Pha Championship Odds
- THE PLAYERS Championship Odds: 113 Tour Winners At TPC Sawgrass
- 2020 PGA Championship Odds, Picks, Predictions: Dustin ...
- Pga Championship Odds 2021
The interest in golf betting on the PGA Tour continues to grow. And for the bigger events like this week’s THE PLAYERS Championship, and majors – starting with next months Masters – wagering action reaches peak levels as the stakes intensify.
THE PLAYERS Championship was canceled last year after one round due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Hideki Matsuyama had been the leader after tying the course record with a 63. In 2019, RoryMcIlroy took the title and the $2.25 million top prize. The purse has increased since then to the highest on tour, other than the Tour Championship finale in the FedExCup.
2 days ago PGA Tour odds for The Players Championship, March 11-14. Players Championship betting odds, including favorite Dustin Johnson. Aug 09, 2020 2020 PGA Championship odds, picks, predictions: Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka clear favorites Koepka is looking for a three-peat at the PGA Championship, which has not been done in a century.
2021 PGA Championship. Date: May 20 to May 23; Venue: Kiawah Island Resort (Ocean) Location: Kiawah Island, South Carolina; Futures Market: Odds to win 2021 PGA Championship; 2021 U.S. Date: June 17 to June 20; Venue: Torrey Pines South; Location: La Jolla, California; Futures Market: Odds to win 2021 U.S. Open; 2021 The Open Championship. With the 2021 Players Championship set for next week, a handful of the world's best golfers will be in action when the 2021 Arnold Palmer Invitation gets underway on Thursday, March 4, live from Bay Hill Club and Lodge in Orlando, Florida. Mar 07, 2021 THE PLAYERS Championship odds Dustin Johnson unsurprisingly opened the week as the favorite at top US sportsbooks. DJ was +1200 at DraftKings as of Monday morning. He was followed on the odds board by Bryson DeChambeau (+1500), Rory McIlroy (1600), Jon Rahm (+1600) and Xander Schauffele (+2000).
The iconic TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida has hosted the event since 1982, and is also the home of the PGA Tour headquarters.
THE PLAYERS Championship odds
Dustin Johnson unsurprisingly opened the week as the favorite at top US sportsbooks. DJ was +1200 at DraftKings as of Monday morning. He was followed on the odds board by Bryson DeChambeau (+1500), Rory McIlroy (1600), Jon Rahm (+1600) and Xander Schauffele (+2000).
View all the odds for The PLAYERS Championship at top US Sportsbooks like DraftKings Sportsbook, FanDuel Sportsbook and PointsBet.
Notable players in the field
A total of 154 players representing 25 countries and territories will compete for the huge $15 million purse and $2.75 million first place prize.
How strong is the 2021 field? There will be 113 PGA Tour winners teeing it up at TPC Sawgrass. That’s tied for most of any tournament since the 2000 RBC Heritage. In total, 49 of the top 50 players in the Official World Golf Rankings, and 29 of the top 30 in the current FedExCup Standings will shoot for THE PLAYERS Championship title at TPC Sawgrass.
