2011 European Tour Year In Review
Golf Betting Lines
12/12/2011 -
Philadelphia, PA (Sportsbook Betting Lines) - It was another big year for the European
Tour as one tour regular took over the top spot in the world rankings and
three other members won their first major championship.
Luke Donald won three times and moved to the top of the world rankings for the
first time in his career. He grabbed a stranglehold atop those rankings,
thanks in part to five worldwide titles.
Three members won the first three majors, meaning European Tour regulars won
six consecutive majors dating back to 2010. Graeme McDowell, Louis Oosthuizen
and Martin Kaymer were the three big winners last year.
When the calendar changed to 2011, Charl Schwartzel, Rory McIlory and Darren
Clarke each won their first major.
Schwartzel broke through at Augusta, where McIlory had the third-round lead.
As McIlroy was struggling mightily on the back nine, Schwartzel broke through
a crowd of eight players. Schwartzel finished with four straight birdies to
close out his round and take the green jacket.
Not to be undaunted, McIlroy fired four rounds in the 60s in a dominating win
at the U.S. Open at Congressional. Clarke closed the British Open with an
even-par 70, but it was enough for a three-shot win at Royal St. George's.
Eleven players combined for 24 wins in the season's 54 events, which started
at the end of 2010.
No matter the year, 2010 or 2011, the European Tour is on a big upswing and
with all of its young talent, more good things are on the horizon.
PLAYER OF THE YEAR -- The steady Englishman
As it did on the PGA Tour, the money title came down to the final tournament.
And, as he did in the United States, Luke Donald sealed the deal on the final
day.
Donald garners Player of the Year status courtesy of his three victories and
his winning the Order of Merit.
The world No. 1 needed a top-nine finish to fend off U.S. Open champion Rory
McIlroy for the money title. McIlroy's only hope was to win the season-ending
Dubai World Championship.
Battling the final two days with a virus, McIlroy was unable to backup his
opening-round 66 with another low round and wrapped up the event with three
straight 71s to share 11th.
Donald, on the other hand, started with an even-par 72 and closed with back-
to-back 66s to end alone in third.
That gave Donald an easy win in the Order of Merit, by over a million euros.
It also meant the 34-year-old was the first player to ever top both the
European Tour and PGA Tour money lists in the same season.
Donald had just 13 starts on the European Tour, actually six if you extract
the four majors and three World Golf Championship events.
However you look at it, Donald was the model of consistency. He missed just
one cut and finished outside the top 11 one other time.
The world's No. 1 player carded three titles, two seconds, a third and a
fourth. His lone missed cut happened to be at the British Open. And that is
the only knock on Donald to this point in his career -- he hasn't won a major.
Two majors gave us his two worst results of the year. The other two majors?
Donald shared fourth at The Masters and tied for eighth at the PGA
Championship.
For the season, Donald teed it up 25 times on the European and PGA Tours. He
missed only three cuts and took over as the top player in the world.
Donald might not be the longest hitter, he might not even hit it the
straightest, but he gets the ball in the hole as quick, if not quicker, than
any other player in the game right now.
You can expect more of the same in the years to come as Donald is just
reaching his peak.
Others in the conversation for Player of the Year were McIlroy, former PGA
Champ Martin Kaymer, reigning Masters winner Charl Schwartzel and the
resurgent, Thomas Bjorn.
TOURNAMENT OF THE YEAR -- Johnnie Walker playoff
There were plenty of good choices for the tournament of the year, but call me
a sucker for big playoffs.
The Johnnie Walker Championship was the biggest playoff of the year, featuring
five players -- Thomas Bjorn, George Coetzee, Mark Foster, Pablo Larrazabal
and Bernd Wiesberger.
Okay, so these guys might not be household names, but a big playoff is a big
playoff. Coetzee and Wiesberger were both going for their first title, Foster
his second and first since 2003, Larrazabal his third and second of the year,
and Bjorn was aiming for his 12th victory, and also his second of 2011.
