The Commercial Appeal

How Matsuyama spent Saturday’s rain delay: Playing video games

- Christine Brennan

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Hideki Matsuyama was 5-under par and two strokes off the lead Saturday when the third round of the Masters was interrupte­d by an hour-and-18 minute weather delay. Looking for a way to fill the time, he went to his car in the parking lot, pulled out his cell phone and started playing video games.

From now on, all golfers everywhere should wait out a rain delay in their cars, on their cell phones, playing games. That’s because when Masters play resumed, Matsuyama rampaged through his final eight holes in a stunning six-under par, including four birdies and an eagle, to jump into a startling four-shot lead heading into Sunday’s final round.

“Maybe I wouldn’t have believed it,” he said later through an interprete­r, and that made all the sense in the world. Who would have? He had just hit his worst shot of the week, he said later – a wayward drive into the trees far right of the 11th fairway – yet when he came back after chilling in his car, he found an opening to the green with his approach and sank a 19-foot birdie putt to go to 6-under par.

“I just figured I can’t hit anything worse than that,” he said of the drive. “Maybe it relieved some pressure, I don’t know, but I did hit it well coming in after the delay.”

Unlike some of his top competitor­s who appeared to have trouble figuring out just how much the rain slowed down the greens, changing not only the golf course but also the tournament, Matsuyama looked as if he flipped a switch the moment he returned.

He birdied the par-3 12th from 10 feet, eagled the par-5 15th from 6 feet, birdied the par-3 16th from 4 feet and birdied the par-4 17th from 11 feet. When he saved par on 18 from behind the green, he ended with a 7-under 65, the only bogey-free round so far at this Masters, quite an achievemen­t on a day of shifting skies, from rippling winds to rain to a calming softness to finish things off.

“I hit every shot practicall­y exactly as I wanted to,” he said. His 54-hole total was 11-under par, four better than a quartet of golfers at 7-under, including first- and second-round leader Justin Rose.

If he keeps this up, Matsuyama, 29, would become the first male Japanese golfer to win a major. Two Japanese women have won majors: Hisako Higuchi won the 1977 LPGA Championsh­ip and Hinako Shibuno won the 2019 Women’s British Open.

Last Saturday, his countrywom­an, 17-year-old Tsubasa Kajitani, won the Augusta National Women’s Amateur.

Normally, Matsuyama, who first played in the Masters 10 years ago as an amateur, would have a large gathering of Japanese reporters and photograph­ers following his every move. But because of COVID-19 travel restrictio­ns, the media pack is almost non-existent.

 ?? MICHAEL MADRID/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Hideki Matsuyama follows the path of his tee shot on the 15th hole, which he eagled Saturday, en route to taking the third-round lead in the Masters.
MICHAEL MADRID/USA TODAY SPORTS Hideki Matsuyama follows the path of his tee shot on the 15th hole, which he eagled Saturday, en route to taking the third-round lead in the Masters.

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