‘I was just so happy and proud’: The world saw another side of Dustin Johnson when his post-Masters tears flowed

DJ’s post-Masters tears revealed a new side of the 24-time PGA Tour champion. But what was behind them? DJ and those closest to him explain.

Dustin Johnson made grown men cry.

The soft-spoken, gentle giant of the south turned the emerald valley of Augusta National Golf Club into his own octagon and battered and bruised not only the field of play but all of his 91 foes last November.

In becoming the first player in Masters history to card multiple rounds of 65 or better in the same tournament  – his previous career low had been 67 – the world No. 1 tied the 54-hole scoring record of 16 under after three rounds and then went where no man had gone before by reaching 20 under in the final round and finishing there for a five-shot victory, the largest winning margin since Tiger Woods won by 12 in 1997.

Johnson threw haymakers from the beginning of the 84th Masters, made just four bogeys (the fewest of any champion), and hit 60 of 72 greens. When his lead was trimmed to one after two early bogeys in the final round, it spawned fear another major tragedy was at hand. Instead, he knocked an 8-iron from 185 yards to 6 feet for birdie on the sixth, added another red number on No. 8, then scored again at Nos. 13, 14 and 15 to leave his pursuers with nothing to do but weep and wave a white flag.

His master work was so staggering that Cameron Smith lost by five despite becoming the first player in Masters history to shoot all four rounds in the 60s.

“I proved I could get it done on Sunday with the lead at a major, bro,” said Johnson, who previously had been 0-for-4 with at least a share of the 54-hole lead in a major. “There were doubts, for sure. I was proud of that round. After the bogeys, it wasn’t like I was frustrated. It didn’t bother me. Just had to stay patient and take it to the house.”

While others left the grounds to tend to their wounded souls, Johnson headed to the terrace putting green for the abbreviated closing ceremony. There, Woods, the five-time Masters champion, helped Johnson slip on the 42-long green jacket.

And then Johnson lost it.

The indestructible force who pulverized Augusta National broke down during an interview and as hard as he tried to hold back the tears and collect himself, the waterworks flowed and his words ceased.

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“The tears came from all the joy, knowing all the work that went into it, the team around me,” Johnson said. “Being the Masters champion in that moment, I was just so happy and proud. And having (fiancé) Paulina (Gretzky) there and my two boys and the family were across the street, and it was just a special moment. I was at a loss for words. I just couldn’t say anything there for a while.

“It’s still kind of a little surreal when I see the jacket and know I’m a Masters champion. All the memories come back.”

It was an understandable outburst of emotion. Growing up across the Georgia-South Carolina border on the outskirts of Columbia, about an hour’s drive from Augusta, the Masters was his Holy Grail. He went to Masters practice rounds with his dad before he turned 10, played the course for the first time in 2008, played in his first Masters in 2009. And long into the nights of his youth, he was making putts to win the Green Jacket.

“The Masters will always be in my heart, with the history and growing up so close,” Johnson said. “It’s pretty cool when a childhood dream comes true.”

There was more behind the tears than a childhood dream fulfilled. Johnson thought of the heartache he endured in squandering victory in five previous majors, some with tragic tones attached. And he was just two months removed from the most recent major disappointment when his one-shot 54-hole advantage in the PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco vanished as Collin Morikawa raced by everyone.

Or the time he rolled down Magnolia Lane in 2017 having won his last three starts but was forced to miss the Masters after he slipped and fell and injured his back in his rental home.

He thought of the six-month sabbatical in 2014 he took from the PGA Tour to deal with “personal challenges” and how he worked to overcome them. Since then, he’s won 16 of his 24 PGA Tour titles, including two majors.

Put all that together and Johnson let his guard down on this rare instance and let the world see what only a few of his closest friends and family had seen.

“I was surprised that he cried and lost it,” said younger brother and caddie, Austin. “I’ve seen him get emotional about other things but not golf. But that tournament means so much to him. It humanized him a bit and everyone else got to see that.”

Colt Knost, the 2007 U.S. Amateur champion who played a bunch of amateur golf with Johnson and later roomed with him on the road the first year they turned pro, was moved by Johnson’s victory and post-round interview.

“I started crying when I saw him cry,” Knost said. “He’s got the biggest heart in the world and he’ll do anything for anyone that’s in his circle and those tears show you how much that tournament means to him and how much working his butt off to be the best means to him.”

