Medalist is back on TV, but don’t expect to see Greg Norman around

Greg Norman was excited to be on the broadcast for this weekend’s match at a club he helped build. An invite never came. How come?

It’s been 25 years since Medalist Golf Club last appeared on national television, when Shell’s Wonderful World of Golf pitted then-world No. 1 Nick Price against Greg Norman, the world No. 2 and founder of the newly opened club.

On May 24, the exclusive Florida enclave hosts another made-for-TV affair with Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning taking on Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady to raise funds for COVID-19 relief.

Just don’t expect to see Greg Norman anywhere.

A spokesperson for Norman confirmed to Golfweek that the World Golf Hall of Famer was approached by Turner Sports about joining the broadcast team for The Match.

“He was very interested. Next thing he heard was that Justin Thomas had been chosen for the role,” said his representative Jane McNeillie. “That’s all we really know.”

It’s been seven years since Norman had an acrimonious and very public split from Medalist after the board hired architect Bobby Weed to make changes to the course, which the two-time major winner furiously described as “a slap in the face.” He famously removed a stuffed shark mounted above the bar in the grill room, which was replaced by a board listing winners of the member-guest including, in 2002, Norman and Andy Mill, his former best friend whose wife, tennis great Chris Evert, left him for Norman in 2006.

I asked Kevin Quigley, the president of the board at Medalist, if the club had requested Norman not be part of the production. 

“No,” he replied.

Is it a preference of Medalist that he not be involved?

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There was a lengthy pause.

“I wouldn’t say a preference,” Quigley finally offered. “We asked who would be involved and we received the answer. His name wasn’t one of them. So there’s nothing in the contract between all the parties that says Greg Norman cannot be involved.”

Of course, not everything has to be contractual to be understood by all parties. An inquiry to Turner Sports on whether Norman was approached was not answered by press time.

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When told that Norman says he was approached and doesn’t know why there was no follow-up, Quigley said, “I have no idea what happened between him and Turner Sports. I can only say what happened between us and Turner Sports. They threw out a bunch of names and Greg Norman’s name was not among them. So we assumed he was not involved.”

Had Turner suggested Norman, would the club have been comfortable with that?

“I don’t know why he would want to be involved. You can go back and I’m sure you’ve seen the stories,” Quigley said before trailing off into another long pause. “His opinion of the golf course was so low that I don’t know why he would want to go on television and be a commentator to a product that he doesn’t approve of.”

In Medalist’s early years, Norman ran the club as he saw fit, and that included making changes to the Pete Dye design on which he was either a consultant or co-architect, depending on who you believe. When members took over the club, Dye was invited back to discuss restoring what had been changed. The legendary designer was driven around the property and was surprised by what he saw. “What happened here?” he asked.

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“Greg Norman tweaked pretty much every hole,” Quigley said. “As the founding member, Greg ran the club at his sole discretion. There’s seven members on the board, he had four seats. His golf course design company did the work, his company was paid for the work, and the members were the ones paying for it. And the members didn’t want the fifth green changed, they didn’t want the bunkers moved from one side of the fairway to the other.”

Quigley says the Medalist board sent Norman registered mail inviting him to submit a proposal at the time of the restoration but received no response. “He didn’t like the idea that anyone else was touching the golf course,” said Quigley. “He had a hissy fit when it was changed. He had an opportunity. He chose not to participate.”

Medalist has earned an enviable reputation as base camp for PGA Tour stars in the last decade since Woods moved to Jupiter and joined the club. More than 20 other professionals are members, including Brooks Koepka, Rickie Fowler, Matt Wolff and Justin Thomas, who Norman believes replaced him on the broadcast team for the Tiger-Phil event. “Justin and Tiger are very close so that might have had something to do with it,” Quigley said dryly.

Norman, who lives 15 minutes away, remains on the member roll at Medalist. “As the founding member of the club, he is a member. The way the document is written, he will always be a member,” the gregarious Quigley said. “He cannot be thrown out nor can he quit. He comes around sometimes and you see him. There’s no controversy.”

