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[h=1]Best bets for the PGA Championship[/h]
ESPN PLUS ($ MATERIAL)
The PGA Tour heads to South Carolina this week for the second major of the year.
The PGA Championship will take place Thursday through Sunday on the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island Golf Resort. Collin Morikawa is the defending champion.
Which players are the favorites this time around, who offers good odds and what props are worthwhile?
Betting analysts Doug Kezirian, Chris "The Bear" Fallica, Joe Fortenbaugh, sports betting deputy editor David Bearman and fantasy analyst Anita Marks offer their best bets.
Odds courtesy of Caesars Sportsbook by William Hill unless otherwise noted.
[h=2]Bets to win[/h] [h=3]Justin Thomas +16-1; Top-10 finish (+150)[/h]
Fallica: Thomas' lone major win came in the Carolinas, and after a weekend collapse at the Masters he'll be focused on making amends for taking himself out of consideration there. He has been in the top 12 five of the last seven majors and it seems like he's overdue to win his second career major. He has also just won on a Dye course, capturing The Players this year.
[h=3]Dustin Johnson 18-1; Top-10 finish (+200)[/h]
Fallica: Who knows if his knee is OK? But if it is, one could be hating themselves for letting this price get away come Sunday, as this course has similarities to Chambers Bay and Whistling Straits, where DJ should have won. Oh, by the way, he has been the runner-up in this event the last two years. [h=3]Xander Schauffele 22-1; Top-10 finish (+200)[/h]
Bearman: We've been down this road before with Schauffele, but one of these majors he is going to win -- and this course sets up nicely for his ball-striking. This course requires hitting fairways and greens, or you are in for a long week. And if you do miss, you better be good at scrambling around the dunes. Schauffele is second in shots gained overall and 14th tee to green. He's 44th off the tee, which combines distance and accuracy from the tee box. Just as important, he is eighth in putting, 19th on tour in greens in regulation and 17th in scrambling.
He comes in with a T-11 and a T-14 following his third-place finish at Augusta, which was his seventh top-6 finish in 15 career major appearances. Four of the last six PGA Championship winners were first-time major winners (only Brooks Koepka was not), so why not Xander? I am not in love with any of the favorites due to recent inconsistent play and injuries. We are getting a nice 22-1 price here. At some point, he's due.
[h=3]Viktor Hovland 22-1; Hovland (-120) over DJ[/h]
Marks: Hovland enters with five top-5 finishes this season and two top 3s (at the Wells Fargo and Valspar). Needless to say, he is dialed in. He skipped the Byron Nelson to give himself a week to fine tune his game. Hovland excels on paved with paspalum grass fairways; he won on similar surfaces at the Mayakoba Golf Classic, the El Camaleon and the Puerto Rico Open. Hovland ranks fourth in strokes gained off the tee, is sixth in tee to green and 23rd in shots gained on approach approach this season. I also have Hovland over Collin Morikawa (50- at DraftKings) and over Rory McIlroy (22-1 at DK). [h=3]Daniel Berger 30-1; Top-10 finish (+333)[/h]
Bearman: As noted above with the Schauffele pick, I am not in love with the favorites this week. I like a lot of golfers in the 30-50-to-1 range, but maybe none more than Berger. He's in the top 25 in all major shots gained metrics, including 10th overall, 18th on approach, 19th putting, 24th off the tee and 25th tee to green. He's also 10th in greens in regulation, which will come into play this week.
Berger came on to the main stage last year with five consecutive top 10s and seven of 10 in a stretch from February to August. His encore performance has been five more top 10s in 14 events this season, including a win at Pebble and a T-3 last week at the Byron Nelson. He mastered the wind and cliffs off the Pacific Coast at Pebble, and while this is a different, harder course, some of the same elements will apply this week. [h=3]Tony Finau 35-1; Top-10 finish (+350); Top-20 finish (+138)[/h]
Fallica: We're gonna put a little on him to win, as he has really been flying under the radar this week and maybe the tempered expectations will help. But, as usual, we will be focusing on the top 10 and 20 markets with Finau, who has eight top 10s in majors since the 2015 PGA. [h=3]Patrick Reed 33-1; Top-10 finish (+350)[/h]
Fallica: Many expect a big hitter to win this week, and while Reed doesn't fit that mold of the longest of the long, he has won on other courses like Augusta, Bethpage and Torrey, each of which supposedly cater to the longer hitter. He has been no worse than 13th in any of the last four majors and will likely be in this come Sunday. Like DJ, he was also in the mix at Chambers Bay. [h=3]Scottie Scheffler 40-1; Top-10 finish (+400)[/h]
Fallica: It seems like the PGA has provided many a debut major winner. Scheffler could be that guy this year. His results don't match the statistics -- 15th off the tee, 40th around the green and 38th tee to green. He was in the mix last year at the PGA (fourth) and posted a top 20 at Augusta. [h=3]Corey Conners 60-1; Top-10 finish (+500)[/h]
Bearman: Despite two "off" weeks, I am not giving up on my guy here. Yes, he faded to a T-43 last week in Texas and ended his top-20 run with a T-21 the week before at Wells Fargo. But I am looking at the entire body of work, which included top 20s in nine of the previous 11 stroke-play events before Wells Fargo.
