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The top-5 newsmakers of 2022

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Check out my rundown of the the top-5 news-making golfers of 2022.

1. Cameron Smith

2022 was one hell of a year for golf, but one subject dominated the first half, and may continue to do so over the next 12 months.

Like it or loathe it, LIV was monumental news, and there are probably half a dozen names that could make the top spot in this column. For me, Aussie Cam Smith tops the lot.

Having shown progression and winning form on the PGA Tour over the past 24 months, Smith raised his game last season, following up back-to-back wins at his home PGA Championship and the pairs competition, the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, and the Sony Open.

A stunning 34-under win at the Tournament of Champions, victory at the prestigious Sawgrass and a fourth top-10 at Augusta saw the 29-year-old make his way comfortably inside the top 10 in the world rankings, becoming one of the main challengers to Scottie Scheffler, Jon Rahm, and Rory McIlroy for the number one slot.

Then the rumblings began.

Having already secured major winners such as Dustin Johnson and Brooks Koepka, the LIV rumor mill went into overdrive, strongly indicating that Smith and former Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama were the next targets. Most golf fans would have seen the Japanese player’s loss of form and would have expected him to make the leap over the now very progressive Aussie.

And then the most bizarre week.

Although fate looked to have nearly secured a St. Andrews victory for Rory McIlroy, both he and Viktor Hovland saw a four-shot overnight lead vanish down the stretch, with Smith simply out-playing them and performing beautifully on and around the hallowed putting surfaces.

After a best-of-the-day 64 had won the most famous trophy in golf, the Claret Jug, Smith faced a barrage of questions about where he went from this victory, with the push towards revealing whether he was a “yeah” or “no” to LIV.

It was a strange reply: “My team around me worries about all that stuff.” He convinced very few.

Of course, it would never stop there, and as the Aussie made his way to two of the three FedEx events (he pulled out of the middle one — the BMW — due to “injury”) he was constantly batting away the reporter’s questions.

He might have said, “I’m ready to cop some heat,” before continuing, “I understand what I’ve said, but as I said, I’m here to play to win the FedEx Cup Playoffs. That’s my number one goal, and whatever happens after that will come from me.” He might also have tried unconvincingly to detract from compatriot Cameron Percy’s view that both he and Marc Leishman were “gone,” but few took his side and at the end of August LIV confirmed they had landed their biggest catch to date.

Smith was clear about his reasons. He stated the signing was a “business decision,” whilst also mentioning that the worldwide LIV schedule was far more appealing:

“I’ve lived over here seven years now, and I love living in the U.S., but just little things like missing friends’ weddings, birthday parties and seeing your mates having a great time at rugby league games has been tough.”

Since joining the rebel tour, Smith has won once from five starts on LIV, with total earnings of just over $7 million, and turned up to dominate the Australian PGA for his third win in five years at the event, a tournament he enjoyed replaying in his local.

In his final event of the year, Smith missed the cut at the Australian Open, but that can’t take away the fact he’s had a year in every respect. Had he continued on the PGA Tour, he would have been news. The fact he didn’t make him even more so.

Unlike many of his fellow jumpers, Smith was getting better by the month and was on his way to the number one slot pretty soon. It will be up to the OWGR, but that he may still do makes him very much news of 2022 and 2023.

2. Lydia Ko

It’s a rare thing to keep top form going for five, 10, 15 years, and more. Players launch out of the blocks, but many have also suffered long periods of, well, nothing.

The PGA Tour may have had its young winners in recent years (Spieth, Wolff, Morikawa and Kim), but the LPGA outdoes them by several handfuls, with players such as Brooke Henderson, Lexi Thompson, Paula Creamer, and Morgan Pressel winning events before they were 19 years of age and again suffering long periods when the game just goes.

Lydia Ko, back-to-back winner of the Canadian Open at 15 and 16 years of age, trumps all those names and, despite the total of 19 LPGA wins over 10 years, 2022 was definitely her best yet.

