PGA Championship expert picks and predictions: Our PGA Pro’s best bets for the 2025 major tournament at Quail Hollow

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In this betting preview:

CHARLOTTE, NC—Only three players have ever won The Masters and the PGA Championship in the same year: Sam Snead (1949), Jack Burke Jr. (1956), and Jack Nicklaus (1963, 1975). Of course, Nicklaus did it twice! Since the move to May in 2019, only one Masters champ has finished top 10 at the PGA: Scottie Scheffler at Valhalla. We all know what happened there! The others? Scottie Scheffler and Tiger Woods missed the cut following their Masters win, and Hideki Matsuyama finished T23 and Rahm T50. Going back the last 15 years, only one Masters champion has gone on to win a different major championship: Jordan Spieth in 2015.

As it turns out, winning a green jacket at Augusta doesn't have the after-effects most major winners would want: winning more majors. Can Rory McIlroy reverse the curse and win two in a row? I cannot think of a better place for him to try. McIlroy has four wins at the Quail Hollow Club, the host of the 107th PGA Championship. Standing in his way are 155 other competitors with designs on the same dream. They are just dreamers, but not Scheffler and Bryson DeChambeau. Golf's current big three have no doubt distanced themselves from the field on more than just the odds board. 

This preview is just that: a preview. For a complete list of my betting predictions covering the PGA Championship winners, placements, and H2H matchups, please go to Read The Line and subscribe.

PGA Championship 2025 best bets

Best bet to win: Bryson DeChambeau (+1000 on DraftKings)

DeChambeau has the skill set and course CV (fourth 2018, ninth 2021 at Truist) to win another major championship. Looking for length, DeChambeau is the longest player in the field and primarily plays a right-to-left shot shape. A trajectory that Rory McIlroy has proven successful at Quail Hollow throughout his career. Our winner will need to putt, and my biggest edge for Bryson against Scottie and Rory is his reliability with the flatstick.

Best bet to place in the Top 10: Patrick Reed (+600 on DraftKings)

Reed has three more chances to make the US Ryder Cup Team. A doubtful Captain’s pick, Reed is twenty-third on the points list. The PGA Championship is worth more points than a regular PGA TOUR event.  There’s no doubt Patrick is motivated and a good fit for Quail Hollow. Reed was runner-up in 2017 to Justin Thomas and has two more top 10s in three starts since the 2017 PGA Championship. Patrick can putt, and that’s primarily why he is so successful here.  

Best head-to-head bet: Jordan Spieth over Brooks Koepka (-120 on DraftKings)

Koepka has one top 25 in a major championship since winning two years ago at Oak Hill. His ball striking is still in championship form, but the putter and short game are not. Spieth has been seriously trending since his return from wrist surgery. Quail Hollow requires great touch on the greens, and that’s where my cash is going by taking Spieth in Charlotte.

PGA Championship 2025 betting odds

Odds courtesy of DraftKings. Showing odds at +15000 and shorter.

GolferOdds
Scottie Scheffler+425
Rory McIlroy+500
Bryson DeChambeau+900
Jon Rahm+1800
Xander Schauffele+2200
Justin Thomas+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Ludvig Aberg+2800
Joaquin Niemann+3000
Tyrrell Hatton+4500
Tommy Fleetwood+4500
Patrick Cantlay+4500
Hideki Matsuyama+4500
Brooks Koepka+4500
Viktor Hovland+5000
Jordan Spieth+5000
Shane Lowry+5500
Sepp Straka +6000
Russell Henley+6500
Corey Conners+6500
Jason Day+7500
Wyndham Clark+9000
Sungjae Im+9000
Patrick Reed+9000
Min Woo Lee+9000
Justin Rose+10000
Daniel Berger+10000
Tony Finau+11000
Robert MacIntyre+11000
Maverick McNealy+11000
Keegan Bradley+11000
Si Woo Kim+12000
Sergio Garcia+12000
Sam Burns+12000
Dustin Johnson+12000
Will Zalatoris +13000
Keith Mitchell+13000
Cameron Smith+13000
Akshay Bhatia+13000
Dean Burmester+14000
Byeong Hun An+14000
Taylor Pendrith+15000
Davis Thompson+15000
Aaron Rai+15000

