Credits: Tannen Maury/ UPI

Masters 2024: Scottie Scheffler earns second Green Jacket at Augusta National

Masters 2024 final leaderboard

-11 Scheffler (US); -7 Aberg (Swe); -4 Morikawa (US), Homa (US), Fleetwood (Eng); -2 DeChambeau (US), Smith (Aus)

World number one Scottie Scheffler won the Masters for a second time after a commanding performance at Augusta National demonstrated why he was the red-hot pre-tournament favourite.

Scheffler, who led overnight by a shot, hit a four-under 68 in Sunday’s final round to finish four clear on 11 under.

Sweden’s Ludvig Aberg shot 69 to finish runner-up on his major debut.

England’s Tommy Fleetwood (69) ended joint third with American pair Collin Morikawa (74) and Max Homa (73).

Fleetwood put together an impressive round to make a late charge up the leaderboard and record his best finish at the Masters.

But catching Scheffler was out of reach. The 27-year-old American showed rare emotion on the 18th green as he received the acclaim of the Augusta patrons after wrapping up his second Masters victory in three years.

There had been a possibility the 2022 champion might not even complete the final round.

Scheffler’s wife Meredith is due to give birth to their first child and the Texan said on Saturday he was prepared to leave Augusta mid-round if she went into labor on Sunday.

Addressing his wife during the Green Jacket presentation ceremony, Scheffler said: “I love you and I’m coming home. I’ll be home as quick as I can.”

He added: “I can’t put into words what it is like to win here again and what it will be like to become a father for the first time.”

Scheffler justifies his standing as rivals falter

Not since Tiger Woods dominated golf in the 2000s had anybody arrived at Augusta as strong a favorite as Scheffler.

He came into the first major of the year on the back of two victories in his three previous tournaments – at the Arnold Palmer Invitational and the Players Championship – and a second-place finish at the Houston Open.

That imperious form, combined with his pedigree as a previous Masters champion, meant his odds were as short as 4-1 at the start of the week.

While not hitting the expected heights on the opening three days, particularly during an eventful round on Saturday where he recovered from several mistakes, he still led by a shot going into Sunday.

However, he lacked distance control with his irons in the opening holes and a bogey on the seventh dropped him back alongside Morikawa and Aberg. Homa joined them in a four-way tie for the lead after a birdie on the eighth.

But Scheffler – playing alongside Morikawa in the group behind Aberg and Homa – birdied the same hole to lead again on seven under.

Then came a moment of magic which felt like a potential turning point – and proved to be so.

Scheffler almost holed a magnificent 89-yard approach on the ninth, demonstrating sublime skill to spin the ball and use Augusta’s contours to roll it towards the pin – leaving himself with a tap-in for back-to-back birdies.

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Masters 2024 predictions, odds, picks, props: Golf insider choosing Sam Burns at Augusta National

Golf insider Patrick McDonald has revealed his 2024 Masters picks, PGA best bets and props for Augusta National

After turning pro in 2009, the 2024 Masters will be the first of Peter Malnati’s career thanks to a win at the Valspar Championship last week. The first round of the 2024 Masters Tournament begins on Thursday, April 11 at Augusta National Golf Club and Malnati jumped to a career-best 65th in the Official World Golf Ranking with his victory. Meanwhile, Scottie Scheffler has won the last two of the last three times he’s teed it up and has spent 44 weeks in a row as the No. 1 player in the world. The 2022 Masters champion has eight PGA Tour wins in just over two calendar years and is the 5-1 favorite in the 2024 Masters odds.

Meanwhile, Malnati is one of the latest entrants into the 2024 Masters field and a 250-1 longshot in the 2024 Masters futures. Before locking in any 2024 Masters picks or golf predictions, you need to see what proven golf betting expert Patrick McDonald has to say, considering his recent track record.

McDonald joined CBS Sports as a golf writer in 2022 after stops at NBC Sports and RyderCup.com. Covering the sport from a broader perspective, McDonald still likes to dip his toes into the betting pools on a weekly basis between the PGA Tour, DP World Tour, and more. Featured weekly on the Early Wedge, he has given out numerous winners already in 2024, including Jake Knapp (50-1) at the Mexico Open.

Now, McDonald has focused his attention on the 2024 Masters field and has locked in his best bets, top sleepers and favorites to avoid. You can see only see them at SportsLine.

Top 2024 Masters expert picks
One stunning prediction from McDonald: He is high on Sam Burns, even though he is a 55-1 longshot. A former Jack Nicklaus National Player of the Year while at LSU, Burns turned pro in 2017 and earned his PGA Tour card before the 2018-19 season, but didn’t break through with his first win until the 2021 Valspar Championship. Burns has added four more victories, including wins in the 2022 Charles Schwab Challenge and 2023 WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play.

