Peter Malnati Masters Rookie Diary: Skipping it and chipping it Tiger-style at 16

In a word, the second nine at Augusta National is magical.

Editor’s Note: Peter Malnati qualified for his first Masters by winning the Valspar Championship last month. The 36-year-old veteran hadn’t won in nearly nine years on the PGA Tour. He’s sharing a first-person account of his experience daily only at Golfweek.com.

For part one, click here.

AUGUSTA, Ga. — In a word, the second nine at Augusta National is magical.

I played it for the first time on Sunday and again on Tuesday, teeing off after a workout, practice and quick lunch, at around 11:45 a.m.

I’m just blown away by the beauty and the puzzle that the holes present. You have two par 5s where you can make a 3 or have a nightmare.

Past champion Vijay Singh was playing in front of me and he was taking his time so I was able to do a thorough study of the greens and surrounds. I tried to pick two hole locations on each green and do thorough work there and then look at the other two places where I thought they might put a hole. A group eventually caught me so I hurried a bit the last three or four holes.

But on 16, I did take a moment to partake in the tradition of skipping a ball across the pond. I used a 5-iron and my ball nearly made it across and into the bunker. In other words, I didn’t embarrass myself with attempt. Then I worked on the front right pin and the back left location, which is where the hole historically is positioned on Sunday. That’s where you see some wild aces as well as the hole for the iconic Tiger chip-in where the Nike Swoosh hung on the hole before dropping in for one of the all-time deuces. I had so much fun practicing there and was amazed how much break there is around the hole. In particular, I was surprised how quick it was from behind that hole.

Just as on Sunday, I piped a drive on 18, which felt great. I wouldn’t go so far as to classify it as claustrophobic, but it’s a narrow shoot to find that fairway.

I know I’m just getting my feet wet at Augusta National but it feels like I’ve been here a long time already. I’m ready to go and for the tournament to start. I’ve got one more day of prep and I plan to take full advantage of it.

Wednesday’s Par 3 Contest I have a feeling may be a highlight of the week. I’m excited to have Alicia caddie for me and for both of my boys to be out there and dressed in their white jumpsuits.

Another day of prep in the morning, and then the Par 3 in the afternoon. Can. Not. Wait.

Photos: The best (and worst) style and apparel choices at 2024 Masters

Some sweet looks, some not-so-great looks.

The 2024 Masters at Augusta National Golf Club is here as the game’s best players have made their way down Magnolia Lane.

Jon Rahm, who is making his first major championship start since he left the PGA Tour for LIV Golf, is the defending champion. He’s joined in the field by 2022 winner and world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler —two wins on Tour so far this season (Arnold Palmer Invitational, Players Championship) — and Rory McIlroy, who is hoping this is the week he completes the career grand slam.

Masters: Tournament hub

Apparel companies love to bring their best stuff for the Masters, and there are always some questionable style choices made during the week — looking at you, Viktor Hovland.

Here are some of our favorite fits — and a few bad ones — at the Masters.

Jon Rahm’s 2024 Masters Champions Dinner brings LIV Golf, PGA Tour players together: ‘We’re a fraternity’

“It was a great night; an emotional night. Ben (Crenshaw) made sure that tonight was all about Jon, Seve and Jackie Burke.”

AUGUSTA, Ga. — The Champions Dinner tipped its hat to Spain on Tuesday evening.

On what would’ve been the 67th birthday of Seve Ballesteros, the table of 33 champions welcomed its newest member — Jon Rahm — before flooding the room with memories of Augusta’s first European victor.

“It was a great night; an emotional night,” said Larry Mize, the 1987 winner. “Ben (Crenshaw) made sure that tonight was all about Jon, Seve and Jackie Burke.”

Rahm sat at the head of the table, side-by-side with Ben Crenshaw, marking the first time a LIV golfer played host to the dinner.

And even though the narrative of PGA Tour vs. LIV Golf remains heated to some, for one night, the sides united.

