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RBC Canadian Open Predictions and Best Bets – PGA Golf Picks June 11-14

RBC Canadian Open June 11-14

RBC Canadian Open Betting Preview

RBC Canadian Open picks from WagerTalk golf handicapper Andy Lang are available before golfers tee off from TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley (North Course) – Caledon, ON! Andy discusses his predictions, picks, who can trip you up, the course and more surrounding the RBC Canadian Open starting June 11!

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RBC Canadian OpenRBC Canadian Open Betting Notes
When:June 11-14
Where:TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley (North Course) – Caledon, ON
Defending Champ:Ryan Fox
Current Favorite:Tommy Fleetwood (+1300 at DraftKings)
TV:CBS, ESPN+, Golf Channel, Paramount+

RBC Canadian Open Course: TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley (North Course)

The Canadian Open heads to the North Course at TPC Toronto, a modern championship layout that provides a fresh challenge for PGA Tour players.

The course is a par-70 stretching  over 7,300 yards, featuring wide fairways, significant elevation changes, and large green  complexes that place a premium on quality approach play. While players will have room to swing off the tee, positioning remains important to create the best angles into the greens. 

The North Course blends risk and reward throughout the round. Several holes offer birdie opportunities, but strategically placed bunkers, water hazards, and challenging green contours can quickly turn an aggressive approach into a bogey.

The layout favors strong ball-strikers who  can take advantage of scoring holes while avoiding costly mistakes on the demanding par-4s. As a newer stop on the PGA Tour schedule, there is less course history for players to lean on, creating opportunities for both established stars and emerging talents.

Expect a balanced test where driving distance is helpful, but approach play, distance control, and putting will ultimately determine who contends for Canada’s national championship.

RBC Canadian Open: Players That Can Trip You Up

Matthew Fitzpatrick comes in as the overall betting favorite, but the recent form doesn’t justify that price. After carrying his brother to a Zurich Classic win, he’s followed it up with finishes of  52nd, 14th, and 36th.

Over his last three tournaments, he ranks just 23rd in total strokes  gained, and the putter has been a major issue at -0.79 strokes gained, the 13th-worst mark in the  field. When your biggest weakness is the flat stick and you’re priced at the top of the board, that’s  a problem. I’ll gladly fade him this week. 

Robert MacIntyre is still getting priced like a Top 10 contender, but the results have been ugly. He’s finished outside the Top 40 in six straight tournaments, and the underlying numbers are  just as concerning.

Over the last nine weeks, he’s losing -0.86 strokes on approach and -0.12  around the green, while also lacking both distance and accuracy off the tee.

That’s not a profile  that wins golf tournaments. The name value is far outweighing the current form. Collin Morikawa is a player I simply can’t trust right now.

He’s coming off finishes of 62nd and 55th, and it’s fair to wonder if his back is fully healthy. The putting has been awful, losing -0.46  strokes over his last two events, and even more concerning, his iron play—normally his biggest  weapon—has started to disappear.

He’s not long enough off the tee to compensate when the approaches aren’t dialed in. Until the ball-striking returns, he’s an easy fade.

RBC Canadian Open: DraftKings Darlings

Jackson Suber ($7,000) continues to be one of the more intriguing value plays in the field. His last three finishes of 19th, 4th, and 67th show both upside and volatility, but the underlying stats are encouraging. He’s accurate off the tee, his iron play has been strong, and the only real 

concern is around-the-green performance. If he can be average in that area, the ball-striking is good enough to produce another strong finish. At this price, the upside is worth chasing. 

Denny McCarthy ($7,300) remains one of the safest cut-makers in this range. He’s made five straight cuts and 12 of his last 15 tournaments, giving him one of the higher floors in the field. Driving has been the concern—he’s neither long nor particularly accurate—but he continues to survive because of his elite putting.

On a course where the flat stick can separate players, that’s exactly what we’re betting on. Four rounds and a solid finish are well within reach. 

Andrew Putnam ($7,400) is another player who simply finds ways to make weekends. He’s made the cut in 10 of his last 11 tournaments, and his game remains remarkably consistent. 

Distance off the tee is the lone weakness, but that’s been the case for years and it rarely stops him from cashing DFS lineups. As long as the irons and putter stay steady, Putnam should once again give us four rounds of scoring opportunities. He’s a strong floor play at this salary.

Rest of lineup: Aaron Rai $8300, Alex Fitzpatrick $8700, Sam Burns $10,100

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