The Columbus Dispatch

Players reflect on Tiger’s ’97 Masters

- Steve Dimeglio

Rory Mcilroy was watching every shot from Northern Ireland.

Jason Day was waking up at 3 a.m. to catch every round in Australia.

Pat Perez was peeking in on the action from Arizona.

Millions of others around the world were sitting in awe, as well.

On TV sets before them was Tiger Woods pulverizin­g the revered, opulent Augusta National Golf Club’s grounds and demoralizi­ng, as we would come to learn, his peers en route to a groundshat­tering romp in the 1997 Masters.

On the silver anniversar­y of the historic triumph, those who witnessed Woods’ momentous domination of the golf course and his sport continues to resonate.

Twenty-five years ago, Woods was an unrelentin­g Goliath who crushed all the outmatched Davids. Over 72 holes at Augusta National, where no black man was allowed to join the club until 1990 and all the caddies were black until 1982, Woods changed the landscape, style and future of the game nearly 50 years to the day after Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in major league baseball.

Woods forced a significan­t rewrite of the record books; led golfers worldwide into the weight room; changed the perception of the pasty, stale game; powered the Neilson ratings to new heights; forced Madison Avenue to turn a discerning eye toward golf; altered the fashion of a sport; and ignited a generation of hopefuls who wanted to be like Tiger. All in 270 magnificen­t strokes. “He’s Michael Jordan in long pants,” Paul Azinger said that day as Woods wrapped up rounds of 70-66-65-69 to finish at a record 18 under; the field average that year was 74.31. Woods, who was 21 when he slipped on the green jacket and remains the youngest to win the Masters, won by a prepostero­us 12 strokes, a record that still stands and marks the worst annihilati­on in a major championsh­ip since Old Tom Morris won the British Open by 13 when Abraham Lincoln was president of the Unites States.

“I beat all of us mortals,” said Tom Kite, who finished second.

And no less an authority than Jack Nicklaus put it this way after watching the first Black man win the green jacket in the 61st edition of the Masters.

“He’s more dominant over the guys he’s playing against than I ever was over the ones I played against,” Nicklaus said after he saw a 6-foot-2, 155-pounder with a 30-inch waist break his 17-under Masters record of 271 that stood for 32 years.

And to think, Woods began his first major as a pro alongside defending champion Nick Faldo looking more like a deer caught in the headlights than a tiger hunting prey. He bogeyed holes 1, 4, 8 and 9 on the outward nine in the first round, his 4-over 40 two shots worse than any first nine played by a Masters winner.

But the mixed-race kid with a middleclas­s background who grew up on a municipal course in the sprawl of Los Angeles resounding­ly rebounded with a back-nine 30 to sign for a 70 and stand three shots out of the lead. Woods’s assault continued on Friday. As CBS’ Jim Nantz announced when Woods eagled the 13th: “Let the record show, a little after 5:30 on this Friday, April the 11th, Tiger Woods takes the lead for the first time in the Masters.”

He never relinquish­ed the advantage. Instead, he built on it.

The sea of change had arrived and his 66 was the finest round of the second day. His lead had grown to three over Colin Montgomeri­e, the top player in Europe and the No. 2 player in the world; Woods was ranked 13th.

“The pressure will be mounting on Mr. Woods,” Montgomeri­e said after his second round. “I have a lot more experience in major golf than he has. Hopefully, I can prove that through the weekend.” Oops. Game over.

Woods tripled his lead from three to nine with a bogey-free 65 while Montgomeri­e finished with a 74. The last round was basically a coronation parade, which ended with a bear hug with his father, Earl, who was six weeks removed from heart-bypass surgery. Also on hand was Lee Elder, who in 1975 became the first Black golfer to play in the Masters.

Woods set off Augusta National’s alarm bells with his shocking power. He averaged 323 yards off the tee on the measured holes – 25 yards longer than the next player. The longest iron he hit into a par-4 the entire week was 7-iron. He twice hit wedge into the green on the 500-yard, par-5 15th – for his second shot. He hit 9-iron into the green on the 555-yard, downhill par-5 second hole – for his second shot. He hit sand wedge into the green on uphill, 405-yard, par-4 18th – for his second shot.

 ?? NETWORK PORTER BINKS/USA TODAY ?? Tiger Woods gives his signature fist pump on the 18th green after winning the 1997 Masters by 12 strokes at Augusta National.
NETWORK PORTER BINKS/USA TODAY Tiger Woods gives his signature fist pump on the 18th green after winning the 1997 Masters by 12 strokes at Augusta National.

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