19th Hole
Vincenzi’s 2024 Mexico Open at Vidanta betting preview: Birdie machine ready to notch first PGA Tour title
Mexico Open at Vidanta! For the third consecutive year, the PGA TOUR heads to beautiful Puerto Vallarta to play the Mexico Open.
The Greg Norman-designed Vidanta Vallarta is a par-71 measuring 7,456 yards. Prior to its inaugural event, the course was extended by over 250 yards to make it PGA TOUR ready, and there were nine new tee boxes and 106 new bunkers added to stiffen the test for the best players in the world.
The course features three par 5s. Also, the par-4 seventh will be drivable for the longer hitters, but the golfers will have to risk taking on some water if they want to go for it.
The field this week will consist of 132 players. Some notable players in the field include Tony Finau, Will Zalatoris, Keith Mitchell, Emiliano Grillo, Taylor Pendrith and Thorbjorn Olesen.
Past Winners at Vidanta Villarta
- 2023: Tony Finau (-24)
- 2022: Jon Rahm (-17)
5 Key Stats For Vidanta Villarta
In this article and going forward, I’ll be using the Rabbit Hole by Betsperts Golf data engine to develop my custom model. If you want to build your own model or check out all of the detailed stats, you can sign up using promo code: MATTVIN for 25% off any subscription package (yearly is best value).
Let’s take a look at five key metrics for Vidanta Vallarta to determine which golfers boast top marks in each category over their past 24 rounds.
1. Driving Distance
At almost 7,500 yards, Vidanta Villarta is a long par 71. The rough shouldn’t be much of a factor this week, which gives the advantage to the long hitters in the field.
Average Driving Distance Over Past 24 Rounds
- Alejandro Tosti (+311.2)
- Sam Stevens (+310.4)
- Cameron Champ (+308.1)
- Patrick Rodgers (+305.1)
- Vincent Norrman (+304.7)
2. Strokes Gained: Ball Striking
With the course playing long and greens likely being receptive, elite ball strikers should have an advantage more so than a good short game and strong putting.
Strokes Gained: Ball Striking Over Past 24 Rounds
- Jhonnatan Vegas (+1.10)
- Erik Van Rooyen (+.95)
- Taylor Pendrith (+.86)
- Tony Finau (+.81)
- Doug Ghim (+.74)
3. Course History
The first two editions of the event have produced plenty of leaderboard similarity. I’m looking to target players who like the golf course.
Course History over past 8 rounds:
- Tony Finau (+4.05)
- Brandon Wu (+3.43)
- Davis Riley (+2.94)
- Cameron Champ (+2.55)
- Patrick Rodgers (+2.41)
4. Strokes Gained: Total in Weak Fields with Easy Scoring Conditions
Last year, the course played extremely easy, and this is one of the weakest fields we will see this year on the PGA Tour.
SG: TOT Total in Weak Fields with Easy Scoring Conditions Past 24 Rounds
- Erik Van Rooyen (+1.84)
- Mackenzie Hughes (+1.69)
- S.H. Kim (+1.43)
- Michael Kim (+1.43)
- Tyler Duncan (+1.26)
5. Strokes Gained: Total in Caribbean
I’m not exactly sure if this part of Mexico would be considered “Caribbean”, but this statistic brings in all rounds from Corales, the Puerto Rico Open, and the Bermuda Championship, which all have close leaderboard correlation to the Mexico Open. This also brings in courses that feature Paspalum greens.
Strokes Gained: Total in Caribbean over past 24 Rounds
- Mackenzie Hughes (+3.14)
- Tony Finau (+2.73)
- Nicolai Hojgaard (+2.40)
- James Hahn (+2.35)
- Chad Ramey (+2.05)
The Mexico Open at Vidanta Model Rankings
Below, I’ve compiled overall model rankings using a combination of the five key statistical categories previously discussed — Driving Distance (22%), SG: Ball Striking (28%), SG: Paspalum (16%), SG: Total in Weak Fields with Easy Scoring Conditions (16%) and Strokes Gained: Total in Caribbean (16%)
- Taylor Pendrith
- Erik Van Rooyen
- Carl Yuan
- Stephan Jaeger
- Mark Hubbard
- Matti Schmid
- Cameron Champ
- Vincent Whaley
- Ryan Moore
- Michael Kim
Mexico Open Picks
(All listed odds are at the time of writing)
Stephan Jaeger +2800 (BetMGM)
Despite not yet winning an event, Stephan Jaeger has been one of the most prolific birdie makers on the PGA Tour. In the field this season, he ranks 5th in the field in Birdie or Better percentage. 13th in Strokes Gained: Ball Striking and 27th in Driving Distance.
