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  • #16
    Courtship of Chambers Bay at US Open

    June 15, 2015

    UNIVERSITY PLACE, Wash. (AP) - Robert Streb walked off the third green at Chambers Bay, looked both directions and headed left down a dirt path toward Puget Sound.

    Wrong way.

    He walked back up the hill and stood in front of a large sign that showed a map of the course, arms crossed as he tried to figure out one of the many mysteries about this U.S. course. In this case, it was a simple question - where was No. 4?

    Streb wasn't alone.

    ''It was early on in the course, I think around the third or fourth hole,'' Paul Casey said Monday. ''My caddie walked the course the day before and knew the way. But I saw many caddies who were lost searching for the fourth tee.''

    There are more pertinent questions about Chambers Bay, the newest course in 45 years to host a U.S. Open. Never has a U.S. Open course featured so much elevation. One fairway is just over 100 yards wide. And it's so difficult to determine where the fairway ends and the green starts that the USGA has marked each green with white dots about a yard apart to outline the putting surface.

    Morgan Hoffmann, one of 11 players who competed at Chambers Bay in 2010 for the U.S. Amateur, described it with words that could take on any meaning.

    Interesting. Different.

    About the only one he left out was exciting.

    ''Oh, it will be exciting, absolutely,'' Hoffmann said. ''There's going to be shots you see on TV that they're going to replay and you're going to say, `How did that happen?' Because you can't see anywhere near what the slopes are.''

    Monday was busier than usual for a U.S. Open as the courtship of Chambers Bay got started with the first official day of practice.

    Tiger Woods was among those who took a scouting trip within the past two weeks. He was first out on the back nine and plans to go nine holes a day. Jordan Spieth played Chambers Bay for one round in the U.S. Amateur (he shot 83), played it again when his caddie got married and spent the weekend getting reacquainted.

    The reviews are mixed, which is not unusual for any U.S. Open.

    Chambers Bay is not a links course. It just dresses up like one, especially with the fescue grass that gives the course a blend of brown and green, mixed with yellow wisps of fescue framing the rugged and expansive bunkers.

    ''There's plenty of danger out there,'' Paul Casey said. ''Visually, it's fairly generous off the tee with what I've grown up with on links, if you're going to call this a links. You can have a lot of fear standing on the tee at links courses - Muirfield, Birkdale and the like.

    ''You know if you don't pipe, it you're going to be looking for a ball for a long time. Here, it's generous. The premium is put on the second shot and on the green. Where do you miss your second shot?''

    Retief Goosen, a two-time U.S. Open champion, hit the front of the first green in front of the flag, which was the wrong spot. It took a slope to the left and rolled off the green. It rolled so far, in fact, that Goosen had to use a laser to figure out how hard he had to get back toward the flag.

    The greens have so much contour that they look like oversized potato chips. Bubba Watson posted a video of him with his back to the hole, putting some 40 feet away from the cup up a ridge and watching it roll back and into the hole.

    Streb, once he found his way to the fourth tee, proved to be a quick study. The flags on the green might as well been there for decoration. Streb stood in the fairway and gazed some 30 yards right of the green.

    There were two TV towers on either side of a large grandstand. He settled on a USGA logo in the mesh bunting of the bleachers, the third one from the left, as his best line to get close to the hole.

    ''I think it's a fun golf course,'' Jimmy Walker said. ''You have to be really careful hitting into the greens - where to hit and where not to hit. ... My first go-around, you see the pin and look at the book and it was hard to tell. I've still got some studying to do.''

    It can be deceptive in so many ways.

    Walker recalled one par 4 in which he thought he could clear all the bunkers down the right side. His caddie, Andy Sanders, was telling him to go much farther left away from the trouble.

    ''Visually, I couldn't do it. It didn't look right,'' Walker said. ''I went ahead and did it my way. And it was bad.''

    For the moment, Chambers Bay is so new and so different that it's more intriguing than aggravating. Then again, scores don't count until Thursday. Walker said he played in a group that produced plenty of birdies and decent scores.

