Tuesday, April 9, 2019

Fantasy Golf: The Masters Preview

As we hit the traditional golf season milestone that is Masters week, let's take stock of the Fantasy Golf Report. Today is Tuesday, April 9th. I have made one decent pick in the last eight weeks and even that was tainted because it was me opting for Tommy Fleetwood at The Players over Rory McIlroy. Highlights of my fuck-up streak include not making the obvious picks of Dustin Johnson at the WGC-Mexico, Paul Casey at the Valspar Championship and, most recently, Charley Hoffman at the Texas Open. You'd have to try pretty hard to blow all three of those picks and the effort level driving my futility is peaking right now. I'm like a high motor college linebacker at the NFL Combine only I have short arms, ran a 5.2 and I just tripped over a cone while trying to cover a coach on a walk-through.

"I would only ask this jury to focus
on what really matters. My faux
sincerity and this green jacket."
Oh but that's not all. I am currently DFL in a fantasy golf league that I created and traditionally dominate based on my unique combination of golf acumen, luck and subtle rules manipulation. Player selection in this league is based on an auction format where I could literally have had any one or two players I wanted yet I somehow wound-up with an enigmatic roster from hell that includes Bryson DeChambeau, Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Hideki Matsuyama, Keegan Bradley and recent addition Haotong Li. Suffice it to say I've got a lot riding on the Masters because a few weeks from now Tiger and Hideki could be in traction and Phil could be in front of a college recruiting scandal grand jury with his palms up saying "I don't know how all of these bad people keep finding me."

And the third leg of this failure trifecta is the fact that I've only played one actual live round since January and I'm pretty sure that distance from the game is impairing my golf IQ. I normally pride myself on not just the ability but the desire to play in any conditions but the weather in Baltimore over the last five months has ranged from windswept post-apocalyptic nuclear winter holocaust to non-stop torrential rain the likes of which no one has ever seen outside of the time someone thought it would be a good idea to do a heist movie starring Morgan Freeman and Christian Slater that would be indistinguishable from every other heist movie only wait for it . . . the whole thing takes place in a steady downpour. If I told you that they called it Hard Rain, you wouldn't believe me so let's just continue.*  

My point (to the extent I have one) is that I am due. I have to be. Even a blind squirrel gets laid wearing a funny hat in the woods every once in a while right? Alright Golf Babes, take us out.  


@GOLFBABES TWEET OF THE WEEK


THIS WEEK'S ANALYSIS


There are certain players who have a unique affinity for Augusta National. I know I'm telling you something you already know but I needed a way to start this section and nothing establishes my credibility as a golf expert right out of the gate like stating the obvious. It's simply the product of opining about a sport where the objective is to hit a ball into a hole with a stick. How else do you explain ever word uttered on the Golf Channel? 


The key to this exercise is to find the guys at the three-way intersection of (1) past Masters success, (2) recent form and (3) gambling value. If you scroll way down, you'll find the standard FGR historical performance chart from the past five years but, for the Masters, I find the following chart which depicts aggregate scoring over the past five years to be more helpful. It's fairly straightforward with the only tweak being that, if a player missed the cut, I gave him a score around the cut line and I capped all scores for that year at the same number because who am I of all people to penalize a guy for having a rough weekend? (Right Eddie Pepperell?) But we're not worried about the guys who missed a bunch of cuts anyway. The value of this chart is how it vividly ranks guys who've played 20+ rounds over the last five years. See for yourself.   



