Paul Peterson Odds to Win and Stats for The 2025 Rocket Mortgage Classic

Data Skrive
Data Skrive

Paul Peterson has +70000 odds at the 2025 Rocket Mortgage Classic at Detroit Golf Club. He made the cut in his most recent event, the RBC Canadian Open, and finished 52nd. Before he tees off in Detroit, MI, let’s break down his recent form to help you make your best bets on Peterson in this event.

Check out all the Latest Golf Betting Previews!

Moneyline

Peterson to win the 2025 Rocket Mortgage Classic +70000

Bet $20, Payout $14,020.00

Paul Peterson’s recent tournaments

Date Tournament Finish Score Shots Behind Leader Earnings
June 5-8 RBC Canadian Open 52 65-70-70-69 (-6) 12 $23,114
May 8-11 Myrtle Beach Classic MC 72-71 (+1) $0
May 1-4 THE CJ CUP Byron Nelson MC 68-72 (-2) $0
April 17-20 Corales Puntacana Championship MC 74-70 (E) $0
April 3-6 Valero Texas Open MC 73-72 (+1) $0

Paul Peterson’s recent performance

  • Peterson has not posted a score better than the tournament average or finished within five shots of the leader in any of his last five events.
  • He posted a final score of -6 relative to par in his only made cut in his last five tournaments.
  • In his last five events, Peterson finished outside the top 20.
  • He’s made the cut in one of his last five appearances.
  • Peterson has finished below par four times and carded three better-than-average rounds over his last 10 played.
  • He has carded one of the 10 best scores of the day in one of his last 10 rounds.

Paul Peterson’s last five outings

Events Within Three Shots Within Five Shots Below Average
5 0 0 0

Paul Peterson’s Last Time Out

  • Peterson fared better on par 3s than most players his last time out, carding a birdie or better on four of the 16 par-3 holes at the RBC Canadian Open (the other competitors averaged 2.2).
  • On the 16 par-3 holes at the RBC Canadian Open, Peterson had more bogeys or worse (two) than the field average (1.5).
  • Peterson carded more birdies or better (eight) than the field average of 6.4 on the 48 par-4 holes at the RBC Canadian Open.
  • In that most recent tournament, Peterson’s par-4 showing (on 48 par-4 holes) included a bogey or worse nine times (worse than the field’s average of 5.6).
  • Peterson ended the RBC Canadian Open outperforming the tournament average of birdies or better on par-5 holes (3.3) with five on the eight par-5 holes.
  • On the eight par-5 holes at the RBC Canadian Open, Peterson carded more bogeys or worse (one) than the field average (0.3).
Author Profile
BetDecider Team

The BetDecider team brings you the most current sports betting content, with expert insights and tips. Our aim is that you can make an informed betting decision, including best odds and exclusive sportsbook offers, to maximize your betting experience.

Ryan Knuppel

Knup Solutions [molongui_author_name]

About Ryan Knuppel

Ryan has been one of the leading sports business & iGaming professionals for over 15 years. He started as a freelance writer and now operates one of the top sports content agencies around, Knup Solutions. He has literally written 10,000 plus sports and betting related articles across the web.

 

Sports Network:

sports20.com, usawager.com, knupsports.com, baseballspotlight.com, basketballarticles.com, betdecider.com, njsportsbookreview.com, dunkelindex.com, sportspub.com, oddschoice.com

 

Betting Guide

How Money Line Works?

Moneyline betting is by far the easiest way to place a sports wager. There are no point spreads to parse, no garbage-time free throws to ruin your betting day, and no last-minute meaningless touchdowns to take you from a winner to a loser.

How to Bet Odds

When we, as sports fans, learned our multiplication tables, we aced the number 7. Seven, 14, 21, 28, 35, 42 were easy because we all watched football on the weekends. Multiplication by sevens, then add a three, a six after a missed PAT.

How to Bet on NFL Games

Baseball is America’s pastime, but football is America’s crazed passion, with its weekly schedule of games, millions of television viewers across the country and the world, and the billion-dollar stadiums that serve as Sunday cathedrals in 32 American cities.

What is the Spread?

If you are a golfer or have ever played on a bowling team, think of a point spread like a handicap. It is a way for two teams of differing abilities to play each other on equal footing.  The better team, and the favorite in the game, gives a certain amount …