The group would play the par-five 18th at Gleneagles until a winner was
crowned. Wiesberger stumbled to a bogey the first time through and was out.
Larrazabal made bogey the second time around and was done.
The remaining trio picked up their play as they all made birdie the third
time. Bjorn and Coetzee made birdie again on the fourth playing of the hole,
but Foster tripped to a bogey and was out.
It came down to the final two. On the fifth extra hole, Bjorn stuffed his
third shot within three feet and had the clear advantage. After Coetzee missed
his 40-foot birdie effort, Bjorn rolled in his putt for the victory.
It was the 12th victory of his career, and he followed with lucky No. 13 the
following week. The titles may also help Bjorn play his way onto the European
Ryder Cup team for the first time since 2002.
SHOT OF THE YEAR -- Clarke's eagle
It is rare for a front-nine eagle to mean so much to a single player, but in
Darren Clarke's case it provided the breathing room he needed.
In the final round of the British Open, Phil Mickelson was trying to chase
down Clarke as both players were looking to win the prestigious title for the
first time.
Mickelson delivered an eagle effort on the par-five seventh to join Clarke in
the lead.
Clarke responded as a true champion would. Three groups later, he also made
eagle on No. 7 to regain a two-stroke cushion. It was that putt that gave
Clarke the edge he needed.
He parred nine in a row after that and saw his lead grow to four shots. Bogeys
on the final two holes did nothing but trim Clarke's winning margin in his
first major championship conquest.
Sure, it wasn't as sexy as Miguel Angel Jimenez banking a shot off the wall at
the 2010 British Open at St. Andrews, but the putt gave Clarke the advantage
he needed to grab the Claret Jug.
ROOKIE OF YEAR -- A Young Dane
Denmark's Thorbjorn Olesen and Scotland's Scott Jamieson were two of the top
rookies on the European Tour in 2011 after gaining their tour cards through
the Challenge Tour.
Olesen gains the nod as Rookie of the Year after finishing 11 spots higher in
the Order of Merit with about 114,000 more euros than Jamieson.
Jamieson did tally five top-10 finishes, but missed the cut in 10 of his last
14 starts, including six in a row at one point.
Olesen had one less top-five finish, but three of his top-fives were ties for
second place. He also had a bad stretch late in the year, missing nine cuts in
a 12-tournament span starting at the British Open.
The soon-to-be 22-year-old Olesen finished one shot back at the Italian and
France Opens, and those big paychecks pushed him ahead of Jamieson for Rookie
of the Year honors.
GOOD YEAR
- McIlroy had more top-fives and more top-10s than Donald, but ended second in
the Order of Merit, despite winning the U.S. Open and Hong Kong Open.
Nevertheless, it was an outstanding season for the Ulsterman.
- Kaymer had wins in his first and next-to-last starts. In between, he posted
six top-10 finishes. The German took second to Donald at the WGC-Accenture
Match Play Championship, but struggled in the majors. He missed the cut in two
of the four and his share of 12th at the British was his best finish in a
major a year after he won his first. No denying his third-place finish in the
Order of Merit though.
- Schwartzel broke out of a pack of eight golfers, including Tiger Woods, to
win the Masters. He did so by making birdie on each of the last four holes.
The South African was the first to birdie the last four holes to win the title
at Augusta. He also won the Joburg Open and finished inside the top-16 in
eight of his 10 starts on the European Tour after the Masters victory.
- Bjorn snapped a nearly four-year winless drought in 2010. He picked up three
more titles this year, including back-to-back victories at the Johnnie Walker
Championship and European Masters.
- Anders Hansen was the only player in the top-10 in the Order of Merit that
didn't win this year. That doesn't mean it was a bad season though. Hansen
posted three seconds and two thirds in 22 events. The Dane remains winless
since the 2009 Joburg Open, but he is continuously knocking on the door for
sure.
BAD YEAR
- Nick Dougherty teed it up 32 times this season, but earned just $10,600 as
he made just one cut. The three-time winner on the European Tour last won in
2009 at the BMW International Open. Since that victory, he has made the cut in
just 23 of 70 starts.
