Butterfield Bermuda Championship

FedExCup Fall – Event No. 7

Butterfield Bermuda Championship

Port Royal Golf Course

Southampton, Bermuda

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Butterfield Bermuda Championship tips

Win Tickets

Justin Lower (25/1): Looking for his first win on TOUR, only one of the five previous winners broke their maiden at Port Royal. Lower’s recent heat and course form pushed him to the top of my list. The co-leader after 54 holes in Cabo San Lucas last week, the 35-year-old ranked in the top 10 in Fairways, Greens in Regulation, and Putting.  Earning a share of second place racked up his third top-10 payday this season on foreign soil (T3 Vidanta Vallarta; T4 Corales Puntacana). The Ohio native, making his fourth consecutive start in Bermuda, has never missed the cut. In 12 rounds, he posted 11 loops in the 60s and owns a 67.75 scoring average. Cashing T17 on debut in 2021, he added T8 in 2022 and T20 in 2023 for an aggregate of 39-under-par.  Camilo Villegas, the 2023 champion, also finished as a co-runner-up at the World Wide Technology Championship before his victory.

Nico Echavarria (35/1): The champion three weeks ago in Japan at the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP decided he was too hot to forego the rest of the FedExCup Fall. After the bye week, he returned with the rest of the TOUR to Cabo San Lucas and added another top-10 payday (T6). The 2023 Puerto Rico Open champion won for the first time navigating similar gusty conditions forecast for this week. The strength of his game is finding fairways (31st) and Greens in Regulation (33rd). With confidence at a sky-high level, the 30-year-old also has no problem making birdies (28th).

Top 10 Tickets

Lucas Glover (13/5): Four of the five previous winners were over the age of 32. The six-time winner on TOUR is the highest-ranked player in the Official World Golf Rankings entered. The forecast suggests the wind will blow all weekend so I will hitch my wagon to a proven tee-to-green player experienced feast or famine on the Port Royal layout. Half of his eight rounds are 67 or better but the other half are 70 or worse, including three rounds above par. After collecting checks of T24-T3-T3-T13 in his last four starts, I’ll gladly wade in.

Patrick Rodgers (7/2): Returning to Southampton for the first time since cashing T3 and solo fourth in 2022 and 2021, the Stanford man will not miss another chance to pad his bank account in the Atlantic Ocean. Sitting at No. 55 in the FedExCup Fall, he is comfortably in the Aon Next 10 and can turn his attention to winning in his 280th start on TOUR. The familiarity of the venue, plus he’s on form, cashing in 11 of his last 12 starts, including T24 in Cabo San Lucas, suggests he is ready to contend, and win.

Top 20 Tickets

Ryan McCormick (6/1): Veteran investors notice that the rank-and-file blow hot for patches each year. The New Jersey native withdrew from the Black Desert Championship after missing the cut in his five previous events. Flipping the switch the following week in Las Vegas, the 33-year-old rookie found something in the desert dirt of TPC Summerlin and posted T16, his first top 25 since T4 at the Myrtle Beach Classic in early May. After not making the trip to Japan, he continued his solid play at the World Wide Technology Championship. Cashing T24, he posted back-to-back top-25 paydays for the first time this season. Get hot, stay hot!

Alex Smalley (9/5): I find it impossible to ignore that the former Duke Blue Devil has never posted a round worse than 70 in three visits to Bermuda. The 12 rounds on his record show 11 have posted 69 or better, but he’s never cashed a check in the top 10. Over the last three years, the 28-year-old posted an aggregate of 33-under with finishes of T30, T11, and T12. Playing the weekend over in four consecutive events entering the week, his best result, T5 at the Sanderson Farms Championship, was also on Bermudagrass.

Port Royal Golf Course

One of only three courses on the PGA TOUR schedule that does not reach 7,000 yards, Port Royal is the shortest of the trio and remains the exact yardage and Par for the sixth consecutive year.

The standard Par-71 includes a pair of Par-3 holes on each of the nine holes, including two stretching 235 yards on the loop back to the clubhouse. The front nine duo, playing 148 and 213 yards, provides a warm-up before the meatier challenges. As a group, they rank annually in the top third of Par-3 groupings on TOUR.

The massive Bermuda greens provide ample room for recovery shots that do not find the tight fairways. Four of the five winners ranked in the top 15 GIR, and all five registered in the top 11 in Putting. Port Royal is the first event on Bermudagrass greens since the Sanderson Farms Championship at the end of September.

When the wind lies down, birdies will fill the scorecards. In 2022, Seamus Power set the tournament record for birdies with 28. Inaugural winner Brendon Todd and 2023 champion Camilo Villegas both circled 27.

Only the 2020 event played over par (71.151).

Yards (per official scorecard):6,828.
Par:71 (36-35).
Greens:TifEagle Bermuda; 8,000 square feet on average.
Stimpmeter:11.5 feet and up.
Rough:419 Bermudagrass at 2 inches.
Bunkers/Water Hazards/In-Play87/4/7.
Architect(s):Robert Trent Jones, Sr., (1971); Roger Rulewich (2008).
Defending Champion:Camilo Villegas (-24; 260).
Multiple Champions Entered:None.
Course Record:61; Alex Noren (2023); Taylor Pendrith (2021).
Tournament Record:260; Villegas and Brendon Todd (2019).

Recent PGA TOUR Winners

2023 Season Winners

EventWinner
Sentry Tournament of ChampionsJon Rahm
Sony Open in HawaiiSi Woo Kim
The AMERICAN EXPRESSJon Rahm (2)
Farmers Insurance OpenMax Homa (2)
AT&T Pebble BeachJustin Rose
WM Phoenix OpenScottie Scheffler
The Genesis InvitationalJon Rahm (3)
The Honda ClassicChris Kirk
Arnold Palmer InvitationalKurt Kitayama (first TOUR win)
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipTaylor Moore (first TOUR win)
Corales PuntacanaMatt Wallace (first TOUR win)
WGC – Dell Technologies MPSam Burns
Valero Texas OpenCorey Conners
MastersJon Rahm (4)
RBC HeritageMatt Fitzpatrick
Zurich Classic of New OrleansDavis Riley & Nick Hardy (first TOUR win for each)
Mexico Open at VidantaTony Finau (2)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipWyndham Clark (first TOUR win)
AT&T Byron NelsonJason Day
PGA ChampionshipBrooks Koepka
Charles Schwab ChallengeEmiliano Grillo
MemorialViktor Hovland
RBC Canadian OpenNick Taylor
U.S. OpenWyndham Clark (2)
Travelers ChampionshipKeegan Bradley (2)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicRickie Fowler
John Deere ClassicSepp Straka
Genesis Scottish OpenRory McIlroy (2)
The Open ChampionshipBrian Harman
3M OpenLee Hodges (first TOUR win)
Wyndham ChampionshipLucas Glover
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipLucas Glover (2)
BMW ChampionshipViktor Hovland (2)
TOUR ChampionshipViktor Hovland (3)
Fortinet ChampionshipSahith Theegala
Sanderson Farms ChampionshipLuke List
Shriners Children’s OpenTom Kim
ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIPCollin Morikawa
World Wide TechnologyErik van Rooyen
Butterfield BermudaCamilo Villegas
The RSM ClassicLudvig Aberg

2024 Season Winners

EventWinner
The SentryChris Kirk
Sony Open in HawaiiGrayson Murray
The American ExpressNick Dunlap (a)
Farmers Insurance OpenMatthieu Pavon (rookie)
AT&T Pebble BeachWyndham Clark (54 holes)
WM Phoenix OpenNick Taylor
The Genesis InvitationalHideki Matsuyama
Mexico Open at VidantaJake Knapp (rookie)
Cognizant ClassicAustin Eckroat (first time)
Arnold Palmer InvitationalScottie Scheffler
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipPeter Malnati
Texas Children’s Houston OpenStephan Jaeger (first time)
Valero Texas OpenAkshay Bhatia
88th Masters TournamentScottie Scheffler (3)
RBC HeritageScottie Scheffler (4)
Zurich ClassicRory McIlroy & Shane Lowry
THE CJ CUP Byron NelsonTaylor Pendrith (first time)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipRory McIlroy (2)
106th PGA ChampionshipXander Schauffele
Charles Schwab ChallengeDavis Riley
RBC Canadian OpenRobert MacIntyre (first time)
The 49th Memorial TournamentScottie Scheffler (5)
124th United States OpenBryson DeChambeau
Travelers ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (6)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicCam Davis
John Deere ClassicDavis Thompson (first time)
Genesis Scottish OpenRobert MacIntyre (2)
152nd Open ChampionshipXander Schauffele (2)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
2024 Paris OlympicsScottie Scheffler (7)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
Wyndham ChampionshipAaron Rai (first time)
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipHideki Matsuyama (2)
BMW ChampionshipKeegan Bradley
The TOUR ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (8)
  
FedEx Cup Fall 
Procore ChampionshipPatton Kizzire
Sanderson Farms ChampionshipKevin Yu (first time)
Black Desert ChampionshipMatt McCarty (first time)
Shriners Children’s OpenJT Poston
ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIPNico Echavarria
World Wide Technology ChampAustin Eckroat (2)

Recent Winners – Butterfield Bermuda Championship

Italics – not entered/qualified this week.

YearWinnerNotes
2023Camilo Villegas (-24)Picked up his first win in NINE YEARS on TOUR and matched the tournament scoring record.
2022Seamus Power (-19)Set the tournament record by circling 28 birdies; won by a shot
2021Lucas Herbert (-15)Won for the first time on TOUR in just his 20th start. Only champion under 32 years of age.
2020Brian Gay (-15)Oldest winner at 48 years old.
2019Brendon Todd (-24)Won the inaugural event by four shots.

Butterfield Bermuda Championship

Internationals have won the last three tournaments after Americans won the first two editions.

Four of the five winners were 33 or older and were previous winners on TOUR. Lucas Herbert was 25 and making just his 20th start when he won for the first time on TOUR.

Every winning total has been 15-under par or lower. Making birdies and avoiding bogeys is the classic formula to contend in a shootout.

No player has won this event more than once.

The weather will play a major role in determining the champion again this year.

On the line this week for the field of 120 is a purse of $6.9 million with the winner taking home $1.242 million plus 500 FedExCup points.

The field will be cut to the top 65 and ties after 36 holes.

After four rounds in Bermuda, the TOUR wraps up the FedExCup Fall next week at The RSM Classic at Sea Island, Georgia.

World Wide Technology Championship

The second edition features a field of 120 led by reigning champion Erik van Rooyen,

FedExCup Fall – Event No. 6

World Wide Technology Championship

El Cardonal at Diamante Cabo San Lucas

Los Cabos, Mexico

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World Wide Technology Championship tips

Tip to win

Harris English 27/1 – The veteran, already a previous winner at this event on a different course in 2013, rolls into town with back-to-back top-10 paydays in the deserts of Utah and Las Vegas. Possessing plenty of power, I’m more interested in his patience and putter to pick up his first win since the 2021 Travelers Championship, another shootout.

Matti Schmid 30/1 – Representing Germany at the 2024 Paris Olympics, the Munich native has hit his stride in the FedExCup Fall. Cashing T3 at the Shriners Open after solo fifth at the Black Desert Championship, his trend of beating the previous result has reached five starts in a row.

Tips to finish top 10

Nate Lashley 5/1 – Veterans tend to gravitate to the top of the leaderboard this time of year. Lashley, 41, has a win and a top-five result at Corales Puntacana on Paspalum, plus three top-10 paychecks on the same grass at the Puerto Rico Open.

Sam Stevens 3/1 – A big boy ball striker, the Texan can handle a coastal breeze. His partner from the Zurich Classic (T4) in late April, Nico Echavarria, won two weeks ago in Japan. Big fairways will produce more chances to pepper flags. He makes tons of birdies as well.

Tips to finish top 20

Joe Highsmith 2/1 – Producing three T16 or better finishes from four made cuts in the FedExCup Fall, the lefthander needs another big finish, or two, to maintain the dream of keeping his card. Cashing T6 at Puerto Rico on the same Paspalum grass produced his best payday of the year.

Vince Whaley 12/5 – The runner-up, one of four at the ISCO Championship in July in a playoff, has also cashed T16 twice in his last three starts. A big hitter who makes plenty of birdies, the 28-year-old should enjoy the WIDE-OPEN layout.

El Cardonal at Diamante

The TGR Design opened in 2014 and hosted a PGA TOUR event for the first time in 2023.

Tipping at 7,452 yards for the second consecutive year, the stock Par-72 played as one of the easiest resort courses on TOUR last season (68.993).

With only one water penalty area and no rough, tee balls should find the Platinum Paspalum fairways. Last year players averaged hitting 90 percent of the fairways.

The Paspalum putting surfaces, managed to run between 11 and 12 feet, provide enormous targets. Averaging 8,700 square feet, the greens are difficult to miss and easy to putt.