PGA Championship 2025: Betting preview

Unlike a majority of major venues, we have a ton of historical player data on the Quail Hollow Club. The PGA TOUR has been coming to Quail Hollow since 2003. QHC hosted the Presidents Cup in 2022 and the 99th PGA Championship back in 2017. Justin Thomas took home the Wannamaker trophy that week and bested an elite field in arid, August conditions. Even though the course has not seen many major changes since that championship, this edition will be completely different. The 99th PGA finished with 12 players under par. Looking back at that leaderboard, it was covered in scramblers. Kevin Kisner was the 54-hole leader! Patrick Reed finished runner-up, and Hideki Matsuyama, Matt Kuchar, Rickie Fowler, and Jason Day were all in contention.

A serious electrical storm is rolling through Charlotte as I am writing this on Tuesday afternoon. I've seen significant rain every day on property, and the forecast calls for more. The official scorecard may read par 71 and 7,626, but I can assure you it will play longer. The green surfaces are maintaining some firmness due to their age and the club's sub-air system. These greens were replaced before the 2024 Truist Championship. A lesson Quail Hollow learned after hosting its first PGA. Before the 2017 Championship, QHC renovated the course. Those newly sodded greens caused havoc in the championship. Players could not hold the putting surfaces, and around the green play became the most important contending characteristic.

That won't be the case this year. This event is going to play like a Truist (or Wells Fargo) tournament. I'll break that down further in the next section, but know this: a powerful "player" is going to win this week. Alongside the rainy conditions, temperatures are predicted to max out in the mid-80s. The breeze should be blowing in the 8-12 mph range, and the radar will require our attention. The field of 156 players will be reduced to the top 70 and ties after 36 holes. Notice I didn't say on Friday, as tournament officials will have their hands full finding time to play amongst the wet weather. Speaking of water, seven holes have water in play along with 61 specifically placed bunkers. The final six holes have both “hazards,” and we all know the final three by heart.

If you don't know the Green Mile by now, you will by the end of this week. Holes 16, 17, and 18 at Quail Hollow add up to 1,246 yards. A little less than an actual mile, but the stress these holes produce under championship pressure makes one believe these guys would rather run a mile than play one! Since the PGA TOUR arrived at Quail Hollow, here's the best way I can summarize the Green Mile effect. Holes 1-15, the field is 1,290 strokes under par. Holes 16-18, the field is 7,683 strokes OVER par! All according to Shotlink data.

Las Vegas has the over/under for the winning score at 13.5 under par. The average winning score of the Truist Championship over the last five editions is 15 under par. In the last ten editions, it has dropped to 14 under par. Incorporating the wet conditions, players will be able to score here. There's going to be a couple of guys who go low in the first couple of days. That being said, the average cutline for Quail Hollow from 2012-2021 is two strokes over par. The cut at the 2017 PGA was six over par, but that was a crazy championship. Conditions were borderline out of control as players could not hold fairways or greens. QHC does have 26 acres of fairway. That's plenty of landing area for these boys, and the rough is not nearly what the reports say it is.

The drivers will have a field day as long as they can keep it out of the trees. That's a dangerous player complement. Asking the middle tier to go deep with the driver and nuclear with their putter is a weekly request. I think you'll see a bunch of the TOUR's most exciting players ascend the leaderboard. The result is what we have seen recently from this championship: an awesome event. The social media world complains about the PGA Championship every year. Fix this, do that, go back to August, etc. The truth is, the PGA does have an identity. It is the ONE major championship that tests all aspects of the modern game. Not to mention, Kerry Haigh and his team have navigated the move to May, the first major after COVID, a frost delay at Oak Hill, and now a daily monsoon in Charlotte. Scottie, Rory, and Bryson are ready to make a run at the Wannamaker trophy. What more could you ask for? Forget that I asked, and just enjoy the show!

