Farmers Insurance Open 2021 picks: The Xander Schauffele debate

The West Coast Swing rolls on this week with the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines, which also hosts this June’s U.S. Open. No, the South Course (where three of the four rounds will be played this week) won’t be set up like it will be in the summer, but it should still serve as a mini U.S. Open preview.

Our experts seem to be a little torn on one of the tour’s studs: Xander Schauffele. He’s among the favorites at 12-1, and he was born and raised in San Diego, so it’s a home game for him. The only issue is his course history (Schauffele has missed four of five cuts), but it’s not scaring away two of our bettors—including our anonymous PGA Tour caddie reporting this week—who we can say is a caddie for a top-25 player on tour. He’s not buying into the past performance from Xander at Torrey. Two of our experts, though, will use it as reason to fade one of the most consistent players in the world.

Which side do you fall on? Read on to see who our experts like this week at the 2021 Farmers Insurance Open.

Farmers Insurance Open 2021 picks: Our Experts’ Outright Predictions (Odds from William Hill)

Anonymous Caddie Picker of the week: Xander Schauffele (12-1) — I don’t think much explanation is needed here, BUT if you look at the winners in the past, two things jump out: Above average distance off the tee and an ELITE short game. Xander has all of that and more. Good form and some rest doesn’t hurt either.

Pat Mayo, DraftKings/Fantasy National, Mayo Media Network analyst: Rory McIlroy (8-1) — It’s been more than a year since Rory got into the winner’s circle. After slogging through the post-COVID restart, things seemingly have flipped for him. He bookended the fall major season with top-10 finishes at the U.S. Open and the Masters and debuted last week on the European Tour with a T-3 in the Middle East—and fired the lowest score in a round twice during the event. He’s played the Farmers the past two years with a T-3 and T-5. It’s time for Rory.

Brandon Gdula, FanDuel/numberFire managing editor: Xander Schauffele (12-1) — Schauffele has a poor history at the Farmers with four missed cuts in five tries, but that’s not necessarily a predictive way to break down a betting card. What Schauffele does well—everything—is what it takes to succeed at Torrey Pines. Schauffele is in the 85th percentile in distance gained over the past 100 rounds, via FantasyNational, and is a good Poa putter. He’s also admitted to preferring tougher golf courses, and that’s what we should get this week.

Rick Gehman, data scientist and RickRunGood.com founder: Rory McIlroy (8-1) — This pick does not come without reservation—McIlroy hasn’t raised a trophy in more than a year and is making the long trek back from Dubai before teeing it up this week. However, we saw flashes of brilliance from McIlroy last week in Dubai. Even with two even-par rounds of 72, he still finished third. He shot the low round of the day on two different days last week and now heads to Torrey Pines. This will be his third trip to the Farmers Insurance Open, finishing T-5 and T-3 in the past two years. He’s overdue for a victory, and that winless streak is in jeopardy this week.

Stephen Hennessey, Golf Digest dep. managing editor: Tony Finau (20-1) — Finau’s numbers at Torrey Pines are staggering: He has gained more than 27 strokes on the field over the past three years, en route to two sixth-place finishes and a 13th. Sure, this number is too low to recoup most of what you’ve lost on betting Finau outright, but I don’t want to miss out on the Finau coronation. After the AMEX close call, I’m willing to bank on him either this week or at the Waste Management.

Christopher Powers, Golf Digest assistant editor: Matthew Wolff (33-1) — I drank the Wolff kool aid last week and was gutted to see him start four over through six on Thursday. This week, I’m ready to get hurt again, not just because he ended up finishing strong at AMEX (12 under after that brutal start), but because Torrey Pines seems perfectly suited for his game. Bombs away, hack out of the rough when you need to, and Poa greens, Wolff’s best putting surface.

Lee Alldrick, FanShare Sports: Tony Finau (20-1) — The American Express wasn’t supposed to be an event that suited his game, but Finau is playing so well right now, his game will let him contend. Now, enter Torrey, one of his best courses. Finau ranks 15th in FanShare’s course-suitability ranking this week and comes into this event ranked third for Opportunities Gained over the past three months.

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 at the Zozo Championship (30-1) and 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!

Farmers Insurance Open 2021 picks: Sleepers/Dark Horses Who Could Win (odds from William Hill unless otherwise listed)

Caddie: Gary Woodland (80-1, PointsBet) — Gary’s playing pain free for the first time in a year, and he played well last week with a top 20. You can tell he seems excited to be competing again. Also, he did happen to win a little tournament down the road at Pebble in 2019, so we know he can handle the Poa greens and cooler weather.