The Masters masterpiece also came a month after Johnson spent 11 days in quarantine in a Las Vegas hotel after testing positive for the coronavirus. Johnson, as is his nature, dealt with it and moved on without missing a beat.

The Masters capped a 13-tournament, post COVID-19 tour de force to end 2020 in which he won four times, including the Tour Championship that earned him the FedEx Cup, and an 11-stroke romp in the Northern Trust where he shot 60 in the second round and finished at 30 under. He also finished runner-up three times.

The victory solidified his perch atop the world rankings; he’s now spent more time as the world No. 1 than anyone not named Tiger Woods and Greg Norman.

“The way he was playing at the end of 2020 I think is the closest thing to what Tiger Woods was,” said elite swing coach Butch Harmon, who has worked with Johnson since 2009 and was with Woods from 1993 to 2004. “The only difference is Tiger was on for 20 years. When DJ’s on, and he’s firing on all cylinders, and everyone else is on, DJ wins.

“He is the closest thing to Tiger Woods I have ever seen.”

Editor’s note: This begins a seven-part series on the life and career of reigning Masters champion Dustin Johnson. Check back to Golfweek.com each day for the next part of the story.

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Brad Faxon on Brooks Koepka’s injury: Range chatter suggests Koepka could be out 6-8 months

When Brad Faxon was asked on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio what he’d heard regarding Brooks Koepka’s injury, he indicated the outlook wasn’t good.

As late as Sunday evening, Brooks Koepka’s plans for the Masters in two weeks remained uncertain. Koepka confirmed to Golfweek that he had undergone surgery on his right knee last week and was undecided whether he’d compete at Augusta National Golf Club next month.

Koepka withdrew from the Players Championship on March 7, and has not competed since. He offered a little more detail about the injury to Golfweek, writing in a text message that he suffered “a right knee cap dislocation and ligament damage.”

In his past two Masters starts, Koepka has finished T-7 and T-2. He’s a monster in majors, which obviously has the golf world talking about how serious this injury really is, and when we might expect to see Koepka return to action.

Brad Faxon was asked that question during an appearance on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio on Tuesday and said that talk around the Honda Classic indicated it’s serious.

“I think this is a really tough question to answer. There was rumors around here, the Honda Classic was last week where I live, I was on the range with caddies and talking, and I have instructor friends, I think this injury is way more serious than Koepka’s letting on,” said Faxon.

“I’ve heard, you know, patella injury, post collateral ligament, PCL. I’ve dealt with multiple ACL injuries, and I’ve heard rumors he’s out for six to eight months,” he continued. “So I don’t think the Masters has a chance. I’m not saying I want that to happen for Brooks in any reason. We need him on the Tour. He’s a hell of a player, but I think he’s going to battle this one. PCL’s a tough injury to get over. Couple that with the other parts of the knee that got injured and we may not know the true story … but I know we’re pulling for him.”

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Brad Faxon on Brooks Koepka’s injury: Range chatter suggests Koepka could be out 6-8 months

When Brad Faxon was asked on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio what he’d heard regarding Brooks Koepka’s injury, he indicated the outlook wasn’t good.

As late as Sunday evening, Brooks Koepka’s plans for the Masters in two weeks remained uncertain. Koepka confirmed to Golfweek that he had undergone surgery on his right knee last week and was undecided whether he’d compete at Augusta National Golf Club next month.

Koepka withdrew from the Players Championship on March 7, and has not competed since. He offered a little more detail about the injury to Golfweek, writing in a text message that he suffered “a right knee cap dislocation and ligament damage.”

In his past two Masters starts, Koepka has finished T-7 and T-2. He’s a monster in majors, which obviously has the golf world talking about how serious this injury really is, and when we might expect to see Koepka return to action.

Brad Faxon was asked that question during an appearance on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio on Tuesday and said that talk around the Honda Classic indicated it’s serious.

“I think this is a really tough question to answer. There was rumors around here, the Honda Classic was last week where I live, I was on the range with caddies and talking, and I have instructor friends, I think this injury is way more serious than Koepka’s letting on,” said Faxon.