Jaeger has had a tough time closing events while in contention, but his recent T3 finish at the Farmers Insurance Open in a strong field should have helped him build the necessary scar tissue it takes to win on the PGA Tour. He shot a final round 72 at Torrey Pines, which wasn’t a horrible result, but left him two shots behind eventual champion Mathieu Pavon.
In his two starts at the course, Jaeger has finished 15th and 18th. At this point in his career, he’s one of the most talented players in the field and should have what it takes to earn his first PGA Tour victory.
Keith Mitchell +3500 (DraftKings)
Keith Mitchell took last week off after a strong start to his 2024 campaign. He finished in a tie for 9th at the American Express in January and in a tie for 17th in his most recent start at the Waste Management Phoenix Open. Over his past 24 rounds, Mitchell ranks 12th in Strokes Gained: Ball Striking and 21st in Driving Distance in the field.
When betting on events that feature Paspalum greens, I always look to target players who’ve had some success on the surface before, as it is quite unique. Mitchell hasn’t played in a great deal of those events over the past few seasons but does have a 2nd place finish at the Corales Puntacana Championship in 2018, which is a strong signal that he likes the surface and can take advantage of a weak field.
On a golf course where great drivers of the golf ball have a significant advantage, I’ll happily take a shot on Mitchell who’s gained strokes off the tee in every one of his starts this season.
Taylor Pendrith +3500 (DraftKings)
Over the past few seasons, Taylor Pendrith has been fantastic in the weaker field events on coastal tracks. In the fall, he finished 8th at the Butterfield Bermuda Championship and was 10th a few months ago at the Sony Open in Hawaii. In his past 24 rounds, the Canadian ranks 6th in Strokes Gained: Total in events that have easy scoring conditions and weak fields and 4th in Strokes Gained: Total in the Caribbean.
Vidanta Vallarta is a course where bombers thrive and Pendrith is one of the longer hitters on the PGA Tour. He ranks 19th in the field in Driving Distance as well as 4th in Strokes Gained: Ball Striking in his past 24 rounds. He also ranks 2ndin the field in Birdie or Better percentage.
In addition to the obvious course fit, Pendrith is starting to play some good golf of late. He finished 9th at Torrey Pines a few weeks ago and has two top 10’s in his last three starts. With fellow Canadian Nick Taylor winning in Phoenix, the 32-year-old will be motivated to get in the winner’s circle in a year where the Presidents Cup will be played in Canada.
Cameron Champ +6500 (FanDuel)
Cameron Champ has become one of my favorite players to bet in the outright market over the years due to his volatility. In most circumstances, volatility is a bad thing in the gambling world, but in outright betting, it’s a trait that I target. Champ finishes at the bottom of the leaderboard far more often than he finishes at the top, but he wins golf tournaments at a much higher clip than his odds indicate.
One of the courses on Tour that Champ fits the most is Vidanta Vallarta. The 28-year-old absolutely pummels the ball and the course is set up for players who can get it out there off the tee. He ranks 4th in Driving Distance in the field and also ranks 3rd in Strokes Gained: Total for the first two editions of the Mexico Open at Vidanta.
By any metric, Champ is a poor putter on just about every surface, with one notable exception: Paspalum. He gains an average of .4 strokes per event on Paspalum as opposed to losing roughly .3 strokes on other surfaces.
Many will be concerned with Champ’s horrible start to 2024 where he’s missed the cut in all four of his starts. However, last season, Champ missed the cut in eight straight events prior to finishing 8th at the Mexico Open.
