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Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Augusta - THE MASTERS - A week to remember ....

The Masters BY: James F. Jordan Jr.

It’s coming… Next week in Fact. The week where father and son shall embrace an accomplished winner of the prestigious “ Green Jacket “.

With the new “ Tiger Woods  Masters “ Video game on the rise and Tiger and Phil lightly peaking before next week, the world is excited to embrace “ Masters Week “. What an event filled week with your usual hosts on hand . All the great moments shall be  voiced throughout the Golf Channel, ESPN and NBC. Thus being said, you will surely be humbled in entertainment from your living room. Who will win? Who will call the big shots when they count most? Will Tiger tie Jack for 5? Phil tie Arnie and Tiger for 4? Is it time for a Professional of youth to prove himself? You'll have to await and discover what I believe to be a Masters to be remembered.

 Tiger’s game is slowly coming around. Phil has always performed well at Augusta. Many of the young kids- Fowler, Johnson, Rory all have a fair chance. It has been an interesting year of success on the PGA tour, with young to mid age winners and truly none of the veterans or young guns taking prize on Sunday. I know half the world will be excited for what’s to come this Masters week. I know with the level of talent qualified and exempt, there will be a resilient display of putting and shot making to keep you on your toes.

Magnolia Lane is the entry hall to the land of green beauty. Four days of beautiful shot making is on the horizon. Putts on a stimpmeter speed similar to your marble bath tub. Quotes to be remembered from clear broadcasting and hugs to be had for one member in a Sunday victory. Whether you’re there in person, playing the new video game of Augusta, or watching at home…. Just be there - “ The Masters “  - JJ 




Familiarize yourself with these beautiful portraits I have attached.... - JJ 




50. Arnold Palmer wins again, 1960
Winning his first Masters in 1958, Palmer started the 1960 edition with a 67 and held the lead at the end of each round. On the last day, Ken Venturi edged in front, but Palmer wasn't done. He birdied the 17th to level and the 18th to beat Venturi by a stroke. Palmer's stellar career includes winning 23 times on the PGA Tour between 1960 and 1963.

49. Jeff Sluman holes in one at the fourth, 1992 
In 1992, Jeff Sluman holed his 213-yard four-iron during the first round for the first hole-in-one of the fourth hole. His tee-shot landed 15 feet from the flag and rolled uphill into the hole. “It looked pretty good when it left the club, but you never dreamed it was going in,” said Sluman. He came fourth - his best finish at Augusta.

48. Billy Casper shoots 106, 2005 
Billy Casper, the 1970 champion, had an embarrassing time at Augusta in 2005. He lost five balls in the water on the way to a 14 at the par-three 16th, and dropped 34 strokes in all during a round of 106, the highest in Masters history. But Casper's score doesn't show up in the record books: he declined to hand in his scorecard afterwards and was disqualified.

47. Mike Weir is the first left-hander to win, 2003 
No left-handed golfer had ever won the Masters before Mike Weir took the green jacket at Augusta in 2003. He managed a bogey-free 68 on the final day which put him into a play-off with Len Mattiace. Weir became the first Canadian to win a major after out-fumbling Mattiace to triumph with a bogey at the first play-off hole, the 10th.

46. Art Wall birdies the last to win, 1959
After losing a two-shot lead to the 1955 champion Cary Middlecoff at the 15th, Art Wall calmly continued a sequence of five birdies in the last six holes. His 12-foot putt on the 18th green was his fifth birdie and what turned out to be a one-shot victory. Wall claimed to have managed more than 40 holes-in-one in his life.

45. Ben Hogan three-putts the 18th, 1946 
Missing out on a play-off in 1942, Ben Hogan was set to win his first Masters four years later when long-time leader Herman Keiser three-putted at the last. Having taken a five-shot lead into the final round, Keiser was exhausted having led since the first day. He recalled that as he waited for Hogan to play the 18th, "I hoped he'd make either a birdie three to win or a five to lose ... I didn't want any play-off." Hogan obliged and, with victory in sight, three-putted to lose by one.

