New Tour schedule aims to play Masters in November, keep Ryder Cup in 2020

Golf’s governing bodies are close to unveiling a new schedule that would see at least three majors and the Ryder Cup contested this year.

After weeks of daily conference calls in a frantic bid to rescue a season crippled by the COVID-19 pandemic, golf’s governing bodies are close to unveiling a new schedule that would see at least three major championships — including the Masters in November — and the Ryder Cup contested this year.

The details of the ambitious revised schedule were outlined to Golfweek by three people close to the discussions, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity since they are not authorized to address the matter publicly.

The planned joint announcement of a new schedule has been delayed while the R&A decides if the 149th Open Championship — slated for July 16-19 at Royal St. George’s in England — will be postponed or canceled entirely. A rescheduled Open would take place at the same venue from Sept. 17-20 — just one week before the Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin. If the R&A opts to cancel, that slot on the calendar could see the U.S. Open played at Winged Foot.

“At this point we are not in a position to confirm any specific dates. While we are hopeful that we will be able to conduct the U.S. Open at Winged Foot Golf Club in June, it is increasingly likely that we will need to postpone,” said Craig Annis, the USGA’s chief brand officer. “We have been working with our broadcast partner Fox Sports, the PGA Tour, and other golf organizations to determine what a viable postponement date could be should we need to make that decision. We are currently considering a number of options and expect to be in a position to announce a decision by next week.”

One of those options under consideration: holding the U.S. Open later in the year on the West coast. The USGA has had initial conversations with two potential venues in California: Torrey Pines near San Diego, which has long been in line to host the Open in ’21, and Pebble Beach, where the ’19 edition was played. Annis acknowledged conversations are underway with several alternate venues and did not rule out a move west.

“Depending on how far out we might have to go it could mean that we need to find a new location. If we get beyond September we would need to find a U.S. Open-ready course in a place with the right climate and agronomics, with consideration to available daylight hours,” he said. “We are fortunate to have a number of USGA host site partners who we are engaging with to determine viability.”

Both Torrey Pines and Pebble Beach have multiple courses on property — a key consideration in getting a full field around for the first two rounds with limited daylight (Pinehurst in North Carolina has also been mooted, though that is considered unlikely.). “Certainly if we had to postpone and if we moved to a slot in the late fall, we would potentially need two courses if the size of the field remains the same,” Annis conceded. “The traditional timing of the U.S. Open allows us to work with maximum daylight hours. Any move away from that would provide daylight challenges for us that we would need to address and playing on two courses could be a way to resolve that challenge.”

The Masters, which was due to begin next week at Augusta National Golf Club, is tentatively penciled in for the week of Nov. 9, according to two people with knowledge of the current planning who spoke on condition of anonymity because they’re not authorized to speak publicly. And what was for so many years the last major of the season is now aiming to be the first: the PGA Championship will be scheduled for Aug. 6-9 at Harding Park in San Francisco.

“Glory’s First Shot” will be followed by the PGA Tour’s Wyndham Championship and then three FedEx Cup playoff events, culminating with the Tour Championship at East Lake in Atlanta on Labor Day weekend. Early talks included possibly restaging the Players Championship, which was abandoned after just one round last month, but the Tour’s flagship event will not now be part of the new lineup. As things stand, only the Ryder Cup will be played on its original dates.

It’s unclear whether the Tour would seek to begin its 2020-21 wraparound season as usual after the Tour Championship. An announcement on a new LPGA Tour schedule could come as early as this week, while the impact of the revised calendar on the European Tour remains uncertain.

While any refreshed schedule would obviously be subject to change — and complete cancellation, given the rapidly expanding coronavirus crisis — the timeframe targeted to resume the PGA Tour season is mid-June. That could potentially allow the Tour to use the four weeks vacated by the Olympics and the U.S. and British Opens to stage tournaments that were previously postponed. Events currently rostered for that summer period — like the RBC Canadian Open in Toronto, the Travelers Championship in Hartford, Conn., and the WGC-St. Jude Invitational in Memphis, Tenn. — could be impacted, either to facilitate the playing of other stops or because of local conditions.

