Steve Bamford

Steve Bamford's John Deere Classic Tips 2022

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Congratulations if you were on-board Xander Schauffele at Monday odds of 20/1 (William Hill) to win the Travelers Championship. Since the LIV Tour launched in St Albans. we have seen Rory McIlroy, Matt Fitzpatrick and Xander in the winners circle: high-class, short-priced winners undoubtedly, although that’s likely to change this week at the John Deere Classic. Also congratulations to my DP World Tour colleague Paul Williams who landed Haotong Li at 60/1 last week at the BMW International Open, with a full 35/1 each-way payout on Pablo Larrazabal also.

The John Deere Classic is never the strongest field-wise, yet the event is still worth a full 500 FedEx Cup points to the winner and comes with the standard 2-year PGA Tour exemption, so it’s a prize well worth taking. Played at the extremely low-scoring TPC Deere Run in Silvis, Illinois, the real skill is to work through which players have the motivation and skill-sets required to produce a birdie barrage around the accommodating D.A.Weibring, Par 71 design. Competition here for a potentially life-changing win is fierce and the tournament always provokes keen interest for those brought up in America‘s Midwest.

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Before we go into the detail surrounding the John Deere Classic, we always have new visitors to Golf Betting System. Welcome and let me point you in the direction of our weekly Golf Betting System podcast (published every Tuesday of the golfing calendar), the Steve Bamford Golf Channel on YouTube and our hugely popular, +6,100 strong, private Group on Facebook – you can Join Here.

Course Guide: TPC Deere Run is a drag-strip of a Par 71 where you’d better make birdies or pack your bags come Friday evening. Ryan Moore, Jordan Spieth and Brian Harman all managed an eagle or 3 (always a bonus) and 21/22 birdies respectively when winning here, whilst Lucas Glover, Dylan Frittelli, Michael Kim, Bryson DeChambeau, Zach Johnson and Spieth again made 24, 22, 30, 24, 24 and 25 birdies respectively when enjoying their successes since 2012.

A minimum 1-in-3 birdie or better conversion is traditionally required to get the job done at the John Deere Classic with the course giving chances to both the shortest and longest players. It’s also abundantly clear that the tournament eventually boils down to a putting contest where a sub-1.7 Putts per GIR performance is required if a player wants to be in the Sunday afternoon mix.

TPC Deere Run, Silvis, Illinois: Designer: D.A. Weibring 1999, with PGA Tour Design renovation 2006/07; Course Type: Resort; Par: 71; Length: 7,289 yards; Number of Holes with Water In-Play: 3; Fairways: Southshore Bentgrass; Rough: Kentucky Bluegrass with Fine Fescue 4″; Greens: 5,500 sq.ft average featuring L-93 Bentgrass; Stimpmeter: 11.5ft; Course Scoring Average 2012: 69.55 (-1.45), Difficulty Rank 42 of 49 courses. 2013: 69.40 (-1.60), Difficulty Rank 36 of 43 courses. 2014: 69.76 (-1.26), Rank 42 of 48 courses. 2015: 69.65 (-1.35), Rank 43 of 52 courses. 2016: 69.90 (-1.10), Rank 39 of 50 courses. 2017: 69.75 (-1.25), Rank 38 of 50 courses. 2018: 69.38 (-1.62), Rank 46 of 51 courses. 2019: 69.51 (-1.49), Rank 35 of 49 courses. 2021: 69.51 (-1.49), Rank 41 of 51 courses.

Widths (yards): Below are the fairway widths for TPC Deere Run and how they compare to recent courses on Tour:

  • TPC Deere Run: 250 yards from tee: 41 yards wide; 275:40; 300:36 325:33; 350:30.
  • TPC River Highlands: 250 yards from the tee: 38 yards wide; 275:36; 300:29; 325:29; 350:28.
  • Muirfield Village: 250 yards from the tee: 34 yards wide; 275:32; 300:28; 325:24; 350:27.
  • Colonial: 250 yards from tee: 27 yards wide; 275:26; 300:27; 325:26; 350:23.
  • Champions Course – Southern Hills: Average 40 yards wide.
  • TPC Potomac: 250 yards from the tee: 32 yards wide; 275:30; 300:27; 325:23; 350:27.
  • Harbour Town: 250 yards from tee: 29 yards wide; 275:26; 300:22; 325:26; 350:22.
  • Oaks Course: 250 yards from tee: 33 yards wide; 275:34; 300:29; 325:27; 350:26.
  • Copperhead: 250 yards from the tee: 24 yards wide; 275:20; 300:21; 325:23 350:19.
  • TPC Sawgrass: 250 yards from the tee: 31 yards wide; 275:32; 300:30; 325:28 350:20.
  • Bay Hill: 250 yards from the tee: 32 yards wide; 275:33; 300:33; 325:39 350:29.
  • PGA National: 250 yards from the tee: 29 yards wide; 275:27; 300:25; 325:27 350:25.
  • Riviera: 250 yards from the tee: 33 yards wide; 275:27; 300:26; 325:26 350:28.
  • TPC Scottsdale: 250 yards from the tee: 33 yards wide; 275:30; 300:28; 325:27; 350:27.
  • Pebble Beach: 250 yards from the tee: 33 yards wide; 275:33; 300:29; 325:30 350:26.
  • Torrey Pines South: 250 yards from the tee: 26 yards wide; 275:27; 300:25; 325:24; 350:23.
  • TPC Stadium: 250 yards from the tee: 29 yards wide; 275:27; 300:26; 325:26; 350:24.
  • Waialae: 250 yards from the tee: 34 yards wide; 275:32; 300:34; 325:37; 350:34.
  • Plantation Course: 250 yards from the tee: 59 yards wide; 275:61; 300:65; 325:60; 350:62.