44. Craig Wood leads from the start, 1941 
Craig Wood had encountered terrible luck in the Masters: he nearly won the first one in 1934, lost a play-off the following year and seemed fated to never win a Major. In 1941, he led Augusta all the way, ensuring a three-shot victory. Only three men since have led the Masters from wire to wire: Arnold Palmer (1960), Jack Nicklaus (1972) and Raymond Floyd (1976).

43. Frank Stranahan finishes as runner-up, 1947 
The Masters still sets aside five places for amateurs, but one has never won the Masters though three have finished second. The first was the powerful Frank Stranahan (he was also a noted weightlifter), who shot a final-round 68 in 1947 – the best of the day – to tie Byron Nelson for second.

42. Jack Nicklaus wins his first Masters, 1963 
Jack Nicklaus' first victory was a close-run thing. With the weather making scoring difficult, only two men ended up under par – Nicklaus at two under and "Champagne" Tony Lema at one under. At 23, Nicklaus became the youngest winner. This was also the final Masters for the inaugural winner, Horton Smith. He died of Hodgkin's Disease later in the year.

41. Cary Middlecoff beats the best, 1955 
Two top golfers of the time, Ben Hogan and Sam Snead, were both in contention for the 1955 Masters, but they found themselves in second and third respectively, seven shots behind Cary Middlecoff. After taking the lead on the second day, Middlecoff didn't relinquish it and finished the tournament with a birdie. He later became a noted TV golf commentator.

40. Phil Mickelson wins at last, 2004 
After 22 wins on the American tour, and years of carrying the dreaded tag of "best golfer never to have won a Major", the big left-hander Phil Mickelson finally won one – at his 47th attempt. Thanks to birdies at five of the last seven holes, including the last, he edged out Ernie Els by a shot.

39. Peter Oosterhuis leads into the final round, 1973 
The bright young Brit led by three shots at the start of the final round after his 68 was the only sub-70 score of the third day, but he faded to a 74 and joint third. Georgia-born Tommy Aaron, the villain of the 1968 de Vicenzo incident, went on to win his only Major. "Oosty", though he won four successive European Orders of Merit, never did win one.

38. Kirk Triplett follows Harrington with hole in one, 2004 
In 2004, Kirk Triplett stepped up to drive at the 177-yard 16th. A few minutes earlier, Padraig Harrington, playing in the previous group, sank a hole-in-one at the same hole. Triplett followed Harrington in selecting a six-iron and the crowd watched in disbelief as they saw a second ace in a matter of minutes. Triplett summed up how he felt when he fell to the ground in shock on the tee: "I didn't know how to react," he said, afterwards. "As I lay on the hallowed ground, I couldn't believe it."

37. Sublime to ridiculous (2) – Mike Donald, 1990 
Mike Donald tore up the Augusta course on his first appearance there in 1990. After collecting eight birdies in a first-round 64 he lead by two strokes. But it didn't last as he slid to an 82 the next day to just beat the cut and finished 47th. Later that year he lost to Hale Irwin in a play-off for the US Open. The only bigger difference by anyone in their first two rounds at the Masters was by the 1941 champion Craig Wood who, in 1936, folowed an 88 with a 67.

36. Sublime to the ridiculous (1) – Charles Coody, 1972 
Texan Charles Coody could hardly have made a better start to defend his Masters title of 1971. He holed in one at the sixth in the first round but then things took a turn for the worse: a triple-bogey seven at the seventh saw him slide out of contention, eventually finishing 12th.

35. Ben Crenshaw's tears and glory, 1995 
Ben Crenshaw's 1995 win came days after the death of Harvey Penick, his mentor, who had taught him a smooth, effortless putting stroke. The American was a pallbearer at Penick's funeral on the Wednesday and teed off the next day. After his final putt won the championship, he colapsed in tears in his caddie's arms.

34. Arnold Palmer and the double-ball mystery, 1958 
Arnold Palmer's first Masters victory in 1958 was clouded by a double-ball controversy in the final round. On a wet day, his tee-shot at the 12th plugged into its own pitch-mark on the back fringe of the green. According to Palmer, "A local rule providing relief from an embedded ball was in effect. I should have been able to lift, clean and drop my ball without penalty to a spot as close as possible to the original position." But a rules official told Palmer he had to play the ball as it lay. Palmer told him: "I'm going to play two balls and appeal to the tournament committee." He took a five with his original ball, but a three with the second one. The appeal was eventually upheld, which saved Palmer two shots ... and he won by one.