Another uncertain element is television, with networks faced with finding slots to broadcast golf at a time when they have commitments to other sports (assuming some normalcy has returned to the sporting calendar by then). NBC, CBS, Fox and ESPN all have obligations with the NFL, college football, Premier League soccer and NASCAR, among others. That could mean, for example, that more U.S. Open coverage is aired on Fox Sports 1 rather than Fox’s main network. Fox is contractually obliged to air the championship on its main channel only when it is played in its traditional June date.

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You have tickets for the 2020 Masters. Now what?

You’ve waited perhaps your whole life to make the trek to Augusta, Georgia, in April but now those plans are off. Here’s an FAQ on tickets.

The 2020 Masters Tournament, originally set for April 9-12, is off for now, postponed as the world grapples with the coronavirus pandemic.

There has been some chatter that the Masters could be held in October. Or the event may not take place at all in 2020 and we’ll all just look ahead to 2021.

But what are you supposed to do if you have tickets for this year’s event?

There’s an informative Frequently Asked Questions page on the official Masters website, which was posted on March 27, 2020. The information there is subject to change at any time, so check back as needed.

What should I do with my tickets?

The Masters site informs ticket holders to hold on to them and to “secure your tickets in a safe location to be used at a future date. If the Masters Tournament is rescheduled, your existing tickets will be used for entry.”

Are my tickets still good if the 2020 Masters is rescheduled?

This is a good one to know. Your 2020 tickets will be valid if the Masters is rescheduled. The Masters website again stresses keeping your tickets in a safe location until more information is available.

Can I sell my 2020 Masters tickets?

Ah, the selling of Masters tickets. Every year, you’ll find scores of tickets and badges for sale on a variety of secondary-market ticket sites, but Masters officials repeatedly say that the Masters is the only official distributor of tickets. On the FAQ page, they remind everyone of that: “Our policies do not permit any outside sales or re-selling of our tickets/badges.”

What if the 2020 Masters is canceled?

Refunds will be issued “to those patrons who purchased tickets directly from Augusta National Golf Club.”

Can I get a refund if I bought tickets from someone other than Augusta National Golf Club?

Here’s the official Masters answer: “Refunds will be issued only to those who purchased tickets directly from Augusta National Golf Club.”

As if you had to ask that one.

If the 2020 Masters is canceled, can I buy the same tickets for 2021?

The FAQ page explains it like this: “Yes. Patrons receiving refunds will be given the opportunity to purchase the same tickets for the 2021 Masters Tournament. In order to do so, a patron must complete a 2021 ticket application during the application window which usually takes place in June.”

I don’t have 2020 tickets but I want some for 2021. How do I apply?

“Go to Masters.com and complete a ticket application during the June 2020 application window. All previous applicants and new registrants will be notified, via email, when the 2021 ticket application is available online.”

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Tiger Woods at the Masters (2005): A most memorable chip shot, a fourth green jacket

“In your life!” roared CBS announcer Verne Lundquist as Tiger Woods pulls off one of the most amazing chip shots in Masters history.

Before we get to the swoosh hanging on the lip for 1.8 seconds on the final day of the 2005 Masters, let’s deal with a few other matters that set the stage for one of the greatest chip shots in the history of the game.

Tiger Woods, his latest new swing in tune, came into the Masters with two wins that year and brimming with confidence. Then he opened with a dismal 74 that included a putt into Rae’s Creek at the 13th hole.

Foul weather marred the first three days of the event and Woods got back on track with a 66 in the second round that was completed Saturday. In the third round that spilled into Sunday, Woods birdied his final three holes on Saturday and then his first four on Sunday en route to a 65 that gave him a commanding 3-shot lead over Chris DiMarco heading into the final round.

2005 Masters: Final leaderboard

DiMarco had held a 4-shot lead when darkness halted play Saturday.

But DiMarco didn’t go away and wasn’t overwhelmed by the Sunday red shirt. When DiMarco and Woods got to the 16th tee, they were six shots clear of the field. Then Woods, who was one clear of DiMarco, sailed his 8-iron over the green, the ball coming to rest against the collar of the rough, well below the putting surface and 50 feet from the hole.