The 25-year-old Korean-born superstar has only won five times since a stellar 2016, but three came this year, winning on her second outing of the year — the Gainbridge LPGA — and at two of her last three outings at the BMW Ladies and prestigious Tour Championship (final round highlights here).

Throughout the 22 events of her season, Ko made every weekend, winning three times and recording nine further top-five finishes to win her first Player of the Year award since 2015. Top that with a return to world No. 1 in what might be the densest LPGA field of all time, and we have a newsmaker making the right type of news.

Ko continues to tinker with her game, recently opening up on the amicable split with Sean Foley, but she’s rarely been happier.

Due to marry her fiance Chung Jun in the off-season, Ko appears more relaxed than she ever has been, and having led the scoring average, strokes-gained-total and been in the top three for scrambling and putting, she may find herself in this column in 12 months time.

3. Ashleigh Buhai

When Ashleigh Buhai won the 2022 Women’s Open at Muirfield in August, she made history by becoming the first (modern-day) South African player to win the event since Alison Sheard in 1979, and only the second female major champion after Sally Little won two at either end of the 1980s.

A noted amateur, Buhai has taken her time winning tournaments, her second victory coming four years after the Catalonia Ladies Masters, whilst her win at her home Open came in 2018, seven years later.

None of those events were particularly close, with a winning margin of at least two, so as she opened up a five-shot lead (courtesy of a 65/64 blitz) going into Sunday, signs looked promising, as did her Open record — a tied-5th and 11th being her two best major finishes in 43 outings.

Three ahead with a handful of holes to play, including the gettable par-5 17th, the engraver was ready to start his job, until a disastrous treble-bogey on the 15th.

Opens are never meant to be easy and when the 33-year-old lost that substantial lead, she faced the prospect of a playoff against In-Gee Chun, a three-time major winner who just two months prior had won the Women’s PGA from two former major champions.

It looked a tough task for the pre-event 200/1 chance against one of the more fancied players, but in an epic battle that went to the fourth extra hole, the less-fancied player proved far the hardiest.

Both had chances to win the decider, and as they approached the 18th yet again, both looked fatigued.

In-Gee found her tee shot drift off the fairway into a bunker, meaning she had to chip out, hit a long hybrid shot and attempt a difficult par save, whilst her opponent’s approach looked to have found one of those golf lies in the back half of an island bunker to the right of the green, facing what appeared to be a much tougher par save.

With In-Gee 15 feet short of the pin, Buhai needed to get closer to the pin and put the onus on the Korean. Under the most extreme pressure, Buhai created a chip shot of beauty, landing perfectly on the green and rolling out to around two feet. In-Gee missed her putt, the South African couldn’t, announcing the victory as “life-changing.”

Not only was the exhausting effort worthy of being a news headline, but the antics of her husband, David, were also worthy of note. Usually caddying for Jeongeun Lee6, he’d clearly had a bit too much of the local brew and couldn’t quite hide either his nerves or delight as the play-off ended in victory for his better half. It would not be another wait for her next title, and just four months later, Buhai ended her year with a victory at the ISPS Handa Women’s Australian Open, coming from one behind another former major winner in Jiyai Shin, who missed a five-footer to tie. This time, Dave had to be a tad quieter — he was on the bag.

4. Tom Kim

In a year that was preoccupied with talk of how much money players were getting or needed, golf needed a lift.

There were the heroic social media stances taken by the likes of Max Homa and Joel Dahmen, both among many that provided a chuckle of three, but on the course, nobody made more of an impact than Joohyung Kim, for whom typists will forever be grateful is better known as Tom.

Through a convoluted qualifying path that included a third place at the Scottish Open, Kim was granted Special Temporary Membership to the PGA Tour and immediately secured his card with a seventh at the Rocket Mortgage Classic after a final round 63. All that after having to birdie his 36th hole to make the cut.

“It means everything,” he said after gaining his license for 2022/23. “Every day I’ve played golf, I’ve thought about playing on the PGA Tour. It was nothing else.”

