X
Lost password?

Don't have an account?
Gain Access Now

X

Receive free daily analysis

NFL
NBA
NHL
NASCAR
CFB
MLB
MMA
PGA
ESPORTS
BETTING

Already have an account? Log In

X

Forgot Password


POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Import Your Leagues
Weekly Rankings
Compare Any Players
Projections
Articles & Tools
Weekly Planner
24x7 News and Alerts

PGA DFS: Vegas Report - Sony Open

Welcome back to the PGA DFS: Vegas Report. What a start to the 2019 calendar year on the PGA Tour! Xander Schauffele captured the fourth victory of his career, ransacking the title away from Gary Woodland. Schauffele tied a course record on Sunday with his 11-under par 62 effort, eclipsing Woodland by one shot for the win. With the triumph, the 25-year-old moves up to sixth in the Official World Golf Rankings and books his ticket back to the 2020 Sentry Tournament of Champions.

Webb Simpson, our pick to win at odds of 25/1, finished in a share of eighth place. The American put together a brilliant Sunday himself, shooting an eight-under par 65 to catapult his way up the leaderboard. Simpson was excellent with his irons all week, gaining 7.212 strokes on his approach shots -- good for second-best in the field, and he concluded the tournament in a share of first for eagles made and fifth in strokes gained tee-to-green. Unfortunately, despite gaining 3.411 strokes putting during the final round, Simpson still ended the tournament ranked 26th out of 33 golfers in strokes gained-putting. A better putting week could have given him a chance to compete, but that same sentiment could be said about a handful of guys every event.

All things considered, the Sentry Tournament of Champions was a pretty thin betting card for us. We had no head-to-head wagers and only two outright selections. Things will begin to pick up as the season rounds into form, but discipline and bankroll management will always be what is most important. I don't believe in forcing inordinately large betting cards for the sake of the article looking better. What I mean by that is, I am not going to recommend a ton of names from the top of the betting board to make it more likely that we find a winner in the article. Sure, we would hit a champion more frequently by doing that, but we wouldn't be profitable by always chasing the top of the board. Golf betting is enticing because there are so many different routes you can take for every event, but your exposure needs to be controlled. Alternative thought processes will regularly be mentioned, and I will do my best to provide other options to consider weekly. With the Sony Open on tap for this week, let's get into some plays that we will be targetting.

For an in-depth breakdown of the top DraftKings and Fanduel plays, check out Joe Nicely's weekly Horse For The Course that highlights the best fits for the week's course.

Editor's Note: Our friends at Fantasy National have built some incredible DFS Golf lineup tools including a Lineup Optimizer, Stat Engine, Ownership Projections and Course Breakdowns. They are by far the best daily fantasy Golf tools in the industry. Seriously. You can read all about them here and see screenshots. 

Sign Up Now!

 

2019 Sony Open - Waialae Country Club - 7,020 Yards - Par 70 - Greens Bermuda.

Located in Honolulu, Hawaii and designed by Seth Raynor in 1925, Waialae Country Club will be hosting an event on the PGA Tour for the 54th consecutive year. Tom Doak made some minor restorations to the course in 2016, restoring it to its original layout.

Just like Kapalua last weekend, Waialae is one of the easier courses on tour but will play vastly different than its predecessor. Kapalua featured a hilly course that played almost 7,500 yards and was susceptible to extreme gusts of wind. Waialae can be described more like a flat, boring bayside track that will emphasize par-four scoring and ball-striking with it being a Par 70 that plays just over 7,000 yards. The only line of defense for the course is wind, which can cause approximately a three-shot difference per day in calm versus windy conditions. However, the fairways are lined with trees that do mitigate some of the weather. Driving accuracy is well below the tour average, but the rough is innocuous, and players will have clean second shots as long as they avoid the trees.

There are 12 par-fours on the course, with 10 of them ranging between 400-500 yards. The four par-threes extend between 176-204 yards and the two par-fives play 506 and 551 yards, respectively. The par-fives are the easiest holes to score on, featuring roughly a 71 percent and 55 percent birdie or better percentage. Those holes are reachable in two shots for just about every player in the field, so golfers that can give themselves an opportunity for quality eagle looks should make a few during the week. In general, Waialae is a second shot course that will reward players that are good with their irons, can score on par-fours and gain a lot of opportunities because of a high percentage of greens in regulation hit.

