 What is up, everybody? Brandingadola here with three of my favorite bets for this week's John Deere Classic over at Fandall Sportsbook. We've had a lot of withdrawals early in the week for this event already, including the pre-tournament favorite, Daniel Berger. And while I still like Web Simpson at the top of the board, the John Deere Classic gives us a lot of chances, historically, to look a little bit farther down the board with our outright. And that puts me on Maverick McNeely. Not that he's a long shot by any means, but if you look at McNeely's profile, there's one stat that lags behind the rest, and it's around the green play, and that doesn't really matter a ton at TPC Deere run because you need to make so many birdies that if you're relying on the wedge play to get up and down, you're not doing enough scoring anyway. McNeely leads this field in birdie or better rate on tour this season, and he's also a strong putter on bent grass. McNeely was T18 here last year as well. If you're looking for iron play in birdie ability, Scott Stallings also has that. In fact, he's got 91st percentile adjusted iron play over the past year, according to my database, and he trails only McNeely and birdie or better rate gained over the past 50 rounds on tour, according to data from fantasynational.com. Stallings irons have the ability to run really hot, and that's what you want for upside for an outright winner. He's gained at least four and a half strokes from approach play alone, and three of his past five shot link measured events, and he crossed over the 7.0 mark in two of those, which is just phenomenal. He has two top tens in the span as well. Stallings has a long history at TPC Deere run that helps him separate from a clustered field and good underlying putting data from within 15 feet for him. Ches Reeve is also the type of golfer who we can target only at specific courses or bump up at specific courses. He's one of the shortest hitters on tour, but also one of the most accurate, and data golf shows that TPC Deere runs rough as the sixth most penal among shot link courses since 2015. So you want to be hitting fairways and playing smart shots. Reeve's irons are 89th percentile long term as well, so you should be able to follow the recipe of just hitting fairways, hitting greens, and then making some putts. Speaking of which, you should be due for some positive putting regression, given his splits from within 15 feet compared to his live putting. You know, this course is one of the easiest to put on anyway. Historically, Reeve is in play for a top 10, top 20 instead of just an outright as well. I finished T18 here last year. That'll do it for my favorite picks for this week's John Deere Classic. Best of luck this week. Let's hit a winner.