Daily Mail

WORLD No1 QUITS WITHOUT PLAYING A SINGLE SHOT!

SO HOW DID RORY, WILLETT AND CO FARE IN AUGUSTA?

- MARTIN SAMUEL Chief Sports Writer reports from Augusta

THe Masters giveth, and the Masters taketh away. For a time yesterday, the Masters threatened to take Danny Willett, its newest champion, to the cleaners.

There are some games in which two sixes are a positive outcome. Monopoly, for instance; you get to throw again. In craps, two sixes preceded by a cry of ‘ boxcars’ mean good money. even during Tarot readings, two sixes are a fine omen, suggesting a person will show kindness to you.

There is little kind about two sixes at Augusta. At the Masters, two sixes are quite horrid, certainly when they are the first numbers on your scorecard.

That was Willett’s fate getting reacquaint­ed with the scene of his greatest triumph. Double bogey at the first, bogey at the second. Six and six again. It is to Willett’s tremendous credit that such a start did not sink him. Indeed, in the circumstan­ces, his round became something of a triumph. Maybe it is the roast beef of old england that Willett served at his champions dinner. They are made of strong stuff in Yorkshire.

everything about Augusta reveres its champions; everything bar the course. Willett drove through gate three, up Magnolia Drive, the magnificen­t vista of the clubhouse before him. He parked on the special side of the car park, reserved for champions, climbed the staircase to the locker room, reserved for champions. He had never been there until this week, he said, had never returned to Augusta since the win.

He had selected an all-white ensemble for his debut as defending champion, the same outfit he wore on his last outing here. White hooded jacket. Slim-fit white trousers, like a scar of chalk amid the lush greens. everything about his appearance suggested confidence. Look at me, I’m back.

An hour or so later, Willett was peering, forlornly and in vain, through trees for sight of a green. His tee shot, his first as champion, had been sliced right. Significan­tly right. An aerial map showed it closer to a service road near the old media centre than the fairway.

Willett tried to blast his way out, and failed, so his third shot was also played from pine straw. The cossetted sanctuary of the champions’ room now seemed a very long way back. It took Willett three more shots to get down.

He is not in the best form, 17th in the rankings as opposed to ninth at Augusta last year. even so, this was a worrying start. Willett marched towards the second tee and respite. Nice fairway, the second. Hard to miss.

Not impossible, though, as he demonstrat­ed. Then he found sand. It’s a par five, Augusta’s second hole, the chance to get a friendly splash of red on the scorecard, representi­ng birdie. Willett went blue for bogey instead. Another six.

After the fantasy of 2016, here was a bad dream. It is hard to retain the Masters, and only the greatest of the greats have done it: Jack Nicklaus, Nick Faldo, Tiger Woods. But to miss the cut? The first reigning Masters champion since Mike Weir in 2004? That wouldn’t be cool. That wouldn’t make for lively conversati­onn back in the champions’ locker room.om.

If Willett had doubts in thathat moment, he would not haveve been the only one. The e

Augusta Chronicle devoted its page nine to tournament prediction­s and it would have made dispiritin­g reading for Willett. One section divided up the field into groups of five: five favourites, five first-timers ready too win, five worth mentioning.

At the bottom, Willett’stt’s picture was flanked by Bubbaubba Watson, Martin Kaymer, Andy Sullivan and Webb Simpson.mpson Willett was one of the five for whom it was ‘not gonna happen’. And in that moment, it looked as if The

Augusta Chronicle were very good judges indeed.

So Willett did what a champion does. He dug in. He knuckled down. He sucked up the pressure and introduced consistenc­y to his game. He found the fairway and drained a 13-foot birdie putt on the third. He made six straight pars through the remaining front nine. He played his shot of the round, a 180-yard fairway iron to within eight inches to birdie the 10th. And, yes, he gave a little back at the 11th, too. But that happens. This was a tough day at Augusta. The sky with its fluffy clouds may have resembled the opening titles of The Simpsons, but the wind was awkward and under-par rounds were the substantia­l minority.

At the 15th, it blew Willett’s ball off the green, towards the water, only the residue of Wednesday’s rain preventing disaster. Proper parky as they might say around Willett’s way. It picked up more as Willett made his way home. And it was there, surrounded by the famous azaleas on the par-five 13th green, that the Masters and its champion fell in love again. An eagle. A lovely big eagle to return his score to level par and to make this a truly impressive round, one that befitted the status of a man who parks his car that bit nearer, and gets dressed upstairs.

Willett kept the good side of the creek down the left of the fairway and then hit an absolute screamer of a second, 218 yards to within 11 feet of the hole. He had been unfortunat­e with a few shorter putts, but this one dropped, sweetly. The only eagle at the hole all day.

In that moment, Willett entered the top 15 on the leaderboar­d. A bullish approach on the 18th green proved costly, three-putting to finish the day one over par, but given his start, it was some fightback. Indeed, given those sixes, one might even say it were champion.

He did what a champion does and sucked up the pressure

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Eye of the storm: Dustin Johnson withdraws on the first tee
GETTY IMAGES Eye of the storm: Dustin Johnson withdraws on the first tee
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