Top golfers in THE PLAYERS Championship
- Dustin Johnson (No. 1)
- Jon Rahm (2)
- Justin Thomas (3)
- Collin Morikawa (4)
- Xander Schauffele (5)
- Tyrrell Hatton (6)
- Patrick Cantlay (7)
- Rory McIlroy (8)
- Patrick Reed (9)
- Webb Simpson (10)
- Bryson DeChambeau (11)
- Viktor Hovland (13)
- Tony Finau (14)
- Daniel Berger (15)
- Matthew Fitzpatrick (16)
- Sungjae Im (17)
- Paul Casey (18)
- Harris English (19)
- Tommy Fleetwood (21)
- Louis Oosthuizen (22)
- Hideki Matsuyama (23)
- Adam Scott (24)
- Kevin Na (25)
- Ryan Palmer (26)
- Cameron Smith (27)
- Abraham Ancer (28)
- Joaquin Niemann (29)
- Scottie Scheffler (30)
- Jason Kokrak (31)
- Billy Horschel (32)
- Victor Perez (33)
- Kevin Kisner (34)
- Marc Leishman (35)
- Justin Rose (36)
- Christiaan Bezuidenhout (37)
- Max Homa (38)
- Lee Westwood (39)
- Shane Lowry (40)
- Sergio Garcia (41)
- Bernd Wiesberger (42)
- Robert MacIntyre (43)
- Carlos Ortiz (44)
- Gary Woodland (45)
- Jason Day (46)
- Will Zalatoris (47)
- Brendon Todd (48)
- Matt Kuchar (49)
- Lanto Griffin (50)
Other notable players include world No. 51 Mackenzie Hughes, 2017 PLAYERS Championship winner Si Woo Kim, 2015 PLAYERS Championship winner Rickie Fowler, Bubba Watson, Russell Henley, Jordan Spieth, Henrik Stenson, 2007 PLAYERS Championship winner Phil Mickelson, and other players moving up in the current FedExCup Standings: Stewart Cink, Sam Burns, Peter Malnati, Hudson Swafford, Martin Laird, Brian Gay, Branden Grace and Wyndham Clark.
No Englishman has ever won The PLAYERS Championship. The top English players that will shoot to end that streak in 2021 include: Tyrrell Hatton, Matthew Fitzpatrick, Paul Casey, Tommy Fleetwood, Justin Rose, IanPoulter and last week’s third round leader at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, 47-year-old LeeWestwood.
Recent THE PLAYERS Championship winners and runner-ups:
- 2019 – Rory McIlroy (-16), Jim Furyk
- 2018 – Webb Simpson (-18), Xander Schauffele, Jimmy Walker, Charl Schwartzel
- 2017 – Si Woo Kim (-10), Louis Oosthuizen, Ian Poulter
- 2016 – Jason Day (-15), Kevin Chappell
- 2015 – Rickie Fowler (-12), Sergio Garcia, Kevin Kisner
In the last event in 2019, Rory McIlroy won by 1-stroke, and 19 players shot 10-under par or better.
Top finishers from 2019 returning in 2021:
- Rory McIlroy (Win)
- Jhonattan Vegas (T3)
- Dustin Johnson (T5)
- Tommy Fleetwood (T5)
- Brandt Snedeker (T5)
- Hideki Matsuyama (T8)
- Jason Day (T8)
- Justin Rose (T8)
- Brian Harman (T8)
- Jon Rahm (T12)
- Abraham Ancer (T12)
- Adam Scott (T12)
- Joel Dahmen (T12)
Tommy Fleetwood and Jason Day also finished top 10 in the 2018 event.
Golfers to watch
The top talent on tour will really be on display this week at THE PLAYERS Championship. Justin Thomas is 5-for-5 in cuts made here with a T3 and T11 making him one of the favorites to watch and consider as a bet. You won’t get him too often at +2000, but we don’t include those golfers at +2000 or below in our bag of Golfers to Watch.
Last week, Tommy Fleetwood and Will Zalatoris both finished top-10 as our Golfers to Watch at the Arnold Palmer Invitational. The previous week, Collin Morikawa cashed in as the winner at +4500 as a Golfer to Watch at the WGC Workday event.
Now it’s on to TPC Sawgrass and THE PLAYERS Championship, where you better be playing well and showing signs of good form and improved play, or the Stadium Course will find your flaws.
Here are four players outside of the leading favorites to consider for your Fairway Foursome to win or for a top finishing position at TPC Sawgrass.
Abraham Ancer (+7500 FanDuel): Ancer finished T12 on debut here last year, and shot under par all four rounds. While lacking experience on this course, he’s making up with a solid stat profile and playing well with six top-20 finishes in his last eight starts on tour. He’s a small and short hitter, but his skill sets fit better than his strokes gained stats show. Ancer ranks No. 1 on tour this season in driving accuracy, which provides the basis for strong play at Sawgrass. Add in top-20 in Greens-in-Regulation and Birdies average, plus excellent Strokes Gained stats of +6.5 or better in Around the Green and Tee-to-Green in his last event at the WGC at The Concession, and Ancer looks like he could contend for another high finishing position as he shoots for his first PGA Tour win.