“We’re a fraternity,” said Crenshaw, who emcees the annual supper.

Added Charles Coody: “It couldn’t have been more congenial. Even Tom Watson at the very end of dinner, he stood from his chair and said how happy he was to see the camaraderie within our group. It was a wonderful night.”

Crenshaw, in his Texas drawl, opened the evening by welcoming Rahm to the Masters Club; he then gifted the Spaniard an inscribed gold locket in the form of the Club emblem.

Two years ago, at the 2022 Champions Dinner, Hideki Matsuyama stunned the table by reciting a speech in English, prompting Gary Player to toast in Japanese.

When asked earlier in the week about congratulating Jon Rahm in Spanish, Ben Crenshaw reflected on his Austin High School diploma.

“I took French,” said Crenshaw, laughing.

2023 Masters
A Masters pin flag blows at the practice facility during the second round of the 2023 Masters. (Photo: Danielle Parhizkaran-USA TODAY Network)

From there, stories immersed the room about Seve.

Bernhard Langer orated a tale about the 1983 Ryder Cup at Palm Beach Gardens when Ballesteros struck a 3-wood out of a bunker from 230 yards onto the green.

Langer told the table that from the lie Seve had, no golfer — aside from Ballesteros — would’ve cleared the lip with anything less than a six iron.

Crenshaw also mentioned the passing of 1956 Masters Champion Jackie Burke.

Burke, who shared a Champions locker with Tiger Woods, died on Jan. 19, 10 days before his 101st birthday.

“God put me down here for a long spell,” Burke said on his 100th birthday.

Thirty-three past champions attended the dinner. The only two absent were Angel Cabrera and Sandy Lyle.

According to Mize, Lyle’s wife, Jolanda, was having inner ear problems, and the 1988 Masters winner elected to remain home.

“Jolanda tried to get Sandy to come,” Mize said. “But he didn’t want to come without her.”

As defending champ, Rahm selected the menu for Tuesday evening, with his spread giving homage to Spain’s Basque region.

The meal began with six options for tapas and pintxos, Spanish for starters, before offering two main courses: Chuleton a la Parrilla, a ribeye with Piquillo peppers, or Rodaballo al Pil-Pil, a fish dish with white asparagus.

José María Olazábal chose the fish. Craig Stadler ordered red meat.

Coody picked fish.

“I didn’t want to venture too far into no-man’s land,” Coody said.

According to multiple past winners, similar to last year, Phil Mickelson remained quiet, and despite being close to Rahm, he elected not to give a toast.

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Tradition of skipping golf balls across 16th hole during Masters practice rounds actually started with this guy

The innovator of the 16th hole skip returned Tuesday to Augusta National.

AUGUSTA, Ga. —  The innovator of the 16th hole skip returned Tuesday to Augusta National.

Fifty-two years ago, Gary Cowan was playing a practice round with Ben Crenshaw when the pair reached No. 16 tee. Cowan, the reigning U.S. Amateur champion, turned to Gentle Ben and said, “Watch this.”

The Canadian skipped a 3-iron across the water, starting a Masters tradition that has lasted half a century.

On Tuesday, Cowan returned to the 16th hole and, alongside countrymen Mike Weir and Corey Conners, shot a pellet across the pond.

“Ben couldn’t believe what I was doing,” said Cowan, reflecting on 1972.
Many Masters traditions have indisputable timelines, such as the creation of the Champions Dinner in 1952, or Sam Snead being awarded the first green jacket in 1949. Other tales have gained legs over time without a surefire genesis.

One such custom is skipping balls over the pond at No. 16.

Ken Green and Mark Calcavecchia claimed to have started the tradition in 1987, until Lee Trevino and Seve Ballesteros one-upped the pair by saying they did it in the early 1980s. Then came photographs of Tom Kite mastering the feat in 1979.

