The Plantation and Seaside courses at Sea Island bring down the curtain on the PGA Tour's calendar year and is our last chance on the far side of the Atlantic to land a a winner to land us into healthy profit. The Plantation course which hosts one round for each player is slightly more classical in look and doesn't present too much of a test length wise. Neither does the Seaside track whose difficulty depends on the wind off the coast. Both courses will yield low scores and we know similar seaside and classical layouts such as Waialae and Harbour Town are places to look for some correlating form.

Webb Simpson has great credentials on these tests that demand a great wedge game and he has tasted plenty of success on these weeks. Single figures is a massive surprise to me and my tissue had him at least a couple of points bigger. Similarly Billy Horschel looks equally as short despite some good form. He is not one I'd necessarily be sure to like this type of test despite his runner up finish here in 2016. A pile of outsiders have won and placed here down the years and given that scores of towards 20 under par are easily reachable I think it pays to look elsewhere at some bigger prices.

In for more punishment this week as I dive in once again (this time with armbands) on Harris English. It was painful not to win last week, but the profit was welcome and we have to try and forget. This week I think he has been slightly overpriced once again only not to the same extent as last week. English's last five performances now read 3-6-33-4-5. That is probably the best in the field bar Brendon Todd and I can't have him three times the price of the market leader. His putting was an eyesore last Sunday but what really put him under pressure was his driving. He found little fairways and around a wet Mayakoba that will trim shots off you which it eventually did. He has more room off the tee this week and surely must fancy his chances to get over the line in his home state. Hasn't done anything special here down the years but he is in the throws of some special stuff and it's hard to see him not being in the mix once again. Brendon Todd is another who I think is overpriced despite going for a miraculous three in a row. He again will be suited to the test and normally I'd back him only I just end up thinking 'how could this possibly happen?'. It could though, it really could.

2pts each-way Harris English  30/1  (1/5 7 places)

Harris English - 2pts e/w @ 30/1

Zach Johnson rushed to finish his final round on Sunday at Mayakoba eventually finishing inside the top 25. This was another solid performance to add to his 14th spot when he threw a solid javelin at the Tessa Sanderson. He likes these types of tests with two wins at the Coloniol and more importantly two seaside Hawaii wins at the TOC and Sony. He is showing signs of improvement and given his exemption is running out on tour he is clicking into working mode. 7th and 8th here the last two years is a solid showing and it is worth noting he had missed the cut at the Mayakoba last year in the lead into this event. This time around his form rates a shade better and looks a value bet around the 50/1 mark.

1.5pts each-way Zach Johnson 50/1 (1/5 6 places)

Zach Johnson - 1.5pts e/w @ 50/1

Brian Harman looks to have been overlooked by the bookmakers this week after two lacklustre efforts in Mexico and Houston. Previous to that he managed two top 20s at the Shriners and Sanderson. He started the season off in fine style with a 3rd placed spot at the Greenbrier also and was in the throws of some of his best stuff in a fair while. I'm prepared to take the chance on him as he prefers tracks that don't stretch his length off the tee and the wet conditions last week may not have been ideal. Fazio redesigned this Seaside track and it's interesting to note Harman won the Wells Fargo at another of his designs at Eagle Point.

1.25pts each-way Brian Harman 66/1 (1/5 7 places)

Brian Harman - 1.25pts e/w @ 66/1

Joel Dahmen has kicked off his 2020 campaign in fine fashion with two top tens at the Mayakoba and the Shriners. Last season he went close a number of times and these wraparound events are high time for someone like him to break his duck. Interesting course correlations are there when you dig deep as original Seaside designer Colt designed Glen Abbey in Canada where Dahmen finished 8th in 2018. The redesigner Fazio had a hand at Quail Hollow where Dahmen finished runner up last year and 16th in 2018. He isn't pigeon holed to a certain type of track but nevertheless this should suit this week and he looks in solid form.

1pt each-way J.Dahmen 80/1 (1/5 6 places)

Joel Dahmen - 1pt e/w @ 80/1

Henrik Norlander again looks overpriced to my eyes given how he has played the last weeks and he finished off in style at the Mayakoba with a 66 on Sunday. As I mentioned last week Norlander won in Wichita where the wind blows and conditions are likely to be testing enough here come the weekend when the course dries out. Finished 2nd here 3 years ago and looks worth a another play at 200/1.

0.75pt each-way H.Norlander 200/1 (1/5 7 places)

Henrik Norlander - 0.75pts e/w @ 200/1