Cameron Smith (+5500 DraftKings): Cameron Smith is no longer offered in the +8000 or better range. That’s what happens when you finish T2 at the Masters, and continue your solid play while rising up the ranks to top 30 in the world. The 27-year-old Aussie is proving that power is not essential, but that a strong Short Game, Around the Green and Putting profile will keep you competitive most weeks. Nothing to like in his three stars at Sawgrass with a pair of missed cuts. But Smith has been consistently solid across most Strokes Gained categories over his last 50 rounds. And he’s one of just a handful of players in this field that ranks top-30 in SG: Around the Green, along with better than average in SG: Approach, Off-the-Tee and Putting.
Jason Day (+5000 DraftKings): Day has three top-10 finishes in this tournament since 2016, when he won the event as the No. 1 player in the world. His experience and proven play here also shows Day with the second-best adjusted scoring average on this course over the last five renewals. He’s rounding into form again with a top-10 and top-20 finish in February, and has gained strokes in most categories over his last five events. Day’s short game and putting really give him an advantage at Sawgrass, where he has proven to be a specialist on the Stadium Course.
Patrick Cantlay (+2200 DraftKings and BetMGM): These are the lowest odds we’ve dipped to in the Golfers to Watch section, but Cantlay still has seven other players with lower odds. He’s too good a fit to pass up this week, as Cantlay has been consistently excellent over his last six starts with six top-20 finishes. That includes a win and two other top 5’s. Entering this event in solid form and playing well is significant towards success. Cantlay has not putted well enough in three starts here, nor on other Pete Dye designs overall. But his Ball Striking, Approach Play and Tee-to-Green are top-10 in this field over his last 36 rounds, and he’s had solid Around the Green stats in a previous start here when he finished top-25. Also of note is Cantlay’s top-5 ranking this season in Bogey Avoidance, which as a strong shot maker makes him appealing at this course as well. Cantlay shot 67 in last year’s opening round before the event was cancelled. He’s Even Money to finish top-20, +225 for top-10, and an interesting look at +4000 to be the first round leader.
Course and tournament information
- Course: TPC Sawgrass (Stadium)
- Location: Ponte Vedra Beach, FL
- Date: March 11-14
- Par: 72 / Yardage 7,189
- Purse: $15 Million / Winner $2.5 M
- Fairways/Rough: Bermudagrass
- Greens: : Bermudagrass
- TV/Online: Golf Channel, NBC (Sat/Sun), PGA Tour Live
- Twitter & Hashtag: @THEPLAYERSChamp
- Defending Champion: Rory McIlroy (2019)
The Stadium Course at Sawgrass is one of the most mentally challenging in the world. So many superlatives are bestowed upon TPC Sawgrass, and the Pete Dye design challenges all players without favoring a single style of play. The course was redesigned in 2017 and now features pure TifEagle Bermudagrass on the putting surfaces. Moving the event to March provides softer conditions and more lush rough. Water looms and becomes a hazard on no less than 12 holes with the short signature hole and world famous island par 3 at the 17th one of the most recognized in the world. The closing stretch concludes with three of the toughest par 4 scoring holes at 14, 15 and the finishing hole at 18 – which is annually the most difficult with water lining the entire left side.
The big bombers hold little advantage on the Stadium Course at Sawgrass, where accuracy off the tee and precision iron play is required. Controlled power and placement is advantageous however, as a variety of shots are needed to navigate the 7,189 yard Par 72 layout. Small greens by PGA Tour standards require placement on approach and are now even more pure for putting.
Harbour Town and TPC River Highlands are two other Pete Dye designed courses to navigate in your research of player performances.
Key stats
Course management is critical, as is precision Ball Striking and Approach play with the ability to chip, scramble and score all part of the process when researching strokes gained stats. Arriving with your golf game in good shape is particularly important this week.