But Cowan, now 85-years-old, with Crenshaw’s backing, believes he was the first in 1972. The Masters official website also credits with Cowan for being the first.

“I was there. It happened,” Crenshaw said. “Gary used a 3-iron, put the ball back in his stance and bam, skipped it straight across the water.”

With Ben’s urging, Cowan successfully knocked three over before Crenshaw – competing in his first Masters – tried to duplicate the achievement to no avail.

A first try went kerplunk. Then a second.

“Ben was playing it too much like a chip,” Cowan said. “I told him, ‘Hit it hard and low,’ and sure enough his third one skipped right across. The crowd went crazy.”

For Cowan, skipping balls over bodies of water had become a favorite childhood game in Kitchener, Ontario. The member of the Canadian Golf Hall of Fame said, “I always liked to horse around.” So when he got to the 16th tee box, Cowan didn’t think twice about dropping a ball and skimming it at Augusta National.

“Did I think I’d get in trouble?” Cowan asked. “You know, that never crossed my mind.”

Skipping balls across the water to the 16th green

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Brooks Koepka is back in his element at Augusta National, and that’s bad news for the 2024 Masters field

Koepka won’t share what he learned from last year’s Masters loss, but he certainly won’t let it happen again.

AUGUSTA, Ga. — As a kid growing up in South Florida, Brooks Koepka always dreamed of winning major championships when he was practicing at his dad’s course.

That desire to be the best has fueled Koepka for 33 years and guided him to an incredible tally of five major championships in a six-year span (two of which were riddled with injuries). While he’s never won at Augusta National Golf Club, Koepka has finished runner-up twice and in the top 10 three times in eight previous Masters appearances.

His most recent close call for a green jacket occurred at last year’s Masters, when Koepka held at least a share of the lead after each of the first three rounds before he was caught by Jon Rahm on the final 18. Koepka ended up tied for second with Phil Mickelson.

After his PGA Championship win last summer, Koepka said he learned a lesson as to why he lost his lead Sunday at Augusta. While he still won’t share exactly what he learned, he’s vowed he won’t let it happen again.

“I think if I get the chance this year, I won’t be thinking that way,” Koepka said during his pre-tournament press conference Tuesday.

Koepka has nine wins on the PGA Tour and three since he joined LIV Golf, but he doesn’t shy away from the fact that the major championships are what’s most important to him. He’s well aware of his stature and current place in the pro golf history books. Major championships make for a lasting legacy.

“Even today, that’s what I first see, that’s what I think you’re judged by, your legacy, what you’re defined by. I’ve always said it, I think you can tell exactly how (many majors) Jack, Tiger, Arnold, Tom, you can tell, all these guys, how many majors they won,” explained Koepka. “It’s tough to tell how many events they won, but I know that there’s one sure-fire way to figure out who is who is by major championships.”

How aware is he? Like the NFL players who can name which quarterbacks drafted ahead of them, Koepka knows he’s tied with James Braid, John Henry Taylor, Byron Nelson, Peter Thomson and Seve Ballesteros on the all-time major winners list and that there are still 14 other names in front of him.

When it comes to players with 25-49 rounds under their belt at Augusta, Koepka is third in scoring average at 71.56 behind Rahm (70.50) and Jordan Spieth (70.66). He doesn’t know what it is about Augusta that brings out his best game, but he sure does wish he could do it more often.

“I just think there’s just something special about this place. You kind of drive down Magnolia Lane and it gets the juices flowing,” said Koepka. “And I think everybody that drives down it gets pretty excited. And, you know, first major of the year. And that’s what you play the game for, is to win here, win a major, and that’s the goal.”

In classic Koepka fashion, he also sarcastically challenged a reporter for asking if 59 was attainable at Augusta National:

Q: It sounds like the course is already pretty dialed this week, but under softer or optimal scoring conditions do you think 59 is obtainable on this golf course?

BROOKS KOEPKA: Have you played here?

Q: Not yet.