Course Designer Links: For research purposes other D.A. Weibring designs include:

  • TPC Four Seasons – AT&T Byron Nelson until 2017

Course Overview: TPC Deere Run is a course that’s extremely scoreable for those players who love to manage their way strategically around a golf course rather than dominate it. With fairways that are easy to hit and receptive 6,000 sq.ft average sized Bentgrass green complexes to aim at, scoring is correspondingly low.

Deere Run is a course that offers up opportunities for bombers like Jhonattan Vegas, Patrick Rodgers and Bryson DeChambeau or plotters like Zach Johnson, Ryan Moore and Wesley Bryan. The key this week will ultimately be a hot putter and minimising bogeys which is always the case on resort-level scoring tests.

Despite playing slightly tougher in 2014, 11 holes still played under par across the tournament, whilst 2015 saw 13 holes. Since then 12 holes all played under par – incredible stuff when you think about it. Post-cut scoring increases slightly with more difficult pin positions and those with prior knowledge of this event know where those weekend holes will be cut and, more importantly, where to position off the tee to access them. Saying that, both Sean O’Hair (2005) and Dylan Frittelli (2019) won this on course debut.

TPC Deere Run is a track that rewards consistency as bogeys in any great volume will cost a player any chance of victory. Fairways are wide for the length of course and 2 of the par-5s (2nd and 17th) are reachable for the whole field. As you’d expect, green complexes run pure and aren’t overly taxing. The tournament tends to be won by excellent putters who can find enough greens and hit the ball close enough to the pin so as to create enough birdie chances. Saying that ball-striker extraordinaire Bryson DeChambeau won this in 2017, entering the tournament ranked 195th in Strokes Gained Putting, whilst you would place reigning champion Lucas Glover in the ball-striker over short game specialist, so it’s as long as it’s short, as you would expect at a resort scoring test.

Another angle to explore this week is to find players who are comfortable on par-3s as TPC Deere Run’s set of short holes yields plenty of birdies each and every renewal.

john deere classic tips

John Deere Classic Winners: 2021: Lucas Glover (-19); 2019: Dylan Frittelli (-21); 2018: Michael Kim (-27); 2017: Bryson DeChambeau (-18); 2016: Ryan Moore (-22); 2015: Jordan Spieth (-20); 2014: Brian Harman (-22); 2013: Jordan Spieth (-19); 2012: Zach Johnson (-20); 2011: Steve Stricker (-22); 2010: Steve Sticker (-26).

OWGR of Winners: 2021: Glover 115; 2019: Frittelli 133; 2018: M Kim 473; 2017: DeChambeau 144.

Cut Line: 2021: -4; 2019: -3; 2018: -3.

Lead Score Progression:

  • 2021: Round 1 -8; Round 2 -13; Round 3 -16; Round 4 -19.
  • 2019: Round 1 -9; Round 2 -13; Round 3 -16; Round 4 -21.
  • 2018: Round 1 -9; Round 2 -15; Round 3 -22; Round 4 -27.

Tournament Stats: We’ve published some key player statistics for this week’s event that are well worth a look. Naturally they’ll help to shape a view on players who could go well this week: Current Form | Tournament Form | First Round Leader | Combined Stats | SG Stats.

Published Predictor Model: Our published predictor is available here. You can build your own model using the variables listed on the left hand side. Top 10 of my published predictor are J.T. Poston, Denny McCarthy, Webb Simpson, Adam Long, Adam Hadwin, Emiliano Grillo, Charles Howell III, Patrick Rodgers, Brendon Todd and Nick Hardy.

John Deere Classic Winning Prices: 2021: Glover 55/1; 2019: Frittelli 90/1; 2018: Michael Kim 300/1; 2017: DeChambeau 50/1; 2016: Moore 25/1; 2015: Spieth 4/1; 2014: Harman 125/1; 2013: Spieth 40/1; 2012: Zach Johnson 12/1; 2011: Stricker 7/1; 2010: Stricker 16/1. Past 7 Renewals Average: 93/1; Overall Average: 66/1.

Historical Weather:

  • 2021: Thursday: Mostly cloudy. High of 74. Wind NNE 6-12 mph. Friday: Mostly cloudy. High of 77. Wind SE 5-10 mph. Saturday: Cloudy, with light showers throughout the day. High of 70. Wind E 7-14 mph. Sunday: Rain throughout the day. High of 72. Wind NE 10-15 mph, gusting to 25 mph.
  • 2019: Thursday: Partly cloudy, with a high of 83. Wind N 8-15 mph. Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high of 87. Wind SW 5-10 mph. Saturday: Mostly sunny, with a high of 90. Wind SW 6-12 mph. Sunday: Partly cloudy, with a high of 92. Wind S/SSW 6-12 mph.
  • 2018: Thursday: Sunny, with a high of 91. Wind S 10-15 mph. Friday: Mostly cloudy, with isolated showers and thunderstorms. High of 87. Wind SE 5-10 mph. Due to inclement weather, round two was suspended from 5:49 p.m. until 6:40 p.m. Due to additional storms, play was suspended for the day at 7:26 p.m. Saturday: Due to expected inclement weather in the afternoon, third-round tee times took place from 9:20 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. in threesomes off tee Nos. 1 and 10. Due to a dangerous weather situation, round three was suspended from 10:38 a.m. until 1:11 p.m. Play was again suspended at 5:53 p.m. and resumed at 7:12 p.m. Sunday: Mostly cloudy. High of 88. W SSE 4-8 mph.
  • 2017: Thursday: Partly sunny with a high of 83. Wind WNW 8-15 mph. Friday: Partly cloudy with a high of 77. Wind NW 7-12 mph. Saturday: Mostly sunny with a high of 83. Wind WSW 5-10 mph. Sunday: Partly cloudy with a high of 83. Wind NE 8-15 mph.
  • 2016: Thursday: Overcast, with afternoon thunderstorms. Friday: High of 82. Wind NNW at 8-15 mph. Saturday: Mostly cloudy, becoming partly cloudy with a high of 82. Wind NW at 8-15 mph. Sunday: Sunny, with a high of 82. Wind W at 5-10 mph.
  • 2015: Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high of 75. Winds variable at 5-10 mph. Friday: Partly cloudy, with a high of 81. Wind SE at 8-15 mph. Saturday: Overcast, with rain and lightning in the morning. Partly cloudy in the afternoon. High of 81. Wind SE at 6-12 mph. Sunday: Partly sunny, with a high of 87. Wind SE at 6-12 mph.

Weather Forecast: The latest weather forecast for Silvis, Illinois, is here.

Nothing major to report weather-wise. Thursday looks the toughest of the days with wind gusting up to 25mph from the south-west. Apart from Thursday, wind then looks a non-factor and 24-25 degrees Celsius temperatures are pretty perfect. We saw 44mm (1.7 inches) of rain here on Saturday prior to tournament week, so that would have been welcomed by the course superintendent. From tournament week onwards though rain is at less than 50% chance, so we could well see the same situation as 12 months ago with firm fairways and watered greens, maximising low scoring.

Player Strokes Gained Rankings: These top 25 in the field rankings are based on an 8-tournament window that stretches back to the Wells Fargo Championship / Betfred British Masters which includes both PGA Tour and DP World Tour events. Players’ rankings are based on performance relative to the rest of the field:

  • Top 25 SG Off The Tee: 1) Grayson Murray; 2) Paul Barjon; 3) Patrick Rodgers; 4) Austin Smotherman; 5) Ben Martin; 6) Tommy Gainey; 7) Emiliano Grillo; 8) Nick Hardy; 9) Charles Howell III; 10) Nate Lashley; 11) Hayden Buckley / Anirban Lahiri; 13) Chez Reavie; 14) Ryan Brehm / Taylor Moore / Adam Svensson; 17) Cameron Champ; 18) Cam Davis / Lucas Glover; 20) Kelly Kraft / Sahith Theegala / Brandon Wu; 23) James Hahn / Scott Piercy / Webb Simpson.
  • Top 25 SG Approach: 1) Vaughn Taylor; 2) Chris Gotterup; 3) Chase Seiffert; 4) Sam Ryder; 5) Matt Wallace; 6) Webb Simpson; 7) Scott Stallings; 8) Mark Hubbard; 9) Hank Lebioda; 10) Chesson Hadley; 11) Nick Taylor; 12) Cam Davis; 13) J.T. Poston / Adam Svensson; 15) Tyler Duncan / Lucas Glover; 17) Justin Lower / Chez Reavie / Brandt Snedeker; 20) John Huh / Ryan Moore / C.T. Pan; 23) Nick Hardy; 24) Joseph Bramlett / Scott Gutschewski / Lee Hodges / David Lipsky.
  • Top 25 SG Around The Green: 1) Adam Hadwin; 2) Jason Day; 3) Seung-yul Noh; 4) David Hearn / Andrew Putnam; 6) John Huh; 7) Sahith Theegala; 8) Kelly Kraft / William McGirt; 10) Joseph Bramlett; 11) Scott Piercy; 12) Henrik Norlander; 13) Rory Sabbatini; 14) David Skinns; 15) Scott Brown / Brendon Todd; 17) Michael Gligic / D.A. Points; 19) Stephan Jaeger; 20) J.T. Poston / Camilo Villegas; 22) Chez Reavie / Matthias Schwab; 24) David Lingmerth; 25) Brice Garnett / Bill Haas / Denny McCarthy.
  • Top 25 SG Tee to Green: 1) Webb Simpson; 2) Charles Howell III / Chez Reavie / Sahith Theegala; 5) Emiliano Grillo; 6) Ryan Armour; 7) Nick Hardy / J.T. Poston; 9) Chris Gotterup / Sam Ryder; 11) John Huh / Stephan Jaeger / Adam Svensson; 14) Scott Stallings; 15) Joseph Bramlett / Anirban Lahiri / Austin Smotherman; 18) Andrew Putnam; 19) Nate Lashley / Matt Wallace; 21) Scott Piercy; 22) Patrick Rodgers; 23) Hank Lebioda / Rory Sabbatini / Adam Schenk.
  • Top 25 SG Putting: 1) Denny McCarthy; 2) Ben Crane; 3) Ricky Barnes; 4) Brendon Todd; 5) Nick Hardy; 6) Bo Van Pelt; 7) Jim Knous / Andrew Landry; 9) Parker McLachlin; 10) Patrick Rodgers; 11) William McGirt; 12) Jonas Blixt; 13) David Lingmerth / Seung-yul Noh; 15) Lee Hodges; 16) David Skinns; 17) Bill Haas; 18) Christiaan Bezuidenhout / Mark Hubbard; 20) Wesley Bryan; 21) C.T. Pan / J.T. Poston; 23) Chesson Hadley / Ben Kohles; 25) Cam Davis / Brandon Hagy / Adam Long.
  • Top 25 SG Total: 1) Nick Hardy; 2) Denny McCarthy; 3) Brendon Todd; 4) William McGirt; 5) Patrick Rodgers; 6) Chez Reavie / Webb Simpson; 8) Adam Long / J.T. Poston; 10) Ryan Armour / Rory Sabbatini; 12) Cam Davis / Chris Gotterup / Charles Howell III; 15) Andrew Putnam; 16) Nate Lashley / Adam Schenk; 18) Scott Stallings / Adam Svensson / Matt Wallace; 21) Mark Hubbard / David Lingmerth / David Lipsky / Austin Smotherman / Sahith Theegala.