Norman did make one poorly-timed visit with his grandson only to find it was member-member weekend. “We had 120 people on the range. So it wasn’t the ideal time for him to hit balls with his grandson,” Quigley said. “He was here earlier in the year. He was in the grill room, sat down and had lunch. Tiger was at a table at the same time. It was all good.”

The course viewers will see on Sunday is much closer to what was broadcast a quarter-century ago, the board president believes. “It’s not an identical restoration but we restored a lot of it,” he said. “We’ll never get it back to the original golf course but it’s a lot closer than it was five years ago.”

I asked if Norman appreciates now the work that was done. “I’ve never heard him make a complimentary comment about the golf course, but I don’t communicate with him regularly,” Quigley said.

The Medalist board will have no say in how its golf course is presented to the world. The Match is being managed by the PGA Tour and last week Tour official Slugger White spent more than four hours touring the layout and discussing pin locations in the company of the club’s professional, it’s superintendent and Olin Browne, a board member and Tour veteran. At the halfway house, the group ran into the man who has replaced the Shark as the alpha male at Medalist, Woods, who was playing with Thomas and Fowler. “They chatted for 10 or 15 minutes and Tiger was funny,” Quigley recounted with a laugh.

“He suggested to Slugger he put all the pins on the front right that way Phil couldn’t use that cut shot of his to get it in there close.”

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Tom Brady continues good-natured jabs ahead of golf match with Peyton Manning

Tom Brady and Peyton Manning have exchanged good-natured jabs leading up to their golf showdown on Sunday.

Peyton Manning and Tom Brady will join Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson in a golf match on May 24 to raise money for COVID-19 relief efforts. There’s been no shortage of smack talk leading up to the event.

During an interview with Bleacher Report this week, Brady joked that he’s worried about fake crowd noise being pumped into the match like the Colts allegedly did against the Patriots.

“I’m just worried about them pumping crowd noise in there if he starts making putts like they used to at the RCA Dome,” Brady said.

Manning and Brady were on-field rivals but they have remained friends off the field even after Manning’s retirement. Their good-natured jabs shouldn’t be confused for mean-spirited insults.

Earlier this month, Manning roasted Brady for a “B&E arrest” during an interview promo for the golf match. Brady wasn’t actually arrested and he laughed at Manning’s joke and even shared it on his own Twitter page.

Before that viral interview, Brady shared a meme poking fun at Manning and Mickelson. Before the match was even announced, Brady tweeted a backhanded compliment for Manning’s golf game in February.

“Peyton is the better golfer right now,” the QB said. “He’s had much more practice these past few years.”

The Match: Champions for Charity will air on TNT at noon on Sunday.

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The Match II: Betting odds, picks and prop bets for Woods-Manning vs. Mickelson-Brady

Highlighting the best prop bets for The Match II between Tiger Woods-Peyton Manning and Phil Mickelson-Tom Brady, with PGA Tour betting odds, picks and best bets.

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Tiger Woods teams up with Peyton Manning Sunday to battle Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady in The Match: Champions for Charity. The sequel to the Woods vs. Mickelson showdown from Nov. 2018 is being held at Medalist Golf Club in Hobe Sound, Fla. and will begin at 2 p.m. ET. Below, we look at the best prop bets for The Match II and make our picks.


Looking to place a bet on The Match II? Get some action on it at BetMGM. Bet Now!


The Match II: Outright odds and best bet to win

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Wednesday, May 20 at 3 p.m. ET.

Woods/Manning: -223 | Mickelson/Brady: +160 (Price Boost: +180)

Woods and Manning, the rightful favorites, carried -208 odds Monday. With a $10 bet at the current price point returning a profit of just $4.81 with an outright win, the play is to HOLD until Sunday in wait of a higher number.

Rory McIlroy and Dustin Johnson were sizable favorites over Rickie Fowler and Matthew Wolff ahead of the TaylorMade Driving Relief event last week, but the line came much closer on the day of the match. Expect similar movement this week – especially with the inclusion of the famous NFL quarterbacks and a broader, sports-starved audience – to get the best odds on the favorites closer to tee time.