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He had to play the shot away from the hole, run it up a severe ridge, have enough spin on the ball to make it stop on the ridge and change direction and start heading toward the cup. Well, he clipped the ball perfectly, it made a seamless right-hand turn and started trickling toward the hole. Then the Nike swoosh hung on the lip for 1.8 seconds before disappearing into the hole.

“In your life have you ever seen anything like that!” CBS announcer Verne Lundquist roared.

“I was just trying to throw the ball up there on the hill and let it feed down there and hopefully have a makeable putt,” Woods said that day. “All of a sudden, it looked pretty good, and all of a sudden it looked like really good and it looked like how could it not go in and how did it not go in and all of a sudden it went in, so it was pretty sweet.”

But Woods squandered his 2-shot advantage with bogeys on 17 and 18 but won on the first playoff hole with a 15-foot birdie.

“Even though I was kind of throwing up on the last couple of holes, I kind of snuck one out in the playoff,” Woods said.

RELATED: The greatest chip in Masters history, as told by Tiger Woods

On the 10th anniversary of the 2005 Masters, the duel with Woods – and the chip shot heard round the golf world – was still fresh in DiMarco’s mind.

“Tiger knocking it in was certainly not what I was expecting, but I had prepared for it,” DiMarco said 10 years later. “It was Tiger Woods, and it is expected that stuff like that happens to him. Jack Nicklaus is right there with Tiger. It’s neck and neck, but I’ve seen a lot of Tiger Woods up close and personal, and there’s never been anyone close to him.”

Speaking of Nicklaus, it was the final Masters for the Golden Bear.

Remarkably, Woods won in each of Nicklaus’ final appearances in the four majors – the 2000 U.S. Open, 2000 PGA Championship, 2005 Masters and 2005 British Open.

Woods now had nine majors – halfway to Nicklaus – and four green jackets. It was his first major win since the 2002 U.S. Open.

“I think it’s pretty neat for me to have an opportunity to have won four before the age of 30. No one’s done that, so to be able to do something that no one has ever done is pretty neat,” Woods said. As for his chase to catch Nicklaus, he added, “There’s a long way to go.”

Little did Woods know that it would be a long time before he won his fifth green jacket.

This is the 11th story in a series looking at each of Tiger Woods’ appearances at the Masters. Catch up on the series here.

WATCH EVERY MASTERS TOURNAMENT – SUBSCRIBE TO ESPN+

Watch the full collection of official Masters films, which has a one-hour recap of every Masters from 1960 all the way up to 2018.

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Tiger Woods at the Masters (2004): More swing changes ahead of 10th career start

Tiger Woods was working through another swing change heading into the 2004 Masters, which marked his 10th start at Augusta National.

Tiger Woods was working through another swing change heading into the 2004 Masters, which marked his 10th – yes, 10th – start at Augusta National.

He had won the World Golf Championships Match Play that year and posted four other top-10s in seven starts before turning onto Magnolia Lane. But at each stop, he was questioned and questioned and questioned about his new swing.

“I feel like I’m playing well,” Woods said ahead of the tournament. “Things that I’ve been working on are starting to come together, which is great. It’s exciting.”

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But Woods signed for a dull 75 in the first round – he shot 40 on the front nine just as he did in 1997. Unlike in 1997, however, when he dramatically rebounded to rout the field, Woods was never a factor in 2004.

He flashed some good form during a second-round 69 but stumbled to another 75 in the third round and finished with a 71 to wind up at 2-over 290 in a tie for 22nd.

His final round was not without drama, however, as he vomited in a garbage can after playing the first hole.

2004 Masters: Final leaderboard

“I ate something that didn’t agree with me,” Woods said. “I felt kind of sick on the range and got progressively worse. On the first green, I had to lighten the load a little bit.”

Much of his data on the stat sheet left him feeling ill, too. While he tied for sixth in greens in regulation (72.2 percent), he needed 123 putts as he finished 11 shots back.

“No,” Woods said when asked if there was an issue with his swing. “I’m very close to putting it all together. I made actually nothing today. I just need to make a few more putts, get the ball a little closer to the hole, and it will be all good.