Already the youngest player inside the OWGR top-50, a week later, the 20-year-old became the only winner of a PGA Tour event that had started their tournament with a quadruple bogey, eventually firing a final round 61 to earn a stunning five-shot victory.

The first two FedEx events didn’t quite match that standard, with a lowly effort at the BMW meaning he missed the Tour Championship.

However, in a mix of established stars, Kim shone out at the Presidents Cup.

Golf Digest tells the tale of the per-tournament press conference:

“When a reporter asked him if he had taken any inspiration from Y.E. Yang’s win over Tiger Woods at the 2009 PGA Championship, and whether that formula of taking down a juggernaut might have echoes in the International Team’s monumental task of beating the Americans.

“Kim took the air out of that narrative quickly—he said he was a Tiger fan growing up and didn’t want Yang to win. Later, he added that even as a seven-year-old, he was disappointed in Yang’s win because he wanted to be the first Korean to win a major.”

Kim may have gone 2-3-0 in the team event, but in winning a foursome (against Scottie and Sam Burns) and one fourball (versus Patrick Cantlay and Xander), he showed that golf can be fun!

Kim could not have started the 2022/23 wrap-around season any stronger, with a comfortable three-shot victory at the Shriners, easily holding off course specialist Cantlay, who simply tried too hard to catch the leader. In doing so, Kim became the first winner since Tiger to win two PGA events before the age of 21.

Subsequent efforts include a 25th at the Zozo, 11th at the CJ Cup and a year-ending fourth place in Japan before taking finishing 10th at the Hero World Challenge, where he co-led after the first round and ‘officially’ met his hero Tiger Woods.

Kim’s ascendancy to the top 15 in the world is no fluke.

He won the Asian Tour Order of Merit before immediately making an impact at the highest level, his approach stats are as good as anyone out there, he openly loves the game, and he’s nicknamed after children’s cartoon hero Thomas The Tank Engine.

In a year when many of the best-known golfers shed fans by the bucket load, Tom Kim is the perfect antidote.

5. Matt Fitzpatrick

Until this year, Matt Fitzpatrick had recorded only one top-10 in 23 attempts at a major.

Whilst the 28-year-old had won seven European Tour events, he had never won on the PGA Tour, with many observers, and Fitz himself, acknowledging his lack of length was an issue. Those runner-up finishes at Bay Hill at this year’s Wells Fargo were no surprise given his class, but there was something just missing.

And then it all came right.

Having worked with coach Mike Walker and biomechanistic Sasho Mackenzie, Fitz started to see results.

Working on a method known as The Stack, the figures tell it all, with Fitz’s average club head speed on the PGA Tour halfway through the 2022 season increasing by over five mph compared to 2019, and his ‘off-the-tee ranking improving to 10th, compared to 59th just three years ago.

The season had already seen the Englishman finish tied-14th at The Masters, T2 at Wells Fargo and T5 at the USPGA, so he was in as good a shape as ever when coming to the U.S Open at Brookline.

Starting alongside another tee-to-green superstar, Will Zalatoris, the two PGA maidens stood on the first tee, hoping to hold off a host of challengers, including the daunting trio of Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm and world number one Scottie Scheffler.

Despite several putts just missing by millimetres and an eagle try at #8, Fitz stubbornly refused to go away, finding himself in the sole lead when Scheffler started unravelling just after the turn.

On the same hole that Scheffler had just three-putted – the 11th – Fitz watched Zalatoris drain one and then miss a two-putt par from 15 feet, giving his playing partner a two-shot lead. That’s huge at a major but thoughts turned to the fate of Mito Pereira at Southern Hills.

Fitz then knocked in a 60-footer monster on 13 and then watched the leader save par from 15 feet, whilst, at the 15th, he again holes for birdie whilst WillyZ records his second bogey in four holes.

Now chasing, Zalatoris made no mistake knocking in a short one at 16 and was now just one behind coming to the pressure holes, and it was set up nicely at 17, where both players made par. Down to the 72nd.

