X
Lost password?

Don't have an account?
Gain Access Now

X

Receive free daily analysis

NFL
NBA
NHL
NASCAR
CFB
MLB
MMA
PGA
ESPORTS
BETTING

Already have an account? Log In

X

Forgot Password


POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Import Your Leagues
Weekly Rankings
Compare Any Players
Projections
Articles & Tools
Weekly Planner
24x7 News and Alerts

PGA DFS Hole By Hole Breakdown: Corales Puntacana Championship (2023)

Josh Bennett's Hole-By-Hole Course Breakdown for The Corales Puntacana Championship (2023), an in-depth look into the host course for PGA DraftKings tournaments.

Welcome to the latest edition of the PGA DFS Hole-By-Hole Breakdown, where Josh Bennett (@JishSwish) breaks down the course the PGA Tour is playing each week. We think this course breakdown is an important slice of the "PGA DFS pie" and will help change the way you do your research for every tournament. A good understanding of the course that's being played is extremely important before diving into individual players. Each week, this article will give you everything you need to know about the course, strategies players could take, and statistics that fit the specifics of the layout.

This week's Breakdown features Corales Puntacana Resort and Club, host of the PGA Tour's Corales Puntacana Championship. Scores will be low on this resort course, so look for the birdie makers and great iron players. Be sure to also read all of our other top-notch weekly PGA DFS and betting articles to help you win big!

 

Corales Puntacana Resort and Club: Par 72, 7670 Yards

Hole 1: Par 4, 433 Yards

Off the Tee: The fairway is wide off the tee for the average hitter, but starts to narrow as it gets farther down so long hitters may have more issues holding the fairway than shorter hitters. It shouldn't matter much though, there isn't OB in play and will be just a wedge into the green no matter where the drive goes.

Approach: Just a wedge for most of the field into the first green, possibly a 9 iron on a mis-hit. The green is large and only has a bunker on the front right that is a few yards off the green so it isn't in play. They should be able to stick short irons and wedges close on the opening hole and get rolling with a birdie early on. Green Size: 30x25 yards

Advantage: SG: Approach, Par 4 Scoring

 

Hole 2: Par 3, 239 Yards

Approach: They don't make the par 3's easy on these guys this week. All of them are long and will likely be the hardest holes on the course just because of the length. This green is narrow for the approach being about 240 yards and it is well protected on both the left and right sides by bunkers. This will be a hard green to hit, so short games will be important on this hole. Green Size: 20x40 yards

Advantage: GIR, Scrambling

 

Hole 3: Par 4, 410 Yards

Off The Tee: The second par 4 is another one that does not provide an advantage for the bombers even though the fairway is wide. Too far of a drive will roll through the fairway and have them fishing their balls from the pond. Long hitters will have to hit less than driver, but that will be fine because it should still leave a wedge into the green. Those that can hit driver have a wide landing area, so finding the fairway won't be an issue for anyone.

Approach: A short wedge will be all that's left for the field here. There's a bunker on the left and one on the right, but they won't be in play with how short the approaches are. This should be a birdie hole for the field. Green Size: 30x15 yards

Advantage: SG: Approach, Par 4 Scoring

 

Hole 4: Par 5, 565 Yards

Off The Tee: Not much to the tee shot here. The fairway is wide enough that it will be hard to miss, and if the long hitters are really worried about the bunker on the right, they can just shift their aim point a little to the left. Otherwise, just step up to the tee and let it fly here.

Approach: Longer hitters will be able to get to this green if they want to. Bunkers are on the left side and there's plenty of room to miss on the right side, so we should see many approaches end up on the right, especially rolling up onto the green. The green may not be hit often because of the length of approach, so a good short game will leave easy birdie opportunities. Green Size: 30x20 Yards

Advantage: Driving Distance, SG: Approach, SG: Around The Green, Par 5 Scoring

 

Hole 5: Par 4, 465 Yards

Off The Tee: The tee shot here will not require any decision making. Short hitters can hit driver to the large part of the fairway and everyone else will have to hit less than driver to stay short of the bunkers. There is not enough room to go over the bunkers, and playing from them on the approach with longer irons is less than ideal. Anything short of the bunkers is what we'll see on this tee shot.