Mayo: Ryan Palmer (80-1, PointsBet) — I bet him 250-1 to win at the U.S. Open here in a few months, so I might as well take a shot on him in easier conditions. In his 14 weighted rounds at Torrey Pines South, Palmer is averaging a stroke gained on the field per round on approach. That’s the most of any player in the field who has played at least 10 rounds on the South outside of Marc Leishman. Now up to No. 28 in the OWGR, Palmer has shockingly gained strokes putting in four straight events and finally gets to tackle a course where his distance can be a real factor.

Gdula: Bubba Watson (40-1) — I can’t see myself digging too deep with outrights this week because big names generally win here. It makes sense. It’s a tough test of golf that requires being viable in every area. Watson doesn’t really have a spotless profile but is a plus putter on Poa, the only surface on which he can make that claim. Watson also has the distance and has a win under his belt at Torrey Pines.

Gehman: Will Zalatoris (70-1, DraftKings) — Zalatoris makes his 2021 debut with the distinction of being one of the bright young stars on the PGA Tour. Zalatoris dominated the Korn Ferry Tour last season, boasting a stretch of 11 consecutive top-20 finishes. He’s continued that play into this season, earning top-10s at the U.S. Open, Corales Puntacana Championship and Shriners Hospitals For Children Open. There are some circles of the golfing world that already believe Zalatoris has the talent of a top-25 player in the world, and he has the opportunity to prove that starting here.

Hennessey, Golf Digest: Dylan Frittelli (140-1, DraftKings) — I gotta give a nod to my guy Fried Egg Paulie, who we had on the “Be Right” podcast last week (shameless plug, go subscribe here). Paulie makes a great case this week for Frittelli—he’s an absolute bomber now who is a top-10 scrambler in this elite field. Frittelli also prominently hits a fade off the tee, which suits Torrey Pines. Frittelli’s top-five finish at the Masters gives me more confidence … I think Frittelli at these deep odds is definitely worth a look. Thank Paulie if this hits.

Powers, Golf Digest: Alex Noren (100-1) — Since the end of July, Noren has six top 20s in 11 starts, two of those coming at the PGA and U.S. Open. While it won’t be set up like it will be in June, Torrey still plays like a U.S. Open/PGA every year, with four of the past six Farmers Insurance Opens featuring a winning total of 10 under or less. One of those years (2018), Noren finished runner-up, and may have won in regulation if he didn’t get freezed out by J.B. Holmes.

Alldrick, FanShare Sports: Marc Leishman (41-1, DraftKings) — Last year’s winner is just starting to come into form again. He enters this week ranked sixth for SG/tee-to-green over the past three months and 13th for Opportunities Gained. Leishman performs very well at Torrey Pines and should be in the mix once again this week.

Farmers Insurance Open 2021 picks: Players to Fade This Week (who will disappoint)

Caddie: Rory McIlroy (8-1) — That’s the thing about Rors, he could win by five or struggle each day to score. It’s a big time difference from Abu Dhabi, and that’ll always affect rest. I’d imagine he will also be feeling a little letdown after losing the lead on the last day last week. He will make the cut as he’s just too talented, but I don’t see him contending.

Mayo: Viktor Hovland (30-1) — Three things matter this week: Driving distance, long irons and short game. The hit-fairway percentage is low, then combine that with a smallish greens at the South Course, and you’re going to have to get it up and down consistently to stay atop the leaderboard. While he’s been improving his short game, Hovland’s chipping flubs on a weekly basis will take him out of contention at Torrey Pines.

Gdula: Viktor Hovland (30-1) — Hovland’s recent win at El Camaleon shouldn’t transfer over both from a field strength and course structure standpoint. Torrey Pines requires distance, which he has to a degree (63rd percentile in this field), but he’s not a strong putter, particularly in a small sample on Poa, and he’s not a great wedge player, both of which are vital based on the data.

Gehman: Xander Schauffele (12-1) — It’s certainly terrifying to fade a golfer who is in the midst of 13 consecutive top-25 finishes, but here we are! According to the RunRunGood.com course model, Torrey Pines is one of the most “consistent” golfers on tour. In short, the course is always set up in a similar fashion, and the field is generally the same strength in each edition. With that, player results have been very stable over the years. Unfortunately for Schauffele, something doesn’t click for him at Torrey Pines, which is only minutes from where he grew up. In five trips, he has one T-25 finish and four missed cuts. He will need to overcome that course adversity to keep his top-25 streak alive this week.