On the deciding hole, and one shot behind, Zalatoris crashed one down the fairway whilst, defending his narrow lead, Fitz pulled a three-wood into the left-hand island bunker.

There was very little room in front of the leader’s ball, and any mis-shot might have seen the ball hit the large tuft of grass, sending the ball anywhere. Another possibility was being short and facing a tough up-and-down from the bunker in front of the green.

Fitz and caddie Billy Foster did not mess around. In contrast to the lopper needing to tell his charge to ‘get on with it’, as he did at Augusta in April, Fitz took control and hit a shot equal to the much-replayed iron of Sandy Lyle’s famous bunker shot on the 72nd hole of the 1988 Masters.

Fitz second ended around 20 feet from the flag, a couple of feet ahead of his playing partner, and now the only other that could stop a play-off between either of the leaders and Scheffler, safe in the house at 5-under.

The leader cozied the ball to the hole, parred out and watched as Zalatoris, already twice a major runner-up, missed the birdie putt by an inch.

Not only had the Englishman finally got the PGA Tour monkey off his back, but he did it in the utmost style, ranking first in tee-to-green with an astonishing 16-plus strokes gained, as well as leading the around-the-green figures.

Fitz went on to make 16th at the Tour Championship, run up in Italy, and end his year looking as if the season had taken its toll, but still finishing 5th.

On the PGA Tour for 2021/2, Fitz ranked 10th off-the-tee, seventh in tee-to-green and around-the-green, 22nd in putting and second overall. On the DPWT, he ranked 21st for driving distance, an improvement of over 100 places from the previous season, and third for stroke average.

Fitz has always been there, but this time he has arrived. And that makes news in the golf world.

Notable mentions

Everyone will have their own view on the newsmakers of 2022.

Of course, having dominated golf news for much of the first half of the year, Greg Norman, LIV CEO, might be a choice. The mouthpiece of the Saudi-backed tour has got himself in the news with an awful lot of rhetoric and has twice been rumored to be on the verge of being replaced.

Then there is Phil Mickelson, who went from being the dominant force on the Champions Tour to hiding away for a couple of months. Having openly admitted his “obnoxious greed”, he became the most polarising figure in the game, accepting a huge amount of money from a group he had previously called “scary motherf**kers.”

On a good note, Rory McIlroy finally became the dominant player, finishing number one on both sides of the Atlantic. He won three events, should have won at least three more, and went home empty-handed from St. Andrews, an Open Championship that was there for him to win.

As a celebrated opponent of LIV, McIlroy became the mouthpiece for the PGA and DPWT players, although that wasn’t always welcomed by all.

Finally, as it was getting quiet, and few thought we would hear about LIV until February, the Augusta National committee released a statement  saying they would welcome all the qualified players to the 2023 Masters. In attempting to “honor the tradition of bringing together a preeminent field of golfers,” they have attracted the attention of the 9/11 survivors’ group, in the same way, LIV Golf did in June.

Whatever your view, there is one thing for sure. Golf is making news.

Happy Holidays, WRXers!

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19th Hole

Vincenzi’s LIV Golf Singapore betting preview: Course specialist ready to thrive once again

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After another strong showing in Australia, LIV Golf will head to Sentosa Golf Club in Singapore looking to build off of what was undoubtedly their best event to date.

Sentosa Golf Club sits on the southern tip of Singapore and is one of the most beautiful courses in the world. The course is more than just incredible scenically; it was also rated 55th in Golf Digest’s top-100 courses in 2022-2023 and has been consistently regarded as one of the best courses in Asia. Prior to being part of the LIV rotation, the course hosted the Singapore Open every year since 2005.

Sentosa Golf Club is a par 71 measuring 7,406 yards. The course will require precise ball striking and some length off the tee. It’s possible to go low due to the pristine conditions, but there are also plenty of hazards and difficult spots on the course that can bring double bogey into play in a hurry. The Bermudagrass greens are perfectly manicured, and the course has spent millions on the sub-air system to keep the greens rolling fast. I spoke to Asian Tour player, Travis Smyth, who described the greens as “the best [he’s] ever played.”