Approach: Given that the approach will come from more than 170 yards, this will be a difficult green to hit because of its size. It's angled in a way that there is not much room to miss anywhere, and if they end up too far left they'll wind up in one of the two bunkers. Good short game players should shine here and making a par is plenty good. Green Size: 15x35 Yards

Advantage: Approaches from 175-200 yards, Scrambling, Bogey Avoidance

 

Hole 6: Par 4, 387 Yards

Off The Tee: Back to an easy hole after one hard one. If they want to play this one conservatively, they can hit less than driver and stay behind the first bunker to the large part of the fairway, but it's unlikely that's the optimal play. Bunkers are out there, but it is wide open here so they can launch it pretty much anywhere and have a very short wedge into the green. Long hitters will be able to run it up to the bunker at the front of the green if they wanted to.

Approach: A wedge for the whole field (even if they hit less than driver). The one bunker in play is the large one in front, but it will be more in play for long hitters going down the fairway than it will for approach shots. Any easy birdie look with a good short wedge approach. Green Size: 35x15 Yards

Advantage: Driving Distance, SG: Approach, Par 4 Scoring

 

Hole 7: Par 5, 515 Yards

Off The Tee: This is a very short par 5, made even shorter by the ability to cut the corner on the dogleg. Overall, this hole will be easy, but there will be definite eagle opportunities with a good drive that stays out of the fairway bunkers. If a drive happens to land in them, the lay up is not difficult and they'll just hit it as far down the fairway as they can (or to the green if possible).

Approach: A long iron approach to this green that has no protection other than its size, and even that won't do it. A good approach from long distance will give really good eagle chances, and birdies will be very popular from all over. A par on this hole should feel like a bogey. Green Size: 15x30 Yards

Advantage: Ball-Striking, Going for the Green Birdie or Better, Par 5 Scoring

 

Hole 8: Par 4, 399 Yards

Off The Tee: Hole 8 begins a stretch of holes along the beach. This one will not require a driver for most of the field especially if it plays firm at all. Long hitters will run their tee shots onto the beach for sure, so it will be popular to just play it safe into the large fairway. Shorter hitters may still need a driver to be sure to carry it to the fairway, but they will still have a wedge to the green no matter what, so no big deal there.

Approach: A short wedge approach to this green only protected by a small bunker on the right side. As long as the tee shot stays on land, this will be an easy birdie opportunity for the whole field. Green Size: 20x30 Yards

Advantage: SG: Approach, Par 4 Scoring

 

Hole 9: Par 3, 204 Yards

Approach: This may be an intimidating tee shot for amateurs by having to carry it over the water, but it shouldn't be for the pros this week. The green is huge, and all they'll have to do is make sure they carry the one bunker at the front of the green and they'll give themselves at least a very high chance to get par. There won't be tons of birdies on this hole, so it will probably feel like it's playing hard, but that is only really because the rest of the course is easy and par will just be popular because of the long approach. Green Size: 45x20 Yards

Advantage: GIR, 3 Putt Avoidance

 

Hole 10: Par 4, 496 Yards

Off The Tee: The start to the back 9 is a similar tee shot to most on the front. It's wide open other than fairway bunkers on the left that can easily be avoided. The fairway is large enough to even aim more to the right side and still not bring much rough into play. Hitting the fairway will be important because of the long approach that is next, but it won't be difficult to do.

Approach: The entire right side of the green is protected by bunkers, which is a smart play by the designers considering many will error to the right off the tee, meaning they'll now have to carry it over the bunkers to get on the green. Another bunker is on the left side of the green, but much less in play than the other two. The green is large enough to hold long approaches, so safe plays will be on, but bad swings or too aggressive swings will likely miss the green. Par will be a good score to start the back. Green Size: 25x35 Yards

Advantage: Driving Distance, Ball-Striking, Scrambling, Bogey Avoidance

 

Hole 11: Par 3, 265 Yards

Approach: This is one of the longest, if not the longest par 3 on the PGA Tour this year. A fairway wood for almost all of the field that will have to carry all the way to the green to avoid issues. Right after the water, there are two sets of bunkers to catch anything that is short. Anything that goes long will land in another bunker. Many will error out to the left, and short games will definitely be on display here no matter where the ball goes. a GIR will be rare. Green Size: 35x20 Yards

Advantage: Scrambling

 

Hole 12: Par 5, 623 Yards

Off The Tee: From one very long hole to another, but this one will be much easier. The fairway is so wide on this hole, it will take a very bad swing to miss here. Nothing to it, really, just hit it as hard as possible and go play the next one from the fairway.

