Corales Puntacana Resort and Club Championship

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The PGA TOUR heads to the Dominican Republic for the Corales Puntacana Resort and Club Championship. The course will play as a par 72, measuring 7,666 yards with paspalum greens.


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STRATEGY

The course, coverage and field will be slightly different from last week’s U.S. Open but will feature a ton of young talent ready to make their mark on the PGA TOUR. Will Zalatoris ($10,900), Sam Burns ($10,100), Henrik Norlander ($8,600), Xinjun Zhang ($8,400) and Will Gordon ($7,600) will join past winners Brice Garnett ($7,900) and Graeme McDowell ($7,800) on what should be a more straightforward test of golf compared to Winged Foot. The tournament offers full FedExCup points to the winner for the first time, which no doubt helps bring former FedExCup champion Henrik Stenson ($9,500) in for the first time in his career.

Corales Golf Club recorded 73 percent of fairways hit in 2018 (second to Trinity Forest) and 72 percent last season. Greens hit in regulation is similar to the TOUR average. We also see a higher amount of scrambling over the TOUR average, which may be due to these tricky green complexes, potential wind and paspalum greens. Paspalum greens are on two other TOUR courses — El Camaleon GC for the Mayakoba Golf Classic and the Grand Reserve CC for the Puerto Rico Open. 

Ball-strikers and birdie makers win events like this. Both Garnett and McDowell had at least one round of 64 or better on the way to victory. One of the reasons the scores aren’t closer to 25-under is the wind. The course hugs the coast on the Eastern tip of the island and is susceptible to coastal conditions. In 2018, the first round was windy and scores ballooned up into the high 70s. Check the wind forecast leading up to Thursday.

Golfers to Consider

Will Zalatoris ($10,900)

A Korn Ferry Tour (KFT) stud who did not disappoint at Winged Foot, finishing sixth in his second major while gaining 10.98 strokes tee-to-green (ranked seventh). He’s undoubtedly feeling confident heading to a course where his ball-striking can reign supreme. You might feel Zalatoris will be heavily rostered and could be fatigued from contending in the U.S. Open, which is understandable. But know what you’re potentially leaving off your roster: first in greens in regulation (GIR) percentage, second in GIR from the fairway, 30th in driving distance and fourth in birdie average on the KFT this season.

Sam Burns ($10,100)

Burns has gained strokes off-the-tee in five straight tournaments and ranks fourth in driving distance since the restart. He has made six of his past seven cuts and comes off a seventh placed finish at the Safeway Open, where he gained 7.5 strokes tee-to-green. The former amateur standout has been great with his ball-striking since the restart, ranking ninth in birdies or better gained and ninth in overall proximity. Burns’ distance will get him in scoring opportunities with his irons. Over the previous three months, he ranks 15th in proximity from 100 to 125 yards and third in 75 to 100 yards. His 12th-place finish here last season also helps.

Luke List ($8,700)

Emiliano Grillo ($9,800) and List suffer the same fate: tremendous ball-strikers, but inefficient on the greens. List has lost an average of 4.2 strokes on the greens in his past five starts but has only missed the cut once. He’s gained 3.6 strokes tee-to-green in the same timeframe and won on the Korn Ferry Tour at TPC Sawgrass in June. List can make birdies in bunches and, similar to Grillo, if the putter gets to field average, he’ll return value at his price tag.

Patton Kizzire ($7,000)

Kizzire ranks as one of the TOUR’s longest hitters, ranking inside the top 30 in this field over the previous three months. Driver accuracy can be spotty but he may find it more manageable at Corales with some of the widest and most frequently hit fairways on TOUR. The two-time winner has missed three of his past six cuts, but both of his wins have come at coastal courses (OHL Classic at Mayakoba, Sony Open in Hawaii). Kizzire is a risk to miss the cut, which is why his roster percentage should stay relatively low. Still, he’s a big hitter who ranks ninth in birdie or better gained since the restart and has win equity in this range, which is hard to come by.

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I am a promoter at DraftKings and am also an avid fan and user (my username is reidtfowler) and may sometimes play on my personal account in the games that I offer advice on. Although I have expressed my personal view on the games and strategies above, they do not necessarily reflect the view(s) of DraftKings and I may also deploy different players and strategies than what I recommend above. I am not an employee of DraftKings and do not have access to any non-public information.

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Source: PGA tour

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