33. Horton Smith wins first tournament, 1934 
The Masters was first played in 1934. For its first five years it was called the Augusta National Invitational tournament as Bobby Jones, one of the co-founders, thought the name The Masters was just too presumptuous. The first winner was 25-year-old Horton Smith, who sealed victory with a 20-foot putt for a birdie at the 17th. Smith won again in 1936 when he was seemingly unaware that his caddie was storing a live rabbit down the golf bag.

32. Dan Pohl's purple patch, 1982 
Dan Pohl was not quite unknown when he teed off for the first time at Augusta in 1982, but it was nonetheless a surprise when he painted one of the more purple patches in Masters history during the third round, scoring eagle, eagle, birdie, birdie from the 13th to the 16th and thus picking up six shots. On the final day he forced his way into a play-off with Craig Stadler, but there was no fairytale ending for Pohl who missed a six-foter on the first extra hole to hand the title to his opponent.

31. Byron Nelson hits the flag, 1957 
The great Byron Nelson was 45 at the 1957 Masters - the first to feature a halfway cut. Nelson finished 16th after hitting his first shot in the water at the 16th. He teed up again with a seven-iron and, to recall the words of his playing partner, Gary Player: "He hit the knob on the top of the flagstick and the ball bounced into the water." Nelson made something of a specialty of hitting the flag: at one US Open he reportedly did it six times.

30. Jack Nicklaus rolls back the years, 1998 
In 1998 The Augusta National committee made a presentation before play started to mark Jack Nicklaus' 40th Masters. Chairman Jack Stephens, pointed out that they had left some room at the bottom of the plaque, “just in case”. Nicklaus said “Let's see if we can try to fill it.” He came close but didn't win, though he did break Sam Snead's record (54 in 1967) as the oldest top-ten finisher in Masters history.

29. Nick Price shoots a 63, 1986 
Nick Price never won the Masters and his best performance was in 1986, when he finished sixth behind Jack Nicklaus. His third-round 63 became a new course record. Covering the back nine in 30 he nearly made it 62 when on a 30-foot birdie putt the ball rimmed round the cup but stayed out. “I didn't want to leave that putt short,” Price said. "I wanted to see if I could shoot 62."

28. Mark O'Meara wins at 15th attempt, 1988 
By 1998 Mark O'Meara was 41 and had 20 tournament wins under his belt though none had come in a Major. This was O'Meara's 57th Major and his 15th Masters: no one had won their first one so late. His third round 68 put him two behind leader Fred Couples, and on the final day he birdied three of the final four holes to win the title by a stroke.

27. Lee Elder is first African-American to play, 1975
The Augusta National was urged to invite Lee Elder who had won the previous season's Monsanto Open in Florida. Elder slammed his tee-shot down the middle of the first fairway but faded to rounds of 74 and 78 and missed the cut. He played the Masters five more times, with a best finish of 17th in 1979.

26. The "Tiger Slam", 2001 
Woods' third Masters meant he uniquely held all four major titles at the same time. His four-round score of 272 has been bettered only three times in Masters history – once by Woods himself in 1997, with 270. At the final hole, Woods' monster drive ended up only 70 yards from the green, the following year the tee had moved back 60 yards "to Tiger-proof" the course.

25. Craig Stadler wins, just, 1982 
Craig Stadler squandered a six-stroke lead over the last six holes at the 1982 tournament, and was all square with Dan Pohl after four rounds. But Stadler had just enough left in the tank to take the play-off at the first extra hole, leaving the Augusta National committee hoping they had a green jacket big enough to accommodate "The Walrus".

24. Fuzzy Zoeller wins on Masters debut, 1979 
Apart from the inaugural 1934 winner Horton Smith, only two men have won the Masters at their first attempt: Gene Sarazen in 1935, and Fuzzy Zoeller in 1979, both of them after play-offs. Zoeller birdied the second extra hole to defeat Ed Sneed and Tom Watson in the Masters' first sudden-death playoff.

