PGA Tour 2019 Live Golf Championship

PGA Tour 2019 Golf Championship: The unsung hero who helped turn an overgrown muny into a major-championship darling 2019 PGA Championship odds: Surprising picks, best predictions from model that nailed Tiger Woods' deep run Tiger Woods can make history yet again with a victory this week at the 2019 PGA Championship.

Woods, a four-time PGA Championship winner, can join Jack Nicklaus and Walter Hagen as the only golfers to win this tournament five times. And Woods has a proven track record at Bethpage Black, the 2019 PGA Championship course. In fact, he is one of just three players in this week's 2019 PGA Championship field to have finished in the top 10 in both majors that have been held there.

 The 15-time major champion finished on top of the leaderboard at the 2002 U.S. Open and earned a sixth-place finish at the 2009 U.S. Open, both held at the same Long Island venue. The current 2019 PGA Championship odds list Woods as the Vegas favorite at 8-1, followed closely by defending champion Brooks Koepka (10-1) and world No. 1 Dustin Johnson (10-1).

The latest 2019 PGA Championship weather is calling for partly cloudy skies with temperatures in the 60s for the first two rounds, with a chance of rain over the weekend. Before you make any predictions for this star-studded event, consult the 2019 PGA Championship picks from the proven model at SportsLine.

SportsLine's prediction model, built by DFS pro Mike McClure, has nailed four majors entering the weekend and was all over Woods' deep run in last year's PGA Championship as a 25-1 long shot. The model projected him as a top contender even though he hadn't cracked the top 10 at this major in almost a decade. Whereas oddsmakers faded Woods, SportsLine was all-in.

The model has been spot-on early in the 2018-19 season. It was high on champion Rory McIlroy at the Players Championship, projecting him as one of the top two contenders from the start. It also correctly predicted Brooks Koepka's (9-1) victory at the CJ Cup. Additionally, it correctly called Bryson DeChambeau's (9-1) seven-shot victory at the Omega Dubai Desert Classic. Anyone who has followed the model is way up.

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