Dustin Johnson eyeing new jacket after having to leave game’s most coveted garment at Augusta National

Dustin Johnson is eyeing a new jacket after having to leave the game’s most coveted garment at Augusta National after the Masters.

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. – Dustin Johnson’s reign as Masters champion was the shortest on record when he had to leave his green jacket at Augusta National after missing the cut as the defending champion last week.

With rounds of 74-75, Johnson missed the weekend by two shots just five months after his record-destroying triumph in the November Masters in which he became the only player in tournament history to reach and finish at 20 under.

Instead of making a spirited title defense the final two rounds, Johnson was left only to help Hideki Matsuyama slip on the green jacket Sunday evening.

“I would have liked to have kept it, but I’ve got one, so it still felt good,” Johnson said Wednesday ahead of Thursday’s start of the RBC Heritage at Harbour Town Golf Links. “And obviously very happy for Hideki. He played great. I think it’s great for golf. It’s great for him.

“It was definitely neat to be a part of the ceremony, and I enjoyed being their champion for five months. I don’t care how long it was for, it’s still cool. I’m always going to be a Masters champion.”

RBC Heritage: Odds and picks | Field by the rankings

No longer in possession of the coveted green jacket, the world No. 1 is eyeing a different sports coat – the red plaid number that goes to the winner this week. If he’s to add to his wardrobe, he has to take care of what ailed him at Augusta.

“The game is OK. Obviously last week I really struggled with the putting, so I’m putting in a lot of work this week on it,” he said. “Probably the worst I’ve putted in a long time.”

That’s an accurate statement – Johnson had two three-putts in the first round and four three-putts in the second round.

“It was disappointing,” Johnson said of not putting up a better defense of his title. “Thursday was tough. But still, a couple three-putts on Thursday and then double the last hole, even though I kind of got it around pretty well.

“And then the same thing on Friday; I played good enough to shoot a good score. You’ve got to hole putts if you want to play well, and I did not do that. I had four three-putts on Friday and missed the cut by a couple. Hit it in the water on 15, felt like I hit a really good shot there.

“You take those away and I’m right in the mix starting the weekend.”

[listicle id=778096457]

Johnson has worked on his setup – he said it was a little funky at Augusta – and his speed on the greens since arriving at Harbour Town.

“I got it fixed,” he said. “It’s better, feels better, a lot more comfortable. I put in some work, but that was kind of the big issue last week. Other than that, I feel like the game is in pretty good form.”

And he feels like he’s in the ideal place to turn around his non-Dustin Johnson like form of late. Since he returned from the Middle East after winning the Saudi International in February, the reigning FedEx Cup champion has just one top-10 in five starts, his missed cut in the Masters and three finishes outside the top 25.

At Harbour Town, he’s finished in ties for 16th, 17th and 28th the last three years.

“I love playing this event,” he said. “I think it’s a great golf course. It’s always in good shape, and it’s a tough course, too, so you know you don’t have to shoot real low, which I like.

“You use every club in your bag. You’ve got to hit all different types of shots. You’ve got to shape it around here. It’s treelined. You just really have to golf your ball. Small greens. You hit a lot of greens you’re going to play well.”

If you putt well on them, that is.

[lawrence-related id=778099409,778099342,778099316,778099304,778099275]

Corey Conners riding wave of momentum to seaside Harbour Town and RBC Heritage

Corey Conners is riding a wave of momentum to seaside Harbour Town and this week’s RBC Heritage.

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. – Corey Conners has raised his own expectations.

And why not? The Canadian has delivered on some of the game’s biggest stages of late, finishing third in the Arnold Palmer Invitational, seventh in the Players Championship and tying for eighth in last week’s Masters.

Golf fans are getting to know this one-time winner on the PGA Tour a bit more and are becoming accustomed to seeing his name on the first page of leaderboards. The 29-year-old has charted a quick and steady rise from when he won the 2019 Valero Texas Open as the No. 196-ranked player in the world. Now he checks in at No. 42.

Which all adds up to him expecting to play well in this week’s RBC Heritage at Harbour Town Golf Links.

