Amateurs struggle at Augusta National but embrace first Masters experience

Augusta National amounts to a steep learning curve and one the three amateurs struggled with in the opening round of the Masters.

Ollie Osborne made his Masters debut Thursday, and the 21-year-old amateur could have become rattled after bogeying three of the first four holes at Augusta National.

But the junior from SMU settled into a groove — crediting his father, Steve, who is doubling as his caddie this week — for calming him down. Osborne was solid for the rest of the day and finished with a 4-over-par 76.

“The first tee shot was a little tough, but we made it through and I felt pretty good out there,” said Osborne, who qualified for the 85th Masters by finishing runner-up at the U.S. Amateur at Bandon Dunes in August.

“When you bogey your first two holes it’s always a little tough, so it was nice to have someone you really know on your bag, and someone I love there to support me,” Osborne said of his father. “He brings up whatever he wants, whatever comes to mind and we have fun together.”

Osborne had an excellent up-and-down to save par on No. 17. His first birdie of the day came at the par-5 eighth hole, where he hit his second shot over the green, before making a great chip to kick-in range.

He said No. 15 was his most memorable hole of the day.

“I made a pretty good 20-footer on a big slider on No. 15, so that was a nice birdie,” Osborne said.

He said the slow start didn’t faze him.

“I didn’t feel like I was doing that bad. I just kind of kept doing my thing. I knew it was coming and I wasn’t nervous or anything,” Osborne said. “I hit some good shots and also some tough ones, but I thought I fought hard.”

U.S. Amateur champ Tyler Strafaci struggles in Masters debut

PGA: Masters Tournament - First Round
Tyler Strafaci chips onto the second green during the first round of The Masters. (Photo: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports)

It wasn’t the round that Tyler Strafaci was hoping for to open the Masters, but the Georgia Tech grad and reigning U.S. Amateur champion soaked up everything he could in his debut at Augusta National.

Strafaci shot 80 in a round without a birdie. He found Rae’s Creek with a wayward tee shot on No. 12 en route to a triple bogey — but he took his setbacks with a great sense of humor.

“I had a blast from the first hole on,” said Strafaci, who played with defending champion Dustin Johnson and Lee Westwood. “On the first tee shot, I’ve never been more nervous in my life, so it was good to kind of hit that one out there. I played really well for about 14 holes and the other four were disastrous. I still feel I can go out tomorrow and play a really good round.

“It was just a surreal experience just being a part of a tournament with such great names and history. It’s definitely something I’m going to look back on in of the future.”

Strafaci is carrying on a family tradition at Augusta National; his grandfather, Frank Strafaci Sr., the 1935 U.S. Public Links champion, played in the Masters in 1938 and 1950.

He never met his grandfather, but Tyler Strafaci carries his memory on with his game. Staying in the Crow’s Nest for a night was a memory he’ll cherish.

“I had a few beers and had a cigar in there,” Strafaci said. “I didn’t burn down the place, which is nice. That was probably the coolest part of being an amateur playing the Masters, staying in the Crow’s Nest with all that history.  I remember getting in there, and it really hit me, the gravity of kind of what I’ve done. That was pretty cool.”

Joe Long takes Augusta National caddie in Masters debut

2021 Masters
Amateur Joe Long of England plays a stroke from the No. 2 tee during Round 1 of the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club. (Photo: Augusta National)

Joe Long of England qualified as the winner of the 2020 British Amateur played at Royal Birkdale. He had never played a full round of golf in the United States until two weeks ago, when he came to Augusta for his first practice round.

The 23-year-old came to Augusta with intriguing storylines. His regular caddie contracted COVID-19 and had to miss the Masters, so Long picked up the highly-respected John Chance from Augusta National to carry his bag.

“I was fortunate to have him for all four practice rounds. John has been here for almost 20 years and he’s awesome,” Long said after a practice round with Brooks Koepka and Shane Lowry on Wednesday. “He knows the course like the back of his hand, especially on the greens. That’s the biggest thing for me because some of the slopes are so extreme — so to have his knowledge on the bag is really helpful.”

Six weeks ago Long went on a trip to South Africa with a friend. He said he tore his left gluteus and has been hampered a bit by it since.

“It was my first time surfing, and I kind of got a little bit ahead of myself,” Long said. “I enjoyed it, but when my friend took us out to the deeper ones I messed up a bit.”

Long had a rough go of it Thursday, shooting an 82 that included a triple bogey on No. 5 and a double on No. 17. He closed out strong, though, with his only birdie on the day on No. 18, where he dialed in his approach to two feet.

“The finish was good,” Long said. “I think it almost went in the hole. So, that’s a bonus.  It was just one of those days where you start off OK, quite steady, and then I made a triple on No. 5. I hit one right, and it just unnerved me a bit and took a while to get back into it.”

Dennis Knight covers sports for the Savannah Morning News. Contact him at Dknight@savannahnow.com. Twitter: @DennisKnightSMN

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Bryson DeChambeau: ‘I thought I was like pretty ripped and jacked back then’

At the Northern Trust, Bryson DeChambeau was asked about the 2015 U.S. Amateur, which he won: “I can’t believe how skinny I was back then.”