2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
Total
Jordan Spieth
-13
-1
-2
-18
-5
-39
Justin Rose
-6
-9
1
-14
1
-27
Rory McIlroy
-9
-3
1
-12
E
-23
Rickie Fowler
-14
-1
10
-6
-2
-13
Paul Casey
-5
-4
-1
-9
7
-12
Dustin Johnson
-7
DNP
-1
-9
7
-10
Hideki Matsuyama
-3
-1
E
-11
7
-8
Jon Rahm
-11
3
DNP
DNP
DNP
-8
Bubba Watson
-9
8
9
1
-8
1
Matt Kuchar
E
-5
6
2
-2
1
Cameron Smith
-9
DNP
11
DNP
DNP
2
Charley Hoffman
-6
2
7
-8
7
2
Henrik Stenson
-9
8
6
-4
1
2
Jason Day
-2
2
1
-1
2
2
Louis Oosthuizen
-6
7
3
-4
3
3
Sergio Garcia
4
-9
8
-5
7
5
Jimmy Walker
-2
1
7
1
E
7
Phil Mickelson
2
2
10
-14
7
7
Justin Thomas
-4
2
10
DNP
DNP
8
Brooks Koepka
4
-1
5
E
DNP
8
Tiger Woods
1
8
DNP
DNP
DNP
9
Patrick Reed
-15
8
12
-2
7
10
Francesco Molinari
-2
5
DNP
DNP
7
10
Adam Scott
1
-2
10
1
1
11
Marc Leishman
-8
8
7
1
7
15
Matthew Fitzpatrick
3
4
E
1
7
15
Brandt Snedeker
4
3
1
1
7
16
Charl Schwartzel
4
-6
10
1
7
16
Branden Grace
-1
DNP
10
1
7
17
Kevin Kisner
E
8
9
DNP
DNP
17
Zach Johnson
2
8
10
-8
7
19
Webb Simpson
-2
8
7
-1
7
19
J.B. Holmes
4
11
-1
1
7
22
Rafa Cabrera-Bello
3
8
4
1
7
23

The bottom line is that I don't give a rat's ass how off his game Jordan Spieth has been lately. At 20 to 1 and $8,900 on DraftKings, he is a steal. Load-up the cart with him like he's half-priced Aqua Velva at Costco. The same is true of Matt Kuchar ($7,900) and Charley Hoffman ($6,800). And I would have said that before Kuch just finished runner-up at the Match Play and Hoffman did the same at the Texas Open. The fact that they're coming-in hot only makes me that much more confident (says the barefoot guy who keeps stepping-on a Lego). 

After we get those three obvious picks out of the way, we have some tough choices to make. The first is at the top where we have Rory, D.J. and Rose all poised to win their first green jacket. You kind of get the feeling that each of them is going to get one so the question then becomes who gets his first? I'm ruling-out DJ this year because he's the least likely of the three to win one having never really contended. (Don't be fooled by the T4 in 2016 as he didn't finish any round better than three back). That leaves Rory or Rose and frankly it's a toss-up. Rory is hotter but Rose has had the more legitimate title runs. I'm going with Rose. I picked him last year and he finished T12 with his "B" game. I don't think he brings that two years in a row.


Down a tier we have a logjam of legitimate contenders that includes Tommy Fleetwood, Jason Day, Paul Casey, Bubba Watson, Hideki Matsuyama, Francesco Molinari, Xander Schauffele and Adam Scott. You only get to pick two of those guys (my rules) and I've tried to come-up with any conceivable reason not to make Casey one of them because I don't trust him but he sure is comfortable here and, when Casey is comfortable, he's easily one of the ten best players in the world if not one of the top five. He's not going to win but he's a virtual lock for a first page of the leaderboard finish. 


Ooh tingling sensation.
Shit just got real.
Hideki loves Augusta almost as much as Casey and his solid recent form has flown a bit under the radar. Also, as you will see in the DraftKings top ten values, I think we're due for a minor Asian invasion this week. As for the other mid-tiers guys, here are my quick hits on why I'm opting out: Fleetwood (too combustible); Day (missed his window); Bubba (in one of those quirky Bubba funks); Molinari (classic one major guy); Schauffele (a year or two away); and Scott (another classic one major guy). 