“I’ve heard, you know, patella injury, post collateral ligament, PCL. I’ve dealt with multiple ACL injuries, and I’ve heard rumors he’s out for six to eight months,” he continued. “So I don’t think the Masters has a chance. I’m not saying I want that to happen for Brooks in any reason. We need him on the Tour. He’s a hell of a player, but I think he’s going to battle this one. PCL’s a tough injury to get over. Couple that with the other parts of the knee that got injured and we may not know the true story … but I know we’re pulling for him.”

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Will the Masters drive Augusta’s economic engine in 2021?

In Augusta, Georgia, there’s “busy,” and then there’s “Masters busy.” With unknown factors in play, Augusta-area retailers and service providers are waiting to see which “busy” shows up for the city’s legendary golf tournament the first full week of …

In Augusta, Georgia, there’s “busy,” and then there’s “Masters busy.”

With unknown factors in play, Augusta-area retailers and service providers are waiting to see which “busy” shows up for the city’s legendary golf tournament the first full week of April.

The Masters Tournament provides a commercial infusion into the area’s economy each year of a size that has only been estimated, since Augusta National Golf Club doesn’t release attendance figures. Previous estimates from local tourism officials place the annual economic impact at more than $100 million.

The coronavirus pandemic dealt the local economy a double blow last year. Travel restrictions to limit COVID-19’s spread delayed the Masters by seven months. That flattened the traditional spike of commercial activity last April, and dulled the spike last November when the tournament played to empty galleries, with no patrons allowed to attend.

This April, the tournament is allowing a limited number of spectators, but Augusta National has not disclosed that number.

The PGA of America announced recently that ticket sales to the Arnold Palmer Invitational, March 4-7, will be capped at 25%. The Players Championship, March 11-14, will be capped at 20%.

Media outlets in the past several years have tended to use an estimate of 40,000 attendees each Masters Tournament day. When Golf magazine asked Tiger Woods his thoughts last August about a Masters with no patrons, he replied: “It’s going to be very different without 40,000 people there.”

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Using the PGA caps as a proportional rule of thumb, it could be estimated that this year’s Masters would attract between 8,000 and 10,000 attendees.

“My sources are guys in the bar,” said Henry Scheer, the manager of TBonz Steakhouse, one of the more popular hangouts during Masters Week that often attracts caddies and some of the competing golfers. “I don’t know how good that will be, but I heard they’re letting in only 20% of the normal number of people that come in.”

Of course, he added, these are the same customers who told him he’d be busy for the rescheduled tournament.

“During November we weren’t sure how it would be, so we went a little higher than we should have in preparing as far as buying things and stuff,” Scheer said. “For this time, we’re bringing it down. It’s definitely not going to be a normal Masters.”

For Scheer, “busy” is a typical Saturday night, he said. “Masters busy” is, at least, a typical Saturday night every night of Masters Week, from Sunday to the following Sunday, often into the wee hours.

This April, Scheer is preparing for customer flow to be somewhere in between, because of uncertainties surrounding actual attendance and whether visitors will be in “a bubble,” which is how he describes patrons simply traveling to and from the course without otherwise venturing out.

“It’s better to prepare to be busy and not be busy than don’t be prepared to be busy and then get killed. That’s the restaurant business,” Scheer said. “We’ve been beat up before. We’re not going to be beat up again.”

Since COVID-19 is still limiting in-dining restaurant capacity, reducing customers to, say, a third of expected turnout wouldn’t pose a serious issue, said Simon Medcalfe, an economics professor at Augusta University.

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But since the business sector doesn’t know exactly what to expect, the community doesn’t know what kind of economic impact to expect, either, he said. Current conditions make behaviors hard to predict.

“A lot of us who live in the local area, are we still going to be here? Are we going to leave? Are houses being rented? Are houses not being rented? Who’s coming in? What types of people are coming in?” Medcalfe said. “All this is entirely unknown, and that just makes any precise estimate very difficult to provide.”

Getting a glimpse of where this year’s Masters economy is headed could lie within its past performance.

A common method of calculating tourism’s impact on an area is by analyzing the activity of hotels and motels where visitors often stay.

Jennifer Bowen, vice president of destination development for the Augusta Convention and Visitors Bureau, cited revenue gathered from Augusta’s hotel/ motel tax to show the tournament’s impact in a good year and an off-year.

In April 2019, the month of the last pre-COVID Masters, the tax took in $26,266,491. Last November, when COVID kept the Masters patron-less, the tax took in just $8,304,497.

