As if you didn’t know picking winners was hard enough already, Harris English won the Sentry Tournament of Champions last week. Yes, the same Harris English who a number of our experts picked to win outright numerous times in 2020, only to never be rewarded. Fittingly, he finally won a tournament you usually have to qualify for via victory the previous season, and not one of us pegged the former Georgia Bulldog to get it done. That’s the way it goes, unfortunately.
Don’t fret, folks, the winners are coming—and we always have good vibes at the Sony Open at Waialae Country Club, hosting the event for a 51st consecutive year. It’s the fourth-longest serving tour event on tour (only to Augusta, Colonial and Pebble). This is also the first full field event of 2021, which means it might be the first week of your season-long fantasy contest—and it also means there will be a wide array of betting options (if you’re not in on the Top 20 After Round 1 bets yet, you’re slacking).
The Sony Open field is noticeably weaker than last week, highlighted by Webb Simpson, Daniel Berger, Collin Morikawa, Hideki Matsuyama and TOC winner Harris English. Simpson is a curious case study this week. He finished in the top five in his last two appearances at Waialae (2020 and 2018). But Webb lost more than six strokes off the tee last week at Kapalua—one of his three worst showings off the tee in the past five years, per our data scientist Rick Gehman’s golf database.
So was that an anomoly? Can you trust Webb’s longer-term stats, which make him the clear favorite at Waialae. That’s one of the questions we help you answer as our expert panel breaks down the 2021 Sony Open field.
Sony Open 2021 picks: Our Experts’ Outright Predictions (Odds from DraftKings)
Anonymous Caddie Picker of the week: Webb Simpson (11-1) — This is a paradise for a shotmaker and a putter. Webb Simpson is both of those things. This is a weaker field than, say, RBC Heritage—where he got his last win. We know he loves it here, and it’d be surprising if he doesn’t contend again this year.
Pat Mayo, DraftKings/Fantasy National, Mayo Media Network analyst: Ryan Palmer (33-1) — A former winner of this event, albeit a decade ago, Palmer is about as close the peak of his powers as he’s ever been at the moment. He’s now up to 25th in the world rankings. He wilted Sunday at the TOC—but it was more putting-related than anything, and frankly, much like English last week, if you looked at his results and stats without the name “Ryan Palmer” next to them, he’d be an auto bet at this price.
Brandon Gdula, FanDuel/numberFire managing editor: Daniel Berger (15-1) — I liked Berger last week at longer odds, but he’s now in favorite territory, but not much has changed with four extra rounds in his profile. Berger is in the 93rd percentile or better in this field in adjusted strokes gained/tee to green and approach since the start of 2020, according to datagolf. He’s also an accurate driver and a good Bermuda putter. I’m going to stick with him despite liking a few other names at the top.
Rick Gehman, data scientist and RickRunGood.com founder: Webb Simpson (11-1) — Simpson played about as poorly as he could have possibly played last week in Maui and still finished T-17. He lost a staggering 6.58 strokes off the tee, which was not only the worst in the field, but also the worst single driving tournament for Simpson in the entire database at RickRunGood.com. However, he finished fifth in strokes gained/approach, which helped him salvage his results. Simpson won’t have to rely on the driver as much at Waialae, which is flat and much shorter than the Plantation Course. He can rely on the rest of his game to improve on his third-place and T-4 finishes in his past two trips to the Sony Open.
Stephen Hennessey, Golf Digest dep. managing editor: Sungjae Im (18-1) — If you were paying attention on Monday, you could’ve scooped up Sungjae at 22-1. That value’s gone, but hey—if you think Sungjae’s a good bet at 22-1, how much of a difference is it? Per Fantasy National, Sungjae gained 9.2 strokes/tee to green last week and 5.2 strokes on his approaches. On Kapalua’s complex greens, he lost 3.2 strokes/putting, a stat that’s bound to regress to the mean. The South Korean star is 13th in this field in strokes gained/putting over the past 100 rounds, per Fantasy National. That’s more like what I’d expect from Sungjae this week.
