‘Epic Nuttiness’: A Wacky Sunday Like No Other at Augusta National
- Posted on April 10, 2011 at 9:35pm by
Scott Baker
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AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — They say the Masters doesn’t truly begin until the back nine on Sunday.
This one? Epic nuttiness.
So many lead changes you needed motion sickness pills to watch the scoreboard. A meltdown that makes Greg Norman’s heartbreak look good. And madness that went on right to the very end, until Charl Schwartzel made four straight birdies to end the hopes of all those players who’d had a chance to win it in the final two hours.
“There were so many numbers going up and down. It must have looked great on TV,” said Jason Day, who finished two strokes behind Schwartzel. “It was exciting stuff, it really was.”
For those who lost track of the leaderboard, here’s a rundown of some of the wackiness:
THE RUSH TO BUTLER CABIN: Despite a shaky front nine, Rory McIlroy had a 1-stroke lead as he walked to the 10th tee. All he had to do was make pars, and the green jacket would be his as a mere 21-year-old. But McIlroy, who still remembers Nick Faldo being gifted the Masters title by Norman in ‘96, collapsed in spectacular fashion.
He pulled his tee shot into the trees left of the fairway, and the ball apparently ricocheted between two of the club’s famous cabins. McIlroy had no choice but to punch it back out, but then yanked his approach shot left of the green, near a scoreboard, before banging a shot off a tree limb.
He finally chipped it onto the green — barely. Two putts left him with a 7, and his lead was now a 2-shot deficit.
McIlroy could have survived it, but he three-putted for another bogey on No. 11. After a four-putt double-bogey on 12, the collapse was complete. After leading the first three days, the Northern Irishman wasn’t even on the leaderboard when the afternoon ended. He closed with an 80, finishing 10 strokes behind Schwartzel.
“I just hit a poor tee shot on 10 and unraveled from there,” McIlroy said. “I’ll have plenty more chances, I know that. It’s just very disappointing what happened today.”
TIGER’S ROAR: The roars were echoing through the pines like the old days as Tiger Woods reeled off four birdies and an eagle for a 31 on the front nine. Never mind his erratic game or the fact he hadn’t won since that infamous car crash 16 months ago. When he made the turn with a share of the lead, almost everyone expected him to tear through the back nine, dropping his challengers one by one.
But Woods isn’t quite his old self yet. A 3-footer for par should have been a gimme, but Woods banged it off the back of the cup for a bogey on No. 12. With a chance to take the outright lead on the par-5 15th, he missed another short putt for an eagle. He still made birdie, but on this wildest of days, it may as well have been a bogey for all the good it did him.
He would play his last three holes at par, and didn’t even bother sticking around for the finish.
BIRDIE STRING: Schwartzel running off four straight birdies was bigger, because they got him a green jacket. But Geoff Ogilvy made five in a row on Nos. 12 through 16 to jump to the top of the leader board.
“When I birdied 14, I thought I was in pretty good shape,” Ogilvy said.
But the Australian couldn’t go any lower, and there were still five groups playing when he finished. Ogilvy would finish at 10-under, tied for fourth with Woods and Luke Donald.
DONALD’S COMEBACK: The Par 3 Tournament winner has never gone on to win the green jacket, and that dubious streak sure looked safe when Luke Donald dunked his tee shot in the water on 13. Instead of being two shots off the lead, he was now four back.
But wait. Birdies on 15 and 16 got Donald within one shot of Adam Scott, only to give a stroke back on 17. When his tee shot on 18 landed on the right edge of a bunker, leaving him a lie only a stork could love, Donald was out of the mix.
Or was he?
Hitting off one leg, Donald’s ball came out perfectly only to hit the flag and carom back off the green. But Donald chipped in from the fairway, the ball bouncing several times on the green before dropping in to put Donald back at 10 under, one shot back.
“I dug in deep and made some birdies coming in,” Donald said, cheers of “LUUUUUKE!” still ringing in his ears. “But I think I’m going to come up a little bit short.”
THE AUSSIES: Adam Scott grabbed the outright lead for the first time with an 8-foot birdie putt on the 14th, giving all of Australia hope that its oh-fer at Augusta National might finally be over.
No way any lead was going to hold up for four holes on this day, however, and, sure enough, Scott’s second shot on 15 rocketed behind the grandstand. He managed a par, then stuffed his tee shot to 2 feet on the par-3 16th.
