Dylan Dethier downplayed Brian Campbell’s chances of making the 2025 U.S. Ryder Cup squad, noting that despite Campbell’s second PGA Tour victory of the season he still sits just 28th in the current standings. Dethier emphasized that the top-12 American rankings have remained unchanged for two consecutive weeks, underscoring how much ground Campbell must make up with limited qualifying events remaining. He contrasted Campbell’s position with Lucas Glover’s move from 20th to 16th, highlighting how even multiple wins are not enough without consistent top finishes. Bettors looking at Ryder Cup roster futures should treat Campbell as a long-odds flier rather than a realistic selection unless he strings together several more high-end results quickly.
Dylan Dethier highlighted Keegan Bradley at +10,000 as a live long shot. He noted Bradley is “driving the ball like a stallion,” giving him the tee-to-green profile required at Oakmont. Dethier also pointed to Bradley’s comfort in the Northeast, comparing the venue’s feel to Aronimink where Bradley previously grabbed a win, and added that winning a U.S. Open would be a fitting capstone for the current U.S. Ryder Cup captain. The recent form plus regional familiarity underpin Dethier’s bullish stance.
Dylan Dethier ignored Xander Schauffele’s blip at Memorial — his first finish outside the top 20 in a major in 3+ years — and pounced on +1750 outright odds. Dethier highlighted Schauffele’s U.S. Open track record: eight starts, never worse than 14th, six top-7s. If the driver clicks, Dethier expects Schauffele to win and recommends a hedge with a Top-10 ticket as well.
Dylan Dethier suggested Bryson DeChambeau is primed for another major run at Oakmont. DeChambeau enters as the defending U.S. Open champion after overpowering Winged Foot and has continued to rank near the top of the PGA Tour in driving distance and strokes-gained off the tee this season. Dethier noted Bryson’s switch to a fresh set of irons from his ‘tinkerer’s workshop’ and believes the combination of raw power and equipment tweaks will help him handle Oakmont’s 7,400-yard, par-70 brute. With the course demanding long iron approaches into firm greens, Dethier views DeChambeau as a legitimate outright betting target rather than just a storyline curiosity.