USA TODAY International Edition
Augusta victory will reverberate to Japan
AUGUSTA, Ga. – Hideki Matsuyama’s march to victory and into the history books in his homeland of Japan definitely had its stops and starts Sunday evening at the Masters.
But when it was over, when Matsuyama’s final putt fell as the shadows grew long to ensure a surprisingly narrow one- shot win, the 29- year- old became much more than just another Masters champion. His victory at 10 under par made him not only the tournament’s first Asian- born champion but also the first Japanese man to win a major golf championship.
As a young man, he first came to the Masters as an amateur in 2011 and again in 2012, invited by Augusta National because he won the Asia- Pacific Amateur, making the cut both times and showing the early promise that foreshadowed a week such as this. He came to Augusta that first year hurting for his nation; a month earlier, his home of Sendai had been ravaged by a terrible earthquake and a series of tsunamis that resulted in more than 15,000 deaths.
He said he wasn’t sure if he even should have been in Augusta, but when he finished tied for 27th, a remarkable achievement for an amateur playing in his first Masters, he said, “Hopefully my play was able to bring some encouragement to those that are in need right now.”
Flash- forward 10 years. Once again, he was thinking of his golf- loving nation, which was awakening to the news of his victory Monday morning. Moments from trying on his green jacket for the first time, he said through an interpreter, “Hopefully I’ll be a pioneer, and many other Japanese will follow. I’m glad to be able to open the floodgates.”
For a few hours Sunday, it appeared Matsuyama was going to surge to an easy victory – if there ever is such a thing at the Masters – continuing a mastery of the course that began Saturday afternoon.
After waiting out a rain delay by playing video games in his car in the parking lot, he returned to shoot 6 under par over his final eight holes of the third round to take a four- shot lead into Sunday’s final round.
He started with a mistake, an opening drive that flew right of the fairway into the pine straw, leading to a bogey on No. 1. But he got the stroke back within minutes by birdieing the par- 5 second hole from four feet.
Short putts were the theme of his front nine as he birdied both No. 8 and No. 9 from 4 feet to reach 13 under par, good for a massive five- shot lead with nine holes to play.
Soon, things got messy as the meticulous Matsuyama suddenly started making mistakes. He bogeyed the notoriously confounding par- 3 No. 12, but came right back with a short birdie putt on the par- 5 13th.
Then, on the par- 5 15th, disaster: his super- charged approach overshot the green and ended up in the water by the 16th hole. Another bogey.
More trouble on the par- 3 16th. Another bogey. After a par on 17, he held a two- shot lead as he hit a beautiful tee shot on 18, meaning he could bogey the hole and still win, and he did exactly that for a 1 over 73.
Asked if he was nervous in those final few shaky holes, he said no, he actually was nervous all day. “My nerves didn’t start on the second nine,” he said. “It was right from the start today.”
But it was good enough for history. He now joins two Japanese women who have won majors: Hisako Higuchi won the 1977 LPGA Championship and Hinako Shibuno won the 2019 Women’s British Open.
A week ago, his countrywoman, 17year- old Tsubasa Kajitani, won the Augusta National Women’s Amateur. And now, here he was, winning as well, energizing a nation.