Pick to Win

Before I get into my pick to win, I want to discuss a common mistake I see golf bettors make. The idea isn't as cut and dry as I am going to make it, but it is something that I see far too many people doing wrong.

I think one of the biggest misconceptions in the industry is what happens when you take a name from the top of the betting board. Far too often I see a player like Justin Thomas as the selection and the rest of the card is filled out with three or four additional players at odds of 30/1 or less. There are a few reasons this doesn't work from both a logical and mathematical perspective.

In an ideal world, you want "to win" the same amount on every bet you make. The differences can be subtle, but it allows cleaner hedge spots or buyouts. Plus, it should keep you from over investing into an event. Let's say your bankroll can afford up to $50 worth of outright wagers for every tournament. That may sound like a lot to some and a little to others, but it works the same way regardless of how big your bankroll is. If you hypothetically selected golfers that had odds of 8/1, 15/1, 20/1, 25/1 and 30/1, you would be betting the following amounts to win around the same total :

$20 to win $160 (8/1)
$10.60 to win $159 (15/1)
$8.00 to win $160 (20/1)
$6.40 to win $160 (25/1)
$5.30 to win $159 (30/1)

That may seem reasonable to some, but it is a mathematical situation that you can't win at long-term. Outside of your win amount getting depleted by doing this strategy, you have to hit a winner during 31.25 percent of the events to break even! This example goes hand-in-hand with my point I made during the beginning of the article, people can show a lot of winners during the year, but it doesn't mean they are showing a profit.

Now let's take the same example of taking Justin Thomas at 8/1 but let's attempt to win $360 on him this time. If we keep with the same $50 bankroll total, we could place $45 on him to win $360. That would leave us with an additional $5 that we could invest into either one extra player or possibly multiple other golfers. However, remember we need to bet to win around the same amount. As an example, it would look something like this if we chose to take one golfer:

$45 to win $360 (8/1)
$4.50 to win $360 (80/1)

We are now winning $200 more and only need to hit a winner 13.8 percent of the time. I still think this example is slightly too bullish and would prefer to find a range for my bankroll that allows me to hit at under 10 percent. But it gets the point across that the lower in odds you go, the fewer golfers you can take, and the higher in odds your guys are, the more golfers you can bet for that week. It doesn't mean that every event needs to have the same win total as the one before, but you should be trying to stay within a similar weekly wager amount until your bankroll allows a progression.

_____________________________________________________________________________

Justin Thomas (8/1, DK Price $11,400, FD Price $12,300)

The Sony Open provides another slightly awkward betting card for us. Depending on what your wagering options are, there are a few different ways to play this. If I had each-way betting, it would change a lot of how I viewed this event. The possibility to get paid out for the top five to seven finishing positions would allow us to explore further down the leaderboard in what appears to be a wide-open event if you remove Justin Thomas from the equation. I believe we have about 40 players that are all viable options to win if Thomas doesn't, and the field is weak enough that multiple options could land inside the each-way finishing positions.

Unfortunately, I don't have that choice available to me inside the United States and would rather condense my selection down to the player that I think is going to win, mainly because it feels like throwing darts at a board this week. If I was to recommend what my card would look like with each-way betting, players such as Scott Piercy (60/1), Chez Reavie (80/1), Sungjae Im (80/1), Danny Lee (90/1), Ryan Armour (110/1), Sam Ryder (110/1) and Ollie Schniederjans (150/1) are all names that I would be considering. Jordan Spieth (16/1) and Hideki Matsuyama (30/1) are other viable routes to start your card with regardless of the gambling options that are available to you, but I decided to go a direction that I usually wouldn't and take the favorite in this tournament.

