The Independent on Saturday

‘The return to glory’ ... then just silence

When Tiger Woods won his first Major title in 11 years Sunday at the Masters, and longtime broadcaste­r Jim Nantz was on the call for CBS

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“THE return to glory,” Nantz intoned as Woods’s championsh­ip-sealing putt settled into the 18th hole. Following the putt, Nantz let the images of the aftermath speak for the moment; he remained silent on air for nearly three minutes as viewers watched Woods celebrate with his family – including his children and his mother. Nantz is no stranger to having a frontrow seat for iconic moments featuring the world’s most famous golfer. He was in the broadcast booth for Woods’s first Major title at the 1997 Masters, and he punctuated that victory with a legendary line, “A win for the ages.” The Washington Post caught up with Nantz to chat about the two events and whether Woods’s win Sunday is the most memorable event he has ever covered (spoiler: it is).

The Post: Okay, Jim, first things first. Was “The return to glory” line off the cuff, or were you planning it down the back nine or even before that?

Nantz: It came to me right at the very end. I didn’t have anything locked up in my head because it could have gone so many different ways on Sunday. It was different in 1997 when Tiger won. I called it “A win for the ages.” That win was much bigger; it had a social significan­ce that transcende­d the sport . ... In 1997 he had a nine-shot lead going into Sunday, so on Saturday night ... I thought through what that last scene was going to look like and what I would say over the last putt. That night I remember sitting in my hotel room and feeling the weight of great broadcaste­rs who had come before me – Dick Enberg, Jim McKay [and others] – so many giants of golf broadcasti­ng peering over my shoulder asking, “How are you going to handle this?” I felt tension, anxiety.

This one, Tiger was two shots back going into Sunday, and he was still a couple back on the 12th hole ... I didn’t know when it left my lips, but I think it’s been pretty good based on the hundreds of texts I’ve gotten that thought “glory” captured the spirituali­ty of the moment. That captured the glory that’s in his life, the fact that he’s a re-made man – at least from what we can tell. Part of the reason I went with the word glory is because when he was on the 18th, [my director] Steve Milton found his family behind the green. When I saw the shot of his mom and son and daughter – assuming he could finish the deal with a five to win – I knew it was going to be an incredible scene that was going to be something similar to ’97. I thought the word glory captured this accomplish­ment and comeback that was truly unimaginab­le.

The Post: After Woods’s winning putt, there was 2:43 of silence on the air as Woods hugged his kids. Was that a conscious choice to let the moment speak for itself?

Nantz: That was easy ... I was feeling it. I don’t mean to sound like a wacko spinning off in some crazy hippie orbit, but I was feeling the moment. I call golf with my head and heart. I don’t have notes in front of me – it’s different from basketball and football in that feel. There was no way I was going to say anything over those images of Tiger with his family. The chanting in the background, the scene was rich. I knew instinctiv­ely I wanted to sit back and enjoy. All I could do was ruin it. The Post: Where does Sunday rank in terms of most memorable events you’ve called?

Nantz: When I walked out of there Sunday night I said it might be the greatest event I’ve ever covered. The one I compare it to would be 1986, when I did my first Masters and Jack Nicklaus’s historic sixth Masters title. I thought I would never live to see another day like that. But I think we just did. I think I could go a lifetime and not beat it. | The Washington Post

 ??  ?? JIM NANTZ calls Tiger Woods’ 2019 Masters win ‘the best event I’ve ever covered.’ | Pressfroum
JIM NANTZ calls Tiger Woods’ 2019 Masters win ‘the best event I’ve ever covered.’ | Pressfroum

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