BROOKS KOEPKA: I can tell by the question.

Q: What number is attainable in your mind? 63’s the low.

BROOKS KOEPKA: I mean, now, anything’s attainable. But, yeah, if you want to go play the members tees and maybe play like 15 holes, yeah, I could do that.

If you didn’t think Koepka was already back to his old self after the PGA Championship, that exchange surely signals he is.

Now healthy following a couple of years of injury struggles, Koepka knows he’s ready for the challenge that awaits this week. Following his Monday practice round, he noted the course “was as firm as I’ve seen it in maybe four, five years” and that green speeds were already near a weekend pace.

For a player who constantly rises to the occasion, that’s music to a confident Koepka’s ears and bad news for the other 88 players in the field.

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Why Scottie Scheffler is glad Nick Dunlap asked for Masters advice

“He should be going to class, and instead, he’s playing in the Masters.”

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Scottie Scheffler is in a much different place than he was three years ago.

The 2022 Masters Tournament champion has crept into veteran territory and is noticing the changes in his approach.

“I think in terms of preparation, I think I valued much more rest going into these types of weeks,” the 27-year-old said Tuesday. “I think when I first came out in my career, I didn’t really value rest as much as I should have. I was a really big practicer, and I would say I probably practiced too much at tournaments. So, trying to work on getting quality rest and being ready to compete.”

The top-ranked golfer in the world, Scheffler enters this week’s Masters with wins at the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill and the Players Championship in back-to-back weeks. He tied for second at the Texas Children’s Houston Open two weeks ago and has seven top-10 finishes in his last eight starts.

He played a practice round Tuesday with 20-year-old rookie Nick Dunlap, who made sure to pick Scheffler’s brain as much as possible.

“He’s in a difficult spot where he should be in college right now. He should be going to class, and instead, he’s playing in the Masters. He asks us a lot of questions, and I try to give him the best answers that I can,” Scheffler said. “Yeah, I feel like when I first came out, there were a lot of older guys that gave me really good advice. And I’m just trying to kind of pay it forward to the next group of guys.

“I think I’m seven years older than Nick, which is pretty wild. I still feel like the young guy out here, and I’m kind of trending now towards the older end of the spectrum now, which is really weird.”

Legendary caddie unlocked Scottie Scheffler’s potential at Augusta

Before Scheffler’s Masters win in 2022, he had a chance meeting with legendary Augusta National Golf Club caddie Carl Jackson. The rest, as they say, is history.

“Well, I’m not going to expand too much on Carl’s secrets in front of people, but … No, it was maybe my second Masters, it was either my second or third. I sat kind of in the back of the caddie house with Carl. And, yeah, he gave me a yardage book that had some of the — where he — I think he called it grain, where some of the slopes are. And it’s just a yardage book that has some arrows in it.”

Scheffler still studies the yardage book to this day.

“I’m not going to tell you where the arrows are pointing,” he said, laughing. “But it’s something that I’ll kind of review at night and I always look at it in the lead-up to the tournament just because there is kind of some weird stuff that goes on around the golf course. And, I mean, he’s such a peaceful guy. So, it was really nice just kind of listening to him talk about the golf course.”

Min Woo Lee broke his finger doing a ‘side bridge glute thing’ in preparation for the Masters

“It was a very lucky — it was probably the best worst thing.”

Min Woo Lee didn’t get as much prep for the 88th Masters as he would’ve liked thanks to an injury.

Lee told reporters Tuesday at Augusta National Golf Club about an injury he suffered to his right ring finger. He broke it, the result of an injury lifting weights.

“I was in the gym on I think Saturday, yeah, Saturday last week,” Lee said. “I was just doing like a side bridge glute thing and it was literally my last rep, last set thing, and I like threw the dumb bell down and somehow clipped my right ring finger so it … Yeah, so I went to the doctor. Went to the doctor and I thought it was OK because I could move it. It was just red. I thought it would be fine. Then they came in and said, you’ve broken it.”