Recent PGA TOUR Winners

2023 Season Winners

EventWinner
Sentry Tournament of ChampionsJon Rahm
Sony Open in HawaiiSi Woo Kim
The AMERICAN EXPRESSJon Rahm (2)
Farmers Insurance OpenMax Homa (2)
AT&T Pebble BeachJustin Rose
WM Phoenix OpenScottie Scheffler
The Genesis InvitationalJon Rahm (3)
The Honda ClassicChris Kirk
Arnold Palmer InvitationalKurt Kitayama (first TOUR win)
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipTaylor Moore (first TOUR win)
Corales PuntacanaMatt Wallace (first TOUR win)
WGC – Dell Technologies MPSam Burns
Valero Texas OpenCorey Conners
MastersJon Rahm (4)
RBC HeritageMatt Fitzpatrick
Zurich Classic of New OrleansDavis Riley & Nick Hardy (first TOUR win for each)
Mexico Open at VidantaTony Finau (2)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipWyndham Clark (first TOUR win)
AT&T Byron NelsonJason Day
PGA ChampionshipBrooks Koepka
Charles Schwab ChallengeEmiliano Grillo
MemorialViktor Hovland
RBC Canadian OpenNick Taylor
U.S. OpenWyndham Clark (2)
Travelers ChampionshipKeegan Bradley (2)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicRickie Fowler
John Deere ClassicSepp Straka
Genesis Scottish OpenRory McIlroy (2)
The Open ChampionshipBrian Harman
3M OpenLee Hodges (first TOUR win)
Wyndham ChampionshipLucas Glover
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipLucas Glover (2)
BMW ChampionshipViktor Hovland (2)
TOUR ChampionshipViktor Hovland (3)
Fortinet ChampionshipSahith Theegala
Sanderson Farms ChampionshipLuke List
Shriners Children’s OpenTom Kim
ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIPCollin Morikawa
World Wide TechnologyErik van Rooyen
Butterfield BermudaCamilo Villegas
The RSM ClassicLudvig Aberg

2024 Season Winners

EventWinner
The SentryChris Kirk
Sony Open in HawaiiGrayson Murray
The American ExpressNick Dunlap (a)
Farmers Insurance OpenMatthieu Pavon (rookie)
AT&T Pebble BeachWyndham Clark (54 holes)
WM Phoenix OpenNick Taylor
The Genesis InvitationalHideki Matsuyama
Mexico Open at VidantaJake Knapp (rookie)
Cognizant ClassicAustin Eckroat (first time)
Arnold Palmer InvitationalScottie Scheffler
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipPeter Malnati
Texas Children’s Houston OpenStephan Jaeger (first time)
Valero Texas OpenAkshay Bhatia
88th Masters TournamentScottie Scheffler (3)
RBC HeritageScottie Scheffler (4)
Zurich ClassicRory McIlroy & Shane Lowry
THE CJ CUP Byron NelsonTaylor Pendrith (first time)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipRory McIlroy (2)
106th PGA ChampionshipXander Schauffele
Charles Schwab ChallengeDavis Riley
RBC Canadian OpenRobert MacIntyre (first time)
The 49th Memorial TournamentScottie Scheffler (5)
124th United States OpenBryson DeChambeau
Travelers ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (6)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicCam Davis
John Deere ClassicDavis Thompson (first time)
Genesis Scottish OpenRobert MacIntyre (2)
152nd Open ChampionshipXander Schauffele (2)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
2024 Paris OlympicsScottie Scheffler (7)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
Wyndham ChampionshipAaron Rai (first time)
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipHideki Matsuyama (2)
BMW ChampionshipKeegan Bradley
The TOUR ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (8)
  
FedEx Cup Fall 
Procore ChampionshipPatton Kizzire
Sanderson Farms ChampionshipKevin Yu (first time)
Black Desert ChampionshipMatt McCarty (first time)
Shriners Children’s OpenJT Poston
ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIPNico Echavarria

Recent Winners – World Wide Technology Championship

Italics – not entered/qualified this week.

YearWinnerNotes
2023Erik van Rooyen (-27)Inaugural winner led the field with 3 eagles, including one on the 72nd hole to win by two shots.

World Wide Technology Championship

Moving to Cabo San Lucas for the 2023 edition, the event was previously held at Mayakoba on the Yucatan Peninsula. Both events featured Paspalum grass from the parking lot to the 19th hole.

The first event featured nine players posting 20-under or better.

Of the 73 players who made the cut, 68 posted 10-under or better.

There were only 13 rounds above par for the week from the players who made the cut.

The field of 120 contains just two players from the OWGR top 50 after Cameron Young withdrew Wednesday morning upon arrival.

The winner will pocket $1.296 million of the $7.2 million prize pool, plus 500 FedExCup points.

The sixth of eight events in the FedExCup Fall, the TOUR continues its fall world tour in Bermuda next week before returning to the U.S.A. for the final event on Sea Island in two weeks. Read more about the final eight events of the season here.   

Others to consider

Max Greyserman 19/1 – The favorite has yet to win on the PGA TOUR, but he has finished second or T2 in three of his last five starts. A big hitter, he’s also a deft putter and is in the form of his life.

Cameron Young 22/1 – The theme at the top of the board is players who have not won on TOUR. The seven-time runner-up has not played since the BMW Championship in late August and has not posted a top-10 result since Detroit at the end of June.

Doug Ghim 24/1 – Only two top-10 paydays on the season include solo second, a career-best in Las Vegas three weeks ago, and T8 at Vidanta Vallarta in Mexico on Paspalum in late February.

J.J. Spaun 27/1 – Another veteran infiltrating the top of the board, the Californian is one of the few favorites with a trophy on the mantle. Three top-10 finishes in his last seven events, including T6 in Japan two weeks ago, demands attention.

Nico Echavarria

Chad Ramey

Patton Kizzire

Nick Hardy

Patrick Fishburn

Henrik Norlander

Austin Cook

ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP

Tee times begin TONIGHT AT 745 ET

FedExCup Fall – Event No. 5

ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP

ACCORDIA GOLF Narashino Country Club

Chiba, Japan

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Mike Glasscott: ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP tips

Win: Hideki Matsuyama (8/1)

Top 10: Beau Hossler (3/1), Will Zalatoris (3/1), Doug Ghim (3/1)

Top 20: Ryo Hisatsune (2/1), Satoshi Kodaira (11/2)

Bet365: Top of the Board  

Xander Schauffele (9/2): The Number Two player in the Official World Golf Rankings headlines the field of 78. The winner of HALF of the major championship events in 2024, the PGA Championship victory, and Champion Golfer of the Year will look to add to his collection. A record of 4-1 in the Presidents Cup, plus five consecutive finishes on TOUR in the top 10 makes him the man to beat.

Collin Morikawa (7/1): The previous time the two-time major champion was in the winner’s circle was last year at Narashino Country Club. Nobody made more birdies (24) and only one player had fewer putts. The last time he played his own ball, he won the GROSS division at the TOUR Championship in late August.

Hideki Matsuyama (8/1): The local legend is the only player to hit the podium twice. Posting 16-under-par, he finished second to Woods in 2019. Returning to Japan for the 2021 edition, his total of 15-under-par was good enough for a victory. Making two eagles en route to victory in 2021, he is the only champion to put two double circles on the card. The 2021 Masters champion has two wins on the ledger in 2024 already.

Sungjae Im (12/1): The Korean won in his native land in April for the second time in two years and racked up eight top-10 paydays on TOUR. Cashing T3 on debut in 2019, he’s added T12 and T29 in the last two years.

Sahith Theegala (16/1): Making his third start in Japan, the 2023 Procore Championship winner has already cashed T19 and T5 in two previous visits. Steady throughout the bag, the 26-year-old sits ninth in SG: Total.

Justin Thomas (20/1): The ebbs and flows of 2024 find the two-time PGA Championship winner on a run of five straight without a top-10 payday. Making his first appearance since the inaugural event, he has had plenty of big finishes in the Pacific Rim during his career.

Kurt Kitayama (25/1): Ranking 11th in SG: Tee to Green and ninth in SG: Approach, finding fairways and greens won’t hurt this week.

Others to consider:

Last year, four Japanese players cashed in the top 12, led by Ryo Ishikawa (400/1) at T4. Kensei Hirata (100/1), a 23-year-old, six-time winner in Asia, finished one shot further back on T6 with 22-year-old Ryo Hisatsune (75/1). Sponsor’s exemption Satoshi Kodaira, the 2018 winner at the RBC Heritage over Si Woo Kim (28/1), cashed T12, his second consecutive season inside T16.

Beau Hossler (33/1) will be boom or bust this week, but without a cut, I’ll gamble. Losing a playoff at the Sanderson Farms Championship, he added T11 and T23 and is playing for the fourth week in a row. Never signing for a round above 70 in eight career loops, I’m on board.

Will Zalatoris (35/1) has also been riding the roller coaster following back surgery. Some days are better than others, including T13 at the BMW Championship and T12 at the FedEx St. Jude Championship the week before. Well rested, I don’t think he would have made the trip if he was “iffy”.

Doug Ghim (35/1) is riding high after a career-best solo second in Las Vegas last week. The ball-striker makes his money from tee to green and that’s the formula this week.

Eric Cole (45/1) showed great putters can also contend outside Tokyo. The birdie machine cashed T2 on debut in 2023.

Gary Woodland (50/1) has persevered after brain surgery and continues to stack rounds together. I am not a fan of this number, but, I am following his progress.

Narashino Country Club

The composite course, made of up holes from the Kings and Queens nines, was designed by Japanese legend Kinya Fujita and opened in 1965.

The 34-36 Par-70 layout stretches to 7,079 yards for the third consecutive season.

The front nine consists of three of the five Par-3 holes and just one of the three Par-5 chances.

With 10 Par-4 chances on the card, exactly half will stretch 480 yards or longer. The Par-5 holes stretch 587 and 605 yards before closing with 562 yards on No. 18. Only quality shots are rewarded.

The Par-3 holes feature one challenge over 183 yards and present scoring opportunities.

Rough approaching four inches and greens running upwards of 12 feet will mitigate scoring opportunities.

There have only been 24 tournament totals posted in double figures in four events. Morikawa, on 14-under in 2023, was the only one last year.

Recent PGA TOUR Winners

2023 Season Winners

EventWinner
Sentry Tournament of ChampionsJon Rahm
Sony Open in HawaiiSi Woo Kim
The AMERICAN EXPRESSJon Rahm (2)
Farmers Insurance OpenMax Homa (2)
AT&T Pebble BeachJustin Rose
WM Phoenix OpenScottie Scheffler
The Genesis InvitationalJon Rahm (3)
The Honda ClassicChris Kirk
Arnold Palmer InvitationalKurt Kitayama (first TOUR win)
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipTaylor Moore (first TOUR win)
Corales PuntacanaMatt Wallace (first TOUR win)
WGC – Dell Technologies MPSam Burns
Valero Texas OpenCorey Conners
MastersJon Rahm (4)
RBC HeritageMatt Fitzpatrick
Zurich Classic of New OrleansDavis Riley & Nick Hardy (first TOUR win for each)
Mexico Open at VidantaTony Finau (2)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipWyndham Clark (first TOUR win)
AT&T Byron NelsonJason Day
PGA ChampionshipBrooks Koepka
Charles Schwab ChallengeEmiliano Grillo
MemorialViktor Hovland
RBC Canadian OpenNick Taylor
U.S. OpenWyndham Clark (2)
Travelers ChampionshipKeegan Bradley (2)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicRickie Fowler
John Deere ClassicSepp Straka
Genesis Scottish OpenRory McIlroy (2)
The Open ChampionshipBrian Harman
3M OpenLee Hodges (first TOUR win)
Wyndham ChampionshipLucas Glover
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipLucas Glover (2)
BMW ChampionshipViktor Hovland (2)
TOUR ChampionshipViktor Hovland (3)
Fortinet ChampionshipSahith Theegala
Sanderson Farms ChampionshipLuke List
Shriners Children’s OpenTom Kim
ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIPCollin Morikawa
World Wide TechnologyErik van Rooyen
Butterfield BermudaCamilo Villegas
The RSM ClassicLudvig Aberg

2024 Season Winners

EventWinner
The SentryChris Kirk
Sony Open in HawaiiGrayson Murray
The American ExpressNick Dunlap (a)
Farmers Insurance OpenMatthieu Pavon (rookie)
AT&T Pebble BeachWyndham Clark (54 holes)
WM Phoenix OpenNick Taylor
The Genesis InvitationalHideki Matsuyama
Mexico Open at VidantaJake Knapp (rookie)
Cognizant ClassicAustin Eckroat (first time)
Arnold Palmer InvitationalScottie Scheffler
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipPeter Malnati
Texas Children’s Houston OpenStephan Jaeger (first time)
Valero Texas OpenAkshay Bhatia
88th Masters TournamentScottie Scheffler (3)
RBC HeritageScottie Scheffler (4)
Zurich ClassicRory McIlroy & Shane Lowry
THE CJ CUP Byron NelsonTaylor Pendrith (first time)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipRory McIlroy (2)
106th PGA ChampionshipXander Schauffele
Charles Schwab ChallengeDavis Riley
RBC Canadian OpenRobert MacIntyre (first time)
The 49th Memorial TournamentScottie Scheffler (5)
124th United States OpenBryson DeChambeau
Travelers ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (6)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicCam Davis
John Deere ClassicDavis Thompson (first time)
Genesis Scottish OpenRobert MacIntyre (2)
152nd Open ChampionshipXander Schauffele (2)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
2024 Paris OlympicsScottie Scheffler (7)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
Wyndham ChampionshipAaron Rai (first time)
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipHideki Matsuyama (2)
BMW ChampionshipKeegan Bradley
The TOUR ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (8)
  
FedEx Cup Fall 
Procore ChampionshipPatton Kizzire
Sanderson Farms ChampionshipKevin Yu (first time)
Black Desert ChampionshipMatt McCarty (first time)
Shriners Children’s OpenJT Poston

Recent Winners – ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP

Italics – not entered/qualified this week.

YearWinnerNotes
2023Collin Morikawa (-14)Only player to post double digits under par; won by six.
2022Keegan Bradley (-15)Won by a shot over Rickie Fowler and Andrew Putnam.
2021Hideki Matsuyama        (-15)Won by five shots after winning the Masters earlier in the year.
2020Patrick CantlayEvent was held at Sherwood Country Club in Los Angeles.
2019Tiger Woods (-19)Defeated Matsuyama by three shots to win the inaugural event and set the tournament scoring record.

ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP

Last week, the Shriners Children’s Open was the site of the first PGA TOUR win in the career of Tiger Woods. This week, the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP was the site of the 82nd, and to this day, final victory for Tiger Woods.

The event was contested for the first time in 2019 at the Narashino Country Club in Chiba, Japan. Woods was victorious, defeating Hideki Matsuyama by three shots, and owns the tournament scoring record on 19-under-par 261.

The fifth edition contested in Japan features defending champion Collin Morikawa and 2021 winner Hideki Matsuyama.

The course record, 61, was last posted by John Huh (not entered) in the 2022 event.

The winning total has been 14-under or lower in every tournament.

The 2022 event is the only tournament to play under par for the week.

Morikawa is the youngest winner at 26. Woods earned his victory at 43, the oldest champion.

Morikawa, a winner by six shots in the 2023 edition, owns the largest margin of victory.

No tournaments have required a playoff to determine the champion.

All four previous winners at Narashino Country Club in Chiba are major champions.

The field of 78 players includes 18 from the Japan Tour. There is no 36-hole cut.

The winner will pocket $1.53 million of the $8.5. million prize pool, plus 500 FedExCup points.

The fifth of eight events in the FedExCup Fall, the TOUR is off next week before stopping in Cabo San Lucas for the World Wide Technology Championship. Read more about the final eight events of the season here.

Shriners Children’s Open

Sittin’ plush with a royal flush, aces back to back!

FedExCup Fall – Event No. 4

Shriners Children’s Open

TPC Summerlin

Las Vegas, Nevada

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Mike Glasscott: Shriners Children’s Open tips

Win: Harry Hall (50/1); Nick Hardy (100/1)

Top 10: Henrik Norlander (15/2), Matti Schmid (11/2), Adam Hadwin (4/1)

Top 20: Taylor Montgomery (7/1), Matt NeSmith (4/1), Will Gordon (7/1), Doug Ghim (13/5)

Bet365: Top of the Board  

Tom Kim (13/1): Posting 44-under over 144 holes, the Korean has posted just seven bogeys and has won both times he has entered. Making his first start on his own ball since the FedExCup Playoffs, he will join PGA TOUR history if he wins for the third consecutive season.

