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2022 Masters odds
Golfers | Odds |
---|---|
Jón Rahm | +1100 |
Justin Thomas | +1200 |
Cameron Smith | +1400 |
Dustin Jónsson | +1600 |
Scottie Scheffler | +1600 |
Rory McIlroy | +1800 |
Viktor Hovland | +1800 |
Brooks Koepka | +2000 |
Jordan Spieth | +2000 |
Patrick Cantlay | +2000 |
Xander Schauffele | +2000 |
Collin Morikawa | +2200 |
Will Zalatoris | +3300 |
Daniel Berger | +4000 |
Hideki Matsuyama | +4000 |
Sam Burns | +4000 |
Shane Lowry | +4000 |
Bryson DeChambeau | +4000 |
Louis Oosthuizen | +4000 |
Corey Conners | +5000 |
Joaquin Niemann | +5000 |
Matt Fitzpatrick | +5000 |
Paul Casey | +5000 |
Sunjae Im | +5000 |
Tiger Woods | +5000 |
Tony Finau | +5000 |
Tyrrell Hatton | +5000 |
Adam Scott | +6600 |
Russell Henley | +6600 |
Tommy Fleetwood | +6600 |
Abraham Ancer | +6600 |
Marc Leishman | +6600 |
Patrick Reed | +6600 |
Billy Horschel | +8000 |
Bubba Watson | +8000 |
Justin Rose | +8000 |
Max Homa | +8000 |
Sergio Garcia | +8000 |
Gary Woodland | +8000 |
Seamus Power | +8000 |
Si Woo Kim | +8000 |
Luke List | +10000 |
Talor Gooch | +10000 |
Tómas Pieters | +10000 |
Webb Simpson | +10000 |
Brian Harman | +12500 |
Cameron Young | +12500 |
Jason Kokrak | +12500 |
Kevin Kisner | +12500 |
Robert Macintyre | +12500 |
Sepp Straka | +12500 |
Harold Varner III | +15000 |
Lee Westwood | +15000 |
Tom Hoge | +15000 |
Christian Bezuidenhout | +15000 |
Francesco Molinari | +15000 |
Kevin Na | +15000 |
Erik van Rooyen | +20,000 |
JJ Spaun | +20,000 |
Lucas Herbert | +20,000 |
Matthew Wolff | +20,000 |
Cameron Champ | +20,000 |
Danny Willett | +20,000 |
Mackenzie Hughes | +20,000 |
KH Lee | +25000 |
Ryan Palmer | +25000 |
Cameron Davis | +30000 |
Garrick Higgo | +30000 |
Lucas Glover | +30000 |
Min Woo Lee | +30000 |
Stewart Cink | +30000 |
Zach Johnson | +30000 |
Harry Higgs | +35000 |
Hudson Swafford | +35000 |
Takumi Kanaya | +35000 |
Keita Nakajima | +40000 |
Padraig Harrington | +40000 |
Charl Schwartzel | +50000 |
Guido Migliozzi | +50000 |
Aaron Jarvis | +100000 |
Austin Greaser | +100000 |
Bernhard Langer | +100000 |
Fred couple | +100000 |
James Piot | +100000 |
Laird Shepherd | +100000 |
Stewart Hagestad | +100000 |
Vijay Singh | +100000 |
Mike Weir | +150000 |
Jose Maria Olazabal | +250000 |
Larry Mize | +400000 |
Sandy Lyle | +400000 |
AUGUSTA, Ga. – Let’s start this week’s ranking in the Masters tournament series with a few caveats.
Yes, I would have liked to squeeze about 20 players into my top 10. Sure, I wanted to list 40 boys in the top 20. And you’re damn right, I could have chosen 60 for the top 40.
Spoiler alert: Figures do not work this way.
As you browse through my selections below, you will no doubt see some and think, “These guys are overrated.” Hey, it makes no sense in this exercise if we do not take some chances on long shots. You will also probably see some and say, “They are too low.” If this were a skill set, we could simply copy and paste the table of contents.
Instead, it is purely a matter of opinion based on speculation. If anything, it can help to give a sense of which players are too expensive on the market and who have some value.
With that in mind, let’s take it right away.
1. Brooks Koepka
Not since Tiger Woods in his prime has he realized how he should reach his peak four times a year before the tournament. Given that he has finally recovered and is already showing solid form, Drive for Five could reach its peak with a green jacket on Sunday night.
2. Patrick Cantlay
After a devastating end to last season and a strong start this year, Cantlay has now finished outside the top-25 in three starts in a row. The good news, however, is that he has worked before while in similar situations.
3. Justin Thomas
A popular choice to win his second Grand Slam title in his career almost half a decade after the first, Thomas has passed more than a year without a win. He continues to knock on the door thanks to his ever-impressive ball performance.
4. Will Zalatoris
Zalatoris, ranked second last year in his Masters debut, seems to be one of the few select players who do not need experience to succeed at Augusta National. His putt was usually smarter and improved a lot in his last start, which made him even more dangerous.
5. Jordan Spieth
That same year, his same form, Spieth turns onto Magnolia Lane and immediately finds his A-game. Although the result has not been quite there this year, he has just led the Valero Texas Open in a stroke he got a tee against the greens last week.
6. Jón Rahm
As he needs even more incentive fuel, Scottie Scheffler, who was previously in 1st place, has been robbed by Scottie Scheffler in recent weeks. With four top-10 in a row at Augusta National, he clearly loves this place, though his putter has been the cause of much frustration this year.
7. Dustin Johnson
Rain earlier this week may not make Augusta National as wet as she played in Johnson’s victory in November two years ago, but it could offer a similar core of soft from tee to flat and stiff on the putting green, a combination he obviously loved. .
