AUGUSTA, Ga. — The roars returned to Masters. At least two of them.
There were enough spectators, believed to be roughly 8,000 a day, to at least bring some sound back to the gorgeous scenery of Augusta National in April. And they stood six-deep over the final 100 yards of the 18th green — masks on — as Hideki Matsuyama walked up the hill to a one-shot victory.
Missing was that head-turning volume, a brief burst of cheers that made spectators look around and try to figure out where it came from and what they were missing.
One of those roars was for Tommy Fleetwood making a hole-in-one on the 16th hole in the opening round. The loudest of the week was for Corey Conners making his ace on the sixth hole Saturday.
But it was progress, and that goes for the rest of golf.
Spectators in limited numbers returned this year at the Phoenix Open — compared with other years in Phoenix, that would be very limited — and have been a part of PGA Tour events ever since the tour left California.
The next test is not so much who has spectators, but how many? And the most questions surround the Memorial in Dublin, Ohio, the first week in June.
The tournament posted on its website efforts to plan for “as safe of an experience as possible” and that it will decide while consulting with local and state governments and the tour.
The tournament said it has temporarily suspended badge sales to best manage the ticketing process. Fans are asked to sign up on a wait list and they will be contacted “should additional badges become available.”
The Memorial last year had a detailed plan for spectators that had been approved by the state until it was decided 10 days before the start of the tournament there would be none. A small grandstand by the 18th hole and some concession structures were still up during the tournament.
At least some spectators would be expected everywhere else on the upcoming tour schedule. The RBC Heritage this week has allowed 20% capacity at Hilton Head.
That will be followed by the Zurich Classic in Avondale, Louisiana (up to 10,000 a day), the Valspar Championship in the Tampa Bay, Florida, area (20-30% capacity), the Wells Fargo Championship in Charlotte, North Carolina (maximum 30% capacity), the AT&T Bryon Nelson in Dallas (10,000 a day), the PGA Championship at Kiawah Island in South Carolina (10,000 a day) and the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial in Fort Worth, Texas (10,000 a day).
“It’s funny to think that 10,000 is going to feel like a lot of people, but after the year we just went through, it’s going to feel like it,” Jon Drago, the AT&T Byron Nelson tournament director, told The Dallas Morning News.
Colonial last year was the first event back from the pandemic. Hilton Head moved to June and the PGA Championship went from May to August. The rest of them between now and Memorial were canceled.
SILVER TO GREEN
Hideki Matsuyama became only seventh player to go from winning a silver cup as low amateur at the Masters to a green jacket as the Masters champion.
The others were Sergio Garcia, Phil Mickelson, Tiger Woods, Ben Crenshaw, Jack Nicklaus and Cary Middlecoff.
The shortest turnaround was Woods, who was low amateur in 1995 and won in 1997. The longest stretch was Mickelson, who was low amateur in 1991 and won his first green jacket in 2004.
And it leads to the question: Who’s next?
There are three leading candidates, and that starts with Bryson DeChambeau because he already has a major (U.S. Open). DeChambeau tied for 21st as low amateur in 2016. He hasn’t cracked the top 25 as a pro.
Patrick Cantlay was low amateur in 2012. He briefly had the lead after an eagle on the 15th hole in the final round only to bogey the next two holes and tied for ninth. Viktor Hovland was low amateur in 2019. He has won twice on the PGA Tour already. He tied for 21st in his Masters debut as a pro this year.
REJUVENATED OLAZABAL
Two-time Masters champion Jose Maria Olazabal felt the best he has in years leaving Augusta National, not only because he made the cut in the Masters for the first time since in seven years but because of how he played.
Aside from a few poor shots in the final round, he was solid.
“It was pretty much the same all week long,” Olazabal said after a tie for 50th. “And in that regard, I take quite a few positive things from this week.”
Next stop: Florida.
Olazabal is playing the Chubb Classic on the PGA Tour Champions, his first start of the year on the senior circuit. He played only five times last year, primarily due to the pandemic.
“The idea is to play as much as possible on the Champions tour and see if I can somehow enjoy the game as I did this week,” he said.
CONSOLATION PRIZE
Corey Conners was five shots out of the lead going into final round of the Masters until falling back early and closing with a 74. He had high hopes for Sunday and was disappointed by the bad start, having to shoot 34 on the back nine just to finish six shots back in a tie for eighth. He at least is assured of returning next year.
And then he learned something that lifted his spirits.
The local Tim Hortons store in his hometown of Listowel, Ontario, took the occasion of his hole-in-one on the sixth hole Saturday to make a special donut. It’s covered with green sprinkles with a powdered-sugar Timbit in the hole to symbolize the golf ball.
“That was pretty sweet,” Conners said. “Not something they normally do, so I was definitely pumped up about that. I wish I could access one of those right now, but I’m pretty far away from the closest Tim Hortons. Definitely pretty special moment when I saw what they had done.”
NAME CHANGES
The PGA Tour season opener is staying at Silverado Resort in Napa, California, and will have a new name. Fortinet, which specializes in cybersecurity, has become title sponsor under a six-year deal. That starts with the Fortinet Championship on Sept. 16.
This is the third title sponsor since the tournament began at CordeValle in San Martin, California, in 2007.
The PGA Tour also announced the one-time event that replaces the Canadian Open this year will be promoted by the state of South Carolina and called the Palmetto Championship at Congaree. That will be June 10-13, one week before the U.S. Open.
DIVOTS
Rickie Fowler is out of the top 100 in the world for the first time since February 2010. … With his tie for 12th at the Masters, Stewart Cink became the 22nd player to surpass $40 million in career earnings on the PGA Tour. … Of the 17 players who finished among the top 12 and ties at the Masters, 14 earned spots in the field next year. Only three were already eligible as Masters champions, major champions from the last five years or Players Championship winners from the last three years. … The Australian PGA Championship, canceled last year because of the pandemic, returns to the schedule on Dec. 2-5 at Royal Queensland Golf Club in Brisbane. … The U.S. Amateur Four-Ball Championship has been awarded to Philadelphia Cricket Club in 2024. It will be the first time the club hosts a USGA event since Alex Smith won the 1910 U.S. Open. It was supposed to host the Four-Ball last year until it was canceled by the pandemic.
STAT OF THE WEEK
For the the third straight year, No. 5 at Augusta National played as the toughest hole in the Masters. Over the previous 84 Masters, its cumulative rank was No. 5.
FINAL WORD
“My nerves really didn’t start on the second nine. It was right from the start today. Right to the very last putt.” — Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama.
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