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The Match II: Best prop bets

Longest drive on hole 3: Mickelson (+130)

Even amid a poor start to the 2020 PGA Tour season, Mickelson, ranked 222nd in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings, was outdriving Woods (16th) 301.1 yards to 291.1. The two PGA Tour pros share the +130 odds, but Mickelson is the pick.

Both Manning and Brady are +700 but don’t overthink this one. They’re still amateur golfers. Note: Per BetMGM rules, the ball has to be in the fairway to count.

Nearest the pin on hole 4: Brady (+600)

Though we’re trusting the pros above, the playing field becomes a little more level on the short par-3 fourth. It’s the shortest of the four par 3s at Medalist at just 191 yards in length.

Manning is typically the better golfer of the two future Hall of Fame QBs with a handicap of 6.4 to Brady’s 8.1, but on such a short hole chase the value with Brady holding the longest odds.

Who will lead after 9 holes? Woods/Manning (-112)

The teams will play the Four-Ball (Best Ball) format on the front nine with the better score of each twosome counting as the team score on each hole. As such, the first nine holes will primarily be Woods vs. Mickelson.

Trust in Woods’ superior world ranking and better play earlier in the 2020 season. The halftime odds are much more appealing for the favorites than their outright odds, and things will become much less predictable with a modified alternate shot format being played on the back.

Who will win hole 18? Woods/Manning (+220)

The expectation is that The Match II will go right down to the wire and the final hole, if not a playoff. It’s a charity event and it’s being televised; organizers will do all they can with various side bets and challenges to draw this out to an exciting finale.

Once there, stick by the opening favorites to pull off a dramatic victory. Woods will have his revenge over Mickelson, and Manning has plenty of reasons for wanting to get back at Brady.

Get some action on The Match II 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.

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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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Tiger Woods returns to golf at his home course Medalist. How will he look in his rematch with Phil Mickelson?

Along with Tom Brady and Peyton Manning, Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson will return to play at The Match: Championship for Charity.

Editor’s note: Palm Beach Post writer Craig Dolch will be on Golfweek’s Instagram Live Friday at 2 p.m. ET to discuss Tiger Woods’ return to play and this weekend’s event at Medalist Golf Club. Dolch also joined Golfweek’s Instagram Live ahead of TaylorMade Driving Relief at Seminole Golf Club.

For golf fans, the world will inch toward normalcy Sunday when they finally see Tiger Woods hit a golf ball.

It will have been 98 days since we’ve seen his swing.

Not that it matters how well Woods plays in The Match: Champions for Charity at Medalist Golf Club in Hobe Sound. This event, which features Woods and Peyton Manning taking on Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady in a best-ball match, will raise more than $10 million for COVID-19 relief efforts.

But with Woods, it always matters what he does. Or, in this case, what he hasn’t done the past three months: play competitive golf.

Woods hasn’t written a number on his scorecard since Feb. 16, when he shot 77 to finish last among the players to make the cut in the Genesis Invitational he hosts at Riviera.

Woods skipped the first three tournaments of the four-event Florida Swing, including his hometown Honda Classic, because of back issues that have necessitated four surgeries and cost him years in his chase of Jack Nicklaus’ 18 career majors.

Woods insisted he would have been healthy to defend his Masters title in April, but the coronavirus pandemic made that a moot point.

So now he returns. But how strange will it be for Woods to smack his driver and not hear thousands of fans screaming their approval during this spectator-less match?

On the flip side, how sweet will it be to finally hear Woods’ comments during a round because the players will wear microphones? What’s the over/under on the number of barbs that will be exchanged between this foursome that has combined to win 20 majors and eight Super Bowls?

Woods doesn’t just move the needle. He can give it.

“There has been a little bit of trash talk already,” Woods said. “Whether it’s ‘I might need extra caddies to carry my Super Bowls,’ because he has more Super Bowls than my partner. Or, ‘I’ve got more majors than Phil, so I’m gonna have to have a truck come up to the first tee and U-Haul it out.’

Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning during the Pro -Am of 2019 The Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club on May 29, 2019 in Dublin, Ohio. (Andy Lyons/Getty Images)

“We like to give out the needle, and to give out the needle you gotta be able to take it. There will be banter back and forth, but it won’t be as rough as what we have in our text exchange.”

Tiger and Phil have been as close to a rivalry as golf has seen in the last two decades. Tiger has more majors (15 to 5) and PGA Tour titles (82 to 44), but Mickelson won their made-for-TV match in Las Vegas in 2018.

There won’t be any losers Sunday.

“This is different than what Phil and I did two years ago,” Woods said. “That was he and I just having a great time, trying to showcase golf in a different way. We’re coming together to showcase golf in a different way, but it’s about charity. That’s the reason why we’re all doing this.”

Picking a winner in a four-man best-ball match between two of the world’s greatest golfers – and two of the best NFL quarterbacks – is never easy.

Look at what happened in last Sunday’s TaylorMade Driving Relief at Seminole, where world No. 1 Rory McIlroy had to hit a wedge inside 18 feet on the last shot for him and Dustin Johnson to eke out a victory over underdogs Rickie Fowler and Matt Wolff at Seminole.

The NFL isn’t the only sport where “on any given Sunday” speaks the truth.

Yet Woods and Manning should be favored. The Medalist is Woods’ home course, the place where he plays most of his golf away from the PGA Tour. (A Medalist member said this week he doesn’t recall Mickelson playing there.)

Not only does Woods know every inch of real estate at the Medalist, the course even has tees named after him. Architect Bobby Weed put in place five “Tiger Tees” when he redesigned the course five years ago. They are on five par-4s (holes 1, 2, 9, 15 and 18), which average 494 yards and stretch the par-72 course to 7,515 yards from the tips.

These tees weren’t added just for Tiger, not with a membership that include bombers such as Johnson, Brooks Koepka, etc. But they’re called the Tiger Tees for a reason.

“We needed to make some accommodations for this generation of golfers that has taken the game to another level,” said Weed, a protégé of Pete Dye. Dye co-designed the Medalist with Greg Norman (a Medalist co-founder who was angered when he wasn’t asked to do the redesign).

The Medalist Golf Club, in Hobe Sound. (Photo: FILE PHOTO/TREASURE COAST NEWSPAPERS)

“We don’t want these players to have to throttle back too much,” Weed said. “They can be as aggressive as they desire, which is interesting from an observer standpoint. Pete left behind a great footprint, and we have a good understanding of what it takes to challenge Tour players.”

No doubt Mickelson will be hitting bombs, as he loves to say, every chance he can Sunday, although there will be no fans for Lefty to give his customary thumbs-up after every good shot.

Sunday’s telecast by Turner Sports (3-7 p.m.) will make for interesting theater involving four athletes who are among the best in their respective sports.

It’s just the second time golf will be telecast from the Medalist. Nick Price beat Norman in a “Shell’s Wonderful World of Golf” show in 1995.

It seems that long ago when we saw Woods twirl a club.

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Tale of the Tape: Breaking down Tiger-Peyton and Mickelson-Brady matchups

The Match: Champions for Charity consists of two top-notch teams, Tiger Woods-Peyton Manning and Phil Mickelson-Tom Brady, but who will win?

There are a lot of rings, trophies and jackets between these four guys.

On Sunday, the team of Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning will take on the team of Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady in The Match: Champions for Charity at Medalist Golf Club.

The dream foursome for many sports lovers which will be broadcast by Turner Sports this Sunday is Part II of the competition between Woods and Mickelson after the Mickelson won the first match in 2018.

While each team consists of one golf Hall of Famer and a future football Hall of Famer, we break down the specifics to help you decide who has the edge in this weekend’s event.

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Tiger Woods after winning the 2019 Masters at Augusta National Golf Club. (Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

Tiger Woods

Age: 44

Years pro: 24

Major titles: 15, including five Masters titles

PGA Tour wins: 82

Notable career accomplishments: Held all four major titles at once from June 2000 to April 2001, leads PGA Tour’s all-time money list, tied for most PGA Tour wins (82), sits third in all-time European Tour wins (43) and nominated for World Golf Hall of Fame Class of 2021.

