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Why this PGA Tour star is the best bet to win the 2023 Memorial Tournament

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After a Charles Schwab Challenge that saw the elite players beaten by Emiliano Grillo and Adam Schenk, it should be back to business at the top-class Memorial Tournament, where a tough 7500-yard layout asks questions of the best in the world, who very often show their quality.

Despite changes to the course in 2020 and beyond, designer Jack Nicklaus continually expects that, “The game should challenge every facet of every club in the bag,” and recent winners prove it.

Bryson DeChambeau, Patrick Cantlay, Jon Rahm, Patrick Cantlay (should have been Rahm) and even Billy Horschel read like a who’s-who of top-class winners, each one firmly inside the top-20 by the end of their winning season, with BDC, Cantlay and Rahm inside the top-10.

The defending champ advised that, “Putting the ball in the fairway is crucial, to start with. But having control of your second shot, it’s a very second-shot golf course in my opinion,” while Rory McIlroy suggested this was more open that most courses – “I feel like a lot of the fairways here pinch in around 310, so it allows the sort of average hitters to hit driver.”

Course specialist Cantlay suggested the advantage of length had been taken away, saying, “So with the new length on all these par-5s, it’s a lot of laying up,” and Rory agreed, commenting on the re-design, “I think what’s happened here is everyone is just now playing from the same spot with their second shot.”

Length helps here, but it is certainly not as important as many other courses. Find the fairway, because missing it means an awkward lie into small greens that won’t hold the ball. Elite they may be but recent specialists hold an unsurprising link to the majors, in particular Augusta, something Rahm showed in excellent fashion when winning this year’s green jacket.

It happens a few times a year. Not many, maybe around three or four, but, for the win, this is a one-and-done deal.

Full respect to favourite Scottie Scheffler, putting up tee-to-green figures not seen for many a year. He doesn’t seem to have a lull in quality, unlike his chief market rival Rahm, but his short game is letting him down. At 6/1 I’m happy to see him go close but not cross the line in front.

Rahm is a course specialist who would have gone back-to-back in 2020 and 2021, but for having to withdraw when clear at the furlong pole. He has lulls in his form though, as when 10th here last year and recently when slowly away at Harbour Town, and down the pack at Oak Hill, when his tetchy again came to the fore. In between, Tony Finau beat the Spaniard, when he attempted to defend his Mexico Open title, and is another that must go close but has his niggling doubts.

McIlroy looked better at Oak Hill last time, raising his game but still finishing outside any challenging position. This seems a theme at the moment, and I’d like to see him in contention for a full weekend before being on, whilst Xander Schauffele continues to knock on doors without being let in.

Given these four are approximately 6/4 combined to get the job done, those niggling doubts lead me to a player for which two events stand out every year.

Patrick Cantlay – stand up, it’s your year! Again.

He may not have won yet this year but the 31-year-old heads into this week having made his last eight cuts in 72-hole events, posting four top-five finishes and a worst finish of 21st at Quail Hollow, a course he has never taken to in any of his three tries.

Third at Riviera, fourth at Bay Hill, third at Harbour Town and top-10 at Oak Hill all highlight a player at the top of his game, particularly as the finishing positions were all higher than at any point during the respective tournaments, something that repeats his effort at Muirfield last year when coming from 48th after round one, to land his fourth top five in seven Memorial starts.

In between, the eight-time PGA Tour winner landed his fourth top-two finish at the Shriners, and was in the final two pairings at Augusta, when the slow-play furore did him no favours on the back-nine on Sunday.

Despite Scottie’s stats, the three-month tracker has Cantlay firmly in front with a ranking of 2nd for total driving, 3rd for ball-striking and an overall 1st for total accuracy.

Look deeper and he is 15th for greens-in-regulation, 2nd for putting average, 14th for par-4s and 3rd for the par-5s, all stats that work amongst the elite.

In six runs at Muirfield – in all its guises and including the one-off Workday Open – he has an average finish of 12.7, his two wins and three top-seven finishes spoilt by a 35th on debut and 32nd in 2020, averaging just under +3 off-the-tee, over +5 for approaches and +9 shots for tee-to-green. Those numbers mean the selection ranks in the top-15 for all the above, plus 13th for putting taking the flat-stick numbers over the last four years.

Winning the Zozo at Sherwood from Rahm and Justin Thomas showed he wasn’t just a Muirfield-positive Nicklaus fiend and, although he was the chief beneficiary of Rahm’s withdrawal here in 2021, he still had to hold off Collin Morikawa, a player that had won the Workday Open around here and who went on to be fourth to Rahm at the US Open (Cantlay 15th) and then won The Open Championship on the bridle.

I will look at top-10 bets for the likes of Shane Lowry, impressing with his ball-striking, and Sungjae Im, a player that suits the plodding type of track, but for win purposes only one player suffices.