“I have a lot of confidence in my game,” Conners said Tuesday. “I feel like I’ve been fine tuning all parts of my game, and everything is rounding nicely into shape. I definitely have high expectations teeing it up week in and week out, and the strong results definitely help that.

“I’m looking forward to continuing the good play. Definitely know that if I play my game, do what I can, play with the confidence I have and the trust that I have in my game, I’m going to give myself a good chance.”

RBC Heritage: Odds and picks | Field by the rankings
More: Conners’ hole-in-one gets ultimate Canadian tribute

He gave himself a big chance last week at Augusta National and got plenty of airtime, especially when he aced the sixth hole in the third round. It was the best iron shot he hit all week of many and only a poor Sunday when he shot 74 kept him out of contention as the shadows of the Georgia Pines started to cover the course late on Sunday afternoon.

“One of my biggest takeaways (from the Masters) is how well the course sets up for me and how much I like the golf course,” Conner said. “I think one of my big strengths is my iron play. It was really valuable around that golf course and makes me avoid the stressful situations or the difficult spots that you can find yourself in on that golf course, striking the ball solidly I think into the greens is really important. I drove it well and ironed it well and took a lot of the stress off my game trying to save pars or whatever.

“As far as Sunday, didn’t quite have the feel on the greens like I had the first few days. Obviously playing for a green jacket, which is a pretty big deal, just wasn’t quite as relaxed on Sunday as I was the first few days. It’s something to be a little more aware of when I get back in the mix there in the future.”

This week, Conners is at another ball-striker’s course – the course is tight and rimmed with trees and the greens are among the smallest on the PGA Tour. Conners missed the cut in his first three trips to Harbour Town but made it to the weekend last year and tied for 21st.

“I feel very comfortable with the course. Solid play last year. Kind of made me like the golf course a little bit more. Got a great feel for things,” he said. “Feeling good about all parts of my game. Been really consistent with the ball-striking, and the putter has been working pretty well the last little while, getting better and better, a little more consistency there.

“But really happy with the way I’m striking the ball, hitting it very solid particularly with the irons, driving it well, also. Feel good, have a lot of confidence in my game right now, and just trying to keep riding that wave of good play.”

[lawrence-related id=778099316,778099304,778099271,778099275]

Corey Conners’ hole-in-one at the Masters got the ultimate Canadian tribute — a donut

After Corey Conners’ ace at the Masters, the local club in his hometown sent “runners” to tell the club’s patrons about his hole-in-one.

The 2021 Masters was loaded with tasty storylines, including Canadian Corey Conners draining the sixth hole-in-one on No. 6 in the tournament’s history — marking the first time since 2013 a player aced a hole other than No. 16 during the event at Augusta National.

Conners hails from a small region in rural Ontario, Canada, about two hours from Toronto, and was immortalized as only a Canadian can be — through a Tim Hortons donut.

Robert Rumph owns the Tim Hortons — a famous coffee and donut chain named for a hockey player that stretches across Canada and into some Northern U.S. towns — in Listowel, a small unincorporated area where Conners was raised.

Rumph was watching when Conners buried the ace, a shot that landed short of the hole and rolled in.

Rumph said Conners’ ace sent waves through the nearby Listowel Golf Club, a 27-hole semi-private golf course, designed by Dave Moote, RF Moote & Associates. Although the clubhouse is currently closed, Rumph said “runners” were sent out on the course to tell all the club’s patrons that Conners had just pulled off Masters history.

“It was amazing,” said Rumph, who has plenty of connections with the family, including knowing Conners’ dad Mike from his time as a local hockey coach. “Corey has made everyone in this area so proud. And when he’s home, he usually stops around and has a donut, so we made this special donut for him.”

The donut is covered in green icing and has a small while “golf ball” of icing on top. It’s not the first time Rumph has created something for Conners, when the 2010 Ontario Amateur champ first qualified for the Masters, the store had a similar donut, minus the golf ball.

“This time we had to add a little something extra,” Rumph said.

Conners should be able to foot the bill for plenty of patrons in the town of 7,500 — he finished T-8 at the Masters and has 11 top-25 finishes in 17 starts on the PGA Tour this season, amassing $2,785,045. He currently sits 42nd in the Official World Golf Ranking and 29th on the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings.