Peyton Manning during the second round of the 2014 AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am at the Pebble Beach Golf Links. (Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

Peyton Manning

Age: 44

Years pro: 18, before retirement in 2016

Super Bowl titles: 2 (2016 and 2007)

Notable career accomplishments: First-overall NFL Draft pick in 1998, Super Bowl MVP in 2007, 14-time Pro-Bowler, five-time League MVP (2003, 2004, 2008, 2009, 2013) and still leads League in passing touchdowns in a season (55) and passing yards in a season (5,477)

Phil Mickelson celebrates after winning the 2004 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. (AP Photo/Dave Martin)

Phil Mickelson

Age: 49

Years pro: 28

Major titles: 5

PGA Tour wins: 44

Notable career accomplishments: Ninth all-time in PGA Tour wins (44), World Golf Hall of Fame member (2012), three-time Haskins Award winner while at Arizona State (1990-1992).

Tom Brady during the first round of the 2010 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am at Monterey Peninsula Country Club. (Allan Henry-USA TODAY Sports)

Tom Brady

Age: 42

Years pro: 20

Super Bowl titles: 6 (2002, 2004, 2005, 2015, 2017, 2019)

Notable career accomplishments: Four-time Super Bowl MVP, three-time NFL MVP (2007, 2010, 2017) and 14-time Pro Bowler (2001, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2009–2018).

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Phil Mickelson on Match II: ‘I can’t wait to go to Tiger’s place and take him down’

Phil Mickelson is talkin’ smack again. After not touching a club for six weeks following the PGA Tour’s shutdown March 13 due to the COVID-19 global pandemic, Mickelson has ramped up his practice and play ahead of Sunday’s “The Match: Champions for …

Phil Mickelson is talkin’ smack again.

After not touching a club for six weeks following the PGA Tour’s shutdown March 13 due to the COVID-19 global pandemic, Mickelson has ramped up his practice and play ahead of Sunday’s “The Match: Champions for Charity,” where he’ll team with Tom Brady and face Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning.

The event, which will raise at least $10 million for coronavirus relief efforts, will be staged at Medalist Golf Club, a private gem in Hobe Sound, Florida, and the home course for one Tiger Woods.

“I can’t wait to go to Tiger’s place and take him down,” Mickelson said in a phone call with Golfweek. “Tiger thinks he has a huge advantage playing there because he was insistent that this event is played on his home course. Despite everyone else wanting to play it elsewhere. That’s fine. We’ll take it to him and Peyton.

“There will be no excuses. It’s his home course but Tom and I are going to go down there and put it to them, and we’ll make it that every time Tiger shows up at his home course, he’ll have a bad memory.”

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Mickelson, who has never played Medalist, will be the first to tell you that his longtime rival has gotten the best of him much more often than not – 15 majors to five, record-tying 82 PGA Tour titles to 44, etc. – but Lefty took it to Woods in Match I two years ago when he won the $9 million, mano-a-mano, winner-take-all tussle in Las Vegas.

But this go-around has a major twist – the two iconic NFL quarterbacks. Manning, a member of Augusta National and Cherry Hills who earned two Super Bowl rings in his playing days, is slightly better than Brady, a member of Seminole who counts six Super Bowl rings on his fingers. Manning plays to a 6.4 handicap index while Brady sits at 8.1.

The competition starts with nine holes of four-ball play (best ball) and then switches to nine holes of modified alternate shot. On the back nine, all four will tee off on each hole and then each team will select the best option and alternate shots from there.

Woods and Manning are about a 2-to-1 favorite.

Doesn’t matter, Mickelson said.

“I’ve played with Tom a few times. I’ve played with him at Augusta National and Friar’s Head and I’ve seen him hit some remarkable shots and I’ve seen him hit some shots that you wouldn’t be so surprised he hit,” Mickelson said. “But his strength is he is a very good putter and he hits the ball a long ways and he’s good with his short irons. If I can get the ball in play I think we’ll have a chance on the back-nine modified alternate-shot platform.”

This alternate-shot wrinkle puts a lot of pressure on Brady and Manning.