Taylor Pendrith (27/1): The second half of the Presidents Cup daily double, the Canadian won a shootout at TPC Craig Ranch in early May for his first victory on the PGA TOUR. Ranking in the top 10 of Strokes Gained: Putting, he will look to improve on his solo third finish on 18-under-par in 2023.

Davis Thompson (30/1): Posting 28-under at the John Deere Classic in July, the former Georgia Bulldog set the tournament record and won for the first time on TOUR. Already secure inside the FedExCup top 50, there’s only one focus this week: win.

Beau Hossler (30/1): Losing in a playoff at the Sanderson Farms Championship, the former Texas Longhorn is still yearning for his first PGA TOUR victory. The California native has never missed the cut in six starts at TPC Summerlin and has posted 38-under-par in his last two starts on TOUR.

Kurt Kitayama (30/1): Never making the cut from three previous attempts at TPC Summerlin, the local showed signs of form last week in Utah. Posting rounds of 65 to open and 64 on Saturday could not cancel two rounds in the 70s in a shootout. Investors can make the case for or against. Volatile.

Tom Hoge (32/1): Returning to action for the first time since cashing T7 at Silverado to kick off the FedExCup Fall. Since his last appearance, he’s been inducted into his college alma mater’s Hall of Fame. The North Dakota native cashed T24 or better four times in his last six at TPC Summerlin, including two paydays inside the top 10.

Stephan Jaeger (32/1): Already a winner this season in Houston, the German posted 20-under last week in Utah to cash solo second. The bright lights of The Strip and expectations will not bother the veteran.

Seamus Power (32/1): Posting a run of T10, T11, and T11 in his last three, the Irishman becomes impossible to ignore.

Eric Cole (32/1): Anytime birdies are required to contend, the Florida resident should be on the radar. Ranking second on the TOUR in total birdies, a shootout is his area of expertise.

Others to consider:

If you prefer the local angle, there are plenty of Las Vegas residents and those with ties to UNLV in the field this week including Kitayama, Maverick McNealy, Taylor Montgomery, Doug Ghim, Charley Hoffman, and Ryan Moore, to name a few.

Adam Hadwin (37/10): Making his eighth start, the Canadian has cashed inside the top 10 in the last three editions and five times from seven weekends. Minus a victory, he’s the course horse.

Harry Hall (50/1): Playing golf at UNLV, the Englishman has racked up three consecutive paydays of T26 or better at TPC Summerlin. Already a shootout winner in 2024, his excellent short game allows him to hang around.

Matti Schmid (55/1): The 2019 and 2020 European amateur champion has yet to crack the code at the highest level. Registering his second top 10 in 25 events last week, it’s time to gamble on the hot streak.

Doug Ghim (65/1): One of the many residents in the field, the tee-to-green expert will rely on sleeping in his own bed to push him into contention this week.

Henrik Norlander (90/1): Sitting at 119th in the top 125, another week with a big finish will go a long way for the Swede. Opening last week with 62 in the Utah desert led to T8, his best payday of 2024.

Nick Hardy (100/1): I’ll take a ride with a guy who found 53 of 56 fairways, painted 63 of 72 GIR, and cashed T8 in the Utah desert last week.

Matt NeSmith (140/1): Hitting the top 10 twice in five visits, the South Carolina native has posted 19 of 20 rounds in the red.

Will Gordon (325/1): Posting 23-under over the last two events comes with three rounds in the 70s and five rounds of 68 or bbetter. Let’s gamble!

NOW PLAYING: Shriners Children’s Open

Host CourseTPC Summerlin
Yards (per official scorecard):7,255.
Par:71 (35-36).
Greens:Dominator Bentgrass; 7,400 square feet on average.
Stimpmeter:11.5 feet and up.
Rough:419 Bermudagrass at 2.25 inches.
Bunkers/Water Hazards/In-Play92/4/4
Architect(s):Bobby Weed (1991).
Defending Champion (event):Tom Kim
Multiple Champion(s) Entered:Tom Kim (2022, 2023), Martin Laird (2009, 2020).
Fact of the Week:Koreans have won four of the last five events.

TPC Summerlin

Sitting northwest of downtown Las Vegas and The Strip, TPC Summerlin was opened for play in 1991 and joined the rotation for the Shriners Children’s Open for the 1992 tournament.

Gone are the days of five rounds spread over three courses, but there have been plenty of changes in the last 30 years in this part of the world. Starting with the 2008 tournament, TPC Summerlin served as the exclusive host.

The 2009 edition was the first played at Par-71, one shot fewer than the Par-72.

The 2014 event tipped at 7,255 yards and is the yardage from the back tees on the 2024 scorecard.

Located at 2,700 feet above sea level, the Bobby Weed design does not require players to overpower the layout. The large landing areas and putting surfaces reward accuracy over power and allow play when the desert gusts blow.

Keeping the ball out of the desert and the four water penalty areas will ensure birdie chances follow. The quartet of Par-3 holes provides the greatest challenges, but the rest of the track affords birdie opportunities.

The 7,400-square-foot targets are carpeted with Dominator Bentgrass, new as of the 2022 tournament. Two and two-quarter inches of 419 Bermudagrass provide the border before the desert. Closely mown areas around the greens allow creativity to get up and down or to hole out.

Recent PGA TOUR Winners

2023 Season Winners

EventWinner
Sentry Tournament of ChampionsJon Rahm
Sony Open in HawaiiSi Woo Kim
The AMERICAN EXPRESSJon Rahm (2)
Farmers Insurance OpenMax Homa (2)
AT&T Pebble BeachJustin Rose
WM Phoenix OpenScottie Scheffler
The Genesis InvitationalJon Rahm (3)
The Honda ClassicChris Kirk
Arnold Palmer InvitationalKurt Kitayama (first TOUR win)
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipTaylor Moore (first TOUR win)
Corales PuntacanaMatt Wallace (first TOUR win)
WGC – Dell Technologies MPSam Burns
Valero Texas OpenCorey Conners
MastersJon Rahm (4)
RBC HeritageMatt Fitzpatrick
Zurich Classic of New OrleansDavis Riley & Nick Hardy (first TOUR win for each)
Mexico Open at VidantaTony Finau (2)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipWyndham Clark (first TOUR win)
AT&T Byron NelsonJason Day
PGA ChampionshipBrooks Koepka
Charles Schwab ChallengeEmiliano Grillo
MemorialViktor Hovland
RBC Canadian OpenNick Taylor
U.S. OpenWyndham Clark (2)
Travelers ChampionshipKeegan Bradley (2)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicRickie Fowler
John Deere ClassicSepp Straka
Genesis Scottish OpenRory McIlroy (2)
The Open ChampionshipBrian Harman
3M OpenLee Hodges (first TOUR win)
Wyndham ChampionshipLucas Glover
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipLucas Glover (2)
BMW ChampionshipViktor Hovland (2)
TOUR ChampionshipViktor Hovland (3)
Fortinet ChampionshipSahith Theegala
Sanderson Farms ChampionshipLuke List
Shriners Children’s OpenTom Kim
ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIPCollin Morikawa
World Wide TechnologyErik van Rooyen
Butterfield BermudaCamilo Villegas
The RSM ClassicLudvig Aberg

2024 Season Winners

EventWinner
The SentryChris Kirk
Sony Open in HawaiiGrayson Murray
The American ExpressNick Dunlap (a)
Farmers Insurance OpenMatthieu Pavon (rookie)
AT&T Pebble BeachWyndham Clark (54 holes)
WM Phoenix OpenNick Taylor
The Genesis InvitationalHideki Matsuyama
Mexico Open at VidantaJake Knapp (rookie)
Cognizant ClassicAustin Eckroat (first time)
Arnold Palmer InvitationalScottie Scheffler
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipPeter Malnati
Texas Children’s Houston OpenStephan Jaeger (first time)
Valero Texas OpenAkshay Bhatia
88th Masters TournamentScottie Scheffler (3)
RBC HeritageScottie Scheffler (4)
Zurich ClassicRory McIlroy & Shane Lowry
THE CJ CUP Byron NelsonTaylor Pendrith (first time)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipRory McIlroy (2)
106th PGA ChampionshipXander Schauffele
Charles Schwab ChallengeDavis Riley
RBC Canadian OpenRobert MacIntyre (first time)
The 49th Memorial TournamentScottie Scheffler (5)
124th United States OpenBryson DeChambeau
Travelers ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (6)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicCam Davis
John Deere ClassicDavis Thompson (first time)
Genesis Scottish OpenRobert MacIntyre (2)
152nd Open ChampionshipXander Schauffele (2)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
2024 Paris OlympicsScottie Scheffler (7)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
Wyndham ChampionshipAaron Rai (first time)
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipHideki Matsuyama (2)
BMW ChampionshipKeegan Bradley
The TOUR ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (8)
  
FedEx Cup Fall 
Procore ChampionshipPatton Kizzire
Sanderson Farms ChampionshipKevin Yu (first time)
Black Desert ChampionshipMatt McCarty (first time)

Recent Winners – Shriners Children’s Open

Italics – not entered/qualified this week.

YearWinnerNotes
2023Tom Kim (-20)Holding off Adam Hadwin by a shot, the Korean became the first player to successfully defend the title at TPC Summerlin.
2022Tom Kim (-24)Winning by four, Kim did not square or bogey or worse on his card.
2021Sungjae Im (-24)Matched the tournament scoring record and won by four shots.
2020Martin Laird (-23)Victorious in the three-man playoff, the Scot won for the second time at TPC Summerlin.
2019Kevin Na (-23)Defeated Patrick Cantlay in a playoff to win for the second time at TPC Summerlin.
2018Bryson DeChambeau (-21)Defeated Patrick Cantlay by one.
2017Patrick Cantlay (-9)Winning for the first time on TOUR, Cantlay outlasted the wind and a three-man playoff.
2016Rod Pampling (-20)The Australian became the oldest winner at age 47.
2015Smylie Kaufman (-16)Closing with 61, the LSU grad won for the first time on TOUR.
2014Ben MartinDefeated Kevin Streelman by two shots to become the first winner at 7,255 yards.

Black Desert Championship

FedExCup Fall – Event No. 3

Black Desert Championship

Black Desert Resort Golf Club

Ivins, Utah

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Odds OutlookDFS ReportHorses for Courses/Stats SuggestExpert Picks

Mike Glasscott: Black Desert Championship tips

Win: Kurt Kitayama (28/1), Ryan Fox (33/1)

Top 10: Erik van Rooyen (33/10), Matti Schmid (5/1)

Top 20: Zac Blair (7/2), Peter Kuest (11/2)

Bet365: Top of the Board  

Keith Mitchell (20/1): For the second consecutive week the former Georgia Bulldog sits at the top of the Bet365.com board. Last week, he missed a four-foot putt on the 72nd hole to miss out on a playoff. The leader after 36 and 54 holes could not pick up his second win and settled for T3, his third consecutive T12 or better on TOUR. He will need another big week from his putter to replicate the low scores produced in Mississippi.

Seamus Power (25/1): A quick glance shows a payday of T11 last week for the Irishman. A deeper inspection reveals four rounds in the 60s. Twice a winner on TOUR, the 37-year-old relies on Par 5 scoring and his short game to contend.

Kurt Kitayama (28/1): The more I dug into his stats this week, the more I’m interested! The Las Vegas resident will not be bothered with desert golf, regardless of the venue. Cashing T8 at TPC Scottsdale in February, another Weiskopf design, he has finished on the podium four times in the last two years on courses he’s never played.

Beau Hossler (30/1): Half of the top four players at Bet365.com had heartbreaking moments on Sunday. Searching for his first win on TOUR, he found himself behind a tree after his tee shot on the final hole. Unable to make a birdie and win the event, he lost in the first hole of the playoff to Kevin Yu (not entered). The good news is that, like Mitchell, he circled 27 par breakers to co-lead the field.

Ryan Fox (33/1): The Kiwi, snubbed by Mike Weir for the Presidents Cup last month, played two non-descript events in Great Britain before cashing T11 in Mississippi. The big hitter possesses a hot putter and should thrive in a birdie fest.

Chan Kim (33/1): The last time the Korean found the top 10 was at the ISCO Championship in July. Before that result, he cashed T8 at the Mexico Open at Vidanta, another wide-open track from the tee box with enormous greens.

Patrick Fishburn (33/1): Teaming up with fellow Utahn Zac Blair at the Zurich Classic, the Ogden resident is no longer an unknown quantity. Taking home a paycheck for T48 in Mississippi, he broke his streak of eight consecutive paydays of T25 or better. Posting 11-under, he didn’t play poorly, but two rounds in the 70s on the weekend didn’t help and will not help this week either. The pressure of being one of the favorites plus one of the crowd favorites creates a complex cocktail.

Black Desert Championship

The PGA TOUR returns to the Beehive State for the first time since the 1963 Utah Open Invitational.

The field of 132 players in the inaugural event will play 36 holes before being cut to the top 65 and ties for the final 36 holes.

The winner will pocket $1.350 million of the $7.5 million prize pool plus 500 FedExCup points.

This is the third of eight events in the FedExCup Fall. Read more about the final eight events of the season here.

Others to consider:

The Utah contingent entered this week includes a range of players highlighted by 65-year-old Jay Don Blake, who is making his 500thPGA TOUR start, and 18-year-old Kihei Akina, who is making his PGA TOUR debut.

Erik van Rooyen (35/1): The winner in his first start at Old Greenwood (2021 Barracuda Championship), the 34-year-old South African also won a shootout at Vidanta Vallarta on 27-under last November.

Andrew Novak (35/1): Grinding along in his best season on TOUR, he has cashed a paycheck in his last eight starts and cashed T8 at TPC Scottsdale earlier in 2024.

Daniel Berger (45/1): The five-time winner on TOUR opened 65-65 last week and sat one off the halfway lead. Cashing solo seventh, a round of 71 on Saturday muted his challenge.

Harry Hall (55/1): The Englishman calls Las Vegas home and already has won a shootout this season. The winner of a five-man playoff at the ISCO Championship in July, his super short game results in plenty of birdies, and that will play in the desert of Utah.

Matti Schmid (66/1): The German international cashed in 11 of his last 12 starts worldwide and has been steady regardless of the postcode of the event. Last week, he secured T16 after posting just one bogey in his last 54 holes.

Zac Blair (110/1): One of five me to fall to Hall in the ISCO Championship playoff, the Orem resident will embrace the home-state advantage. Blowing hot and cold, his missed cut last week came on four-under. Not all missed cuts are created equal.

Austin Smotherman (125/1): Cashing T7 at the Procore Championship after the first event of the FedExCup Fall, combined with T5 at Vidanta Vallarta last November, allows me to connect a longshot dot.

Peter Kuest (200/1): The BYU grad has played three PGA TOUR events this year and hit the top 10 twice. When the stars align!