He’s No. 21 in the Official World Golf Ranking and also 21st in the FedEx Cup standings after four top-10 finishes over his first eight starts during the 2024 PGA Tour season. After missing the cut in his first Masters appearance in 2022, Burns finished 29th last year. His putting (top 20 in strokes gained: putting the last four seasons) should be a valuable asset moving forward at Augusta National Golf Club. See who else to back here.

How to make 2024 Masters picks, bets
McDonald is also jumping on an underdog who’s had plenty of success at Augusta National but is still listed at more than 100-1 to win it all. You can only see his 2024 Masters picks at SportsLine.

2024 Masters odds, field
See full 2024 Masters picks at SportsLine

Scottie Scheffler +500
Rory McIlroy +1000
Jon Rahm +1300
Brooks Koepka +2100
Jordan Spieth +2100
Will Zalatoris +2100
Viktor Hovland +2100
Xander Schauffele +2400
Ludvig Aberg +2400
Patrick Cantlay +2800
Justin Thomas +2800
Cameron Smith +3100
Hideki Matsuyama +3100
Collin Morikawa +3100
Joaquin Niemann +3100
Wyndham Clark +3100
Matt Fitzpatrick +3600
Dustin Johnson +3600
Tony Finau +4400
Max Homa +4400
Brian Harman +4600
Shane Lowry +4600
Cameron Young +4600
Jason Day +4600
Bryson DeChambeau +4600
Sam Burns +5500
Min Woo Lee +5500
Sahith Theegala +5500
Tommy Fleetwood +5500
Sung-Jae Im +7500
Tyrrell Hatton +7500
Corey Conners +9000
Tom Kim +9000
Justin Rose +9000
Patrick Reed +9000
Russell Henley +12000
Adam Scott +12000
Rickie Fowler +12000
Jake Knapp +12000
Phil Mickelson +16000
Harris English +16000
Sergio Garcia +16000
Tiger Woods +16000
Gary Woodland +19000
Keegan Bradley +19000
Si Woo Kim +19000
Chris Kirk +19000
Ryan Fox +19000
J.T. Poston +19000
Nick Dunlap +19000
Cameron Davis +19000
Thorbjorn Olesen +19000
Adrian Meronk +19000
Sepp Straka +19000
Nick Taylor +19000
Eric Cole +19000
Matthieu Pavon +19000
Emiliano Grillo +19000
Nicolai Hojgaard +19000
Luke List +21000
Adam Hadwin +21000
Charl Schwartzel +28000
Kurt Kitayama +28000
Bubba Watson +28000
Ryo Hisatsune +28000
Erik van Rooyen +28000
Danny Willett +34000
Denny McCarthy +34000
Lee Hodges +34000
Taylor Moore +43000
Adam Schenk +43000
Lucas Glover +43000
Grayson Murray +55000
Christo Lamprecht +55000
Mike Weir +100000
Jose Maria Olazabal +100000
Fred Couples +100000
Vijay Singh +100000
Zach Johnson +100000
Stewart Hagestad +100000
Jasper Stubbs +100000
Santiago De La Fuente +100000
Neal Shipley +100000

Scottie Scheffler

Players Championship: Scottie Scheffler wins title at Sawgrass

Scottie Scheffler overcame a neck injury and record five-shot deficit in the final round to become the first man to defend the Players Championship.

The world number one, who had treatment on his neck during round two, hit an eight-under 64 to win the 50th staging of the PGA Tour’s flagship tournament.

He won by one shot on 20 under from fellow Americans Brian Harman, Wyndham Clark and Xander Schauffele.

All three missed putts to force a play-off in a phenomenal finish in Florida.

Harman was first to the 18th but he pushed a 17-foot birdie putt wide as he closed with a 68 at Sawgrass.

Schauffele, who led overnight and for much of the final round, failed with his 60-footer as he posted a 70, while US Open champion Clark’s 17-footer horseshoed around the hole and left him signing for a 69.

Asked what it was like to become the first player to win successive Players titles, Scheffler said: “It’s pretty special.

“It’s something you don’t get the opportunity to do very often. It’s tough enough to win one.”

He is the youngest player, at the age of 27, to win two titles – only Jack Nicklaus has won the event three times.

His eighth PGA Tour victory is all the more remarkable considering the pain he was in during Friday’s second round when he tweaked his neck while playing a shot. He called for a physio who worked on the injury between holes and he was still in obvious discomfort during Saturday’s third round.

