The Northern Trust (formerly The Barclays tournament) began in 1967 as the Westchester Classic and was played at the Westchester Country Club in Rye, New York. In 2008 the Tournament left the Westchester Country Club and was rotated amongst different clubs mainly in the New York / New Jersey metropolitan area.

The Northern Trust is played in August to lead off the FedEx Cup Playoffs. The Top 125 players qualify for The Northern Trust based on FedEx Cup points amassed during the regular PGA Tour season.


As of last year, the FedEx Cup Playoffs were reduced from four events to three. The Playoffs feature a progressive cut, with fields of 125 for The Northern Trust, 70 for the BMW Championship and 30 for the Tour Championship.

As the Northern Trust begins play on Thursday, August 20th, see odds and best outright, top-10 and top-20 longshot bets and sleeper picks. 2020 Northern Trust: Data scientist reveals picks to win, prop bets, matchup plays Golf handicapper Rick Gehman, who nailed Patrick Reed winning last year's Northern Trust at 40-1, gives his best bets for this week's FedEx Cup playoff opener at TPC Boston. Reed is the event’s defending champion and has won The Northern Trust two of the last four years. “Reed has good experience on this course and is playing some good golf,” Sherman said. The Northern Trust Viktor Hovland +250 Easy prop to get on board with here considering Hovland's an outright selection as well, as the young Norwegian is actually the favorite at that price just ahead of his former teammate Matthew Wolff (+300).

The Northern Trust will cut the field to low 70 and ties after 36 holes, while the BMW Championship and Tour Championship are no-cut events.

The first two Playoff events award 2,000 points to the winner (quadruple points of regular season events), while the Tour Championship, features a strokes-based system called the FedEx Cup Starting Strokes.

The FedEx Cup points leader after the first two Playoff events will begin the Tour Championship at -10, the No. 2 player will start at -8, the No. 3 player at -7 under, the No. 4 player at -6 and the No. 5 player at -5. Players 6-10 start at -4, players 11-15 start at -3, players 16-20 start at -2 under, players 21-25 start at -1 and players 26-30 start at even par.

The player with the lowest aggregate score over 72 holes when combined with his FedEx Cup Starting Strokes will win the Tour Championship and also be crowned FedEx Cup Champion.

This year, TPC Boston in Norton, Massachusetts serves as host for the Northern Trust. The course played host to the Dell Technologies Championship (fka Deutsche Bank Championship) in the post season playoffs from 2007 to 2018.

TPC Boston is a 7,216 yard Par 71 and was originally designed by Arnold Palmer. In 2007 Gil Hanse redesigned the course with PGA Tour player Brad Faxon serving as player consultant. It is a long but easy layout with several doglegs and fast greens that are larger than the Tour average.

TPC Boston in its previous billing was one of the easier tracks of the post season playoffs. The average winning score in the Dell Technologies Championship between 2007 and 2018 was -18 (268). This means it is not a catch-up course and players will need to be quick off the mark. Henrik Stenson finished on -22 (262) when he won here in the 2013 Deutsche Bank Championship.

Players will have to hit the ground running so a good place to start is Birdie Average. With a premium on scoring, Par 5 Performance will also be important on the gettable Par 5’s. A player’s iron-play will also need to be dialled in and hitting a high percentage of greens in regulation an absolute must.


With large greens it will be important to find the right target on the green. In this regard Proximity to Hole will also be an important stat to consider in trying to find an identikit winner.

As you would expect from the FedEx Cup Playoffs this is a top-class field with a wealth of talent. Those in tune with distance and accuracy who sink their fair share of putts should thrive.

This is one those weeks to approach with caution. With such a strong field playing on a relatively easy track it is hard to separate a likely winner from the pack.

Northern Trust Betting Tips

Paul Casey 40/1 (E/W) – best result in the recent past at the Northern Trust is a solo 5th in 2017 when played at the Glen Oaks Club. His past history at TPC Boston is noteworthy, finishing solo 2nd in the 2016 edition of the Deutsche Bank Championship and T4 a year later in the Dell Technologies Championship. The Englishman’s game is in a good place at the moment underlined by his T2 finish in the PGA Championship. Features just inside the Top 30 in this week’s Stats Analysis, he is 6th on Tour for Strokes Gained Approach-The-Green and 12th for GIR. Not short on confidence, this week sets up perfectly for his aggressive play. Just needs to see a few putts drop early to get the juices flowing.

