The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

This Masters like no other

- By Doug Ferguson

Nothing about this Masters will look familiar until the champion slips his arms through a green jacket.

The purple, pink and white blooms of azaleas and dogwoods, which provide such a magnificen­t accent to Augusta National in spring, give way to the orange and gold hues of autumn. The course might look familiar with its emerald green fairways, blazing white sand in the bunkers, towering Georgia pines and the still water of Rae’s Creek.

It just won’t sound the same, not without thousands upon thousands of spectators framing each hole and sending those piercing roars from all corners of the course.

It won’t be the same. What makes this Masters unlike any other is the calendar. Golf’s annual rite of spring is now two weeks before Thanksgivi­ng. And without its patrons, the cathedral of golf will never be quieter.

“It’s going to be eerie. It’s going to be different,” Rory McIlroy said. “But at least we’re playing for a green jacket.”

Not even that much was certain when the COVID-19 pandemic began shutting down sports around the world a week before the first day of spring. The Masters was postponed — a relief to those who initially feared cancellati­on — and then reschedule­d for Nov. 12-15, the final major of an unforgetta­ble year.

When the pandemic did not loosen its grip, the club had no choice but to close the door to its patrons. No need for those green “Golf Traffic” signs posted about the city, or people lining the streets of Washington Road looking for tickets.

There won’t be a Par 3 Contest, with players dressing their children in white coveralls. The first-time players might not know any better.

For the veterans, it might not be much different from their scouting trips to Augusta National. They will know what they’re missing, the sights and sounds.

“You walk through the gates at Augusta, there’s that energy, that anticipati­on,” said McIlroy, making his 10th appearance at the only major keeping him from the career Grand Slam. “There’s still a golf course there. There’s still a golf tournament to be won, and you’ve got to make the most of it.

“But they’re playing,” he said. “And that’s the most important part.”

Tiger Woods had to wait 19 months to play another Masters.

He won his fifth green jacket, as significan­t as any of his 15 majors considerin­g where he had been. His one-shot victory last year capped one of the more remarkable comebacks in sport, which included four back surgeries and a DUI arrest from a bad mix of medicine while trying to cope with pain.

Woods ended the year by winning in Japan for his 82nd career victory, tying the PGA Tour record held by Sam Snead. Excitement was building toward this year, especially the Masters.

And then it stopped. Woods, keeping a limited schedule to get the most out of his 44-year-old body, had played only two tournament­s when the pandemic stopped sports.

And then he hardly played at all — one time before an ordinary performanc­e at the PGA Championsh­ip, two FedEx Cup playoff events before he missed the cut at the U.S. Open, and one tournament in the two months leading to the Masters. Las Vegas set his odds of tying Jack Nicklaus with a sixth green jacket at 35-1.

“The entire year has been different for all of us,” he said. “And my run-up to Augusta is unlike anything I’ve ever experience­d. That’s just the way it is.”

But it’s Augusta National, a course he knows as well as any. His optimism hasn’t waned.

“My game is definitely better than it was at the U. S. Open,” Woods said last month. “I feel a little bit more prepared, a little bit better, and hopefully that translates into playing the golf course.”

Even as the defending champion, and golf’s biggest star, Woods is playing second billing at this Masters.

Bryson DeChambeau has been the talk of golf since golf returned. He added some 40 pounds of muscle and mass, all designed to enable him to swing faster and harder and hit drives farther than anyone imagined. It carried him to a six-shot victory in the U.S. Open with a game that defied convention.

DeChambeau took a month off ahead of the Masters to work on a 48-inch driver with hopes of dismantlin­g Augusta National.

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? McIlroy watches his putt on the 13th hole during a practice round for the 2019 Masters in Augusta, Ga.
CHARLIE RIEDEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS McIlroy watches his putt on the 13th hole during a practice round for the 2019 Masters in Augusta, Ga.

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