“I didn’t want to give up in the tournament,” said Scheffler, who collected $4.5m (£3.5m) from the $25m prize fund. “I did what I could to hang around until my neck got better and [on Sunday] it felt really good.”

And as much as Harman, Schauffele and Clark squandered their opportunities, Scheffler earned his historic victory with a stunning final round as he matched the record comeback wins of Justin Leonard in 1998 and Henrik Stenson in 2009.

He had eradicated Schauffele’s lead by the ninth hole. A chip-in eagle two on the par-four fourth sparked the comeback and Scheffler followed that with three birdies in five holes to join Schauffele on 17 under.

But moments later Schauffele knocked in a birdie on seven to move one ahead.

That set the scene for a nerve-shredding back nine, with Scheffler, Schauffele and Clark taking or sharing the lead at various points.

While Scheffler posted birdies on the 11th, 12th and 16th holes, Schauffele and Clark were dropping shots.

Clark, who led by four strokes at the halfway stage of the tournament following two rounds of 67, bogeyed the 10th and 14th to drop to 17 under, while Schauffele bogeyed the 14th and 15th as he slipped to 18 under.

Meanwhile, Open champion Harman was quietly creeping up the leaderboard, with four birdies in five holes around the turn taking him to 18 under.

He rolled in another on the 15th but was unable to pick up another shot on the famously tough closing three holes.

Schauffele and Clark birdied the par-five 16th to move to 19 and 18 under respectively and played sensational tee shots to inside eight feet on the notoriously difficult par-three 17th ‘island hole’.

Schauffele missed his birdie putt. Clark holed. Both needed to birdie the last to match Scheffler. Both failed.

“When I went to bed last night, it’s not exactly how I envisioned walking off the 18th green,” said Schauffele, whose last victory was the 2022 Scottish Open.

“This sucks but I’ll lick my wounds and right back to it next week.”

Fitzpatrick’s challenge fades
England are still waiting for their first winner of the Players after Matt Fitzpatrick’s charge for the title stalled at the fourth hole, for the third successive round.

The 2022 US Open winner, who carded double-bogey sixes in rounds two and three, had joked after the third round about his approach on Sunday: “If I can play better on the fourth hole, that will probably be a good start.”

However, it once again proved his undoing.

He was two off the lead after opening with successive birdies, but a dropped shot at the fourth halted his momentum and further bogeys on the sixth and ninth meant he dropped out of contention.

But he closed with four successive birdies to finish on a high and in fifth on 16 under.

For Rory McIlroy, winner of this title in 2019, it was another rollercoaster week. He holed 26 birdies but finished 11 shots off the lead.

However, after his closing round of 72, which featured five birdies and five bogeys, he said he is “headed in the right direction”.

“After the first round, my expectations sort of went sky high because I was like, ‘oh, I think I’ve figured it out’,” said the Northern Irishman, who was joint leader on seven under on Thursday.

“Then the last three days were a little bit more of a struggle. I made enough birdies – it’s just a matter of getting rid of the bad stuff.”

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Ahmad Baig Wins Lexus Challenge 2024 Trophy

Ahmad Baig had a quick comeback day to win the Lexus Challenge 2024 Championship

At the end of the first two rounds, scoring 69 and 72, Baig was at T7 with a score of -1, three strokes behind the leading group. Entering the decisive, Baig had an excellence performance including the series of 5 classy birdies from hole 4 to 8 to rise to the top of table.

Baig scored 2 more birdies at back 9 on hole 14 and 16 taking a lead of 3 strokes. With a round of 65, Ahmad Baig won the Lexus Challenge 2024 trophy and brought home the first asain development title of his career, receiving a prize money of 14,875 USD

Jakraphan Premsirigorn (Thailand) finished runner up with -5 whereas CK Park (Korea) and Sangchai Kaewcharoen (Thailand) shared the third place.

Creits: calgolfnews

Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele And Wyndham Clark Lead Players Championship After First Round At TPC Sawgrass

Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele and Wyndham Clark will take a one-shot lead into Friday as Ryan Fox made a hole-in-one on the 17th

Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele and Wyndham Clark will take a one-shot lead into Friday after a low-scoring first round of the Players Championship.

Soft greens and close to perfect conditions at TPC Sawgrass meant the first round got off to a hot start when it came to scoring, with 75 players shooting under par on Thursday.

One of those was McIlroy, who shrugged off lacklustre form heading into the tournament to card a seven-under 65. He sunk 10 birdies, including six in his first eight holes, but also found the water twice for a bogey and a double.

Schauffele shot a more steady bogey-free 65, while Clark – teeing off later in the afternoon – made it a three-way tie for the lead with eight birdies and just one bogey for his round. Nick Taylor and Matt Fitzpatrick finished a shot behind thanks to strong rounds of 66.