For a summary of the Strokes Gained Performances from this week’s field here at TPC Deere Run since 2016 click here.

Tournament Trends & Key Factors: Analysing the final stats of the winners of the John Deere Classic back to 2010 gives us a little more insight into the requirements for this test:

  • 2021, Lucas Glover (-19). 293 yards (41st), 73.2% fairways (24th), 77.8% greens in regulation (15th), 29’2″ proximity to hole (9th), 81.5 % scrambling (5th), 1.66 putts per GIR (10th).
  • 2019, Dylan Frittelli (-21). 314 yards (32nd), 78.6% fairways (7th), 77.8% greens in regulation (10th), 31’9″ proximity to hole (22nd), 93.8% scrambling (1st), 1.70 putts per GIR (22nd).
  • 2018, Michael Kim (-27). 295 yards (27th), 82.1% fairways (2nd), 83.3% greens in regulation (3rd), 24’11” proximity to hole (1st), 83.3% scrambling (1st), 1.53 putts per GIR (1st).
  • 2017, Bryson DeChambeau (-17). 302 yards (21st), 75.0% fairways (32nd), 79.2% greens in regulation (11th), proximity to hole 30’7″ (13th), 66.7 % scrambling (29th), 1.65 putts per GIR (10th).
  • 2016, Ryan Moore (-22). 289 yards (34th), 82.1% fairways (12th), 83.3% greens in regulation (1st), proximity to hole 27’0″ (2nd), 91.1 % scrambling (1st), 1.67 putts per GIR (6th).
  • 2015, Jordan Spieth (-20). 284 yards (17th), 69.6% fairways (60th), 72.2% greens in regulation (33rd), proximity to hole 28’9″ (16th), 65.0 % scrambling (32nd), 1.54 putts per GIR (1st).
  • 2014, Brian Harman (-22). 303 yards (18th), 80.4% fairways (8th), 87.5% greens in regulation (1st), proximity to hole 23’3″ (2nd), 66.7 % scrambling (29th), 1.70 putts per GIR (31st).
  • 2013, Jordan Spieth (-19). 318 yards (14th), 76.8% fairways (19th), 72.2% greens in regulation (34th), proximity to hole 34’1″ (56th), 70.0% scrambling (18th), 1.62 putts per GIR (8th).
  • 2012, Zach Johnson (-20). 293 yards (47th), 73.2% fairways (34th), 75.0% greens in regulation (26th), proximity to hole 29’7″ (16th), 77.8% scrambling (2nd), 1.61 putts per GIR (4th).
  • 2011, Steve Sticker (-22). 318 yards (12th), 64.3% fairways (62nd), 73.6% greens in regulation (33rd), proximity to hole 30’2″ (15th), 78.9% scrambling (2nd), 1.55 putts per GIR (1st).
  • 2010, Steve Stricker (-26). 292 yards (32nd), 73.2% fairways (34th), 80.6% greens in regulation (11th), proximity to hole 26’5″ (5th), 64.3% scrambling (24th), 1.53 putts per GIR (1st).

Tournament Skill Averages:

  • Driving Distance: 27th, Driving Accuracy: 27th, Greens in Regulation: 16th, Proximity to Hole: 14th, Scrambling: 13th, Putting Average 9th.

Strokes Gained Tournament Trends:

  • 2021, Lucas Glover (-19). SG Off the Tee: 29th, SG Approach: 3rd, SG Around the Green: 17th, SG Tee to Green: 4th, SG Putting: 19th.
  • 2019, Dylan Frittelli (-21). SG Off the Tee: 10th, SG Approach: 60th, SG Around the Green: 2nd, SG Tee to Green: 15th, SG Putting: 2nd.
  • 2018, Michael Kim (-27). SG Off the Tee: 34th, SG Approach: 11th, SG Around the Green: 47th, SG Tee to Green: 16th, SG Putting: 1st.
  • 2017, Bryson DeChambeau (-18). SG Off the Tee: 17th, SG Approach: 27th, SG Around the Green: 38th, SG Tee to Green: 18th, SG Putting: 2nd.
  • 2016, Ryan Moore (-22). SG Off the Tee: 23rd, SG Approach: 2nd, SG Around the Green: 32nd, SG Tee to Green: 1st, SG Putting: 8th.