Christopher Powers, Golf Digest assistant editor: Kevin Kisner (30-1) — It’s probably dumb to start chasing a Kisner win, because it might not come until March at the Match Play, but screw it. I’m still hurting from that RSM playoff loss, and I’m sure he is too. He’s one of the few guys who played last week, so he’s prepared for the windy conditions at Waialae, where he has a strong record (4th in ‘20; 4th in ‘17; 5th in ‘16). He’s been closing in on a fourth career victory since July thanks to some steady approach play and a hot putter, as is tradition. At 30-1, I’m still firmly aboard the Kiz train.
Lee Alldrick, FanShare Sports: Russell Henley (35-1) — Henley comes into this event ranked first in strokes gained/tee to green and Opportunities Gained over the past three months. He is also one of the best putters in the field on Bermuda too, ranking 10th for SG/putting on Bermuda greens.
Results from last season: Golf Digest’s betting panel predicted 14 winners correctly last season, and collectively on outright winners, top-10 bets and matchups won and lost, our panel went up 225.30 units (the equivalent of being up $2,253 if you wagered $10 on all of our bets) last season. Our anonymous tour caddie nailed Viktor Hovland (25-1) to finish 2020 strong. Also at the end of last year, Brandon Gdula of numberFire/FanDuel correctly picked Patrick Cantlay last week at the Zozo Championship (30-1) and giving Christopher Powers predicted Bryson DeChambeau (28-1 at the U.S. Open)—picking up the momentum we had in the 2019-’20 season. Be sure to check this column every week for picks from the hottest betting panel in golf!
Sony Open 2021 picks: Sleepers/Dark Horses Who Could Win
Caddie: Cameron Davis (100-1) — The hype was very real on Cameron Davis in 2020. He’s a streaky player because he’s more of a bomb-and-gouge type of player. But he’s also a shotmaker and can get super hot. He finished ninth here a year ago … I really love him earning his first win here.
Mayo: Sebastian Munoz (55-1) — Munoz fits the narrative of players who played in the TOC, and not only did he play, but he was one of the best players in the field, improving his ball striking every day.
Gdula: Talor Gooch (90-1) — Gooch is a balanced golfer, which helps a lot in a scoring fest where anyone can win. He’s also around field average in fairways hit and Bermuda putting, which are some vital stats for the week. He’s just a better golfer than the price indicates.
Gehman: Sebastian Munoz (55-1) — Munoz played himself out of the Tournament of Champions on Thursday by carding an opening-round 75 (2-over). Instead of packing it in and enjoying his time in Maui, Munoz went nuts over the final three days, playing the final 54 holes in 18 under par. That aggregate score over the last three days was second best in the field, behind only Joaquin Niemann, who lost in a playoff to Harris English. If he can carry that form into Honolulu, Munoz is certainly a viable contender to pick up his second PGA Tour victory.
Hennessey, Golf Digest: Zach Johnson (45-1) — Believe it or not, ZJ is third in Fantasy National’s “Good Drives Gained” stat, which predicts how often a player hits the green from their tee shots. You wouldn’t expect a short knocker like ZJ to rank that high in this field. He’s also eighth in strokes gained on par 4s in his past 50 rounds, and third in strokes gained/putting. This is all a recipe for success for ZJ at a course he’s won before. He’s trending in the right direction, and after he contended at RSM, it feels like he could yet again.
Powers, Golf Digest: Marc Leishman (66-1) — Pre-COVID Leish appeared to be back last week, particularly on approach, where he gained 3.8 strokes, and tee to green, where he gained 4.3 strokes. The putting, however, was abysmal (the Aussie ranked 40th out of 42 players in SG/putting). I’ll bet on a bounce back on the greens at Waialae, where he has two top-five finishes since 2014 and has made the cut in all 11 of his appearances.
Alldrick, FanShare Sports: Marc Leishman (66-1) — His game—if it’s back to pre-quarantine form—suits this course perfectly, ranking 10th in FanShare’s course-suitability ranking.
Sony Open 2021 picks: Players to Fade This Week (who will disappoint)
Caddie: Hideki Matsuyama (22-1) — This seems pretty easy—he has just one top-25 finish in eight previous appearances, and he is coming off one of his worst putting performances of his career (and DANG, he was bad). He’ll get it worked out, but you won’t get my money this week.