8. Tony Finau
Together we may have to forget everything we have learned about Finau’s game in the first three months of the year, which has been shockingly unimpressive, and instead remember that he has three top-10 players in four starts here and is armed with a world of talent.
9. Cameron Smith
Last month’s winner of THE PLAYERS Championship, who had a healthy dose of Mother Nature potpourri, where conditions alternated between hot and cold, dry and wet, windy and calm, he could be licking his chops with a similar prediction this week. .
10. Scottie Scheffler
There are no holes in the new number 1 player’s game, as he has proven himself with three victories in his last five starts. Certainly the payout ratio is obvious and he is ready to claim a major; it’s just a question of whether he can keep the heater going.
11. Sam Burns
There are not many good buys for the tournament, but Burns, who won the Valspar championship in his last start, will definitely make it to the competition. The only possible reason is that he is playing his first and no rookie at the Masters has won since Fuzzy Zoeller in 1979.
12. Rory McIlroy
It’s hard to believe that McIlroy has now been eight years since his last major victory. In the time he has spent searching for the fourth part of the grand slam of his career, he has five top-10 in seven starts here, including a few heart fractures that have added to the scar tissue.
13. Matt Fitzpatrick
There are many ways to classify which players have performed best this season so far. Although Fitzpatrick may not have won, he leads the PGA TOUR in the total strokes achieved, which indicates his all-round ability at the highest level.
14. Russell Henley
At its core, the Augusta National Golf Course is second to none. No one – not Collin Morikawa or Thomas or Rahm – has met their irons better this season than Henley, who leads in strokes that have been achieved on approach strokes, perhaps the most important measure this week.
15. Shane Lowry
Lowry has already been a grandmaster and has shown some signs that he could add to that total someday, although these signs have not yet appeared. He has only made three cuts in six Masters starts and has not made the top 20.
16. Collin Morikawa
Admittedly, I feel like a double big winner is too low on this list, but he did not sound completely confident in the current state of his game when he spoke earlier this week. That said, he’s a great iron player who could count on throwing darts.
17. Xander Schauffele
It’s no secret that Schauffele tends to play his best golf both at major tournaments and on limited courses, so it’s natural that he should do well in a limited tournament, even on a course he already has in the top two. seats for the past three years.
18. Viktor Hovland
There is perhaps no player in the top 10 of the world who has obvious weaknesses in his game like Hovland, who is ranked last on the PGA TOUR in Strokes Gained: Around the Green this season. Unless he hits 18 flats in regulation every day, this is not the place to fix it.
19. Corey Conners
Are you still perceiving a theme? After last year’s Masters Championship, where notorious poor putters finished 1-2 in this tournament, Conners certainly fits in with the format of those who have enjoyed success at Augusta National recently.
20. Tiger Woods
After watching him practice and talking to him, there seems to be little doubt that Woods is not here to be a celebratory golfer. The five-time Masters winner seems ready to fight, as optimism about his performance this week seems to continue to grow by the minute.
21. Luke List
22. Robert Macintyre
23. Billy Horschel
24. Max Homa
25. Joaquin Nieman
26.Daniel Berger
27. Adam Scott
28. Louis Oosthuizen
Although he still gets the honor of having played his best in a major tournament – and rightly so – that has not been the case in this game, as his loss to Bubba Watson in the 2012 final is still his only top-10 finish. his start in 13 previous games.
29. Stewart Cink
30. Sergio Garcia
31. Marc Leishman
32. Talor Gooch
33. Sungjae Im
34. Gary Woodland
35. Justin Rose
36. Tom Hoge
37. Jason Kokrak
38. Bubba Watson
39. Paul Casey
A big question mark here, where Casey was forced to give WD / have a gift in each of his three games at the WGC-Dell Match Play just two weeks ago due to a chronic back injury. If he is complete he can certainly compete, but it is still a big if.
40. Patrick Reed
41. Tyrrell Hatton
42. Francesco Molinari
43. Sepp Straka
44. Thomas Pieters
45. Kevin Kisner
46. Abraham Ancer
47. Webb Simpson
48. Tommy Fleetwood
Fleetwood was once considered an inevitable grandmaster, but Fleetwood’s game came at a difficult time, although he showed some signs of returning to the top flight. His best chance is left at The Open or US Open, as he has never finished better than T-17 here.
49. Mackenzie Hughes
50. Erik Van Rooyen
51. Seamus Power
52. Lee Westwood
53. Brian Harman
54. Kevin Na
55. Ryan Palmer
56. Hideki Matsuyama
What a shame. The defending champion made an impressive menu for Tuesday night’s championship night, but his title defense could be in doubt as he was forced to cancel the Valero Texas Open last week due to a neck injury.
57. Si Woo Kim
58. Harold Varner III
59. Matthew Wolff
60. Guido Migliozzi
61. Lucas Herbert
62. Danny Willett
63. Hudson Swafford
64. Lucas Glover
65. Bernhard Langer
66. KH Lee
67. Bryson DeChambeau
More injury news: DeChambeau revealed this week that he initially injured himself in a fall when he played table tennis with Sergio Garcia and Joaquin Niemann two months ago. Not yet healthy, expectations should drop significantly for this week.
68. JJ Spaun
69. Cameron Young
70. Cameron Champ
71. Padraig Harrington
72. Zach Johnson
73. Min Woo Lee
74. Garrick Higgo
75. Cameron Davis
76. Vijay Singh
77. Charl Schwartzel
78. Christiaan Bezuidenhout
79. Takumi Kanaya
80. Harry Higgs
81. Stewart Hagestad (a)
Hagestad, who has been a small fan of this tournament for half a decade, is an amateur in his career who, in his thirties, could have the advantage of experience to repeat this honor this week as well.