PGA Championship: Sleepers| Sleeper picks| Preview| Picks

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Tiger Woods enthused spectators and rivals alike with a back-nine practice round in Southern Hills on Monday, continuing his comeback. Today we will discuss about PGA Championship: Sleepers| Sleeper picks| Preview| Picks

PGA Championship: Sleepers| Sleeper picks| Preview| Picks

https://youtu.be/wsfNgIOraMg

The PGA Championship (often referred to outside the United States as the US PGA Championship or USPGA) is an annual golf tournament organized by the Professional Golfers Association of America. It is one of four men’s major championships in professional golf.

PGA Championship
Tournament information
Location Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States
Established 1916
Course(s) Southern Hills Country Club
Par 70
Length 7,556 yards (6,909 m)
Organized by PGA of America
Tour(s) PGA Tour
European Tour
Japan Golf Tour
Format Stroke play (1958–present)
Match play (1916–1957)
Prize fund US$12,000,000[1]
Month played May (formerly August)

Sleepers

PGA Championship: Sleepers| Sleeper picks| Preview| Picks

Since 2019 you can’t find any other player with four wins being offered at this high level. In fact, the other eight players who meet that criterion are all favorites this week and almost can’t be found higher than 25-1.

 

To this day, his performance in run-of-the-mill PGA Tour events has far surpassed his work in the majors. Starting in a 10 career in the Major, Homa has yet to finish in the top 10. In fact, he is yet to finish in the top 20 and is in the 2021 Open Championship with a career-best T40 performance. He has made the cut in only three of those 10.

While there’s a gap between the skill and mindset needed to win a major title and win at your average PGA Tour stop, Homa’s game should fit on paper. Eventually, he will be due to bring the A-game that has turned his four wins on the Tour into a major. After T13 at The Players this year, his best performance in that event, he is ready to take the next logical leap.

Sleeper picks

PGA Championship: Sleepers| Sleeper picks| Preview| Picks

Cameron Young, 8,000. He hasn’t been playing like a “sleeper” with one T2 and T3 in his last two starts – and on two very different golf courses (TPC Potomac and Harbor Town). But he is a player that casual fans are still not familiar with. He will win a major, and likely will soon. Crazy talent. No real weaknesses. Plus, the smartest picker I know has been raving about Young for months.

Sleeper Pick: Davis Riley, 25,000: Riley is stripping it just as well as anyone in professional golf. It’s a long shot, but it’s a dice roll that I love taking.

Dylan Dethier
Sleeper Pick: I’ll Give You Two! Keegan Bradley at 10,000 and Cameron Tringle at 25,000. Speaking of high numbers! Good iron players with good hands and (hopefully!) a hot putter.

Conor Federico
Sleeper Pick: Cameron Champ, 10,000. This is not the same Southern Hills where Tiger won in 2007. This week, the course will run 300 yards long, and its fairways will be much wider. Enter the Tour’s longest hitter (323.5 yards/drive). In his last two starts, the champ has been applying that power to better scoring, with a T10 at the Masters and a T6 at the Mexico Open.

luke kerr-dinin
Sleeper pick: Keegan Bradley, 1,000. Speaking of good ball-strikers and sketch putters: Keegan Bradley! The former PGA winner is ranked 12th on the tour between SG:T2 Green and an impressive T8, T4, T2 run. The putter will need to warm up to walk away from the trophy, but he can also cool off in the top 10.

Preview

Over the past five seasons, four of the top players (Justin Thomas, Brooks Koepka (2), Colin Morikawa) have won the PGA Championship on a rotating course.

Phil Mickelson posted a resounding victory on Kiawah Island last year at age 50 to capture his second title.

The last time (2007) the PGA Championship was held at Southern Hills in Tulsa, Okla., Tiger Woods took his fourth win. To know about the top-10 players over the past five years, here’s a look at the results:

Take a look at their betting odds on the past five winners:

2021 – Phil Michelson (250-1)
2020 – Colin Morikawa (30-1)
2019 – Brooks Koepka (10-1)
2018 – Brooks Koepka (18-1)
2017 – Justin Thomas (35-1)

Schaeffler has been the hottest golfer since the beginning of February. He has won four of his last eight appearances, along with another top-10 finish (seventh). After wins at Waste Management and the Arnold Palmer Invitational, Schaeffler raised her game even more with wins at WGC-Dell Technologies and the Masters.

Since mid-October, he has crossed 160 under in 56 stroke-play rounds. In his first PGA Championship in 2020, Schaeffler finished fourth with a score of -10 (eighth in 2021). He is in top form and his game has reached an elite level in 2022, making him the player to beat at this year’s PGA Championship.

Picks

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Why Scotty Schaeffler Would Win the PGA Championship

Jessica Marxbury: Scottie Schaeffler would win for three reasons: 1) she’s world No. 1 and a major at that; 2) Somewhat unbelievably, he loves the southern hills! This is one of his favorite courses. How random – and accidental! – Is that?!; 3) He is the undisputed best pressure player in the game at the moment. Who has been more clutch than Schaeffler over the past eight months, starting with his stellar performance in the Ryder Cup? of course.

Josh Sense: He will win because he has no weaknesses in his game and, perhaps more important, his attitude is unbeatable. The man is a mill. Unlike some other A-listers, you never get the sense that he’s just going through the motions, even at low-wattage events. But he also somehow manages to go full bore without putting counter-productive pressure on himself. The way they approached the Masters – I have prepared; Now let’s see what happens – how will he approach the PGA. No one is playing golf better than Scheffler, and he certainly isn’t going to beat himself.

Nick Piastowski: This could be a continuation of something special, and you won’t want to say later: Why didn’t I pick the hottest golfer on the planet? His game is played anywhere.

Why didn’t Scotty Scheffler win the PGA Championship?

Jessica Marxbury: Scotty Scheffler wouldn’t win as there would be so many other big names who would play well in the Southern Hills, and Scheffler could play the lights-out and still be clipped. Winning the Major in golf is the hardest thing to do, and it’s never a sure thing, even for the sport’s greatest veterans.

Ratings