Bryson DeChambeau is buff. We all know this by now.

But it wasn’t that long ago that a much slimmer DeChambeau hoisted the Havemeyer Trophy after winning the 2015 U.S. Amateur.

The 2020 U.S. Am just concluded Sunday to stellar reviews at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort in Oregon, and the event brought back memories for DeChambeau.

“I do remember a faint Bryson, a small, faint image of Bryson back in the day,” DeChambeau said when asked about the U.S. Am during Tuesday’s media session at the Northern Trust at TPC Boston.

“It’s funny, I was looking at an Instagram post of mine. … five years ago now, yeah, it’s 2015, 2016 when I just turned professional. I went to the Bahamas and had my shirt off and I can’t believe how skinny I was back then. I thought I was like pretty ripped and jacked back then.”

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Sunday’s final round saw fog roll in, creating oohs and aahs from everyone watching on TV and adding a layer of intrigue for eventual champion Tyler Strafaci and runner-up Charles Osborne.

“I saw a few pictures and it shocked me how different it is,” DeChambeau said. “That was pretty special seeing Strafaci and Osborne up there and them fighting it out. I watched it. It was a lot of fun.

“It just shows personally that a lot of hard work, a lot of dedication can get you to this whole new place in life, and that’s what I’m trying to hopefully do for a lot of people out there is to inspire people to work hard every day and do their absolute best to be the best they can possibly be.”

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U.S. Amateur: Wild finish as Tyler Strafaci birdies 18 to win, will meet Charles Osborne in final

BANDON, Ore. – Tyler Strafaci is trying to bring a USGA championship back to his family for the first time in 85 years. The Georgia Tech senior birdied the 18th hole to defeat Oklahoma State’s Aman Gupta 1-up Saturday evening in the semifinals of …

BANDON, Ore. — Tyler Strafaci is trying to bring a USGA championship back to his family for the first time in 85 years.

The Georgia Tech senior birdied the 18th hole to defeat Oklahoma State’s Aman Gupta 1-up Saturday evening in the semifinals of the U.S. Amateur at Bandon Dunes. Strafaci advanced to face SMU’s Charles Osborne in a 36-hole championship match Sunday morning.

Strafaci’s grandfather, Frank, won the U.S. Amateur Public Links title in 1935.

“Ever since I was a kid playing golf, I remember my dad telling me stories about my grandfather,” Strafaci said. “All my dad’s friends would talk about how great of a guy he was and how good of a golfer he was. Every time I went to Pinehurst people came up to my father and told him how awesome that his dad was. There was such a history and I always knew that, so I am just happy to be part of that.”

Last month, Strafaci won the North & South Amateur at Pinehurst to earn a locker in the clubhouse near his grandfather, who won the tournament in 1938 and 1939.

Strafaci’s father, Frank Jr., also had a decorated amateur career including a few appearances in USGA championships. Frank Strafaci is caddying for his son this week.

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“He knows my game better than anyone so having him calm me down, it’s been good,” Strafaci said. “In the past, I didn’t like having him caddy because we’d bicker back and forth, but he knows I’m at a level where I am in control of my game so he is there to push me along instead of teaching me.”

Strafaci got plenty of looks during the past year at The Havemeyer Trophy that goes to the champion after his college teammate and former roommate, Andy Ogletree, won the 2019 title.

“I glimpsed at in when he brought it in, but I always had a dream that the first time I hold the trophy, it’s mine,” Strafaci said. “It was cool to see the Havemeyer around his apartment when we’d hang out and watch TV with that as the centerpiece.”

Strafaci never trailed against Gupta and went 4-up on the 12th hole before Gupta won four of the next five holes to even the match on No. 17.

“Walking up the fairway on No. 17, my ball was in the bunker and I had some negative thoughts in my head that I said to my dad and he snapped me out of it,” Strafaci said. “He got in my face a bit and got me more positive. He said the only thing I can control is a birdie on the last hole.”

Strafaci did that to win the match after Gupta found trouble off the tee and took three shots to get out of a fairway bunker, ending up with a double bogey on the par-5 18th hole.

“That took a lot for me on 18 because you have to imagine that everything is going downhill,” he recalled. “I had given away four holes so if I had not won, in my mind it would have almost been embarrassing and tough for me to live with because there were some decisions in the round that cost me a shot here and there. To hit those three shots on No. 18 and give myself a six-footer for birdie, I’m proud of myself and proud of my dad for keeping me under control.”


U.S. Amateur: Leaderboard | Photos


Strafaci will face off for the championship against Osborne, who defeated Charlotte’s Matthew Sharpstene 4&2 in the semifinals.

“It’s kind of unbelievable,” Osborne said. “I can’t believe it that I’m here. It’s really cool how this week has gone for me and I’m excited to be in it.”

Osborne and Strafaci, who both earned an exemption into next year’s U.S. Open, met for the first time on the driving range prior to the semifinal matches. While Strafaci is ranked No. 56 in the World Amateur Golf Rankings, Osborne is No. 460.