Davis Love III, who competed in a Singapore Open in 2019, also gushed over the condition of the golf course.

“I love the greens. They are fabulous,” the 21-time PGA Tour winner said.

Love III also spoke about other aspects of the golf course.

“The greens are great; the fairways are perfect. It is a wonderful course, and it’s tricky off the tee.”

“It’s a long golf course, and you get some long iron shots. It takes somebody hitting it great to hit every green even though they are big.”

As Love III said, the course can be difficult off the tee due to the length of the course and the trouble looming around every corner. It will take a terrific ball striking week to win at Sentosa Golf Club.

In his pre-tournament press conference last season, Phil Mickelson echoed many of the same sentiments.

“To play Sentosa effectively, you’re going to have a lot of shots from 160 to 210, a lot of full 6-, 7-, 8-iron shots, and you need to hit those really well and you need to drive the ball well.”

Golfers who excel from tee to green and can dial in their longer irons will have a massive advantage this week.

Stat Leaders at LIV Golf Adelaide:

Fairways Hit

1.) Louis Oosthuizen

2.) Anirban Lahiri

3.) Jon Rahm

4.) Brendan Steele

5.) Cameron Tringale

Greens in Regulation

1.) Brooks Koepka

2.) Brendan Steele

3.) Dean Burmester

4.) Cameron Tringale

5.) Anirban Lahiri

Birdies Made

1.) Brendan Steele

2.) Dean Burmester

3.) Thomas Pieters

4.) Patrick Reed

5.) Carlos Ortiz

LIV Golf Individual Standings:

1.) Joaquin Niemann

2.) Jon Rahm

3.) Dean Burmester

4.) Louis Oosthuizen

5.) Abraham Ancer

LIV Golf Team Standings:

1.) Crushers

2.) Legion XIII

3.) Torque

4.) Stinger GC

5.) Ripper GC

LIV Golf Singapore Picks

Sergio Garcia +3000 (DraftKings)

Sergio Garcia is no stranger to Sentosa Golf Club. The Spaniard won the Singapore Open in 2018 by five strokes and lost in a playoff at LIV Singapore last year to scorching hot Talor Gooch. Looking at the course setup, it’s no surprise that a player like Sergio has played incredible golf here. He’s long off the tee and is one of the better long iron players in the world when he’s in form. Garcia is also statistically a much better putter on Bermudagrass than he is on other putting surfaces. He’s putt extremely well on Sentosa’s incredibly pure green complexes.

This season, Garcia has two runner-up finishes, both of them being playoff losses. Both El Camaleon and Doral are courses he’s had success at in his career. The Spaniard is a player who plays well at his tracks, and Sentosa is one of them. I believe Sergio will get himself in the mix this week. Hopefully the third time is a charm in Singapore.

Paul Casey +3300 (FanDuel)

Paul Casey is in the midst of one of his best seasons in the five years or so. The results recently have been up and down, but he’s shown that when he’s on a golf course that suits his game, he’s amongst the contenders.

This season, Casey has finishes of T5 (LIV Las Vegas), T2 (LIV Hong Kong), and a 6th at the Singapore Classic on the DP World Tour. At his best, the Englishman is one of the best long iron players in the world, which makes him a strong fit for Sentosa. Despite being in poor form last season, he was able to fire a Sunday 63, which shows he can low here at the course.

It’s been three years since Casey has won a tournament (Omega Dubai Desert Classic in 2021), but he’s been one of the top players on LIV this season and I think he can get it done at some point this season.

Mito Pereira +5000 (Bet365)

Since Mito Pereira’s unfortunate demise at the 2022 PGA Championship, he’s been extremely inconsistent. However, over the past few months, the Chilean has played well on the International Series as well as his most recent LIV start. Mito finished 8th at LIV Adelaide, which was his best LIV finish this season.

Last year, Pereira finished 5th at LIV Singapore, shooting fantastic rounds of 67-66-66. It makes sense why Mito would like Sentosa, as preeminent ball strikers tend to rise to the challenge of the golf course. He’s a great long iron player who is long and straight off the tee.