Mayo: Abraham Ancer (25-1) — Ancer has started to get the Tony Finau treatment. He’s priced like he’s won multiple times despite that not being the case. Ancer will eventually get his win—hell, it could be this week! But I’m just not comfortable betting him this high up the board. Last week his T-17 was almost entirely putting-related. He’s a good putter, but gaining 6.1 strokes on the greens won’t even be enough if you can’t hit an iron at Sony.
Gdula: Hideki Matsuyama (22-1) — Hideki was my fade pick last week, but I’m there again. He actually lost strokes tee to green at the Tournament of Champions but more importantly lost 9.7 strokes from putting, according to FantasyNational. The tee-to-green game is so good, but you can’t win when you putt yourself out of contention.
Gehman: Hideki Matsuyama (22-1) — I’ve always been a proponent for “Team No Putt,” which is the idea that great ball-strikers who are poor putters will prevail if given enough opportunity. After watching Matsuyama for four days in Maui, I’m starting to re-think that stance. He lost an appalling 9.74 strokes putting, which was three shots worse than the next worst putter (Mackenzie Hughes). I’d normally expect a bounce back—but those numbers are so bad that he could be lost on the greens—and no amount of practice in the next few days is going to change that. I’ll need to see signs of life from Matsuyama before investing.
Hennessey, Golf Digest: Hideki Matsuyama (22-1) — The guy burned me in DFS lineups and top-10 bets last week, so I’m very familiar with how poorly he putted (see Gehman’s stats above). I’m off Hideki, especially here, where he can drive it into some trouble.
Powers, Golf Digest: Harris English (13-1) — As a closet Dawgs fan, nobody was happier for Harris English than me last week. But a natural letdown is expected here, especially after he had been knocking on the door for so long.
Alldrick, FanShare Sports: Collin Morikawa (15-1) — Morikawa is brilliant tee-to-green but his putting on bermuda is alarming. He ranks 117th in the field this week for SG/putting on bermuda losing 0.7 shots per round to Webb Simpson statistically. That means he is almost giving Simpson a three-shot head start.
Sony Open 2021 picks: Matchups
Caddie: Sungjae Im (-118) over Hideki Matsuyama (DraftKings) — You would’ve made some good money fading Hideki last week. I won’t miss out this week—I trust Sungjae way more than Hideki in this spot.
Mayo: Tom Hoge (+130) over Brian Harman (DraftKings) — Plus-money on a player who’s an excellent fit for this venue? Thank you very much. Hoge is almost all irons and putting. He’s gained in eight straight events on the greens. Harman is consistently making cuts but has flashed limited upside recently. Whereas Hollywood Hoge churned out a T-3 at Mayakoba (the biggest comp course to Sony) to close his 2020, and has two top-15 finishes in this event the past three years.
Gdula: Russell Henley (-115) over Cam Smith (FanDuel) — Henley is the best long-term iron player in the field, and Smith is the defending champ. Smith, though, won here in windy conditions, which don’t seem as likely, and Henley’s actually got the better around-the-green play between the two.
Hennessey: Sungjae Im (-118) over Hideki Matsuyama (DraftKings) — This feels too good to be true. Sungjae is my pick to win, Hideki’s my fade. That equals putting my mortgage on it (just kidding, if my wife’s reading this!).
Powers: Webb Simpson (-118) over Harris English (DraftKings) — I’m a firm believer that if you’re going to fade someone like I’m fading Harris English this week, you should actually fade them in some capacity. This matchup presents that opportunity. Webb Simpson is almost back at full health after a bout with COVID, and he managed a 17th last week despite losing nearly seven strokes off the tee. The rest of his game was just fine, and I don’t anticipate another poor driving week. I also love the fact that Webb’s gone 3rd-4th-13th-13th-13th in his last five Sony starts (English has a great Sony record too, but we’re fading him, remember?).
Alldrick, FanShare Sports: Webb Simpson (-120) over Collin Morikawa (Bet365) — As you’ve seen above, Morikawa’s putting woes on bermuda greens statistically gives Simpson a three-shot head start. Their form is also pretty much the same meaning Morikawa is going to struggle to find any advantage over Simpson this week.
