Ben Coley bagged 28/1 and 8/1 winners on day one of the PGA Championship, and now returns with another three-ball treble for Friday afternoon.
Spieth fought hard to shoot 72 yesterday and just about remain in the conversation, and anyone watching will know he didn't do a lot wrong. Not for the first time this spring, his putting was an issue throughout but there was some bad luck, too, as drives which landed in the fairway but came to rest an inch into the rough cost him strokes at the 15th and 18th holes.
It was just one of those days, where small misses were magnified and I dare say some frustration grew as McIlroy made things look easy. Spieth will have been really pleased with how he stuck to the task, coming home in level par, and there's less between him and McIlroy than revised prices suggest.
With Woods plainly struggling for fitness and unable to cover the deficit around the green, this should be a head-to-head and anything 6/4 or bigger about Spieth is worth a small bet. McIlroy did drive the ball fabulously and isn't a player I'd have been in a rush to take on, but the combination of Woods' troubles and the way Spieth's round unfolded has added enough to the price.
Griffin (2042) has been hitting the ball superbly of late and that continued in an opening 72. He made very little despite several good chances courtesy of quality approach play, yet was still able to match Laurie Canter's score as the pair proved six shots too good for PGA pro Dylan Newman, who outperformed both of them on the greens.
Canter, who isn't known for his short-game, was fully three shots better than Griffin on and around the greens, underlining the superiority in the American's long-game. Whereas there's a good chance that remains – Griffin is among the best ball-strikers on the PGA Tour over the last two months – it's even more likely that there's a turnaround on and around the greens, and 10/11 about Griffin in what amounts to a match looks the best bet of the evening.
Slightly more risk comes attached to backing 50-year-old Yang (1825), but he hit the ball really well to outshine John Daly and Shaun Micheel. Daly birdied the first and was excellent for a while, but bogeyed four of his final five holes in a likely sign of what's to come. He's been given permission to ride a cart this week due to health problems but this remains a physical test for him and late on Friday afternoon, it's also possible he grows frustrated with the pace of play. That wasn't an issue in the first group out but it just might be today.
Micheel was always behind and lacks the competitive sharpness of Yang, the youngest and fittest of this trio. Yang has finished ahead of Daly in five of their six combined starts since this tournament last year and the one shot gap between them ought to widen, with something around the 75 mark from the 2009 champion likely to set the bar too high for both his playing partners.
Those looking for a treble should consider Stewart Cink, who beat Padraig Harrington and Jason Dufner to continue a strong run of form. My worry there is that Harrington is highly unlikely to struggle as badly as he did with the putter and there's not as much between them as their respective first-round scores suggest. Kevin Na's short-game could again be the difference in his three-ball but evens is short enough against two solid operators so we'll stick to a double at a nice price.
Posted at 0925 BST on 20/05/22
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