I think roughly 10/1 is about where we could expect long-term expected value on Justin Thomas, but there are ways to push his 8/1 price above that. We could parlay him with an event on Wednesday to bolster his odds to 16/1 or above. I typically like this approach, and it can put us in a much more optimal position, but there are two things I would advise if doing this. The first would be to make sure you parlay it with an event before the tournament starts. Nothing would be worse than Thomas holding a six-shot lead on Sunday, and you have to sweat out either side of the Philadelphia Eagles and New Orleans Saints game to see if you win. The second suggestion would be to cut the bet amount that you were going to make in half. The wager should be treated like a 16/1 selection and not 8/1, allowing us to save some money on the week but giving us the same win total as before. This, of course, assumes we can have the first leg of the bet come in successfully.

Fourteen of the past 20 winners of the Sony Open played the Tournament of Champions the week prior, including each of the last five. Twenty-two players are making the trip from Kapalua to Honolulu this year, and perhaps nobody looked more ready to win than Justin Thomas. The American concluded the event with an eight-under 65 on Sunday and would have most likely eclipsed his third-place finish if it weren't for his abnormally poor production with his driver and putter. Thomas lost 0.433 strokes off-the-tee and 0.762 putting on the week. Both of those statistics placed him outside of the top-20 and diminished his stellar 10.805 strokes gained approaching the green, which ranked him first overall in the field.

Thomas has had the majority of his success on the PGA Tour outside of the lower 48 states, winning two of his nine titles in Hawaii and three in Asia. He has three top-14 finishes here in his four attempts, which includes a victory in 2017. If there is anything that could hold him back this weekend, it is his greens in regulation percentage, where he ranks just 26th in the field over his past 50 rounds. Game-theory suggests that there could be some value in fading him in DFS contests this week since he is projected to be the highest owned player on the slate, but I will be overweight with him in all game types. Hopefully you can get his outright price propped up through a two-team parlay.


Chez Reavie (80/1, DK Price $7,600, FD Price $9,400)

While Chez Reavie isn't entering this year's Sony Open with the same form that he possessed last season, it seems reasonable that we could see another early season push from the 63rd-ranked golfer in the world. It is not to say that he has been bad recently, making six straight cuts and providing a share of seventh place at the CJ Cup in October, but last season Reavie entered this event having made sixteen consecutive weekends, which included 11 top-25 finishes. Sadly, his 2018 season faltered slightly after that, and the restart to 2019 couldn't come soon enough.

Reavie is a player that can be taken out of an event if length off the tee is required. One of the shorter hitters on tour, the American does most of his work with his irons, accuracy and proximity to the hole. All those things can play to his advantage at a shorter venue but are negated at tracks that require distance. When we look at courses under 7,200 yards, Reavie's name begins to stick out in a lot of key statistical categories over the last 50 rounds compared to the field. The 37-year-old ranks fifth in strokes gained on par-fours, eighth in opportunities gained, 10th in strokes gained approach and 12th in greens in regulation gained

If we keep looking at courses under 7,200 yards but also add a filter to include venues with Bermuda greens, Reavie begins to excel even more. Over his past 50 rounds compared to the field, he ranks first in greens in regulation gained, second in strokes gained approach, fourth in opportunities gained and fifth in par-three scoring between 175-200 yards. Par-five scoring remains an issue regardless of where the tournament is being held, but Waialae Country Club provides some of the most friendly par-fives in the world.

Reavie enters the week as the 30th highest priced player on DraftKings, 29th on FanDuel and 34th in the betting market. He is currently projected to be owned around 13 percent on DraftKings and 12 percent on FanDuel, but I think he is a safe cash-game option that can still present upside in GPP events.

 

Head-to-Head Play of the Week

Jimmy Walker -115 over Kevin Na -105
Jimmy Walker $7,400 price tag on DraftKings vs. Kevin Na $7,200 price tag on DraftKings
Jimmy Walker 6.5 percent projected ownership vs. Kevin Na 1.3 percent projected ownership

Risk 1.15 Units to Win 1.00.

In theory, I should be going larger on this wager, but I am confused why it is still up on the board given all the uncertainty surrounding Kevin Na. The American was forced to withdraw from the Tournament of Champions with a fractured bone in his right pinky finger and was estimated to be out roughly four weeks.

