Waste Management Phoenix Open matchups and prop bet predictions

Waste Management Phoenix Open matchups and prop bet predictions

Waste Management Phoenix Open matchups and prop bet predictions https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Fans begin to return to the PGA Tour this week with 5,000 spectators per round allowed on the grounds of TPC Scottsdale in Phoenix, Arizona, for the Waste Management Phoenix Open. Below, we’ll look for the best value bets in the 2021 Waste Management Phoenix Open odds, with tournament matchups, placings and other PGA Tour prop bet predictions.

Running during the week of Super Bowl 55 and the European Tour’s Saudi International, a strong field including six of the top-nine golfers in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings is in attendance. Webb Simpson is back to defend his title while Rory McIlroy makes his tournament debut at TPC Scottsdale.

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Tuesday at 5:15 p.m. ET.

Matchup bets

Bubba Watson (-118) vs. Brooks Koepka

Everyone keeps thinking Koepka, a four-time major winner and the 2015 Phoenix Open champ, needs to get right eventually. Well, he has missed three three straight cuts and is in complete disarray.

Watson also missed the cut last week at the Farmers Insurance Open in his first event of 2021. Only four golfers with 10 or more rounds of experience at TPC Scottsdale have averaged more than Watson’s 1.95 strokes gained on the field per round.

Webb Simpson vs. Daniel Berger (+105)

Berger and Simpson come into the week ranked sixth and ninth, respectively, in the Golfweek rankings. Simpson, the defending tournament champion is a modest favorite in this tournament head-to-head despite having the lower world ranking. Both are playing for the first time in 2021 back on the mainland after they each played both events in Hawaii.

Berger has never won here, but he has three top-10 finishes in six appearances. Both are excellent ball-strikers are among the top-six betting favorites for the week. Take the value in Berger in what should be a pick ’em.

Placing bets

Top 5: Byeong Hun An (+1600)

Going back to course history, An’s 2.09 strokes gained on the field per round rank fourth in this field among those with at least 12 rounds played. He tied for eighth in a slightly weaker field at The American Express two weeks ago before a T-75 finish last week amid a poor putting performance. His experience on these greens should help.

Place your legal, online 2021 Waste Management Phoenix Open bets in CO, IA, IN, MI, NJ, PA, TN, VA and WV at BetMGM. Risk-free first bet! Terms and conditions apply.

Top 10: Doc Redman (+1400)

Redman missed the cut in two of his last three events, but he collected three top-10s from mid-August to early November of 2020. He’s struggling around the greens on the 2020-21 season, but he’s still gaining 0.34 strokes per round off-the-tee and suits this venue well with relatively unguarded putting surfaces.

Top European: Rory McIlroy (+210)

This is a glorified head-to-head between McIlroy and tournament betting favorite Jon Rahm (+100). Henrik Norlander and Rory Sabbatini are next by the odds in this group at +1400 and +1600, respectively.

Rahm has three career top-10 finishes here while McIlroy debuts, but the Northern Irishman is better with the driver, ranking second on Tour in SG: Off-the-Tee for the season.

First-round leader

Webb Simpson (+2500)

This is good value for the defending champion. It’s early in the season, but Simpson is tied for eighth on Tour with a first-round scoring average of 68.29 through seven events. He opened with a 71 here last year but shot 63-64 in his next two rounds to fly up the leaderboard.

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A tale of two idiots who didn't come in from the rain on one of the world's longest courses

A tale of two idiots who didn't come in from the rain on one of the world's longest courses

A tale of two idiots who didn't come in from the rain on one of the world's longest courses https://ift.tt/2LdJP3J

Editor’s note: Two idiots didn’t know when to come in out of the freezing rain while playing a beautiful golf course in Alabama from what clearly was the wrong set of tees on one of the longest tracks in the world. This is their story, as told by one of those idiots – the instigator.

This was a bad idea from the start. I know that now, and I blame the cold weather for any flaws in judgment. After years of advocating that most players should happily move up a tee box to better enjoy a shorter course, a severe case of brain freeze clearly occurred the first week of January just a short drive south of Birmingham, Alabama.

Ross Bridge, one of the best and most scenic courses on the Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail, was wide open, not a player on the tee sheet. With good reason. It was 39 degrees and blowing sideways with several miserable Forrest Gump kinds of rain. “Little bitty stingin’ rain, and big ol’ fat rain, rain that flew in sideways, and sometimes rain even seemed to come straight up from underneath,” the noted Alabama native said, and the central part of the state experienced all of them that morning.