“At the risk of stating the obvious, while we can’t predict the economic impact of the Masters 2021, we believe it will be somewhere in between the full impact we saw in 2019 and the no-patron impact we experienced in 2020,” Bowen said. “It will have an impact, and for that we are grateful.”

Columbia County hotel occupancy also showed a drop, but not as pronounced.

According to data collected for Columbia County by Smith Travel Research, the county’s hotels posted an 87.7% average occupancy rate during the 2019 Masters, April 7-14. For the 2020 Masters, Nov. 8-15, the occupancy average dropped to 74.4%. For the same week in November 2019, the rate was just 56.4%.

A view of the entrance to Magnolia Lane at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia. (Photo: Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

“So there were definitely people in town who were assisting with the 2020 tournament,” said Shelly Blackburn, executive director of the Columbia County Convention and Visitors Bureau. “And I think the main reason why we saw them in hotels is because schools were still in session, not as many people were willing to rent houses, and it wasn’t a typical break for our community as a whole. So I think that really pushed a lot of those vendors into hotels.”

Blackburn said she expects a similar pattern in April, but consumer circumstances have moved closer to normal. Spring break for Augusta-area public schools typically falls during Masters Week in April, and families seize the opportunity to leave town on vacation, often renting their vacated houses to visitors.

Columbia County hotels fared better than expected overall in 2020, starting in the summer, Blackburn said. Occupancy was buoyed by stays from traveling health professionals, construction crews for road projects and Amazon support staff connected to an Amazon fulfillment center under construction near Appling.

But when she emailed a small survey to Columbia County hoteliers last week to gauge occupancy for the next Masters, she said she got no responses.

“Unfortunately, April was by far the worst month in 2020 for all of the hotels,” Blackburn said. “And it’s such a competitive industry anyway, so they’re a little gun shy. They don’t know what to expect, and they’re worried.”

Housing rentals for Masters Week can prove more lucrative but are harder to track in terms of calculating economic impact. The Masters attracts many deep-pocketed golf fans, both individuals and corporate clients, who prefer to rent houses for the week, sometimes including household staffs who cook and clean while the tenants enjoy the tournament.

The Augusta Metro Chamber of Commerce oversees the Masters Housing Bureau, the only home-rental service sanctioned by Augusta National. Chamber President and CEO Sue Parr said business at the bureau is “not as brisk” as in past years, but homes are still in demand and inquiries still come in every day.

“We’ll probably keep getting inquiries right up until April, which is typically how that happens,” she said. “But certainly it’s hard to calibrate this year with very unusual circumstances.”

Prospective visitors still are looking at several travel and lodging options even as the tournament draws closer, rendering the situation “impossible” to judge where the market is or where it should be, Parr said. The scope of inquiries could change as the COVID-19 vaccination rate improves or if reports brighten from Europe, since Masters patrons visit from all over the world.

“It’s just an unusual year we’ve had here, but I think the community is prepared for whatever happens,” she said. “We’ll just take it one day at a time and I think we’ll have a great Masters Week.”

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Opinion: Masters with limited attendance becoming a new tradition unlike any other

As Christine Brennan writes, if an outdoor sport, with built-in social distancing, can’t bring back the masses, it’s clear COVID-19 remains.

At the spectator-less November Masters, there was the hope that the 2021 tournament would be able to be played as close to normal as possible, with throngs of golf fans returning to the game’s American mecca.

Those dreams were dashed Tuesday morning when Fred Ridley, chairman of Augusta National Golf Club, announced that the club “intends to limit attendance” at the April event, employing the bubble-like health and safety standards that were used two months ago for the delayed 2020 tournament.

“With these protocols in place, efforts are being made to include a limited number of patrons, provided it can be done safely,” Ridley said.

When a sport that is played outside, with built-in social distancing, cannot bring back the multitudes, the message is clear: COVID-19 rages on. The threat is real. It is real for everyone, especially middle-aged and older golf fans, most of them male. No responsible sports organization can think or say otherwise.

“As with the November Masters, we will implement practices and policies that will protect the health and safety of everyone in attendance,” Ridley said. “Nothing is, or will be, more important than the well-being of all involved.”