In 2019, THE PLAYERS Championship winner Rory McIlroy led the field in strokes-gained off-the-tee. Yet short-hitting but accurate runner-up Jim Furyk outscored McIlroy across the 16 par-5s. Those two players are most diametrically opposed, yet Sawgrass allows golfers with different styles to showcase their skills against the strongest, world class field.
Strokes Gained: Approach leaders in this field over their last 24 rounds, according to research and stats from Fantasy National:
- Hideki Matsuyama
- Justin Thomas
- Jason Kokrak
- Sergio Garcia
- Keegan Bradley
- Talor Gooch
- Gary Woodland
- Webb Simpson
- Dustin Johnson
- Paul Casey
Next: Cameron Smith, Henrik Stenson, Xander Schauffele, Rory McIlroy, Sungjae Im, Patrick Cantlay
Strokes Gained – Ball Striking:
- Rory McIlroy
- Hideki Matsuyama
- Jason Kokrak
- Justin Thomas
- Gary Woodland
- Dustin Johnson
- Keegan Bradley
- Patrick Cantlay
- Keith Mitchell
- Sergio Garcia
Next: Paul Casey, Luke List, Xander Schauffele, Sungjae Im
Other stats to evaluate include Bogey Avoidance and SG: Tee-to-Green, which over the last 24 rounds is led by McIlroy, Matsuyama, Thomas, Kokrak and world No. 1 Dustin Johnson.
Following THE PLAYERS Championship, the PGA Tour heads down the South coast on I-95 to PGA National for the Honda Classic in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.
- August 4, 2020
- By Matt Blunt
- VegasInsider.com
Weekly PGA
Picks & Predictions
Golf Major Betting Resources
2020 PGA Championship
It's the first Major of this unique 2020 season this week, as the Tour heads out west to San Francisco for the PGA Championship. It's a tournament where last week's runner-up Brooks Koepka, is the two-time defending champion of this event, and will amazingly have his second crack at three-peating as a Major champion in as many years.
His form at the St Jude was what many wanted to see from Koepka before pulling the trigger on him this week, and on a course where having length is definitely an advantage, Koepka's price (+1100) is only going to get shorter.
However, only one other player has had an opportunity to win three consecutive PGA Championships, and both times he had that opportunity, Tiger Woods came up short. In 2001 it was David Toms who thwarted Tiger's three-peat, and in 2008 it was Padraig Harrington.
There is a first time for everything I know, but Koepka's price, the history he's up against, and the idea that his T2 at St Jude was really thanks to a lights out Thursday (-8) and then holding in the pack shooting -2 total over the final three days, has me passing on him this week.
- Tour: PGA
- Date: Thursday, Aug. 6, 2020 to Sunday, Aug. 9, 2020
- Venue: TPC Harding Park
- Location:San Francisco, California
- Par-Yardage: 70, 7,235 yards
- TV: ESPN, CBS
The course is virtually identical in length to last week's trek at the St Jude, but there should be some drama on the Back 9 over the weekend. The 17th hole is a 250-yard Par 3 hole, that comes directly after a 340-yard, potentially driveable Par 4. Finish the round with the 510+ yard Par 4 18th hole and who knows what kind of numbers we could see from guys late.
Rough and fast greens are always going to be the main ways guys get in trouble at PGA Championships, and it will be interesting to see how many guys choose to dial it back at times just to keep things easier by being in play. It's not a foreign track to many of these guys either, as Rory McIlroy won the 2015 WGC Match Play here, and the USA won the 2009 President's Cup at this venue as well.
PGA Championship
Betting Odds
Only last week's winner Justin Thomas (+900) has better odds then the aforementioned Brooks Koepka (+1100), who are followed by Bryson DeChambeau, Rory McIlroy, and Jon Rahm all at +1500. Xander Schauffele (+1800), Dustin Johnson (+2300), and Patrick Cantlay (+2500) are the only other names below 30-1, as it's in that group where Tiger Woods (+3300) and a host of other great names sit.
Interestingly enough, the fact that nobody in the stroke play era of the PGA Championship has ever three-peated as champion wasn't the only interesting historical note I came across this week.