The injury wasn’t public until Lee made it so during his media session Tuesday. Last week, he was in attendance in Las Vegas following sister Minjee Lee on the LPGA, and there’s a photo of his finger wrapped up.

2024 Masters Tournament
Minjee Lee, caddie Bradley Beecher and her brother Min Woo Lee at the 2024 T-Mobile Match Play at Shadow Creek Golf Course in Las Vegas. (Photo: Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

Lee said he felt pressure to tell people because of his high expectations.

Ultimately, he had no idea what to expect this week, but his finger quickly recovered from the accident.

“I mean, recovery was very miraculously good,” Lee said. “I hit my first shot for the last week on Friday, so hit my first full driver. Yeah, honestly, it’s actually amazing how fast the recovery was. It was bruised, still swollen, but not actually that painful which is really strange. Icing and elevating as much as I can. Yeah, I guess it wasn’t the best prep, and I go the flu two days ago. Yeah, it’s going great.”

How is he feeling with two days to go until the first round?

“Early on I was hitting chip shots and stuff, like few days afterwards, and it was pretty average,” Lee said. “Yeah, I mean, I played a full nine holes and hit some decent shots so, again, just surprised. Yeah. I think it was very lucky. It was a very lucky — it was probably the best worst thing.”

How Wyndham Clark cleared the mystique of Augusta National before first Masters appearance

Clark has the highest ranking for a Masters rookie in history.

AUGUSTA, Ga. — There aren’t many golfers – just two in fact – who have accomplished what Wyndham Clark is about to do this week at the Masters Tournament.

In the 87 previous Masters, almost every reigning U.S. Open champion had played in April’s Masters before their U.S. Open win the previous June.

The first to break the barrier was little-known Jack Fleck, who won the 1955 U.S. Open, taking down Ben Hogan in an 18-hole playoff at the Olympic Club in San Francisco to qualify for the 1956 Masters.

The other was Orville Moody, who made his Masters debut in 1970, a whopping 54 years ago. Moody had won the 1969 U.S. Open at Champions Golf Club in Houston.

Being a Masters rookie with a U.S. Open title under his belt just shows how far Clark has come in the last past 11 months, when he’s won three times and skyrocketed up the World Golf Ranking.

Less than three months before the 2023 Masters, Clark was ranked 159th in the world. He’s now No. 4. That’s the highest ranking for a Masters rookie in history.

He’s expected to finish higher than Fleck or Moody did in their Masters debut. Fleck tied for 43rd in the 1956 Masters and Moody tied for 18th in 1970.

In fact, Clark, who was a middle-of-the-pack player for his first five years on the PGA Tour, has improved so much in the past year that his name is being thrown around as a possible winner in his Masters debut. Only three players have done that, the last being Fuzzy Zoeller in 1979.

Clark thinks it’s only a matter of time for another rookie to break through so why not him? Or of the 19 other first-timers, which includes Ludvig Aberg.

“No one thought I could win the U.S. Open being the first time in contention, so I think things are meant, you know, records or curses or whatever they are, are meant to be broken, and if it’s not me this week it could be Ludvig or someone else that does it,” Clark said. “I think the guys that are playing professional golf now have gotten so good, and I don’t think we really listen and think of those things, we just see the golf ball and put it where we want to put it and wherever, you know, the ball ends up, we go and hit it again and try to win a golf tournament regardless of where we’re at.”

Clark said winning this week “would be an amazing accomplishment. And I like my chances. I really like myself on this golf course. I feel good on a lot of tee shots and approaches, and there’s so much creativity. So I feel good coming into the week.”

Fellow Masters participant Luke List also likes Clark’s chances.

“His game is perfect for Augusta National,” List said. “Long and straight and a good putter. That’s what you’ve got to do out here.”