- Jeppe Huldahl led the tour in starts with 35, but that didn't mean it was a
lucrative year for the Dane. He made 10 cuts and earned over 131,000 euros.
However, he ended 158th in the Order of Merit and did not retain his tour card
for next year.
- Markus Brier, a two-time winner on tour, missed the cut in two of his last
three starts and failed to keep his tour card for 2012 by 426 euros.
- Ross Fisher earned his fourth tour win in 2010, but failed to post a top-
five finish in 24 starts this season.
- Keith Horne made 16 cuts in 33 events, but didn't have a single top-10
finish.
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NFL Football Betting Online
Is there such a thing as a trap game in the NFL?
I once asked that question to Pete Korner, who at the time was office manager and a senior linesmaker for Las Vegas Sports Consultants.
Korner almost ripped my head off. There is no such thing as a trap game, he loudly berated me. It’s a myth. The numbers are made using power ratings, he said.
There are trap games, though. They just might not be what you think. The perception is of a good team, say Philadelphia, laying a small number against New Orleans.
Using the highly-respected power ranking from The Gold Sheet, you’d find the Eagles with a power rating of 4 and the Saints at 8. When you factor the game being played in New Orleans, you could see why the line opened so short at less than a field goal.
For some, this makes it enticing to take the Eagles. That’s not a real trap game, though.
A real trap game, says professional gambler Dave Malinsky, is thinking you’re getting value betting a bad team, which brings us to the Oakland Raiders-Denver Broncos matchup.
The Raiders are +15 in this long-standing division rivalry. Denver is on a short week having dispatched Baltimore Monday. However, the Raiders haven’t covered the spread their last 10 games.
Many bettors don’t trust the Raiders to give a full effort. Few think much of Art Shell and his Oakland’s coaching staff.
So oddsmakers have to do something to make Oakland attractive if they hope to get equal action.
Now Malinsky is a value shopper. But he won’t touch the Raiders even getting more than two touchdowns.
“I try to eliminate the undisciplined, unfocused teams because they’re the ones most likely to suffer the bad beats,” he said.
Near the top of Malinsky’s list of stay-away teams is the Miami Dolphins, who have yet to cover a spread this season.
“Whatever you think of Nick Saban, you have to look at the penalties and turnovers,” Malinsky said.
It’s easy to point out the Dolphins failed to get the money this past week against New England because Olindo Mare missed a field goal and had another field goal blocked. But even though the Dolphins outgained the Patriots, 283-213, they committed eight penalties.
Bad teams not only cost themselves victories, but pointspread covers as well. The Arizona Cardinals and Green Bay Packers are two more examples.
The Cardinals couldn’t have been in a better position this past Sunday, up 14-0 at home against a mediocre Kansas City Chiefs squad. But they couldn’t hold it. The Packers got a push against St. Louis, but also could have won losing by three when Brett Favre fumbled at the St. Louis 11-yard line with 44 seconds left.
“The Packers were in a position to beat Philadelphia, too,” Malinsky said. “But they couldn’t even cover double digits.
“These teams just make mistakes and it costs you … they always will look good from a value standpoint. They really will. But that’s the trap.”
Houston and Tennessee rank among the six-worst teams. Malinsky wouldn’t be afraid to take either of these teams, however, if the price were high enough.
The Texans are bad, Malinsky said, but they have some discipline. The Titans showed they could not only come up with an outstanding game plan, but execute it as well, losing by one to the Colts on the road as an 18 ?-point underdog this past Sunday.
“Jeff Fisher is a worker,” Malinsky said of the Titans coach. “I’m not sure how hard Art Shell wants to work when he gets out of bed.”
Fisher, though, could be out as Tennessee coach after this season. Is he still worth backing in the right spot, with the right price, as a lame duck coach?
“It’s in his nature to keep working hard and not worry about any possible lame duck status,” Malinsky said. “He’s coaching for his resume.”
Note: Monday night game will be picked Monday. Lines used are from football betting lines.
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