- Brooks Koepka: +1000
- Justin Thomas: +1100
- Jon Rahm: +1400
- Rory McIlroy: +1400
- Bryson DeChambeau: +1600
- Dustin Johnson: +2000
- Xander Schauffele: +2000
- Webb Simpson: +2500
- Patrick Cantlay: +3000
- Collin Morikawa: +3300
- (Odds Subject to Change)
More recent history shows that each of the past eight PGA Champions, and nine of the past 10, have had a Top 18 finish or better in at least one of the two previous PGA Championships. In other words, Justin Thomas finished 18th at the PGA Championship in 2015, he then won it two years later. Each of the past eight champions can say the same. The only outlier in the bunch?
Keegan Bradley's 2011 PGA Championship win when that tournament was his first career Major of any kind.
There are some interesting names when you go back to consider this week when you go back and break down who finished 18th or better in the 2019 and 2018 PGA Championships, and it was a nice way to break down the field. But that breakdown also includes Koepka three-peating as a potential outcome too, so I guess we will see if any of these historical runs hold up for another year.
Golfers to Watch - TPC Harding Park
Top Picks and Predictions
Contender to Back
PGA Championship
Xander Schauffele +1800
Schauffele's seemingly taken all the right steps upward throughout his young career so far, as he's won, and won big events, but just not that Major yet. With three rounds of 68 or better, and no rounds over par at the St Jude last week, that's an example of what I mean when one scorching hot day didn't carry the result, and that form is just something I prefer.
No previous experience at this track may hurt him slightly, but it will be so negligible relative to his talent that it shouldn't take but a solid week of practice to feel comfortable. Five Top 20's in six starts over the past two months, and three Top 14's in his last three outings overall should bring no concerns in form either.
THE PLAYERS Championship Odds: 113 Tour Winners At TPC Sawgrass
The fact that Xander has beaten quality, deep fields like this in the past tells you he knows what to do late if he's there, and winning a Major is that ultimate next step he's got to take in his career. I believe that if you were to put odds on which Major Xander would win first assuming you knew he got at least one, the PGA Championship would likely be one of the top two favorites no matter where it's held. Why not a PGA Championship in his home state of California, when he's playing some of his most consistent and best golf of his career?
Mid-Range Value
PGA Championship
Gary Woodland +5000
Woodland is one of six names in the field this week that has actually finished in the Top 18 in each of the past two PGA Championships, although there is no correlation to those guys being more likely to win in that historical run.
But Woodland actually has two Top-8's at this event the past two years, and it was just a month later after last year's 8th place finish that he broke through and won the US Open. Knowing he has that ability can be huge down the stretch, and while his finishes have been going the wrong way his last three starts, he's still gaining strokes on the field in putting every week. A steady putter will take guys a long way in a Major championship.
If Woodland spends too much time around the green his outright's take a hit, but the approach game is still relatively dialed in if you look at every event he's played in 2020, and he's never lost strokes to the field in approach in two consecutive weeks during that time. He lost strokes last week at the St Jude.
Therefore, the confidence is there that Woodland should be able to turn that part of his game around at a place he does actually have great memories of. He finished 2nd to Rory in that 2015 WGC Match Play event at Harding Park. Dial things back to the way they were that week, with the head on his shoulders he's got now, and Woodland could have his second Major title in as many seasons this week.
Long Shot Pick
PGA Championship
2020 PGA Championship Odds, Picks, Predictions: Dustin ...
Chez Reavie +10000
Reavie is another one of those six players to have a Top 18 finish at this tournament each of the past two years (T14 in 2019, T12 in 2018), and he's just quietly gone about his business since the restart. In Reavie's last five starts starting with last week, he's finished 6th, 22nd, 17th, 46th, and 74th. That's not bad at all and clearly trending in the direction you'd want a 100-1 shot to be. And that 22nd at the Memorial could have been much better had he not shot 79 on a final Sunday that was still one of the worst scores on a day where nobody put up pretty numbers.
Furthermore, he's done nothing but stripe the ball relative to the field in recent weeks - +2.10 SG: Approach last week – and is just at the mercy of how good he's rolling the ball with the putter. If that's the biggest concern for a guy that's playing well and sits at this price, I'll gladly take on that risk.