Matchup Results from the Sentry: Powers: 1 for 1 (Collin Morikawa (+105) over Viktor Hovland); Hennessey: 1 for 1 (Justin Thomas (+100) over Dustin Johnson); Gdula: 1 for 1 (Webb Simpson (-110) over Viktor Hovland); Caddie: 1 for 1 (Justin Thomas (-136) over Bryson DeChambeau); Mayo: 0 for 1, Gehman, Alldrick: 0 for 1.
Matchup Results this season: Alldrick: 10 for 13 (up 6.04 units); Hennessey: 8-1-3 (up 4.20 units); Gdula: 7 for 13 (up 0.53 units); Powers: 4-3-6 (down 2.13 units); Caddie: 4-1-9 (down 2.82 units); Mayo: 5 for 13 (down 3.23 units); Gehman: 4 for 13 (down 4.13 units).
Sony Open 2021 picks: Top 10 (odds from FanDuel Sportsbook)
Caddie: Brandt Snedeker (+700) — Sneds has some sneaky good history at Waialae, with a runner-up and two other top-20s. I think he’ll really eye this tourney up as his chance at having a much better 2021. These odds are too appealing for a world-class player who’s on the verge of finding his game.
Mayo: Marc Leishman (+450) — Finishing middle of the pack at T-25 at the Tournament of Champions, the Aussie lost 5.1 strokes on the greens, third-worst in the field. The irons? Quality. Leishman was eighth-most among all players, gained 3.8 strokes, sandwiched between Dustin Johnson and Daniel Berger. Flip the putter, and he should get back into contention at a course where he’s finished in the positives on the putting surface in seven of the past eight years.
Gdula: Brendon Todd (+490) — Any time we get Todd on a course where distance isn’t a prerequisite, we can take notice. The data shows an emphasis on accuracy and scoring, which Todd can do at his peak. He has also made five of six cuts at Waialae since 2009 and finished a solid 13th a week ago at a Kapalua course that favored distance.
Gehman: Cameron Davis (+850) — Davis flashed his raw talent on multiple occasions down the stretch of 2020. He contended at the Wyndham Championship and more recently at the Sanderson Farms Championship. Unlike some of the shorter, more accurate players, Davis is likely to take a “bomb and gouge” approach around Waialae. That’s an approach that led him to a T-9 finish at this event last season.
Hennessey, Golf Digest: Charles Howell III (+490) — This is the Sony Open! CH3 has made 19 of 19 cuts here in his career—including 10 top-10 finishes. He finished 12th here last year; eighth in the year before that. He has $3 million in career earnings here—hit the smash button on this.
Powers, Golf Digest: Tom Hoge (+950) — If not for Leishman, Hoges and grinders would be my longshot at 125-1. Last we saw him, he made a serious run at the Mayakoba Golf Classic, ultimately tying for third. He makes a ton of birdies (11th on tour in birdie average), and has a 12th and a third in two of his last three Sony appearances. If he avoids the bogeys, which he did a great job of at Mayakoba, I could see him contending here again.
Alldrick, FanShare Sports: Ryan Palmer (+300) — Palmer’s form is undeniable. He comes into this event off of back-to-back fourth-place finishes. Speaking of fours, he also ranks fourth in the field this week for SG/tee to green over the past three months and Opportunities Gained, per Fantasy National. Palmer’s elite off-the-tee game also sets up great for Waialae with him ranking top 20 in our FanShare’s course-suitability ranking.
Top-10 results from Mayakoba: Everyone: 0 for 1
Top 10 results from this season: Gehman: 4 for 13 (up 15 units); Powers: 1 for 13 (up 1 unit); Hennessey: 1 for 13 (down 9 units); Tour caddie: 2 for 13 (down 7.95 units); Alldrick: 0 for 12 (down 12 units); Mayo, Gdula: 0 for 13 (down 13 units each).
Gehman: Abraham Ancer — Logic says Webb Simpson is the best play of the week, but Simpson offers plenty of natural homes throughout the year, including the Waste Management Open and the Wyndham Championship. Ancer, on the other hand, possesses a similar skill set to Simpson that is continuing to develop each week. Ancer provides additional confidence thanks to his final round 66 (7-under) at the TOC.
