Where Can I Bet on Sergio Garcia to Win The Players Championship 2017? Find Odds

Written by:
Guest
Published on:
May/08/2017

You can bet on Sergio Garcia to win this year’s Players Championship at MyBookie.

Bet on Sports-Join MyBookie.ag today!

Across the board, Garcia was being listed on average with a payout potential of 18-1 or US$180 for each US$10 bet.

Career

Turned professional   1999

Current tour(s)      European Tour (joined 1999)

PGA Tour (joined 1999)

Professional wins       31

Number of wins by tour

PGA Tour 10

European Tour      13

Asian Tour      5

Other   5

Best results in major championships

(wins: 1)

Masters Tournament Won: 2017

U.S. Open      T3: 2005

The Open Championship      2nd/T2: 2007, 2014

PGA Championship      2nd/T2: 1999, 2008

Garcia won the Masters this year and is ready to take a crack at the Players Championship.

"It's going to be amazing. It's one of the things I'm most looking forward to," Garcia said. "I think that everyone knows how much I love The Players Championship, how well I've done there. How much it means to me. To be there as Masters champion, it's going to be extra special."

All Players Championship 2017 Betting Odds

Dustin Johnson 7 (pays US$70 on a US$10 bet)

Rory McIlroy 11 (pays US$110 on a US$10 bet)      

Jordan Spieth 12

Sergio Garcia 18

Jason Day 20            

Rickie Fowler 20 

Jon Rahm 22

Hideki Matsuyama 25

Justin Rose 25   

Justin Thomas 28

Henrik Stenson 33    

Adam Scott 33

Brooks Koepka 40            

Paul Casey 45           

Kevin Kisner 50

Phil Mickelson 50   

All Live Odds Here  

- Don Shapiro, Gambling911.com

Sports News

Iowa State: Are They The Underdogs To Look For In March Madness?

Iowa State: Are They The Underdogs To Look For In March Madness?

They may be defined as “underdogs” or “Cinderella teams”, a term that is usually saved for teams that have little to no chance of winning even a single game during the NCAA Tournament. Teams like Loyola Marymount (1990), George Mason (2006), Davidson (2008), VCU (2011), UConn (2014), and Loyola Chicago (2018) come to mind when conversations turn toward the most surprising tournament runs in recent memory. 

Syndicate