Strokes Gained Tournament Skill Averages:

  • SG Off the Tee: 23rd, SG Approach: 21st, SG Around the Green: 27th, SG Tee to Green: 11th, SG Putting: 6th.

Let’s take a view from players as to how TPC Deere Run sets up and what skill sets the course favours:

Lucas Glover (2021): “I wedged it very nice today and putted well, which you have to do here, because you get a lot of opportunities, and distance control is pretty important, and I did a good job of that today and then putted nice. I just like Deere Run. It’s in perfect shape for starters. It’s a fun golf course, and you know barring some crazy conditions, you’re going to get a lot of opportunities. If you’re putting okay you’re going to make some birdies, which is always a good feeling.

Confidence wise, I had a good Sunday last week. I didn’t play well Friday, Saturday, but I had a good Sunday and brought some stuff here from Sunday that were good. Yesterday was a little scrappy, but today everything kind of clicked.”

Dylan Frittelli (2019): “Yeah, that’s huge. I’d obviously won on The European Tour, but my exemption was running out at the end of this year, so I was looking at, if I don’t keep my card here on the U.S. tour, I have to go to Korn Ferry Tour School and play the Playoffs there, and try and get my card back. Then I’m giving up three or four weeks to play in Europe where I can try to keep a card. All this stuff has been going through my mind the last four to eight weeks, and the only thing is you can’t control that stuff. You just have to play golf and try to put it in the background. Last week and the previous week, I played great but let it affect me, and thankfully it weekend I managed to knuckle down and have a really clear mind-set and execute on pretty much every shot on the weekend.”

Michael Kim (2018): You know, I’ve been really comfortable on the course the last couple years, and if you look at kind of the guys that have done well here going back, guys like Steve Stricker, Zach Johnson, Jordan Spieth, you know, guys that don’t necessarily bomb the ball, but with good wedge game and putting they can do good out here. So kind of along that same mould. Greens are great. They’re soft, they’re rolling true, and they’re bent greens, so you just got to hit it on your line.”

Bryson DeChambeau (2017): “Yeah, you got to be hitting your wedges really close. If you can do that all week, you’ll be just fine. If you can make pars on the tough par-3s and hit it on the fairway, like on 15 every day, land it on the green, two-putt, make your par, get out of there, I think you have a very good chance of playing well here. I have always liked short par 4s. My favourite is No. 9 at Cypress. It’s definitely a cool little short par-4; drivable. A lot of risk/reward in it. I think D.A.’s (Weibring) done a great job with 14, as well as 17. Definitely risk/reward holes that if you execute shots well you’re going to get rewarded. That’s the epitome of golf, right? Executing a shot, having it end up beautifully, even though sometimes you can get a bad break, right? So you could hit a beautiful shot on 14 and get absolutely into the worst place possible. Like if you pull it just a little bit on 14 and get on the down slope in the rough to the short left pin you’re toast. You’ve got to know where to miss it on those holes. I think he’s designed it very, very well.

Ryan Moore (2016): “It’s a course I’ve really grown to like over the years. I played it early in my career, and I took a few years kind of off in the middle, and when I came back and started playing it again, I don’t know, I appreciated it more for some reason or another. Maybe I’ve learned over the years the type of golf courses that are good for me and that set up well for me, and this is definitely one of them. The golf course has enough angles, and the holes that you can force it down there a little bit farther, they’re pretty difficult tee shots, so guys that hit it significantly farther than me don’t have a huge advantage on a golf course like this.

Yeah, I think that’s part of the success. I enjoy the course. I like bent greens a lot. These are honestly some of the best we putt on every single year, and they’re probably the best I’ve ever seen them this year. They’re fantastic.

Zach Johnson: “I think starting on 14, you’ve got often times a reachable par 4, a birdie hole, but a hole that if you’re just a little bit off, a bogey hole. 15 is a really good par 4. Obviously 16 assuming it’s one of the signature holes here if not the signature hole, great little par 3. A birdieable, maybe even eagle hole on 17, and then a brutal but fair 18th hole with a lot of opportunity and I would say treachery around the corner. It’s just because of the character of the last five holes here, I think. I don’t want to equate it to another golf course, but I look at I’m not saying we’re going to have seven straight birdies to finish, but if you look at TPC River Highlands, it’s kind of got that sort of ingredient, where you have a reachable par 5, you’ve got a short par 4, a par 3, a lot of water, and just holes that you can either go really, really low or it can really bite you, and I think that’s why you see a little bit of movement and guys just kind of bunching up at the end.

D.A. Points: “Again, for lack of a better term, it’s a putting contest and that’s why Steve Stricker and Zach Johnson win a lot because they make everything. I shoot under par every time I come here; it’s just not under par enough to see the weekend.

Keegan Bradley: “Yeah, you really need to be ready to go from the first tee to the last, because you’re going to have to make a bunch of birdies on this course this week to contend, but most importantly, you’ve got to hit the ball on these fairways. They are generous fairways, but if you do hit the ball in the fairway, you’re going to be able to basically attack every pin position right now because of the softness.