Close your eyes and bet it. Embrace the volatility.
Jhonnatan Vegas +8000 (BetRivers)
Jhonnatan Vegas is one of my favorite players to bet on and I’m ecstatic to find a spot on the schedule that should suit the Venezuelan remarkably.
After an injury hiatus, Vegas is back playing consistent golf and has shown some flashes of his ceiling in his most recent start. At the Waste management Phoenix Open, the two-time Olympian finished 22nd and gained 7.2 two strokes ball striking comprised of 3.8 strokes off the tee and 3.2 on approach.
Coastal Paspalum is a surface Vegas has thrived at over the years. The 39-year-old has finishes 2nd (2021 Puerto Rico Open) and 4th (2022 Corales Puntacana) on Paspalum and should be extremely comfortable with the putter this week.
In his past 24 rounds, Vegas ranks 2nd in Strokes Gained: Ball Striking in the field and 22nd in Driving Distance. The big man will be letting it rip off the tee in Mexico this week.
Harry Hall +130000 (BetRivers)
Harry Hall has absolutely feasted on Paspalum greens over the course of his PGA Tour career. The Englishman absolutely loves playing on the coast and a good deal of his best finishes have come on this surface, including the 2023 Puerto Rico Open (7th), the 2023 Mexico Open (10th) 2023 Corales (13th), and the 2022 Great Exuma (19th).
Hall finished 10th at the event last year and arrives after a solid tied for 41st finish at the Waste Management Phoenix Open. We’ve seen longshots win this season with a hot putter and Hall is one of the best putters in the field.
Adrien Dumont De Chassart +20000 (FanDuel)
Adrien Dumont De Chassart is a young up-and-coming player I’ve committed to betting early in the 2024 season. That approach will certainly come with ebbs and flows but in the end, I am betting on the talent of the 23-year-old.
The Belgian possesses arguably the most desired trait in order to contend this week in Mexico: At his best, he’s an elite talent off the tee. ADDC gained 4.0 strokes off the tee in his last start at the Waste Management Phoenix Open and should be able to let his drive loose at Vidanta Vallarta this week.
De Chassart is a proven winner on the Korn Ferry Tour and has the upside to take advantage of a weaker field this week in Mexico.
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19th Hole
‘My chill here was zero’ – The comment from Genesis winner Hideki Matsuyama that left Amanda Balionis Renner stunned
On Sunday at Riviera, Hideki Matsuyama shot one of the most impressive rounds in the history of the event.
The Japanese star was six shots back of Patrick Cantlay to begin his final round with a handful of very good players ahead of him as well. Matsuyama went on to shoot 62 and won the event by an unthinkable three shots. During the round, Hideki made a few incredible shots including a dart on the par 4th 15th to less than a foot.
HIDEKI NEARLY EAGLES 15? pic.twitter.com/jzTFV8wrS1
— GOLF.com (@GOLF_com) February 18, 2024
After the round, Matsuyama spoke to Golf on CBS’ Amanda Renner via a translator about the round. Inexplicably, the 2021 Masters Champion said he felt like three over par on the day.
Hideki says he feels like he shot 3 over par today ? @thegenesisinv pic.twitter.com/8Q3cdePqcc
— Golf on CBS ? (@GolfonCBS) February 19, 2024
Renner seemed shock by the comment and took to X later to share her thoughts.
My chill here was… zero. https://t.co/zBfh8n51BU
— Amanda Balionis Renner (@Amanda_Balionis) February 19, 2024
“My chill here was… zero,” she said.
Hideki is truly one of a kind!
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- Brandel Chamblee outlines what his tough road back to PGA Tour would look like for LIV pros
- Cam Smith: Joining LIV Golf one of the best decisions I’ve ever made
- Phil Mickelson makes career hole-in-one claim that far exceeds Tiger Woods’ total
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19th Hole
The startling difference in yardage books from today compared to 40 years ago
Four time European Tour winner, Ken Brown, is in Kenya this week for the first time since he won the event 40 years ago. The DP World Tour X account shared a post where Brown details how much the yardage books have evolved in that time frame.