23. Ray Floyd finds the water, 1990 
History almost repeated itself in 1990. Nick Faldo, who was seven behind at the start of the final round, forced himself into another play-off. Again he won it at the 11th, the second extra hole, after the long-time leader, Raymond Floyd, found the water. Floyd, who was 47, would have been the oldest winner of the Masters if he had held on.

22. "Hoch the Choke", 1989 
A scorching 65 from Nick Faldo on the final day in 1989 put him into a play-off with the American Scott Hoch. It looked all over when Hoch was two feet from the cup at the first extra hole, but he knocked it four feet past before holing the return. The American's chance had gone and at the next, the 11th, a relieved Faldo holed a 25-footer for the first of his three Masters.

21. Tom Weiskopf's unlucky 13 at the 12th, 1990
Two players have carded a 13 at the Masters. Tom Weiskopf followed Japan's Tsuneyuki "Tommy" Nakajima at the par-three 12th in the first round in 1980 when he dumped five balls into Rae's Creek. Weiskopf was always a bridesmaid at Augusta, finishing second four times - the most by anyone who never won a green jacket.

20. Zach Johnson wins with one over par, 2007 
Bad weather made Augusta difficult in 2007. Though Tiger Woods was on the prowl, 31-year-old Zach Johnson was not to be distracted as he made three birdies in his last six holes to finish one-over-par, 289, two clear of Woods. He was one of only three players in Masters' history for whom an over-par finish was good enough to win the green jacket.

19. Gary Player is first overseas winner, 1961 
In 1961, after three sub-70 rounds Gary Player led by four into the last day: he needed that cushion as he dipped to 74, just enough to beat the holder Arnold Palmer. In so doing the "Man in Black" had become the first non-American to win the Masters. Player changed another tradition, too: to the chagrin of the Augusta National committee, he declined to return his winner's green jacket the following year.

18. Keeping the jacket; 1966, 1990 and 2002 
Tradition dictates that the previous year's winner should present the green jacket to the new champion, which usually works well. But there's a problem when the champion retains the title. Jack Nicklaus was the first to do so, in 1966, and simply put his old jacket back on. The only other back-to-back winners were Nick Faldo (in 1990) and Tiger Woods (2002).

17. Woosie wins, 1991 
After the Scotsman (Lyle) and the Englishman (Faldo twice), what about the Welshman? Ian Woosnam took control in the middle rounds, carding a 66 and 67 to lead Tom Watson by a stroke before a nervous final-round shoot-out. With one to play, Woosnam, Watson and Jose-Maria Olazabal were all square. Olazabal dropped a shot at the last, Woosnam's missed the green with his second but scrambled a par which was fine as Watson closed with a six.

16. Larry Mize stuns Greg Norman, 1987 
The three-man play-off in 1987 featured two golfing superstars in Seve Ballesteros and Greg Norman as well as one virtual unknown - Augusta native Larry Mize. Seve was eliminated at the first extra hole and when Mize missed the green on the second extra hole, victory seemed a certainty for Greg Norman. But Mize took a sand wedge and rifled his third shot into the hole from around 140 feet to snatch victory.

15. Amateur Ken Venturi blows a big lead, 1956 
One of the biggest Masters disasters belongs to Ken Venturi. Venturi led the final round four shots clear yet lost. Still an amateur and admitting his tactics were wrong he said of his final-day performance: "I hit 15 greens but three-putted six times. The mistake I made was consciously trying to two-putt every green and just coast home."

14. Olazabal secures an emotional victory
In 1999, Jose Maria Olazabal was the most emotional of winners. Two years earlier his career was as good as over after being diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis that reduced his mobility by the day and eventually rendered the Spaniard barely able to drag himself from his bed. A German doctor, Hans-Wilhelm Muller-Wohlfahrt, suggested it could be more to do with his back than his feet. Olazabal went on to win his second Masters and paid tribute to the doctor in his winning speech.

13. Ben Hogan wins for the first time, 1951
After two near-misses in 1942 and 1946, Ben Hogan seemed destined never to win the Masters, particularly after a near-fatal accident in 1949. But Hogan defied doctors who said he might not walk again and started concentrating on Majors. He went on to win six between 1950 and 1953, the Masters in 1951.

