2022 Golfweek Senior Tournament of Champions

Calling All Champions! Join us Nov 30 – Dec 2 for the 2022 Golfweek Tournament of Champions as we make a long overdue trip back to PGA National Resort & Spa in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. The Senior TOC is open to national, state, and club champions, …

Calling All Champions! Join us Nov 30 – Dec 2 for the 2022 Golfweek Tournament of Champions as we make a long overdue trip back to PGA National Resort & Spa in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. The Senior TOC is open to national, state, and club champions, along with those who strive to be a champion. Home of the PGA Tour’s Honda Classic, The Champion, features the iconic “Bear Trap” which spans three demanding holes designed by Jack Nicklaus and called “one of the toughest stretches in golf.”

The Fazio features more generous fairways allowing big hitters an opportunity to excel off the tee while putting a premium on a solid short game. Both the Champion and Fazio at PGA National are unique and each requires a golfer to step up to the ball with a carefully organized series of shots in mind.

Test you skill against the best on both the famous Champion and Fazio courses, the perfect venue for the Golfweek 2022 Senior Tournament of Champions, part of the Golfweek Elite Senior Players Series!

 

John Smoltz discusses his self-standing Bloodline putter

Golfweek’s Beth Ann Nichols chats with former MLB pitcher and avid golfer, John Smoltz, about his beloved self-standing Bloodline putter.

Golfweek’s Beth Ann Nichols chats with former MLB pitcher and avid golfer, John Smoltz, about his beloved self-standing Bloodline putter.

Lexi Thompson walks the 17th hole at TOC

Golfweek’s Beth Ann Nichols chats with LPGA golfer, Lexi Thompson, as she plays and walks through the 17th hole at the TOC this weekend.

Golfweek’s Beth Ann Nichols chats with LPGA golfer, Lexi Thompson, as she plays and walks through the 17th hole at the TOC this weekend.

Cydney Clanton lost her tour card by $8, then clawed her way into LPGA’s most elite field

After losing her tour card by just $8, Cydney Clanton is making the most of her spot in the LPGA’s debut event of 2020.

Two years ago, Cydney Clanton lost out on her full card by $8. The cost of a burrito. She went to Q-Series to try and improve her LPGA status, but after a deflating eighth-round 80, took six weeks off. It marked her biggest break from golf since age 10.

She felt defeated.

“If you let the game identify you,” said Clanton, “you can get beat up pretty quickly.”

Professional golfers walk a razor-thin line between success and trunk-slamming. Clanton hired a sports psychologist for the first time in her pro career and dug into a book her pastor had referenced, Joyce Meyer’s “Battlefield of the Mind.”

Managing mental health ranks high on the priority list these days for Clanton, who tasted the spoils of victory at the highest level for the first time on her 30th birthday at last year’s new Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational.

With the motto “All In” emblazoned on their caps, Clanton and Jasmine Suwannapura won the team title along with a spot in this week’s season-opening Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions, a celebrity pro-am party that features the smallest, most elite field on the LPGA schedule.

Winners only.

“I want more,” said Clanton of her goals for 2020, “and I think I can be more.”

While the odds of winning an LPGA event will never been better than at the TOC, there are a number of heavy-hitters in the field – Lexi Thompson, Jessica Korda, Nelly Korda, Brooke Henderson and Ariya Jutanugarn. Not to mention LPGA Hall of Famer Inbee Park, who is starting her season much earlier than usual.

Of course, the list of players who took a pass is equally as interesting as it includes all the major winners from 2019, most notably World No. 1 Jin Young Ko. (AIG British Open winner Hinako Shibuno isn’t eligible as she’s not an LPGA member.) And Michelle Wie, who recently announced that she’s expecting her first child, a girl, this summer.

Clearly some of the LPGA’s biggest stars wanted a longer offseason. Clanton, who’s a bit of an outlier in this field as a late bloomer, took all of one week off before getting after it back home in Concord, North Carolina.

Her consistency faded late in the season last year, and she was eager to figure out why. That first LPGA title came with a two-year exemption on tour. While that gives Clanton some breathing room, the Auburn grad’s main focus is to capitalize on what’s ahead.

“My biggest goal is I want to be competitive week in and week out,” she said.