NOW PLAYING: Black Desert Championship

Host CourseBlack Desert Resort Golf Club
Yards (per official scorecard):7,371.
Par:72 (36-36).
Greens:XL007 Bentgrass; 7,000 square feet on average.
Stimpmeter:12 feet or less (wind dependent).
Rough:Kentucky Bluegrass at two inches.
Bunkers/Water Hazards/In-Play44/3/2
Architect(s):Tom Weiskopf & Neil Smith (2022).
Defending Champion (event):Inaugural event.
Multiple Champion(s) Entered:None.
Multiple Champions (course):None.
Fact of the Week:The last event held in Utah was the 1963 Utah Open Invitational.

Black Desert Resort Golf Club

Sitting 3,100 feet above sea level, Black Desert Resort Golf Club opened in late 2022. Designed by Tom Weiskopf and Neil Smith, the course was built on, through, and around the black lava in the valley of Greater Zion in the southwestern part of the state.

Tipping at 7,371 yards, the Par 71 will not play that long due to the altitude. Three Par-5 holes range between 571 and 589 yards. The quartet of Par-3 holes features an homage to the “Postage Stamp” at Royal Troon, the site of Weiskopf’s only major championship. Adding to the scoring drama will be two risk-reward Par 4 holes that measure less than 325 yards, one on each nine.

The risk-reward from the tee box offers fairways 30 yards wide in places. Framed by two inches of Kentucky Bluegrass, players pushing the edge of where the grass meets the lava will provide the best angles of attack. If the wind in the desert decides to blow, there is plenty of room to navigate off the tee and into the greens.

The 7,000-square-foot targets are carpeted with Bentgrass. The green complexes, above average in size by TOUR standards, will run true and roll just a click under 12 feet. The complexes have plenty of room for different styles of hole locations.

Only two holes have water penalty areas, while 44 bunkers litter the lava fields just 120 miles north of Las Vegas. Closely mown areas repel approaches that do not reach the intended targets. Two inches of Kentucky Bluegrass keep wayward tee shots from being swallowed by the ancient rocks.

Recent PGA TOUR Winners

2023 Season Winners

EventWinner
Sentry Tournament of ChampionsJon Rahm
Sony Open in HawaiiSi Woo Kim
The AMERICAN EXPRESSJon Rahm (2)
Farmers Insurance OpenMax Homa (2)
AT&T Pebble BeachJustin Rose
WM Phoenix OpenScottie Scheffler
The Genesis InvitationalJon Rahm (3)
The Honda ClassicChris Kirk
Arnold Palmer InvitationalKurt Kitayama (first TOUR win)
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipTaylor Moore (first TOUR win)
Corales PuntacanaMatt Wallace (first TOUR win)
WGC – Dell Technologies MPSam Burns
Valero Texas OpenCorey Conners
MastersJon Rahm (4)
RBC HeritageMatt Fitzpatrick
Zurich Classic of New OrleansDavis Riley & Nick Hardy (first TOUR win for each)
Mexico Open at VidantaTony Finau (2)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipWyndham Clark (first TOUR win)
AT&T Byron NelsonJason Day
PGA ChampionshipBrooks Koepka
Charles Schwab ChallengeEmiliano Grillo
MemorialViktor Hovland
RBC Canadian OpenNick Taylor
U.S. OpenWyndham Clark (2)
Travelers ChampionshipKeegan Bradley (2)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicRickie Fowler
John Deere ClassicSepp Straka
Genesis Scottish OpenRory McIlroy (2)
The Open ChampionshipBrian Harman
3M OpenLee Hodges (first TOUR win)
Wyndham ChampionshipLucas Glover
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipLucas Glover (2)
BMW ChampionshipViktor Hovland (2)
TOUR ChampionshipViktor Hovland (3)
Fortinet ChampionshipSahith Theegala
Sanderson Farms ChampionshipLuke List
Shriners Children’s OpenTom Kim
ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIPCollin Morikawa
World Wide TechnologyErik van Rooyen
Butterfield BermudaCamilo Villegas
The RSM ClassicLudvig Aberg

2024 Season Winners

EventWinner
The SentryChris Kirk
Sony Open in HawaiiGrayson Murray
The American ExpressNick Dunlap (a)
Farmers Insurance OpenMatthieu Pavon (rookie)
AT&T Pebble BeachWyndham Clark (54 holes)
WM Phoenix OpenNick Taylor
The Genesis InvitationalHideki Matsuyama
Mexico Open at VidantaJake Knapp (rookie)
Cognizant ClassicAustin Eckroat (first time)
Arnold Palmer InvitationalScottie Scheffler
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipPeter Malnati
Texas Children’s Houston OpenStephan Jaeger (first time)
Valero Texas OpenAkshay Bhatia
88th Masters TournamentScottie Scheffler (3)
RBC HeritageScottie Scheffler (4)
Zurich ClassicRory McIlroy & Shane Lowry
THE CJ CUP Byron NelsonTaylor Pendrith (first time)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipRory McIlroy (2)
106th PGA ChampionshipXander Schauffele
Charles Schwab ChallengeDavis Riley
RBC Canadian OpenRobert MacIntyre (first time)
The 49th Memorial TournamentScottie Scheffler (5)
124th United States OpenBryson DeChambeau
Travelers ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (6)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicCam Davis
John Deere ClassicDavis Thompson (first time)
Genesis Scottish OpenRobert MacIntyre (2)
152nd Open ChampionshipXander Schauffele (2)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
2024 Paris OlympicsScottie Scheffler (7)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
Wyndham ChampionshipAaron Rai (first time)
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipHideki Matsuyama (2)
BMW ChampionshipKeegan Bradley
The TOUR ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (8)
  
FedEx Cup Fall 
Procore ChampionshipPatton Kizzire
Sanderson Farms ChampionshipKevin Yu (first time)

Recent Winners – Black Desert Championship

Italics – not entered/qualified this week.

YearWinnerNotes
2024Inaugural Event 

Sanderson Farms Championship

Look at the size of that chicken!

FedExCup Fall – Event No. 2

Sanderson Farms Championship

Country Club of Jackson

Jackson, Mississippi

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Quick Links:

Odds OutlookDFS ReportHorses for Courses/Stats SuggestExpert Picks

Mike Glasscott: Sanderson Farms Championship tips

Win: Nick Dunlap (25/1), Matt McCarty (45/1)

Top 10: Mark Hubbard (11/2), Ben Griffin (33/10)

Top 20: Wilson Furr (17/4), Greyson Sigg (33/10)

Top 40: Tyler Duncan (12/5), Chad Ramey (29/20)

Bet365: Top of the Board  

Keith Mitchell (22/1): Ranking in the top 10 of most ball-striking categories, the Tennessee native has cashed solo 12th and T12 in his last two events on TOUR. A previous winner on TOUR, the former Georgia Bulldog has never made the cut in four previous visits.

Seamus Power (22/1): The Irishman hit the top 10 for the first time in 2024 on TOUR in his last outing at the FedEx St. Jude Championship. Cashing T10, he extended his streak of play on the weekends to six straight and four registered T28 or better. Making his seventh start at the Country Club of Jackson, the two-time TOUR winner has never been better than T18 but has four paychecks inside the top 30.

Mackenzie Hughes (25/1): The only player entered this week who played in the Presidents Cup, the Canadian enjoys the Bermudagrass of Mississippi. The 2022 champion posted 70-70 (-4) in defense last year, but that wasn’t low enough to play the weekend. Coming off T4 at the Procore Championship, I would expect him to pop right into contention again.

Nick Dunlap (25/1): The Alabama native began the season as an amateur and ended the season in the Top 50 at the BMW Championship. The winner at The American Express in January as an amateur also won and event as a professional at the Barracuda Championship in July. Playing in the final group at the FedEx St. Jude Championship, he couldn’t keep up with eventual champion Hideki Matsuyama but cashed T5 to secure top 50 playing privileges for 2025. I’m not sure anything is going to bother him!

Maverick McNealy (28/1): Still on the hunt for his first victory on TOUR, my choice to win in this column at the Procore Championship, missed the cut. Playing for the first time since the 2021 edition, his best finish in Jackson is T17 on his last visit. Outstanding throughout the bag, a sharp week on approach will be necessary to contend.

Ben Griffin (30/1): The 18-hole, 36-hole, and 54-hole leader last year could not close the deal in regulation and fell short in the five-man playoff. Posting a career scoring average of 68.63, he owns five rounds from eight of 68 or better at the Country Club of Jackson.

J.J. Spaun (30/1): Rolling into town with T29 or better in five of his last six events on TOUR, the Californian is hoping the sixth time in Mississippi is the charm. His best finish in five starts is T34. Recent top-10 paydays at the 3M Open and Wyndham Championship are hard to ignore.

Others to consider:

Patrick Fishburn (33/1): The run of form is third, missed cut, T6, third, and T15 for the GIR machine.

Mark Hubbard (50/1): The leader after 54 holes two years ago, the Californian posted 74 in the final round and shared fifth. Last year, he posted 17-under and missed the playoff by a shot (T6). He’s 30-under over the last eight rounds.

Andrew Novak (55/1): Making the cut in 15 of 20 events in 2024, the Sea Island resident cashed in the top 10 four times and nine times in the top 25. Sitting 20th in SG: Total, he’s quietly under the radar.

Cameron Champ (45/1): The 2018 winner in just his second event with a PGA TOUR card ran T9 here last year. Owns a 68.17 scoring average here over 12 rounds.

Matt McCarty (45/1): Bypassing the Korn Ferry Tour Championship, the three-time winner has cashed in the top 10 seven times in his last nine starts. He won’t be lacking confidence or form.

Chad Ramey (125/1): The Mississippi native, already a winner on TOUR, arrives with five consecutive paychecks deposited on TOUR. Davis Riley (100/1), a two-time winner on TOUR, is also a Mississippi native and in the field.

Greyson Sigg (90/1): T4 at the Procore Championship broke a streak of six missed cuts. Stay hot!

Tyler Duncan (275/1): Cashing T16 and T14 in two of the last three years, the man from Indiana has found something in Mississippi.

Wilson Furr (125/1): The winnerb of the Gator Invitational at the Country Club of Jackson in 2018, the Jackson native calls this his home course.

NOW PLAYING: Sanderson Farms Championship

Host CourseCountry Club of Jackson
Yards (per official scorecard):7,461.
Par:72 (36-36).
Greens:Champion Bermudagrass; 6,200 square feet on average.
Stimpmeter:11.5 feet and up.
Rough:419 Bermudagrass/Zoysia at 2.5 inches.
Bunkers/Water Hazards/In-Play54/7/5.
Architect(s):John Fought (2008).
Defending Champion (event):Luke List.
Multiple Champion(s) Entered:None.
Multiple Champions (course):None.
Fact of the Week:The last five tournaments have been decided by a playoff or one shot.

Sanderson Farms Championship

Golf in Mississippi has been on the PGA TOUR schedule since 1968, but the Country Club of Jackson and the Sanderson Farms Championship both debuted in October of 2014 as part of the 2014-15 season.

An opposite-field event until the 2019-20 season, the 2019 edition was awarded full FedExCup points and benefits.

Luke List, currently listed at 90/1 at Bet365.com will defend the title and look to become the first player to win in back-to-back years.

No player has won this event at the Country Club of Jackson more than once.

The first six events produced first-time winners on the PGA TOUR.

The last four events have crowned previous champions.

The winning total has been 18-under or better in eight of ten events.

All ten champions have ranked in the top 15 of Putting: Birdie or Better Percentage.

Winners have ranked in the top 15 in Ball-Striking in seven of ten events.

Former champions in the field also include Mackenzie Hughes, Cameron Champ, the youngest winner at 23, Ryan Armour, the oldest winner at 43, Cody Gribble, and Peter Malnati.

The field of 132 players includes four open qualifiers and will play 36 holes before being cut to the top 65 and ties.

The winner will pocket $1.368 million of the $7.6 million prize pool plus 500 FedExCup points.

This is the second of eight events in the FedExCup Fall. Read more about the final eight events of the season here.

Recent PGA TOUR Winners

2023 Season Winners

EventWinner
Sentry Tournament of ChampionsJon Rahm
Sony Open in HawaiiSi Woo Kim
The AMERICAN EXPRESSJon Rahm (2)
Farmers Insurance OpenMax Homa (2)
AT&T Pebble BeachJustin Rose
WM Phoenix OpenScottie Scheffler
The Genesis InvitationalJon Rahm (3)
The Honda ClassicChris Kirk
Arnold Palmer InvitationalKurt Kitayama (first TOUR win)
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipTaylor Moore (first TOUR win)
Corales PuntacanaMatt Wallace (first TOUR win)
WGC – Dell Technologies MPSam Burns
Valero Texas OpenCorey Conners
MastersJon Rahm (4)
RBC HeritageMatt Fitzpatrick
Zurich Classic of New OrleansDavis Riley & Nick Hardy (first TOUR win for each)
Mexico Open at VidantaTony Finau (2)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipWyndham Clark (first TOUR win)
AT&T Byron NelsonJason Day
PGA ChampionshipBrooks Koepka
Charles Schwab ChallengeEmiliano Grillo
MemorialViktor Hovland
RBC Canadian OpenNick Taylor
U.S. OpenWyndham Clark (2)
Travelers ChampionshipKeegan Bradley (2)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicRickie Fowler
John Deere ClassicSepp Straka
Genesis Scottish OpenRory McIlroy (2)
The Open ChampionshipBrian Harman
3M OpenLee Hodges (first TOUR win)
Wyndham ChampionshipLucas Glover
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipLucas Glover (2)
BMW ChampionshipViktor Hovland (2)
TOUR ChampionshipViktor Hovland (3)
Fortinet ChampionshipSahith Theegala
Sanderson Farms ChampionshipLuke List
Shriners Children’s OpenTom Kim
ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIPCollin Morikawa
World Wide TechnologyErik van Rooyen
Butterfield BermudaCamilo Villegas
The RSM ClassicLudvig Aberg

2024 Season Winners

EventWinner
The SentryChris Kirk
Sony Open in HawaiiGrayson Murray
The American ExpressNick Dunlap (a)
Farmers Insurance OpenMatthieu Pavon (rookie)
AT&T Pebble BeachWyndham Clark (54 holes)
WM Phoenix OpenNick Taylor
The Genesis InvitationalHideki Matsuyama
Mexico Open at VidantaJake Knapp (rookie)
Cognizant ClassicAustin Eckroat (first time)
Arnold Palmer InvitationalScottie Scheffler
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipPeter Malnati
Texas Children’s Houston OpenStephan Jaeger (first time)
Valero Texas OpenAkshay Bhatia
88th Masters TournamentScottie Scheffler (3)
RBC HeritageScottie Scheffler (4)
Zurich ClassicRory McIlroy & Shane Lowry
THE CJ CUP Byron NelsonTaylor Pendrith (first time)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipRory McIlroy (2)
106th PGA ChampionshipXander Schauffele
Charles Schwab ChallengeDavis Riley
RBC Canadian OpenRobert MacIntyre (first time)
The 49th Memorial TournamentScottie Scheffler (5)
124th United States OpenBryson DeChambeau
Travelers ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (6)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicCam Davis
John Deere ClassicDavis Thompson (first time)
Genesis Scottish OpenRobert MacIntyre (2)
152nd Open ChampionshipXander Schauffele (2)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
2024 Paris OlympicsScottie Scheffler (7)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
Wyndham ChampionshipAaron Rai (first time)
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipHideki Matsuyama (2)
BMW ChampionshipKeegan Bradley
The TOUR ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (8)
  
FedEx Cup Fall 
Procore ChampionshipPatton Kizzire

The Country Club of Jackson

Founded in 1914, the course presently has 27 holes, but the Dogwood and Azalea nines are used for the Sanderson Farms Championship.