Previous weeks: Safeway Open: Joel Dahmen; U.S. Open: Jon Rahm; Corales: Denny McCarthy. Sanderson: Sebastian Munoz. Shriners: Matthew Wolff. CJ Cup: Xander Schauffele. Zozo: Bubba Watson. Bermuda: Rasmus Hojgaard. Houston: Lanto Griffin. Masters: Rory McIlroy. RSM: Webb Simpson. Mayakoba: Viktor Hovland (pretty decent!). Sentry TOC: Patrick Reed.
Hennessey: Ryan Palmer — I used Joaquin Niemann, or else I’d be tempted to go to Joaco Flaco flames. I’ll stick with Ryan Palmer. He’s a past winner at the Sony, played great last week and played well here last year. This is the time to burn Palmer.
Previous weeks: Safeway Open: Phil Mickelson; U.S. Open: Hideki Matsuyama; Corales: Adam Long. Sanderson: Sam Burns. Shriners: Harris English. CJ Cup: Kevin Na. Zozo: Joaquin Niemann. Bermuda: Doc Redman. Houston: Russell Henley. Masters: Tyrrell Hatton. RSM: Brian Harman. Mayakoba: Abraham Ancer. Sentry TOC: Justin Thomas.
Powers: Zach Johnson — Coming off a sixth at RSM, his third top-eight finish in his last eight starts. Career results at the Sony Open include a win and five top-15s.
Previous weeks: Safeway Open: Brendan Steele; U.S. Open: Louis Oosthuizen; Corales: Adam Long. Sanderson: Sam Burns. Shriners: Jason Kokrak. CJ Cup: Daniel Berger. Zozo: Joaquin Niemann. Bermuda: Denny McCarthy. Houston: Russell Henley. Masters: Bubba Watson. RSM: Brian Harman. Mayakoba: Corey Conners. Sentry TOC: Harris English.
Courtesy of Rick Gehman of RickRunGood.com:
9.51 — The number of strokes gained from tee-to-green for Sungjae Im at the Sentry Tournament of Champions. That was the best number in the entire field.
0.84 — The number of strokes lost by Cameron Smith on approach during his victory at the Sony Open last year. Smith and Bryson DeChambeau are the only two golfers to win an event since the start of 2020 while losing strokes on approach.
2,611 — The number of days between the last two PGA TOUR wins for Harris English. Previous to winning last week’s Tournament of Champions, he was victorious at the 2013 Mayakoba Classic.
41 — The rank (out of 42) for Collin Morikawa in Strokes Gained Approach in the final round of the Tournament of Champions. An uncharacteristic round after being third in the field for the first three rounds.
Pat Mayo is an award-winning video host and producer of long and short-form content, owner of the Mayo Media Network and host of The Pat Mayo Experience. (Subscribe for video or audio. Mayo (@ThePME) won the 2020 Fantasy Sports Writing Association Daily Fantasy Writer of the Year and Golf Writer of the Year awards, along with the Fantasy Sports Trade Association Best Sports Betting Analyst award, and was finalist for four FSWA Awards in 2020 (Best Podcast, Best Video, Daily Fantasy Writer of the Year, Golf Writer of the Year). His 21 FSWA nominations lead all writers this decade and are third-most all-time. Mayo is on the board of governors at www.fantasynational.com.
Brandon Gdula, managing editor and analyst for NumberFire, a FanDuel daily-fantasy analysis company, recently won the 2018 fantasy sports-writers association Golf Writer of the Year *(congrats, Brandon!)*. Gdula also co-hosts the DFS Heat Check podcast.
Rick Gehman is the founder of RickRunGood.com and the RickRunGood YouTube Channel, is one of the industry’s leading experts on golf DFS and gambling. Gehman is co-host of the First Cut Podcast and appears regularly on the Pat Mayo Experience golf podcasts. Follow him on Twitter: @RickRunGood.
Lee Alldrick of FanShare Sports started out writing an article highlighting the best bargain plays for fantasy golf under his twitter handle @DKGolfBargains. His success at this prompted FanShare Sports to enlist him as a guest writer, which evolved into him writing the weekly Under The Radar article. As a U.K.-based expert, Alldrick’s insight into European Tour regulars and low priced, low owned plays has provided an invaluable edge for readers when it comes to DFS GPPs.