Golf Monthly betting guide
Following the Australian Open and Mastercard Masters, the PGA represents the final leg of the Aussie triple-crown and naturally most of the country's leading players line up except World Cup representatives John Senden and Mark Hensby. Played at the Hyatt Regency course at Coolum, this is another Australian event that always seems to produce a quality leaderboard and separate the cream of the crop from the also-rans.
Bearing that in mind, it's no surprise that ROBERT ALLENBY and Peter Lonard have won five out of the last six runnings, as that pair have consistently produced the goods at home far more than any of their compatriots. Question marks must be raised though over their ability to reproduce that form this week. Allenby has uncharacteristically flopped badly on his other recent Australian starts, and while Lonard has been on the fringes of contention in both tournaments, he never seriously threatened the judges in either. And again, the market is headed by Adam Scott and Geoff Ogilvy, purely on the basis of their supremacy over the rest in the US as both are still yet to win an Australian event and neither have any form of note on the course.
At current prices, the standout value in my view has to be ROD PAMPLING at 25/1. On US Tour form, Pampling is only just behind the principals here, but his home record is clearly superior. At Coolum, Rod has been knocking on the door in this event in recent years, with three consecutive top-10 finishes including 2nd in 2003 and 3rd in 2005. His only home start so far this winter at Sydney was a tad disappointing but even then he rallied well after a poor start. On the basis of a top-6 finish on his penultimate start in the States, he is in as good a form as the other main contenders.
It's also high time STUART APPLEBY won in Australia again, and Coolum represents as likely a venue for that to occur. Winner of the Coolum Classic in 1998 at this venue, Apples also has figures of 3rd and 8th on his two most recent course outings. There's nothing wrong with his form €" he only just missed out at the Australian Open (a poor effort at Huntingdale the following week was not too surprising given an indifferent course record), so 14/1 looks a very reasonable each-way price.
Finishing better than anyone at Huntingdale was MATTHEW GOGGIN, who ended up 7th after looking a cert to miss the cut at one stage. Runner-up to Allenby here last year, Goggin is arguably the most improved Australian over the last 12 months, and that title has plenty of competition. There's been little wrong with any of Goggin's home form over the past 2 years, nor with a number of high finishes in exalted PGA Tour company. I'm convinced a win is around the corner at a decent price.
But what of the course specialists? It seems very harsh to abandon Allenby and Lonard purely on the basis of a couple of moderate weeks. Those results are more than factored into their prices of 16/1 and 20/1 as in previous years those odds would have been half of that €" Allenby's in particular, who I can remember successfully taking single figures about for two of those past Coolum wins. Of the pair he represents slightly better value and is therefore included in the staking plan.
Bearing that in mind, it's no surprise that ROBERT ALLENBY and Peter Lonard have won five out of the last six runnings, as that pair have consistently produced the goods at home far more than any of their compatriots. Question marks must be raised though over their ability to reproduce that form this week. Allenby has uncharacteristically flopped badly on his other recent Australian starts, and while Lonard has been on the fringes of contention in both tournaments, he never seriously threatened the judges in either. And again, the market is headed by Adam Scott and Geoff Ogilvy, purely on the basis of their supremacy over the rest in the US as both are still yet to win an Australian event and neither have any form of note on the course.
At current prices, the standout value in my view has to be ROD PAMPLING at 25/1. On US Tour form, Pampling is only just behind the principals here, but his home record is clearly superior. At Coolum, Rod has been knocking on the door in this event in recent years, with three consecutive top-10 finishes including 2nd in 2003 and 3rd in 2005. His only home start so far this winter at Sydney was a tad disappointing but even then he rallied well after a poor start. On the basis of a top-6 finish on his penultimate start in the States, he is in as good a form as the other main contenders.
It's also high time STUART APPLEBY won in Australia again, and Coolum represents as likely a venue for that to occur. Winner of the Coolum Classic in 1998 at this venue, Apples also has figures of 3rd and 8th on his two most recent course outings. There's nothing wrong with his form €" he only just missed out at the Australian Open (a poor effort at Huntingdale the following week was not too surprising given an indifferent course record), so 14/1 looks a very reasonable each-way price.
Finishing better than anyone at Huntingdale was MATTHEW GOGGIN, who ended up 7th after looking a cert to miss the cut at one stage. Runner-up to Allenby here last year, Goggin is arguably the most improved Australian over the last 12 months, and that title has plenty of competition. There's been little wrong with any of Goggin's home form over the past 2 years, nor with a number of high finishes in exalted PGA Tour company. I'm convinced a win is around the corner at a decent price.
But what of the course specialists? It seems very harsh to abandon Allenby and Lonard purely on the basis of a couple of moderate weeks. Those results are more than factored into their prices of 16/1 and 20/1 as in previous years those odds would have been half of that €" Allenby's in particular, who I can remember successfully taking single figures about for two of those past Coolum wins. Of the pair he represents slightly better value and is therefore included in the staking plan.
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