Fast forward to the Sony Open one week later, and Na is planning to give it a go in Honolulu. There is a lot that can go wrong between now and Thursday, and it is possible that he never quite makes it to the first tee -- which would void all wagers for the event. But considering that there is a chance that he might actually attempt to gut this out, I would feel negligent if I didn't use this as my bet of the week.

In my opinion, the only reason why this is even an option for Na stems from him already being in Hawaii. I am slightly perplexed why he didn't just head home after withdrawing last week, and it does worry me somewhat, but all he has to do is hit one ball and pull out for our bet to be graded a winner. That alone is worth a wager in my opinion, but there are some statistical issues that both Na and Walker are facing.

If we weren't dealing with an injury to Na, this line should probably be reversed. Walker at +100 is where I would have placed it, which means we are technically looking at a negative -3.5 percent implied probability on the wager. However, there is an injury to account for that could affect him if he does play, and there is a definite withdrawal percentage that we need to take into account. Unless the books have inside information that he will be fine and this is a trap wager -- which can't be completely discredited, I would have hung this line closer to -150 for Walker. That gives us about a 6.5 percent edge when we try to estimate how impactful the injury will be.

If Kevin Na pulls out of the event in a timely manner on Wednesday, I will try to edit this post with another head-to-head bet. For what it is worth, Jimmy Walker graded 35th overall for me this week. That is much lower than I would ever want to go with my head-to-head selection, but this situation is anything but conventional.

 

2019 Head-to-Head Record (4-2-1)

+2.70 Units Year-To-Date From H2H Bets

Tournament Head-to-Head Bet Bet My Picks Finish Opponent Finish Result Total
Safeway Open Sangmoon Bae +130 Over Chris Kirk 1.00 Units to Win 1.30 MC (+2) MC (E) Loss -1.00
CIMB Classic Kevin Na -120 over Kevin Tway 1.50 Units to Win 1.25 T19 (-17) T27 (-13) Win 1.25
CJ Cup Paul Casey +100 over Marc Leishman 1.25 Units to Win 1.25 T18 (-8) T18 (-8) Push 0
WGC-HSBC Thomas Pieters +120 over Kevin Na 1.00 Units to Win 1.20 T18 (-1) T54 (+10) Win 1.20
Shriners Austin Cook +100 over Russell Henley 1.00 Units to Win 1.00 MC (+1) MC (-1) Loss -1.00
Mayakoba Kevin Chappell +100 over Charley Hoffman 1.25 Units to Win 1.25 T41 (-9) MC (+2) Win 1.25
RSM Classic Patrick Rodgers -105 over Bronson Burgoon 1.05 Units to Win 1.00 2nd (-19) MC (+2) Win 1.00


2019 Outright Bets That Have Finished Inside the Top-10

Player

Event

Odds

Finish Position

Matt Kuchar

Mayakoba Golf Classic

66/1

1

Chesson Hadley

CIMB Classic

110/1

T2

Ryan Palmer

CJ Cup

150/1

T3

Sam Ryder

Shriners Hospitals

80/1

3

Jason Day

CJ Cup

13/1

T5

Zach Johnson

RSM Classic

40/1

T7

Kevin Kisner

RSM Classic

40/1

T7

Webb Simpson

TOC

25/1

T8

J.B. Holmes

Safeway Open

60/1

9

Shubankar Sharma

CIMB Classic

150/1

T10

 

Sign Up Now!
Our friends at Fantasy National have created some game-changing DFS Golf tools, and you can read all about them here. They are hands-down the best daily fantasy Golf tools in the industry.Premium DFS Golf Tools and Lineup Optimizer

Golf DFS News and Player Outlooks

 

Fantasy National Golf Club

Fantasy National Golf Club

POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Import Your Leagues
Weekly Rankings
Compare Any Players
Projections
Articles & Tools
Weekly Planner
24x7 News and Alerts

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP

REAL-TIME FANTASY NEWS

Brian Thomas Jr.