As devastating as this news is for the local economy, Augusta National’s decision is both a wake-up call and an exhibition of serious and responsible leadership. Even though there are acres and acres of land at the club, and plenty of room to roam, the Masters has prudently decided it just cannot yet safely bring back many of its fans while the world is still in the throes of this terrible pandemic.

It will, however, hold two other signature events prior to the first men’s major golf championship of the year: the Augusta National Women’s Amateur and the Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals. A “small number” of spectators will be allowed at both, Ridley said. Neither of those events were held in 2020.

All of this means that the 2021 Masters will look quite similar to the 2020 Masters, except that it will be played in the springtime, with the club’s famous azaleas in bloom.

In November, every person who went through the gates at the 2020 Masters – players, caddies, club employees, Augusta National members, the news media – first had to test negative for COVID-19 on site before being allowed in.

Once inside, everyone was required to wear masks in buildings as well as on the course, golfers and caddies excepted. In the opulent press building, meals were carry-out only, while the relatively small number of journalists were socially distanced in the expansive work room.

We now know that it will be 2022 at least before the Masters looks like its old self again. With few fans and no roars erupting around the course this coming April, it will be a tradition unlike any other, now two tournaments in a row.

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Opinion: Masters with limited attendance becoming a new tradition unlike any other

As Christine Brennan writes, if an outdoor sport, with built-in social distancing, can’t bring back the masses, it’s clear COVID-19 remains.

At the spectator-less November Masters, there was the hope that the 2021 tournament would be able to be played as close to normal as possible, with throngs of golf fans returning to the game’s American mecca.

Those dreams were dashed Tuesday morning when Fred Ridley, chairman of Augusta National Golf Club, announced that the club “intends to limit attendance” at the April event, employing the bubble-like health and safety standards that were used two months ago for the delayed 2020 tournament.

“With these protocols in place, efforts are being made to include a limited number of patrons, provided it can be done safely,” Ridley said.

When a sport that is played outside, with built-in social distancing, cannot bring back the multitudes, the message is clear: COVID-19 rages on. The threat is real. It is real for everyone, especially middle-aged and older golf fans, most of them male. No responsible sports organization can think or say otherwise.

“As with the November Masters, we will implement practices and policies that will protect the health and safety of everyone in attendance,” Ridley said. “Nothing is, or will be, more important than the well-being of all involved.”

As devastating as this news is for the local economy, Augusta National’s decision is both a wake-up call and an exhibition of serious and responsible leadership. Even though there are acres and acres of land at the club, and plenty of room to roam, the Masters has prudently decided it just cannot yet safely bring back many of its fans while the world is still in the throes of this terrible pandemic.

It will, however, hold two other signature events prior to the first men’s major golf championship of the year: the Augusta National Women’s Amateur and the Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals. A “small number” of spectators will be allowed at both, Ridley said. Neither of those events were held in 2020.

All of this means that the 2021 Masters will look quite similar to the 2020 Masters, except that it will be played in the springtime, with the club’s famous azaleas in bloom.

In November, every person who went through the gates at the 2020 Masters – players, caddies, club employees, Augusta National members, the news media – first had to test negative for COVID-19 on site before being allowed in.

Once inside, everyone was required to wear masks in buildings as well as on the course, golfers and caddies excepted. In the opulent press building, meals were carry-out only, while the relatively small number of journalists were socially distanced in the expansive work room.

We now know that it will be 2022 at least before the Masters looks like its old self again. With few fans and no roars erupting around the course this coming April, it will be a tradition unlike any other, now two tournaments in a row.

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Masters organizers announce delay in ticketing process for 2021 badges

An email to ticket holders seems a realization that a second Masters tournament will be greatly influenced by COVID.

Will spectators roam the grounds at Augusta National when the second Masters in six months rolls through this April?

That’s still the hope, although an email to ticket holders seems a sad realization that a second tournament will be greatly influenced by COVID.

“As planning continues on how to stage the 2021 Masters Tournament safely and responsibly, we would like to inform you that Augusta National is delaying the ticket process for Patron Series Badges, which traditionally begins Jan. 1,” an email said, according to ESPN.com.

“Our intention is to communicate our decisions for the 2021 Masters to all patrons of record by the end of January. No further action is needed with your account at this time.”

