The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHY DUSTIN JOHNSON IS QUESTIONAB­LE FOR MASTERS

World’s top-ranked player injures his back at Augusta rental home, putting status for today’s opening round of the Masters in doubt.

- By Steve Hummer shummer@ajc.com

The report came late afternoon AUGUSTA — Wednesday, very likely shaking up the Masters leaderboar­d before even the first number was posted.

Pre-tournament favorite Dustin Johnson injured his back in a fall and was at best hopeful to make his 2:03 p.m. tee time in today’s first round.

Nothing else has slowed the world’s No. 1-ranked player and winner his past three times out on the PGA Tour. But now a trip and fall on a rainy day in Augusta, away from the course, may do what the best golfers in the world have been largely unable to this season.

Johnson’s agent, David Winkle, supplied what detail was available.

“At roughly 3:00 pm (Wednesday), Dustin took a serious fall on a staircase in his Augusta rental home,” his statement read.

“He landed very hard on his lower back and is now resting, although quite uncomforta­bly. He has been advised to remain immobile and begin a regimen of anti-inflammato­ry medication and icing, with the hope of being able to play tomorrow.”

Johnson entered this week the favorite of oddsmakers and well-placed observers alike.

“If there’s a course built for someone — we said that about Tiger Woods — it’s (Augusta National and) Dustin Johnson right now,” said World Golf Hall of Famer and Golf Channel analyst Colin Montgomeri­e. “Obviously he’s the guy to beat, if he can cope with the additional pressure that’s on his shoulders.”

The star quality of the Masters field already had taken a bit of a hit when Woods announced he would miss his third Masters in four years with a back injury. But now it was Johnson who was the long-hitting sensation poised to dissect Augusta National and lap the field. This was his eighth Masters, and he seemed to be getting the hang of it — coming off his best finish a year ago (fourth).

“I’ve always liked the course. I always thought it suited my game very well,” Johnson said Tuesday.

“The last couple years I’ve done a little bit better, and I feel like I’ve had a chance. Obviously I’m playing well coming into this week, so hopefully I can continue that success, and I’m looking forward to giving myself a chance to win on Sunday.”

Here was “the best driver of the golf ball of all time, other than Tiger Woods in 2000,” ESPN’s resident champion/analyst, Curtis Strange said. But such a skill requires a very limber back.

It is not the first time Johnson has been knocked for a loop at the Masters with a quirky injury. After straining his back lifting a jet ski a week before the 2012 tournament, he was forced to withdraw.

No player has come into the Masters as the top-ranked golfer in the world and won since Woods in 2002. When asked about that curious fact, Johnson could only quip, “I don’t know. It’s the first time I’ve ever been the favorite.” Throw in a fall from the stairs, and that footnote was beginning to look like a curse.

That it was the 32-year-old Johnson who reportedly had a clumsy moment on the stairs was all the more unfathomab­le because here was perhaps the most athletic player on the PGA Tour. As fellow pro Rickie Fowler put it: “Dustin is just crazy, in a way kind of a freak of nature.”

He is a survivor of multiple calamities and fiery crashes in the majors, but those all happened on the course. That all culminated with the 2016 U.S. Open, in which he was ambushed by a mid-round penalty on Sunday and still won by three strokes. Seemingly no external upheaval could touch him.

To victory and disappoint­ment alike he turned a blank expression.

“Yeah, I’ve gotten frustrated a few times. Probably when I was younger. I still get mad now, but I just don’t show it as much,” Johnson said earlier this week. “I was taught very young that it’s not the right way to act.”

This is something different. Not some arcane golf ruling to be shrugged off.

Johnson tried to warn us Tuesday that nothing is certain at the Masters.

“I’ve got a lot of confidence in my game right now, especially with the way I’ve been playing the last few tournament­s,” he said.

“But, you know, anything can happen.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Dustin Johnson putts on the 11th green while Brooks Koepka’s caddie, Ricky Elliott, tends the flag during their Wednesday morning practice round. Johnson later returned to his rental home, where he fell on the stairs and hurt his back.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Dustin Johnson putts on the 11th green while Brooks Koepka’s caddie, Ricky Elliott, tends the flag during their Wednesday morning practice round. Johnson later returned to his rental home, where he fell on the stairs and hurt his back.
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 ?? PHOTOS BY CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Sergio Garcia tees off on the 14th hole under a stormy sky just before play was suspended in Wednesday’s Masters practice round at Augusta National Golf Club.
Ken Paul (left) and Bob Juno view a plaque honoring Arnold Palmer behind the 15th green at...
PHOTOS BY CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Sergio Garcia tees off on the 14th hole under a stormy sky just before play was suspended in Wednesday’s Masters practice round at Augusta National Golf Club. Ken Paul (left) and Bob Juno view a plaque honoring Arnold Palmer behind the 15th green at...
 ??  ?? Russell Henley, a former University of Georgia golfer, tees off on the 12th hole at Wednesday’s Masters practice round in Augusta. He won the Shell Houston Open on Sunday, earning a Masters invite.
Russell Henley, a former University of Georgia golfer, tees off on the 12th hole at Wednesday’s Masters practice round in Augusta. He won the Shell Houston Open on Sunday, earning a Masters invite.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Dustin Johnson (front) and Brooks Koepka cross the Nelson Bridge on the 13th fairway during Wednesday’s practice round. Johnson may not be crossing the bridge again this week.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Dustin Johnson (front) and Brooks Koepka cross the Nelson Bridge on the 13th fairway during Wednesday’s practice round. Johnson may not be crossing the bridge again this week.
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