Hennessey, Golf Digest: Marc Leishman (33-1) — It’s so hard to find a reason to fade any of the guys 40-1 or lower. I’ll look at the longer-term form with Leishman and bank on him regressing a little more back to that. These are just low odds for someone who was so bad for so long. I do think he really likes Torrey, so I’m not confident in this one.

Powers, Golf Digest: Jon Rahm (7-1) — Fading Jon Rahm at Torrey is like betting against Brady in the playoffs, but the W/D last week and the new clubs are two very large question marks. You can’t bet on two big question marks at 7-1, no matter how good the course history is.

Alldrick, FanShare Sports: Xander Schauffele (12-1) — Historically, Schaufelle struggles around Torrey, especially the South Course. He ranks just 73rd in the field this week for total strokes gained/total on Torrey’s South Course. Not something you want to see at these odds.

Farmers Insurance Open 2021 picks: Matchups

Caddie: Charles Howell III (-106) over Rickie Fowler (DraftKings) — This one I’m simply going with consistency. Howell consistently drives the ball well, which is needed at Torrey. Rickie played well last week with his T-21, but he’s too inconsistent with the driver. I think Fowler will have a big year, but Scottsdale next week is more suited to his game.

Mayo: Tony Finau (+110) over Xander Schauffele (DraftKings) — While it’s never wise to bet against Xander, you have two equal skill sets and Finau had made the weekend in every career appearance at Torrey with three top-six finishes the past four years, against Xander, who has made one of five cuts here.

Gdula: Adam Scott (-112) over Marc Leishman (FanDuel) — Leishman’s the defending champ here and has shown life statistically in two January events, but there’s a lot to worry about long-term. Scott is a good Poa putter and a much better overall golfer in terms of the adjusted strokes-gained data.

Gehman: Charles Howell III (-106) over Rickie Fowler (DraftKings) — It’s rare that I will lean so heavily on course history, but according to the RickRunGood.com course model, Torrey Pines is one of the courses where you can most predict success each year. With that being said, I’m going to fade Fowler, who has failed to crack the top 60 in any of his past seven trips here, which includes five missed cuts. I’ll back Howell who has a sparkling record at this event, making the weekend in all 17 starts and earning eight top-10s in the process.

Hennessey: Sungjae Im (-114) over Viktor Hovland (PointsBet) — I hyped Hovland up a bit on the podcast, and I don’t hate him as an outright bet to be honest, given his stellar driving ability and his putting on Poa. But Sungjae Im is the more complete player. And his short game versus Hovland’s at Torrey Pines … this makes me really like Sungjae’s chances—especially because he played so well at the AMEX, despite a couple bad shots.

Powers: Scottie Scheffler (-125) over Si Woo Kim (DraftKings) — I’m just going to bet on the natural letdown with Si Woo here, and on Scheffler being hungry after missing the cut on the number at AMEX.

Alldrick, FanShare Sports: Bubba Watson (-111) over Jason Kokrak (Betfair) — Kokrak’s form over the past three months has been terrible. Two MCs, a 35th and a 56th. He also struggles putting big time on Poa greens. Watson on the other hand has two top-10 finishes in his past three events and ranks first in the field this week for total strokes gained on the Torrey Pines South Course.

Matchup Results from The American Express: Alldrick: 1 for 1 (Sungjae Im (+100) over Scottie Scheffler); Powers: 1 for 1 (Cameron Davis (-125) over Tom Hoge); Gehman: push (Brendan Steele over Matt Jones); Caddie, Mayo (unlucky Hoffman WD), Gdula, Hennessey: 0 for 1

Matchup Results this season: Alldrick: 12 for 15 (up 7.87 units); Hennessey: 8-1-5 (up 2.20 units); Gdula: 8 for 15 (up 0.4 units); Powers: 6-3-6 (down 0.48 units); Gehman: 5-9-1 (down 3.28 units); Caddie: 4-1-11 (down 4.82 units); Mayo: 5 for 15 (down 5.23 units).

Farmers Insurance Open 2021 picks: Top 10 (odds from FanDuel Sportsbook)

Caddie: Sungjae Im (+310) — Played well last week with the exception of a couple big numbers. He made a 7 on a par 5 in Round 1 and a 7 on No. 9 (par 4) on Day 3. With two pars he would have finished fifth. His ball-striking plus a past history of a strong short game will serve him well.

