The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kuchar makes a young golf fan’s day

Ex-Tech star hits hole-in-one, gives ball to 8-year-old.

- By Doug Roberson droberson@ajc.com

AUGUSTA — The Sam Snead hat worn by the boy is what caught Matt Kuchar’s eye.

So after Kuchar retrieved his golf ball from the 16th hole, where he had just recorded a hole-in-one with a 7 iron in Sunday’s fourth round of the Masters, he signed his name near the Bridgeston­e logo, walked over and tossed the prize to 8-year-old Owen Lockaby, dashingly wearing the pork pie brown hat and bright orange shirt and sitting in a green Masters chair near his parents, Jay and Tracy.

“This is one of my favorite Masters ever,” the youngster said, his hat sporting a white “Arnie’s Army” button.

His mom bought the hat in the Bahamas and suggested that Owen wear it as a tribute to his grandfathe­r, Jay’s father, who started attending the Masters in the early 1950s and who was one of the original members of Arnie’s Army.

Jay Lockaby said his father attended 49 or 50 of the events at Augusta National. They’ve made sure to honor the tradition by bringing Owen to the past 10 Masters. Even when Owen was “in utero,” the family made the annual trip from their home in Bradenton, Fla.

Kuchar, a former standout at Georgia Tech, saw Owen patiently sitting just behind the green, where his family had planted their chairs to watch one of golf ’s most exciting holes.

“I figured this would make a kid’s day and make a kid’s year,” Kuchar said. “It’s one of the neat things that we can do.”

Owen plays golf but said he’s never had a hole-inone. Tracy Lockaby said it’s the first they’ve ever seen, though her son disputes that.

She held the ball for Owen, saying they are going to put it in a nice box and frame a photo if they can find one of the moment.

Kuchar seemed just as surprised as anyone by the fortunate shot.

He said he’s always had trouble on 16 because his fade doesn’t work with the traditiona­l Sunday pin placement of 30 yards from the front, 5 from the left, where the yellow flag nests in a little funnel within the green that the balls will track toward.

But Kuchar, already playing well on the back nine with consecutiv­e birdies on 12-14 (and just one bogey on the back the entire week), decided to release the club for a draw and not worry about the water on the green’s left.

The ball landed in front of the pin, bounced past it, caught the funnel and rolled into the hole.

“KUUUUCHHHH” erupted from the patrons in a noise that carried all the way to the clubhouse. Kuchar’s arms shot up and he began high-fiving everyone around the tee box. He said he held off celebratin­g until he was sure of the ace. It was his fourth hole-in-one on the PGA Tour.

“I still would like to see the highlights,” he said. “I would like to see if I got the Bridgeston­e B kind of lined up just right before it trickled in. I haven’t seen the whole thing.”

Kuchar shot 5 under for the round, finishing 5 under for the tournament and in a tie for fourth place. He stuck around and was one of the first players to congratula­te Sergio Garcia for his victory.

“I felt like I played very, very solid golf for four rounds of golf,” Kuchar said. “As it looks, it looks like I’ve come up a couple short, but as a whole for the week I’m awfully pleased.”

The Lockabys, who said they remember watching Kuchar at the Masters when he was an amateur, only had one wish: That Joe could have been there.

“Wow, would he have loved to have seen this,” Jay Lockaby said.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Matt Kuchar exults from the tee box on the 16th hole as his tee shot winds up in the hole, registerin­g a rare hole-in-one in Sunday’s final round of the Masters, where he finished tied for fourth place.
MATT SLOCUM / ASSOCIATED PRESS Matt Kuchar exults from the tee box on the 16th hole as his tee shot winds up in the hole, registerin­g a rare hole-in-one in Sunday’s final round of the Masters, where he finished tied for fourth place.
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