Defending champion and World No.1 Scottie Scheffler, coming off a dominant victory at Bay Hill last week, continued his improvement on the greens to post a five-under 67, alongside Tom Hoge, Jason Day, Ludvig Aberg, Tyler Duncan, Maverick McNealy and Jimmy Stanger (who still had two holes to go before play was suspended due to darkness).

The moment of the day belonged to Ryan Fox when he sunk a hole-in-one at the iconic, island green 17th – becoming just the 14th golfer in Players Championship history to hit an ace on the hole. He finished his round on three under.

PLAYERS CHAMPIONSHIP LEADERBOARD

-7 Xander Schauffele (65)
-7 Rory McIlroy (65)
-7 Wyndham Clark (65)
-6 Nick Taylor (66)
-6 Matt Fitzpatrick (66)
-5 Ludvig Aberg (67)
-5 Tom Hoge (67)
-5 Jason Day (67)
-5 Scottie Scheffler (67)
-5 Maverick McNealy (67)
-5 Tyler Duncan (67)
-5 Jimmy Stanger
-4 Taylor Montgomery (68)
-4 Michael Kim (68)
-4 Sepp Straka (68)
-4 Nate Lashley (68)
-4 Max Homa (68)
-4 Mark Hubbard (68)
-4 Matti Schmid (68)
-4 Corey Conners (68)
-4 Chris Kirk (68)

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2024 Players Championship odds, picks, field, predictions: Golf expert fading Rory McIlroy at TPC Sawgrass

A PGA Tour season laden with longshot winners makes a stop in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., this week for the 2024 Players Championship beginning on Thursday at TPC Sawgrass. In 10 PGA Tour events this year, six winners have been +10000 or longer, and five have been +15000 or more. The biggest longshot was then-amateur Nick Dunlap, who was +40000 to win The American Express. Before Scottie Scheffler’s win last week at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, the shortest-priced player to win this season was Jake Knapp, who was +4000 at the Mexico Open at Vidanta.

This week, Scheffler is the +500 favorite in the 2024 Players Championship odds. Rory McIlroy (+1200), Xander Schauffele (+2000), Justin Thomas (+2000) and Viktor Hovland (+2200) round out the top five choices in The Players Championship 2024 field. Before locking in any 2024 Players Championship picks, make sure you see the PGA Tour predictions and best bets from golf betting and fantasy expert Sia Nejad.

Nejad specializes in betting and DFS in golf, among other sports. He’s had incredible success in the outright and first-round leader markets and in betting head-to-head matchups. He also has been solid with his head-to-head matchups since last year’s Charles Schwab Challenge, going 33-20-2 and returning 9.17 units over that span. That’s a $917 profit for $100 bettors since May 2023.

Nejad also nailed 75-1 longshot Wyndham Clark as the outright winner at the Wells Fargo Championship. In 2023, SportsLine debuted “The Early Wedge,” and in the first three months of the show, he hit two first-round leaders and three outright winners.

Now, Nejad has focused his attention on the 2024 Players Championship field and has locked in his best bets, top sleepers and favorites to avoid. See who they are at SportsLine.

Top 2024 Players Championship expert picks

One surprise: Nejad is completely fading McIlroy, even though he is a strong contender according to The Players Championship odds. The 34-year-old from Northern Ireland has been splitting his time this year between the PGA Tour and DP World Tour. His best finish on the PGA Tour is 21st, at both the Cognizant Classic and the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

So far this season, he ranks 129th on tour in strokes gained: putting (-0.246). Despite that, he is still the clear second choice in the Players Championship at +1200. “Given his recent form, there’s no way I can take him at +1200 or less,” Nejad told SportsLine.

However, Nejad is high on the chances of Tom Hoge, who’s a +6600 longshot. Hoge has one win in 265 career starts on the PGA Tour. That victory came in the 2022 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. This season, Hoge’s best finish was a tie for sixth, also at Pebble Beach.

In five starts at The Players Championship, Hoge has made the cut all five times. Last year, he shot a third-round 62 and tied for third. “His approach game has been dialed in, and he has some good all-around recent form and history at TPC Sawgrass,” Nejad said. See whom else to back at SportsLine.

How to make 2024 Players Championship picks

Nejad has locked in his best bets for the 2024 Players Championship and is backing several longshots, including one that is priced at more than 60-1. This player “has been absolutely dialed-in with his approach game” and is a longshot who could surprise. You can see Nejad’s PGA Tour picks only at SportsLine.