“I give them a lot of credit for putting themselves out there because there is going to be a unique pressure,” Mickelson said. “But that’s why it’s going to be so much fun, because we are going to have mishaps and we are going to have some bad shots and we are going to laugh at ourselves.”

Mickelson also said there will be plenty of ribbing, unlike the near silence during his and Woods’ first match in Las Vegas. Each of the four players will be mic’d up, with each riding in their own cart. There will be no caddies or spectators.

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“Tiger and I clamped up the first time,” Mickelson said. “That won’t happen again. I think having Peyton there will be a big part of it because he gives me and Tom somebody to rough up. Peyton, when he comes back at you, he does it in a funny way that elicits a laughter from you as opposed to a defensive response.

“And I think that’s why he’s so funny, because even the person he is cutting up finds it funny and doesn’t take it personal. And that will allow us to free it up and do it a little bit more.”

Mickelson will fly to Florida on Thursday. He’ll do so with his usual confidence.

“I’ve actually played a lot in the last two weeks,” he said. “The last two weeks I’ve been practicing a lot. I’ve played 36 each of the last three days and I’ve been having a blast playing golf. I’m actually playing pretty good. I haven’t played competitively in a while but I’ve been able to work on my game and I’m pretty optimistic I’m going to play well.”

 

Charles Barkley, Justin Thomas on the call for Tiger-Phil match

Justin Thomas, Charles Barkley are on the on-air team calling The Match: Champions for Charity featuring Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson.

Justin Thomas, fresh off landing the cover for PGA Tour 2K21, has been announced as one of the commentators for The Match: Champions for Charity.

It’ll be Part II of the Tiger Woods-Phil Mickelson showdown, but this time, it features two NFL greats, as Woods will team up with Peyton Manning, while Mickelson’s teammate will be Tom Brady.

The Match: Champions for Charity is set for Sunday, May 24 at 3 p.m. ET.

Thomas will be an on-course reporter, as will CBS’ Amanda Balionis. Brian Anderson is the host and he will be joined by two analysts: NBA legend Charles Barkley and 2008 Masters champ Trevor Immelman. Barkley also works as a basketball analyst on TNT’s Inside the NBA.

All the action will be live on four different cable channels: TNT, TBS, truTV and HLN. There will also be a live pre-match show on the Bleacher Report app starting at 2 p.m.

The event will raise $10 million for COVID-19 relief.

The Match: Champions for Charity will be played at the Medalist Golf Club in Hobe Sound, Florida.

The Match: Champions for Charity
The Match: Champions for Charity is live on May 24 across multiple networks.

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The Match: Champions for Charity – Best bets for Woods-Manning vs. Mickelson-Brady

Looking at the betting odds and making our best bets for The Match: Champions for Charity between Tiger Woods-Peyton Manning and Phil Mickelson-Tom Brady.

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Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson are going head-to-head once again in The Match: Champions for Charity Sunday, May 24, at Medalist Golf Club in Hobe Sound, Fla. Woods will be joined by future Hall of Fame QB Peyton Manning, while Mickelson teams up with Tampa Bay Buccaneers QB Tom Brady for a charity match raising money for COVID-19 relief efforts.

Also see: How to Watch Driving Relief: McIlroy-Johnson vs. Fowler-Wolff odds and bets

Below, we’ll look at the early betting lines for the first-of-its-kind golf event. The two teams will play the Four-Ball (Best Ball) format on the front nine. They’ll then switch to a modified alternate shot format for the back nine where each member of the twosomes will tee off with alternate shot being played from the best first shot.


Looking to place a bet on the PGA Tour? Get some action on it at BetMGM. Bet Now!


The Match: Champions for Charity – Odds and best bet

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

Woods/Manning: -200 vs. Mickelson/Brady: +150

Woods and Manning open as fairly heavy favorites in the charity exhibition. Woods, the defending Masters champion, sits 16th in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings amid the PGA Tour’s pause due to the pandemic. Mickelson has slipped all the way to 222nd in the world ranking after missing the cut in four of his last six professional events.

Manning also holds an edge over Brady, playing to a handicap of 3.5 to Brady’s 8.