[vertical-gallery id=778097465]

Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama casually hung out at Atlanta airport with the green jacket

Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama casually hung out at Atlanta’s airport with the green jacket after his win at Augusta National.

Picture this: It’s Monday after the Masters and you’re slowly moving through Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport making your way to your gate to fly home after a weekend at Augusta National.

Something green catches your eye. That’s not uncommon at the biggest airport for Masters traffic the day after the tournament. Then you look a little closer and realize it’s a green jacket. Scratch that, the green jacket.

Then you realize it’s 2021 Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama.

After his historic major championship victory, the 29-year-old native of Japan was spotted casually sitting at the airport with the green jacket draped over a chair like an old coat.

Masters: Leaderboard | Photos | Winner’s bag | Money list

Riggs, host of Barstool’s Fore Play podcast, shared a close-up picture he was sent of Matsuyama and his team at the airport. Even after the $2.07 million payday, it’s cool to see Matsuyama among the patrons making their way home.

That said, his departure from Georgia looks a bit different than Jordan Spieth’s six years ago.

https://www.instagram.com/p/1bbFHbBR0l/

[vertical-gallery id=778097465]

Billy Horschel apologizes for ‘conduct’ during Masters meltdown

“I am and have always been a fiery competitor.”

Billy Horschel’s 2021 Masters didn’t go all that great.

He did make the cut, but he finished in 50th place and had to go barefoot not once but twice to hit shots out of the water, and he slipped down a hill the first time.

There was also video caught of him slamming one of his irons into his golf bag in fury, and it appears that’s what he was apologizing for — to fans, Augusta National, its members and patrons — on Twitter after the end of the Masters.

Here’s video of the club slam and his subsequent apology he sent on Twitter:

At least he had fun with his slip!

[mm-video type=video id=01f329kgmn0af0y2yt75 playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01f329kgmn0af0y2yt75/01f329kgmn0af0y2yt75-bd3c555ca4c8f5ec1608f3e8103fea8e.jpg]

‘Making Japan proud’: Tiger Woods congratulates Hideki Matsuyama for historic Masters win

Tiger Woods took to Twitter to congratulate Hideki Matsuyama for his history-making Masters win at Augusta National.

Hideki Matsuyama made history Sunday, becoming the first Japanese male golfer to win a major championship by wrapping up the 2021 Masters title.

His history-making win earned kudos from the biggest name in the golf world: Tiger Woods.

“Making Japan proud Hideki,” Woods wrote on his verified Twitter account. “Congratulations on such a huge accomplishment for you and your country. This historical @TheMasters win will impact the entire golf world.”

Woods, who was absent from the 2021 tournament as he continues his recovery from a February car crash, has captured the green jacket five times, most recently in 2019, the most recent Masters to be played in its traditional April timeslot. That title marked Woods’ first major in nearly 11 years, and 15th major title overall.

Masters: Leaderboard | Photos | Winner’s bag | Money list

Woods himself made Masters history when he won his first green jacket in 1997. That victory, the first major win of his career, made Woods the first African-American winner at Augusta National.

Matsuyama is just the second man from an Asian country to ever win a major, per The Associated Press. Y.E. Yang of South Korea beat out Woods to win the 2009 PGA Championship.

[vertical-gallery id=778097465]

Forward Press podcast: Peter Kostis on the 2021 Masters, what Hideki Matsuyama’s win means for Japan and more

In this episode of the Forward Press Podcast, David Dusek and Peter Kostis recap the Masters and Hideki Matsuyama’s historic win.

Welcome to episode 92 of Forward Press, a weekly podcast from Golfweek.

In this edition of the Forward Press Podcast, Golfweek’s David Dusek chats with golf instructor and analyst, Peter Kostis, about Hideki Matsuyama’s historic victory at Augusta National, the incredible performance by Will Zalatoris in his Masters debut, what Xander Schauffele needs to take away from this weekend, and much more.

As always, you can download the Forward Press podcast and listen on all of your favorite platforms, including: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Spotify | Castbox | Radio Public.

Did you like what you heard? You can catch up on previous episodes of the Forward Press podcast here.