Recommended Bet:

Patrick Cantlay  

19th Hole

‘Don’t think I’ll sleep well tonight’ – LPGA pro offers candid take following rough AIG Women’s Open finish

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An opening round of 77 left LPGA pro Jenny Shin with a mountain to climb at last week’s AIG Women’s Open.

However, fighting back with rounds of 69 and 67, Shin found herself six shots off the lead and just outside the top 10 heading into Sunday as she went in search of her first major victory.

Shin, who won the US Girls’ Junior at just 13, couldn’t back those rounds up on Sunday, though, and after playing her opening nine holes of the final round in level par, she then bogeyed three holes coming home to slip down the leaderboard and eventually finish T23.

Taking to X following the final round, Shin offered a frustrated and honest take on how she was feeling, posting: “Don’t think I’ll sleep well tonight. What a crappy way to finish.”

Shin has made 11 cuts in 13 starts on the LPGA Tour this season, but has been plagued by frustrating Sunday finishes throughout the year. Shin ranks 102nd on tour this year out of 155 for Round 4 scoring in 2025.

Miyu Yamashita won the 2025 AIG Women’s Open with a composed final round of 70 to win her first major of her career by two strokes.

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How a late golf ball change helped Cameron Young win for first time on PGA Tour

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Cameron Young won the Wyndham Championship on Sunday for his first victory on the PGA Tour.

Young dominated all weekend at TPC Sedgefield, running away from the pack to win by six strokes and put himself in contention for a Ryder Cup pick in September.

Ahead of the event, the 28-year-old switched to a Pro V1x prototype golf ball for the first time, following recent testing sessions with the Titleist Golf Ball R&D team.

Interestingly, Young played a practice round accompanied by Fordie Pitts, Titleist’s Director of Tour Research & Validation, at TPC Schedule early last week with both his usual Pro V1 Left Dot ball and the new Pro V1x prototype.

Per Titleist, by the second hole Young was exclusively hitting shots with the Pro V1x prototype.

“We weren’t sure if he was going to test it this week, but as he was warming up, he asked to hit a couple on the range,” Pitts said. “He was then curious to see some shots out on the course.  Performance-wise, he was hitting tight draws everywhere. His misses were staying more in play. He hit some, what he would call ‘11 o’clock shots,’ where again he’s taking a little something off it. He had great control there.”

According to Titleist, the main validation came on Tuesday on the seventh hole of his practice round. The par 3 that played between 184 and 225 yards during the tournament called for a 5-iron from Young, or so he thought. Believing there was “no way” he could get a 6-iron to the flag with his Left Dot, Young struck a 5-iron with the Pro V1x prototype and was stunned to see the ball land right by the hole.

“He then hits this 6-iron [with the Pro V1x prototype] absolutely dead at the flag, and it lands right next to the pin, ending up just past it,” Pitts said. “And his response was, ‘remarkable.’ He couldn’t believe that he got that club there.”

Following nine holes on Tuesday and a further nine on Wednesday, Young asked the Titleist team to put the ProV1x balls in his locker. The rest, as they say, is history.

Check out Young’s winning WITB here.

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Rickie Fowler makes equipment change to ‘something that’s a little easier on the body’

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Rickie Fowler fired an opening round of one-under par on Thursday at the Wyndham Championship, as the Californian looks to make a FedEx Cup playoff push.

Fowler is currently 61st in the standings, so will need a strong couple of weeks to extend his season until the BMW Championship, where only the top 50 in the standings will tee it up.

Heading into the final stretch of the season, Fowler has made an equipment switch of note, changing into new iron shafts, as well as making a switch to his driver shaft.

The 36-year-old revealed this week that he has switched from his usual KBS Tour C-Taper 125-gram steel shafts to the graphite Aerotech SteelFiber 125cw shafts in his Cobra King Tour irons, a change he first put into play at last month’s Travelers Championship.

Speaking on the change to reporters this week, Fowler made note that the graphite shafts offer “something that’s a little easier on the body.”

“I mean, went to the week of Travelers, so been in for, I guess that’s a little over a month now. Something that’s a little easier on the body and seemed to get very similar numbers to where I was at. Yeah, it’s gone well so far.”

Fowler has also made a driver shaft change, switching out his Mitsubishi Diamana WB 73 TX for a UST Mamiya Lin-Q Proto V1 6 TX driver shaft in his Cobra DS-Adapt X, which he first implemented a couple of weeks ago at the John Deere Classic.

However, according to Fowler himself, the testing and potential changes are not done yet.

“Probably do some more testing in some different weight configurations with them once I get some time. Yeah, I feel like we’re always trying to search, one, to get better but are there ways to make things easier, whether that’s physically, mentally, whatever it may be. So yeah, I thought they were good enough to obviously put into play and looking forward to doing some more testing.”

Fowler gets his second round at TPC Sedgefield underway at 7.23 a.m ET on Friday.

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