Steve Stricker: “Winning score? Depends on the weather, I guess. I mean, there’s just a lot of good birdie opportunities out there, par-5s, some of them are reachable. For everybody, two of them are reachable, two out of the three. And there’s a lot of short irons in your hand where you can make some birdies. And then the holes you’ve got to pay attention on, you make your pars and move on. But yeah, it’ll be pushing that 20 number, I’m sure. The greens are pure.

Path to Victory: Below are the end of round positions for the winners of the John Deere Classic since 2010:

  • 2021 – Lucas Glover: Round 1: 29th, Round 2: 3rd, Round 3: 12th.
  • 2019 – Dylan Frittelli: Round 1: 10th, Round 2: 11th, Round 3: 5th.
  • 2018 – Michael Kim: Round 1: 2nd, Round 2: 1st, Round 3: 1st.
  • 2017 – Bryson DeChambeau: Round 1: 8th, Round 2: 2nd, Round 3: 5th.
  • 2016 – Ryan Moore: Round 1: 3rd, Round 2: 1st, Round 3: 1st.
  • 2015 – Jordan Spieth: Round 1: 101st, Round 2: 16th, Round 3: 1st.
  • 2014 – Brian Harman: Round 1: 1st, Round 2: 3rd, Round 3: 1st.
  • 2013 – Jordan Spieth: Round 1: 64th, Round 2: 19th, Round 3: 9th.
  • 2012 – Zach Johnson: Round 1: 39th, Round 2: 11th, Round 3: 3rd.
  • 2011 – Steve Stricker: Round 1: 7th, Round 2: 2nd, Round 3: 1st.
  • 2010 – Steve Stricker: Round 1: 2nd, Round 2: 1st, Round 3: 1st.

Shots From the Lead: Below are the shots from the lead during the tournament of john Deere Classic winners since 2010:

  • 2021 – Lucas Glover: Round 1: 5 back, Round 2: 2 back, Round 3: 4 back.
  • 2019 – Dylan Frittelli: Round 1: 4 back, Round 2: 5 back, Round 3: 2 back.
  • 2018 – Michael Kim: Round 1: 1 back, Round 2: 3 ahead, Round 3: 5 ahead.
  • 2017 – Bryson DeChambeau: Round 1: 3 back, Round 2: 2 back, Round 3: 4 back.
  • 2016 – Ryan Moore: Round 1: 1 back, Round 2: level, Round 3: 1 ahead.
  • 2015 – Jordan Spieth: Round 1: 8 back, Round 2: 5 back, Round 3: 2 ahead.
  • 2014 – Brian Harman: Round 1: level, Round 2: 1 back, Round 3: 1 ahead.
  • 2013 – Jordan Spieth: Round 1: 6 back, Round 2: 5 back, Round 3: 6 back.
  • 2012 – Zach Johnson: Round 1: 7 back, Round 2: 4 back, Round 3: 4 back.
  • 2011 – Steve Stricker: Round 1: 3 back, Round 2: 2 back, Round 3: 2 ahead.
  • 2010 – Steve Stricker: Round 1: 1 back, Round 2: 1 ahead, Round 3: 6 ahead.

Form of John Deere Classic winners since 2010:

  • Lucas Glover: 41st Rocket/MC Palmetto/37th Memorial/8th Colonial.
  • Dylan Frittelli: 46th 3M /46th Rocket /MC Travelers/59th Canadian Open.
  • Michael Kim: MC Greenbrier/MC National/MC Travelers/18th St Jude.
  • Bryson DeChambeau: 14th Greenbrier/17th National/26th Travelers/MC US Open.
  • Ryan Moore: 17th Travelers/70th PGA/46th Open/32nd US Open.
  • Jordan Spieth: 1st US Open/3rd Memorial/30th Byron Nelson/2nd Colonial.
  • Brian Harman: MC Greenbrier/MC AT&T National/42nd Travelers/6th St Jude.
  • Jordan Spieth: 23rd Greenbrier/6th AT&T National/MC US Open/63rd Memorial.
  • Zach Johnson: 64th Travelers/41st US Open/MC St Jude/1st Colonial.
  • Steve Stricker: 19th US Open/1st Memorial/12th TPC Sawgrass/13th New Orleans.
  • Steve Stricker: 58th US Open/17th Memorial/38th Colonial/30th Masters.

First Round Leader Analysis: First round leader(s), their wave and winning score since 2010. Full First Round Leader stats are here.

  • 2021 – Hadley/Munoz – Both PM -8/63 – 95/1 & 70/1.
  • 2019 – Diaz  – PM -9/62 – 150/1.
  • 2018 – Wheatcroft  – AM -9/62 – 175/1.
  • 2017 – Howell III/Schniederjans – AM/PM Split -8/63 – 45/1 & 95/1.
  • 2016 – Gillis/Loupe – Both PM -7/64.
  • 2015 – Thomas/N Thompson – AM/PM Split -8/63.
  • 2014 – Harman/Z Johnson/Sabbatini – All AM -8/63.
  • 2013 – Z Johnson / Villegas – Both AM -7/64.
  • 2012 – Matteson – PM -10/61.
  • 2011 – Blanks – PM -8/63.
  • 2010 – Goydos – AM -12/59.