Meanwhile Day, his playing partner and fellow Aussie, had been stuck at 10-under for what seemed like an eternity on a day when the leaderboard was on spin cycle. (It was only three holes, actually.) But he made a long putt for a birdie on 17, then rolled in an 8-footer for another on 18. Suddenly he, too, was at 12 under with Scott.
But they were out of holes, and Schwartzel had just made a 10-footer to take the lead by himself. When the South African put his approach shot to a mere 20 feet, leaving him two shots to win the green jacket, Scott, Day and all of their fellow Aussies could only shake their heads again.
“I hung in there as long as I could,” Scott said. “Obviously, I can’t control Charl. When you birdie the last four holes at the Masters and you’re around the lead, that usually wins.”
It did.





















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h3llyahimerican
Posted on April 11, 2011 at 3:58pmI love playing golf (just a reason to get drunk and cuss all afternoon). I normally do not like watching it, but yesterday was actually exciting.
I do not like figure skating, so I gaurantee if a figure skating article comes out, I will not be reading it. If I decide to read it (maybe it says something like FIGURE SKATER SLICES OFF FINGER ON ICE INADVERTENTLY I may be inclined to click), I won’t waste the effort to comment “yawn figure skating is boring” because I already understand this fact and I would be a moron to read about something I already knew I deemed boring.
Report Post »shakenbake
Posted on April 11, 2011 at 3:43pmI was there! That was the most exciting golf I have ever witnessed against the backdrop of Augusta National. Having never been there before and getting to see a great tournament is a very special memory now. Thank goodness Tiger didn’t win.
Report Post »parlayer
Posted on April 11, 2011 at 9:28amAlmost but no “Cigar” tiger!!
Report Post »ofallon
Posted on April 11, 2011 at 8:25amI thought it was strange that Tiger didn’t stick around for the finish. He said, “I’m starving” and left the party early. I was happy for Mr. Schwartzel and South Africa. The interview with the young Japanese amateur winner was impressive also.
Report Post »flasho
Posted on April 11, 2011 at 8:09amOK, you all don’t like reading about golf, yet you read the article anyway? Hmm, I usually don’t read things I have no interest in.
Report Post »survivorseed
Posted on April 12, 2011 at 5:54pmNot only read it but couldn’t help but have their opinion on it too. Not only had their opinion of it but managed to get an obama smear in there as well. This site is truly for people with absolutely nothing better to do with their time.
Report Post »Maybe you people could take up golf to pass the time although I suspect sgt crust isn’t very coordinated
teddrunk
Posted on April 11, 2011 at 7:24amWow, that was exciting. I wish I would of recorded it, but I was busy outside on a nice day watching my grass grow. Next week I’ll be watching paint dry. Grass, paint & golf, the 3 most exciting things as a spectator.
Report Post »curmudgeon60
Posted on April 11, 2011 at 6:46amSo this is why NOBAMA is on his 63rd game of golf!! He’s practicing for the MASTERS.
Report Post »waicool
Posted on April 11, 2011 at 4:26amtiger woods tiger woods tiger woods tiger woods tiger woods tiger woods tiger woods tiger woods tiger woods tiger woods ad infitenum i’m not buying it.
Report Post »nocomment
Posted on April 11, 2011 at 4:06amI expected to read or see something ‘epic’ or ‘nutty’…
All I found… was myself yawning.
Report Post »nocomment
Posted on April 11, 2011 at 4:02amGolf… Yawn…
Report Post »Affirmative Blaction
Posted on April 11, 2011 at 4:59amYawn indeed, now I love golf, well playing it, reading it, eh well mabey yeah, videos of highlight shots would help.
Report Post »Fletch
Posted on April 11, 2011 at 5:20amwatching someone else play golf … yawn yawn
reading about someone else watching someone else playing golf …… yawn yawn yawn
Report Post »GODSAMERICA
Posted on April 11, 2011 at 8:47amNo yawns there for me. It was very good golf and very interesting to watch. I know I enjoyed it plus I picked up a few ideas to try.
Report Post »Sgt.Crust
Posted on April 11, 2011 at 9:02amGolf is a boring sport to watch, to play and therefore is a game for wussies!
Report Post »TakeOurCountryBack
Posted on April 11, 2011 at 9:46pmSGT.CRUST
Spoken like someone who rarely hits the ball past the ladies tee.
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