Are Tiger’s Honda Classic Betting Odds Worth a Wager?

By Alex Kilpatrick in Golf
Updated: April 22, 2020 at 12:01 pm EDTPublished:

- Tiger has confirmed that he will play in this weekend’s Honda Classic.Â
- His odds to win are more reasonable than they’ve been all year.
- Are the sportsbooks still overrating his chances, nonetheless?Â
Tiger Woods only confirmed last week that he’ll play in the 2018 Honda Classic (February 22nd-25th), presumably encouraged by how he’s holding up to PGA Tour play, physically. Usually, a Tiger-is-going-to-play announcement comes complete with ludicrously short odds at your local online betting site. But at the Honda, he’s more reasonably handicapped than he’s been since he started his comeback.
Honda Classic Betting Favorites
Player | Odds |
---|---|
Rickie Fowler | +800 |
Rory McIlroy | +1000 |
Justin Thomas | +1000 |
Sergio Garcia | +1600 |
Alex Noren | +3000 |
Adam Scott | +5000 |
Webb Simpson | +5000 |
Brandt Snedeker | +5000 |
Tiger Woods | +5000 |
Graeme McDowell | +6600 |
JB Holmes | +8000 |
Ian Poulter | +8000 |
Tiger’s played in this tournament before, going back as far as 1993. Back then, the tournament was held at Weston Hill G&C. Since 2007, the tournament has called the Champions Course at the PGA National Golf Club home, and Tiger has competed three times. His best result came in 2012, when he finished second overall, and obviously since then he’s struggled in a very general way.
If I described a hypothetical player to you, say one with two finishes this year and coming off a missed cut, you wouldn’t put that player at +5000. You would put him longer, not much longer, but definitely longer. The more Tiger plays, the more the betting market adapts to the reality of the player he is today, as opposed to the player he was at some point in the past.

Defending champion Rickie Fowler is listed at +800, which is pretty standard odds for the favorite. He’s been playing well enough in the 2018 season, although the closest he’s been to a win was his runner-up at Mayakoba, which was actually before the New Year. These odds are a little short for a player who has recorded just four wins since turning pro in 2009. We all remember how long it took for Fowler to get up over that hump, and there’s probably a reason he doesn’t make it often.
[I]s Tiger overrated? … [I]f so, only slightly.
Rory McIlroy (+1000) is also a past winner, and has been playing a lot recently. He’s not entirely on form — he finished just T20 in last week’s Genesis Open. He’s encouraged by the result, though, and says that it doesn’t quite reflect his quality of play. That would be great to know if he wasn’t already listed so short, but that’s golf betting.
Alex Noren (+3000) is on a run of form and is still listed pretty long. He finished T16 at the Genesis Open, T21 at the Phoenix Open, and made the playoff at the Farmers Insurance Open. The 35-year-old Swede is blooming late and becoming one of the most consistent names on tour, and at a price that’s reasonable.
So is Tiger overrated? Maybe, but if so, only slightly. He’s listed at the same odds as Webb Simpson, who similarly hasn’t delivered on his promise since 2012. There’s a bulk of players at +6600 that Tiger would fit in beautifully with, and the way the odds sheet is formatted, it looks like Tiger used to be a part of that group, but now they’ve got him up at +5000. Shame.
Betting Advice
Again, you’re going to want to take a flyer; the favorites haven’t been performing well enough recently to warrant their lines. I still really like Alex Noren, mostly because he came so close to delivering a huge payout earlier this year and an unknown quantity on the rise is always fun.
If you’ve been itching … to bet your money on Tiger Woods, this is the first week that I won’t call you crazy for doing it.
If you’ve been itching, just itching, to bet your money on Tiger Woods, this is the first week that I won’t call you crazy for doing it. At +5000, it’s hard to be a bad bet.

Golf, Tennis & College Football Writer; Jr. Editor
Alex studied political science in university but spent most of that time watching college football. He covered sports betting for SBD from 2017-2019. Avid tennis player, golf nut, and motorsports nerd.