Valero Texas Open 2023 betting guide: PGA expert best bets to win in Texas and secure a Masters invite

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Sporting News/Read the Line

At the Valero Texas Open, the proof is really in the results. Six of the last 10 winners have been long shots with pre-tournament odds of +10000 (100-1) or greater. Four of the last five winners earned their first PGA TOUR win in San Antonio. And six of the last seven winners of the tournament prior to the Masters have earned an invite to the year’s first major championship of the season.

It sounds unbelievable, but it happens almost every year. I guess the only goal in golf that can compete with all of these increased purses is a trip down Magnolia Lane.

Today we will discuss the Valero Texas Open odds, tournament and course information, past trends of winners, and best bets to win the last tourney before the Masters. 

Odds courtesy DraftKings and DK Nation

Valero Texas Open 2023: Odds

Golfer Winner Top 5 Top 10
Tyrrell Hatton +1200 +320 +165
Rickie Fowler +1800 +400 +210
Si Woo Kim +2200 +450 +240
Hideki Matsuyama +2200 +500 +260
Corey Conners +2200 +500 +260
Taylor Montgomery +2500 +550 +280
Davis Riley +2500 +550 +280
Chris Kirk +2800 +600 +280
Matt Kuchar +3000 +600 +300
J.J. Spaun +3000 +650 +320
Ryan Fox +4000 +900 +400
Matt Wallace +4000 +850 +400
Brendon Todd +4000 +850 +400
Ben Griffin +4000 +850 +400
Alex Noren +4000 +800 +400
Thomas Detry +4500 +1000 +450
Nicolai Hojgaard +5000 +1000 +500
Nick Taylor +5000 +1100 +500
Cam Davis +5000 +1000 +500
Christiaan Bezuidenhout +5500 +1100 +500
Andrew Putnam +5500 +1100 +500
Aaron Rai +5500 +1100 +500
Beau Hossler +6000 +1200 +550
Adam Schenk +6000 +1200 +550
Sam Ryder +6500 +1200 +600
Taylor Pendrith +7000 +1400 +600
Nick Hardy +7000 +1400 +650
Byeong Hun An +7000 +1400 +650
Alex Smalley +7500 +1400 +650
Will Gordon +8000 +1600 +700
Trey Mullinax +8000 +1600 +750
Sam Stevens +8000 +1600 +750
Ryan Palmer +8000 +1600 +700
Robby Shelton +8000 +1600 +750
Eric Cole +8000 +1400 +700
Tyler Duncan +9000 +1600 +750
Patton Kizzire +9000 +1800 +800
Kevin Streelman +9000 +1600 +750
Garrick Higgo +9000 +1800 +800
Francesco Molinari +9000 +1800 +750
David Lingmerth +9000 +1600 +750
Brandon Wu +9000 +1800 +800
Ben Martin +9000 +1600 +750
Sepp Straka +10000 +2000 +850
S.H. Kim +10000 +1800 +800
Patrick Rodgers +10000 +1800 +850
Erik Van Rooyen +10000 +1800 +850
Emiliano Grillo +10000 +1800 +800
Austin Eckroat +10000 +2000 +900
Akshay Bhatia +10000 +1800 +850
Luke List +11000 +2200 +900
Joseph Bramlett +11000 +2200 +1000
Charley Hoffman +11000 +2200 +1000
Dylan Wu +11000 +2200 +900
Vincent Norrman +13000 +2500 +1100
Peter Malnati +13000 +2500 +1100
Lanto Griffin +13000 +2500 +1100
Hayden Buckley +13000 +2500 +1000