‘I never gave up:’ Xander Schauffele can hold his head high after another close call at the Masters

Xander Schauffele never gave up and can hold his head high after another close call at the Masters.

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Xander Schauffele experienced a full range of emotions on Sunday in the final round of the 85th Masters. He fell out of contention early, roared back to make it interesting and just as he looked poised to make one of the great comebacks in tournament history, he made a round-ruining triple bogey.

On the scorecard, it added up to a round of even-par 72 and a tie for third place, but that doesn’t begin to tell the story of this tragedy in three parts.

Schauffele entered the final round at Augusta National Golf Club trailing Hideki Matsuyama by four strokes. After a birdie at the second, Schauffele appeared to have shot himself out of the tournament with what he called “a messy start.” He made costly bogeys at the third and fourth hole and then doubled the fifth, which he failed to par in all four rounds. At 3 over for the day through six holes, Schauffele’s deficit had grown to seven strokes. He could’ve been deflated, but he was not.

“I never gave up,” Schauffele said. “It almost took the edge off.”

Masters: Leaderboard | Photos | Winner’s bag | Money list

The rollercoaster round began to turn for the better with birdies at Nos. 7 and 8 and kicked into high gear with a string of four straight birdies beginning at No. 12. Meanwhile, Matsuyama made his first bogey of the day at No. 12 and over shot the 15th green with his second shot and made another bogey to give Schauffele a glimmer of hope. He trailed by two strokes and had the tee at the par-3 16th hole.

“I was coming in hot. I was feeling good,” Schauffele said. “I was in full chase mode.”

This was his chance to apply the pressure. Instead, he left Matsuyama off the hook. Schauffele tried to draw an 8-iron at the 170-yard hole and his shot hit a wall of wind and landed short on the bank and rolled into the water. He went on to make triple bogey, sealing his fate.

“I hit a perfect 8 iron,” he said. “The wind was into us, left to right. It got smoked and eaten up. You could kind of see it. The ball hovered there.”

It is a shot that Schauffele likely will play over and over in his mind and think about what could have been. Adding insult to injury, when he took his drop, his 9-iron flew the green.

“It seemed like it went downwind almost. (Caddie) Austin (Kaiser) and I just kind of painfully laughed at each other and said, ‘Well, I guess it switched again,’ ” Schauffele said.

Let the second-guessing of how he played his tee shot at 16 begin.

[vertical-gallery id=778097465]

“I think a lot of great shots into 16 are left to right.  High cuts into that mound,” Schauffele said. “I’ve been hitting a good high cut all week. I just didn’t think of it at that time. I hit like a hard draw 8-iron, and it wasn’t the shot. Moving forward, just kind of throw it in the memory bank. I’m going to keep collecting thoughts.  Hopefully, I keep coming back here for years to come, and the goal is to win one day.”

Despite another close call at the Masters — Schauffele finished tied for second in 2019 — he still held his head high with how he battled back to give Matsuyama a scare.

“I’ll be able to sleep tonight,” Schauffele said. “I might be tossing and turning, but I’ll be OK.”

[lawrence-related id=778099069,778099085,778099057,778099045,778099005]

Tiger Woods congratulates Hideki Matsuyama after thrilling Masters win

A hearty congratulations from one Masters winner to another.

The golf world has come together to celebrate Hideki Matsuyama’s Masters title as the 29-year-old became the first Japanese man to win a major championship. That includes the sport’s biggest name, Tiger Woods, who took to Twitter on Sunday to send Matsuyama a well-earned bout of congratulations on his “huge accomplishment” after the day’s events completed.

Matsuyama won his first Masters title by just a stroke, hitting a bogey on the 18th hole to finish the tournament at a -10 on Sunday. Between the Tokyo broadcast having a field day with his performance and Matsuyama’s caddie bowing to the course after the win, it was quite a day for the first time Masters winner.

Add in a personal congratulations from golf’s biggest name to that list as well and it’s a pretty long list of accomplishments for Matsuyama after this weekend.

And of course, Woods is no stranger to Masters wins either, as the 45-year-old has five green jackets of his own, most recently winning the title again in 2019.

Though Woods is still recovering from the February car crash he was in, it’s still nice to see him take time out of his day to congratulate the new Masters winner even though he couldn’t be there in person.