The course is a perfect fit for Conners' ball striking, as he is ninth tee to green, 12th off the tee, sixth on approach and 14th overall. He comes in ninth in greens in regulation, 11th in driving accuracy and 12th in scoring average to round out some impressive stats this year this year.
After spending a couple of weeks near the top of the betting board, he's now back to 60-1, which is just fine for me. I'll happily jump on that and throw some on a top 10 at 5-to-1, which is exactly where he finished at the first major of the year down in Georgia. [h=3]Keegan Bradley 70-1; Top-20 finish (+275)[/h]
Bearman: The 2011 PGA champion quietly is having a resurgence with a T-4, second and T-18 in his last three events, along with a top 10 at the API in March. He didn't qualify for the Masters due to a couple of down years, but in the last six weeks he has gone from 150th in the world to 69th, his best ranking since before the COVID-19 break. He's fifth in the all-important tee-to-green metric and 35th off the tee and overall and 25th in hitting greens. Where Bradley has struggled is on the greens. Make no mistake about it, he has been bad there (190th on tour). However, this is a course where if you hit fairways and greens and are at least average with the flat stick on the slower Paspalum greens, you can win. Oh, and he finished T-3 here in 2012 behind the Rory McIlroy runaway in his title defense. At 70-1, he's my flier for the week.
ESPN PLUS ($ MATERIAL)
The PGA Tour heads to South Carolina this week for the second major of the year.
The PGA Championship will take place Thursday through Sunday on the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island Golf Resort. Collin Morikawa is the defending champion.
Which players are the favorites this time around, who offers good odds and what props are worthwhile?
Betting analysts Doug Kezirian, Chris "The Bear" Fallica, Joe Fortenbaugh, sports betting deputy editor David Bearman and fantasy analyst Anita Marks offer their best bets.
Odds courtesy of Caesars Sportsbook by William Hill unless otherwise noted.
[h=2]Bets to win[/h] [h=3]Justin Thomas +16-1; Top-10 finish (+150)[/h]
Fallica: Thomas' lone major win came in the Carolinas, and after a weekend collapse at the Masters he'll be focused on making amends for taking himself out of consideration there. He has been in the top 12 five of the last seven majors and it seems like he's overdue to win his second career major. He has also just won on a Dye course, capturing The Players this year.
[h=3]Dustin Johnson 18-1; Top-10 finish (+200)[/h]
Fallica: Who knows if his knee is OK? But if it is, one could be hating themselves for letting this price get away come Sunday, as this course has similarities to Chambers Bay and Whistling Straits, where DJ should have won. Oh, by the way, he has been the runner-up in this event the last two years. [h=3]Xander Schauffele 22-1; Top-10 finish (+200)[/h]
Bearman: We've been down this road before with Schauffele, but one of these majors he is going to win -- and this course sets up nicely for his ball-striking. This course requires hitting fairways and greens, or you are in for a long week. And if you do miss, you better be good at scrambling around the dunes. Schauffele is second in shots gained overall and 14th tee to green. He's 44th off the tee, which combines distance and accuracy from the tee box. Just as important, he is eighth in putting, 19th on tour in greens in regulation and 17th in scrambling.
He comes in with a T-11 and a T-14 following his third-place finish at Augusta, which was his seventh top-6 finish in 15 career major appearances. Four of the last six PGA Championship winners were first-time major winners (only Brooks Koepka was not), so why not Xander? I am not in love with any of the favorites due to recent inconsistent play and injuries. We are getting a nice 22-1 price here. At some point, he's due.