12. Jimmy Demaret does the hat-trick, 1950
The first man to win the Masters three times was Jimmy Demaret, completing his hat-trick in 1950. He had to make up seven shots on leader Jim Ferrier over six holes and ended up beating him by a stroke. According to a later Masters champion, Jack Burke, Demaret had "the strongest hands in the world, and his wrists were the size of most people's ankles".

11. Tiger Woods chips in at the 16th, 2005 
Tiger Woods' fourth Masters was a come-from-behind affair following a first-round 74. Even a second-round 66 left him six shots behind leader Chris DiMarco, but his third round 65 resulted in Dimarco being left three behind. In the final round, DiMarco hung in there and looked likely to level as Woods' tee at the 16th went into long grass. As though being pulled by a string into the hole, Woods played “one of my more creative shots”, a 30-foot chip that rolled slowly towards the hole before dropping in. The pair ended level but Woods went on to shake off DiMarco at the first extra hole.

10. Seve's first win, 1980
Severiano Ballesteros dominated the Masters in 1980, with rounds of 66, 69 and 68 to take a seven-shot lead into the final day. He moved to 10 clear with nine to play and had a 25-footer to notch yet another birdie at the 10th. By then, people were almost taking it for granted that he would make it. Two holes later his lead had been severely cut with Jack Newton champing at the bit in second place. After the 13th, the lead was down to three but that's as close as it got. He eventually won by four and became the first European to win the Masters, and at 23, the youngest champion.

9. Byron Nelson wins the greatest play-off, 1942 
There have been 13 play-offs in the Masters, but the best of the lot was probably in 1942 when Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson went head-to-head over 18 holes after finishing three ahead of the field. "Lord Byron" finished on 69 edging Hogan out by a stroke. Fifteen years beforehand, when they were 14, Nelson had beaten Hogan in a nine-hole play-off to win the Glen Garden Caddie Tournament in Fort Worth in Texas.

8. Arnold Palmer plays his 50th Masters, 2004 
Arnold Palmer took part in every Masters from 1955 to 2004, winning four times and enjoying an 11-year run during which he never finished outside the top 10. On his 50th tournament he was 74, and missed the cut. For Palmer it was unimportant, he was there to say good-bye to old friends, picking out familiar faces in the crowd at every hole, saying good-bye to 'Arnie's Army'.

7. Gene Sarazen's "shot heard round the world", 1935 
The first time this saying was applied to golf was during the second Masters. With four holes remaining, Gene Sarazen trailed Craig Wood by three. At 'Firethorn', the par-five 15th of 485 yards, Sarazen holed his second for an albatross - he made up three strokes in one go. They finished square, which resulted in a two-round play-off that Sarazen won and so became the first of only five players to win all four Majors.

6. Nick Faldo demolishes Greg Norman, 1996 
Greg Norman had yet another chance to win in 1996, taking a six-stroke lead into the final day. After six holes his partner Nick Faldo had only made up one shot. Suddenly, Norman's lead started to dwindle and disappeared altogether when he took three putts at the 11th. Norman lost his nerve and Faldo took the lead finishing five ahead to collect his third green jacket.

5. Gary Player wins from seven behind, 1978 
By 1978 Gary Player's Major-winning days were thought to be gone. He was also seven points short of the leader going into the final round, but from there he dazzled with a majestic 64. It was his third Masters and his ninth and last Major. His terrific round included seven birdies in the last ten holes. He said: "I shot 30 on the back nine and I rimmed the hole three times. I thought to myself it was a good thing those putts didn't go in because if you shoot 27 round Augusta they'll never invite you back."

4. Roberto de Vicenzo signs for wrong score and misses play-off, 1968 
Distracted after dropping a shot at the last hole, the Argentinian Roberto de Vicenzo signed for the wrong score after his playing partner, Tommy Aaron, wrote a four for the previous hole instead of de Vicenzo's birdie three. The mistake cost de Vicenzo a shot, along with a play-off with Bob Goalby. "What a stupid I am," lamented the distraught de Vicenzo. Aaron was almost as upset.