Limited in Practice on Wednesday
Jerami Grant

Available Wednesday Night
Jalen Brunson

Returns From Two-Game Absence
Jalen Smith

Available to Play Wednesday
Tre Jones

Downgraded to Out
Shaedon Sharpe

Misses Wednesday's Game
Dereck Lively II

Cleared for Action Wednesday
Daniel Gafford

Available Wednesday
Caleb Martin

Won't Play Against Knicks
Raisel Iglesias

Returning to the Braves on One-Year Deal
Lamar Jackson

Absent Due to Ankle Injury
Marvin Bagley III

Starts on Wednesday
Mike Conley

Joins Starting Unit Wednesday
Saddiq Bey

Cleared for Wednesday's Action
Zion Williamson

Returns to Action Wednesday
Aaron Gordon

Out Wednesday
Cooper Flagg

Won't Play Wednesday
Bam Adebayo

Cleared to Play Wednesday
Tre Mann

Ruled Out Wednesday
Sam Merrill

Ruled Out for Wednesday
Jabari Smith Jr.

Active Against Cavaliers
Buddy Hield

Good to Go Wednesday
Jonathan Kuminga

Misses Fourth Consecutive Game
Alexandre Sarr

Unavailable on Wednesday
Conor Garland

to Return on Thursday
Thomas Harley

to Miss Road Trip
Eetu Luostarinen

Out Week-to-Week After Barbecue Accident
Curtis Lazar

to Miss at Least Three Games
Vladimir Tarasenko

Misses Third Consecutive Game
Mikael Granlund

Remains Out Wednesday
Charlie McAvoy

Out Indefinitely After Facial Surgery
Joe Burrow

to Potentially Return in Week 12?
Aaron Rodgers

Out on Wednesday, Hopes to Practice Thursday
Jaylen Warren

Not Seen at Wednesday's Practice
Dak Prescott

Lands on Injury Report Ahead of Week 12 With Hip Injury
Rhamondre Stevenson

Targeting a Return in Week 12?
Isiah Pacheco

Returning to Practice on Wednesday
Brian Thomas Jr.

Jaguars "Optimistic" About Brian Thomas Jr.'s Week 12 Status
Josh Jacobs

Will Not Practice on Wednesday
Sahith Theegala

Looking to Continue Fall Run at RSM Classic
Jayden Daniels

Commanders Considering Shutting Down Jayden Daniels?
Stephan Jaeger

Looking to Bounce Back at RSM Classic
Tom Hoge

Looking to Regain Form at RSM Classic
Joe Highsmith

Searching for Turnaround at RSM Classic
Adam Hadwin

Looking to Build on T11 Finish in Bermuda
Austin Eckroat

Searching for Momentum at RSM Classic
Joel Dahmen

Trying to Find Form at the RSM Classic
Marvin Harrison Jr.

Ruled Out Again in Week 12
Drake London

Falcons Hoping That Drake London Will Return in Week 13
CFB

Garrett Nussmeier Doubtful to Play Against Western Kentucky
Michael Penix Jr.

