Welcome! Where are you, you ask. I’m calling it this weekend 9. Think of it as a place to warm you for Friday, Saturday and Sunday. We will have thoughts. We will have tips. We will have tweets. But only nine at all, though sometimes perhaps more and sometimes perhaps less. How much for whom am I? The paragraphs below show some of the stories. I can reach nick.piastowski@golf.com.
Last Thursday, in a pool in Las Vegas while wearing a marg, my friend cheered for Hideki Matsuyama to the birds a hole in Detroit after bets on it on his phone.
Some scene, right? Because the bet extended the Par-4 length, it was also fast, and you could even light another in Matsuyama for the other hole while Prisn. Maybe the same bet. Or maybe a slightly less optimistic.
Maybe a bet for him to cheat.
These acts, of course, are not new, nor are the consequences of dependence on gambling, or fans howl after players to help during their choices. But the news this week at Major League Baseball brought to the forefront another portion of the bets – players being involved. According to a written story BY Espn David Purdum and Jeff PassanGuardians Cldis Luis Ortiz is under investigation after a betting integrity firm flags two areas that attracted an unusual gambling activity. The money was placed twice on Ortiz or to throw a ball or to hit a batter, and Ortiz threw balls in both cases.
Not to give anyone a wise idea, but a seemingly betting was significantly bet, rather than spreading it. Would anyone then notice a Luis Ortiz, say, in late June, and some people who earned $ 100? Or would anyone notice a $ 100 bet in Matsuyama to make a four in a par-3? This is just a hole. He could heal. It can also benefit potentially. And do it again this week. And in and above.
Ok, ok, enough of the virtuous preaching. My friend’s bet was fun. Matsuyama did Birdie. We immediately ordered another drink after profits. However, it will be about how this policeman is. And good honesty of Ole fashion. I will let you decide if this can happen.
Let’s see if we can find eight more items for weekend 9.
A receipt from Java
2 Thursday, my interview with Richard Teder was published-and if you want to read the story for the 20-year-old amateur who pulled off the road to make the championship open, you can do it by clicking here – But I left an article I am interested in his story:
Becoming the first player ever from Estonia to play in a major, he can make the opportunity that he is the best golf player from the country in northeast Europe. Of course, Estonia has only seven courses and golf is not so popular there, but yet, this is an impressive title to master – and I asked about it.
Considering that you are the first Estonan you play in the open championship, I think it can be done that you can now be the best player from your country. How is that thought?
Open 20-year sensation? He wants Bryson and learned English through YouTube
“Well, I feel like I was the best player here for years,” Teder said. “But because there are not many people here, but there are many good things. I mean, our national team, there are many good players there. But, yes, it means man. Everything I have worked for, and it is delightful, it is a pleasure to enter the open. We have a pro.”
Do you think at all about being the best?
“No, I don’t think about it at all, a man,” said Teder. “Because, I don’t know. Just just a small place. We don’t have a lot of players, and I’ve been very good for the last three, the four years. There are not many people who can beat me here. So a kind of accustomed to it, really.”
A Making from Java – and for the following weeks
3 Teder can also send it. He said his club speed hours in 126, 127 MPH, which would be ranked at the top of PGA Tour-or in the neighborhood of another 20-year-old, Aldrich Potgieterwho won last week at Rocket Classic and is looking to be in quarrel this week John Deere Classic.
No player is alone in the under age bomber group, which led to a reporter this week on John Deere Classic asking the 49-year-old Zach Johnson: “They just can’t continue to improve. Can they?”
The answer was interesting.
“I don’t know. I mean, I think they can,” Johnson said. “You know, the data are supposed to break down. The youth trajectory in this game is not like what is happening on that slope (gesture vertically), but it is a steady trend. Maybe with little of this (makes a gesture wavey).
“Impressive is impressive. I want to say, I think you have to make tribute to many boys. We are definitely fun, and have the relationship we make with our media partners, I mean, golf is an attractive sport for youth. It is all. Tiger Woods Effect, too. They will not hide that fact. All of this. We’ve got athletes playing this game at a young age that could probably go in a different direction in sports, but this sport caught them, for good extent because it is great. It is dizzying, it’s scary, but it’s fantastic, if that makes sense.
“As a competitor, like an athlete here, the youth of this game is impressive. I mean, like one of my son’s best friends, surely his best friend, both going to Clemson, is a striker in this game. He is a striker. He has done things in the 15 years that I have never been able to do.
“So yes, be careful. There are many of them.”
A guidance advice for your weekend
4. In one minute video UNDERBryson Dechambeau fasten the slice of UselessA five -star basketball recruit for the University of Tennessee.
Another guide advice for your weekend
5. In a video you can see by clicking hereseparated by Golf Top 100 Instructor Stan Utley, Bobby Jones explains how to hit a bunker stroke with fried eggs.
6. I will also immediately support anyone who again brings a tie in Golf.
A golf story that could only care about me
7 A story written by Noah Brennan e Calgary Herald – which you can read completely here – warned me of a group by closing a hole in Canada in an effort to make a hole in one.
After 57 hours, Ace came, and you can watch a video of it UNDER.
A golf tweet that could only care about me
8. Tweet UNDERAnnouncement Joe Buck shared a moment from a golf round with the announcer Jim Nantz – who greeted the video with his signature golf phrase.
What golf is on TV this weekend?
9. Here’s a TV golf summary this weekend:
– Saturday
6:30 AM-11: 30 AM et: BMW International Open Third Round, Golf Channel
11 AM-1 PM et: John Deere Classic Third Round, Golf Channel
1 PM-4 PM et: John Deere Classic Third Round, CBS
– Sunday
6:30 AM-11: 30 AM et: BMW International Open Final Round
1 PM-3 PM et: John Deere Classic Last Round, Golf Channel
3 Afternoon-6 Afternoon ET: John Deere Classic Last Round, CBS
What are you emailing me
10. Let’s do 10 and 11 items! Two weeks ago, I would look for readers’ opinions if they were more fun than the good that looked like world -wing, or the good ones kneeling, and I received some answers.
Here’s one:
There is room for difficult courses and ‘light’ courses. But I don’t like seeing the good “brought to their knees”. Local premises and Putti could have been turning into the eye if the greens were concrete and the approximate would be high waist. Courses that are really challenging only because of the design – without being cheated – the hosts must be opened.
11 Here’s another:
Challenge ‘-They hit 600-Oborr par-5 in 2 and wedge in 450-oral holes. Screw them. Make them play closer to the game we all play. Par should be a good result.
More of the ones you are e -mail me
12 Let’s make 12 items! Here is another email I received:
Max (Homa) is right. The anonymity of social media allows people to show the worst of themselves without consequences. Our society is generally widespread with anger these days, and I attribute many of them to the “news” TV of cable TV that are best called “rabies factories” because they build their eyesight by angry people. Viewers become dependent on their rage, so they continue to tune. I stopped watching news on cable TV a few years ago and I was much less angry since then, which means I am generally happier. As Max said, when anything important happens, you still learn about it, though maybe not immediately.
“>>
;)
Nick pastowski
Golfit.com editor
Nick Pastowski is an old editor on Golf.com and Golf Magazine. In his role, he is responsible for editing, writing and developing stories throughout the golf space. And when he is not writing about ways to hit the golf ball farther and narrower, Milwaukee’s locals are probably playing the game, hitting the ball left, right and short, and drinking a cold beer to wash his result. You can turn to him for any of these topics – his stories, his game or his beers – in Nick.piastowski@golf.com.