Hideki Matsuyama became the ninth different golfer to win the Masters in as many years.
[vertical-gallery id=778097465]AUGUSTA, Ga. — Hideki Matsuyama made history Sunday in his 10th Masters appearance, claiming a one-shot victory in the 85th Masters Tournament. He’s the first Japanese man to win a major championship.
Matsuyama shot 73 in the final round. He built a five-shot lead early in the second nine and withstood a charge from Xander Schauffele to become the ninth different person to win the Masters in as many years.
Here are five things we learned in the final round.
Check out how much money each player won at the 2021 Masters at Augusta National Golf Club.
After a successful week of work in Georgia, Hideki Matsuyama will drive down Magnolia Lane and leave with a new green jacket, a sterling silver replica of the Masters Trophy, a gold medal and $2.07 million.
The 29-year-old native of Japan won the 2021 Masters by one stroke, signing for a 1-over-73 in Sunday’s final round to win by one shot at 10 under. Matsuyama held off Masters rookie Will Zalatoris, 2015 champion Jordan Spieth and Xander Schauffele to become not just the first Masters champ, but the first men’s major championship winner from Japan.
Check out how much money Matsuyama and company are taking home from Augusta National Golf Club.
To hear Jordan Spieth tell it, there is work still to be done to retooling the golf swing that won three majors between 2015 and 2017.
AUGUSTA, Ga. – Jordan Spieth ran out of gas on the first nine Sunday at Augusta National Golf Club.
Having won the Valero Texas Open one week ago to snap his three-year winless streak, Spieth didn’t have enough in the tank to mount a comeback. He closed with a respectable final-round of 2-under 70 to share third place, but a sluggish start did him in.
“I’m tired,” Spieth conceded after the round. “I felt some mental fatigue for sure and made a couple bonehead mistakes over the weekend, just from, I think, maybe the long stretch.”
Spieth, the winner of the 2015 Masters, recorded his fifth top-3 finish at Augusta National and added another chapter in golf’s best comeback story this season. To hear Spieth tell it, there is work still to be done to retooling the golf swing that won three majors between 2015 and 2017.
“I’ve made a lot of good progress, but I feel like that road ahead is still significant for me,” he said.
How far off is open to debate as Spieth led the field in greens in regulation, hitting 56 of 72 greens. Despite a couple of chip ins during the tournament, Spieth only got up and down eight times, and mentioned a poor chip at the eighth hole Sunday that left him a 17-foot birdie putt as the only shot on the front nine that stuck in his craw.
“I wish that I had the control of my swing that I hope is coming or I think is coming soon because it would have made things a little easier this week,” Spieth said. “Structurally, it’s still not matching up where I want it to, and I feel like I’m doing a significant movement to try and get there. I still have a little bit of the old tendencies, but I get it in a better striking position, with the wrists in a better place, the club face and the shaft plane in a much better place, which is why I’m able to come out and contend.”
[vertical-gallery id=778097465]
Spieth began the final round trailing Hideki Matsuyama by six strokes, so it would have taken a special day like the 8-under 64 who shot in 2018 to give Patrick Reed a scare.
But Spieth caught a flier on the first hole and putting from the back fringe, he couldn’t get up and down. He recovered the stroke with a birdie at 2, but back-to-back bogeys at Nos. 5 and 6 dropped him to 3 under and eight behind Matsuyama.
While he bounced back with five birdies before a closing bogey, Spieth could ill afford to make three bogeys in his first six holes.
The highlight of Spieth’s round had to be his approach from 211 yards at the par-4 10th hole, which caught a slope and stopped 4 feet from the hole. In holing the short birdie putt, Spieth became the first player to birdie the 10th hole in all four rounds. Spieth said he will take some time off and that working at home is where he can make the strides necessary to become a consistent winner again.
“It’s still a little ways to go,” he said. “It could just kind of start to click and really feel that momentum.”
The aphorism that familiarity breeds contempt holds true in friendships, but not at the Masters, where the prevailing sentiment is fear.
The final round of the 85th Masters unfolded in the same manner as most of the 84 preceding it, marked by neither charge nor collapse that would further burnish the lore of Augusta National, but instead just a humdrum march into history.
What was surely a tremendous relief for Hideki Matsuyama and the expectant nation whose weight he carries, also served also to highlight the absence of the other, less noble narrative we’ve come to relish at the Masters: the agony that invariably shadows someone else’s ecstasy.