While Mickelson bested Woods one-on-one after four playoff holes the last time around in 2018 at Shadow Creek Golf Course in Las Vegas, NV, the favorites are the ones to back at Medalist. Woods is one of many PGA Tour pros who calls it his home course, and he’s pairing up with the better of the two amateurs.

Back WOODS/MANNING at -200. A $10 bet will return a profit of $5 with a win. There are sure to be more prop bets released in the build-up to the event, and we at SportsbookWire will have you covered.


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The Match: Champions for Charity – How to watch

When is it? Sunday, May 24. Coverage begins at 2 p.m. ET.

Where is it? Medalist Golf Club, Hobe Sound

Television broadcast: TNT, TBS, truTV and HLN

Pre-match coverage: Bleacher Report app

Get some action on the PGA Tour 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 follow SportsbookWire on Twitter and Facebook. Please gamble responsibly.

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 to watch Tiger Woods vs. Phil Mickelson Part II and what you need to know

Teeing up The Match: Champions for Charity with Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning taking on Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady.

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The worlds of professional golf and football will join forces Sunday, May 24, at Medalist Golf Club in Hobe Sound, Fla., as Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning team up to battle Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady in The Match: Champions for Charity.

The event is being held to raise money for the COVID-19 pandemic, while the PGA Tour remains on hiatus until the currently scheduled return date of June 11 for the Charles Schwab Challenge. WarnerMedia and the golfers have pledged a donation of $10 million to COVID-19 relief.

Below, we break down all we know about The Match Part II with key details on the course, participants and how to watch.

The Match Part II: Medalist Golf Club

Woods is one of the many PGA Tour pros who call Medalist their home course. The private club measures 7,157 yards and plays to a par of 72.

The course will be carefully prepared under the watch of state and local government and public health officials to ensure the health and safety of all involved.

The Match Part II: Format

The teams of two, featuring two Hall of Fame golfers and two future Hall of Fame NFL quarterbacks, will compete in a unique match play event. The first nine holes will see them follow a Four-Ball (Best Ball) format before switching to a modified alternate shot format for the closing nine.

All four golfers will tee off on each hole on the back nine. They’ll choose the best tee shot of the twosome and alternate shots the rest of the way in.

The format is a sure way to engage viewers and sports bettors alike, with in-play betting widely expected to be a big draw to the event during the international sports lull. There’s expected to be a broad range of on-course competitions between the golfers and teams to raise more money for the COVID-19 charities.

The Match Part II: How to watch

The broadcast will be carried by TNT, TBS, truTV and HLN and will begin at 3 p.m. ET Sunday, May 24. The Bleacher Report app will carry exclusive pre-match coverage.

The Match Part II: The participants

Tiger currently ranks 16th in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings. He last finished 68th at The Genesis Invitational in mid-February.

Mickelson has fallen all the way to 222nd in the Golfweek rankings. He missed the cut at both The Genesis Invitational and the Arnold Palmer Invitational. His last win was at the 2019 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

Manning and Brady play to handicaps of 3.5 and 8, respectively.

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Woods, Manning considered betting favorites over Mickelson, Brady

Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning are considered betting favorites against Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady in “The Match: Champions for Charity.”

Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning will take on Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady in “The Match: Champions for Charity,” a golf match that will raise funds for COVID-19 relief efforts (match date to be determined).

Woods and Manning are considered the betting favorites (-200) over Mickelson and Brady (+160), according to SportsBetting.ag. That’s not surprising because Manning and Woods have golfed together four times before at Memorial pro-ams in 2019, 2018, 2009 and 2005.

Sports fans can also bet on if “audible” will be said by any of the players (-120 for yes and no) and if “Omaha” will be said (+175 for yes, -250 for no). Bets can also be placed on if “deflate” will be mentioned (-200 yes, +150 no). Fans can even bet on if President Donald Trump will attend the match (+800 yes, -1500 no).

The over/under for the number of commercials featuring Manning that will air during the match has been set at 1.5. Manning (-175) is also considered more likely than Brady (+135) to finish with the most birdies.

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