    And one aspect of the U.S. Open has changed.

    ''I don't know exactly what the mission statement is to find a U.S. Open course and how to set it up,'' two-time Open champion Lee Janzen said.

    ''But I would imagine that it would be to provide a challenging test so that the best players in the world are challenged, and hopefully bring out the best players for that week.''
    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

    Comment


    • #17
      Golfers to Bet - U.S. Open

      June 16, 2015


      Tournament: U.S. Open
      Date: June 18-21
      Venue: Chambers Bay Golf Club
      Location: University Place, WA

      The second, and often toughest, major of the year takes place this upcoming week when the players head to Chambers Bay Golf Club for the first time on Thursday. The U.S. Open first took place in 1895 and has been held at 50 different venues in the past with the most common spot being Oakmont Country Club in Pennsylvania, which has been the host eight times; most recently in 2007.

      Four of the past five victors in this tourney have come from Europe, with Graeme McDowell (2010), Rory McIlroy (2011), Justin Rose (2013) and most recently Martin Kaymer last year as he dominated the field. He took home the trophy in blistering fashion, winning by eight strokes behind a score of nine-under-par at Pinehurst No.2 as he started the week with back-to-back 65s. The only other two players who were able to get into red figures over the four days were Erik Compton and Rickie Fowler who were one-under-par.

      Each of the top-60 players in the world will be in attendance at the par-70, 7,742-yard course which was built just eight years ago and will be the first Pacific Northwest course to have the U.S. Open played on it.

      In the first major of the year, the Masters, Jordan Spieth was able to come away with the victory and he will surely be a favorite here again with World No. 1 Rory McIlroy attempting to win his fifth major championship. There has been a first-time U.S. Open winner at each of the last six installments of the event with Tiger Woods winning his third such event back in 2008 at Torrey Pines.

      Let’s see which players can make their way around this tough course and come out on top when Sunday afternoon rolls around.

      Golfers to Bet

      Justin Rose (18/1): Rose is 11th in the FedEx Cup standings this year after playing in 11 events and made the cut seven times over that stretch. He has really come on of late and had big performances in both the Masters (2nd) and the Memorial Tournament (2nd) while taking down his seventh PGA Tour victory in New Orleans at the Zurich Classic in late April. He is strong at the tough courses that the U.S. Open typically plays on and after a strong two-stroke win over Jason Day and Phil Mickelson in the 2013 installment of this event, Rose showed up with a solid tie for 12th last year. He seems to come through on the bigger stages and in his last six showings in majors; he’s done no worse than 24th. His length off the tee (297 yards per, 29th on TOUR) will aid him on this long track while his ability out of the sand (66.7%, 2nd on TOUR) will keep him from putting up those big numbers. Rose has been in the top-five in every major, but the U.S. Open is the only one that he has been victorious in, and look for the 34-year-old from England to put up another solid showing.

      Henrik Stenson (35/1): It has not been a storybook season for the sixth ranked golfer in the world as he started the year with a top-four finish in three of his first four events, but has fallen off and done no better than 17th in his last four tourneys. His stats point towards him doing better in these tournaments as he is ranked in the top-10 in driving accuracy (70.4%, 10th on TOUR) and greens in regulation percentage (72.2%, 2nd on TOUR) while also being one of the better putters in the game (0.535 strokes gained putting, 15th on TOUR). Stenson is one of the best golfers who has yet to earn a major in his career, but he has been close plenty of times, with a top-five finish in four of his past seven attempts while finishing fourth at the U.S. Open in Pinehurst last year. Look for Stenson to put it all together this week as the field attacks a brand new course.