List calls Clark “a phenomenal talent. That’s kind of the future of the game, is the guys that are going to hit it far and be good putters. Wyndham is a great player, really nice guy, and, again, has a great career ahead of him.”

Clark has purposely cleared the deck of most of the mystique of playing in the Masters. In two pre-Masters trips, he played 36 holes on each visit. He has now played multiple practice rounds this week.

“The good thing is I came and did a couple visits here, and I wanted to try to get the awe of Augusta National kind of out of the way so that, when I showed up this week, it’s all business and I can just focus on the golf at hand,” he said. “And I’ve done that well in this last year. And so I know I’m going to have the first tee jitters when I step up on 1 and put the ball on the peg and have to hit it. But I’m really hoping that, when we get to No. 2 or 3 or 4, I’m pretty relaxed and I just get about my business and do my job.”

Masters: For Tiger Woods, the mission hasn’t changed when he competes in the Masters

As much as he knows the Masters is “golf at the end of the day” he’s discovered the magnitude of the year’s first major championship.

“I definitely think the lead-up, before I even got here, it’s amazing how just friends and family and random people I see back home in Scottsdale (Ariz.) people just saying, man, good luck at the Masters, and bringing up the Masters, where when I’m going into a regular PGA Tour event, they’re not necessarily saying that. So that’s probably the first thing.”

It took hard work, both physically and mentally, for Clark to ascend to the elite level in today’s professional golf.

He has embraced the notoriety, which included a news conference in the Augusta National’s Press Building on Tuesday.

“Peers of mine and friends of mine would be doing the pressers on Tuesdays and Wednesdays of tournaments and being talked about and all the interviews, and I’m on the range grinding all day and no one knows my name and really cares to know my name,” Clark said. “So for me it’s exciting. I like doing this stuff because it’s something I’ve worked really hard to get here to do.”

Clark is one of those Masters participants who had such high hopes of one day playing in the Masters that they vowed not to play Augusta National until they were in the tournament. As a qualifier for the 2024 Masters, Clark could play the course any time he wished after the course opened for the 2023-24 season in mid-October. His first trip came during the second week of March.

“It was a really cool trip because I went with my dad and brother,” he said. “They have never been and so we went and had an awesome kind of Clark boys trip and it was very memorable. It’s something we’ll remember for the rest of our lives.

“That’s a place I always dreamed of playing at and then to do it with my dad and brother was awesome. We were walking the first couple of holes and we were just looking at each other and saying this is so cool.”

Jordan Spieth is focused on a simple approach this week as he pursues second Masters title

“My goal is to have a specific and very small target on each shot.”

AUGUSTA, Ga. — A simple answer to a simple question.

Sitting at the podium during his Tuesday press conference, Jordan Spieth was asked how to recreate his 2015 form — the year he won his lone green jacket.

“Make that many putts,” he said. “It’s that simple. I’ve hit it better a lot of years, but I was just rolling ’em (in 2015).”

Spieth enters the week ranked 18th in the world, but has struggled over the last two months.

Masters: Tournament hub

In his past five events, he was disqualified following a scorecard mishap at Riviera, placed 30th at Bay Hill, missed the cut at the Players Championship and Valspar, and finished 10th last week in San Antonio.

Still, the 30-year-old believes his form isn’t far off.

“I feel like my game has been better than the results,” Jordan said. “They typically line up over an extended period of time. I’ve just had some really outlier weeks.”

Jordan Spieth putts on no. 12 during a practice round for the Masters Tournament golf tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Network

Last April, Spieth carded a final-round 66, marking his sixth top five in 10 tries at Augusta National.

But following the 2023 event, he stood near the scorers’ building and spoke with annoyance of his fourth-place finish.

“I made a tremendous amount of mental mistakes,” Spieth said last April. “I got lazy picking targets. I probably only had a target on 50 percent of the shots, and I like to have them 100 percent of the time.

“To be this close, it’s nice, but it almost frustrates me more.”