Mayo: Luke List (+1400) — Nothing will be more deserved than watching List showcase the skills of Rory and Rahm tee-to-green, only to watch him miss a string of two-foot putts to miss the cut. Now, if his putter was better we’d never get these odds, so there’s a give and take. He’s third in the field in driving distance gained over the past 50 rounds, per Fantasy National. List’s ball-striking and short game are starting to look more like his excellent 2019 than whatever happened in 2020.

Gdula: Cameron Tringale (+1000) — Tringale virtually always gains strokes with his irons, and Poa is his best putting surface, which is what he’d get in three rounds at the South Course. He’s also good on bentgrass, which is what he’ll be putting on at the North Course. He’s long enough to play well here, and the odds are long enough, too.

Gehman: Ryan Palmer (+490) — Palmer has been solid for over a year, notching three top-20 finishes in his past four starts. He brings a pristine record into the Farmers Insurance Open, an event that he has played three times. He has finishes of T-2, T-13 and T-21—the last was in 2020 when he actually played in the final group on Sunday before fading to T-21. Palmer has a knack for avoiding the critical mistake and keeping himself in play for all four days. I expect more of the same this week.

Hennessey, Golf Digest: Gary Woodland (+500) — Woodland’s injuries appear to be in the rear view. And he’s back at Torrey, where has some strong history—throw out a MC in 2020, and he gained more 29 strokes on the field in top-20 finishes in 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019. Take the value based on the books not adjusting enough for his good outing at the AMEX last week.

Powers, Golf Digest: Jason Day (+400, DraftKings) — I love Jason Day to win this week, and I’ll back it up with a top 10 in case he comes up just short. Don’t let the long lay-off scare you away (Day hasn’t played since RSM). Prior to his two victories here, he’d been coming off a three-month break (2018) and a three-week break (2015). This man feasts on the West Coast swing, and there’s no reason to believe he won’t again in 2021.

Alldrick, FanShare Sports: Charley Hoffman (+1300) — Hoffman withdrew last week when in contention with a back injury. If this was something to worry about this week he’d have withdrawn from the Farmers already. Hoffman comes into this event ranked sixth for SG/tee-to-green over the past three months and eighth in FanShare’s course-suitability ranking.

Top-10 results from The American Express: Gehman: 1 for 1 (Abraham Ancer, +320); Everyone else: 0 for 1.

Top 10 results from this season: Gehman: 5 for 15 (up 17.2 units); Powers: 1 for 15 (down 1 unit); Tour caddie: 2 for 15 (down 9.95 units); Hennessey: 1 for 15 (down 11 units); Alldrick: 0 for 14 (down 14 units); Mayo, Gdula: 0 for 15 (down 15 units each).

Gehman: Jon Rahm — Bear with me on this one, because I know most will opt to save Rahm for a major. However, if you’re willing to forgo Rahm there, this might be the best spot to use him. Look at the composition at the top of this field. There are certainly big questions surrounding the other top players (McIlroy, Schauffele and Finau). Rahm is not only the betting favorite but has dominated this event in the past. In four trips, his worst finish is T-29 and he has a T-5, runner-up and victory during that stretch. It would be a contrarian play to use him here, but I believe it to be worth consideration.

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. Sentry TOC: Patrick Reed. Sony: Abraham Ancer. AMEX: Patrick Cantlay.

Hennessey: Sungjae Im — I was closing to using Finau here, but A) I don’t like agreeing with the peanut brain below me and B) I’ll use him next week in Phoenix. We know Sungjae plays tough courses well—having won the 2020 Honda. And like Augusta, you need to be comfortable hitting a cut off the tee, which Sungjae is. I like Sungjae finishing top 10 here—and I doubt many people will take him this week with a stacked field and a disappointing weekend at the AMEX.

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. Sentry TOC: Justin Thomas. Sony: Ryan Palmer. AMEX: Scottie Scheffler.

Powers: Tony Finau — He may not win, but top fives and top 10s are damn good in One and Done, too. He has never missed a cut at Torrey, and his past five starts here have gone a little something like this: 18th-fourth-sixth-13th-sixth.

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. Sony: Zach Johnson. AMEX: Matthew Wolff.

Courtesy of Rick Gehman of RickRunGood.com:

0.83 The average strokes gained/putting by Cameron Smith on Poa annua greens. That’s the best mark on the surface by any golfer in the field (minimum 20 rounds).

1.91 — The average SG/tee to green for Will Zalatoris. That’s by far the best mark in the field with that caveat that Zalatoris has only 10 measured rounds.

368 — Days since Xander Schauffele’s last missed cut, anywhere in the world. It was this event, last year.

2.721 — The scoring difference between the North Course (70.573) and the South Course (73.294) through 36 holes last year.

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.

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