment, when you’re on the other side of it, it’s something that gets you motivated, gets you pumped up a little bit.

“So I can say whatever I want about it, but he beat me. So he has the upper hand on me,” Thomas continued. “But we won the Cup, so that’s all that matters.”

The clap-back didn’t stop there.

Earlier in the day during the final round of matches, CBS Sports’ Kyle Porter pointed out how Thomas was frustrated by Kim not conceding what he thought to be a gimme putt on the par-4 9th, which he made to go 2-up in the match. The two-time major champion took to Twitter after the fact to have a little fun at the moment caught on camera.

PGA Tour stats had the putt right in the middle at 2 feet, 7 inches, so maybe JT had a point after all.

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