“I didn’t make any putts this week, at all. Any putt that I had within 10 feet for birdie, I didn’t make them, and you have to make those. Occasionally I had a couple of par putts, four or five feet, and I didn’t make those, either. You can’t go around here and not putt well and expect to win.

“I’m disappointed because I didn’t win. That’s obviously the ultimate goal. I felt like I hit the ball well enough to do it, but I just didn’t make any putts.”

As for putts, Phil Mickelson delivered one for the ages. Lefty canned an 18-footer on the 72nd hole to win his first green jacket and his first major. With one giant leap – OK, a vertically challenged leap – Mickelson put an end to his 0-for-42 futility in major championships.

While Mickelson put an end to his streak, Arnold Palmer capped off his remarkable streak. At age 74, the King, an owner of four green jackets, hiked up the 18th fairway for the final time in competition in what was his 50th consecutive Masters start.

This is the tenth story in a series looking at each of Tiger Woods’ appearances at the Masters. Catch up on the series here.

WATCH EVERY MASTERS TOURNAMENT – SUBSCRIBE TO ESPN+

Watch the full collection of official Masters films, which has a one-hour recap of every Masters from 1960 all the way up to 2018.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

Tiger Woods at the Masters (2003): A first-ever Augusta three-peat?

In 2003, Tiger Woods was in line to become the first to win three consecutive green jackets. “I really would like to win this week,” he said.

Tiger Woods is the only player to win the U.S. Junior Amateur Championship in three consecutive years.

He’s the only player to bag a three-peat in the U.S. Amateur.

And in 2003, he was in line to become the only one to win three consecutive green jackets.

“I really would like to win this week,” Woods said ahead of the tournament.

“I’ve been able to do certain things in golf that no one’s ever done before. And if you’re ever in that position, you want to take advantage of it because it doesn’t happen all the time. I was in that position to win the Juniors, to win the Amateurs, and now hopefully I can win three straight Masters.”

2003 Masters: Final leaderboard

He headed to the Masters with three victories in five starts that year and was installed as the 7-5 favorite. Someone not named Woods, however, made history (we’ll get to him in a bit).

Woods opened with a 76 – his worst first-round score in his 22 Masters starts – and shot a second-round 73 to make the cut on the number and stood 11 shots behind the leader.

But Woods vaulted into contention with a bogey-free 66 in Saturday’s third round and went to sleep just four shots behind the leader.

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“Tomorrow you just play one shot at a time and see what happens,” Woods said after the third round. “I played well here and there and then finally today I got something going and I continued it for all 18 holes.

“We all know that anything can happen on that back nine. You just need to get yourself in position. I’m four back. That’s not inconceivable. That’s for sure.”

He got within three with a birdie on two but then his three-peat ran into trouble on the third hole named Flowering Peach. With a strong wind at his back, Woods pulled driver and had a go at the green 350 yards away. Instead he wound up in a batch of trees. He punched out left-handed but needed four more shots to finish off a disastrous double-bogey 6.

“That cost me a lot right there, a lot of mo,” Woods said.

He went on to bogey three of his next five holes and finished with a 75 – tied for his worst final-round in his history in the Masters.

“It was just one of those weeks where I couldn’t really get anything going for an extended period of time,” Woods said. “It’s disappointing. We try to put ourselves in a position to win and you’re not going to win every time. You look at the greatest champions of all time and their winning percentage in all sports, it’s not too good.”

But Woods did end his day on a historical note. He helped Mike Weir slip on the green jacket as he became the first Canadian and first left-handed player to win at Augusta National. Weir defeated Len Mattiace in a playoff.

This is the ninth story in a series looking at each of Tiger Woods’ appearances at the Masters. Catch up on the series here.

WATCH EVERY MASTERS TOURNAMENT – SUBSCRIBE TO ESPN+

Watch the full collection of official Masters films, which has a one-hour recap of every Masters from 1960 all the way up to 2018.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

Tiger Woods at the Masters (2002): Woods wins back-to-back green jackets

Tiger Woods returned to Augusta National in 2002 and became the third golfer to win back-to-back green jacks at the Masters.

Something was different heading into the 2002 Masters.

No, not with Tiger Woods — he was still the dominant force in the game. He’d won 25 times worldwide since the start of 1999, including five majors, and had four top-10s in seven starts in 2002 when he arrived in Augusta, Georgia.