Doc Redman 125/1 (E/W) – first look at both the FedEx Cup Playoffs and TPC Boston for the 22 year old from North Carolina. Followed up a T29 in the PGA Championship with a T3 in last week’s Wyndham Championship which included a career low 63 in Round 3 (also shot a 63 a few weeks back in the Travelers Championship). Topped the pile last week in Strokes Gained Tee-To-Green, he also racked up 21 Birdies and squared only 3 Bogeys. Places just outside the Top 10 in this week’s Stats Analysis which is testament to the strength of his all-round game. Arriving hot to TPC Boston he won’t be phased by the exalted company that comes with the end of season playoffs. Recent form and skill set make a him hard to ignore at those odds.

  • August 18, 2020
  • By Matt Blunt
  • VegasInsider.com

Weekly PGA
Picks & Predictions


The first week of the playoffs gets going on the PGA Tour this week, as the Top 125 players in the Fed Ex Cup points race have a tee time at TPC Boston if they wanted it. From here it's a race to get inside that Top 70 so that a tee time with one's name on it exists next week.

That's the immediate goal for everyone in this field, although winning the Northern Trust does go quite a long way in making sure a trip to Atlanta for the Tour Championship in two weeks is available as well.

TPC Boston makes it's return to hosting a playoff event after a year hiatus, and it's a course that does generally cater to the longer hitters. The 18th hole is a getable Par-5 that can provide plenty of drama late on the weekend and will probably create some big swings in scorecards this week.

Taking advantage of all three of the Par 5's this course offers is going to be key to whomever ends up on top, but keeping the ball in the short grass as much as possible on all 18 holes is going to be the overall key.

Northern

Winning scores here generally come in the -15 to -20 range, so guys better be able to avoid those big numbers if they want to find their names in contention, and scrambling around the greens to keep those strong rounds going could end up being what separates some from the back.

But as always, getting hot with the putter is something the winner will ultimately do on a track like this were numerous guys will be going low.

PGA Tour Betting Resources
2020 The Northern Trust

  • Tour: PGA, FedEx Cup Playoff Odds
  • Date: Thursday, Aug. 20, 2020 to Sunday, Aug. 23, 2020
  • Venue: TPC Boston
  • Location: Norton, Massachusetts
  • Par-Yardage: 71, 7,342 yards
  • TV: Golf Channel, CBS

The last time TPC Boston held a playoff event back in 2018, it was Bryson DeChambeau (+1100) who came away as the winner, his second straight playoff win at the time.

Even with two wins in the first two events of the Fed Ex Cup playoffs that year, DeChambeau failed to end up as the Tour Champion in the end, something that he still discusses from time to time today.

Best Bets For The Northern Trust

Given DeChambeau's recent changes to his body and game the past few months, he's become quite the polarizing figure to some, but he enters this week's event as the favorite.

The Northern Trust
Betting Odds

  • Bryson DeChambeau: +1200
  • Justin Thomas: +1400
  • Rory McIlroy: +1400
  • Jon Rahm: +1600
  • Dustin Johnson: +2000
  • Xander Schauffele: +2000
  • Collin Morikawa: +2200
  • Jason Day: +2500
  • Patrick Reed: +2800
  • Patrick Cantlay: +3000
  • (Odds Subject to Change)
Best bets for the northern trust

Behind him is a whole list of talented names as you would expect in a prestigious event like this, with Justin Thomas (+1300),Rory McIlroy (+1500), Jon Rahm (+1500), Jason Day (+2000), and Xander Schauffele (+2000) rounding out the guys at 20/1 odds or lower.

It's not hard to make a case for any of those guys, although McIlroy has yet to really show his best stuff since returning from the stoppage and if there was one name that may not deserve a ringing endorsement this week, it would be him.

It's one of those names that tees off this week's selections though, so let's get right to it:

Golfers to Watch - TPC Boston
Top Picks and Predictions

Contender to Back
The Northern Trust

Jon Rahm +1500

Rahm finished 4th here in his first look at this course back in 2017, and his overall length does put him in that group of guys that should have an advantage over a good chunk of the field this week in that regard.

Advertisement

Two Top-13 finishes – including a win – in his last three starts shows that the form is there, and if it's not going to be a Major victory (as of yet) that is Rahm's highlight in his trophy case, a Fed Ex Cup playoff event is the next best thing.

Best Bets Northern Trust

Rahm has consistently been gaining strokes on the field in basically every category over the past few weeks, while the only times he's not it's very minimal overall. He was +2.59 SG Total at the PGA Championship a couple of weeks back, and if it weren't for a putter that couldn't find the range, he might have that first Major win already.