In 2008, architect John Faught, with the help of Mike Gogel, renovated the property for PGA TOUR play.

Hosting for the 11th year in a row, the Par-72 will play 7,461 yards for the fifth consecutive season.

The Bermudagrass fairways are framed by two-and-a-half inches of Bermuda/Zoysia rough, a half an inch increase over 2023. Strategically placed bunkers, 56 total, plus seven water penalty areas scattered across five holes, will provide deterrence.

Champion Bermudagrass, tricky and grainy, covers the putting surfaces, which range to 6,200 square feet on average, and run at 11.5 feet and up.

The Par-5 holes rank in the top 15 of most difficult faced on TOUR.

Finding fairways this week will be the first challenge.

Holing putts and keeping the card clean is also necessary. The last five winners have not squared more than five bogeys for the week.

The winning score range includes 22-under in 2021, the tournament scoring record set by Sam Burns (not entered), and 16-under in the inaugural event in the fall of 2014.

Will Zalatoris (not entered) posted 61 (11-under-par), also in the 2021 edition, and owns the course record.

The 36-hole cut has been under par in each edition, including a record 5-under last year and in 2021.

Recent Winners – Sanderson Farms Championship

Italics – not entered/qualified this week.

YearWinnerNotes
2023Luke List (-18)Won a five-man playoff for his second TOUR win.
2022Mackenzie Hughes  (-17)Defeated Sepp Straka in a playoff for his second TOUR victory.
2021Sam Burns (-22)Set the tournament scoring record.
2020Sergio Garcia (-19)Held off 2015 champion Peter Malnati by a shot.
2019Sebastian Munoz      (-18)Knocked out Sungjae Im in a playoff for his first win on TOUR.
2018Cameron Champ    (-21)The youngest winner at 23, the Californian won for the first time on TOUR.
2017Ryan Armour (-19)The oldest winner at 43, the veteran picked up his first victory on TOUR.
2016Cody Gribble (-20)Became the first winner to reach 20-under; Won for the first time on TOUR.
2015Peter Malnati (-18)First-time winner was victorious by a shot.
2014Nick Taylor (-15)The first-time winner was victorious by a shot.

FedExCup Fall – Procore Championship

After attending the 2023 event, I’m bummed I am not there for 2024!

FedExCup Fall – Procore Championship

Silverado Resort

North Course

Napa, California

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Mike Glasscott: Procore Championship tips

Win: Maverick McNealy (22/1), Rico Hoey (70/1)

Top 10: Matt Kuchar (11/2), Brendon Todd (17/4), J.J. Spaun (16/5)

Top 20: Charley Hoffman (33/10), Justin Lower (7/2)

Top 40: Martin Laird (11/5)

Bet365: Top of the Board  

Sahith Theegala (11/1): Only Collin Morikawa (not entered) posted a lower gross total at The TOUR Championship three weeks ago in Atlanta. Defending a title for the first time comes with extra duties, but the 2024 Presidents Cup team player will not be searching for any answers in the dirt in Wine Country. Making his fifth appearance, along with his victory, he cashed T6 and T14 in three previous starts.

Wyndham Clark (12/1): Wins in California at the 2023 U.S. Open at the Los Angeles Country Club and the Pebble Beach Pro-Am last February, golf in the Golden State suits his eye. Cashing T14 or better in six of his last seven tournaments on TOUR suggests his game travels.

Corey Conners (16/1): Peppering Fairways and GIR, the Canadian will look to repay the trust shown to him by International Captain Mike Weir. A Captain’s pick, the Ontario native has not missed a cut on TOUR since the 2023 U.S. Open.

Maverick McNealy (22/1): The Stanford, California, native will look to follow in Theegala’s footsteps as a first-time winner on TOUR from the Golden State. Posting T3 at the 3M Open, the last tournament for the rank and file with Bent/Poa annua greens, he just missed advancing to the BMW Championship with T12 at the FedEx St. Jude Championship in August. The Stanford grad posted 18-under here in 2021 finishing second by a shot to Homa.

Max Homa (22/1): In his last three visits he’s won twice and cashed T7. His previous visit to the top 10 on TOUR came at Quail Hollow, another course where he’s won. Selected to the Presidents Cup by USA Captain Jim Furyk, I couldn’t think of a better landing spot to dial in his game for Royal Montreal in two weeks.

Min Woo Lee (25/1): The Australian, a runner-up twice this season on TOUR, is still looking for his first victory on U.S. soil. The big hitter from Perth will look to overpower the 7,123-yard resort course on debut.  

Luke Clanton (25/1): The amateur from Florida State University, the No. 1 ranked amateur in the world, exploded onto the radar after making the cut at the U.S. Open (T41). Cashing T10 at the Rocket Mortgage Classic in his TOUR debut, the following week he posted 24-under to share second at the John Deere Classic. Returning to Earth with T37 and a missed cut, his final attempt of the 2024 season resulted in solo fifth at the Wyndham Championship.

J.J. Spaun (28/1): A slow start to 2024 kept the San Diego native out of the FedExCup Playoffs but a fantastic regular season finish keeps him on my radar. The Californian did not pick up his first top 25 until T10 in Detroit began a streak of six straight. Closing with T9 at 3M and T3 at Wyndham suggests he’s not satisfied with being ranked 97th.

Players to consider for Top 10 or Top 20 action:

Matt Kuchar (55/1): In the last two regular season events he was in the fight on Sunday. Same with the last two years at Silverado.

Charley Hoffman (90/1): A victory would match Stewart Cink as the oldest champion. A top-20 finish would be his third in his last four starts on TOUR.

Brendon Todd (40/1): Another top-10 result this season would make it three consecutive years in the top 10 in Napa Valley. Possessing a driver that finds fairways, the four-time winner on TOUR also has a deft short game.

Eric Cole (40/1): Rolled in 23 birdies on debut last year and collected money for solo fourth. The Florida native has cashed in eight straight events on TOUR.

Nick Taylor (75/1): Snubbed for the Presidents Cup in his native Canada, there is plenty of motivation this week.

Justin Lower (100/1): Two years ago, he played from the lead in the final group before finishing T4.

Rico Hoey (66/1): In five of his last six events, he’s cashed T26 or better, including three inside the top 10.

Martin Laird (225/1): The TOUR veteran shines this time of year and has played well recently here and at Lake Tahoe.

NOW PLAYING: Procore Championship

Host CourseSilverado Resort – North Course
Yards (per official scorecard):7,123.
Par:72 (35-37).
Greens:Bentgrass/Poa annua; 5,400 square feet on average.
Stimpmeter:11.5 feet and up.
Rough:Bluegrass/Rye at 2.5 inches.
Bunkers/Water Hazards/In-Play55/2/2
Architect(s):Ben Harmon (1955); Robert Trent Jones, Sr., (1966); Johnny Miller (2011).
Defending Champion (event):Sahith Theegala
Multiple Champion(s) Entered:Max Homa (2022, 2021).
Multiple Champions (course):Max Homa, Brendan Steele (not entered).
Fact of the Week:5 of the 8 winners in the previous 10 events at Silverado are native Californians.

Procore Championship

Procore becomes the third sponsor in 11 tournaments in Napa Valley.

The opening event to the wrap-around season from years past transitioned into the opening event for the FedExCup Fall in 2023.

Sahith Theegala, the betting favorite at Bet365.com, returns to defend the title at the site of his first win on the PGA TOUR.

Max Homa, the 2021 and 2022 winner, finished T7 last year as he attempted to join Steve Stricker (John Deere Classic) as the last player to win an event in three consecutive seasons.

The first 10 events produced eight unique winners and five were native Californians.

The last five winners have posted 16-under or better, and three of the previous four champions have posted the lowest winning totals.

Theegala is the only winner in the last six editions not to register in the top three in SG: Tee to Green (T6).

In his first victory in 2021, Max Homa is the only winner in the last six years to finish outside the top seven in Scrambling (T42).

Former champions in the field this week also include Cameron Champ (2019), Kevin Tway (2018), and Monday Qualifier Sangmoon Bae (2014).

The field of 144 players includes four open qualifiers and will play 36 holes before being cut to the top 65 and ties.

The winner will pocket $1.080 million of the $6 million prize pool plus 500 FedExCup points.

Recent PGA TOUR Winners

2023 Season Winners

EventWinner
Sentry Tournament of ChampionsJon Rahm
Sony Open in HawaiiSi Woo Kim
The AMERICAN EXPRESSJon Rahm (2)
Farmers Insurance OpenMax Homa (2)
AT&T Pebble BeachJustin Rose
WM Phoenix OpenScottie Scheffler
The Genesis InvitationalJon Rahm (3)
The Honda ClassicChris Kirk
Arnold Palmer InvitationalKurt Kitayama (first TOUR win)
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipTaylor Moore (first TOUR win)
Corales PuntacanaMatt Wallace (first TOUR win)
WGC – Dell Technologies MPSam Burns
Valero Texas OpenCorey Conners
MastersJon Rahm (4)
RBC HeritageMatt Fitzpatrick
Zurich Classic of New OrleansDavis Riley & Nick Hardy (first TOUR win for each)
Mexico Open at VidantaTony Finau (2)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipWyndham Clark (first TOUR win)
AT&T Byron NelsonJason Day
PGA ChampionshipBrooks Koepka
Charles Schwab ChallengeEmiliano Grillo
MemorialViktor Hovland
RBC Canadian OpenNick Taylor
U.S. OpenWyndham Clark (2)
Travelers ChampionshipKeegan Bradley (2)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicRickie Fowler
John Deere ClassicSepp Straka
Genesis Scottish OpenRory McIlroy (2)
The Open ChampionshipBrian Harman
3M OpenLee Hodges (first TOUR win)
Wyndham ChampionshipLucas Glover
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipLucas Glover (2)
BMW ChampionshipViktor Hovland (2)
TOUR ChampionshipViktor Hovland (3)
Fortinet ChampionshipSahith Theegala
Sanderson Farms ChampionshipLuke List
Shriners Children’s OpenTom Kim
ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIPCollin Morikawa
World Wide TechnologyErik van Rooyen
Butterfield BermudaCamilo Villegas
The RSM ClassicLudvig Aberg

2024 Season Winners

EventWinner
The SentryChris Kirk
Sony Open in HawaiiGrayson Murray
The American ExpressNick Dunlap (a)
Farmers Insurance OpenMatthieu Pavon (rookie)
AT&T Pebble BeachWyndham Clark (54 holes)
WM Phoenix OpenNick Taylor
The Genesis InvitationalHideki Matsuyama
Mexico Open at VidantaJake Knapp (rookie)
Cognizant ClassicAustin Eckroat (first time)
Arnold Palmer InvitationalScottie Scheffler
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipPeter Malnati
Texas Children’s Houston OpenStephan Jaeger (first time)
Valero Texas OpenAkshay Bhatia
88th Masters TournamentScottie Scheffler (3)
RBC HeritageScottie Scheffler (4)
Zurich ClassicRory McIlroy & Shane Lowry
THE CJ CUP Byron NelsonTaylor Pendrith (first time)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipRory McIlroy (2)
106th PGA ChampionshipXander Schauffele
Charles Schwab ChallengeDavis Riley
RBC Canadian OpenRobert MacIntyre (first time)
The 49th Memorial TournamentScottie Scheffler (5)
124th United States OpenBryson DeChambeau
Travelers ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (6)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicCam Davis
John Deere ClassicDavis Thompson (first time)
Genesis Scottish OpenRobert MacIntyre (2)
152nd Open ChampionshipXander Schauffele (2)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
2024 Paris OlympicsScottie Scheffler (7)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
Wyndham ChampionshipAaron Rai (first time)
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipHideki Matsuyama (2)
BMW ChampionshipKeegan Bradley
The TOUR ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (8)

Recent Winners – Procore Championship

Italics – not entered/qualified this week.

YearWinnerNotes
2023Sahith Theegala (-21)California native won for the first time on TOUR and tied the tournament scoring record.
2022Max Homa (-16)Successfully defended his 2021 title by defeating 2016 Masters champion Danny Willett by a shot.
2021Max Homa (-19)Closing with 65, he beat Maverick McNealy by a shot to pick up his first top 10 since June.
2020Stewart Cink (-21)Became the oldest winner at 47 while setting the tournament scoring record.
2019Cameron Champ    (-17)Sacramento native held off Adam Hadwin to win by one.
2018Kevin Tway (-14)Posting the highest winning total, Tway needed a playoff to win for the first time on TOUR.

FedEx Cup Playoffs – BMW Championship

I wish I was a headlight on a northbound train.

I’d shine my light through that cool, Colorado rain.

FedExCup Playoffs – BMW Championship

Event No. 2

Castle Pines Golf Club

Castle Rock, Colorado

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Quick Links:

Odds OutlookDFS ReportHorses for Courses/Stats SuggestExpert Picks

Mike Glasscott: BMW Championship tips

Win: Wyndham Clark (25/1), Patrick Cantlay (16/1)

Top 5: Tony Finau (9/2)

Top 10: Corey Conners (3/1), Nick Dunlap (15/4)

Top 20: Max Greyserman (29/20)

Bet365: Top of the Board  

Scottie Scheffler (7/2): The only bogey on his radar is the man next on his list. Any result inside T4 will secure the top spot in the Starting Strokes next week at East Lake, regardless of any other results. Castle Pines provides a new canvas and another opportunity to win his first FedExCup Playoffs event, or at worst, secure the top spot for the big bonus payday.

Xander Schauffele (6/1): The only man who can take the lead from the World No. 1 is the World No. 2. The two-time major champion in 2024 closed with 63 last Sunday making Matsuyama earn it in Memphis. Cashing T2, the Californian knocked a chunk off Scheffler’s lead, but only a victory this week, plus some help from his Ryder Cup teammate, will result in him taking over the points lead.

