2010 RBC Canadian Open Odds: Paul Casey the Betting Favorite
Paul Casey is the top PGA Tour betting choice at online sportsbooks to win in this weekend's RBC Canadian Open odds with a price of 16-1. The trio of Sean O'Hair, Luke Donald, and Retief Goosen were the next choices at 18-1. That was followed up with Tim Clark, Matt Kuchar and Camilo Villegas at 25-1. The RBC Canadian Open golf odds will tee-off on Thursday morning and has a total purse of $5.1 million with a total of 500 FedExCup points on the line. Nathan Green is the defending champion. The tournament will take place at St. George's Golf and Country Club at Etobicoke, Ontario and can be seen on the Golf Channel or CBS.
Heading into 2010 RBC Canadian Open golf odds as the favorite, Casey has climbed to 8th on the Official World Golf Ranking as has made the cut in 8 out of 10 tournaments this year with a best finish of 2nd in the World Golf Championships-Accenture Match Play Championship. He was 3rd in last week's British Open. Casey hails from England although he attended Arizona State University. With the fall of Tiger Woods both in the esteem of the public and on the golf course, PGA Tour betting is again a wide open field that makes for an exciting handicapping challenge.
A new winner and name seems to emerge each week on the tour to keep it fresh and unpredictable. The days of Tiger Woods mailing it in and easy payoffs for golf bettors willing to make the overlay are over. "The last 10 years we've been in the Tiger era," said Casey this week. "He's been phenomenal. It's taken away a lot of opportunities for a lot of guys. But he's not playing the golf he wants to play and we're getting better." Woods will not be in the Canadian Open this weekend nor will his rival Phil Mickelson.
Heading into 2010 RBC Canadian Open golf odds as the favorite, Casey has climbed to 8th on the Official World Golf Ranking as has made the cut in 8 out of 10 tournaments this year with a best finish of 2nd in the World Golf Championships-Accenture Match Play Championship. He was 3rd in last week's British Open. Casey hails from England although he attended Arizona State University. With the fall of Tiger Woods both in the esteem of the public and on the golf course, PGA Tour betting is again a wide open field that makes for an exciting handicapping challenge.
A new winner and name seems to emerge each week on the tour to keep it fresh and unpredictable. The days of Tiger Woods mailing it in and easy payoffs for golf bettors willing to make the overlay are over. "The last 10 years we've been in the Tiger era," said Casey this week. "He's been phenomenal. It's taken away a lot of opportunities for a lot of guys. But he's not playing the golf he wants to play and we're getting better." Woods will not be in the Canadian Open this weekend nor will his rival Phil Mickelson.
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