So which players should you target or avoid for the 2024 Players Championship, and which player in The Players Championship 2024 field could bring a huge payday at more than 60-1? Check out the odds below, then visit SportsLine to see Sia Nejad’s top picks for the 2024 Players Championship, all from the expert who is 33-20-2 on his last 55 head-to-head picks.

2024 Players Championship odds, field

Scottie Scheffler +500
Rory McIlroy +1200
Xander Schauffele +2000
Justin Thomas +2000
Viktor Hovland +2200
Will Zalatoris +2500
Patrick Cantlay +2500
Max Homa +2500
Collin Morikawa +2800
Jordan Spieth +3000
Hideki Matsuyama +3000
Ludvig Aberg +3000
Wyndham Clark +3500
Shane Lowry +3500
Sam Burns +4000
Tommy Fleetwood +4500
Si Woo Kim +4500
Russell Henley +4500
Jason Day +4500
Cameron Young +4500
Sahith Theegala +5000
Min Woo Lee +5000
Brian Harman +5000
Byeong Hun An +5500
Tony Finau +6000
Tom Hoge +6000
Matt Fitzpatrick +6000
Corey Conners +6000
Tom Kim +7500
Sungjae Im +7500
Keith Mitchell +8000
Keegan Bradley +8000
Harris English +8000
Cam Davis +8000
Adam Scott +8000
Aaron Rai +8000
Justin Rose +9000
Eric Cole +9000
Emiliano Grillo +9000
Nick Taylor +10000
J.T. Poston +10000
Doug Ghim +10000
Chris Kirk +10000
Brendon Todd +10000
Andrew Putnam +10000
Alex Noren +10000
Adam Hadwin +10000
Nicolai Hojgaard +10000
Denny McCarthy +11000
Billy Horschel +11000
Stephan Jaeger +13000
Sepp Straka +13000
Rickie Fowler +13000
Matthieu Pavon +13000
Lucas Glover +13000
Jake Knapp +13000
Erik Van Rooyen +13000
Christiaan Bezuidenhout +13000
Beau Hossler +13000
Ryan Fox +15000
Luke List +15000
Kevin Yu +15000
Davis Thompson +15000
Austin Eckroat +15000
Akshay Bhatia +15000
Patrick Rodgers +18000
Maverick McNealy +18000
Andrew Novak +18000
Taylor Pendrith +20000
Thomas Detry +25000
Ryo Hisatsune +25000
Kurt Kitayama +25000
Taylor Moore +30000
Taylor Montgomery +30000
Seamus Power +30000
Sam Ryder +30000
Nick Dunlap +30000
Matt Wallace +30000
Matt Kuchar +30000
Lee Hodges +30000
K.H. Lee +30000
Justin Suh +30000
Gary Woodland +30000
Garrick Higgo +30000
Chesson Hadley +30000
Chan Kim +30000
Carson Young +30000
Ben Silverman +30000
Ben Kohles +30000
Ben Griffin +30000
Adam Svensson +30000
Webb Simpson +35000
Vincent Norrman +35000
Tyler Duncan +35000
Sami Valimaki +35000
Nico Echavarria +35000
Mark Hubbard +35000
Mackenzie Hughes +35000
Adam Schenk +35000
Troy Merritt +40000
Steve Stricker +40000
Robert MacIntyre +40000
Nick Hardy +40000
Martin Laird +40000
Justin Lower +40000
Joel Dahmen +40000
Jimmy Stanger +40000
J.J. Spaun +40000
Greyson Sigg +40000
Grayson Murray +40000
Francesco Molinari +40000
Charley Hoffman +40000
Chad Ramey +40000
C.T. Pan +40000
Brandon Wu +40000
Alex Smalley +40000
Aaron Baddeley +40000
Scott Stallings +50000
Sam Stevens +50000
Nate Lashley +50000
Michael Kim +50000
Matt NeSmith +50000
Joseph Bramlett +50000
Camilo Villegas +50000
Ben Martin +50000
Brice Garnett +50000
Zac Blair +60000
S.H. Kim +60000
Robby Shelton +60000
Matti Schmid +60000
Peter Malnati +80000
Harry Hall +80000
Dylan Wu +80000
David Skinns +80000
Carl Yuan +80000
Ryan Moore +100000
Kevin Streelman +100000
Hayden Buckley +100000
Davis Riley +100000
David Lipsky +100000
Tyson Alexander +150000
Chez Reavie +150000
Callum Tarren +150000
Ben Taylor +500000

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Ahmed Baig defends JA Zaman Memorial Golf title

The 10th JA Zaman Memorial Open Golf Championship deliv­ered an ending that was noth­ing short of a roller-coaster ride – a gripping and fluctuating finale that culminated in a re­sounding climax here at par-72 Lahore Gymkhana Golf Course on Sunday.