Suddenly and unexpectedly, the skies parted. The sun shone in all its silver-lining glory. I’ve been around golf all my life, and I recognized these signs of a “sucker hole,” with just enough of a tiny clearing on the radar to lure me out of my palatial hotel room next door at the Renaissance. I didn’t care to heed the meteorological warnings – maybe it was the changing barometric pressure as a cold front swept down from the North Pole to impair my thinking. I was in Alabama to play golf and write about several courses, and this parting of the skies was just the encouragement I needed to keep me away from the 300 emails waiting in my inbox.

Ross Bridge Golf Resort and Spa near Birmingham, Alabama, as photographed on a normal day (Courtesy of the Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail/Michael Clemmer)

Did I mention the course? Ross Bridge is lovely, even during its winter hibernation. Bold shaping, room to swing away, interesting green complexes where putts roll true. It ranks No. 3 on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access courses in Alabama, and there are plenty of arguments available that it could be tops on that list. If it hadn’t been such an alluring course, we wouldn’t have left the hotel that day.

But those back tees. Why? Dear golf gods, please answer me. Just why?

The black tees at Ross Bridge stretch the course to 8,191 yards, making it one of the five longest courses in the world. Nobody needs to play a course that long, even on a sunny day. It would take a special kind of golfing moron – is that an oxymoron or just a redundant phrase? – to play from those tee boxes in a gale.

This moron had a complicit partner. Matt Matin of Winter Garden, Florida, had joined me for the round, and while he didn’t seem thrilled by the idea of playing from almost 8,200 yards – only about 80 yards per hole more than we should have tackled on a summer day – he proved susceptible to goading and false promises. On a past trip he had been talked into playing another top-rated course in what turned out to become a hailstorm, and he should have known better. So I had to lay it on thick.

Matt Matin tees off on No. 3 at Ross Bridge just before the rain starts. (Golfweek)

“I don’t think the heavy stuff is gonna come down for quite a while now,” I said in my best Carl Spackler. “It’s an adventure. When will you ever get the chance to do this again? … Don’t worry about the score. … If it gets nasty, we’ll go inside. … I bet we can both break 100.”

He’s a grown man. His decisions are his own. In other words, I didn’t feel too bad dragging a buddy out there in the wet and cold.

Besides, we’re both low single-digit handicappers. What’s a little rain and a few more yards? It sounded like fun at the time … with that time being before we started.

We weren’t the first to try this, and we won’t be the last, even though we probably should have been. The only saving grace is that we were the only ones daft enough to be out in those conditions that day, so at least we didn’t slow down anyone else’s game.

With the clouds still parted, the first hole was simple enough. Or at least as simple as can be expected for a 620-yard par 5 around and over a lake, with a semi-blind second shot to lay up. Sure, Matt lost a ball, but after my drive and hybrid layup, I knocked an 8-iron to 25 feet and just missed the birdie putt. That was downwind.

The second hole gave a precursor of what was to come. Playing 467 yards steeply downhill but right back into a wind that rattled the flagstick and puffed up my rain jacket like a balloon, we both made casual bogey 5s.

Then came the rain, turning its cold eye to vengeance. The “sucker hole” had closed around us.

From the back tee, the 470-yard third hole requires a carry of some 225 yards over a lake just to reach the start of a fairway that stretches along the shoreline – anything short or left, and it’s a reload. On a normal day, neither Matt nor I would have blinked twice. But the wind was blowing at least 25 mph into our faces, with gusts that exceeded 35. Matt drives it farther than I do, normally capable of 280 without a second thought, and he attempted the crossing. His typical low screamer made the carry and found the rough, short and right of the fairway.

I just didn’t have it in me to lose a ball so early, so I bailed right. Way right. I aimed at and managed to hit a hillside that probably had never been the intended target on that hole since it was built. Safe and dry, I had a mere 315 yards left to the flag, never so pleased to find a ball in heavy rough and 18 inches above my feet.

Golfweek’s Jason Lusk aims way to the side on No. 9 at Ross Bridge in a nearly freezing rainstorm. (Golfweek)

I won’t bore you with all the details, but that is how much of the rest of the day went. Find a target that didn’t require a forced carry of 230-plus yards into the wind, get creative, try to make a bogey and keep moving. There were plenty of 3-woods on par 3s, 5-iron third shots into par 4s, a few glorious pars and even a couple reasonable birdie putts, none of which found the cup.