[h=3]Viktor Hovland 22-1; Hovland (-120) over DJ[/h]
Marks: Hovland enters with five top-5 finishes this season and two top 3s (at the Wells Fargo and Valspar). Needless to say, he is dialed in. He skipped the Byron Nelson to give himself a week to fine tune his game. Hovland excels on paved with paspalum grass fairways; he won on similar surfaces at the Mayakoba Golf Classic, the El Camaleon and the Puerto Rico Open. Hovland ranks fourth in strokes gained off the tee, is sixth in tee to green and 23rd in shots gained on approach approach this season. I also have Hovland over Collin Morikawa (50- at DraftKings) and over Rory McIlroy (22-1 at DK). [h=3]Daniel Berger 30-1; Top-10 finish (+333)[/h]
Bearman: As noted above with the Schauffele pick, I am not in love with the favorites this week. I like a lot of golfers in the 30-50-to-1 range, but maybe none more than Berger. He's in the top 25 in all major shots gained metrics, including 10th overall, 18th on approach, 19th putting, 24th off the tee and 25th tee to green. He's also 10th in greens in regulation, which will come into play this week.
Berger came on to the main stage last year with five consecutive top 10s and seven of 10 in a stretch from February to August. His encore performance has been five more top 10s in 14 events this season, including a win at Pebble and a T-3 last week at the Byron Nelson. He mastered the wind and cliffs off the Pacific Coast at Pebble, and while this is a different, harder course, some of the same elements will apply this week. [h=3]Tony Finau 35-1; Top-10 finish (+350); Top-20 finish (+138)[/h]
Fallica: We're gonna put a little on him to win, as he has really been flying under the radar this week and maybe the tempered expectations will help. But, as usual, we will be focusing on the top 10 and 20 markets with Finau, who has eight top 10s in majors since the 2015 PGA. [h=3]Patrick Reed 33-1; Top-10 finish (+350)[/h]
Fallica: Many expect a big hitter to win this week, and while Reed doesn't fit that mold of the longest of the long, he has won on other courses like Augusta, Bethpage and Torrey, each of which supposedly cater to the longer hitter. He has been no worse than 13th in any of the last four majors and will likely be in this come Sunday. Like DJ, he was also in the mix at Chambers Bay. [h=3]Scottie Scheffler 40-1; Top-10 finish (+400)[/h]
Fallica: It seems like the PGA has provided many a debut major winner. Scheffler could be that guy this year. His results don't match the statistics -- 15th off the tee, 40th around the green and 38th tee to green. He was in the mix last year at the PGA (fourth) and posted a top 20 at Augusta. [h=3]Corey Conners 60-1; Top-10 finish (+500)[/h]
Bearman: Despite two "off" weeks, I am not giving up on my guy here. Yes, he faded to a T-43 last week in Texas and ended his top-20 run with a T-21 the week before at Wells Fargo. But I am looking at the entire body of work, which included top 20s in nine of the previous 11 stroke-play events before Wells Fargo.
The course is a perfect fit for Conners' ball striking, as he is ninth tee to green, 12th off the tee, sixth on approach and 14th overall. He comes in ninth in greens in regulation, 11th in driving accuracy and 12th in scoring average to round out some impressive stats this year this year.
After spending a couple of weeks near the top of the betting board, he's now back to 60-1, which is just fine for me. I'll happily jump on that and throw some on a top 10 at 5-to-1, which is exactly where he finished at the first major of the year down in Georgia. [h=3]Keegan Bradley 70-1; Top-20 finish (+275)[/h]
Bearman: The 2011 PGA champion quietly is having a resurgence with a T-4, second and T-18 in his last three events, along with a top 10 at the API in March. He didn't qualify for the Masters due to a couple of down years, but in the last six weeks he has gone from 150th in the world to 69th, his best ranking since before the COVID-19 break. He's fifth in the all-important tee-to-green metric and 35th off the tee and overall and 25th in hitting greens. Where Bradley has struggled is on the greens. Make no mistake about it, he has been bad there (190th on tour). However, this is a course where if you hit fairways and greens and are at least average with the flat stick on the slower Paspalum greens, you can win. Oh, and he finished T-3 here in 2012 behind the Rory McIlroy runaway in his title defense. At 70-1, he's my flier for the week.