Rory McIlroy (14/1): Finishing in the bottom three last week in Memphis, the Ulsterman did not do much of anything well. Dropping to fifth in the Playoffs standings, his place at East Lake is secured, but his desire to get back on the horse will be hotter than the forecast in the mountains. The three-time winner at East Lake also has the 2012 BWM Championship at Crooked Stick in 2012 on his mantle.

Collin Morikawa (14/1): Since his performance at the Masters, the two-time major champion has been in the weekly preview when entered. Not many hit more fairways, and that skill set travels. Previously a winner at Old Greenwood, Muirfield Village, and The Concession, I don’t have to sell his affinity for courses designed by the Golden Bear.

Patrick Cantlay (16/1): The only multiple BMW Championship winner in the field, the Californian will attempt to make it a hat trick of new venues where he has lifted the trophy. Balanced throughout the bag, he was one shot off last week of hitting the top 10 for the third time in four starts. Twice a winner at the Memorial, he also has an eye for Jack Nicklaus’ designs.

Hideki Matsuyama (18/1): Becoming the first Japanese player to win a FedExCup Playoffs event is another box checked off for the world superstar. Getting it over the finish line in Memphis last week without his regular caddy and coach should lift his confidence higher than the altitude this week. Nobody has won the first two Playoffs events since 2018.

Viktor Hovland (18/1): The defending champion at the event, the Norwegian picked up just his second top-10 payday of the year last week at the FedEx St. Jude Championship. Sitting six shots off the 54-hole lead, he posted his third consecutive round of 66 or better to share second. Only Cantlay has won consecutive BMW Championships.

Players to consider for Top 10 or Top 20 action:

Tony Finau (25/1): If a shootout breaks out, his putting must keep up. Growing up in Utah, playing at elevation won’t bother him.

Wyndham Clark (25/1): At media day earlier this year, the man who grew up in Denver and played out of Cherry Hills surmised he played over 25 rounds on this layout over the years. If there’s a home-state advantage, he owns it. Cashing T14 or better in four of his last five events on TOUR, including T7 last week, his story might already have been written.

Billy Horschel (40/1): The only player in this field to win a PGA TOUR event in Colorado, the Florida man has been racking up big finishes after his tough loss at The Open. His run of events in the top 10 hit three straight last week with T10 in Memphis.

Corey Conners (45/1): Sitting ninth in SG: Tee to Green and fifth SG: Approach I love him on unfamiliar greens.

Nick Dunlap (66/1): Won the 2023 U.S. Amateur at Cherry Hills last summer and played in the final group last week. Needing a par at the final hole to qualify for the BMW Championship, he held his nerve and cashed T5. The two-time winner plucked one of his victories at Old Greenwood, another Nicklaus course.

Max Greyserman (100/1): The 2023 winner at TPC Colorado at Heron Lakes, the runner-up at the 3M Open and Wyndham Championship, knocked out a KFT field last summer to punch his ticket to the PGA TOUR.

Castle Pines Golf Club

Opening in 1981, the Jack Nicklaus design 30 miles south of Denver hosted The INTERNATIONAL, a PGA TOUR stop in late summer from 1986-2006.

The 2006 edition tipped out at 7,619 yards and played to Par-72. For the 2024 BMW Championship, Nicklaus and Total Turf rebuilt all the tees and greens, and the new yardage on the scorecard is 8,130 yards.

Hosting the BMW Championship, or any FedExCup Playoffs event for the first time, the biggest ballpark used on TOUR EVER sits over 6,000 feet above sea level. Bent/Poa greens and Bent/Poa/Rye fairways and rough can survive the less-than-hospitable cold weather months.

The 77 bunkers, 10 water penalty areas, and four inches of Bluegrass/Fescue/Rye rough frames the fairways and putting surfaces. Over 400 feet of elevation changes and the altitude of Castle Pines will require committing to yardages and ball flights. The greens, 5,600 square feet on average, are tiered and are prepped to run at 13 feet on the Stimpmeter.

Only Adam Scott (2000) and Jason Day (2006) have played tournament golf at Castle Pines. Neither survived the cut to play the weekend, and the redesign should remove any memories of 18-plus years ago.

The ability to navigate elevation changes, uneven lies, and math conversions for yardages into greens, patience, experience, and execution from tee to green will be the key stats to follow this week.

NOW PLAYING: BMW Championship

Host CourseCastle Pines Golf Club
Yards (per official scorecard):8,130.
Par:72 (36-36).
Greens:T1-Bentgrass/Poa annua; 5,600 square feet on average.
Stimpmeter:13 feet and up.
Rough:Bluegrass/Fescue/Rye at 4 inches.
Bunkers/Water Hazards/In-Play77/10/10
Architect(s):Jack Nicklaus (1981; 2006 and after).
Defending Champion (event):Viktor Hovland.
Multiple Champion(s) Entered:Patrick Cantlay (2022, 2021).
Multiple Champions (course):None.
Fact of the Week:At 8,130 yards, this is the longest course in the history of the PGA TOUR.

FedExCup Playoffs Event No. 2 – BMW Championship

The oldest non-major championship event on TOUR, the Western Open debuted in 1899 in Chicago.

The Playoffs began in 2007, and the Western Open evolved into the BMW Championship and continued rotating at courses throughout the Midwest and Mideast. The 2014 edition was played in the Denver suburbs at Cherry Hills Golf Club, the site of the famous 1960 U.S. Open. Billy Horschel won the event before winning the FedExCup Playoffs the following week at East Lake.

Viktor Hovland, the reigning event champion, won his first FedExCup Playoff event in 2023 at Olympia Fields North Course in the Chicago suburbs before winning the FedExCup Playoffs at East Lake.

Patrick Cantlay won the previous two editions at first-time host courses on the East Coast at Wilmington Country Club (Delaware) and Caves Valley Golf Club outside Baltimore.

Other BMW Championship winners in the field this week include Justin Thomas (2019, Medinah No. 3, Chicago), Keegan Bradley (2018, Aronimink, Philadelphia), Jason Day (2015, Conway Farms, Chicago), and Rory McIlroy (2012, Crooked Stick, Indianapolis).

The 50 players in the field this week will play all 72 holes (stroke play), and the top 30 after Sunday will qualify for The TOUR Championship at East Lake next week. All 50 players in the field have qualified for the eight Signature Events in 2025.

The winner will pocket $3.6 million of the $20 million prize pool plus 2,000 FedExCup points, quadruple the amount given to winners during the regular season. For the Playoffs, all point values are worth four times the amount awarded during the regular season.

Recent PGA TOUR Winners

2023 Season Winners

EventWinner
Sentry Tournament of ChampionsJon Rahm
Sony Open in HawaiiSi Woo Kim
The AMERICAN EXPRESSJon Rahm (2)
Farmers Insurance OpenMax Homa (2)
AT&T Pebble BeachJustin Rose
WM Phoenix OpenScottie Scheffler
The Genesis InvitationalJon Rahm (3)
The Honda ClassicChris Kirk
Arnold Palmer InvitationalKurt Kitayama (first TOUR win)
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipTaylor Moore (first TOUR win)
Corales PuntacanaMatt Wallace (first TOUR win)
WGC – Dell Technologies MPSam Burns
Valero Texas OpenCorey Conners
MastersJon Rahm (4)
RBC HeritageMatt Fitzpatrick
Zurich Classic of New OrleansDavis Riley & Nick Hardy (first TOUR win for each)
Mexico Open at VidantaTony Finau (2)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipWyndham Clark (first TOUR win)
AT&T Byron NelsonJason Day
PGA ChampionshipBrooks Koepka
Charles Schwab ChallengeEmiliano Grillo
MemorialViktor Hovland
RBC Canadian OpenNick Taylor
U.S. OpenWyndham Clark (2)
Travelers ChampionshipKeegan Bradley (2)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicRickie Fowler
John Deere ClassicSepp Straka
Genesis Scottish OpenRory McIlroy (2)
The Open ChampionshipBrian Harman
3M OpenLee Hodges (first TOUR win)
Wyndham ChampionshipLucas Glover
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipLucas Glover (2)
BMW ChampionshipViktor Hovland (2)
TOUR ChampionshipViktor Hovland (3)
Fortinet ChampionshipSahith Theegala
Sanderson Farms ChampionshipLuke List
Shriners Children’s OpenTom Kim
ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIPCollin Morikawa
World Wide TechnologyErik van Rooyen
Butterfield BermudaCamilo Villegas
The RSM ClassicLudvig Aberg

2024 Season Winners

EventWinner
The SentryChris Kirk
Sony Open in HawaiiGrayson Murray
The American ExpressNick Dunlap (a)
Farmers Insurance OpenMatthieu Pavon (rookie)
AT&T Pebble BeachWyndham Clark (54 holes)
WM Phoenix OpenNick Taylor
The Genesis InvitationalHideki Matsuyama
Mexico Open at VidantaJake Knapp (rookie)
Cognizant ClassicAustin Eckroat (first time)
Arnold Palmer InvitationalScottie Scheffler
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipPeter Malnati
Texas Children’s Houston OpenStephan Jaeger (first time)
Valero Texas OpenAkshay Bhatia
88th Masters TournamentScottie Scheffler (3)
RBC HeritageScottie Scheffler (4)
Zurich ClassicRory McIlroy & Shane Lowry
THE CJ CUP Byron NelsonTaylor Pendrith (first time)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipRory McIlroy (2)
106th PGA ChampionshipXander Schauffele
Charles Schwab ChallengeDavis Riley
RBC Canadian OpenRobert MacIntyre (first time)
The 49th Memorial TournamentScottie Scheffler (5)
124th United States OpenBryson DeChambeau
Travelers ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (6)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicCam Davis
John Deere ClassicDavis Thompson (first time)
Genesis Scottish OpenRobert MacIntyre (2)
152nd Open ChampionshipXander Schauffele (2)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
2024 Paris OlympicsScottie Scheffler
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
Wyndham ChampionshipAaron Rai (first time)
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipHideki Matsuyama (2)

Recent Winners – BMW Championship

Italics – not entered/qualified this week.

YearWinnerNotes
2023Viktor HovlandStormed home with 61 on Sunday at Olympia Fields to erase a three-shot deficit entering the final round. First Playoffs victory.
2022Patrick Cantlay (-14)Successfully defended his 2021 championship at Wilmington CC.
2021Patrick Cantlay (-27)Needed six playoff holes to win and set the event tournament scoring record to par at Caves Valley GC.
2020Jon Rahm (-4)Defeated Dustin Johnson in a playoff at Olympia Fields.
2019Justin Thomas (-25)Destroyed the famous Medinah No. 3 and won by three over Cantlay.
2018Keegan Bradley (-20)Set the event scoring record total at Aronimink outside Philadelphia. Won in a playoff.

One and Done

I’ll be joining Spotter’s game again this season. Now, where did I put my checkbook…

35 events.

1 player per event (plus a backup pick if your guy gets kidnapped on Wednesday night and doesn’t make it to the first tee Thursday).

1 use per year.

Add up the total money and Spotter is yer uncle!

EventSelectionEarnings
The SentryCollin Morikawa690,500
Sony Open in HawaiiCorey Conners18,592
The American ExpressAdam Hadwin310,800
Farmers Insurance OpenJason Day0
AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-AmJordan Spieth70,125
WM Phoenix OpenMatt Fitzpatrick156,200
The Genesis InvitationalMax Homa329,000
Mexico Open at VidantaTony Finau145,125
Cognizant ClassicRussell Henley32,850
Arnold Palmer InvitationalScottie Scheffler4,000,000
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipWill Zalatoris0
Valspar ChampionshipSam Burns0
Texas Children’s Houston OpenWyndham Clark54,418
Valero Texas OpenC Bezuidenhout67,735
88th Masters TournamentRory McIlroy175,500
RBC HeritagePatrick Cantlay1,160,000
Zurich ClassicNick Taylor122,375
THE CJ CUP Byron NelsonStephan Jaeger112,100
Myrtle Beach ClassicDaniel Berger20,350
Wells Fargo ChampionshipSahith Theegala47,000
106th PGA ChampionshipBrooks Koepka113,962
Charles Schwab ChallengeTaylor Moore0
RBC Canadian OpenMackenzie Hughes295,316
49th Memorial TournamentBen An200,200
124th United States OpenXander Schauffele639,289
Travelers ChampionshipBrian Harman520,000
Rocket Mortgage ClassicAkshay Bhatia616,400
John Deere ClassicDenny McCarthy252,400
Genesis Scottish OpenLudvig Aberg330,750
152nd Open ChampionshipTommy Fleetwood0
3M OpenEmiliano Grillo61,695
Wyndham ChampionshipSungjae Im31,995
FedEx St. Jude Championship  
   
Total Winnings: 10,574,677

His game has more fun stuff to it. Reach out @A340Spotter on Twitter or A340Spotter@frontier.com for more details and to join.

Recapping Last Week – FedExCup Playoffs – FedEx St. Jude Championship

Two events left!

I’m playing Justin Thomas this week and Hideki Matsuyama next week.

No room for the Irishman Lowry or 2023 FedExCup Playoff champion Viktor Hovland.

TPC Southwind has produced an interesting list of winners over the years, both as a tune-up event before the U.S. Open (limited firepower fields) and in the five years as a WGC or FedExCup Playoff event.

Fortune favors the bold, and sadly those who have earned their places at the top of the heap. With no cut, all 70 players have a chance to pull an upset. I’d save the big hitters for ramping up next week into East Lake.

WHO WROTE THAT? WAS THAT ME???

Of my four choices left, I had the winner and T2 and went with the guy who cashed T30.

Yep, that’s me.

Again.

This Week – FedExCup Playoffs – BMW Championship

LAST CHANCE.

My choices, as of today, include:

Hideki Matsuyama (3)

Wyndham Clark (6) – Riding high with the hometown homey

Shane Lowry (11)

Robert MacIntyre (12)

Byeong Hun An (15)

Viktor Hovland (16)

Matthieu Pavon (20)

Aaron Rai (21)

OTHERS

Good luck!

FedEx Cup Playoffs – FedEx St. Jude Championship

FedExCup Playoffs – FedEx St. Jude Championship

Event No. 1

TPC Southwind

Memphis, Tennessee

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Quick Links:

DFS ReportHorses for Courses/Stats SuggestExpert Picks

Mike Glasscott: FedExCup St. Jude Championship tips

Win: Sam Burns (40/1), Eric Cole (100/1)

Top 10: Hideki Matsuyama (9/4), Aaron Rai (16/5), Billy Horschel (16/5), Justin Thomas (16/5)

Top 20: Davis Thomspon (17/10), Adam Scott (3/2)

Bet365: Top of the Board  

Scottie Scheffler (15/4): The only man in the field with a gold medal and six wins, he is still looking for his first top-10 payday in the land of Elvis. The Texan, ranked No. 1 in the Official World Golf Ranking, is also hunting for his first Playoff title.