The sixth tee was worth noting. The par 3 measures 207 yards on the scorecard, the shortest hole on the course. With a back flag, it was playing 221. The wind was howling, the pine trees shaking. The rain might have been sleet. Some of it might have been snow. It was hard to tell, because my contact lenses were basically frozen to my eyeballs.

I hit first, a driver straight into that tempest with contact a little low on the face. That ball normally would have gone about 240 in the air, but in those conditions it finished just short of the green. Matt then steeled himself and knocked his driver onto the green, 30 feet short of the hole. It was the shot of the week. Par for Matt, bogey for me, and we somehow kept moving.

The rain let up after a few more holes to be merely miserable, but that seemed to encourage the freezing gusts as Weather.com reported a “feels like” temperature of 33. I wouldn’t know, as I was too numb to feel much of anything at that point. Matt wanted to quit after 13 holes when his hands turned blue, so like the great friend I am, I loaned him my backup pair of dry FootJoy winter gloves and prodded him onward. Of course, I could have given him the gloves several holes earlier, but we did have a $5 Nassau to consider, and I was 1 up.

Golfweek’s Jason Lusk watches his third shot to the par-4 18th green in the rain and wind at Ross Bridge. (Golfweek)

We wrapped up on 18 – a 487-yard par 4 over and around another lake into a wicked side wind – with my winning bogey and Matt’s double. We raced to the parking lot, me to count my winnings and Matt to hug the car heater. A lonely bagpiper – a tradition at Ross Bridge – played from within a covered shelter, too smart and too cold to expose in full force his kilt to that kind of weather. The music seemed appropriate, but I’m not sure even a golf-crazy Scot would have been out in that storm.

Final tally: 88 for me, 89 for Matt. I proudly call it the best 88 I have ever shot, with five greens hit in regulation. It was my highest score of the week by more than 10 shots, but also the most memorable. Or at least I assume memorable. Several weeks later, I still haven’t thawed out enough to be sure.

What did we learn from this day on the links? Absolutely nothing. Again quoting Forrest Gump, “Stupid is as stupid does.”

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Arizona State's Blake Wagoner shoots opening-round 9-under 63, leads Amer Ari Invitational

Arizona State's Blake Wagoner shoots opening-round 9-under 63, leads Amer Ari Invitational

Arizona State's Blake Wagoner shoots opening-round 9-under 63, leads Amer Ari Invitational https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Blake Wagoner just made an early case for round of the year.

Playing as an individual this week for the Sun Devils, the senior signed for an opening-round 9-under 63 on Tuesday to take the early lead at the Amer Ari Invitational at Hapuna Golf Course in Waimea, Hawaii.

Wagoner put the college-golf world on 59 watch after making birdie on six of his opening seven holes. The Cornelius, North Carolina, native made a pair of pars to make the turn at 6-under 30 and added two more pars to start his back nine.

Additional birdies on Nos. 12, 14, 16 and 17 and his lone bogey of the day on the par-4 18th propelled Wagoner to the top of the leaderboard, three shots clear of Washington’s Noah Woolsey at 6 under.

Rankings: Men’s team | Men’s individual
More: All the latest college news on the Road to Grayhawk

Fellow Sun Devils David Puig and Cameron Sisk, as well as Georgia Tech’s Connor Howe and Hawaii’s Isaiah Kanno, are all T-3 at 5 under.

Georgia Tech leads the team competition at 14 under, followed by Arizona State (-13), USC (-8), Washington (-3) and San Jose State (-1).

Second-round action continues on Wednesday followed by Thursday’s third and final round.

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2021 Golfweek West Coast Junior Open

2021 Golfweek West Coast Junior Open

2021 Golfweek West Coast Junior Open https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

The 2021 Golfweek West Coast Junior Open is set to return May 22-24 to Ak-Chin Resort’s Southern Dunes Golf Club in Maricopa, AZ. The event will be ranked by the World Amateur Golf Rankings and the Golfweek/Sagarin Rankings.

The tournament is open to any player age 13-19 who is not affiliated with a college golf team, so long as eligibility requirements are met.

This is the first tournament of the 2021 Golfweek Junior Tournament Series. Top finishers win automatic exemptions into the prestigious Golfweek International Junior Invitational Nov 6-7 in Florida.

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Virginia holds off Wake Forest down the stretch at UCF Challenge for season-opening win

Virginia holds off Wake Forest down the stretch at UCF Challenge for season-opening win

Virginia holds off Wake Forest down the stretch at UCF Challenge for season-opening win https://ift.tt/39FqbqK

ORLANDO, Fla. – How badly were Virginia golfers itching to get started this season? Senior Beth Lillie joked she’d have ridden her bicycle the 800 miles from campus to Orlando to tee it up in the season-opening UCF Challenge if she had to. It’s that kind of thinking that figured heavily into Virginia’s gutsy performance down the stretch against ACC foe Wake Forest – a team that topped many a “favorites” list – for an early spring trophy.

