masters
Beam me up, Scottie. Or, at the very least, let me try on your green jacket! World No. 1 golfer Scottie Scheffler made short work of the final three rounds of the 2022 Masters to win his first major on a 10-under (278) finish with a record $2.7 million payout. It was his fourth PGA Tour win this season—all of which have come in the last 57 days—after failing to win the first 70 PGA events of his career. Tiger Woods came in lower on the leaderboard but his comeback was still considered a success after his major car crash last year. He joins Ian Woosnam (1991), Fred Couples (1992), Woods (2001,...
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Of all the sights and sounds seen and heard Thursday at Augusta National on Day 1 of the Masters, only one truly mattered: Tiger Woodsmashing golf balls. We now know which way the game-time decision went. It was a refreshing scene, as inarguably the world’s most famous golfer almost lost his leg in a serious car accident in early 2021. The five-time Masters champion, who had rods and screws inserted into his right leg after the crash, finished -1 at 71. His scorecard had three birdies and two bogeys, and what it doesn’t show, though, is the 30-footer for birdie on 16. “If you would have seen h...
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Tiger Woods has said it will be a “game-time decision on whether I compete” at the Masters this year. “I will be heading up to Augusta today to continue my preparation and practice,” he tweeted on Sunday. “It will be a game-time decision on whether I compete. Congratulations to 16-year-old Anna Davis on an amazing win at the @anwagolf and good luck to all the kids in the @DriveChipPutt.” Woods indeed arrived on Sunday and had a practice round. He’s on the pre-tournament interview schedule for 11 a.m. Tuesday. Woods has not played in a tournament since suffering a serious injury to his right le...
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Last year on the 17th green at Waialae Country Club was the last—and only—time Kevin Na opened a green-reading book on the golf course. It was there that he needed a birdie-eagle finish to shoot 59 in the third round of the Sony Open. However, after reading the green for his 10-footer, he glanced at the book, adjusted his read, took the shot, and missed. He wound up winning the tournament with a 61, but nuts to the book, he thought. “It didn’t work out too well,” Na recalled Thursday, “so that was the last time I saw it.” Na’s longtime caddie, Kenny Harms, used to use the book to verify his in...
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