And I would have the undisputed world's worst fantasy golf website if I didn't devote at least a couple paragraphs to Tiger and Phil (and even then I might still have the world's worst fantasy golf website). Tiger is overrated as usual with most having him with the fourth best odds behind the three favorites I discussed above when there is no way he should be ranked ahead of Spieth, Casey, Rickie Fowler and probably Jon Rahm, Justin Thomas (more on Fowler, Rahm and Thomas later), Day, Watson and Matsuyama. Yes he is one of the three greatest Masters players of all-time along with Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer but he hasn't had a top ten since 2013 and he hasn't exactly been tearing it up this year though his near-miss final four at the Match Play was definitely a positive sign. I give him a 50/50 shot at a top ten.

Phil on the other hand is underrated. I think I write this every year and I will continue to write it until they bury him behind the 12th tee after he inevitably double-crosses the mob. Phil has finished 7th or better at Augusta fourteen times and, during one ten year stretch from 2001-2010, he had eight top five finishes including three wins. He also shot -14 and finished T2 as recently as 2015. He's stunk the most recent five times he's teed it up in 2019 but the last time he played a course he loves as much as Augusta, he won at Pebble Beach. I have a feeling he could make a run this year but his downside is a total flameout so I can't pick him ahead of guys like Matsuyama and Kuchar. I'd really like to but I can't.  


How awesome was it to see the women 
amateurs playing out of the pine straw 
at Augusta? (Pretty freakin' awesome).
One and Done Pick: Justin Rose

Other Guy I'd Pick: Jordan Spieth

Sleeper Pick: Si Woo Kim

DraftKings Top Ten Values

Rory McIlroy
$11,600
Justin Rose
$10,800
Paul Casey
$9,000
Jordan Spieth
$8,900
Hideki Matsuyama
$8,700
Matt Kuchar
$7,900
Ian Poulter
$7,600
Haotong Li
$7,200
Charley Hoffman
$6,800
Si Woo Kim
$6,700

Let's use this vacant space to talk about a few of the guys I've ignored. Justin Thomas, Jon Rahm and Rickie Fowler are all capable of winning but this generation will have its Nick Price, Ernie Els and Greg Norman because there are only so many green jackets to go around. Especially these days when you start handing them out to the likes of Patrick Reed, Sergio Garcia and Danny Willett. Brooks Koepka definitely has the game to win one but he seems even more disengaged than usual these days so let's consider him down the road.

And that brings us to Bryson DeChambeau. There is absolutely no doubt in my mind that he's going to end-up with multiple green jackets in his closet. If we're making historical comparisons, let's go with Bernhard Langer. However, I absolutely refuse to even consider the possibility that we are going to be subjected to Patrick Reed putting a green jack on Bryson DeChambeau the year after Sergio Garcia put a green jacket on Patrick Reed. No, no, no and a thousand times more no. If that happens I will go into a seventy-two hour state of denial where my answer to everything will simply be "fuck-off" which may present some issues on the college tour with my son the next day and my ensuing attempt to pass-through airport security. Best case scenario I just spend the day in a catatonic state like I do after a Patriots Super Bowl win but please God. Just no.      


