The Manila Times

Hideki goes from inspiratio­n to champion

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The idea was to create golfing heroes, not necessaril­y a Masters champion.

Hideki Matsuyama is now both. “I owe a deep debt of gratitude to the members of Augusta National,” Matsuyama said on the night before he became Japan’s first Masters champion. “Because I wouldn’t be here today without them.”

The seed was planted in February 2009, when Tiger Woods was a major champion for the fourth straight year and players from all but one continent where golf is played were represente­d among the top 15 in the world ranking. The exception was Asia.

Billy Payne, chairman of Augusta National at the time, flew to Hong Kong with then-R&A chief Peter Dawson to announce a new tournament — the Asia-Pacific Amateur — for amateurs across a region they felt was teeming with potential.

They wanted to use the powerful brand of the Masters and the deep heritage of the British Open to make golf more appealing to the next generation.

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Matsuyama played the second edition of the Asia-Pacific Amateur in 2010 at Kasumigase­ki Country Club about an hour outside Tokyo, the host course of the Olympics this year. He won by five shots.

Matsuyama first appeared in Butler Cabin as a low amateur in his Masters debut 10 years ago. Then, he won the AsiaPacifi­c again by one shot — Cameron Smith of Australia, a Masters runner-up last year, tied for fourth.

“When I played in my first Masters Tournament as an amateur and made the cut, I felt for the first time that I could compete on the world stage,” Matsuyama said in a 2015 email interview. “I decided right there at Augusta National that golf would be my lifelong career.”

That was the starting point for Matsuyama becoming an inspiratio­n, if not a golfing hero, for Japan and perhaps other Asian countries. And now he’s a Masters champion.

The inspiratio­n began before he slipped his arms into a green jacket.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? Hideki Matsuyama
AFP PHOTO Hideki Matsuyama

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