Sunday Territorian

Scott’s putting in effort

- RUSSELL GOULD

WHEN he was forced off golf courses everywhere at exactly the wrong time, Adam Scott sent an SOS for a putting mat.

Being thrust into 10 days of isolation after a positive COVID-19 test in late October, just as the former world No.1 was ramping up his Masters preparatio­ns, was the biggest spanner in the works Scott could imagine.

The Aussie great works his entire calendar around preparing for the majors, meticulous­ly plotting a path that allows him to peak at Augusta, like he did for his famous victory in 2013. Scott had stopped playing after the US Open in the middle of September, rested, then resumed his intense training regime and arrived at the ZOZO Championsh­ip in California ready to play.

But instead he was sent to a hotel in Los Angeles, stuck in a single room, saved only by a putting mat and some “gifts” from Scotty Cameron, who makes his putters, to keep him going until he emerged on November 2.

“I bought a putting mat for the hotel room that Scotty Cameron sent up for me to just have some fun with,” Scott said, after arriving at the Houston Open last week.

But while Houston was in his plans, being holed up for 10 days with no golf was not, and Scott didn’t get the October look at Augusta he had planned to get ready for the first ever Masters in November.

Scott hasn’t missed a Masters since 2002, every one of them in April, but knows this year the course will look, and play, differentl­y.

“For quite a few years I had always kind of arrived (at Augusta) on Friday night or Saturday morning and played over the weekend, but that wasn’t really the plan this year,” Scott said.

“It was to get up there maybe after the ZOZO and go and visit for a day or so and just get a look at it, I guess, in this fall time of year.

“So now I’m just going to go in Sunday night and play.

“I mean, I feel like it’s nice to go and visit and it’s nice to get familiar, but I’ve been there a lot and I am fairly familiar with it.”

The absence of patrons, as fans are called, fans will give the whole event a different look and feel, which Scott knows all too well.

“The crowd really enhances the atmosphere,” he said.

“I have very strong memories of those final couple of hours on the golf course (in 2013) as the clouds got low and the rain set in and it got a bit cool and it stayed that way.

“You know, the patrons there at Augusta, it became like a bit of a hardcore sports fan feeling and it was such a great atmosphere, especially in the playoff with myself and Cabrera.

“Everyone was out there wet, but it didn’t matter, they were at the Masters and watching some good golf. I certainly got a strong memory from that. So there will be something missing, for sure.”

Scott leads a five-pronged Australian attack, with Jason Day, Marc Leishman and Cameron Smith. The addition this year is Victorian amateur Lukas Michel, who won his way to Augusta with victory in last year’s US Mid-Amateur Championsh­ip.

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