                                               THE DAN JENKINS MEMORIAL 

                                          HISTORICAL PERFORMANCE CHART 


DK Price
2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
Rory McIlroy
$11,600
T5
T7
T10
4th
T8
Dustin Johnson
$11,300
T10
DNP
T4
T6
MC
Justin Rose
$10,800
T12
2nd
T10
T2
T14
Tiger Woods
$10,500
T32
DNP
DNP
T17
DNP
Justin Thomas
$10,200
T17
T22
T39
DNP
DNP
Jon Rahm
$10,000
4th
T27
DNP
DNP
DNP
Rickie Fowler
$9,700
2nd
T11
MC
T12
T5
Brooks Koepka
$9,500
DNP
T11
T21
T33
DNP
Bryson DeChambeau
$9,300
T38
DNP
T21
DNP
DNP
Tommy Fleetwood
$9,200
T17
MC
DNP
DNP
DNP
Jason Day
$9,100
T20
T22
T10
T28
T20
Paul Casey
$9,000
T15
6th
T4
6th
DNP
Jordan Spieth
$8,900
3rd
T11
T2
1st
T2
Bubba Watson
$8,800
T5
MC
T37
T38
1st
Hideki Matsuyama
$8,700
19th
T11
T7
5th
MC
Francesco Molinari
$8,600
T20
T33
DNP
DNP
50th
Xander Schauffle
$8,500
T50
DNP
DNP
DNP
DNP
Adam Scott
$8,400
T32
T9
T42
T38
T14
Phil Mickelson
$8,300
T36
T22
MC
T2
MC
Tony Finau
$8,200
T10
DNP
DNP
DNP
DNP
Loois Oosthuizen
$8,100
T12
T41
T15
T19
25th
Patrick Reed
$8,000
1st
MC
T49
T22
MC
Matt Kuchar
$7,900
T28
T4
T24
T46
T5
Marc Leishman
$7,800
9th
T43
MC
DNP
MC
Patrick Cantlay
$7,700
MC
DNP
DNP
DNP
DNP
Sergio Garcia
$7,700
MC
1st
T35
T17
MC
Henrik Stenson
$7,600
T5
MC
T24
T19
T14
Ian Poulter
$7,600
T44
DNP
T49
T6
T20
Gary Woodland
$7,500
MC
MC
DNP
MC
T26
R. Cabrera-Bello
$7,500
T38
MC
T17
DNP
DNP
Cameron Smith
$7,400
T5
DNP
T55
DNP
DNP
Webb Simpson
$7,400
T20
MC
T29
T28
MC
Charl Schwartzel
$7,300
MC
3rd
MC
T38
MC
Eddie Pepperell
$7,300
DNP
DNP
DNP
DNP
DNP
Mattew Fitzpatrick
$7,300
T38
32nd
T7
DNP
MC
Haotong Li
$7,200
T32
DNP
DNP
DNP
DNP
Tyrell Hatton
$7,200
T44
MC
DNP
DNP
DNP
Billy Horschel
$7,100
MC
DNP
T17
MC
T37
Branden Grace
$7,100
T24
T27
MC
MC
MC
Charles Howell, III
$7,000
DNP
DNP
DNP
DNP
DNP
Keegan Bradley
$7,000
DNP
DNP
T52
T22
MC
Thor Olesen
$7,000
DNP
DNP
DNP
DNP
T44
Zach Johnson
$6,900
T36
MC
MC
T9
MC
Charley Hoffman
$6,800
T12
T22
T29
T9
DNP
J.B. Holmes
$6,800
DNP
50th
T4
MC
DNP
Kiradech Aphibarnrat
$6,700
T44
DNP
T15
DNP
DNP
Kevin Kisner
$6,700
T28
T43
DNP
DNP
DNP
Si Woo Kim
$6,700
T24
MC
DNP
DNP
DNP
Emiliano Grillo
$6,600
DNP
51st
T17
DNP
DNP
Jimmy Walker
$6,600
T20
T18
T29
T38
T8

Footnote

* So many great nuggets about this movie that I never knew and now I'm glad I do: 

  • The estimated budget to make it was $70M and it made less than $20M. Apparently people didn't want to spend a rainy day watching a movie about rain. Who knew? 
"But I don't wanna watch
a bad movie about rain
Mr. Clark. I swear."
  • It was originally titled The Flood but they changed it because they didn't want people to think it was a disaster movie (because then they might have accidentally gone to see it?). 
  • Minnie Driver stated that she hated working on the movie due to its intense and continuous wet conditions. Apparently when she read the script, she must have thought that all of the references to "rain" were metaphorical. 
  • And finally, Morgan Freeman later offered the following: "Did any of you see this movie? Don't. Just don't."    
Email the Fantasy Golf Report at fgr@fantasygolfreport.com.

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