      Hideki Matsuyama (35/1): Matsuyama has been on fire in 2015 as evidenced by his top-10 ranking in the FedEx Cup standings, and despite failing to get a victory on the year, has been in contention plenty of weekends. In his 16 events played, he has a mere one cut and has placed in the top-10 half of the time with his best finish coming at the Waste Management Open where he was the runner-up. He also has his best showing at a major championship when he used a Sunday 66 to vault him up to fifth at the Masters. Matsuyama has played in the U.S. Open in each of the last two seasons and earned a top-10 spot in 2013 while making the cut but not being in contention last year. His drive is spot on, ranking in the top-50 in both distance (295.6 yards per, 35th on TOUR) and accuracy (65.5%, 45th on TOUR) while using his tremendous ball striking to rank second in strokes gained from tee-to-green. Matsuyama is only 23-years-old and is still getting better, so a major championship is not far off.

      Kevin Na (90/1): Na is another of the most consistent players on TOUR and through his 17 tournaments he has been able to make all but two cuts, with one being a withdrawal from the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open to start the year. He has six top-10s and just missed grabbing getting his second PGA after being the runner-up at the CIMB Classic. His short game should keep him from tacking on any unnecessary strokes over the week as he ranks fifth in sand save percentage (65.6%) and is 21st in scrambling (64.2%) Na has improved his standing at the U.S. Open each time since missing the cut in his first two attempts (2010, 2111) and is coming off a very solid performance last year when he tied for 12th. He can keep up with the best in the sport and will likely do so again at Chambers Bay.

      Francesco Molinari (100/1): Molinari hasn’t done all that much on the PGA Tour this year, making 8-of-11 cuts with two top-10s, but comes into this event with some solid play in recent weeks. He tied for third at the Memorial Tournament in his last PGA appearance and ranked in the top-five at two of the past three European Tour events played; one being a fifth at the BMW Championship. At the Memorial Tournament, Molinari put up some ridiculous stats, accurately driving 91.1% of fairways and getting on the green in regulation 77.8% of the time as he scored a mark of eight-under-par on the par-fours. He has yet to win a PGA event and has just two top-10s in major championships, but is riding a hot last month and could open some eyes in Washington.

      Odds to win U.S. Open - Sportsbook.ag

      Rory McIlroy 5/1
      Jordan Spieth 8/1
      Phil Mickelson 14/1
      Dustin Johnson 18/1
      Justin Rose 18/1
      Rickie Fowler 20/1
      Jason Day 25/1
      Adam Scott 30/1
      Bubba Watson 35/1
      Henrik Stenson 35/1
      Hideki Matsuyama 35/1
      Jim Furyk 35/1
      Sergio Garcia 35/1
      Brandt Snedeker 45/1
      Jimmy Walker 45/1
      Martin Kaymer 45/1
      Matt Kuchar 45/1
      Patrick Reed 45/1
      Billy Horschel 50/1
      Tiger Woods 50/1
      Brooks Koepka 60/1
      Kevin Kisner 60/1
      Keegan Bradley 70/1
      Lee Westwood 70/1
      Paul Casey 70/1
      Ryan Moore 70/1
      Zach Johnson 70/1
      Byeong-Hun An 75/1
      Louis Oosthuizen 80/1
      Charley Hoffman 90/1
      Chris Kirk 90/1
      Hunter Mahan 90/1
      Ian Poulter 90/1
      J.B. Holmes 90/1
      Kevin Na 90/1
      Bill Haas 100/1
      Francesco Molinari 100/1
      Jason Dufner 100/1
      Webb Simpson 100/1
      Gary Woodland 110/1
      Luke Donald 110/1
      Marc Leishman 110/1
      Ryan Palmer 110/1
      Graeme McDowell 120/1
      Charl Schwartzel 125/1
      Robert Streb 125/1
      Brendon Todd 150/1
      Danny Willett 150/1
      Ernie Els 150/1
      Jamie Donaldson 150/1
      John Senden 150/1
      Kevin Chappell 150/1
      Russell Henley 150/1
      Shane Lowery 150/1
      Tommy Fleetwood 150/1
      Victor Dubuisson 150/1
      Angel Cabrera 200/1
      Bernd Wiesberger 200/1
      Branden Grace 200/1
      Cameron Tringale 200/1
      David Hearn 200/1
      Geoff Ogilvy 200/1
      Michael Putnam 200/1
      Miguel Angel Jimenez 200/1
      Ben Martin 250/1
      Joost Luiten 250/1
      Morgan Hoffman 250/1
      Erik Compton 300/1
      Lucas Glover 300/1
      Matt Every 300/1
      Stephen Gallacher 300/1
      Thongchai Jaidee 300/1
      Bryson DeChambeau 400/1
      Anirban Lahiri 500/1
      Sam Saunders 500/1
      Colin Montgomerie 1000/1
      Darren Clarke 1000/1
      Gunn Yang 1000/1
      Ollie Schniederjans 1000/1
      Bradley Neil 2000/1
      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