Approach: Not many will be able to reach the green here, nor is it necessary. The green is protected in the front by bunkers to catch anything rolling up to the green, plus the green is just small in general. There is not penalty areas around the green so they can try to get it there, they just have to be prepared to play around the green. Some may just elect to lay up to a preferred wedge distance and play from there. No matter what they choose, it will likely be towards their strengths and everyone will have a great chance at birdie. Green Size: 15x40 Yards

Advantage: Driving Distance, SG: Approach, SG: Around The Green, Par 5 Scoring

 

Hole 13: Par 4, 446 Yards

Off The Tee: They'll want to avoid the trees to have a look at the green on this hole, so they'll have to move their aim to the right side of the fairway. This will bring rough into play, but the other set of trees on the right should not be in play still. Long hitters may have to hit less than driver, or they'll risk playing out of the bunkers or in the trees on the left. The dogleg shortens the hole a little, however, so even less than driver still leaves a short club to the hole.

Approach: A short iron approach to a green with basically no protection. There are a couple bunkers in the area, but are not close enough to the green to be in play. A drive that finds the fairway will make hitting this large green easy, but getting it on from the rough or bunker shouldn't be an issue either. Another birdie hole here. Green Size: 40x25 Yards

Advantage: Ball-Striking, SG: Approach, Par 4 Scoring

 

Hole 14: Par 5, 626 Yards

Off The Tee: Another long par 5 that actually gets longer because of the angle they almost force them to take because of the bunker placement. They'll likely take their tee shots to the right side of the fairway where there is plenty of room and go from there. Not much else to it.

Approach: This whole hole looks very goofy, and the approach does especially. There's a bunch of fairway bunkers in the middle and edges of the fairways, but there is only one small one at the actual green. If they want to let it rip and try and get to the green, they can do that because there is no trouble after the last fairway bunker. They can also lay up to any distance they want and play a wedge to the green. Like the last par 5, they should choose to do whatever the strength in their game is and everyone will have a good birdie look. Green Size: 20x40 Yards

Advantage: Ball-Striking, SG: Approach, SG: Around the Green, Par 5 Scoring

 

Hole 15: Par 4, 421 Yards

Off The Tee: Another hole here where it is nearly impossible to miss the fairway. Long hitters could possibly run through the fairway again on this hole, but there's plenty of room anyway. Like many other tee shots, not much to this one, just aim down the middle and hit it wherever it ends up.

Approach: This hole has two greens, but the green on the left is likely the one to be played. It has just one bunker, and these guys will only have wedges into the green so the bunker won't be in play. Another birdie hole for the field. Green Size: 20x35 Yards

Advantage: SG: Approach, Par 4 Scoring

 

Hole 16: Par 4, 461 Yards

Off The Tee: The fairway is smaller than the last few on this hole, but it's still large and there is no trouble around if it's missed. No surprise, bombs away yet again.

Approach: No protection to this green, so an approach with a mid iron will be easier than usual. Great iron players will have good looks at birdie, but this hole will be more about avoiding a bogey than pouring in birdies. It is not a difficult hole, but not extremely easy either because of the length. Green Size: 15x40 Yards

Advantage: Driving Distance, Ball-Striking, SG: Approach, Par 4 Scoring

 

Hole 17: Par 3, 214 Yards

Approach: The last par 3 is another long one. The bunker in the front will catch anything short. There aren't a lot of open spaces to miss, but the green is large enough that it shouldn't be difficult to hit and hold. Avoiding 3 putts will be the key on this hole. Green Size: 35x15 Yards

Advantage: GIR, 3 Putt Avoidance, Bogey Avoidance


Hole 18: Par 4, 501 Yards

Off the Tee: The closing hole will be a fun one, and the tee shot will be largely dependent on wind and each individual's distance. They will absolutely be able to cut off most of this hole, it is just a matter of how much. The long hitters will have the opportunity to go straight at the green if they want as well.

