Cnotes u.s. Open articles and possible best bets !

Search

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
104,198
Tokens
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.''
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
104,198
Tokens
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.''
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
104,198
Tokens
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
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,108,526
Messages
13,452,233
Members
99,418
Latest member
TennisMonger
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com