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PGA Championship 2025: Quail Hollow course overview

The three finest players in the world are ALL playing their best approaching the PGA Championship. My lens for picking the winner is quite focused. I know it's a major championship, but this narrative will be rather quick. You've heard from plenty of pundits across the board. Conquering Quail Hollow starts with ball speed off the tee. Rory McIlroy has won here four times because he is the best driver of the golf ball in the world. Take his superpower and match it to a design that significantly favors a right-to-left ball flight (a draw for right-handers). Tee shot after tee shot gives the longer draw biased player an advantage. My favorite example is number 16, a 529-yard par four where the green is set on a peninsula out into a small lake.

Players like Rory and Bryson DeChambeau, who both play a draw, will take it over the inside elbow of the dogleg. Their drives will hit the downslope and extend 50-60 yards past their competitors, who cannot carry that corner. They will hit an eight iron or less while the remainder of the field attacks with a five-iron. I think I'll take the two that are closer. This same situation happens again and again all over the course. Toss in the fact that Quail Hollow's rough is overseeded with Ryegrass and nowhere near the length listed on paper, and these guys will have an unreal edge.

To compound the advantage even further, the longer you can hit the ball off the tee, the closer you are to the next target. QHC boasts 10+ approaches over 200 yards for most of the field. Add another 20 yards off the tee (or more), and now you are hitting a more accurate club into the green. Again, over 72 holes, the proximity of the closer player represents a huge advantage. In summary, to start, we need uber-long drivers and accurate mid-iron players. I'm pretty sure the top three can handle that blueprint for success.

The second edge you can look for on approach amongst your player pool is the ability to launch the ball higher than your peers with your irons. A superpower of Scottie Scheffler, this is why he is always pin high. Players who can hit it high off the turf have an advantage. A majority of guys can go up with the driver, but off the ground, only a few, and you know their names. The ground is super soft, but these green surfaces are only about 12-18 months old. It takes time for the sod to soften. Throw in the fact that QHC has sub-air, and the team is doing everything they can to dry these green complexes out. This is the one thing that can keep this championship in the mid-teens for scoring. Otherwise, we are looking at another Valhalla, and the redundant rhetoric about what an average venue this is, which is killing me already.

I'll throw in a couple of other skills that are important for the model maniacs. Par 4 scoring has always been a great differentiator at this course. The last 10 Quail winners gain an average of 10 strokes on the field playing the 4s. Tight lie chipping is a quality that can help keep a scorecard pointing in a positive direction. There are a couple of fairway bunkers out there that can cause trouble for these guys, and I like those who can strike it from any surface with an iron. The fact is, this is just a great test of golf. Not many places have hosted multiple majors, a Presidents Cup, and a TOUR event for over 20 years. When you consider comp courses and Augusta National Golf Club gets mentioned, that doesn't hurt either.

When it comes to comps, I like ANGC, Riviera, Kapalua, Valhalla, and Bay Hill. Difficult golf courses that require exceptional driving, accurate irons, and the ability to score on the greens. Each of these venues, including Augusta, is a distant second when it comes to the impact putting has on your ability to contend AND win. It may sound like hyperbole, but nine of the last 10 winners have gained over three strokes on the field with their flatstick. The winner's average separation over the last decade is six strokes! Please do not undervalue the effect a player can have on contending with their putter. Guys like Denny McCarthy and Patrick Reed are very valuable players in DFS lineups and prop cards. I don't think they can beat the top three, but when those pool contests separate the field into flights, make sure you favor putting (and length).

There's no reason to overthink Quail Hollow. The top three have short odds, so we will build a card that creates multiple revenue opportunities to try and take advantage. There's a vibe this week in Charlotte. The critics keep chirping from home, and to be honest, nobody on property cares. The players are focused on winning, Ryder Cup points, and making the cut at a major. Augusta can be somewhat subdued at times as everyone walks around gingerly; not this week. I'm turning the volume up on my Bluetooth speaker and enjoying every minute of the PGA Championship and our next win!

Read The Line is the leading golf betting insights service led by 5-time award-winning PGA Professional Keith Stewart. Read The Line has 39 outright wins and covers the TGL, 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, and Twitter.

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