That included another victory in Arnold Palmer’s annual invitational at Bay Hill.

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Instead, the altered nature of the tournament had everything to do with the iconic course. After Woods began turning Augusta National’s hallowed grounds into a pitch-and-putt in 1997 – hitting wedge to the par-5 15th, sand wedges to the longer par-4s, etc. – the green jackets called renowned architect Tom Fazio with one goal: put some teeth back into the course.

Fazio delivered, which meant new trees were planted, extra tee boxes ingrained and 285 extra yards of length added to nine holes, stretching the course to 7,270 yards. The modifications, naturally, became known as Tiger-proofing.

“This golf course has certainly changed on your approach mentally,” Woods said. “I think it’s more of a mental test now than it was when I first won here, because of the lengthening.”

2002 Masters: Final leaderboard

Well, 100 years after Bobby Jones was born, and in Arnold Palmer’s last Masters, the Tiger-proofing was no match for Tiger. With rounds of 70-69-66-71, Woods finished at 12-under 276 and three shots clear of Retief Goosen when the manual white scoreboards came to a standstill.

But it was far from easy as he joined Jack Nicklaus (1965-66) and Nick Faldo (1989-90) as the only players to win back-to-back green jackets.

“I always felt that I had the game that was good enough to win here at this tournament. But you need to have — and I keep saying it — you’ve got to have some good breaks,” Woods said. “I played well this week, made some good putts when I really needed them, but I had some good breaks as well. I was able to somehow finagle a way to get up-and-down and save a lot of pars this week.”

Woods signed for a 70 after the first round, then played 26 holes on Saturday to finish off his second round and conclude his third round due to a rain delay. He woke at 4:30 a.m. that Saturday, trailing Vijay Singh by six shots, but by nightfall he held co-ownership of the lead at 11 under with Goosen. His third-round 66 was the lowest of the day.

As Masters Sunday took flight, six of the top 7 players in the world were within four shots of the lead – Goosen tied with Woods, Singh two back, Phil Mickelson, Sergio Garcia and Ernie Els four back.

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Woods birdied two and three and from there no one got within two shots of him the rest of the way. While Els and Mickelson each birdied the first two holes, their offensive on Woods stalled, as did all the others. Woods let them insert their own daggers and while he made three bogeys, he kept his distance with four birdies.

The extra length did him no harm – he hit 69 percent of his fairways in regulation, 75 percent of his greens. He made 19 birdies, averaged 295 off the tee.

It was his third green jacket, his seventh major championship. And he was just 26. No one had ever gotten to seven major victories at such a young age.

“It’s pretty neat to be able to have my name mentioned with some of the golfing greats, especially at this tournament,” Woods said. “This tournament is very historic and very special to all the players. This is a tournament we really want to win, and to be able to put my name on that trophy three times, it’s really cool.

“It would be nice to win as many majors as Jack did. That would be great. But if it doesn’t happen, it doesn’t happen. I think the thing I keep saying to myself every year is I want to become a better player at the end of the year than I was at the beginning. If I can keep doing that year after year, I’ll have a pretty good career.”

This is the eighth story in a series looking at each of Tiger Woods’ appearances at the Masters. Catch up on the series here.

WATCH EVERY MASTERS TOURNAMENT – SUBSCRIBE TO ESPN+

Watch the full collection of official Masters films, which has a one-hour recap of every Masters from 1960 all the way up to 2018.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

Tiger Woods at the Masters (2001): Woods sweeps majors in less than a year

Tiger Woods outlasted Phil Mickelson at Augusta National to win the 2001 Masters Tournament and sweep the four majors in less than a year.

For nearly eight months, Tiger Woods carried around the burden of expectation and pondered the budding history that awaited at the 2001 Masters.

While he’d grown accustomed to living in the spotlight, a laser beam of attention tracked Woods after defeating Bob May in a dramatic playoff at Valhalla to win the 2000 PGA Championship. In a year in which he won nine times, Tiger’s PGA triumph was his third consecutive major conquest, a nail-biter following a record 15-shot runaway in the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach and an 8-shot waltz in the British Open at St. Andrews.