Mito has some experience playing in Asia and is one of the most talented players on LIV who’s yet to get in the winner’s circle. I have questions about whether or not he can come through once in contention, but if he gets there, I’m happy to roll the dice.

Andy Ogletree +15000 (DraftKings)

Andy Ogletree is a player I expected to have a strong 2024 but struggled early in his first full season on LIV. After failing to crack the top-25 in any LIV event this year, the former U.S. Amateur champion finally figured things out, finished in a tie for 3rd at LIV Adelaide.

Ogletree should be incredible comfortable playing in Singapore. He won the International Series Qatar last year and finished T3 at the International Series Singapore. The 26-year-old was arguably the best player on the Asian Tour in 2023 and has been fantastic in the continent over the past 18 months.

If Ogletree has indeed found form, he looks to be an amazing value at triple-digit odds.

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Opinion & Analysis

Ryan: Lessons from the worst golf instructor in America

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In Tampa, there is a golf course that boasts carts that do not work, a water range, and a group of players none of which have any chance to break 80. The course is overseen by a staff of crusty men who have succeeded at nothing in life but ending up at the worst-run course in America. However, this place is no failure. With several other local courses going out of business — and boasting outstanding greens — the place is booked full.

While I came for the great greens, I stayed to watch our resident instructor; a poor-tempered, method teacher who caters to the hopeless. At first, it was simply hilarious. However, after months of listening and watching, something clicked. I realized I had a front-row seat to the worst golf instructor in America.

Here are some of my key takeaways.

Method Teacher

It is widely accepted that there are three types of golf instructors: system teachers, non-system teachers, and method teachers. Method teachers prescribe the same antidote for each student based on a preamble which teachers can learn in a couple day certification.

Method teaching allows anyone to be certified. This process caters to the lowest caliber instructor, creating the illusion of competency. This empowers these underqualified instructors with the moniker of “certified” to prey on the innocent and uninformed.

The Cult of Stack and Jilt

The Stack and Tilt website proudly boasts, “A golfer swings his hands inward in the backswing as opposed to straight back to 1) create power, similar to a field goal kicker moving his leg in an arc and 2) to promote a swing that is in-to-out, which produces a draw (and eliminates a slice).”

Now, let me tell you something, there is this law of the universe which says “energy can either be created or destroyed,” so either these guys are defying physics or they have no idea what they are taking about. Further, the idea that the first move of the backswing determines impact is conjecture with a splash of utter fantasy.

These are the pontifications of a method — a set of prescriptions applied to everyone with the hope of some success through the placebo effect. It is one thing for a naive student to believe, for a golf instructor to drink and then dispel this Kool-Aid is malpractice.

Fooled by Randomness

In flipping a coin, or even a March Madness bet, there is a 50-50 chance of success. In golf, especially for new players, results are asymmetric. Simply put: Anything can happen. The problem is that when bad instructors work with high handicappers, each and every shot gets its own diagnosis and prescription. Soon the student is overwhelmed.

Now here’s the sinister thing: The overwhelming information is by design. In this case, the coach is not trying to make you better, they are trying to make you reliant on them for information. A quasi Stockholm syndrome of codependency.

Practice

One of the most important scientists of the 20th century was Ivan Pavlov. As you might recall, he found that animals, including humans, could be conditioned into biological responses. In golf, the idea of practice has made millions of hackers salivate that they are one lesson or practice session from “the secret.”

Sunk Cost

The idea for the worst golf instructor is to create control and dependency so that clients ignore the sunk cost of not getting better. Instead, they are held hostage by the idea that they are one lesson or tip away from unlocking their potential.

Cliches

Cliches have the effect of terminating thoughts. However, they are the weapon of choice for this instructor. Add some hyperbole and students actually get no information. As a result, these players couldn’t play golf. When they did, they had no real scheme. With no idea what they are doing, they would descend into a spiral of no idea what to do, bad results, lower confidence, and running back to the lesson tee from more cliches.