For the record, here’s the breakdown of pure Bentgrass green PGA Tour victors in the field since 2008:

  • 6 – Steve Stricker.
  • 5 – Zach Johnson.
  • 4 – Jason Day, Webb Simpson.
  • 3 – Lucas Glover, Ryan Moore.
  • 2 – Jason Dufner, Martin Laird.
  • 1 – Arjun Atwal, Jonas Blixt, Jonathan Byrd, Cameron Champ, Derek Ernst, Dylan Frittelli, Bill Haas, Charley Hoffman, David Lingmerth, Ben Martin, Sean O’Hair, Chesson Reavie, Rory Sabbatini, Scott Stallings, Kevin Streelman, Michael Thompson, Brendon Todd, Camilo Villegas, Nick Watney, Boo Weekley.

Recent winning totals of -16, -20, -26, -22, -20, -19, -22, -20, -22, -18, -27, -21 and -19 highlight that the key to success in Illinois is two-fold: make copious amounts of birdies and minimise dropped shots. It’s not rocket science, but as both 2018 and 2019 highlighted, finding the winner here is not always easy. Picking out Michael Kim in 2018 at 300/1 with form in of MC/MC/MC highlights the volatility we are dealing with at the John Deere Classic with field quality falling year-on-year. 2019 saw Dylan Frittelli capture his maiden PGA Tour victory here at 90/1. His form in read 59-MC-46-46, hardly stellar stuff, but you could have picked him on the basis he had been 9th after 54 holes the week before at the 3M Open, before shooting a Sunday +2/73 and collapsing 37 spots. Fact is, this is resort scoring golf and freak results happen as a regular matter of course.

Dig a little deeper and there might be a trend worth pursuing. Taking defending champion Lucas Glover, plus Bryson DeChambeau, Ryan Moore, Jordan Spieth and Brian Harman – they entered the tournament in the top 90 of birdie-makers. That’s ok, so effectively top 45% on Tour. Look at Bogey Avoidance and those ranks correlate to 9th (Spieth 2013), 27th (Harman), 3rd (Spieth 2015), 90th (Moore 2016), 139th (DeChambeau 2017) and 97th (Glover 2021). Bryson’s number is certainly an outlier, where the season-long number was based upon a terrible start to 2017 where he’d missed 12 cuts with a new putting style. However you can see the requirement for players to be balanced in being able to attack but keep the card clean on tough par-4s like the 9th, 15th and certainly the 18th, which traditionally play as the hardest holes on the course.

It won’t surprise in a tournament where 4 straight rounds of 66 is the target that streaky scorers dominate the contending positions. Michael, Ryan, Jordan, Zach and ‘Mr John Deere’ Steve Stricker are all excellent Bentgrass putters, but equally ball-strikers can contend and occasionally win. Lucas Glover, Bryson DeChambeau, Sean O’Hair, Jhonattan Vegas, John Senden, Troy Matteson and Kyle Stanley are hardly outstanding when it comes to the flat stick, but excellent close approach play on enough holes can generate the volume of close birdie opportunities required to feature.

Also worthy of note O’Hair, Senden, Harman, DeChambeau, Kim, Frittelli and famously Jordan Spieth were all Tour maiden winners here at the John Deere Classic.

Patrick Rodgers 1.5pts EW 33/1 (8EW, 1/5) with Paddy Power

The formula of finding players who gain strokes Off the Tee and who can putt isn’t a bad one for the John Deere Classic. 5 of the last 6 winners were all in the top 25 for Strokes Gained Off The Tee; with the last 6 winners ranking in the top 19 for Strokes Gained Putting. 5 of the 6 ranked in the top 8. So with Wyndham Clark not in the field, my sight strayed straight to Patrick Rodgers who I’m leading with at the 2022 John Deere Classic.

Rodgers is a rare enigma in this field. A player who can drive the ball well and who can putt well on a regular basis. Season-long ranks of 70th for Off the Tee and 27th for Putting paint the picture. Look at that through the window of my 8-week Strokes Gained tracker and Patrick ranks 3rd for Off the Tee and 10th for Putting in this field. Indeed the fact that he’s in the top 25 for Tee to Green and 5th for Strokes Gained Current Form, tells you all you need to know about how well he’s playing this summer.

The Indiana man is also a bit of a John Deere Classic specialist. 15th (2013) 27th (2016), 2nd (2017) and 23rd (2021) from 8 appearances here, across our John Deere Classic Strokes Gained Analysis in this field he ranks 3rd for Off the Tee, 7th for Putting and 10th for Strokes Gained Total. RESULT: T30

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Cam Davis 1.5pts EW 40/1 (8EW, 1/5) with Ladbrokes

2021 Rocket Mortgage Classic champion Cam Davis has been playing some good stuff of late. 56th last week at the Travelers Championship, he shot an opening round 65 and was 2nd heading into the weekend. Form since the start of April is positive, reading 46(Masters)-3(RBC Heritage)-MC(Wells Fargo)-7(Charles Schwab)-53(Memorial) prior to TPC River Highlands last week, and the 27 year-old Australian is undoubtedly trending.

Inconsistent over the course of a season, Cam tends to have a history that lends itself well to the John Deere Classic challenge this week. A streaky scorer, Davis prefers short and medium-length course formats: 9th at Waialae (2020), 8th at PGA National (2020), 3rd at PGA West (2021), 1st at Detroit Golf Club (2021), 3rd at Harbour Town (2022), and 7th at Colonial Country Club are prime examples. His Rocket Mortgage victory in neighbouring Michigan came with a -18/270 total, and his 3rd place at The American Express last year also came with a -20/268 total. He can undoubtedly go low.