Xander Schauffele (8/1): The winner at East Lake in his rookie season of 2017, the two-time major champion is flying along this summer. Making his seventh start at TPC Southwind, his T6 from 2020 is the only finish inside the top 10. Only Scheffler has more top-10 results this season than the Californian.

Rory McIlroy (10/1): The summer of going close extended with T5 at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Close calls at the U.S. Open and Genesis Scottish Open suggest he’s honing in on another title. A big Sunday in 2023, posting 65 in the final, saw him miss the playoff by a shot and claim his best finish near the Big River. The three-time winner of the Playoffs knows this is a marathon, not a sprint. He’s never won the first event or at TPC Southwind.

Collin Morikawa (12/1): A winless 2024 sounds disappointing, but T23 or better since the second week in April paints a different picture. Arriving for the 2020 edition, he’s posted T26 or better, including T13-T5 over the last two editions, suggesting he’s comfortable in the heat and humidity of summer in West Tennessee. With some of the friendliest Champion Bermudagrass surfaces, he should be on the radar.

Ludvig Aberg (20/1): There’s no questioning his talent, but relying on the consistency to perform on the big stage event in and out might be weighing on him. Summers in Europe are different from the heat and humidity of the States.

Tommy Fleetwood (22/1): Did the silver medal performance in Paris spend the final gas in the tank? After missing the cut at The Open, the Englishman rode the wave of patriotism to the medal stand. Sitting at No. 32 in the Playoffs, a big result is not required this week. In four previous visits, he cashed T4 on debut in 2019 and missed the playoffs by a shot last year. Torn.

Patrick Cantlay (22/1): The 2021 FedExCup Playoffs winner returns to the scene of his 2023 playoff defeat by Lucas Glover (not qualified). Without a win on his ledger in 2024, the Californian flashed at Harbour Town (T3), another track with small greens, plus big paydays at Pinehurst No. 2 (T3) and TPC River Highlands (T5).

Hideki Matsuyama (25/1): Yet to win a Playoff event in his previous 10 years, last year was the first time the Japanese start did not make the top 30 at East Lake. Sitting eighth in the standings entering the week buoyed by a win at The Genesis Invitational at Riviera last winter, he will return to Georgia for the final in 2024. The bronze medal winner in Paris shared second after falling in a playoff in 2021.

Tom Kim (28/1): Finishing second in a playoff to his best friend Scheffler in Connecticut, the young Korean star has split time missing the cut or cashing inside the top 15 in his last four starts. A superb driver of the golf ball, his results of T24 last year and T13 suggest he’s comfortable in Memphis.

Players to consider for Top 10 or Top 20 action:

Billy Horschel (40/1): Nothing better than a front-row seat last week at Wyndham to inspire a big result on another course he plays well.

Justin Thomas (40/1): The winner here by three shots in 2020 has been playing himself into contention recently. Never worse than T26, the two-time major champion on Bermudagrass should feature this week.

Aaron Rai (40/1): The only blemish in his last five outings was playing the weekend and fading at The Open Championship. The first-time winner on TOUR last week in North Carolina will look to make it back-to-back titles. Anyone who hits that many fairways and greens cannot be omitted this week.

Sam Burns (50/1): The angle of picking apart a tee-to-green challenge won’t bother the two-time winner at Innisbrook. Knocked out in a playoff in 2021, I return to a guy with results on Bermudagrass.

Adam Scott (60/1): Ranked No. 46 entering the week, the Australian knows it is time to continue the form he found in Great Britain. Back-to-back top-10 paydays and a nice break will have him ready for the challenge this week.

Davis Thompson (70/1): The JDC winner knocked off the rust last week with T12 at Wyndham to register his 12th top-25 payday of the season. Don’t tell anyone he is currently ninth in SG: Total!

Eric Cole (100/1): Sitting outside the top 50 (No. 54), the Florida man will look to add to his recent top-10 haul. Posting T7 or better in three of his last five events, including last weekend in Greensboro, he knows another big payday is required to continue in the Playoffs.

TPC Southwind

The 1998 design from Ron Prichard began a regular run on TOUR in 1989 and continues today. After graduating from a World Golf Championship event in the summer from 2019 through 2021, TPC Southwind will kick off the FedExCup Playoffs for the third consecutive year.

Like many courses in the hot and humid zone, TPC Southwind changed out Bentgrass greens to Champion Bermuda before the 2012 edition. The greens, on average spanning 4,200 square feet, are the third-smallest targets on TOUR annually and will run 12.5 and up on the Stimpmeter.

Tipping out at 7,243 yards and playing to Par-70, the test off the tee, into and around the greens is the challenge. Meyer Zoysiagrass fairways are framed by three inches of nest-y Bermuda rough and water penalty areas on 11 holes.

The Par-70 has one of the easiest pairs of Par-5 holes on TOUR. Last year, more than 53 percent of the field birdied the 579-yard challenge on the front and 530-yard shorty on the back. The four Par-3 holes didn’t provide much resistance either. With only one of the four playing over 200 yards, the quartet registered under par in 2023.

While most will score on the Par-3 and Par-5 holes, the dozen Par-4 chances will be the toughest test. Avoiding bogeys and keeping it between the lines on the four-shot chances provided parts of the winning formula in the last five seasons.

The average winning score over the last five editions, all limited field events, is 15.5 under par. The scoring average has been under par in all five tournaments.

Justin Rose signed for 61 in Round 3 last season, tying the course tournament record.

NOW PLAYING: FedEx St. Jude Championship

Host CourseTPC Southwind
Yards (per official scorecard):7,243.
Par:70 (30-35).
Greens:Champion Bermuda; 4,300 square feet on average.
Stimpmeter:12.5 feet and up.
Rough:Bermuda at 2.5 inches and growing.
Bunkers/Water Hazards/In-Play75/11/11.
Architect(s):Ron Prichard (1988).
Defending Champion:Lucas Glover (did not qualify)
Multiple Champion(s) Entered:Will Zalatoris (2022).
Multiple Champions (course):None.
Course Record:61; Justin Rose (Round 3, 2023).
72 Hole Tournament Record:264, (-16); last in 2021 (Abraham Ancer, not qualified).
Fact of the Week:Only two of the five previous winners at TPC Southwind are in the field this week.

FedExCup Playoffs Event No. 1 – FedEx St. Jude Championship

Hosting for the first time in 1958, Memphis continues to be the home to a PGA TOUR event in 2024.

The Playoffs began in 2007 with a four-event series to determine the champion. Formally the Westchester Classic, the opening event of the Playoffs was contested on historic East Coast tracks until migrating to Memphis for the 2022 edition.

The first two winners of the Playoffs in Memphis featured fantastic ball-strikers Lucas Glover (not qualified) last year after Will Zalatoris won the first edition in 2022. Both winners needed a playoff to lift the trophy.

Justin Thomas, the winner of the World Golf Championship in 2020, is the only champion of three from that event entered this week.

The Playoff format changed with the 2023 edition. Only 70 players are eligible and that continues for the 2024 tournament.

The no-cut event guarantees four rounds of stroke play to push into the top 50 for The BMW Championship next week outside Denver.

The winner will pocket $3.6 million of the $20 million prize pool plus 2,000 FedExCup points, quadruple the amount given to winners during the regular season. For the Playoffs, all point values are quadrupled.

Recent PGA TOUR Winners

2023 Season Winners

EventWinner
Sentry Tournament of ChampionsJon Rahm
Sony Open in HawaiiSi Woo Kim
The AMERICAN EXPRESSJon Rahm (2)
Farmers Insurance OpenMax Homa (2)
AT&T Pebble BeachJustin Rose
WM Phoenix OpenScottie Scheffler
The Genesis InvitationalJon Rahm (3)
The Honda ClassicChris Kirk
Arnold Palmer InvitationalKurt Kitayama (first TOUR win)
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipTaylor Moore (first TOUR win)
Corales PuntacanaMatt Wallace (first TOUR win)
WGC – Dell Technologies MPSam Burns
Valero Texas OpenCorey Conners
MastersJon Rahm (4)
RBC HeritageMatt Fitzpatrick
Zurich Classic of New OrleansDavis Riley & Nick Hardy (first TOUR win for each)
Mexico Open at VidantaTony Finau (2)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipWyndham Clark (first TOUR win)
AT&T Byron NelsonJason Day
PGA ChampionshipBrooks Koepka
Charles Schwab ChallengeEmiliano Grillo
MemorialViktor Hovland
RBC Canadian OpenNick Taylor
U.S. OpenWyndham Clark (2)
Travelers ChampionshipKeegan Bradley (2)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicRickie Fowler
John Deere ClassicSepp Straka
Genesis Scottish OpenRory McIlroy (2)
The Open ChampionshipBrian Harman
3M OpenLee Hodges (first TOUR win)
Wyndham ChampionshipLucas Glover
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipLucas Glover (2)
BMW ChampionshipViktor Hovland (2)
TOUR ChampionshipViktor Hovland (3)
Fortinet ChampionshipSahith Theegala
Sanderson Farms ChampionshipLuke List
Shriners Children’s OpenTom Kim
ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIPCollin Morikawa
World Wide TechnologyErik van Rooyen
Butterfield BermudaCamilo Villegas
The RSM ClassicLudvig Aberg

2024 Season Winners

EventWinner
The SentryChris Kirk
Sony Open in HawaiiGrayson Murray
The American ExpressNick Dunlap (a)
Farmers Insurance OpenMatthieu Pavon (rookie)
AT&T Pebble BeachWyndham Clark (54 holes)
WM Phoenix OpenNick Taylor
The Genesis InvitationalHideki Matsuyama
Mexico Open at VidantaJake Knapp (rookie)
Cognizant ClassicAustin Eckroat (first time)
Arnold Palmer InvitationalScottie Scheffler
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipPeter Malnati
Texas Children’s Houston OpenStephan Jaeger (first time)
Valero Texas OpenAkshay Bhatia
88th Masters TournamentScottie Scheffler (3)
RBC HeritageScottie Scheffler (4)
Zurich ClassicRory McIlroy & Shane Lowry
THE CJ CUP Byron NelsonTaylor Pendrith (first time)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipRory McIlroy (2)
106th PGA ChampionshipXander Schauffele
Charles Schwab ChallengeDavis Riley
RBC Canadian OpenRobert MacIntyre (first time)
The 49th Memorial TournamentScottie Scheffler (5)
124th United States OpenBryson DeChambeau
Travelers ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (6)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicCam Davis
John Deere ClassicDavis Thompson (first time)
Genesis Scottish OpenRobert MacIntyre (2)
152nd Open ChampionshipXander Schauffele (2)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
2024 Paris OlympicsScottie Scheffler
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas
Wyndham ChampionshipAaron Rai (first time)

Recent Winners – FedEx St. Jude Championship

Italics – not entered/qualified this week.

YearWinnerNotes
2023Lucas Glover (-15)Needed a playoff to defeat Patrick Cantlay and win for the second consecutive week on TOUR. Did not qualify for the 2024 Playoffs.
2022Will Zalatoris (-15)Defeated Sepp Straka in a playoff to become just the second player to win for the first time on TOUR in the FedExCup Playoffs (Villegas, 2008 BMW).
2021Abraham Ancer (-16)Used extra holes to defeat Sam Burns and Hideki Matsuyama in the last edition of the WGC-FESJI.
2020Justin Thomas (-13)Winning by three shots, he was one of five players to post double digits under par for the event.
2019Brooks Koepka (-16)Won the first edition of the WGC-FESJC by three shots.

One and Done

I’ll be joining Spotter’s game again this season. Now, where did I put my checkbook…

35 events.

1 player per event (plus a backup pick if your guy gets kidnapped on Wednesday night and doesn’t make it to the first tee Thursday).

1 use per year.

Add up the total money and Spotter is yer uncle!

EventSelectionEarnings
The SentryCollin Morikawa690,500
Sony Open in HawaiiCorey Conners18,592
The American ExpressAdam Hadwin310,800
Farmers Insurance OpenJason Day0
AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-AmJordan Spieth70,125
WM Phoenix OpenMatt Fitzpatrick156,200
The Genesis InvitationalMax Homa329,000
Mexico Open at VidantaTony Finau145,125
Cognizant ClassicRussell Henley32,850
Arnold Palmer InvitationalScottie Scheffler4,000,000
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipWill Zalatoris0
Valspar ChampionshipSam Burns0
Texas Children’s Houston OpenWyndham Clark54,418
Valero Texas OpenC Bezuidenhout67,735
88th Masters TournamentRory McIlroy175,500
RBC HeritagePatrick Cantlay1,160,000
Zurich ClassicNick Taylor122,375
THE CJ CUP Byron NelsonStephan Jaeger112,100
Myrtle Beach ClassicDaniel Berger20,350
Wells Fargo ChampionshipSahith Theegala47,000
106th PGA ChampionshipBrooks Koepka113,962
Charles Schwab ChallengeTaylor Moore0
RBC Canadian OpenMackenzie Hughes295,316
49th Memorial TournamentBen An200,200
124th United States OpenXander Schauffele639,289
Travelers ChampionshipBrian Harman520,000
Rocket Mortgage ClassicAkshay Bhatia616,400
John Deere ClassicDenny McCarthy252,400
Genesis Scottish OpenLudvig Aberg330,750
152nd Open ChampionshipTommy Fleetwood0
3M OpenEmiliano Grillo61,695
Wyndham ChampionshipSungjae Im31,995
   
Total Winnings: 10,574,677

His game has more fun stuff to it. Reach out @A340Spotter on Twitter or A340Spotter@frontier.com for more details and to join.

Recapping Last Week – Wyndham Championship

With just three weeks remaining, this is my favorite part of the season when I realize who I have forgotten to play.

I know I will have Justin Thomas, Viktor Hovland, and Hideki Matsuyama to choose from over the next two weeks. Oh, I didn’t use Shane Lowry, either. Banging.

Thankfully, Sungjae Im was not thrown to the wolves earlier in the season when he was floundering. It’s strange to have the betting favorite this late in the season, but I cannot complain.

You can’t win the last three events of the season if you don’t win the first one!

Sungjae Im (T41) – Big boy ran out of gas on the wonky schedule. Glad he waited for me to select him! Hope you used one of the selections below instead!

Others to consider

Billy Horschel – I’m not the biggest fan, and I have no idea how he will react after just missing out at Royal Troon, but he loves Sedgefield. Another top 10 finish (T7).

Shane Lowry – Fresh off his week in Paris, I’m glad I can wait. Posted 2-under and MC.

Si Woo Kim – One of the few, if any, former champions I would look at this week. Posted 2-OVER and MC.

May Greyserman – SOLO SECOND, Aaron Rai – WINNER, and Cam Davis – MC all deserve a look depending on your situation.