Crave the hard days. That’s a mindset Virginia learned from Bob Rotella, a Charlottesville, Virginia-based sports psychologist with whom the team often works. Tuesday certainly fit into the category, with a biting Florida chill and strong wind gusts.

“One of the things (Rotella) said is we should crave days that are hard because it’s the best opportunity to gain strokes on the field,” Virginia head coach Ria Scott said. “You should crave days that are hard, you should crave holes that are hard because those are where you can make a difference.”

Scores: UCF Challenge

Scott encouraged her team to look at the final round as a clean slate. Virginia was 11 shots off Houston’s lead entering the final round, but last February, in the next-to-last tournament the team played before COVID shut down the spring season, the Cavaliers made up nine shots in nine holes to win the IJGA Collegiate Invitational, an event Scott hosted at Guadalajara Country Club, Lorena Ochoa’s home course.

It took four qualifying rounds back home in Charlottesville to set the UCF Challenge lineup. The weather was hit-and-miss. That was another experience to draw on.

Virginia and Wake Forest

Virginia and Wake Forest players stand at the 18th green at the UCF Challenge.

“We woke up and we were like, it’s just like a qualifying day in Charlottesville,” Scott said. “We’ve had to qualify in pretty similar conditions and low temps over the last couple of weeks. We just kept feeding it to them that there’s no one more prepared for this than you. You’ve seen it, you’ve played in it.”

Virginia made the turn in 1 under on Tuesday to move to the top of the leaderboard, slightly ahead of Wake Forest and Houston. But the Cavaliers managed to play the back nine in even par to maintain the only under-par team score of the day. Even as Wake Forest counted nine back-nine birdies, Virginia was too far ahead and at 5 under total, won the tournament by one shot.

Sophomore Celeste Valinho, a native of Jacksonville, Florida, had been looking forward to this tournament. She couldn’t wait for warmer temperatures and Bermuda greens. As it turned out, she only got one of those things.

Valinho made the turn on Tuesday in 2 over, and was so frustrated with her play on the front nine – no putts falling and “some dumb pars” – that she wasn’t even focusing on the leaderboard. Valinho stopped worrying about making birdies and started thinking about hitting greens. She figured she’d go from there. She made eagle on the par-5 13th and birdied the par-5 18th for a closing 72.

“Everybody just stormed me – great putt, we’re in the lead,” she said of walking off No. 18. “That’s going to matter a lot.”

Ultimately it did, and Scott called Valinho the unsung hero of the week.

Valinho struggled to get through qualifying as a freshman, admitting that it was stressful for her. She’s done a better job approaching qualifiers as regular rounds, and she carried that thinking over to the UCF start. She’s also worked hard to control her body language.

“Everyone always told me your body language matters so much,” she said. “I was always like yeah, how does slapping your leg really matter that much? It really does.”

Individually, Valinho tied her senior teammate Beth Lillie for third place. Riley Smyth tied for seventh and Jennifer Cleary finished T-10.

No one – not even Lillie – is biking home from Orlando. The Cavaliers piled in the team van instead, which is how they’ll travel all spring. Lillie felt it was a win just getting to play the UCF Challenge, let alone bring home a trophy.

“It just shows all the work we have put in even when things are uncertain and unclear, which is such a testament to the team and everything,” she said.

Lillie won the Donna Andrews Invitational in June. She flew back to her Fullerton, California, home and since a top-10 finish at the Southern California Women’s Amateur in August, hasn’t teed it up in competition until this week.

“I did feel a little bit rusty the first day here,” she said. “Like ooh, gotta get back in the mindset. But it clicked back in the second day.”

Lillie relished going head-to-head with Wake Forest. The memory of Virginia’s Guadalajara comeback rang in her brain, too.

“We did it there once so we felt like we could do it again,” she said. “I think we kind of consider ourselves, no matter how good we all think we’re playing, we kind of consider ourselves underdogs and that’s a good mindset going into a hard day like today with wind. You just have to go tough it out.”