Fast-forward 12 months and Spieth says he’ll attempt to correct the hiccups.

“My goal is to have a specific and very small target on each shot. It’s the easiest way to have your good shots go right where you want and your misses be close,” he said.

Spieth has been dealing with a lingering ECU wrist tendon injury, and admitted Tuesday that it remains unfixed.

He said it recurred in January after Hawaii, again during the Players Championship, and most recently last Monday in San Antonio.

“It flares up for 24 hours and then slowly gets better,” he said. “I don’t think there’s anything I can do other than rest it. And I’m not resting it anytime soon.”

Masters rookie Ludvig Aberg is far from a dark horse at Augusta National

Could he be the first Masters first-timer to win since 1979?

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Ludvig Aberg is a Masters rookie, competing in his first major championship despite having already played in the Ryder Cup and reached the top 10 in the world. How aware is he that no first-timer has won the Masters since Fuzzy Zoeller 45 years ago?

“I actually didn’t know that stat up until just now,” he said on Tuesday during his pre-tournament press conference. “I think that speaks to the difficulty of the golf course and the difficulty of some of the things that you might get thrown at you in the tournament. But I can’t really do a whole lot about that.”

The 24-year-old Swede, who qualified as winner of the PGA Tour’s RSM Classic, has made a rapid ascension from top-ranked amateur in the world a year ago out of Texas Tech to a winner on the DP World Tour, too, and a threat to hoist a trophy any time he tees it up. But could he be the first Masters first-timer to win since 1979?

Masters: Thursday tee times | Tournament hub

“I had a chance in Hawaii to walk around and watch him play a bunch. I think this is our next superstar,” said ESPN’s Andy North, a two-time U.S. Open winner, during a pre-tournament conference call with media. “I’m so impressed with him. I love the way he plays the game. I love the way he attacks it. Doesn’t fiddle around much. Just gets up and hits it and plays golf. I’m really looking forward to seeing what he does this week. I think Augusta National could be a great place for him. Yeah, he’s a young guy and hasn’t played there much, but I think that he’s got a chance to have a great week.”

Curtis Strange, a fellow two-time U.S. Open champion and ESPN commentator, tabbed Aberg as his Masters dark horse.

“In the last week, some of my researchers at ESPN said how can he be a dark horse? I said, well, he’s never played in a major before. He’s only 24. He’s come on the scene so quickly. He dominated the college scene. He’s dominated whenever he’s played throughout his whole life, which is very short,” Strange said. “If we won there, it wouldn’t surprise anybody, I don’t think.”

“I want to say for the record that Curtis has picked the ninth-ranked player in the world as his dark horse. Out there on a really, really wiggly limb,” cracked ESPN’s host of the network’s Masters coverage, Scott Van Pelt. “Aberg’s awesome. Everything they said is true. His demeanor is the thing I like the best. He just seems totally unflappable, which I guess you’d be if you whacked the thing 330 down the middle all the time. He can go, man.”

Aberg, who played Augusta National as a freshman in college with his team shortly before COVID-19, returned for the first time two weeks ago for a scouting trip and said he’s counting on the experience of his veteran caddie, Joe Skovron. Aberg also can count on the counsel of former Swedish pro Peter Hanson, who has served as a mentor and helped him quite a bit with his short game.

“I remember we worked a little bit at Players and he was trying to show me this shot. And he just steps up, and he makes it,” Aberg said. “So that’s the kind of teacher he is, and I’m learning a lot from him.”

Aberg still recalls watching the final round of the 2012 Masters when Hanson played in the final group, shooting 73 and ultimately finishing T-3. “I didn’t know him at the time, and it’s pretty cool that I’ve gotten to know him quite well over the last couple years, and he’s been telling me stories,” Aberg said.

As he approaches his major debut, Aberg was asked to name the major he most dreamed of winning growing up. “It was this, the Masters, definitely,” he said.

But a dark horse? Definitely not, first-timer or not.