As the only major championship venue visited annually, Augusta National occupies an intimate space in the minds of fans and competitors. The aphorism that familiarity breeds contempt holds true in families and friendships, but not at Augusta National, where the prevailing sentiment is anticipation or fear, depending upon whether one is viewing or competing.
For no matter how serenely a man may be sailing through the final round, he— and everyone watching — knows exactly where icebergs lurk ahead, and that no deviation is possible.
With each triumph authored on the second Sunday in April (or, in Dustin Johnson’s case, the third one in November) there are attendant disasters, many better known to aficionados than the limbs of their family tree. The Masters shines an adoring light on its winners, but no tournament casts a more coruscating and enduring glare on its losers.
“It’s just a different feel,” Rory McIlroy said. “That’s the difference between closing out another major championship and closing out a Masters.”
McIlroy can attest, having closed out four of the former but melted to a back-nine 43 when called upon to do the latter.
No one really got close enough to Matsuyama on Sunday to qualify as either challenger or choker, but the ranks of Augusta’s nearly men can wait another year to expand. No player is eager to be the next conscript, though they’d join a legendary cohort.
A few years ago, I chatted outside the National’s clubhouse with Curtis Strange. Back in ’85, he had opened with 80 but held a three-stroke lead walking off the 12th green in the final round. He rinsed balls at 13 and 15, finishing T-2. More than 30 years had passed, but when I asked how long it had taken for that hurt to fade, he replied: “You mean it does?”
In 2018, I sat watching the third round with David Duval, whose mind wandered to the four straight years (’98-’01) when he had a chance to win a Masters. Three months after his last tilt at a green jacket, Duval claimed his lone major at the Open Championship. I asked if that win had eased the disappointment of not winning at Augusta National.
He gazed at me as though he had never before been presented with a question so imbecilic. Finally, he shook his head firmly and said, “No.”
[listicle id=778074097]
There are others: Greg Norman, defined less by his successes in the British Open than by his failures at the Masters; Ernie Els, owner of four majors but not the one he most wanted; Tom Weiskopf, who would be in the hall of fame had he won at Augusta National, but instead, he was second four times so he’s not. Johnny Miller, runner-up three times. So too Tom Kite. No one played Augusta National better for longer without winning than Kite, whose longevity is cemented by the fact that he was the runner-up in both Jack’s last win and Tiger’s first.
One of the most memorable mini-tragedies wasn’t even wrought by clubs but rather by a pencil. See: De Vicenzo, Roberto.
Even those welcome at the Champions Dinner weren’t immune. Twenty years ago, I asked a handful of legends to identify a single shot from their career they‘d most like to have over. Arnold Palmer and Gary Player combined for seven Masters wins, but both remained haunted by wayward shots to the final green—in ’61 and ’62, respectively—that handed victory to the other. Seve Ballesteros said he couldn’t let go of a ghastly hooked 4-iron into the water on No. 15 when he was leading in ’86.
But this was a Masters to be remembered for Matsuyama’s imperious stability on Sunday and the seismic impact his win will have in Asia, not for the implosion of someone else.
There were still plenty of disappointed contenders pointing courtesy cars to the crummy end of Magnolia Lane, but at least none carried with them the corrosive aftertaste of a final-round fiasco. Only 361 days until we see if the next cast in golf’s most thrilling drama will be as fortunate.
If Cameron Smith had played the par-5 15th hole a bit better this week, he might have been in contention in the final round of the Masters.
AUGUSTA, Ga. — If Cameron Smith had played the par-5 15th hole at the Augusta National Golf Club a bit better during the week, he might have been in contention in the final round of the 85th Masters Tournament.
Smith bogeyed the hole again on Sunday, the only blemish on his card, as he shot 70 for a 3-under-par 285 finish, and a tie for 10th.
However, the native of Brisbane, Australia, and a resident of Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, Smith had found Augusta National much to his liking, with three top-10s in his last four starts, 5-of-5 on making the cut and six under-par rounds in the last two tournaments.
“I love the golf course,” he said. “I just love the shots that it makes you hit. It just really suits my eye. So there’s no reason why I can’t win here. It’s just everything’s got to come together one week a year, and I’m sure I’ll be up there.”
Smith assured himself of another trip to Augusta for 2022 by finishing inside the top-12 but he likely would have made it anyway on his world golf ranking (30th).
He birdied the first three par-5 holes on Sunday, parred every other hole with little sweat, but then bogeyed the 15th when his third shot went over the green and his pitch stayed on top of the bank. He two-putted from there.
In the second round, Smith was 6 under for the day and 4 under for the tournament before hitting his third shot into the water at No. 15 and taking a double-bogey.