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Justin Thomas has 'tremendous opportunity to learn and grow' after homophobic slur

Justin Thomas has 'tremendous opportunity to learn and grow' after homophobic slur

Justin Thomas has 'tremendous opportunity to learn and grow' after homophobic slur https://ift.tt/3tf6duK

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – Last night, Justin Thomas spoke with the leadership of his equipment sponsor, Titleist, who is sticking by him despite his use of a homophobic slur during the third round of the Sentry Tournament of Champions in January. The end result? The company invited him to participate in its diversity and inclusion training.

“It’s stuff like that to where just like they’re wanting themselves to get better, they are offering me if I want to be a part of that, too,” Thomas said. “It’s stuff like that that kind of has really kept me upbeat and kept me in a great mood and kept me very optimistic about the growth that I can have.”

But there has been plenty of fallout from Thomas’s poor word choice. Clothing company Ralph Lauren cut ties with Thomas and Citi denounced his language and announced via an Instagram post that he will be required to donate a “meaningful portion” of his deal to LBGTQ causes.

Thomas returned to action last week wearing brand-less apparel at the European Tour’s Abu Dhabi Golf Championship and missed the cut. He makes his seventh start of the 2020-21 PGA Tour season this week at the Waste Management Phoenix Open, which has traditionally been a happy hunting ground for Thomas. The question remains, how will being humbled in a moment that clashed sharply with his previously spotless public image impact his play between the ropes?

Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship

Justin Thomas at the 2021 Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship at Abu Dhabi Golf Club in United Arab Emirates. (Photo: Warren Little/Getty Images)

“When you take a wolf and you humble him that wolf is never the same type of hunter again,” said Golf Channel analyst Arron Oberholser. “I think JT is one of those guys who truly has a conscious, has truly been affected by this and it could take a while for him to really get his edge back. I think his edge has been taken away to a certain extent. He might be able to get back there, but it’s going to take a lot of work.”

Thomas may be able to tap into his close friendship with Tiger Woods, who endured an even more public humiliation more than a decade ago and returned to World No. 1 as well as winning the Masters in 2019 for his 15th major championship, for advice on how to grow from the experience.

“Tiger had to embrace a completely new way of thinking about the world and he did and he came back and he did it a different way with a bad back and a different outlook,” Oberholser said. “JT has tons of runway to be able to do the same thing.”

While acknowledging that it’s a small sample size, Oberholser noted that Thomas had never finished worse than ninth in his three previous overseas non-Tour sanctioned tournaments before missing the cut in Abu Dhabi.

“Do you think coming off a third (at Sentry Tournament of Champions) if things hadn’t happened in Hawaii, would he have missed the cut at Abu Dhabi? Not a chance in hell. I’m absolutely convinced. This has affected him big time,” Oberholser said.

Thomas doesn’t disagree.

“Clearly it’s been a distraction,” he said. “I mean, I think that kind of speaks for itself. But the biggest thing that I’ve learned from it is that I made a mistake and that I have a tremendous opportunity to learn and grow from it, just like I do in my golf game, just like I do in my everyday life. This is a part of my everyday life, and I have the opportunity to try to turn this into a positive and learn and grow from it as much as I possibly can.”

On paper, TPC Scottsdale would seem like a safe landing place for Thomas to try to get back on track this week. He’s finished third the past two years at the Phoenix Open and his high ball flight, ability to maneuver it both ways and elite iron play should make him a perennial favorite at a course that rewards all three of those skills.

Phoenix Open: Tee times, TV info | Odds, picks | Fantasy rankings

“I love watching him play when he gets going,” said tournament defending champion Webb Simpson. “I feel like he actually gets more comfortable and more excited to play when he’s 7-, 8-under. There’s like a hyper focus, and I saw that in Tiger over the years.”

Thomas has long been a fan of the Tom Weiskopf-Jay Morrish layout. He’s making his seventh consecutive start here in the Valley of the Sun.

“I feel like if you really have control of your ball you can go around here with very minimal mistakes and make a lot of birdies, but at the same time it is a place that if you’re not playing well, it can expose you, and I think that’s why I’ve had a little bit of both,” he said.

If one club has held Thomas back from tasting victory in the desert, it likely has been his driver.

“When he gets nervous or he gets going bad, he hits a pull,” Oberholser said, citing Thomas’s reluctance to hit driver at No. 14, a drivable par-4 at the Plantation Course at Kapalua Resort, home of the Sentry Tournament of Champions. “Everyone to a man hit driver off the tee while JT hit iron or 3-wood and bunted it every day and used his wedge. Why? Because I don’t think he trusts the driver fully when trouble is on the left. It’s a scary shot for him. And what’s on the left coming down the stretch in Phoenix?”