This Week – FedExCup Playoffs – FedEx St. Jude Championship

Two events left!

I’m playing Justin Thomas this week and Hideki Matsuyama next week.

No room for the Irishman Shane Lowry or 2023 FedExCup Playoff champion Viktor Hovland.

TPC Southwind has produced an interesting list of winners over the years both as a tune-up event before the U.S. Open (limited firepower fields) and in the five years as a WGC or FedExCup Playoff event.

Fortune favors the bold, and sadly those who have earned their places at the top of the heap. With no cut, all 70 players have a chance to pull an upset. I’d save the big hitters for ramping up next week into East Lake.

Good luck!

2024 Men’s Olympic Golf

Oui

Quatre!

2024 Men’s Olympic Golf

Le Golf National

Saint-Quentin-En-Yvelines, France

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Quick Links:

Odds OutlookDFS ReportHorses for Courses/Stats SuggestExpert Picks

Mike Glasscott: Olympics Tips

Win: Xander Schauffele (6/1), Jon Rahm (9/1)

Top 3: Collin Morikawa (4/1)

Top 5: Tommy Fleetwood (15/4), Alex Noren (9/2), Guido Migliozzi (11/1)

Top 10: Ryan Fox (4/1), Thorbjorn Olesen (4/1), CT Pan (7/1)

Bet365: Top of the Board  

Scottie Scheffler (4/1): Don’t let the pictures on social media of the World Number 1 enjoying the events with his wife and child distract you. The Texan is always all business behind the scenes, but his only “struggles” this season have come on new courses to him. He posted T8, T41, and T7 during the three rotating majors, yet he posted all six wins on tracks he’s previously had success or reps. I’m running out of ways to express my disdain for playing the favorite!

Xander Schauffele (6/1): The reigning Olympics Men’s Golf champion, the Californian has plenty of winning stamps on his passport. The 2018 WGC-Champions winner in China has also won twice in Scotland, including the 2024 Open Championship. Other victories at The Sentry and East Lake against elite fields on difficult routings reinforce his class. If the lid is truly off, he will be the first player to win two gold medals in Men’s Golf.

Rory McIlroy (6/1): The only player from the top three choices to play this course in a tournament setting, the four-time major winner has unfinished business on this course and at this event. One of the seven men in the playoff for bronze in 2021, McIlroy has finished third and fourth in two visits to the Open de France and won the 2018 Ryder Cup.

Jon Rahm (9/1): Posting a top 10 in the final major of the season for the first time in 2024, the Spaniard is rounding into form. In two previous attempts at Le Golf National, the two-time major winner has cashed in the top 10 each visit. No longer bothered by a foot problem, he’s free to put the pedal to the metal and enjoy his first visit to the Olympic Games.

Collin Morikawa (11/1): One of the most demanding courses off the tee, the two-time major champion relishes the challenge. Not many hit it better off the peg, and his current form is of zero concern. Posting T16 or better in every event stretching back to the Masters, the only missing piece is a victory.

Ludvig Aberg (14/1): A season of firsts continues for the World Number 4. From The Sentry through THE PLAYERS and his first four major championships, I would not think another high-profile event would change his thought process or demeanor. All the players above him have more reps, but he has similar talent. Nobody will have an advantage on the greens this week; that won’t hurt his chances.

Players to consider for a medal or Top 10 action:

Tommy Fleetwood: Never having won in the USA or on the PGA TOUR, this would be the week for the breakthrough. A winner at the 2017 Open de France and 2018 Ryder Cup on this track, the Team Great Britain athlete is playing in his second Olympics.

Thorbjorn Olesen: One of five players from the victorious 2018 Ryder Cup team, the Dane has hit the top 10 four times in nine visits at Le Golf National, including T10 in 2023 and a runner-up payday on debut in 2010.

Alex Noren: Like Fleetwood, the Swede has not won on the PGA TOUR but has won in Europe and at this layout. The winner in 2018 returned two months later to help the European team win the Ryder Cup. Cashing T10 and T13 in his last two starts in Scotland, form isn’t an issue.

C.T. Pan: The Taiwanese star cashed T30 in Rio de Janeiro, fought off six others for bronze in Tokyo, and will make his third appearance.

Ryan Fox: One of four players to play in all three Olympics, the Kiwi has a pair of T18 or better paydays from five starts at Le Golf National in his memory bank. A big hitter, the putter covers this inaccuracy.

Guido Migliozzi: A winner seven weeks ago in Europe, he returns to the site of his 2022 victory. Cashing T4 and T14 in two visits to the U.S. Open suggests his game is designed for tough layouts.

NOW PLAYING: 2024 Men’s Olympic Golf

Host CourseLe Golf National
Yards (per official scorecard):7,174.
Par:71 (36-35).
Greens:Creeping Bentgrass, Poa annua.
Stimpmeter:“Olympic speed” per Kerry Haigh.
Rough:Ryegrass, Fescue cut at three levels.
Bunkers/Water Hazards/In-Play51/15/10
Architect(s):Hubert Chesneau and Robert von Hagge (1990).
Defending Champion (event):Xander Schauffele (2021, Tokyo Games).
Multiple Champion(s) Entered:None.
Course Record: 
72 Hole Tournament Record: 
Fact of the Week:Golf was not contested in the Olympics between 1904 and 2016.

Le Golf National

Designed in 1990 by architects Hubert Chesneau and Robert Von Hagge, the former pastureland in the southwest suburbs of Paris has served as the home of the Open de France since 1991.

The host of the 2018 Ryder Cup, the event will play 7,174 yards to Par-71 (36-35) for the Olympics.

The transformed farmland turned into rolling terrain with 10 water penalty areas. Trucked-in dirt from Paris created viewing areas, mounds, and slight elevation changes, especially around the greens. Narrow fairways are framed by three cuts of rough, the last layer of defense reaching four inches or better. Greens and fairways are protected by 51 bunkers plus water penalty areas spread over 10 holes.

Ball strikers who find the short grass off the tee will fire at flagsticks on the above-average green complexes. Creeping Bentgrass mixed with Poa annua is a familiar surface, and the greens average between 6,500 and 8,600 square feet. Those playing from off the fairways will have chances to recover. The greens will be rolling at “Olympic Speed” but I’ll remind you that the Women’s Olympic Golf tournament is slated to be played on this same course next week.

The powerful finish, a four-hole stretch featuring two island greens and two of the three longest Par-4 holes, Nos. 17 and 18 playing 480 and 471, respectively.

Since the 2016 renovation for the Ryder Cup, the winning score for the Open de France, the annual championship contested on the DP World Tour, has averaged just a shade over 12-under-par.

Guido Migliozzi, in the field this week, produced the lowest winning total, 16-under 268, during his 2022 victory.

Alex Noren, also in the field this week, produced the highest winning total, seven-under 277 when he won in 2018.

Recent Winners

2023 Season Winners

EventWinner
Sentry Tournament of ChampionsJon Rahm
Sony Open in HawaiiSi Woo Kim
The AMERICAN EXPRESSJon Rahm (2)
Farmers Insurance OpenMax Homa (2)
AT&T Pebble BeachJustin Rose
WM Phoenix OpenScottie Scheffler
The Genesis InvitationalJon Rahm (3)
The Honda ClassicChris Kirk
Arnold Palmer InvitationalKurt Kitayama (first TOUR win)
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipTaylor Moore (first TOUR win)
Corales PuntacanaMatt Wallace (first TOUR win)
WGC – Dell Technologies MPSam Burns
Valero Texas OpenCorey Conners
MastersJon Rahm (4)
RBC HeritageMatt Fitzpatrick
Zurich Classic of New OrleansDavis Riley & Nick Hardy (first TOUR win for each)
Mexico Open at VidantaTony Finau (2)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipWyndham Clark (first TOUR win)
AT&T Byron NelsonJason Day
PGA ChampionshipBrooks Koepka
Charles Schwab ChallengeEmiliano Grillo
MemorialViktor Hovland
RBC Canadian OpenNick Taylor
U.S. OpenWyndham Clark (2)
Travelers ChampionshipKeegan Bradley (2)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicRickie Fowler
John Deere ClassicSepp Straka
Genesis Scottish OpenRory McIlroy (2)
The Open ChampionshipBrian Harman
3M OpenLee Hodges (first TOUR win)
Wyndham ChampionshipLucas Glover
FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipLucas Glover (2)
BMW ChampionshipViktor Hovland (2)
TOUR ChampionshipViktor Hovland (3)
Fortinet ChampionshipSahith Theegala
Sanderson Farms ChampionshipLuke List
Shriners Children’s OpenTom Kim
ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIPCollin Morikawa
World Wide TechnologyErik van Rooyen
Butterfield BermudaCamilo Villegas
The RSM ClassicLudvig Aberg

2024 Season Winners

EventWinner
The SentryChris Kirk
Sony Open in HawaiiGrayson Murray
The American ExpressNick Dunlap (a)
Farmers Insurance OpenMatthieu Pavon (rookie)
AT&T Pebble BeachWyndham Clark (54 holes)
WM Phoenix OpenNick Taylor
The Genesis InvitationalHideki Matsuyama
Mexico Open at VidantaJake Knapp (rookie)
Cognizant ClassicAustin Eckroat (first time)
Arnold Palmer InvitationalScottie Scheffler
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (2)
Valspar ChampionshipPeter Malnati
Texas Children’s Houston OpenStephan Jaeger (first time)
Valero Texas OpenAkshay Bhatia
88th Masters TournamentScottie Scheffler (3)
RBC HeritageScottie Scheffler (4)
Zurich ClassicRory McIlroy & Shane Lowry
THE CJ CUP Byron NelsonTaylor Pendrith (first time)
Wells Fargo ChampionshipRory McIlroy (2)
106th PGA ChampionshipXander Schauffele
Charles Schwab ChallengeDavis Riley
RBC Canadian OpenRobert MacIntyre (first time)
The 49th Memorial TournamentScottie Scheffler (5)
124th United States OpenBryson DeChambeau
Travelers ChampionshipScottie Scheffler (6)
Rocket Mortgage ClassicCam Davis
John Deere ClassicDavis Thompson (first time)
Genesis Scottish OpenRobert MacIntyre (2)
152nd Open ChampionshipXander Schauffele (2)
3M OpenJhonattan Vegas

Men’s Olympic Golf

Golf was abandoned after the 1904 edition in St. Lous but returned for the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro, won by Justin Rose (not entered).

The 2020 edition was postponed to 2021 to allow a safer environment in Tokyo. Xander Schauffele outlasted the field to win the gold medal at Kasumigaseki Country Club, and C.T. Pan won a seven-man playoff for the bronze medal.

Three former winners of the Open de France entered. Led by 2022 winner Guido Migliozzi, the field includes 2017 champion Tommy Fleetwood plus 2018 winner Alexander Noren.

The field consists of 60 players from 32 countries. The loaded event features the top seven players and ten of the top 15 in the Official World Golf Rankings.

All 60 players will play 72 holes of stroke play. There is no cut.

Schauffele and Pan are the only players in the field that have previously won a medal.

Any ties for medal consideration will be broken via playoff. From the International Golf Federation:

“If two athletes are tied for the lead after 72 holes, a hole-by-hole playoff will be conducted to determine the gold and silver medals, or if three or more athletes are tied for the first position, a playoff will be conducted to determine the gold, silver and bronze medals. If two or more athletes are tied for the second position, a playoff will be conducted to determine the silver and bronze medals. If two or more athletes are tied for the third position, a playoff will be conducted for the bronze medal. In any case, only one gold, one silver, and one bronze medal will be awarded.”

The gold medal winner will receive Official World Ranking Points, entry into all four major championships in 2025, and a spot in THE PLAYERS Championship. If a member of the PGA TOUR, the winner will be eligible for The Sentry in January.

Recent Winners – Men’s Olympic Golf

Italics – not entered this week.

YearWinnerNotes
2021Xander SchauffeleBecame the second gold medal winner of the modern era winning in the homeland of his mother in Japan.
2016Justin RoseThe Englishman held off Henrik Stenson and Matt Kuchar to win the first gold medal awarded in the sport since 1904.

One and Done

I’ll be joining Spotter’s game again this season. Now, where did I put my checkbook…

35 events.

1 player per event (plus a backup pick if your guy gets kidnapped on Wednesday night and doesn’t make it to the first tee Thursday).

1 use per year.

Add up the total money and Spotter is yer uncle!

EventSelectionEarnings
The SentryCollin Morikawa690,500
Sony Open in HawaiiCorey Conners18,592
The American ExpressAdam Hadwin310,800
Farmers Insurance OpenJason Day0
AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-AmJordan Spieth70,125
WM Phoenix OpenMatt Fitzpatrick156,200
The Genesis InvitationalMax Homa329,000
Mexico Open at VidantaTony Finau145,125
Cognizant ClassicRussell Henley32,850
Arnold Palmer InvitationalScottie Scheffler4,000,000
THE PLAYERS ChampionshipWill Zalatoris0
Valspar ChampionshipSam Burns0
Texas Children’s Houston OpenWyndham Clark54,418
Valero Texas OpenC Bezuidenhout67,735
88th Masters TournamentRory McIlroy175,500
RBC HeritagePatrick Cantlay1,160,000
Zurich ClassicNick Taylor122,375
THE CJ CUP Byron NelsonStephan Jaeger112,100
Myrtle Beach ClassicDaniel Berger20,350
Wells Fargo ChampionshipSahith Theegala47,000
106th PGA ChampionshipBrooks Koepka113,962
Charles Schwab ChallengeTaylor Moore0
RBC Canadian OpenMackenzie Hughes295,316
49th Memorial TournamentBen An200,200
124th United States OpenXander Schauffele639,289
Travelers ChampionshipBrian Harman520,000
Rocket Mortgage ClassicAkshay Bhatia616,400
John Deere ClassicDenny McCarthy252,400
Genesis Scottish OpenLudvig Aberg330,750
152nd Open ChampionshipTommy Fleetwood0
3M OpenEmiliano Grillo61,695
   
Total Winnings: 10,542,682

His game has more fun stuff to it. Reach out @A340Spotter on Twitter or A340Spotter@frontier.com for more details and to join.

Recapping Last Week – 3M Open

Emiliano Grillo: Only Finau has more cache here. Vamos!

Others to consider:

Cam Davis, Taylor Pendrith, Luke Clanton (!), Tom Hoge, Mac Meissner.

Good luck and watch out for the mosquitos, the official state bird of Minnesota!

At some point, I will return to fading myself and guess better.

Cam Davis – T19

Taylor Pendrith – 5th

Luke Clanton – MC

Tom Hoge – MC

Mac Meissner – T59

This Week – The Olympics

A week of rest, reflection, and regrets for a miserable season!

Back at it next week for the Wyndham Championship!