Touted as Pakistan’s next golf sensation, Ahmed Baig of Royal Palm Golf Club seized victory in a spectacular fashion, overturn­ing the match dynamics in the final three holes of an intense 72-hole contest. The specta­tors were treated to perhaps the most thrilling display of golf ever seen at Gymkhana, with Baig clinching the win through a stunning Eagle and consecutive Birdies, surpassing the reigning national champion Muhammad Shabbir by two shots.

The championship, boasting a prize pool of Rs 7.5 million and a Haval Jolion Car for a hole-in-one, saw an impressive turn­out of over 530 participants, including the country’s top 100 professional golfers. The event’s inclusivity was evident, featuring top amateurs, ladies, seniors, veterans, and juniors, highlighting the diversity and vibrancy of golf in Pakistan. The Zaman family’s commit­ment to nurturing talent across all age groups in sport deserves commendation.

The final round was a whirl­wind of emotions, with Shabbir initially leading, only to falter due to a costly mistake. Min­haj Warraich and Muhammad Nazir briefly shared the lead until a dramatic turn of events on the 16th hole, where Baig’s remarkable 45-foot putt for an eagle drew him level with the leaders. The closing stages saw Baig outshining his com­petitors with unmatched skill, finishing as the tournament’s back-to-back champion.

Muhammed Shabbir Iqbal secured the runner-up position with an aggregate score of 282, falling just two strokes short of Ahmed Baig. Minhaj Maqsood claimed the third spot with an aggregate score of 283, seven under par. Muhammed Nazir finished with a score of 284, Muhammed Alam 285, Mu­hammed Zubair 288 while Sha­hid Javed Khan and Muhammed Munir 290. In the amateur cat­egory, Shahzaib Khan took the top spot, with Tipu Raja and Hussain Hamid finishing sec­ond and third, respectively.

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Mexico Open: Jake Knapp secures first PGA Tour victory after final-day tussle with Sami Valimaki

Jake Knapp earns entry into The Players, The Masters, PGA Championship and five remaining PGA Tour Signature Events after his maiden victory in Mexico; Sami Valimaki claims second, while Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre finishes tied-sixth

Jake Knapp recovered from blowing a four-shot lead to hold off Sami Valimaki and register a maiden PGA Tour title with a two-shot win in the Mexico Open at Vidanta.

Knapp mixed two birdies with two bogeys during a final-round 71 at Vidanta Vallarta to end the week on 19 under and ahead of Valimaki, who finished runner-up after a two-under 69.

Stephan Jaeger and C.T Pan both posted final-round 65s to jump into tied-third on 14 under alongside Justin Lower, while Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre shared sixth place with Patrick Rodgers after a two-under 69.

“Didn’t necessarily have my best stuff today, that’s for sure,” Knapp told Golf Channel. “Knew it was nerve-wracking, knew it was going to be tough. It would have been nice to hit driver better and hit it a little bit better, but was super pumped on how I played in the finishing stretch.”

Knapp took a four-shot lead into the final day but gave the chasing pack hope when he bogeyed the first and found water off the third tee on his way to another dropped shot, allowing Valimaki to close within one when he rolled in from 10 feet at the fourth.

Valimaki pulled level when a stunning tee shot at the driveable seventh set up a six-foot eagle, as Knapp got up and down from a greenside bunker to make his first birdie of the day and also move to 18 under.

Knapp holed from 10 feet to save par at the eighth and edged back ahead when Valimaki opened his back nine with a bogey, with the Finn then cancelling out a birdie at the par-five 12th by dropping a shot at the par-three next.

A close-range birdie at the par-five 14th doubled Knapp’s lead, with three pars enough to close out a victory that secured him a place in The Players, The Masters, PGA Championship and the five remaining PGA Tour Signature Events.

Credits: wfxrtv

2024 Mexico Open one and done picks, field, top sleepers: PGA Tour predictions, expert golf betting advice

Mike McClure locked in his PGA one and done golf picks, rankings and top sleepers for the Mexico Open at Vidanta 2024 at Vidanta Vallarta in Mexico

The PGA Tour is set to make its annual trip south of the border this week for the 2024 Mexico Open at Vidanta Play gets underway on Thursday at Vidanta Vallarta. As the defending tournament champion Tony Finau headlines the 2024 Mexico Open field. The world No. 24 is easily the most accomplished player in the field and enters as the 13-2 betting favorite in the latest 2024 Mexico Open odds. Other top contenders include Nicolai Højgaard (16-1), Emiliano Grillo (18-1), Thomas Detry (25-1), Stephan Jaeger (25-1), Thorbjørn Olesen (25-1)., and Taylor Pendrith (30-1). The players will be competing for a total 2024 Mexico Open purse of $8.1 million. The winner will take home $1.386 million.