Water galore. When Thomas was asked about if the trouble on the left side of many of the back nine holes had made it difficult for him to win at TPC Scottsdale, he said, “I didn’t until you just brought it up, so now I’m thinking about it.”

He added: “But I do love the golf course. I think and hope it really is a place that I’ll win multiple times in my career. I would like to get it out of the way soon so I can stop guessing and hoping.”

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Waste Management Phoenix Open fantasy golf power rankings

Waste Management Phoenix Open fantasy golf power rankings

Waste Management Phoenix Open fantasy golf power rankings https://ift.tt/3tmS4vt

TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course in Arizona hosts this week’s Waste Management Phoenix Open. The field includes six of the top-nine golfers in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings. Below, we look at the fantasy golf power rankings and odds for the 2021 Waste Management Phoenix Open.

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Odds last updated Tuesday at 6:55 a.m. ET.

Fantasy Golf Top 30

30. Brendan Steele (+8000)

Was off last week for the Farmers Insurance Open in San Diego following a T-21 finish at the American Express. He gained 1.29 strokes per round from tee-to-green in a T-4 finish at the Sony Open in Hawaii.

29. Si Woo Kim (+6600)

Followed up his victory at the American Express with a missed cut last week. He’s hitting his irons very well and TPC Scottsdale offers the type of risk-reward opportunities where he often succeeds.

28. Byeong Hun An (+10000)

Putting continues to hold him back and he lost another 2.84 strokes per round with the flat stick last week in a T-75 finish. His irons are dialed in, and he should leave himself some shorter putts on the Stadium Course’s relatively unguarded greens.

27. Henrik Norlander (+10000)

One of five co-runner-ups last week while ranking second among those who made the cut in SG: Tee-to-Green.

26. Sebastian Munoz (+10000)

Makes his 2021 debut on the mainland following a T-17 at the Sentry Tournament of Champions and a T-65 at the Sony Open in Hawaii. Debuted in this event with a T-47 finish last year.

25. Sam Burns (+8000)

Tied for 18th last week following a missed cut at the American Express. He’s averaging 0.93 SG: Off-the-Tee per round through 18 measured rounds on the season and fits TPC Scottsdale’s bomber profile.

24. Billy Horschel (+5000)

Has plenty of experience here with 1.20 strokes gained on the field over 30 career rounds on the Stadium Course. He tied for ninth last year but leaned a little too heavily on his putter.

23. Brooks Koepka (+5000)

Three straight missed cuts for the former world No. 1 and four-time major champion. He won this event in 2015 but finished outside the top 40 each of the next two years and hasn’t played since 2017.

22. Louis Oosthuizen (+5000)

Playing here for the first time since a third-place finish in 2017. He was fifth in the field with 2.40 SG: Tee-to-Green that year.

21. Brian Harman (+6600)

Twenty-six career rounds played at TPC Scottsdale but with an average of just 0.31 strokes gained on the field per round. He’s 24th in the Golfweek rankings and is 14th in the field by that measure.

Place your legal, online 2021 Waste Management Phoenix Open bets in CO, IA, IN, MI, NJ, PA, TN, VA and WV at BetMGM. Risk-free first bet! Terms and conditions apply.

20. Russell Henley (+6600)

Strung together four top-10 finishes over a six-event stretch from mid-August to late October last year. Began 2021 with a T-11 at the Sony Open but missed the cut at the American Express before taking last week off.

19. Cameron Champ (+8000)

Averaging 0.79 SG: Off-the-Tee per round. He gained 1.75 strokes off-the-tee last week but lost a dreadful 4.72 per round with the putter en route to a missed cut.

18. Corey Conners (+6600)

An expert ball-striker who gained 1.04 strokes per round off-the-tee in this event last year but lost 0.79 strokes per round on the greens. His putting has been much improved through his first 24 rounds of the 2020-21 Tour season.

17. Jason Day (+6600)

Missed the cut last week with an uncharacteristically poor putting performance. He was still strong off-the-tee.

16. Carlos Ortiz (+6600)

Was in contention last week for his second win of the 2020-21 season until a final round of plus-6, 78. He tied for 25th last year for his best result in four tries.

15. Matthew Wolff (+6000)

Will be a risky play this week after citing a hand injury for his withdrawal following an opening-round 78 last week. Missed the cut last year but gained 1.24 strokes per round off-the-tee over 36 holes.

14. Gary Woodland (+5500)

The 2018 champion is coming off a T-48 finish at the Farmers Insurance Open in which he lost a staggering 1.46 strokes per round off-the-tee. He’ll need to be much better than that this week, but he usually is.