      Comment


      • #18
        Rose brimming with confidence at CBay

        June 17, 2015

        UNIVERSITY PLACE, Wash. (AP) - Justin Rose was a 17-year-old amateur with no expectations when he somehow found a way to compete on the final day in the British Open.

        He was 32 when he finally won his first major championship, outlasting Phil Mickelson two years ago in the U.S. Open at Merion outside of Philadelphia.

        Now he's the No. 5 player in the world and a contender almost every time he tees it up. That includes a final group pairing with Jordan Spieth in the Masters that didn't get him a green jacket but left him brimming with confidence coming into this Open at Chambers Bay.

        ''I feel like I've kicked on from winning my first major, sometimes it's difficult to live up to that,'' Rose said Wednesday. ''I've won tournaments; I've done all the right things. Again, Augusta was another sign this year. I came up against a great Jordan Spieth performance, but again it was a sign that my game was capable of winning these big championships.''

        Rose has already pocketed one win this year, taking the Zurich Classic in New Orleans. He almost won again in his last outing, losing in a playoff at the Memorial to David Lingmerth.

        He feels like he's come into his own as a player who should be in the mix anytime he tees it up in a major championship.

        ''I'm 34. Let's say the next six to 10 years are going to be more of my prime,'' Rose said. ''I think from 30 to 40 I always felt was going to be the time where I was going to have to step up and win a major, to get that done relatively early in that time frame has been great. Let's call it six years, that's 20 plus, 24 majors that are going to come around. I feel like if I just keep doing what I'm doing that's going to throw up quite a few opportunities.''

        It's been a long climb for the Englishman, whose game sagged badly when he turned pro the year after he finished fourth as a teenager at Royal Birkdale. At one point he missed 21 straight cuts on the European Tour as he searched for answers.

        But the father of two, who now lives in the Bahamas, retooled his swing and broke through with four wins internationally in 2002 before joining the PGA Tour. Now he's a major champion whose biggest worry is managing his time with his family while at the same time keeping his game in fine tune.

        ''It all happens at once,'' Rose said. ''You're in the prime of your golfing career, and you're also in a sense in the prime of your life with young kids. Everyone tells you when you have kids how quick it goes and you blink and they're teenagers. You're trying to absorb as much as you can at home and make the most of your career. So it's definitely a fine line to balance. But it's very rewarding when you get the balance.''

        Rose drew a pairing in the first two rounds with Spieth and Jason Day, two players he's very familiar with. He has played with Spieth in three tournaments this year, including the final rounds at the Masters.

        ''It's a great pairing,'' Rose said. ''I enjoy playing with Jordan. I think in some ways I've got to learn his game pretty well. It's going to be a fun three ball to be a part of.''

        Even more fun for Rose would be to be in the mix on Sunday, much like he was at Merion when he posted a score that none of the players behind him could beat.

        Chambers Bay is an entirely different course than Merion, but Rose sees similarities. Par is usually a good number at the Open, and the rewards usually come with patience.