He also seems to like the Mid-West having been in 6th place after 54 holes, eventually finishing 14th at the 3M Open in 2020, played at TPC Twin Cities in Minnesota. 2 visits to the John Deere Classic have seen him finish 53rd (2019) and 55th (2021) respectively and opening rounds of 66 (2019) and 67 (2021) show what he’s capable of around TPC Deere Run. RESULT: T8

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Adam Svensson 1.5pts EW 40/1 (8EW, 1/5) with Paddy Power

A move to Northern climes also seems to be bringing Adam Svensson back towards the top of leaderboards. That makes a level sense for the Canadian, who is a 3-time winner on the Korn Ferry Tour across 2018 (once) and 2021 (twice).

Up to a career high 163rd in the Official World Golf Rankings, Adam won the coveted Nationwide Children’s Hospital Championship last year in Columbus, Ohio – a title that has been won by the likes of Harris English, Justin Thomas and Scottie Scheffler (Rickie Fowler, Cameron Smith and Cameron Young have also been runners-up).  And if we were to see another maiden PGA Tour victor this week at the John Deere Classic, I’d put Svensson close to the top of the list of likely players to do it.

45th at the Memorial Tournament, 21st at the RBC Canadian Open and 25th last week at the Travelers Championship, the distinct fall by a level or three in the field quality this week should aid the 28 year-old Canadian, who played beautifully at St George’s and shot 66-64 across Friday/Saturday last week in Hartford. 5 straight positive weeks with the putter on putting surfaces with Bentgrass within them is worthy of note, especially for a player who across my 8-week Strokes Gained trackers ranks in the top 15 for Off the Tee, Approach and Tee to Green, and in the top 18 for Strokes Gained Current Form.

And there’s another line of enquiry I like this week. Svensson played the PGA Tour in 2018/19 as a rookie. Best finishes were at PGA West -18th, TPC Twin Cities – 15th and here at TPC Deere Run – 18th. A slow start, was followed by 65-68-68, which over the final 54 holes, was T7 in the field. He ranked 17th for Tee to Green and pretty much neutral with the putter, at a time in his career when the flat stick was freezing cold. RESULT: T24

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Martin Laird 1pt EW 50/1 (8EW, 1/5) with Paddy Power

A firing Martin Laird at this level of competition is the right kind of player to have onside this week. In 3 looks at TPC Deere Run, he’s finished 29th (2008), 37th (2019) and 28th (2021). An opening 65 in 2019 was good enough for an each-way FRL payout and 8 of his 12 rounds here at the John Deere Classic have been in the 60s. Across our John Deere Classic Strokes Gained Analysis in this field he also ranks 9th for Tee to Green and 12th for Ball Striking. Consistency personified, and the Scotsman can actually get over the line on the PGA Tour.

A 4-time winner, he’s a 2-time winner of the Las Vegas birdie-fest known as the Shriners Open, with those wins coming at -19/265 (2009) and -23/261 (2020). That last victory is fascinating as he saw off the like of Patrick Cantlay, Si Woo Kim and Will Zalatoris in regulation play, plus Austin Cook and Matthew Wolff in a play-off to capture the title. A grade up from the John Deere Classic.

Ranking 30th for Tee to Green this season – best in the field – and ranking only 124th in the FedEx Cup highlights Laird’s putting woes in 2021/22, but he made a few putts at TPC River Highlands last week shooting 63 on Thursday and 66 on Saturday to go into Sunday in 5th place. A 13th at the Travelers was his best ever finish in Hartford and it was good to see the flat stick showing signs of life as he gets to play on his favoured Bentgrass greens this week. RESULT: T30

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Matt Wallace 1pt EW 80/1 (8EW, 1/5) with Ladbrokes

Matt Wallace still has plenty to play for in 2022. At 143rd in the FedEx Cup standings his PGA Tour playing privileges are still in the balance, and he won’t want to go down the route of the Korn Ferry Tour Playoffs. So we have a player who will be motivated arriving in Illinois, and we also have a player who’s started to show the green roots of recovery over the past month.

It started on his home DP World Tour with 5th at the Dutch Open, where he was 3rd going into the weekend and 1st going into Sunday. That was the first time that he had competed at the top of a leaderboard since the ZOZO Championship in Japan last October. He backed that up with 18th at the Porsche European Open where he played with a borrowed set of clubs, after his own never made it to Germany. Since a move over to the PGA Tour, Matt was 35th at the RBC Canadian Open, where a Friday 66 saw him head into the weekend in 8th spot on the leaderboard, and 46th at the Travelers Championship last week saw him fire a 66 on Sunday, so the Hillingdon man is building the momentum he needs.

And it’s not as if Wallace hasn’t contended on the PGA Tour over his short North American career. 3rd at TPC San Antonio (2021), 6th at Quail Hollow (2021), 4th at Bay Hill (2020), 6th at Bay Hill (2019) and 3rd at Bethpage Black (2019), Wallace was also a contender at the short, scoreable, Harbour Town last term, where he was in 4th spot going into Sunday, before eventually finishing 18th. In the top 20 across my 8 week Strokes Gained tracker for both Tee to Green and Current Form, the sort who can contend this week at a reasonable price. RESULT: MC

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Odds and bookmaker offers correct at 16:15BST 27.6.22 but are naturally subject to fluctuation.