Ben Coley seeks to end a profitable week by finding the winner of the PGA Championship, where Mito Pereira is the man to catch.
Prices ultimately determine selections and with little to choose between the two (and nothing in terms of their scores), Zalatoris has to get the vote. He's got a few things in his favour, too: he's away from the spotlight of the final group, and he's the only one of the top six who has been in the mix for a major before. The latter in particular might be significant, and he's stood tall for all four major top-10s, especially so when runner-up at Augusta last year.
The short putts he missed during round three were of course unsettling, though not surprising, and explain why he was four shots worse than Pereira on the day. In fact every other member of the top four outperformed Zalatoris with the putter by over four and a half strokes, which in turn tells you which of the four produced the best golf from tee-to-green.
It is going to be difficult for Zalatoris to win this without making those four- and five-foot putts, and the idea that as the pressure increases, his putting worsens, is one that makes some sense. However, there is one piece of evidence that contradicts this theory: the single best putter during round four of the Masters last month was Will Zalatoris.
That is to say nothing much except that he is capable of a good day on the greens when it counts. We've seen him do it. We haven't seen Pereira do it, and like him neither Fitzpatrick nor Young has given themselves the opportunity to do it. And, over one round in which he may well face fewer of those short putts he so badly struggles with, I don't think anyone should be fixated on his weakness. It makes for difficult viewing and gives everyone something to talk about, but it might not stop him from becoming a major champion.
Ultimately, we have a rookie leader being pursued by players you could legitimately describe as the best driver, the best iron player and the best putter on the PGA Tour. It makes for a fascinating conclusion to what has been a wonderful week on a golf course which has more than played its part, and it's only price which forces me towards Zalatoris over Fitzpatrick.
If you're not as bothered by price and can get the 5.2 currently being traded on Betfair Exchange, by all means back the latter and cheer on a player seeking to become the only English winner of this in the stroke play era. If Fitzpatrick does win, it will be worth celebrating.
Finally, there are a handful of tempting two-ball options, including Robert MacIntyre from the second group out. He's in with Patton Kizzire, who offered some scathing criticism of the course after his third round, and perhaps the Scot will benefit from a better attitude as he seeks to end another good major on a high.
Later on, Keegan Bradley's overall form might entitle him to be a bit shorter to beat Jason Day while Viktor Hovland, cheered on by Oklahoma crowds, can get the better of Tony Finau, but the best bet is BROOKS KOEPKA to beat Harold Varner III.
Clearly, players paired together for Sunday have produced similar performances this week and there's an argument that nobody should be massively short, but Koepka isn't: we can have even-money about by far the superior player here, and that does surprise me.
It is true that Varner has produced the better tee-to-green display so far but that's his game and Koepka is still entitled to be more like BoyleSports' 8/11 than the evens offered by Paddy Power and Betfair, with Unibet offering 49/50 and bet365 quoting 5/6. Anything that price and upwards offers value for those seeking afternoon entertainment, though I suspect most will have other things to worry about before settling down for the main event this evening.
Posted at 0915 BST on 22/05/22
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