Needs Reconstructive Surgery on Torn ACL
Jaxson Dart

Expected to Return to Practice on Wednesday
Shedeur Sanders

Will Start Against Raiders
Dalton Kincaid

Ruled Out Against Texans
Connor Bedard

Continues Tear With Hat Trick
Macklin Celebrini

Pots Hat Trick in Tuesday's Win
Jake Guentzel

Records Eighth Career Hat Trick
Sammy Blais

Injured Versus Blues
Alexander Romanov

Injured in Tuesday's Win
Ryan Hartman

Considered Week-to-Week
Michael Thorbjornsen

Hopes to End 2025 Campaign With Another Solid Finish
Andrew Novak

Looks to End 2025 Season on High Note at RSM Classic
Harry Higgs

Teetering for PGA Tour Card in 2026
PGA

Nico Echavarria has the Potential to Contend at the RSM Classic
Sam Stevens

Finishing Out Year in Georgia
Seamus Power

Playing Better at the Right Time
Beau Hossler

Roller Coaster Comes to Saint Simons Island
Quade Cummins

The Time is Now for Quade Cummins in Georgia
Austin Cook

Needs a Win at the RSM Classic
Cameron Champ

on the PGA Tour Card Bubble
Grayson Rodriguez

Shipped to Angels
Taylor Ward

Orioles Acquire Taylor Ward From Angels
Shota Imanaga

Accepts Cubs Qualifying Offer
Brandon Woodruff

Returning to Milwaukee in 2026
Denny McCarthy

Looking For Another Solid Finish at RSM Classic
Si Woo Kim

Looking To Use Current Momentum to Flip Script at RSM Classic
Mackenzie Hughes

a Good Bounce-Back Candidate at RSM Classic
Harris English

Making 14th Start at This Week's RSM Classic
Konnor Griffin

Could Compete for Starting Shortstop Job in 2026
Gleyber Torres

Accepts Tigers Qualifying Offer
Odell Beckham Jr.

Officially Reinstated by NFL Commissioner
Matt Murray

to Miss Six Weeks With Lower-Body Injury
Ilya Lyubushkin

Out on Tuesday
Jamie Benn

Makes Season Debut Tuesday
Evgenii Dadonov

on Track to Return Tuesday
Dougie Hamilton

a Game-Time Call Tuesday
Anthony Cirelli

Expected to Return Against Devils
Victor Hedman

Questionable for Tuesday
Auston Matthews

to Miss at Least Two More Games
C.J. Stroud

Expected to Return in Week 13 Against Colts
C.J. Stroud

to Miss Another Game
Joe Mixon

Uncertainty Remains Around Joe Mixon's Return Timeline
CFB

Sam Leavitt Set to Enter Transfer Portal?
Jose Altuve

Undergoes Foot Surgery
Alex Bregman

Red Sox Going for Either Alex Bregman or Pete Alonso?
CFB

James Franklin to be Virginia Tech's Next Head Coach
CFB

Fernando Mendoza the Clear Heisman Trophy Favorite?
CFB

Beau Pribula Has Chance to Face Oklahoma on Saturday
Jack Della Maddalena

Gets Dominated
Islam Makhachev

Claims UFC Welterweight Belt
Zhang Weili

Gets Outclassed
Valentina Shevchenko

Wins Unanimous Decision At UFC 322
Sean Brady

Suffers First-Round TKO Loss
Michael Morales

Remains Unbeaten
Leon Edwards

Suffers Second-Round Knockout Loss
Leon Edwards

Carlos Prates Becomes The First Man To Knock Out Leon Edwards
Beneil Dariush

Suffers Brutal First-Round Knockout Loss
Beneil Dariush

Benoit Saint Denis Knocks Out Beneil Dariush In 16 Seconds
Josh Naylor

Mariners Finalizing Five-Year Contract
CFB

Jeremiah Smith, Carnell Tate Not Dealing With Long-Term Injuries
CFB

Virginia Tech Close To Naming James Franklin As Head Coach
CFB

Garrett Nussmeier Doubtful vs. Arkansas On Saturday
Edwin Díaz

Blue Jays Interested in Signing Edwin Diaz?
Jacob deGrom

Named AL Comeback Player of the Year
Ronald Acuña Jr.

Ronald Acuna Jr. Wins NL Comeback Player of the Year Award
Aroldis Chapman

Named AL Reliever of the Year
Edwin Díaz

Edwin Diaz Named NL Reliever of the Year
Islam Makhachev

Set For UFC 322 Main Event
Jack Della Maddalena

Set For His First Title Defense
Zhang Weili

Can Become The New Women's Flyweight Champion
Valentina Shevchenko

Set For UFC 322 Co-Main Event
Michael Morales

Looks To Remain Undefeated
CFB

Mario Craver a Game-Time Decision for Week 12
Sean Brady

Set For Title Eliminator Bout
Carlos Prates

A Favorite At UFC 322
Leon Edwards

Looks To Get Back In The Win Column
Benoît Saint Denis

Benoit Saint Denis Set To Open Up UFC 322 Main Card
Beneil Dariush

Looks To Win Back-To-Back Fights
CFB

Virginia's Chandler Morris Trending Toward Facing Duke on Saturday