While Clanton said she hadn’t given the list of celebrity participants too close of a look, she fancies playing alongside an MLB pitcher. Though part of a team, Clanton said, a pitcher stands alone on the mound. A Hall of Fame pitcher, John Smoltz, happened to win last year’s celebrity division.

“A pitcher is gonna be about as close to what we have to face every day, in every shot,” she said.

Clanton has three brothers and knew she wanted to be a professional golfer as early as the sixth grade. She played nearly everything growing up – tennis, swimming, travel soccer, AAU basketball. She pitched on a boys’ team in the third grade and played first base.

“They didn’t really like that a whole lot,” she said.

Mom wouldn’t let her play football.

“I was always trying to find a better team,” said Clanton, “move up in age or try to get on a travel team.”

Golf was the first sport that she really had to work at, and that piqued her interest. At every level, Clanton proved a slow cooker in a microwave age. Youth rules, in women’s golf especially.

Clanton said she has learned the importance of not comparing herself to others. Even in something that seems positive, like, trying to go an entire tournament without making a bogey. Once she started focusing on trying to make fewer mistakes, she also ended up making fewer birdies. Clanton learned not to set goals that didn’t match her strengths.

She tells college players all the time – figure out who you are as a player and own it. And another thing too ­– the biggest difference between the Symetra Tour and the LPGA is that a round of even par will typically throw a player out of the mix on the LPGA. Whatever numbers you’re putting up in college – think lower.

“I can talk golf all day long,” said the self-described golf nerd, “and not a lot of girls are that way.”

Clanton loves mechanics. Loves to watch tournament golf. Adam Scott and Luke Donald own some of her favorite swings in the game. Right now she and swing coach Davis Ross are studying Justin Rose’s action. Ross has been Clanton’s swing coach since the beginning, and she has long told him that the only teacher she’d leave him for is Butch Harmon.

One of the toughest pieces of the professional puzzle for Clanton has been figuring out how to use a caddie. She has a great relationship with her current looper, Randy Wilkins, but has found that the less information she receives, the better.

“Honest to goodness if they said in 2021 you didn’t have to have a caddie and you could carry your own bag,” she said, “I’d probably try it for a long time.”

Clanton said she talked to Angela Stanford shortly after winning about resetting after reaching a goal.

“We are all chasers at heart, I believe,” said Stanford, who won her first major at age 40. “Set a new goal and go get it.”

There aren’t many 30-year-old first-time winners on the LPGA. That’s another thing Clanton finds herself telling youngsters, that PGA Tour players typically don’t hit their peak until late 20s, early 30s.

“Golf,” she said, “kind of has its own time-table.”

And $8 doesn’t have to be the end of the world.

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Sentry Tournament of Champions: Fantasy Golf Power Rankings

Previewing the 2020 Sentry Tournament of Champions and looking at the best fantasy golf selections for Plantation Course at Kapalua.

The Sentry Tournament of Champions in Maui, Hawaii kicks off the 2020 PGA Tour year with a field of 34 winners from 2019 in attendance. Those set to tee off Thursday include five of the top 10 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

The event returns to the Plantation Course at Kapalua, with the venue having undergone significant renovations since last year’s tournament. It now measures 7,518 yards and plays as a par 73.

Fantasy Golf Rankings: Top 30

Here are my top-30 fantasy golf rankings for the 2020 Sentry Tournament of Champions at the Plantation Course at Kapalua.

30. Adam Long

Long missed five consecutive cuts after getting career win No. 1 at the Desert Classic. He was T-2 at the Mayakoba Classic, but he followed it up with a T-35 at The RSM Classic.

29. Sung Kang

Kang claimed his first PGA Tour since 2013 at the AT&T Byron Nelson, but he missed the cut in six of his remaining 16 worldwide events on the year.

28. Max Homa

Homa takes a break from roasting his followers on Twitter this week to compete in the Tournament of Champions. His lone top-20 result since winning the Wells Fargo Championship was a T-5 at the Japan Tour’s Dunlop Phoenix.

27. J.B. Holmes

Holmes may be better known now for his “feud” with World No. 1 Brooks Koepka, than for his 2019 win at the Genesis Open. He finished the 2019 Tour year with no other top 10s and 10 missed cuts. He most recently withdrew from the CJ Cup @ Nine Bridges.