But as I mentioned earlier, there are strong cases to be made for all the names at the top, but Rahm is the name for me this week in that range.

Mid-Range Value
The Northern Trust

Tyrrell Hatton +5500

Hatton has done some phenomenal work in just eight official PGA starts this year, including one win at the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

He' s a name that I not only like this week, but one as a longer shot to win that $15 million prize a few weeks from now, and a victory this week would go a long way in obtaining that prize.

Nearly all aspects of Hatton's game have been working quite well since the restart, although an abnormally bad putting week for him at the PGA Championship made it a short week for the Englishman. It's the accuracy and approach game that will determine whether or not Hatton becomes a contender on the weekend, and a 12th place finish at this venue back in 2018 suggests to me that he'll find a way to bring his best stuff this week.

Mid-Range Value #2
The Northern Trust

Viktor Hovland +5500

Not looking to go searching for diamonds in the rough way down the odds board this week – although if I were forced to, Brendon Todd (+11000) and Emiliano Grillo (+17500) would be the names I'd consider. But it's Hovland at the same price point as Hatton that I've settled on simply because his accuracy and ball striking is quickly approaching the “second to none” category on the PGA Tour these days.

This will be Hovland's maiden voyage at TPC Boston so I do wish the price was a little higher with that being the case, but with a win on Tour already this season and the phenomenal success off his young colleagues like Morikawa, Wolff and others likely have made the oddsmakers somewhat guarded in pricing these guys now.

All this young Norwegian does is stripe the ball though and if you give yourself enough quality birdie looks at this track, there is a good chance the majority of them will start to fall.

Putting is the weak link in Hovland's game right now, so that is always going to be a concern, but he did find a way to gain 1.2 strokes on the field with the flatstick at the PGA Championship while the rest of his game wasn't up to his usual standard.

If he's able to put it all together this week, I do think he'll be there in contention late.

Props to Watch - TPC Boston

72 Hole Matchup to Take
The Northern Trust

72 Hole Matchup: Jason Day (-106) over Collin Morikawa

This is nothing more than a situational play for me here as after the entire golf betting market had Morikawa to win the PGA, everyone, including Morikawa himself took it easy last week to bask in his glory.

But even with a week off, fading a young 23-year old golfer off a monumental win for his career is always something to keep in the back of your mind, especially when he – like Hovland unfortunately – is making his maiden voyage at this golf course.

Compare that to the nine straight years Jason Day has teed it up here from 2010-18, where Day has one missed cut (2018) and six Top-15 finishes on his resume. You've also got an outright situation where Day is five points better for the outright win (+2000) compared to Morikawa's +2500, and yet Morikawa is the favorite in the head-to-head tilt?

Northern Trust Best Bets

Off the highest of highs for one of the future faces of the Tour, I just don't see that making sense for Morikawa this week, and I'll take the grizzled vet in Day this week.

Top Former Oklahoma State Player
The Northern Trust

Viktor Hovland +250

Easy prop to get on board with here considering Hovland's an outright selection as well, as the young Norwegian is actually the favorite at that price just ahead of his former teammate Matthew Wolff (+300).

The fact that Rickie Fowler is behind both of them at +350 tells you where the state of Rickie's inconsistent game currently is, and even though Fowler does have the experience edge over those two at TPC Boston, and did win here in 2015, the fact that Fowler's got four missed cuts and three Top 22 finishes in his last seven starts suggests that he just can't find any consistency in his game right now and clearly the oddmakers agree.

How to Bet on Golf

Golf betting has gained much more exposure and interest in the past few years, and with plenty of plus-money prices littered throughout the various forms of golf wagers, the chance for bigger scores is part of the reason behind that increased popularity.

Sportsbooks ensure that there are no shortage of wagering options on golf tournaments every week, and it isn't all about picking the winner. Grabbing the outright winner of a golf tournament is the best way to get that 'big score' but it's also the hardest wager to cash. After all, a typical professional golf tournament has a field of 140+ different players to consider.

Understanding Golf Odds and Bets

Most golf odds are listed in the fractional format – 10/1 on Dustin Johnson for example – and in that particular case you would multiply the amount bet by that first number to project your winnings. So a $100 bet on DJ to win that particular event would win you $1000.

If you are more comfortable with the American version of odds listings that you typically see across the other major North American sports – ie +1000 – these numbers are easily convertible. Online and app based books may already have that option built in, but the easiest way to do it yourself is to add two zeros to the first number in the fraction. So a 10/1 price on DJ converts to +1000 in that format.