Top Props & Matchup Wagers
PGA Championship
72 Hole Matchup to Take
PGA Championship
Shane Lowry (-112) over Justin Rose
Might as well keep the theme going of backing these recent Top 18 finishers, as Lowry is another one of those six names to do it each of the past two years. Like Woodland, Lowry is another guy that found a way to break through on the biggest stage last year (British Open) and from a mental/confidence perspective that's always only a plus. But this play is more about fading Justin Rose and his play of three straight missed cuts of late.
Statistically, Rose isn't doing a whole lot of things all that well right now, and if the approach game waivers, that's when those awful weeks come about. He didn't particularly like his stay here in 2015 where he failed to get out of the group stage, and ultimately, there has been nothing he's shown lately that suggests he's anything but a fade this week.
Top 40 Finish – Yes
PGA Championship
Adam Scott +100
Jordan Spieth +100
Had Scott shown anything in competition prior to this being his first event since the restart, outright futures would have been more strongly considered. But the unknown (on the handicapping end at least) of the shape of his game has taking the cushion with placing in this prop the more desired way to support him this week.
Scott is the fourth name of six to have consecutive Top 18 finishes in the PGA the past two years to appear in this piece, and like Rose, he played here in 2015 but failed to get out of the group stage. But when ball striking is highly important, Scott's name is always one to at least glance at, scenarios working against him or not.
He's been around long enough that the break shouldn't bring too much rust, and trusting him to make the weekend and go from there for even money isn't the worst option out there.
Spieth is the final name to have Top 18 finishes here the past two years (Koepka would be the 6th), and he's actually shown some positive things in his game from top to bottom the past couple of starts. He's gained strokes on the field in every category but off the tee the past two starts, and those have been some quality-laced fields themselves (Memorial and St Jude).
He's another guy that it wouldn't surprise me if he finished outside the Top 40 this week, but at the same time he's done enough recently where wanting to kick yourself becomes an option on Monday if you don't take him at even money to finish in the Top 40. If Spieth keeps things in play off the tee, his advantages in the rest of his game should pay off enough to reach this spot.
PGA Championship
Betting History
Recent Winners (Odds to win)
- 2019 - Brooks Koepka (10/1)
- 2018 - Brooks Koepka (18/1)
- 2017 - Justin Thomas (35/1)
- 2016 - Jimmy Walker (125/1)
- 2015 - Jason Day (12/1)
Brooks Koepka captured the 2019 PGA Championship at the infamous 'Black Course' at Bethpage State Park in Farmingdale, New York on Long Island. Koepka entered the tournament as the defending champion and he posted a wire-to-wire victory with a score of 8-under.
Koepka joined Tiger Woods as the only players to win back-to-back titles in that major. Most sportsbooks had Koepka listed as the 10/1 co-favorite (Bet $100 to win $1,000) to win the 2019 PGA Championship.
How to Bet on Golf
Golf betting has gained much more exposure and interest in the past few years, and with plenty of plus-money prices littered throughout the various forms of golf wagers, the chance for bigger scores is part of the reason behind that increased popularity.
Sportsbooks ensure that there are no shortage of wagering options on golf tournaments every week, and it isn't all about picking the winner. Grabbing the outright winner of a golf tournament is the best way to get that 'big score' but it's also the hardest wager to cash. After all, a typical professional golf tournament has a field of 140+ different players to consider.
Understanding Golf Odds and Bets
Most golf odds are listed in the fractional format – 10/1 on Dustin Johnson for example – and in that particular case you would multiply the amount bet by that first number to project your winnings. So a $100 bet on DJ to win that particular event would win you $1000.
Pga Championship Odds 2021
If you are more comfortable with the American version of odds listings that you typically see across the other major North American sports – ie +1000 – these numbers are easily convertible. Online and app based books may already have that option built in, but the easiest way to do it yourself is to add two zeros to the first number in the fraction. So a 10/1 price on DJ converts to +1000 in that format.