26. Tyler Duncan

Photo Credit: Ray Carlin – USA TODAY Sports

Duncan’s victory is the most recent among those in attendance, having claimed his first career win at The RSM Classic. The win vaulted him from No. 387 in the world to 170th, and he’s now 164th. He positions his tee shots well and has a good approach game.

25. Nate Lashley

Lashley got his first PGA Tour win at the Rocket Mortgage Classic. He missed eight cuts in 2019 and withdrew from the no-cut Zozo Championship in Japan, but he enters the week seventh in the field in Bogey Avoidance over everyone’s last 36 rounds on courses with Bermuda greens.

24. Dylan Frittelli

The reigning John Deere Classic champ started his 2019-20 season with top 10s at the Sanderson Farms Championship and Safeway Open before missing the cut at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open.

23. Lanto Griffin

Griffin has gained 1.015 strokes per round putting to start the season and took down the Houston Open in just his fifth PGA Tour event of 2019. He’s coming off a missed cut at The RSM Classic.

22. Ryan Palmer

Palmer gets entry into this event as the playing partner to Jon Rahm at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans in late April. He placed in the top 10 in four solo events, most recently tying for 10th at the Zozo.

21. Keith Mitchell

Photo Credit: Orlando Ramirez – USA TODAY Sports

Mitchell won’t get the full advantage of his distance at this venue with all in attendance able to reap the rewards of the wide, rolling fairways. His victory came at the competitive Honda Classic, showing he can contend in elite fields.

20. J.T. Poston

Poston moved from 158th to 77th in the OWGR with his win at the Wyndham Championship immediately prior to the start of the FedExCup playoffs. He rarely finds trouble or plays himself out of contention.

19. Cameron Champ

Champ picked up a win at the Safeway Open to qualify for his second straight Tournament of Champions. He tied for 19th a year ago, but that’s unrelated to his ranking, here.

18. Matthew Wolff

Wolff won the 3M Open in his rookie season. It came just one week after the only missed cut of his debut campaign at the Rocket Mortgage Classic.

17. Kevin Na

Na won twice on the PGA Tour in 2019, taking down the Charles Schwab Challenge and Shriners. His lack of distance will be a weakness at this venue.

16. Chez Reavie

Reavie stepped into the winner’s circle for the first time since 2008 with a victory at the Travelers Championship. He positions himself well off the tee.

15. Sebastian Munoz

Another first-time PGA Tour winner in 2019, Munoz claimed victory at the Sanderson Farms Championship. He missed the cut in two of five events since, but he was solo third at The RSM Classic.

14. Joaquin Niemann

Niemann had four top-10 showings in the 2018-19 season before starting the 2019-20 campaign with victory at The Greenbrier. He’s one of the top pin-seekers from distance in the field.

13. Brendon Todd

Photo Credit: Ray Carlin – USA TODAY Sports

Todd enters the week in better form than anyone in the field after consecutive wins at the Bermuda Championship and Mayakoba Classic and a solo fourth at The RSM Classic. He’ll face a tougher test at a longer venue amid a stronger field.

12. Corey Conners

Conners came up with a clutch victory at the Valero Texas Open to gain entry to the Masters. His putting struggles won’t be as apparent at a longer venue where his distance and ball-striking will shine.

11. Kevin Kisner

Kisner broke through with a win at the WGC-Match Play, but was held out of the top 10 until back-to-back T-9s at the BMW Championship and Tour Championship in the FEC playoffs.


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10. Collin Morikawa

A finalist for 2019 Rookie of the Year, Morikawa’s first of what seems likely to be many career wins came at the Barracuda Championship. There aren’t any flaws in his game.

9. Paul Casey

Casey avoids trouble and can score low. He tied for 16th a year ago.

8. Rickie Fowler

Fowler finished fifth in 2016 and tied for fourth in 2018. He returns after year off following his win at the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

7. Patrick Reed

Photo Credit: Butch Dill – USA TODAY Sports

It’s unknown at the time of publishing whether Reed made the flight to Maui with his trusted shovel. His accuracy off the tee and on approach hasn’t been in top form of late, and he’ll again need to overcome the ire of spectators.