Approach: No matter what angle they take to the fairway, they'll all have a wedge of some sort into the green. The bunker near the green is really only in play for the long hitters that go at the green. No matter what, a birdie on the closing hole is in play for everyone. Green Size: 25x45 Yards

Advantage: Driving Distance, SG: Approach, Sand Saves, Par 4 Scoring

 

Conclusions

The fairways are very wide here, as they are at many resort courses, so great approach players from the fairway should be the primary target this week. Even though the course is long on paper, the par 3's and par 5's make up most of that, so on many holes these guys will just have wedges into the greens for birdie looks.

With the note above on wedges into greens, GIR percentage will be high, so looking for birdie or better makers and those that convert birdies at a high percentage will be key. Scores will be low, so being exposed to those kinds of players is a good idea.

As in with any course that has huge fairways and no penalty areas near the fairways, hitting the ball far will be an advantage. Those that are towards the top of the driving distance category should pop at the top of the leaderboard.

Other stats to consider: Par 4 Scoring, Par 5 Scoring, SG: Around The Green, 3 Putt Avoidance, Ball-Striking

 

Assumptions

Images and measurements were done on Google Earth. These satellite images can sometimes be up to five or more years old and not show very recent changes to courses if there were any.

Carry distance is used for off-the-tee distances shown in the images. The average carry distance on tour in 2021 was 281 yards, so that is what is used here.

I used a total dispersion off-the-tee of 60 yards. This comes from an article that Jon Sherman wrote for Practical Golf (@practicalgolf) discussing average dispersion, and I took 5-10 yards off from that number.

I assumed a 10-15 yard roll out from the carry distance to start the measurement to the green. Measurements to the green were rounded to the nearest five yards and measured from the center of the fairway to the center of the green.

Green measurements were also measured to the nearest five yards.

Things like weather, rough length, elevation, etc. are not taken into consideration on the measurements. I can only see and assume so much from satellite images. However, I do note where possible on each hole if things like elevation and wind could impact how the hole plays.

Scorecard:

  Win More With RotoBaller

Win more with expert tools and advice from proven winners! RotoBaller's PGA Premium Packages feature several savvy analysts and proven winners for DFS and betting.

Our very own Joe Nicely took down a big DraftKings DFS tournament for the Travelers Championship. And as an encore, RotoBaller subscriber @tenndolly2 won $100K on FanDuel with the help of Joe and the rest of our Premium PGA team:

Between all the incredible Premium PGA DFS and Betting content and tools we put out each week, and our Premium Slack Community where we chat with our subscribers before lineups lock, RotoBaller PGA subscribers are armed with the tools, analysis, and advice to win more.

Golf DFS News and Player Outlooks


More PGA Analysis and DFS Lineup Picks

POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Import Your Leagues
Weekly Rankings
Compare Any Players
Projections
Articles & Tools
Weekly Planner
24x7 News and Alerts

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP

REAL-TIME FANTASY NEWS

D'Andre Swift

Breaks Out for 175 Total Yards and Touchdown in Win
Drake London

Explodes for 158 Yards and Touchdown in Win Over Bills
Bijan Robinson

Erupts for 238 Total Yards and Touchdown Against Bills
Christopher Bell

Sits Third in Points After Quiet Third-Place Finish
Chase Briscoe

Passes Denny Hamlin at the Start, but Hamlin Gets Him in the End
Joey Logano

Falling Out of Playoff Picture Despite Other Contenders' Crashes
Ryan Blaney

Stage 1 Crash Puts Ryan Blaney in Severe Playoff Trouble
Denny Hamlin

Wins at Las Vegas and Will Compete for the 2025 Cup Series Title
Kyle Larson

Dominates at Las Vegas but Ends Up Second
Chase Elliott

Struggles to Gain A Solid Finish at Las Vegas After Pit-Road Penalty
William Byron

Strong Run Ends In A Wreck at Las Vegas
Stephon Castle

Set to Suit Up for Monday's Preseason Matchup With Indiana
Garrett Wilson

Expected to Miss "a Couple of Weeks" With Hyperextended Knee
Dalton Kincaid

Ruled Out for Monday Night
Luka Dončić

Luka Doncic Set to Make Preseason Debut on Tuesday
Josh Norris

Could Miss Eight Weeks
Toumani Camara

Misses Practice on Monday
Zack MacEwen

Out for "Extended Period of Time"
Sean Durzi

to Miss Four Weeks
Jason Dickinson

a Game-Time Decision Monday
Coby White

Expected to Miss Remainder of Preseason
Lucas Raymond

Sustains Upper-Body Injury
Brady Tkachuk

Suffers Injury in Monday's Loss
Lane Hutson

Canadiens Sign Lane Hutson to Eight-Year Extension
Tre Mann

Considered Questionable for Wednesday's Preseason Contest
CFB

Sam Leavitt Viewed as Day-to-Day with Undisclosed Injury
Anthony Santander

Scratched From Game 2 of ALCS With Back Tightness
Deebo Samuel Sr.