The fact is that poor instruction is about conditioning players to become reliant members of your cult. To take away autonomy. To use practice as a form of control. To sell more golf lessons not by making people better but through the guise that without the teacher, the student can never reach their full potential. All under the umbrella of being “certified” (in a 2-day course!) and a melee of cliches.

This of course is not just happening at my muni but is a systemic problem around the country and around the world, the consequences of which are giving people a great reason to stop playing golf. But hey, at least it’s selling a lot of golf balls…

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19th Hole

Vincenzi’s 2024 Zurich Classic of New Orleans betting preview

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The PGA TOUR heads to New Orleans to play the 2023 Zurich Classic of New Orleans. In a welcome change from the usual stroke play, the Zurich Classic is a team event. On Thursday and Saturday, the teams play best ball, and on Friday and Sunday the teams play alternate shot.

TPC Louisiana is a par 72 that measures 7,425 yards. The course features some short par 4s and plenty of water and bunkers, which makes for a lot of exciting risk/reward scenarios for competitors. Pete Dye designed the course in 2004 specifically for the Zurich Classic, although the event didn’t make its debut until 2007 because of Hurricane Katrina.

Coming off of the Masters and a signature event in consecutive weeks, the field this week is a step down, and understandably so. Many of the world’s top players will be using this time to rest after a busy stretch.

However, there are some interesting teams this season with some stars making surprise appearances in the team event. Some notable teams include Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele, Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry, Collin Morikawa and Kurt Kitayama, Will Zalatoris and Sahith Theegala as well as a few Canadian teams, Nick Taylor and Adam Hadwin and Taylor Pendrith and Corey Conners.

Past Winners at TPC Louisiana

  • 2023: Riley/Hardy (-30)
  • 2022: Cantlay/Schauffele (-29)
  • 2021: Leishman/Smith (-20)
  • 2019: Palmer/Rahm (-26)
  • 2018: Horschel/Piercy (-22)
  • 2017: Blixt/Smith (-27)

2024 Zurich Classic of New Orleans Picks

Tom Hoge/Maverick McNealy +2500 (DraftKings)

Tom Hoge is coming off of a solid T18 finish at the RBC Heritage and finished T13 at last year’s Zurich Classic alongside Harris English.

This season, Hoge is having one of his best years on Tour in terms of Strokes Gained: Approach. In his last 24 rounds, the only player to top him on the category is Scottie Scheffler. Hoge has been solid on Pete Dye designs, ranking 28th in the field over his past 36 rounds.

McNealy is also having a solid season. He’s finished T6 at the Waste Management Phoenix Open and T9 at the PLAYERS Championship. He recently started working with world renowned swing coach, Butch Harmon, and its seemingly paid dividends in 2024.

Keith Mitchell/Joel Dahmen +4000 (DraftKings)

Keith Mitchell is having a fantastic season, finishing in the top-20 of five of his past seven starts on Tour. Most recently, Mitchell finished T14 at the Valero Texas Open and gained a whopping 6.0 strokes off the tee. He finished 6th at last year’s Zurich Classic.

Joel Dahmen is having a resurgent year and has been dialed in with his irons. He also has a T11 finish at the PLAYERS Championship at TPC Sawgrass which is another Pete Dye track. With Mitchell’s length and Dahmen’s ability to put it close with his short irons, the Mitchell/Dahmen combination will be dangerous this week.

Taylor Moore/Matt NeSmith +6500 (DraftKings)

Taylor Moore has quickly developed into one of the more consistent players on Tour. He’s finished in the top-20 in three of his past four starts, including a very impressive showing at The Masters, finishing T20. He’s also finished T4 at this event in consecutive seasons alongside Matt NeSmith.

NeSmith isn’t having a great 2024, but has seemed to elevate his game in this format. He finished T26 at Pete Dye’s TPC Sawgrass, which gives the 30-year-old something to build off of. NeSmith is also a great putter on Bermudagrass, which could help elevate Moore’s ball striking prowess.

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