        ''I think the mentality is going to be the same in terms of having to grind out pars, having to be patient, having to handle the adversity that's going to happen out there in 72 holes of golf,'' he said. ''As long as I play well that should manifest itself in a pretty good chance to win. Then it's all about coming down the stretch on Sunday.''
        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

        Comment


        • #19
          Kaymer forgotten man at US Open

          June 17, 2015

          UNIVERSITY PLACE, Wash. (AP) - Rarely has a two-time major winner and defending U.S. Open champion walked down a fairway in such as relative anonymity as Martin Kaymer did Tuesday afternoon at Chambers Bay.

          The crowd that turned out early to see Masters winner Jordan Spieth practice alongside Tiger Woods had departed. The fans clamoring to see top-ranked Rory McIlroy had left. The gallery that had greeted Rickie Fowler and Phil Mickelson on the first tee had thinned out.

          Not that it bothered Kaymer one bit. He blissfully went about his business.

          ''A lot of times I'm under the radar, I feel like, which is fine,'' Kaymer said. ''Obviously the other guys, they should get a lot of credit for what they've done.''

          Then again, Kaymer deserves his due, too.

          The meticulous German won his first major title at the PGA Championship in 2010 at Whistling Straits, another links-style course nestled along Lake Michigan that will also host this year's tournament. Then, his peerless performance at Pinehurst last year, when Kaymer opened such a large lead by Sunday that the final round amounted to a coronation rather than a competition.

          He wound up putting another three shots between himself and Rickie Fowler and Erik Compton, shooting a final-round 69 for a resounding eight-shot victory.

          ''Martin had a pretty awesome performance last year,'' Fowler said following his own practice round Tuesday. ''He didn't really give us a chance to go catch him.''

          So where are the crowds that should be engulfing Kaymer on the wind-swept course overlooking Puget Sound? Why are reporters chasing after Tiger and Phil and the game's other young guns, and breezing right past the former soccer star with the square jaw and powerful swing?

          They're questions that stump Henrik Stenson, who finished 10 shots back a year ago.

          ''He put on a fantastic show and left everybody else in the dust,'' Stenson said, pausing for comedic effect: ''But it was still a good race for second, I guess.''

          Kaymer certainly enjoyed his year as champion. Nearly every tournament he played in wanted him to tote along his trophy, and the replica that he gets to keep now sits on a wooden stand next to his replica of the Wanamaker Trophy from his PGA Championship triumph.

          More than anything else, though, it was the respect that he received from those in the golf community. Maybe a few more fans followed him each week, and a few more asked for autograph during practice rounds, but his victory at Pinehurst - and the manner in which Kaymer accomplished it - almost seemed to elevate him to a new level in the locker room.

          Now, he will try to defend his U.S. Open title on a layout that should suit him well.

          Chambers Bay, just south of Seattle, has quickly earned a reputation for being unlike any other course. But the truth is that it has some of the same elements of Whistling Straits and even Pinehurst, which returned to its native bump-and-run state for last year's championship.

          Stray too far from the generous fairways and there's knee-high fescue, broken up by the occasional waste bunker. Greens are so topsy-turvy that well-placed shots can carom off at odd angles, as Rickie Fowler found out when his approach shot during a practice round early Tuesday hit on the front of the green, rolled backward and finished in a bunker 30 yards away.

          ''I believe we're going to play three British Opens this year: We start here and then we play the real one at St. Andrews, and then Whistling Straits,'' Kaymer said. ''I think the guys from the UK might have a little bit of an advantage this week, because this is what they grew up on.''

          Especially if the course dries out, which the forecast for the week suggests. But even at its most brutal, Kaymer said he relishes the opportunity to defend his title at Chambers Bay.

          ''For me, I enjoy playing difficult golf courses wherever they are, because it's not about making too many birdies, not about a putting competition,'' he said. ''It's just a challenge. It's the biggest challenge that we have after the Masters, I think.''
          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

          Comment


          • #20
            PLAYERS I LOVE TO WIN....GREAT ODDS:

            Odds to win 2015 U.S. Open

            June 11, 2015

            The U.S. Open, the second golf major of the season, will take place at Chambers Bay from University Place, Washington on June 18, 2015. This will be the first Open played in the state of Washington.