A victory at Augusta National and Woods would become the only player ever to hold all four professional major titles at one time. Grand Slam? Tiger Slam? Woods didn’t want to argue the terminology; he just wanted to get on with it.

2001 Masters: Final leaderboard

“Do I feel the burden of it? No,” Woods said two days before the ceremonial tee shots. “To be honest with you, it is a special tournament, and we are here at the Masters, and that is very special. But, you know what, I guarantee you, come Sunday night, win or lose, life is going to go on. The sun will come up on Monday. People obviously are excited about what could transpire, and so am I. But it’s not life or death. I enjoy competing and it is fun. Take it as that.”

Woods headed into the Masters after victories in his previous two starts – at Arnie’s Bay Hill Invitational and the PGA Tour’s Players Championship.

Woods opened with a 70 and followed with a 66 to get within two of the lead through 36 holes. A 68 in the third round put him atop the famous white scoreboards by one and gave way to a final-day, final-group pairing with Phil Mickelson.

David Duval was three shots back and birdied seven of the first 10 holes to move into a tie with Woods, who followed a bogey at the first with birdies at two, seven and eight. Meanwhile, Mickelson had a share of the lead after four of the first five holes but bogeyed six and then remained one, two or three shots behind the rest of the way.

Woods regained the lead when he nearly holed out his approach on the 11th, fell back into a tie with a bogey on 12, then grabbed the solo lead again with a birdie on the 13th. Looking to regain the advantage, he shockingly three-putted for par on the 15th from just 18 feet. Duval, however, bogeyed 16 to fall one back, missed birdie chances from 10 and 6 feet on the final two holes, and wound up in second as Woods parred 16, 17 and birdied 18 from 18 feet to win by two at 16-under 272.

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Woods walked to the side of the 18th green and buried his head in his cap as Mickelson took the last stroke of the tournament.

“When I didn’t have any more shots to play, that’s when I started to realize what I had done; I won the tournament, and I started getting a little emotional, and I was trying to pull it together,” Woods said.

It was his sixth major title, his fifth in the last six played, his second green jacket. And he earned a clean sweep of all four majors in 294 days.

“I have a better appreciation for winning a major championship,” Woods said. “To win four of them in succession, it’s hard to believe. I don’t think I’ve ever accomplished anything this great.”

The achievement was so great the most powerful man in golf heard from the most powerful man in the world.

“We all apologize for the delay, ladies and gentlemen,” Billy Payne, then chairman of the media committee, said as he introduced Woods at the post-round interview with the media. “President (George H. W.) Bush just called Tiger and expressed his congratulations.”

A worthy call indeed.

This is the seventh story in a series looking at each of Tiger Woods’ appearances at the Masters.

WATCH EVERY MASTERS TOURNAMENT – SUBSCRIBE TO ESPN+

Watch the full collection of official Masters films, which has a one-hour recap of every Masters from 1960 all the way up to 2018.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

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Augusta in October would certainly be a Masters unlike any other

Instead of being the annual rite of spring, the Masters could serve as a different version of a Fall Classic.

It would certainly be a Masters unlike any other.

Instead of being the annual rite of spring for golf in April, the Masters could serve as an autumn awakening in October. A different version of a Fall Classic, if you will.

Shortly after Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley announced this year’s Masters was postponed – not canceled – due to the coronavirus pandemic sweeping the world, speculation has run rampant as to when the best players in the world would arrive in Augusta, Georgia, and drive down Magnolia Lane in pursuit of a green jacket.

Word got out that the club was making calls to local schools, rental agencies and government officials to get a sense of how a Masters in October would pan out, seeing as every Masters has been played in April except the two years it was held in March. Quickly, area hotel rates in the 10th month of the year skyrocketed.

A few clues

These bites of information naturally spawned some questions. If the Masters were to be held in October – and that’s a big if – how would the course play? How would it look? How would it feel?

Past Masters champions Zach Johnson and Trevor Immelman and former world No. 1 Luke Donald have all played Augusta National in October and offered some clues.