“I haven’t had much experience in match play,” Osborne said. “I’ve been looking at it like I have nothing to lose and everything to gain so I try to be as aggressive as possible. I always considered myself a good player. I know the rankings don’t show that, but it is just a number at the end of the day. I know the game I have and I know what I can do so I try to do me and let everyone else think what they want to think.”

Osborne and Sharpstene tied the first four holes before Osborne went ahead with a par on the fifth hole. Sharpstene won the sixth and seventh holes to take the lead before Osborne birdied the eighth and ninth holes to go ahead 1-up.

“I felt like I turned the table a bit when I won a couple holes there and got back to 1-up headed to the back,” he said.

Osborne added a par on the 11th hole to stretch the lead to two holes, but Sharpstene got a birdie on the 12th to move to one down. Osborne had birdies on No. 13 and No. 14 to move to 3-up.

On the par-3 15th hole, Osborne had to take an unplayable lie and finished with a double bogey, but Sharpstene also found trouble and made double bogey. Sharpstene hit his tee shot into the penalty area on No. 16 as Osborne made par to win the match.

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Charles Osborne is the latest to go low at U.S. Amateur with a 64 on Bandon Trails

SMU’s Charles Osborne is one of a handful of players at the U.S. Amateur who has been able to go low at Bandon Dunes or Bandon Trails

Charles Osborne bookended his second round of the U.S. Amateur, at Bandon Trails in Bandon Dunes, Oregon, in a rather lackluster way. The SMU junior had a bogey at the first and back-to-back bogeys to close.

But oh, how glorious it was in between.

Osborne erased his opening-hole mistake with a birdie at the par-5 fifth hole on Trails, the most inland course among the Bandon line-up, and the one with arguably the most Oregon-ey feel of them all. His birdie two holes later at the fifth hole kicked off a stretch six consecutive birdies. He added three more from Nos. 14-16 before coming back with bogeys at Nos. 17 and 18 to finish with a 7-under 64 that tied the competitive course record set a day earlier by Oklahoma State player Aman Gupta.

The most interesting thing about Osborne’s day, perhaps, was that he was just coming off an opening 77 on Bandon Dunes. The 20-year-old said he didn’t feel like he even played all that badly in his opening round on the opposite course.

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Chalk that up to the wind. Osborne, who also goes by Ollie, teed off in the first round at 1:03 p.m. In other words, he was in one of the last groups to go off. Scores in the afternoon wave were considerably higher, even though the two courses had nearly identical stroke averages on the opening day: 75.58 for Bandon Dunes and 75.60 for Bandon Trails.

“I kind of turned on the back nine, and on 11 I think the wind was blowing easily 35 into, and that’s how it stayed on the back nine,” he explained. “I actually played good golf and liked how I was swinging, so I came out here and did the same thing. The course was – like it’s in the trees and then the wind was down this morning, so happy to take advantage of it, and the putter was rolling, too.”

Osborne’s precision with his approach shots allowed him to go deep on Bandon Trails. He said he hit nearly everything to 10 or 15 feet, and then the putts started dropping.

The round could have even been lower. After sticking a 9-iron to inside 20 feet on No. 9, he burned the edge for eagle.

By the time he was done, Osborne was 2 under for stroke play and safely into match play. He was a handful of shots behind SMU teammate McClure Meissner, who had carved out a share of the first-round lead and was still playing his way around Trails.

Osborne, a Reno, Nevada, native ranked No. 463 in the world, finished fourth individually at The Prestige in February. It’s one of the deepest fields in college golf. He won the Royal Oaks Collegiate in October.

“Before in Reno there’s not a lot of competition, so it was really fun to go down to Texas and actually see some players that can kind of kick you around a little bit,” he said. “It was humbling, but it also made me a lot better as a player.”

So much of being successful this week will depend on the ability to control ball flight and manage high winds, particularly once match play sends the entire 64-man bracket back to Bandon Dunes for the remainder of the week.

Meissner, the other SMU player, brought a little of his Texas upbringing to Bandon this week, and it made all the difference in the first round. Meissner fired his round of 8-under 64 on Bandon Dunes, but had the luxury of a 9:01 a.m. tee time.

Still, he knows what to do this week.

“So I was talking to some of the guys in my group today,” Meissner said after Monday’s first round, “and I was like, yeah, in the springtime in Dallas, it blows 15, 20, 25, so it feels – although I don’t play this grass a lot – it feels like a home game for me just because I’m able to kind of be creative. That’s kind of where I excel.”

How to watch

Wednesday Aug. 5 (Round of 64 matches): 6-7 p.m., Peacock (streaming); 7-9 p.m., Golf Channel

Thursday, Aug. 6 (Round of 16 matches): 6-7 p.m., Peacock; 7-9 p.m., Golf Channel

Friday, Aug. 7 (Quarterfinals matches): 6-7 p.m., Peacock; 7-9 p.m., Golf Channel

Saturday, Aug. 8 (Semifinal matches): 7-10 p.m., Golf Channel

Sunday, Aug. 9 (Championship match): 7-10 p.m., Golf Channel

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