With his standing as the top player in the field, would this be the ideal week to use Tony Finau as your pick in One and Done pools? Or should you target a long shot with this being a wide open field? Before locking in your 2024 Mexico Open one and done picks, you need to see what SportsLine DFS pro and PGA expert Mike McClure has to say.

The One and Done format is growing in popularity. It has several noticeable similarities to NFL Survivor pools, with the main difference being entries are not eliminated with a bad week. Players pick one golfer per week and earn points based on their selected golfer’s prize money for that tournament. Golfers can only be used once per season, and the point format makes nailing majors and big money tournaments critical.

McClure is a DFS legend with over $2 million in career winnings, and he’s been red-hot on his PGA picks dating back to the PGA Tour restart in June of 2020. McClure uses his proprietary simulation model to analyze the field and crush his golf picks.

McClure nailed plenty of One and Done picks in 2023. At the 2023 Farmers Insurance Open, McClure’s top One and Done pick, Max Homa, outlasted the entire field to take home his sixth career PGA Tour victory and $1.566 million. At the WM Phoenix Open, McClure nailed Scheffler winning the tournament, taking home $3.6 million.

He correctly called Jon Rahm’s wins at The Masters and the Sentry Tournament of Champions. Then at the RBC Canadian Open McClure listed Nick Taylor and Tyrrell Hatton as two of his top one and done picks. Taylor would go on to win the tournament, while Hatton finished in third place. And finally, at the Rocket Mortgage Classic, his top OAD pick was eventual tournament champion Rickie Fowler.

This season, one of his top OAD picks was for The American Express was Justin Thomas, who finished in third place and took home $635,600, and at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am his top pick was Scottie Scheffler, who finished in sixth place after the final round was cancelled due to weather. At the WM Phoenix Open, McClure recommended OAD players use Scheffler as their pick if they hadn’t done so already this season. He ended up finishing in third place, taking home $519,200. Finally, one of McClure’s top OAD picks at the Genesis Invitational was Patrick Cantlay, who finished in fourth place at the signature event.

Now, McClure has dialed in on the Mexico Open at Vidanta golf tournament and just locked in his one and done picks and PGA predictions. They are a must-see for any player looking for an edge in their One and Done pool. You can only see McClure’s Mexico Open at Vidanta 2024 one and done picks at SportsLine.

Top 2024 Mexico Open at Vidanta One and Done picks
One of McClure’s top one and done picks this week at Vidanta is Tony Finau. The 34-year-old has an impressive track record, and is the top ranked player in the field. Finau’s pedigree is unmatched this week, and McClure likes his chances at defending his 2023 Mexico Open title.

Finau currently ranks fifth on the PGA Tour in strokes gained tee-to-green (1.545), seventh in strokes gained on approach (0.915), and 17th in strokes gained off the tee (0.613). With his status as the unquestioned top golfer in the Mexico Open field, McClure believes the time is right to use Finau in One and Done pools. You can see who else to back at SportsLine.

How to make Mexico Open 2024 One and Done picks
McClure is also targeting another golfer for his 2024 Mexico Open at Vidanta one and done picks who was outstanding throughout the 2023 season. This player has the ability to win any tournament he enters, and is one of the most talented golfers in this wide open field. You can find out who it is, and check out all of McClure’s Mexico Open at Vidanta one and done picks at SportsLine.

Credits: bunkered

LIV Golf and the World Rankings remain a mess with no simple solution

Irreconcilable dissonance. We’re not exactly sure where we read that play on words, but we are appropriating the term here considering how neatly it describes the current landscape as it relates to one gnawing, intractable issue undermining the legitimacy of men’s professional golf.

The Official World Golf Ranking no longer accurately reflects the game’s talent structure. With the launch of the LIV Golf League in 2022, a significant segment of players no longer earn points for the majority of events they’re competing in. That includes elite players such as Brooks Koepka, the reigning PGA champion, two-time major winner Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau, Cam Smith and Jon Rahm, another two-time major winner and the reigning Masters champion whose exit velocity from the PGA Tour in December pulled in Ryder Cup teammate Tyrrell Hatton just before LIV’s season opener in Mexico.

At this week’s Asian Tour International Oman event, more than 20 LIV golfers will be in the field, including Louis Oosthuizen, Peter Uihlein, Matthew Wolff, Abaraham Ancer, and Mito Pereira. Given LIV’s partnership with the Asian Tour, some players are contractually obligated to compete—and it works well in their schedules ahead of the LIV Golf event in Saudi Arabia a week later. Others, however, are there to try to help earn OWGR points.

