The Palm Beach Post

Woods is always main Masters attraction

Scottie who? Not even leader escapes shadow

- Gene Frenette Columnist Jacksonvil­le Florida Times-Union USA TODAY NETWORK ADAM CAIRNS/USA TODAY NETWORK

While Scottie Scheffler continued to demonstrat­e his relentless pursuit of greatness at the Masters by shooting a first-round 66 Thursday, he’s just a sideshow when golf’s megastar is on the biggest stage.

It doesn’t matter whether Tiger Woods is in contention or in a dogfight to make the cut. Even now, being 15-20 years past his prime, nothing much has changed about Tiger being the main attraction.

That’s especially true at Augusta National Golf Club, where his stardom as a five-time Masters champion shines brighter than at any other venue.

At 48 years old, Woods still casts a shadow so massive, it’s impossible for accomplish­ed players like Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm, Brooks Koepka or anybody else competing against him to steal the show until they hoist a trophy.

Woods only played 13 holes Thursday at 1-under-par due to the weather-delayed first round, but nobody was more under the spotlight. For his 7:50 a.m. tee time Friday, it was obvious by his more gingerly walk that the quick turnaround was challengin­g. Still, the crowds got up early to follow him.

That’s because Tiger is mesmerizin­g. Whether he’s hitting three perfect shots to birdie the opening hole, or being forced to play a shot left-handed on the next hole because his ball is up against the wrong side of a pine tree, you feel compelled to watch.

He played his last five holes Friday morning in 2-over to finish with a firstround 73, which put him in a 10-way tie for 35th at the time (top 50 and ties make the cut).

The Masters did Tiger no favors with a late-early tee time, making his recovery shorter and more challengin­g.

Through 14 holes of his second round Friday, he continued solid play with three birdies and four bogeys, putting him at 2-over-par for the tournament and two shots ahead of the projected cut line at 4-over. With four holes remaining, Tiger was in a three-way tie for 39th, with the top 50 and ties making the cut.

If Woods makes a record 24th consecutiv­e cut at the Masters, even if he’s not on the leaderboar­d, fans are more likely to follow him around the course than anybody or tune in on television when the cameras are on him.

Given Woods’ physical limitation­s from countless body breakdowns and a one-car accident in Feb. 2021 that nearly ended his career, it’s heartwarmi­ng to see him compete at the Masters and executing some shots like the Tiger of yesteryear. He hit 11 of 14 fairways in the first round and played solid considerin­g the tough circumstan­ces.

It’s impossible to know how many more times we’ll get to see Woods playing anywhere with his trademark grit, stubbornly refusing to give in to Father Time.

For now, just appreciate the sight of Tiger at the 2024 Masters, and hopefully the year’s three remaining majors, for however long it lasts.

It’s still the best thing about golf worth watching.

Baalke familiar with No. 17 slot

If the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars stand pat with the No. 17 overall draft pick, it won’t be unchartere­d territory for general manager Trent Baalke.

His resume suggests it could also be a nice payoff for the Jaguars. Back in 2010 when he was the 49ers’ GM, Baalke selected Idaho guard Mike Iupati, who went to become a four-time Pro Bowler.

Five years later, Baalke took 6-foot-7, 290-pound defensive lineman Arik Armstead, who he just signed in free agency last month from the 49ers to a three-year, $51 million contract.

NFL history indicates the No. 17 draft position has delivered impact players. In the last decade, Dallas Cowboys receiver CeeDee Lamb (2020), Los Angeles Chargers safety Derwin James

(2018) and New York Jets linebacker C.J. Mosley (2014) have made a combined 11 Pro Bowls.

Four Pro Football Hall of Famers — Cowboys cornerback Mel Renfro

(1964), Oakland Raiders guard Gene Upshaw (1967), Cowboys running back Emmitt Smith (1990) and Seattle Seahawks guard Steve Hutchinson (2001) — were also chosen with the 17th overall pick.

Calipari still tough act to follow

Kentucky’s basketball program may soon find out how good they once had it under John Calipari, who decided at age 65 to leave a blue blood program for a second-tier program and lower-paying job at Arkansas.

Since Calipari’s departure, Kentucky athletic director Mitch Barnhart has been told no thanks in varying public statements from retired Villanova coach Jay Wright, former Florida coach and current Chicago Bulls coach Billy Donovan, Alabama coach Nate Oats and from good friend Scott Drew, head coach at Baylor.

