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Dustin Johnson looks to put a disappointing weekend at Pebble Beach behind him and defend his title in the Genesis Open, one he won in phenomenal fashion a year ago.
Having briefly led by four shots last Saturday afternoon, Johnson failed to make any further progress and was unable to stare down the unflappable Ted Potter, who produced a display of precision and poise to serve up a shock result akin to Vaughn Taylor's victory there in 2016.
Johnson is a point shorter here and that's understandable, given that he went from a decent effort at Pebble Beach to spread-eagling the field here at Riviera a year ago, having previously finished runner-up twice at a golf course made for his game.
While the players may not always say so, Riviera has increasingly played into the hands of the PGA Tour's elite big-hitters, largely because missing fairways isn't punished. Perhaps that explains leaderboard ties with Augusta, where rough is limited, but whatever the case there's plenty of encouragement to reach for driver and be aggressive at both.
Combine all of those factors and van Aswegen looks well worth chancing at 350/1.
Returning to the power angle, I think it may be worth forgiving JB Holmes a couple of missed cuts since he played in the final group at Torrey Pines.
Firstly, the disappointment of missing out on the play-off there will have stung and if we go back to his last win, it's interesting to note that Holmes had come up just short three weeks before, then went on to miss the cut at Bay Hill before a hard-fought victory in Houston.
Secondly, he was forced to go on the defensive - and rightly so - having taken over four minutes to play his second shot at the final hole of that event, and it's possible that the media spotlight which he felt was undeserved had a detrimental impact on his performance in Phoenix just days later.