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A few basics first: The average temperatures in April and October are similar – from the upper-40s to the upper-70s. On average, October (6.19 inches) gets more rain than April (4.31 inches). Northerly winds are the norm in October, which means players would hit into wind streams on the first hole and on three of the four par-5s.

In April, players play on rye grass and putt on bentgrass greens. In the fall, when the seasonal club reopens in October after closing in late May, the rye overseed is introduced while the Bermuda grass is shaved. That would mean an October Masters would play out on a carpet of rye and Bermuda from tee to green.

“Playing in October is very different to April in the fact the Bermuda grass was still fighting with the overseed,” Donald said of the 7,475-yard course.

But Donald said the club’s resources, including a SubAir system that controls the temperature and moisture of all the greens and many landing areas in the fairways, would make an October Masters course play as similar as possible to April’s course.

“And the greens are always pure there so they’d be fast and true. But there would certainly be some Bermuda grass fighting with the overseed,” Donald continued. “The fairways would be a little bit softer because you’re usually coming off a very warm summer in Georgia, which goes through September, so you’re just starting to cool off in October. With that heat you have to water the course a lot.

“I just think the course would play a bit longer.”

‘It would still be Augusta… still be pure’

Johnson, who held off Tiger Woods to win the green jacket in 2007, said it’s difficult to predict how the course will play in October.

“The bottom line is, if they knew they were going to host the Masters in October, the course would look and play dramatically different this October than any other October,” said Johnson.

“My guess is that you would see more Bermuda, but it would still be Augusta National and it would still be pure. It would still be green and it would still be a major championship at Augusta National.

“And the playability of Augusta National will still be based on Mother Nature, not the grass. It’s Augusta National. It’s going to be pure. You’re going to have great lies; the greens will be pure. If it’s in October, it still would be unbelievable.”

Which would be true with the visuals, as well. The vibrant spring colors of the lush dogwoods and azaleas would be replaced by the autumn splendor of various shades of yellow, orange, red and brown hues.

“In the spring, all the color is popping and it’s very lush,” said Immelman, who also held off Woods en route to his green jacket in 2008. He has played Augusta National more than 20 times in October. “Now, in the fall, you’ve got great color, too. It’s just different colors. You have that fall orangey, reddish thing going.

“But it’s still breathtaking.”

And a Masters in October also could be inspiring.

“We’ve become so accustomed to the fact that the Masters signals the fact the major season is starting, it’s spring time for most of America. It signals that we’ve come through a long winter and those who had been locked in by winter are feeling the warmth of spring,” Immelman said. “If the Masters is played in the fall, it would feel a little different. But the world is going through such a tough time right now, and everybody is so unsure how the next little while will pan out.

“At some point, when we do feel we have the ability to be able to go back out there and start our normal lives, hopefully with as minimal and little damage as possible, I think sports and arts and entertainment are going to be such a huge part of our signaling to ourselves that we’ve made it through this and we can start celebrating those things once again.

“The Masters and all the great events in sports would be so inspirational for us to start building back up.”

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Tiger Woods at the Masters (2000): Green jacket eludes Woods in most successful year

Tiger Woods entered the 2000 Masters Tournament on a hot streak, but finished fifth after struggling over the weekend at Augusta National.

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As the world welcomed a new millennium — and remained far removed from the stone age as the Y2K scare vanished when computers correctly shifted from 1999 to 2000 — Tiger Woods was at the zenith of his powers.

With his retooled swing fully on point, Woods went on a 12-month heater that left authors scrambling to revise the record books and his fellow pros struggling to keep pace with his dust.

In 20 starts, he finished first or second 13 times. His nine wins were the most in a single year since Sam Snead won 11 times 50 years earlier. The $9.2 million in earnings broke his single-season record set the previous season by $2.6 million.

He destroyed picturesque Pebble Beach and bludgeoned his colleagues to win the U.S. Open by a record 15 shots. He became the youngest, at 24, to complete the career Grand Slam when he won the Claret Jug at St. Andrews by eight. He finally put away Bob May in a playoff to win the PGA Championship a second consecutive year. He won Jack Nicklaus’ and Arnold Palmer’s tournaments. And he teamed with David Duval to close his year out with a win in the World Cup.