13. Bubba Watson (+5000)

Has been excellent in all ball-striking categories early in the 2020-21 season. Through 13 measured rounds, he’s averaging 2.63 SG: Tee-to-Green and 1.11 SG: Off-the-Tee. Only one golfer in the field has more rounds played here than his 52.

12. Will Zalatoris (+4500)

Up to 12th in the Golfweek world rankings following another top-10 finish last week. His iron play is well-suited for this week’s venue, as it was for Torrey Pines and Winged Foot.

11. Scottie Scheffler (+4500)

The reigning PGA Tour Rookie of the Year missed the cut in both the Farmers Insurance Open and the American Express following a T-13 in the Tournament of Champions. He debuted with a missed cut here last year, but he gained 1.00 strokes per round off-the-tee.

10. Ryan Palmer (+4500)

One of last week’s co-runner-ups with 2.61 SG: Putting per round. A poor performance with the flat stick caused him to miss the cut last year, as he gained strokes off-the-tee and from tee-to-green.

9. Harris English (+3000)

Hasn’t finished in the top 10 here since a third-place finish in 2016. He missed the cut last week with 4.07 strokes lost per round from tee-to-green three weeks removed from his Tournament of Champions victory.

8. Sungjae Im (+3300)

Struggling to string together a complete four rounds following a T-5 at the Tournament of Champions. Tied for 34th last year and won The Honda Classic just four weeks later.

7. Hideki Matsuyama (+2500)

Won here twice during a dominant stretch spanning 2016 and 2017. He withdrew in 2018 due to injury but finished T-15 in 2019 and T-16 last year.

6. Daniel Berger (+2200)

Three top-10 finishes in six appearances in this event, including a T-9 early in his resurgent 2020 campaign. He relied on his putting last year, but he’s also a premier ball-striker.

5. Xander Schauffele (+1100)

Three appearances here with no finish worse than his T-17 in 2018. He shared second place last week with 2.06 SG: Tee-to-Green per round.

4. Webb Simpson (+1600)

The defending champ hasn’t played since tying for fourth at the Sony Open. He followed the same schedule last year with a third-place finish in Hawaii.

3. Justin Thomas (+800)

Returns to the USA following a missed cut at the European Tour’s Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship on the heels of a third-place finish at the Tournament of Champions. He finished third in Phoenix each of the last two years.

2. Jon Rahm (+650)

No. 3 in the Golfweek rankings following a T-7 result last week. Three top-10 finishes in five career appearances at TPC Scottsdale.

1. Rory McIlroy (+1100)

No. 1 in the field and No. 2 on Tour in SG: Off-the-Tee through 18 measured rounds on the 2020-21 season. He makes his debut at this event, but he’s a natural fit for the desert-style course.

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Waste Management Phoenix Open: Thursday tee times, TV information

Waste Management Phoenix Open: Thursday tee times, TV information

Waste Management Phoenix Open: Thursday tee times, TV information https://ift.tt/3cmD8Ye

The PGA Tour’s West Coast swing moves from San Diego to Arizona this week for the 2021 Waste Management Phoenix Open.

Defending champion Webb Simpson highlights an impressive field at TPC Scottsdale for a slightly different “People’s Open.” The famous party on the par-3 16th won’t be nearly as packed, but fans will be in attendance. World No. 2 Jon Rahm, No. 3 Justin Thomas, No. 4 Xander Schauffele and No. 6 Rory McIlroy will also be teeing it up this week.

From tee times to television information, here’s everything you need to know for the first round of this week’s event in Phoenix.