Expected to Play on Monday Night
Brock Bowers

Could Sit for the "Long Haul"
CeeDee Lamb

has a Chance to Play in Week 7
Dalton Knecht

Impresses Offensively, Must Improve Defense to Earn Key Role
Milwaukee Bucks

Bucks Sign Alex Antetokounmpo to Two-Way Deal
San Diego Padres

Mike Shildt Retires as a Manager
Tennessee Titans

Titans Fire Head Coach Brian Callahan
Mateusz Gamrot

Suffers Second-Round Submission Loss
Charles Oliveira

Gets Back In The Win Column
Montel Jackson

Drops Decision
Deiveson Figueiredo

Gets Split-Decision Victory
Vicente Luque

Outclassed
Vicente Luque

Joel Alvarez Outclasses Vicente Luque
Jhonata Diniz

Suffers Second-Round TKO Loss
Mario Pinto

Remains Undefeated
CFB

Matt Rhule Denying Interest in Penn State Head Coaching Job
CFB

Le'Veon Moss Not Believed to Have Suffered Season-Ending Injury
Ricardo Ramos

Suffers First-Round Submission Loss
Chris Godwin

Not Expected to Return in Week 7
Bucky Irving

Not Expected to Return in Week 7
Puka Nacua

Rams Think Puka Nacua has Avoided a Long-Term Injury
Kaan Ofli

Scores Comeback Win
CFB

Bill Belichick Says he's Committed to North Carolina
Moses Moody

Shut Down for Rest of Preseason
Kel'el Ware

Responding Well to Erik Spoelstra's Challenge
Derrick White

Stuffs the Stat Sheet Against Cavaliers
Austin Reaves

Displays Smooth Scoring Abilities Against Warriors
Brandin Podziemski

Drops 23 Points Against Lakers
Puka Nacua

Likely to Miss Time Due to Sprained Ankle
Rashee Rice

Eligible to Play Sunday Against the Raiders
Emeka Egbuka

Expected to Miss "Some Time"
Tiger Woods

Undergoes Back Surgery
James van Riemsdyk

Available for Red Wings Debut Monday
Kris Letang

Considered Day-to-Day
Carson Soucy

Lands on Injured Reserve
Tyler Kleven

Ready for Season Debut Monday
Evgenii Dadonov

Moves to Long-Term Injured Reserve
Drake Batherson

Aims to Return Wednesday
Pierre-Luc Dubois

Exits Win Early
CFB

UAB Fires Head Coach Trent Dilfer After 2.5 Seasons In Birmingham
CFB

Penn State Fires Head Coach James Franklin After 10.5 Seasons
CFB

Penn State QB Drew Allar Will Miss The Rest Of 2025 Season With Ankle Injury
Marquise Brown