2000 Masters: Final leaderboard

But in his best year of so many, the green jacket eluded Woods despite rolling down Magnolia Lane with three wins and three runner-up finishes in seven PGA Tour starts under his belt. The field or Woods? Some bettors took Woods.

But a first-round 75 included a double-bogey 6 at No. 10 and a triple-bogey 6 at the 12th. A second-round 72 left him at 3 over and nine shots behind the pace-setting Duval. Tiger stirred up some hope with a 68 in the third round – he was the only player to break 70 that day – and he trailed Vijay Singh by six shots with 54 holes to play.

“At least I gave myself a chance after Thursday,” Woods said.

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But as he arrived at the first tee for Masters Sunday, something seemed amiss. Instead of wearing his Sunday red shirt, he was sporting some weird blend of horizontal black-and-white stripes splashed with purple tones. What was that?

After making the turn in 33 strokes — and you know what can happen on the back nine on Sunday among the Georgia pines — Woods couldn’t sustain his charge and signed for a 69. That left him at 4-under 284 and in fifth place, six shots behind Singh, who had never finished better than a tie for 17th in six starts at Augusta. In winning his second major, Singh beat Ernie Els by three.

“For some reason, the golfing gods weren’t looking down on me this week,” Woods said.

This is the sixth story in a series looking at each of Tiger Woods’ appearances at the Masters.

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Tiger Woods at the Masters (1999): Duval-Tiger showdown was all the buzz

A showdown between No. 1 David Duval and No. 2 Tiger Woods was all the talk heading into the 1999 Masters.

A showdown between Tiger Woods and David Duval was all the talk heading into the 1999 Masters.

Woods, who won his first green jacket in 1997 by a record 12 shots and finished in a tie for eighth in 1998, was in the midst of fine tuning his revamped swing but remained a serious contender. Coming into the Masters, he had six top-10s in eight starts, including a victory in the Buick Invitational and a tie for second in the Nissan Open.

But Duval was the clear favorite.

He was on a remarkable run of 11 wins in 34 starts. He had won his two previous starts ahead of the Masters, including The Players Championship. He had won his first two starts of the year, the second coming in the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic, where he closed with a 59.

Duval was No. 1 in the world rankings, Woods No. 2.

1999 MASTERS: Final leaderboard

But the Sunday showdown never materialized.

Woods never threatened and shot rounds of 72-72-70-75 to finish at 1-over 289 and in a tie for 18th. He made a triple-bogey 8 on the eighth hole in the first round, a double-bogey 5 on the 12th the second round, and made three consecutive bogeys, something he had never done in the Masters, in the third round. He started the final round five shots out of the lead but shot 75 and finished nine shots behind Jose Maria Olazabal, who won his second green jacket.

“I hit a lot of great shots and a lot of ugly ones,” Woods said. “I just didn’t make the putts or give myself a lot of opportunities.”

While he wasn’t in full control of his game in the Masters, everything clicked for Woods the rest of 1999. He won nine times, including his second major victory in the PGA Championship. He won eight of his final 12 starts in 1999.

Duval, meanwhile, shot 71-74-70-70 to finish at 3-under 285 and in a tie for sixth. He pulled within one in the final round with birdies at 7, 8 and 10, but a double-bogey 6 on the 11th hindered his chances.

Olazabal, Woods’ first playing partner in his first Masters in 1995, held off Greg Norman and Davis Love III in the final round. Olazabal shot 70-66-73-71 to finish at 8-under 280.

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Three years prior, Olazabal didn’t think he’d ever play golf again as aching feet had forced him to crawl on all fours around his house. But his condition had been misdiagnosed as rheumatoid arthritis. It was later discovered that he suffered from a lower back hernia. Treatment and rehabilitation returned his health. Out for 18 months, he played in his first professional tournament in March 1997.

Sergio Garcia, the British Amateur champion, made it a Spanish double in 1999 as he became the first European to win the low amateur medal.

This is the fifth story in a series looking at each of Tiger Woods’ appearances at the Masters.

WATCH EVERY MASTERS TOURNAMENT – SUBSCRIBE TO ESPN+

Watch the full collection of official Masters films, which has a one-hour recap of every Masters from 1960 all the way up to 2018.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.