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The delay doesn’t necessarily mean plans for the 2021 event have changed, but it shows that Augusta National Golf Club is trying to buy a little time to solidify a plan for the 85th edition of the famed tournament,

The 2020 event won by Dustin Johnson was held with just a few volunteers and auxiliary staff on the grounds, which made for a peculiar vibe.

But players insisted it’s special playing Augusta National under any circumstances.

“There are no bad days out here, and without the grandstands, without all that, people can see and appreciate it,” Augusta native Charles Howell III said. “There’s different angles and different layouts and different ways you can play a hole.”

“Whether there’s fans or not, we’re playing the same golf course and trying to shoot the low score and beat the same players that we have to try and do every single year,” Jordan Spieth added. “It doesn’t change with the patrons. It’s just kind of more the ambiance and what really makes the Masters that next level special is the patrons, but as a competitor, it’s really no change.”

One interesting angle is how Augusta National might retract tickets from those who had been told their 2020 badges or practice round tickets would roll over to the 2021 event if a smaller number of patrons are allowed to attend.

The deadline to apply for 2021 practice rounds and daily tournament tickets was June 21.

The cost for practice round tickets was $75, while daily tournament tickets were listed at $115.

The 2021 Masters will be held April 5-11.

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2021 Masters early odds, predictions and PGA Tour best bets

It’s still a few months away, but check out the betting favorites for the 2021 Masters.

The 2020 Masters Tournament saw a brand-new scoring record set in the first-ever fall edition of golf’s premier event. Dustin Johnson posted two rounds of 7-under 65 and finished at 20 under for a five-stroke victory over Cameron Smith and Sungjae Im to dethrone Tiger Woods and win his first green jacket. Below, we look at the 2021 Masters betting odds, and make our PGA Tour picks and predictions to win.

The Masters will return to Augusta National Golf Club in its usual spot on the calendar from April 8-11, 2021. It will be the first major of the calendar year. The field is not yet finalized, and won’t be until the week before the event, but BetMGM has already released odds for 53 golfers. Now’s the time to start scouting out the PGA Tour futures prices in search of value.

2021 Masters betting odds

NAME ODDS 2020 FINISH
Dustin Johnson +600 1
Justin Thomas +1000 4
Rory McIlroy +1000 T-5
Jon Rahm +1100 T-7
Brooks Koepka +1400 T-7
Bryson DeChambeau +1400 T-34
Xander Schauffele +1600 T-17
Patrick Reed +2500 T-10
Sungjae Im +2500 T-2
Webb Simpson +2800 T-10

2021 Masters betting picks – Favorite

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Monday at 7:50 a.m. ET.

Bryson DeChambeau (+1400)

DeChambeau now shares the fifth-best odds to win the 2021 Masters after being the outright betting favorite for the 2020 event. The 2020 U.S. Open champion struggled with his added distance off the tee and broke 70 in just one of his four rounds.

His odds are nearly doubled roughly five months out from the 2021 tournament. It won’t take much (a win or two in the 16 events between now and mid-April) for him to regain pole position as the public favorite. He’s worth a small wager at what could be his highest price for 2021.

Place your legal, online 2021 Masters bets in CO, IN, NJ, TN and WV at BetMGM. Risk-free first bet! Terms and conditions apply. Bet Now!

2021 Masters betting picks – Contender

Daniel Berger (+4000)

Berger was a notable absentee from the 2020 Masters field. He didn’t qualify in time for the original April date of the tournament, but he was one of the PGA Tour’s most consistent players following the mid-June restart. He won the Charles Schwab Challenge in the first event back and rose all the way to No. 4 in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings by the time of the tournament.

Berger has played the Masters three times before, finishing T-10 in his 2016 debut and never missing the cut. Like DeChambeau, his odds will likely drop quickly upon his return to tournament play.

2021 Masters betting picks – Long shot

C.T. Pan (+20000)

Pan has the longest odds of anyone to finish inside the top 10 of the 2020 Masters. A T-7 finisher, only three players have longer odds for 2021, while Rahm and Koepka are the No. 4 and 5 betting favorites, respectively.

While the 2021 Masters should play much more difficult in returning to its customary spring spot on the PGA Tour schedule with firmer fairways and greens, Pan now has his debut out of the way and some much-needed experience at Augusta National. A relative unknown in North America, his odds likely won’t change too much over the next five months, but he’s worth watching and bettors should pounce quickly if his odds begin to drop.

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