Baltimore Sun

Drama dominates on Day 1

Spieth’s birdie surge, Sergio’s splash downs part of fun at Augusta

- By Teddy Greenstein he was agua.

AUGUSTA. GA. — Why do we love the Masters? It’s not the azaleas or $1.50 pimento cheese sandwiches.

Amain reason is the drama this spectacula­r golf course provides.

Where else on earth could we see the defending champion rinse five consecutiv­e shots on the same day an amateur makes two eagles? And those were just two of the stunning developmen­ts Thursday from Round 1 at Augusta National:

Few others did, writing off the 2015 Masters champion after his putting stroke went MIA over the winter and stayed lost until last week’s tie for third in Houston. Onthe eve of the Masters, the headline on a golf.com video asked: “Does Jordan Spieth have a confidence problem?” All together now: NO. Spieth eagled the eighth hole by getting up and down from 276 yards and reeled off five straight birdies on Nos. 13-17. Would he close the round with a sixth straight? No, not after hooking a drive into the trees, chipping out sideways and ripping a 3-wood well left of the green. But a brilliant pitch led to a satisfying bogey and a 6-under 66 to lead the field by two.

What got him going? A fresh glove for a sweaty left hand.

“I started pin-seeking after that,” he said.

five balls into the pond that fronts the 15th green was classic Sergio. What, you thought

responsibl­e? “It’s the first time in my career where I make a 13 without missing a shot,” he said. “Simple as that.”

The defending champion hit a Jordan Spieth reacts after making birdie on the 16th hole on Thursday, one of his five straight birdies. 6-iron from 206 yards that he thought “was perfect.” And then he essentiall­y hit the same shot four straight times, overspinni­ng a sand wedge and watching as the balls retreated into the

“The ball just wouldn’t stop,” he said.

Bubba Watson, observing from the group behind, defended Garcia: “He wasn’t hitting bad shots; it’s not like he was duffing or giving up.” And Garcia followed up his 13 with a birdie 2 on the 16th.

The 13 is the highest score ever recorded at No. 15 (by two shots!) and ties Tommy Nakajima (13th hole, 1978) and Tom Weiskopf (12th hole, 1980) for the highest score in Masters history.

of a miracle, and we will not disagree. If you saw what transpired Wednesday after he ran backward to celebrate an ace in the par-3 contest, you were thinking amputation was more likely than a next-day 68 in the Masters.

For those who didn’t see it — don’t. Finau crumpled to the ground after partially dislocatin­g his left ankle, which he then popped back into place out of embarrassm­ent.

“The last thing I wanted was to get put on a stretcher,” he said during an ESPN interview, adding that the excruciati­on level was 10 out of 10.

An MRI revealed no structural damage, clearing Finau to play. And play he did, thriving on Augusta National’s hilly fairways to record six birdies.

on Augusta National’s par-5s — even after club officials “Tiger-proofed” them. OnThursday he said he played them “very sloppily,” and the result was all pars.

But let’s not get carried away regarding Woods’ mediocre 1over 73 in his first round in a major since 2015. He’s still well in contention, seven shots behind Spieth. And he has never been Mr. Thursday. In his 20 previous first rounds here, Woods broke 70 only once. In 2005, he shot an opening 74. Three days later (66-65-71), he donned his fourth green jacket.

And this quote should put his performanc­e — and remarkable recovery from spinal fusion surgery — into perspectiv­e.

“I came up here the last couple of years just to have food,” he said of the Champions Dinner.

Doug Ghim by telling him: “It’s scoreable. There’s no wind. Go tear it up.” Ghim, who turned in the day’s low amateur score of even-par 72, made eagles on Nos. 13 and 18, where he holed out from 188 yards with a 6-iron and embraced his caddie/father, Jeff. It was only the sixth eagle at No. 18 in Masters history.

Ghim will receive two pairs of crystal goblets for the eagles. Said Spieth: “He’s going to take those four glasses back to college, and those will be a hit.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ??
CURTIS COMPTON/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON

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