Tee times

1st Tee

Tee time Players
9:20 a.m. Kyle Stanley, Sam Ryder, Scott Harrington
9:30 a.m. Camilo Villegas, Lucas Glover, Rory Sabbatini
9:40 a.m. Joel Dahmen, Tom Hoge, Will Gordon
9:50 a.m. Sungjae Im, Ryan Palmer, Russell Knox
10 a.m. J.T. Poston, Keith Mitchell, Zach Johnson
10:10 a.m. Max Homa, Satoshi Kodaira, Patton Kizzire
10:20 a.m. Hudson Swafford, Jason Dufner, Jimmy Walker
10:30 a.m. Brian Gay, Richy Werenski, Austin Cook
10:40 a.m. Sebastián Muñoz, Pat Perez, Kevin Streelman
10:50 a.m. Ryan Moore, Henrik Norlander, Adam Schenk
11 a.m. Brian Stuard, Scott Stallings, Mark Hubbard
1:40 p.m. Louis Oosthuizen, Harold Varner III, Scottie Scheffler
1:50 p.m. Russell Henley, Vaughn Taylor, John Huh
2 p.m. Padraig Harrington, Steve Stricker, Jerry Kelly
2:10 p.m. Harris English, Jon Rahm, Justin Thomas
2:20 p.m. Webb Simpson, Gary Woodland, Hideki Matsuyama
2:30 p.m. Matthew Wolff, Ryan Armour, Brendan Steele
2:40 p.m. Brendon Todd, Chez Reavie, Brice Garnett
2:50 p.m. Robert Streb, Michael Thompson, Aaron Wise
3 p.m. C.T. Pan, Billy Horschel, Jordan Spieth
3:10 p.m. Cameron Tringale, Talor Gooch, Xinjun Zhang
3:20 p.m. Mark Anguiano, Davis Riley, John Augenstein

10th Tee

Tee time Players
9:20 a.m. Emiliano Grillo, Byeong Hun An, Will Zalatoris
9:30 a.m. Matt Jones, Luke List, Jamie Lovemark
9:40 a.m. James Hahn, Scott Brown, Matthew NeSmith
9:50 a.m. Si Woo Kim, Brooks Koepka, Rickie Fowler
10 a.m. Daniel Berger, Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele
10:10 a.m. Cameron Champ, Bubba Watson, Jason Day
10:20 a.m. Carlos Ortiz, Nate Lashley, Luke Donald
10:30 a.m. Sung Kang, J.B. Holmes, Andrew Putnam
10:40 a.m. Nick Taylor, Brian Harman, Kevin Stadler
10:50 a.m. Charley Hoffman, Harry Higgs, Bo Hoag
11 a.m. Sam Burns, Wyndham Clark, Erik van Rooyen
1:40 p.m. Adam Hadwin, Charl Schwartzel, Denny McCarthy
1:50 p.m. Chris Kirk, Hunter Mahan, Bo Van Pelt
2 p.m. Danny Lee, Patrick Rodgers, Beau Hossler
2:10 p.m. Stewart Cink, Kevin Tway, William McGirt
2:20 p.m. Dylan Frittelli, Adam Long, Troy Merritt
2:30 p.m. Tyler Duncan, Michael Kim, Grayson Murray
2:40 p.m. Martin Laird, Corey Conners, Ted Potter, Jr.
2:50 p.m. Martin Trainer, Matt Kuchar, Keegan Bradley
3 p.m. Doc Redman, Sepp Straka, Tom Lewis
3:10 p.m. Sean O’Hair, Kyoung-Hoon Lee, Robby Shelton
3:20 p.m. Vincent Whaley, Jesse Mueller, Nick Hardy

TV, radio information

Thursday, Feb. 4

TV

Golf Channel (watch for free on fuboTV): 3-7 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 9:15 a.m.-7 p.m.
Twitter: 9:15-10:20 a.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-7 p.m.

Friday, Feb. 5

TV

Golf Channel (watch for free on fuboTV): 3-7 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 9:15 a.m.-7 p.m.
Twitter: 9:15-10:20 a.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-7 p.m.

Saturday, Feb. 6

TV

Golf Channel (watch for free on fuboTV): 1-3 p.m.
NBC: 3-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 11 a.m.-6 p.m.
Twitter: 11-12:15 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

Sunday, Feb. 7

TV

Golf Channel (watch for free on fuboTV): 1-3 p.m.
NBC: 3-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 11 a.m.-6 p.m.
Twitter: 11-12:15 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

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The show will go on: 149th Open Championship will be held with or without fans

The show will go on: 149th Open Championship will be held with or without fans

The show will go on: 149th Open Championship will be held with or without fans https://ift.tt/3jdeBX9

It was the only men’s major not played last year during the global COVID-19 pandemic.

This time around, there is every intention to play the Open Championship, and that means with or without fans.

According to a report by Sky Sports, R&A chief executive Martin Slumbers said the 149th Open will be contested at Royal St George’s in July. The report quotes Slumbers as saying he “strongly believes” the tournament needs fans to be in attendance and that he’ll see how the limited numbers at April’s Masters Tournament goes.

“We will play the Open this year,” Slumbers told Sky Sports News. “Clearly at this point there are multiple scenarios. … I think there’s a very good possibility we will be able to have spectators, but we will have to wait and see how many.”

Postponing the event a year also pushed back the 150th Open at St. Andrews to 2022.

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