            Oddsmakers at Sportsbook.ag have installed Rory McIlroy as the top betting choice (5/1). The Northern Ireland product captured the event in 2011 and is one of four International golfers to win the U.S. Open in the last five years.

            2015 Masters champion Jordan Spieth has been installed as an 8/1(Bet $100 to win $800) betting choice.

            Listed below are the future odds at Sportsbook.ag.

            Odds provided by Sportsbook.ag

            ODDS TO WIN 2015 U.S. OPEN (6/18/15)

            Rory McIlroy 5/1
            Jordan Spieth 8/1
            Dustin Johnson 18/1
            Phil Mickelson 18/1
            Justin Rose 20/1
            Rickie Fowler 20/1

            Jason Day 22/1
            Adam Scott 25/1
            Bubba Watson 30/1
            Henrik Stenson 30/1
            Hideki Matsuyama 35/1
            Jim Furyk 35/1
            Matt Kuchar 35/1
            Sergio Garcia 35/1
            Jimmy Walker 40/1
            Martin Kaymer 45/1
            Patrick Reed 45/1
            Tiger Woods 50/1
            Brandt Snedeker 55/1
            Billy Horschel 65/1
            Brooks Koepka 70/1
            Graeme McDowell 70/1
            Hunter Mahan 70/1
            Keegan Bradley 70/1
            Lee Westwood 70/1
            Louis Oosthuizen 70/1
            Paul Casey 70/1
            Ryan Moore 70/1
            Webb Simpson 70/1
            Zach Johnson 70/1
            Bill Haas 90/1
            Chris Kirk 90/1
            Ian Poulter 90/1
            J.B. Holmes 90/1
            Francesco Molinari 100/1
            Jason Dufner 100/1
            Charl Schwartzel 110/1
            Charley Hoffman 110/1
            Gary Woodland 110/1
            Harris English 110/1
            Jamie Donaldson 110/1
            Kevin Na 110/1
            Ryan Palmer 110/1
            Victor Dubuisson 110/1
            Angel Cabrera 150/1
            Brendon Todd 150/1
            Daniel Berger 150/1
            Ernie Els 150/1
            Geoff Ogilvy 150/1
            Graham DeLaet 150/1
            John Senden 150/1
            Kevin Streelman 150/1
            Luke Donald 150/1
            Marc Leishman 150/1
            Padraig Harrington 150/1
            Russell Henley 150/1
            Shane Lowery 150/1
            Nick Watney 160/1
            Steve Stricker 160/1
            Bernd Wiesberger 200/1
            Branden Grace 200/1
            Brendon de Jonge 200/1
            Cameron Tringale 200/1
            Charles Howell III 200/1
            Danny Willett 200/1
            Jonas Blixt 200/1
            K.J. Choi 200/1
            Kevin Chappell 200/1
            Matt Jones 200/1
            Michael Putnam 200/1
            Miguel Angel Jimenez 200/1
            Peter Uihlein 200/1
            Russell Knox 200/1
            Sang-Moon Bae 200/1
            Seung-Yul Noh 200/1
            Thorbjorn Olesen 200/1
            Ben Martin 250/1
            Brendan Steele 250/1
            Jason Kokrak 250/1
            Joost Luiten 250/1
            Justin Thomas 250/1
            Matt Every 250/1
            Morgan Hoffman 250/1
            Scott Piercy 250/1
            Shawn Stefani 250/1
            Thomas Bjorn 250/1
            Tim Clark 250/1
            Vijay Singh 250/1
            Boo Weekley 300/1
            Erik Compton 300/1
            Lucas Glover 300/1
            Stephen Gallacher 300/1
            Thongchai Jaidee 300/1
            Anirban Lahiri 500/1
            Colin Montgomerie 1000/1
            Darren Clarke 1000/1
            Gunn Yang 1000/1
            Ollie Schniederjans 1000/1
            Bradley Neil 2000/1
            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

            Comment

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