He said both situations were the result of questionable layup shots.
“I just put myself in bad spots laying up,” he said. “We hit one too far down there one day, and then I got kind of cute and rolled it back into the water, and then the next one, too far back, and it was to a back pin. Poor layups, poor execution.”
The highlight of the day was his 62-foot birdie putt at No. 13, which Smith said made up for a poor third shot that went long and left.
“I shouldn’t have been there in the first place, to be honest,” he said. “It was a poor layup there. I kind of had to squeeze something down there but ended up with a birdie somehow. I just got the fall line and drilled it down the hill.”
Smith, who made Masters history last November as the first player to ever shoot all four rounds in the 60s (he tied for second behind Dustin Johnson), is likely to be a force at Augusta with his solid iron play and nervy short game.
He said he enjoys the cat-and-mouse game with the wind and the firm greens.
“I just like the way the wind kind of effects some shots and doesn’t on some others,” he said. “Obviously, the places to leave it is key around here. You’ve got to know where to miss it, and you’ve got to putt good.”
Matsuyama was steady throughout, holding off Will Zalatoris and others to capture not only his biggest title, but the biggest for Japan.
Adam Scott said Sunday that Hideki Matsuyama might have entered the final round of the 2021 Masters somewhat oblivious to how groundbreaking it would be for a Japanese player to win a men’s major.
“I think he’d become the superstar of Japan, if he isn’t already,” Scott said after his own round. “But I don’t think he really feels the weight of expectation — like we all kind of can see what it would mean for Japan and golf over there.”
If Matsuyama didn’t know before what the victory might mean, he’s about to find out.
As he played toward his sixth title on the PGA Tour, the former World No. 2 was steady throughout, holding off youngster Will Zalatoris, Jordan Spieth, Xander Schauffele and others to capture not only his biggest title, but the biggest for his country.
It was the first victory for the 29-year-old Matsuyama since 2017, when he won the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational for the last of three titles that season.
Fan-favorite Spieth, who has a green jacket from his victory at Augusta in 2015, never really got rolling on the front nine Sunday, making the turn at 37. But Spieth rallied on the back and continued a recent trend of strong play, posting a top-5 finish after winning the Valero Texas Open in San Antonio last week. He closed with a 70 to finish at 7 under for the week.
Zalatoris, who is still just a special temporary member of the PGA Tour, played admirably, closing his day with an 18-foot par putt. He finished with a round of 70 to close at 9 under.
And Schauffele appeared to be tanked after a three-hole stretch on the front in which he went bogey-bogey-double, but he rebounded to make things interesting — pulling to two strokes behind with three holes to play.
But on No. 15 Schauffele found the water, an inconvenient time to post his first triple-bogey at a major.
Meanwhile, Jon Rahm started the day out of the top 20, but he made the day’s biggest charge, following up three consecutive 72s with a scintillating 66.
It set up a fourth straight top-10 finish at Augusta National, but he admitted after his round that when he started thinking about getting close to Matsuyama the pressure mounted.
“It was all fun and games until I made that birdie on 12 and then I looked up and thought I’m not that far away,” Rahm said. “I tried my best at the end, it’s just with the wind gusts and the greens being that firm, pars are obviously great.”
AUGUSTA, Ga. — Though Cameron Champ played the unconventional Masters Tournament in November, his first time in the field, this year felt more like his first Masters than five months ago.
“With Lee Elder and my family being here, it definitely made, for me, kind of feeling like it’s my first Masters,” Champ said.
And for his dad, Jeff, he had one simple word to sum up the week.
“Amazing. Absolutely amazing.”
Other than his bogey on No. 18 and double bogey on No. 10, Champ played the second nine at even par Sunday, getting three birdies and a near ace on No. 16. His best round came on Friday, when he shot a 35 on the back side to get to 4-under for the tournament. He added birdies on Nos. 2 and 7 during his final round to sign for a 1-over 289.
“I hit one bad shot all day and on No. 10, it somehow stays above the lip of the bunker, I have no idea how, and I make double there. If I make par there, I shoot 2-under and it would have been an even better day. Nothing negative to take away from this,” Champ said.
Though it wasn’t a typical roar, his entourage of friends and family that followed him this week cheered him on as he made the walk from the 16th tee to the green for his birdie tap-in. Despite his up and down play all tournament, his family was supportive.
They’d say to each other, “A par is good here. … If we can get another birdie here, we’d be good.”