3. Sandy Lyle birdies the last to win, 1988 
By 1988 there had never been a British winner of the Masters and, it looked like it would remain that way as Sandy Lyle found the fairway bunker with his tee-shot at the last. He had been four ahead with nine to play before catching trouble around Amen Corner, putting him level with Mark Calcavecchia. Remaining calm Lyle calmly hoisted a seven-iron that pitched past the flag and spun back 10 feet. It was a straight putt although Lyle admitted after that his knees were knocking.

2. Jack Nicklaus becomes the oldest winner, 1986 
Going into the Masters in 1986 Jack Nicklaus had not finished higher than 39th in his previous seven tournaments. Greg Norman was leading the field and the 46-year-old Nicklaus was only four behind – but then the magic started. He birdied 10, 11 and 13, but his play on 15 was what made the impossible start to look possible. There Nicklaus knocked in an eagle and he then almost holed his tee shot on 16 – his play was met by roaring crowds as he took the lead. When Seve Ballesteros went in the water on 15 and Norman dropped a shot, Nicklaus went on to win his record sixth green jacket - he was 46 years 82 days old.

1. Tiger Woods becomes the youngest winner, 1997 
Tiger woods rewrote the record books in 1997 – his first Major as a pro. He had a quiet first round of 70, then incredibly scored 66 and 65 in the second and third rounds, taking a lead of nine into the final day – by the end his lead had extended to 12. "This seems to be the next generation," said Tom Kite, a distant second in his 24th Masters. "He seems to have leapfrogged the rest of the field." Woods established new Masters records for margin of victory and low aggregate (270). He was, at 21 years 104 days, the youngest champion.






    Below is the list of winners of The Masters, one of the four men's majors, dating back to the tournament's inception in 1934. 

    2010 - Phil Mickelson
    2009 - Angel Cabrera
    2008 - Trevor Immelman
    2007 - Zach Johnson
    2006 - Phil Mickelson
    2005 - Tiger Woods
    2004 - Phil Mickelson
    2003 - Mike Weir
    2002 - Tiger Woods
    2001 - Tiger Woods
    2000 - Vijay Singh
    1999 - Jose Maria Olazabal
    1998 - Mark O'Meara
    1997 - Tiger Woods
    1996 - Nick Faldo
    1995 - Ben Crenshaw
    1994 - Jose Maria Olazabal
    1993 - Bernhard Langer
    1992 - Fred Couples
    1991 - Ian Woosnam
    1990 - Nick Faldo
    1989 - Nick Faldo
    1988 - Sandy Lyle
    1987 - Larry Mize
    1986 - Jack Nicklaus
    1985 - Bernhard Langer
    1984 - Ben Crenshaw
    1983 - Seve Ballesteros
    1982 - Craig Stadler
    1981 - Tom Watson
    1980 - Seve Ballesteros
    1979 - Fuzzy Zoeller
    1978 - Gary Player
    1977 - Tom Watson
    1976 - Raymond Floyd
    1975 - Jack Nicklaus
    1974 - Gary Player
    1973 - Tommy Aaron
    1972 - Jack Nicklaus
    1971 - Charles Coody
    1970 - Billy Casper
    1969 - George Archer
    1968 - Bob Goalby
    1967 - Gay Brewer
    1966 - Jack Nicklaus
    1965 - Jack Nicklaus
    1964 - Arnold Palmer
    1963 - Jack Nicklaus
    1962 - Arnold Palmer
    1961 - Gary Player
    1960 - Arnold Palmer
    1959 - Art Wall
    1958 - Arnold Palmer
    1957 - Doug Ford
    1956 - Jack Burke Jr.
    1955 - Cary Middlecoff
    1954 - Sam Snead
    1953 - Ben Hogan
    1952 - Sam Snead
    1951 - Ben Hogan
    1950 - Jimmy Demaret
    1949 - Sam Snead
    1948 - Claude Harmon
    1947 - Jimmy Demaret
    1946 - Herman Keiser
    1942 - Byron Nelson
    1941 - Craig Wood
    1940 - Jimmy Demaret
    1939 - Ralph Guldahl
    1938 - Henry Picard
    1937 - Byron Nelson
    1936 - Horton Smith


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