One can make an argument that the OWGR board of directors has an obligation to devise a mathematical formula that awards points for LIV Golf’s 54-hole format as it does for other minor tours. One can also make a counter argument that LIV’s largely closed-shop roster, small fields and concurrent team competition skew its results to a degree that compels the OWGR to deny certification.

With officials from the PGA Tour and DP World Tour recusing themselves from the decision, the remaining members of the OWGR board denied LIV Golf’s request for inclusion in October. Those remaining members are the representatives of the four major championships.

Presumably this will all be corrected whenever the PGA Tour finalizes its negotiations with the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia, the financial muscle behind LIV Golf. Until that happens, however, we’ll continue to monitor the degrees of consternation or schadenfreude certain factions exhibit as they observe LIV golfers slipping down the board and, thus, losing access to the majors via top-50 standing.

Make no mistake, this is the heart of the problem in the short run. Without LIV events getting OWGR points, LIV players’ path into major championships via being among the Top 50 (Masters, British Open) or Top 60 (U.S. Open) in the rankings is cut off.

It was difficult to not feel a slight pang of sympathy for Joaquin Niemann, who beat Sergio Garcia in a playoff to win LIV Golf Mexico and then lamented that because he no longer resides among the world’s top 50, he wasn’t eligible to compete in any of the majors—though he did qualify for the Open Championship at Royal Troon by virtue of his playoff win at the Australian Open in December. Niemann is playing in Oman this week, too, looking for OWGR points but poised to miss his first Masters since the 2020 pandemic edition.

LIV Golf’s membership largely feels cheated. Their players, presumably assured by CEO Greg Norman that OWGR recognition was a foregone conclusion, believe they are deserving of points simply by virtue of their tour’s existence. This is the irreconcilable dissonance.

In the aftermath of his win in the Mexican twilight, Niemann was passionate about his career goals. “I want to win majors, but I gotta get in first.” Well, had winning majors been his priority, he would have remained on the PGA Tour, where he built a résumé that saw him rise to 15th in the world. When he was among the gang of six who defected to LIV after the 2022 Tour Championship, he was ranked 19th, but he has since fallen to 81st.

This is the Faustian bargain that he and his fellow LIV members opted to accept. Their choice made them wildly rich—some more so than others—while taking a calculated risk that their standing in the sport as reflected in the OWGR would not be adversely affected, at least not for long. Some accepted what can only be estimated as generational wealth. It’s a damn good deal. Their omission from the OWGR is not a punishment, but the price of that payday.

Golf fans can and should be unhappy about the current imbalance of the OWGR but anyone who lays the blame at the feet of OWGR chairman Peter Dawson and representatives of the major championship has a misplaced sense for assigning fault.

Interestingly, it was another LIV golfer who grasped the role he played in his own predicament.

Carlos Ortiz, who has fallen to 1,286th in the world, seems to be of two minds on the subject, telling former tour player and CBS broadcaster Colt Knost on a recent podcast that, “I understand that we went out of the system, and it’s gonna take time to be part of the system. But I also think that if the World Ranking was to be accurate, they have to include all kinds of players.”

But the following is why Ortiz deserves a measure of respect: “I’m not saying we should have got them from the beginning, or something. I know there are certain rules, and I knew from the beginning the consequences and the setback that we could have had, and I accept them. … I definitely knew the consequences and the reason for going [and] not getting world ranking points was part of them.”

Ortiz did add one strange observation, that people “have to recognize that there [are] good players here [on LIV].” This is both true and beside the point. Of course there are good players competing on the LIV tour. Some are great. Some are destined for the Hall of Fame. But they also contributed to the very deficiencies in the OWGR that they lament.

Last Sunday at the Malaysian Open, Spain’s David Puig, a member of Garcia’s Fireballs team, offered another reminder of the talent on the LIV tour. Not exactly a household name in golf, Puig completed a remarkable weekend to win his second Asian Tour event in the last four months. He submitted a pair of bogey-free 62s after making the cut on the number, and in the process claimed one of three qualifying spots for the Open like Niemann did in Australia.

“Getting that Open spot is super cool,” said Puig, who rose from No. 245 to No. 141 in the world after his victory. “I came here for that.”

LIV golfers say they just want to be a part of the OWGR ecosystem. For now, players like Puig and Niemann have to find their way into the existing one wherever they can. It doesn’t seem quite right, but it’s the path they chose for riches beyond their wildest dreams—and, obviously, well beyond their dreams of winning majors.