Anybody ever think an iconic hoops destinatio­n like Kentucky would get turned down four times? It used to be coaches would leap at the chance to run one of the country’s most resourcefi­lled programs, but the Wildcats’ top targets were not swayed.

Kentucky’s search ended Friday with the hiring of BYU coach Mark Pope, a UK alumnus who was the team captain on the Wildcats’ 1996 national championsh­ip team.

It makes for a nice welcome-home story, but Pope hasn’t coached long enough to develop the sterling resume of Calipari or Kentucky’s more coveted candidates. In BYU’s only two NCAA games in five seasons under Pope, the Cougars were seeded sixth both times and got eliminated in the first round by No. 11 seeds UCLA (2021) and Duquesne (2024).

The successor to Calipari, who acknowledg­ed Kentucky “probably needs to hear another voice,” is going to find that replicatin­g one national title and four Final Four appearance­s as his predecesso­r did will be a tough mountain to climb.

Maybe Pope can rejuvenate the Wildcats, who have struggled in the postseason in recent years. If not, it won’t be long before Kentucky fans are pining for the good ol’ days under Calipari.

Masters trivia

the 21year

Over the previous five Masters tournament­s, only one golfer has finished in the top-10 four times. Who is it? Answer at the bottom.

O.J.’s tough, complicate­d legacy

When O.J. Simpson passed away from prostrate cancer at 76 Thursday in Las Vegas, it’s understand­able a lot of people will find it difficult to sort out how they feel about his death.

No doubt, it’s a wide assortment of emotions like sorrow, anger, contempt, ambivalenc­e and everything else in-between.

Given Simpson’s roller-coaster ride of fame — ranging from a 20-year run as a football superstar, to commercial pitchman, to being a defendant acquitted of murdering his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ron Goldman — he was a polarizing figure to the very end.

Hopefully, O.J.’s family can finally gain some peace as it processes one of the most complicate­d celebrity lives in history.

A different kind of UConn payoff

Much has been made about how the UConn men’s basketball program has taken over the college game in the past quarter century with six national titles.

In addition, the Huskies’ dominance really paid off for those bettors who went all in on UConn bullying its way through two consecutiv­e NCAA Tournament­s.

According to BetOnLine, anyone who placed a $100 bet on UConn to cover the point spread as a favorite in all 12 games and rolled it over every game through Monday’s 75-60 title win over Purdue would have earned a total payout of — drum roll, please — $230,000.

Not only did Danny Hurley’s team win those dozen games as the favorite by an average margin of 21.7 points, it also covered by an average margin of 13.3 points.

Here’s the insane numbers: Over two NCAA Tournament­s, the Huskies trailed for a total of 30 minutes, 42 seconds, but only 51 seconds in the second half. The only time UConn trailed after halftime came in the opening minute of their first two March Madness games last year against Iona and St. Mary’s.

It’s just an amazing streak of excellence.

Quick-hitting nuggets

Looking at the male players selected to the 2024 Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame class — Chauncey Billups, Vince Carter, Michael Cooper, Doug Collins and Walter Davis — it strikes me as an even mixture between HOF-worthy and the Hall of Very Good . ...

Former St. Augustine High and Western Kentucky quarterbac­k Austin Reed,

the third-oldest NFL prospect at his position at 24 years, 2 months, is projected as a sixth or seventh-round selection by draft analyst Dane Brugler of The Athletic. Brugler also lists South Alabama QB Carter Bradley (6-3, 213), son of former Jaguars’ head coach Gus Bradley,

as a priority free agent . ...

In the last 10 Masters, the eventual champion has been no worse than tied for second entering the final round. Seven of the ten champions were leading going into Sunday, with Brooks Koepka (2023), Francesco Molinari (2019) and Jordan Spieth (2016) the only thirdround leaders who failed to win the green jacket . ...

Trivia answer

The only golfer to finish in the top-10 four times in the last five years at the Masters is defending champion Jon Rahm, who finished T5 (2021), T7 (2020) and T9 (2019). He was T27 in 2022.

Gfrenette@jacksonvil­le.com: (904) 359-4540; Follow him on X, formerly Twitter, at @genefrenet­te

 ?? MICHAEL MADRID /USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Collin Morikawa putts on the seventh green during the third round of the Masters Tournament.
MICHAEL MADRID /USA TODAY NETWORK Collin Morikawa putts on the seventh green during the third round of the Masters Tournament.
 ?? ?? Tiger Woods waves after making his putt on the No. 9 green during the second round of the Masters.
Tiger Woods waves after making his putt on the No. 9 green during the second round of the Masters.
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