Harry Hall +13000 +2500 +1100
Ben Taylor +13000 +2500 +1100
Pierceson Coody +15000 +2800 +1200
Mark Hubbard +15000 +3000 +1200
Kramer Hickok +15000 +2800 +1200
Dylan Frittelli +15000 +2800 +1200
Troy Merritt +18000 +3500 +1400
Scott Piercy +18000 +3500 +1200
Padraig Harrington +18000 +3000 +1200
Nate Lashley +18000 +3000 +1200
MJ Daffue +18000 +3500 +1400
Matthias Schwab +18000 +3500 +1200
Martin Laird +18000 +3000 +1200
Lucas Glover +18000 +3500 +1400
Lee Hodges +18000 +3000 +1200
Kevin Tway +18000 +3500 +1400
Kevin Chappell +18000 +3500 +1400
Kazuki Higa +18000 +3500 +1400
Doug Ghim +18000 +3500 +1200
Cameron Champ +18000 +3500 +1400
Austin Smotherman +18000 +3500 +1200
Hank Lebioda +18000 +3500 +1400
Michael Thompson +20000 +3500 +1400
Michael Kim +20000 +3500 +1400
Matthew NeSmith +20000 +3500 +1400
Justin Lower +20000 +3500 +1400
Harry Higgs +20000 +3500 +1600
Chad Ramey +20000 +3500 +1400
Adam Long +20000 +3500 +1400
Zac Blair +25000 +4000 +1600
Stewart Cink +25000 +4000 +1600
Henrik Norlander +25000 +4000 +1600
Greyson Sigg +25000 +4000 +1600
Chesson Hadley +25000 +4000 +1600
Carl Yuan +25000 +4500 +1800
Callum Tarren +25000 +4000 +1600
Brice Garnett +25000 +4500 +1800
Brent Grant +25000 +4500 +1800
Austin Cook +25000 +4000 +1600
Augusto Nunez +25000 +4500 +1800
Ryan Armour +30000 +4500 +1800
Russell Knox +30000 +5000 +1800
Doc Redman +30000 +4500 +1800
Cole Hammer +30000 +5000 +2000
Andrew Novak +30000 +5000 +2000
Ryan Gerard +30000 +4500 +1800
Tano Goya +35000 +6000 +2200
Nico Echavarria +35000 +6000 +2200
Matti Schmid +35000 +6000 +2200
Chandler Phillips +35000 +6000 +2200
Satoshi Kodaira +35000 +6000 +2200
Zecheng Dou +40000 +7000 +2500
Ryan Moore +40000 +6500 +2200
Ricky Barnes +40000 +7000 +2800
Paul Haley II +40000 +7000 +2500
Luke Donald +40000 +7000 +2500
James Hahn +40000 +7000 +2500
Harrison Endycott +40000 +6500 +2500
Chez Reavie +40000 +7500 +2800
Carson Young +40000 +7000 +2500
Andrew Landry +40000 +7000 +2500
Trevor Werbylo +50000 +8000 +3000
Richy Werenski +50000 +9000 +3500
Michael Gligic +50000 +9000 +3500
Kevin Roy +50000 +8000 +3500
Jimmy Walker +50000 +8000 +3000
Trevor Cone +60000 +11000 +4000
Scott Harrington +60000 +10000 +4000
Jim Herman +60000 +9000 +3500
Brandon Matthews +60000 +9000 +3500
Austen Truslow +60000 +11000 +4000
Kyle Westmoreland +80000 +13000 +4500
Kelly Kraft +80000 +11000 +4000
Jason Dufner +80000 +13000 +4500
Brian Stuard +80000 +13000 +4500
Roberto Diaz +80000 +11000 +4000
Peter Lansburgh +80000 +13000 +4500
Peter Kuest +80000 +13000 +4500
Kyle Stanley +100000 +20000 +6500
J.B. Holmes +100000 +18000 +6000
David Carey +100000 +18000 +6500
Nick Watney +150000 +25000 +8000
Max McGreevy +150000 +25000 +8000
Jesse Mueller +200000 +30000 +11000
JJ Wood +250000 +40000 +13000
Davis Love III +250000 +40000 +18000