It was an experience that only could have been better if his grandfather Mack Champ would have been there. Mack developed Cameron to get to where he is now. Mack idolized Lee Elder and one day hoped to step on the grounds of Augusta National Golf Club in his lifetime.
Though that never came to fruition, Cameron, his dad and the rest of family knew he was there in spirit. And that’s good enough for them.
“It was one of his dreams to be here. … This is the one place he wanted to go. It was, obviously, my rookie year so I was just trying to get here as fast as I could. Obviously, I was a little bit late, but again, I know he’s looking down on us,” Champ said.
And if Mack was on the 18thwatching his grandson finish off his second Masters, Jeff said he could imagine what his father would say toCameron: “I’m proud of you.”
If you want to take a trip down Magnolia Lane for the 2022 Masters Tournament, it’s time to start preparing now.
When you hear the birds of Augusta National Golf Club chirping through your speakers, it’s almost like they’re calling out your name, begging you to pay a visit.
If you want to see the azaleas and dogwoods in full bloom—not to mention some of the best golfers in the world—at the 2022 Masters Tournament, it’s time to start preparing now.
The ticket application for practice and tournament rounds for the 2022 Masters will open on June 1 and go through June 21, 2021, with a selection to follow. It’s important to note, according to the Masters, that “2021 ticket holders of record, not selected to attend, who complete an application will be given priority to purchase tickets for the 2022 Masters Tournament.”
AUGUSTA, Ga. — The green jacket is the ultimate symbol of success in golf.
A golfer wearing the single-breasted, single-vent garment has achieved something special: a victory at the Masters Tournament.
Augusta National Golf Club members began wearing the jackets in 1937. The idea was to have them be easily identifiable so they could answer questions from patrons.
Brooks Uniform Co. in New York made the original jackets, which featured heavy wool material. Those soon gave way to a lightweight version that could be custom-ordered from the club’s pro shop.
Here’s what to know about the Masters green jacket:
Do Masters champions keep the green jacket?
The green jacket is reserved for Augusta National members and golfers who win the Masters. Jackets are kept on club grounds, and taking them off the premises is forbidden.
The exception is for the winner, who can take it home and return it to the club the following year.
Gary Player reportedly got into a heated exchange in 1962 with Cliff Roberts after he mistakenly took his jacket home to South Africa.
“I didn’t know you were supposed to leave it there,” Player said. “Next thing you know, there was a call from Mr. Roberts.”
According to Player, here’s how the exchange went:
“‘Gary, have you got the jacket?’
“I said, ‘Yes, I do.’
“He said, ‘Well, no one ever takes the jacket away from here.’
“And I said, ‘Well, Mr. Roberts, if you want it, why don’t you come and fetch it?’”
Roberts, who didn’t lose many arguments, agreed to a compromise.
“He kind of chuckled and said don’t wear it in public,” Player said.
So, you can’t take it with you?
Champions can for a year – and some jackets from former members have come up for auction in recent years. And the Augusta National has filed suit to keep jackets off the auction block.
But the ultimate taking it with you story belongs to the 1970 Masters champion. Billy Casper never lost his appreciation for the Masters Tournament and Augusta National Golf Club.
The 1970 champion was buried in his green jacket. His wife, Shirley, asked for and received permission from Augusta National.
How it started
Augusta National members began wearing the jackets in 1937.
The original purpose of the green jacket, as envisioned by Cliff Roberts, was to identify club members as “reliable sources of information” to visiting non-members – and to let waiters know who got the check at dinner.
What it means
A golfer wearing the three-button style, single-breasted and center-vented garment has achieved something special: a victory at Augusta National Golf Club.
The first green jacket was awarded to a winner when Sam Snead won the tournament for the first time in 1949, to make him an honorary member. It was then awarded to all past champions retroactively.
Who presents the green jacket to the winner?
Traditionally, the previous year’s winner presents the jacket to the new champion at the tournament’s end. In case of a repeat winner, the Masters chairman presents the jacket to the winner.
This has happened three times, first in 1966 when Jack Nicklaus became the first repeat champion, then in 1990 when Nick Faldo repeated the feat. The last time was when Tiger Woods repeated as Masters champion in 2002.
Who makes it
For three decades, Cincinnati-based Hamilton Tailoring Co. has made the traditional blazer worn by Masters Tournament winners. It uses wool fabric produced at the Victor Forstmann Inc. mill in the central Georgia town of Dublin. The company takes about a month to produce each blazer, which is fitted with custom brass buttons inscribed with the Augusta National logo. The owner’s name is stitched on a label inside.