The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Masters tees off today

Rory McIlroy shoots for his third straight major title. Keep up with the leaderboar­d and all the Augusta action today at AJC.com.

- By Thomas Stinson tstinson@ajc.com

AUGUSTA — They both drove the same route down Magnolia Lane, major characters destined for the same first tee, two lives aimed in crossed directions.

Rory McIlroy, 25, opens the 79th Masters today in quest of his third consecutiv­e major title with the chance to become the first European player to complete the career Grand Slam.

Tiger Woods, 39, enters his 20th Masters hoping to breath life into the corpse that his game has eventfully become.

There’s always a new plot line around the next dogleg at Augusta National, and this week has underscore­d a bunch. Bubba Watson’s quest to defend. Martin Kaymer’s ascension. Miguel Angel Jimenez’s annual spring hair festival.

And they’ll all be looking over their shoulders.

“There are several guys that are here this week that are thrilled that all the attention is on Rory getting ready for a grand slam and Tiger coming back,” Ireland’s Padraig Harrington said. “There’s at least four players who haven’t won

though. This week is more like a final walk on a beach for Crenshaw than it is a final Masters. He wants to see it, hear it, feel it, every moment.

It was the last practice round before Crenshaw’s last and 44th Masters. He posed for pictures, signed autographs, interacted with grandpas and grandsons.

He created a three-generation nirvana for fans, playing and goofing on Augusta National’s back nine with fellow Texan Jordan Spieth and fellow multi-Masters champion Tiger Woods.

“We had the best time,” he said later. “I pulled in and Tiger just had gotten his stuff out and he said, ‘Who do you have today?’ I said, ‘I’ve got Jordan on the back nine at 10. Please come on with us. That’d be just wonderful.’ And it was.”

Even when Crenshaw missed a shot Wednesday, like his second at- tempt off the tee at 17, he turned it into a special memory for somebody. He ventured into the gallery to find his ball, picked up and smiled at a young boy who stood there quietly while he held his hat out.

Crenshaw dropped the ball in the hat.

Spencer Ford, the 8-year-old, was asked: Do you know who that was? “No.” I told him the golfer’s name was Ben Crenshaw and he had won the Masters twice, but Spencer didn’t say anything. He seemed to be just waiting for somebody else to give him something.

Is there anybody he would like to meet? “Michael Jordan.” His father, Chris, laughed. The two had traveled from Minneapoli­s after winning the lottery for practice-round tickets.

“He actually made his first par recently,” Chris said. “We’ve got the ball in a special box on a shelf. Maybe we can get another box for this.”

There is no shortage of story lines this week. Woods, the game’s mostwatche­d 111th-ranked player in history, returns from a nine-week layoff, during which he hopes to have healed mind, body and game. Rory McIlroy, the world’s No. 1, has won four majors but is seeking his first green jacket. Spieth, who led by two shots on Sunday last year and was on the verge of being the Masters’ youngest champion before finishing second, is expected to be leaderboar­d staple again. And there’s always Bubba.

But let’s spend a moment with Crenshaw. His Masters titles in 1984 and 1995 supplied punctuatio­n to his career and created an emotional attachment to Augusta and automatic galleries, oblivious 8-year-olds notwithsta­nding.

But it’s time. It’s really past time.

“This course is so long for me — I probably should’ve stepped down a few years ago,” he said.

Since his last green jacket 20 years ago, Crenshaw has missed the cut 16 of 19 times, including the past seven. His past nine rounds: 83, 77, 78, 78, 77, 76, 83, 80, 84, 83, 85. The course has been lengthened twice since 2002, and the evil groundskee­pers have narrowed fairways by adding obstacles — like trees.

Asked if making the cut would complete this dream week for him, Crenshaw laughed.

“I’d have to have a lot of good fortune for that to happen,” he said.

“This place has changed so much. It’s tighter off tees. More trees. I told Jordan there was cut grass everywhere, which made Augusta one of kind. Those were the days when you could really curve the ball. Can’t curve it anymore.”

Crenshaw gave us one of golf ’s special moments in 1995. He had been struggling with his game. He was struggling emotionall­y when Harvey Penick, the longtime coach at Texas and to pros, including Crenshaw, died a week before the Masters.

Crenshaw traveled to Austin, Texas, for the funeral on Tuesday. He was a pall bearer. Then he flew to Augusta the next morning, the day before the first round of the Masters. But he played inspired golf that weekend. He birdied Nos. 16 and 17 on Sunday’s back nine and defeated Davis Love III by one stroke. His 72-hole score of 14-under 274 was the fourth-best in tournament history.

“It is, and it will always be, a dear memory to (his wife) Julie and I and all of us who went through it,” Crenshaw said. “Harvey was like a second father, and a wonderful teacher and a great person. To have played well that week is beyond my comprehens­ion.”

There was symmetry to the Wednesday’s practice threesome. Golf ’s future star (Spieth). The sport’s dominant personalit­y trying to regain his form (Woods). And the exiting Longhorn, who at 63 years old joked, “I’m not sure I have too many rounds left in me.”

At least two.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Rory McIlroy is seeking his third consecutiv­e major title and has a chance to become the first European player to complete a career Grand Slam.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Rory McIlroy is seeking his third consecutiv­e major title and has a chance to become the first European player to complete a career Grand Slam.
 ??  ??
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Joined by Tiger Woods for his final Masters practice round, Ben Crenshaw, 63, admitted, “I probably should’ve stepped down a few years ago.”
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Joined by Tiger Woods for his final Masters practice round, Ben Crenshaw, 63, admitted, “I probably should’ve stepped down a few years ago.”

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