40 years since @KenBrownGolf won in Kenya, he compares his 1984 yardage book to the one the players will use this week ?#MKO2024 pic.twitter.com/5EvvG9QG7a
— DP World Tour (@DPWorldTour) February 19, 2024
Brown says jokingly that “what you had for breakfast” is in today’s books and adds “It’s got how far every single yardage is from all the different spots, it’s fantastic.”
“This is a massive, massive improvement. It saves you a lot of work because we used to have to try and do this whilst we were having a practice round.”
Brown said that players used to get together after rounds to compare notes about the course.
“A lot of us used to get together at the end of the day and say, ‘What did you get from that spot?’”
Yardage books have certainly made preparation for tournaments much easier for current professionals.
More from the 19th Hole
- Brandel Chamblee outlines what his tough road back to PGA Tour would look like for LIV pros
- Cam Smith: Joining LIV Golf one of the best decisions I’ve ever made
- Phil Mickelson makes career hole-in-one claim that far exceeds Tiger Woods’ total
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19th Hole
PGA Tour pro provides ‘the lowest hanging fruit’ for golfers to lower their handicap
Michael Kim, who’s been extremely active on social media over the past year or so, once again took to X to give some tips for lowering your handicap.
According to Kim, the “lowest hanging fruit” to lower your handicap is adding distance.
My avg ball speed my rookie yr was 162 and max was 170. Now my avg is 172 and max is 180-182. With enough training and diligence, you can absolutely get longer, and not just 5 or 6 yards, 20-30 yards like I have. Distance is the lowest hanging fruit to lower ur handicap pic.twitter.com/Av9tGzsd6E
— Michael S. Kim (@Mike_kim714) February 16, 2024
Some questions about what it’d be like with my rookie yr driver. It’s a common misconception but driver limits on CENTER hits have been on the edge for a while now. It’s the off center hits that have been the biggest difference. If I were to take my old driver and go all out, I’d…
— Michael S. Kim (@Mike_kim714) February 16, 2024
Kim then referred back to his previous post from back in October, which went in depth about how he added speed and distance to his own game.
Yesterday, I mentioned that I have gained 20 yards since I turned pro and some followers asked me how I did it. There are lots of things that went into it and here’s a somewhat detailed ?
? goes Strength-Speed-Technique-Technology
Feel free to skip to the one you want pic.twitter.com/JmoFtGpBCL— Michael S. Kim (@Mike_kim714) October 3, 2023
First is strength. Pretty easy concept. I worked out much harder, and got stronger. My college coach, who was great in many many aspects, didn’t like us working out. Old school ?????. Max homa, Pace Johnson and I would sneak out to the regular student gym to workout lol.
Once I…— Michael S. Kim (@Mike_kim714) October 3, 2023
Speed
Just gaining strength has no guarantee on increasing driver distance. More strength does not always correlate to more speed. I’m fact more often it does not. The workouts make sure you have the potential and the muscles to do it safely without hurting yourself.In order…
— Michael S. Kim (@Mike_kim714) October 3, 2023
Technique. Here are some pictures of my swing previously and now.
Some of you know how much I love hipturn and why I give that advice to so many amateurs. It’s a must for 90% of golfers imo. Watch my pinned video and thread on my profile if you haven’t already. You can see the… pic.twitter.com/QdLeFu6KBL
— Michael S. Kim (@Mike_kim714) October 3, 2023
Technology: Obviously, technology has improved since I have turned pro. But from my experience, the good and really solid hits haven’t increased a ton, it’s the mishit that have gotten better. The drivers have been on the edge on ball speed for a while now. TrackMan had already…
— Michael S. Kim (@Mike_kim714) October 3, 2023
There you have it! If you want to lower your handicap, add distance.
More from the 19th Hole
- Brandel Chamblee outlines what his tough road back to PGA Tour would look like for LIV pros
- Cam Smith: Joining LIV Golf one of the best decisions I’ve ever made
- Phil Mickelson makes career hole-in-one claim that far exceeds Tiger Woods’ total
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