[mm-video type=video id=01f2z7ps9tsx8e2p4ds2 playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01f2z7ps9tsx8e2p4ds2/01f2z7ps9tsx8e2p4ds2-18dacaba9e0756fcf0cd46d37d8843c4.jpg]

How much money each golfer won at the 2021 Masters at Augusta National

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.

Masters: Leaderboard | Photos | Winner’s bag

Masters prize money

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Hideki Matsuyama -10 $2,070,000
2 Will Zalatoris -9 $1,242,000
T3 Jordan Spieth -7 $667,000
T3 Xander Schauffele -7 $667,000
T5 Jon Rahm -6 $437,000
T5 Marc Leishman -6 $437,000
7 Justin Rose -5 $385,250
T8 Patrick Reed -4 $345,000
T8 Corey Conners -4 $345,000
T10 Cameron Smith -3 $299,000
T10 Tony Finau -3 $299,000
T12 Webb Simpson -2 $218,500
T12 Stewart Cink -2 $218,500
T12 Kevin Na -2 $218,500
T12 Si Woo Kim -2 $218,500
T12 Robert MacIntyre -2 $218,500
T12 Brian Harman -2 $218,500
T18 Tyrrell Hatton -1 $161,000
T18 Collin Morikawa -1 $161,000
T18 Scottie Scheffler -1 $161,000
T21 Harris English E $119,600
T21 Shane Lowry E $119,600
T21 Phil Mickelson E $119,600
T21 Justin Thomas E $119,600
T21 Viktor Hovland E $119,600
T26 Paul Casey 1 $79,925
T26 Abraham Ancer 1 $79,925
T26 Ian Poulter 1 $79,925
T26 Louis Oosthuizen 1 $79,925
T26 Cameron Champ 1 $79,925
T26 Matt Jones 1 $79,925
T26 Bubba Watson 1 $79,925
T26 Charl Schwartzel 1 $79,925
T34 Michael Thompson 2 $60,663
T34 Matt Fitzpatrick 2 $60,663
T34 Matt Wallace 2 $60,663
T34 Ryan Palmer 2 $60,663
T38 Martin Laird 3 $52,900
T38 Henrik Stenson 3 $52,900
T40 Christiaan Bezuidenhout 4 $43,700
T40 Gary Woodland 4 $43,700
T40 Sebastian Munoz 4 $43,700
T40 Mackenzie Hughes 4 $43,700
T40 Joaquin Niemann 4 $43,700
T40 Bernd Wiesberger 4 $43,700
T46 Brendon Todd 5 $33,503
T46 Bryson DeChambeau 5 $33,503
T46 Tommy Fleetwood 5 $33,503
49 Jason Kokrak 7 $29,900
T50 Jose Maria Olazabal 8 $28,635
T50 Billy Horschel 8 $28,635
52 Francesco Molinari 9 $27,600
53 Jim Herman 10 $27,140
54 Adam Scott 11 $26,680
Sergio Garcia CUT $10,000
Daniel Berger CUT $10,000
Jimmy Walker CUT $10,000
Matt Kuchar CUT $10,000
Max Homa CUT $10,000
Danny Willett CUT $10,000
Kevin Kisner CUT $10,000
Brooks Koepka CUT $10,000
Dustin Johnson CUT $10,000
Lee Westwood CUT $10,000
Mike Weir CUT $10,000
Lanto Griffin CUT $10,000
Dylan Frittelli CUT $10,000
Robert Streb CUT $10,000
Rory McIlroy CUT $10,000
C.T. Pan CUT $10,000
Bernhard Langer CUT $10,000
Victor Perez CUT $10,000
Zach Johnson CUT $10,000
Brian Gay CUT $10,000
Patrick Cantlay CUT $10,000
Ian Woosnam CUT $10,000
Jason Day CUT $10,000
Carlos Ortiz CUT $10,000
Hudson Swafford CUT $10,000
Sandy Lyle CUT $10,000
Fred Couples CUT $10,000
Sungjae Im CUT $10,000
Vijay Singh CUT $10,000
Larry Mize CUT $10,000

[vertical-gallery id=778097465]