6. Gary Woodland

Woodland was the runner-up here a year ago and makes his second straight appearance following his US Open win.

5. Xander Schauffele

The defending champ has won a total four PGA Tour events over the last three years, but this was his only win in 2019. He had three runner-up results.

4. Patrick Cantlay

Entering the week at No. 9 in the OWGR, Cantlay won the Memorial Tournament and had seven other top 10s last year. He’s had two runner-up finishes since mid-August.

3. Jon Rahm

The top golfer from the OWGR at No. 3 in the world, Rahm was the runner-up here in 2018 and finished T-8 in 2019.

2. Dustin Johnson

Johnson hasn’t finished worse than T-6 in his last three appearances here, including a win in 2018. He has a total of 12 worldwide wins since the start of 2016.

1. Justin Thomas

Thomas is the 2017 champion of Kapalua and he finished third a year ago. The free distance added by the venue plays to his advantage and lets his ball-striking and putting carry the weight.

Follow @EstenMcLaren and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

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Sentry Tournament of Champions odds, predictions, picks and PGA Tour best bets

Analyzing the 2020 Sentry Tournament of Champions, with PGA Tour betting odds, picks, predictions and best bets.

The 2020 portion of the 2019-20 PGA Tour schedule kicks off this week with the Sentry Tournament of Champions at the Plantation Course at Kapalua. A field of thirty-four features five of the top 10 golfers in the Official World Golf Ranking.

The key stats best suited to the 7,518-yard, par-73 venue are:

  • Strokes Gained: Approach
  • Strokes Gained: Ball-Striking
  • Bogey Avoidance
  • Sand Saves Gained
  • Good Drives Gained
  • Proximity 175-200 Yards

My model at Fantasy National looks at the most recent 36 rounds played on courses with Bermuda greens.

Sentry Tournament of Champions – 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 Thursday at 7:20 p.m. ET.

Patrick Cantlay (+1400)

Cantlay is the fourth-best golfer in attendance by the OWGR measure. His only 2019 win came at the Memorial Tournament, but he preceded it by back-to-back T-3 results and followed it up late in the year with runner-up finishes at the BMW Championship and Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. He has the most appealing odds of the top golfers in the elite field with a $10 bet returning a profit of $140.

Collin Morikawa (+2200)

Morikawa offers a better return than Cantlay. A rookie in 2019, his first career win came at the Barracuda Championship. He enters the week ranked 65th by the OWGR and most recently finished T-5 at the Japan Tour’s Dunlop Phoenix. He has a great approach game and excels from our key proximity distance this week.

Sentry Tournament of Champions – Tier 2

Photo Credit: Butch Dill – USA TODAY Sports

Corey Conners (+2800)

Conners won’t get the full advantage of his driver this week at a venue with wide, rolling fairways allowing all in attendance to bomb it off the tee, but he will get something of a reprieve from his usual struggles on the greens. Each of the last five TOC champions finished at or below 21-under par, and Conners certainly has the ability to go that low.


Looking to place a bet on this tournament? Get some action on it at BetMGMSign up and bet at BetMGM now!


Matt Kuchar (+2800)

Much of Kuchar’s career success has come early in the calendar year. The 24th-ranked golfer in the world won twice last season, at the Mayakoba Golf Classic and the Sony Open in Hawaii. He was also the runner-up at both the RBC Heritage and WGC-Match Play. He ranks second to Conners by my stat model.

Sentry Tournament of Champions – Longshots

Photo Credit: Thomas J. Russo – USA TODAY Sports

Joaquin Niemann (+3000)

Niemann is coming off a Presidents Cup loss as a member of the International team. He gained entry to this event with his first career victory at A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier to kick off the 2019-20 PGA Tour campaign, and has been one of the most active golfers early in the season. His strong approach game gives him an advantage on the expansive greens.

Keith Mitchell (+4000)

Mitchell is our longest dart throw at a tournament without a lot of betting value due to the small field of elites. He also earned his first career victory in 2019 at The Honda Classic in early March. He held off World No. 1 Brooks Koepka on Sunday, and showed he can compete in strong fields.

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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