Scores Twice in SNF Victory
Patrick Mahomes

Explodes for Four Touchdowns on SNF
Tetairoa McMillan

Scores his First Two Touchdowns in Win Over Dallas
Ja'Marr Chase

Posts Double-Digit Catches in First Game With New Quarterback
Kendrick Bourne

Records 142 Receiving Yards for Second Straight Week
Kimani Vidal

Dominates Backfield Touches, has Huge Game in Week 6
Brandon Woodruff

Will Not be on NLCS Roster
Keegan Murray

to Undergo Surgery
Max Scherzer

Added to ALCS Roster
Bryan Woo

Makes ALCS Roster
Bo Bichette

Won't Make ALCS Roster
Sacramento Kings

Russell Westbrook, Kings Have "Strong Mutual Interest"
Christopher Bell

the Favorite to Win at Las Vegas
Denny Hamlin

on the Pole at Las Vegas
Joey Logano

Can Joey Logano Get Lucky in Las Vegas Again?
William Byron

has the Fastest Car in Practice at Las Vegas
Ty Gibbs

Speed of Ty Gibbs a Good Sign for Toyota at Las Vegas
NASCAR

Bubba Wallace Should Contend at Las Vegas
Ross Chastain

Scrapes Wall in Practice But Qualifies 15th at Las Vegas
Chris Buescher

Looking for Improvement at Las Vegas
Austin Cindric

It Has Been Hit or Miss for Austin Cindric at Las Vegas
Steven Lorentz

Exits With Injury Saturday
Carson Soucy

Suffers Upper-Body Injury Versus Penguins
Erik Gudbranson

Sustains Upper-Body Injury Saturday
Sean Durzi

Hurt Against Predators
Jaccob Slavin

Suffers Injury Saturday
Kris Letang

Under Evaluation for Undisclosed Injury
Josh Norris

Will Miss "a Significant Amount of Time"
Chase Elliott

Should Run Well at Las Vegas
Kyle Larson

Conservatism May Keep him from Replicating Previous Las Vegas Drive
Josh Berry

After Josh Berry's Las Vegas Win, Ryan Blaney Should be a Top Contender
Chase Briscoe

has Definitely Improved on Intermediate Tracks
Gleyber Torres

Will Undergo Surgery to Repair Sports Hernia
Bryan Woo

Expected to be on Mariners' ALCS Roster
CFB

CJ Baxter to Miss Saturday's Game Against No. 6 Oklahoma
CFB

Syracuse QB Steve Angeli Will Miss Significant Time
Cody Bellinger

Plans to Opt Out of Contract
MLB

Munetaka Murakami Will be Posted This Winter
Nathan Eovaldi

has Hernia Surgery, Should be Ready for Spring Training
Mateusz Gamrot

Set For UFC Rio Main Event
Charles Oliveira

Returns At UFC Rio
Montel Jackson

Set For UFC Rio Co-Main Event
Deiveson Figueiredo

Returns At UFC Rio
Joel Álvarez

Joel Alvarez Set for his Welterweight Debut
Vicente Luque

A Huge Underdog
Deandre Ayton

Still Waiting to Build Chemistry With Lakers Stars
Mario Pinto

Looks To Remain Undefeated
Jhonata Diniz

Looks To Win Back-To-Back Fights
Kaan Ofli

Looks To Secure His First Octagon Win
Ricardo Ramos

Looks To Get Back In The Win Column
Michael Aswell

Looks For His First UFC Win
VJ Edgecombe

Will Not Play on Friday
T.J. McConnell

Expected to Miss at Least a Month
Ben Sheppard

Unlikely to Play in Next Two Preseason Games
Dylan Harper

in Line to Play in First Preseason Game
CFB

North Carolina's Caleb Hood Retiring from College Football
CFB

Jeff Sims Likely to Start Against Utah
CFB

Syracuse QB Steve Angeli Will Miss Remainder of 2025 Season With Torn Achilles
CFB

Sam Leavitt Not Expected to Play for Arizona State on Saturday
CFB

John Mateer Upgraded to Probable Ahead of Saturday's Red-River Shootout
VJ Edgecombe

Misses Practice Thursday
Jaylen Wells

To Have an Expanded Role in the Offense?
Tanner Scott

Removed From NLDS Roster After Lower-Body Procedure
CFB

Ryan Williams Will Be Available Against No. 14 Missouri On Saturday
CFB

John Mateer Officially Questionable Ahead of Saturday's Game vs. Texas
Will Smith

Catching in Game 3 of NLDS
CFB

North Carolina Discussing Buyout Option Of Coach Bill Belichick
Jackson Chourio

Back in Lineup for NLDS Game 3
Roki Sasaki

"Definitely the Primary Option" in Save Situations for Dodgers
Sahith Theegala

Still Uneven Heading to Japan
Nicolai Hojgaard

Trying to Pick Up Pieces After Last Three Efforts
Vince Whaley

Tries to Add on From Sanderson Farms Performance
Adam Scott

Struggling Some Heading to Baycurrent Classic
PGA

Chris Gotterup Expects to Contend at Baycurrent Classic
Si Woo Kim

Primed for Baycurrent Classic