Join the ranks of the OddsShopper Hall of Fame
Updated June 15, 2026 by Ben Rasa

Part of the OddsShopper team, translating our betting data and expert analysis into practical strategy guides.
I covered my three US Open outright picks in a separate piece. This one is for two bets that don't fall into the straight winner market: a nationality prop and a Top 10 play. Different bet types, same course, same reasoning about what Shinnecock Hills asks of a player.
Here are the two bets I am adding to the card.
The Top Japanese Player market covers every Japanese player in the field, and this week the most prominent names alongside Matsuyama are Ryo Hisatsune and a handful of others. Hisatsune is the one drawing the most attention given his 2026 form on the PGA Tour.
Hisatsune is a good player. But Shinnecock Hills is a completely different test from a typical DP World Tour event. The US Open setup, the firm and fast conditions, the brutal rough, the premium on course management under major championship pressure — these are the things that separate players who have been here before from players who haven't. Matsuyama has been here many times. He has a Masters title on his resume and has competed at the highest level of major championship golf for years. That experience matters at Shinnecock.
At -112, you are not getting much juice for backing Matsuyama, but that is the point. The market respects Hisatsune's form. I think the course tips this further toward Matsuyama than the price suggests, and a -112 line on a player with his major pedigree in this specific setup is a bet I am comfortable making.
Ben Rasa's Tails golf card is where his weekly outright plays live, with the course-fit, form, and matchup reasoning behind every pick laid out so you see why it is on the card. If you would rather follow a sharp than build the model yourself, follow Ben Rasa's golf card on Tails. New to Tails? Code EAGLE15 takes 15% off your first week or month: Follow Ben's card
Aberg is a name I keep coming back to this week, and the Top 10 market is the right way to bet him. We do not need him to win. We do not need him to be perfect. We just need him to be in the mix, and everything about his game says he will be at Shinnecock.
He was T4 at the PGA Championship this year. That is a concrete data point on a major championship course under major championship pressure. His tee-to-green numbers are elite, which is the stat that matters most at Shinnecock Hills. A US Open setup rewards the player who can hit fairways, attack the right sectors of small greens, and avoid the catastrophic mistakes the rough punishes you with when you miss. That profile fits Aberg.
Maybe this is the week he breaks through fully. Maybe he finishes just outside the top five and the ticket still cashes. At +235, you are getting over 2-1 that he appears on the first page of the leaderboard come Sunday. For a player with his ball-striking profile at a course that specifically rewards ball-striking, that is a number I can work with.
The Top 10 with ties format also matters here. If there is a logjam at 9th or 10th place, ties count. You are not getting squeezed out by a single shot.
Nationality props and Top 10 markets are the kinds of bets where books price differently. Some books will be sharper on the outright winner market and leave the specialty markets softer. Before you place either of these, check OddsShopper for the best available number. On a +235 Top 10 bet, finding +260 or +270 at a different book changes the value of the bet meaningfully.
What is the Top Japanese Player market? It is a bet on which Japanese player in the field will finish with the best result. At the 2026 US Open, the most prominent Japanese players are Hideki Matsuyama and Ryo Hisatsune, though other Japanese players are also in the field.
Why is Shinnecock better for Matsuyama than Hisatsune? Shinnecock Hills requires major championship experience, precise course management, and the ability to handle brutal US Open conditions. Matsuyama has all of that, including a Masters title. Hisatsune has had a strong year on the PGA Tour but is playing in this type of environment for the first time.
What does Top 10 with Ties mean? If your player finishes in a tie for 9th or 10th, the bet still cashes. Ties are included, so you are not eliminated by a single shot if there is a cluster around the cut line for the top 10.
Why is Aberg's tee-to-green game relevant at Shinnecock? Shinnecock Hills is a ball-striking test. Putting matters everywhere, but the course's firm conditions, small greens, and punishing rough place the premium on approach play and fairway finding. Aberg's tee-to-green stats rank among the best in the field, which directly maps to what the course rewards.
How do I find the best price on these markets? OddsShopper compares odds across 100+ sportsbooks in real time, including specialty markets like nationality props and Top 10 bets. It is the fastest way to make sure you are not leaving a better number on the table.
Good luck this week. The outrights are the fun ones to sweat but these two bets are how I am filling out the rest of the card at Shinnecock.
Ben Rasa's Tails golf card is where his weekly outright plays live, with the course-fit, form, and matchup reasoning behind every pick laid out so you see why it is on the card. If you would rather follow a sharp than build the model yourself, follow Ben Rasa's golf card on Tails. New to Tails? Code EAGLE15 takes 15% off your first week or month: Follow Ben's card
21+ in regulated U.S. markets where sports betting is legal. Please bet responsibly.