Valero Texas Open: Tournament and course description

TPC San Antonio is the host venue for this Texas showdown. The Oaks Course was designed by Greg Norman in 2010. The par-72 scorecard measures 7,438 yards; one of the 10 longest tests on the PGA TOUR. A 7,400-plus yard course sounds long, but much of the yardage is found on the par-5s and a couple of the par-4s. Those four long 4s average 468 yards in length and play as the top four toughest relative to par on the course.

Aside from them, half of the par-4s put a scoring wedge in a player’s hand along with the four par-5s. Wedge play is extremely important on the Oaks Course. Nearly one-third of your approach shots come from inside 125 yards. The greens average 6,400 square feet in size, so proximity plays a part in these scoring chances.

Eighteen players from last week’s WGC Dell Technology Match Play Championship have traveled down the highway to San Antonio from Austin. The field of 144 players is competing for $8.9 million dollars ($1.6M for first place) and that Masters invite. Eleven players in the field are already included in the year’s first major. I won’t be watching many of them too closely, as I’m sure they are already looking ahead.

Valero Texas Open: Past results and trends

The average winning score in San Antonio over the last decade is 13 under par. Oddly enough for a mid-teens winning average, the cutline is +2.5 over par in that period. This exemplifies the challenge that is the Oaks Course. Your score is a constant balance between birdie and bogey. First step, find the fairway and you can contend on this Norman design.

The weather in southern Texas has been warm this winter — especially in February and March. This has caused the Bermuda grass to go from dormant to growing. That weed-like grass is now coming up through the Rye overseed. Miss the fairway and you’ll be guessing what happens next. The winners have historically gained about three strokes against the field en route to winning off the tee. I wouldn’t be surprised to see that number increase in this edition.

Sixty-four bunkers blanket the landscape. Unlike many other courses, these hazards have jagged edges and unpredictable outcroppings. The contenders will be good bunker players. Seventeen of the 18 green complexes have these tests to contend with. I’d feel better about not getting into one, but competitors hit far less than the PGA TOUR average of GIR’s here.

The wedge just won’t be for scoring in San Antonio. The field will need some serious around-the-green skill to make birdies on par 5s and save par on the rest. The last two winners have each gained an average of four strokes on the field from close range with their short game. Almost as impactful as the putter, both count on this difficult test.

If your players are competing from the fairway, they will be faced with interesting angles to each of the greens. Greg did a good job of challenging the guys even though they are using scoring clubs. Almost all of the driver holes bend either left to right or the reverse. In doing so, the green complexes come at them from a variety of perspectives. Over the past five years, our winners have gained an average of 7.5 strokes against the field on approach.

This skill set will set you apart. With most of these approaches coming in with a wedge or mid-iron we don’t see a lot of separation in the field. This is one of the main reasons why I believe we see a number of long shots winning here. One of the biggest differentiators in golf is long iron play. That skill really separates the top 25 in the world from the rest. Eliminate it and your +25000 players have more of a chance.

Most players near the top of the board are looking past this week. You and I would too. For our best bets, let’s attack the middle of the board. We’ll wager on guys who have something to gain this week by playing well. In doing so, I believe the cash will be on the table come Sunday afternoon in San Antonio.

Valero Texas Open: Best Bets

Best bet to win: Tyler Duncan (+9000 DraftKings)

Tyler Duncan has nothing to lose this week and everything to gain. He proved last week by finishing in third place he’s showing great form. That’s his second third place finish in his last four starts. The other came at the Honda Classic. Both difficult ball striking tests, these two high finishes were due to great driving of the golf ball. When he does miss the fairway, Tyler doesn’t miss by much. He hits a bunch of GIR’s and ranks eighth in the field for birdie or better percentage (BoB%). Round it out with strong par 4 scoring and he’s a long shot with a solid chance to win on Sunday.

Best bet to finish in the Top 20: Corey Conners (+125 Bet365)

As a Monday qualifier in 2019, Corey Conners won this event. He has a sub-70 scoring average in four starts at the Valero, never missing a cut. This beautiful ball striker excels by hitting fairways and greens. The same reason he always top 10s at Augusta! Get some cash from Corey one week early and pick him to place on the Oaks Course.

Best bet to finish in the Top 40: Ben Martin (+175 Fanduel)

This is definitely one of those weeks where you must look down the board for betting value. Ben Martin is ranked in the top 10 of this field for ball striking, good drives gained, par 4 scoring, and approach. What more do you need to finish in the top 40? He’s made five cuts in a row and finished in the top 15 three times. Another one who plays difficult courses well because of his ball striking.

For a complete list of my betting predictions covering winners, placements, H2H matchups, One and Done picks, and DFS recommendations, please go to Read The Line and subscribe.

Read The Line is the leading golf betting insights service led by 5-time award winning PGA Professional Keith Stewart. Read The Line covers the LPGA and PGA Tour, raising your golf betting acumen week after week. Subscribe to Read The Line’s weekly newsletter and follow us on social media: TikTok, Instagram, Twitter.

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Keith Stewart is the founder of Read the Line, covering the business and game of golf. He a PGA member and writer for PGA.com, as well as an expert golf betting contributor for The Sporting News.
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