Phil Mickelson joins list of players to finish top 10 at the Masters in four different decades

When your name is next to Ben Hogan and Jack Nicklaus, you’re doing something right.

AUGUSTA, GA. — Finishing in the top 10 of the Masters is an impressive accomplishment no matter the year. After all, Augusta National Golf Club isn’t for the faint of heart.

But to do so in four different decades? That’s a testament to a player’s longevity and ability to navigate Alister MacKenzie’s masterpiece among the Georgia pines.

Stats guru Justin Ray from the Twenty First Group was first to point out that Phil Mickelson had a shot to join the exclusive group of players with a top 10 this week, and Sunday afternoon he did just that.

Mickelson, who missed last year’s event after his controversial statements and move to LIV Golf, shot a 7-under 65 during the final round of the 2023 Masters to shoot up the leaderboard into a tie for second place with Brooks Koepka. A three-time winner of the green jacket (2004, 2006, 2010), Lefty has now finished inside the top 10 a whopping 15 times in more than 30 appearances at Augusta National.

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Here’s the impressive list of other players to finish top 10 at the Masters in four different decades.

Raymond Floyd to reimagine bunkerless Raptor Bay course in Florida as new Saltleaf Golf Preserve

Renamed Saltleaf Golf Preserve, the layout will feature a main 18-hole course and a family-friendly nine-hole short course.

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Raymond Floyd’s vision for the original Raptor Bay golf course in Estero, Florida, went against the grain versus many Sunshine State developments.

The retired four-time major champion wanted to embrace the Florida habitat and keep the course as traditional as possible.

“I’ve always been fond of trying to lay a golf course out as a part of the natural environment and let nature be its beautiful thing that it is,” Floyd said.

Now, 22 years later, the course will be reborn as Saltleaf Golf Preserve after London Bay’s purchase of the golf club in 2020. London Bay held a groundbreaking for the course on Tuesday with plans to open for play in 2023.

The course will be the first major construction project of London Bay’s Saltleaf village, a 500-acre coastal community on Estero Bay with plans for more than 800 residencies.

Bringing Floyd and golf course architect Harry Bowers back to reimagine their original course was a no-brainer, according to Mark Wilson, the founder of London Bay and developer for the project.

“This course was loved by so many people and gets an awful lot of use,” he said.

Saltleaf Golf Preserve will feature an 18-hole championship course as well as a nine-hole, family-friendly short course.

“This is the very first step of the development of Saltleaf,” Wilson said.

Floyd explained that he got his start designing golf courses as a teenager with his father.

“My philosophy has always been traditional,” he said. “I like to not change the land where it doesn’t look like it belongs, and so many golf courses, through the years, there’s so much earth moved, when you go to play it, it just doesn’t belong in the environment.”

That’s why the public-access Raptor Bay doesn’t have any formal bunkers, an element that will remain in the new project. The layout does feature plenty of sand in the form of exposed waste areas, but no traditional sandy pits.

“(Raptor Bay) has been really, really well received and your resort play loves it, it speeds up play, it’s great for your maintenance, so that was so successful,” Floyd said. “Now that we’re redoing and building another 18 holes, we’re going to take that same theme and carry it through.”

Floyd’s design philosophy had appeal for the developers.

“The way that he used all the natural beauty and so on was really important,” Wilson said.

Wilson, Floyd, Raptor Bay golf director Mark Wilhelmi and others spoke at the groundbreaking before taking the ceremonial photo, complete with shovels and hard hats.

“We’re all familiar with a kid on Christmas Eve who can’t wait for the next morning,” Wilhelmi said. “Well, I’m a balding, 52-year-old kid that is six-and-a-half months away from opening the coolest thing on Earth, and I can’t wait.”

Follow News-Press Sports Reporter Dustin Levy on Twitter: @DustinBLevy. For additional coverage of sports across Southwest Florida, follow @newspresssports and @ndnprepzone on Instagram.

The 10 players who have made the most starts in PGA Tour history

The King — Mr. Arnold Palmer — is on this list. Who joins him?

On February 10, 2022, Charles Howell III made his 600th start on the PGA Tour at the WM Phoenix Open. That got us thinking, who has made the most starts on the PGA Tour in history? And even better, how many of those resulted in playing over the weekend?

One of the names on this list is the King himself. Arnold Palmer owns one of the most decorated resumes in the history of golf, but his number of starts is one accolade that often goes unnoticed.

On top of his 62 wins and seven major championships, Palmer is seventh all-time in starts made on the PGA Tour.

Check out the rest of the top 10 below.

Masters Par 3 Contest: A tradition, a blessing — and a curse?

Nobody has ever won the Par 3 Contest and the Masters in the same week. That will remain true for at least another year due to COVID-19.

Masters patrons have long called it a curse, but few have experienced it.

This marks the 60th anniversary of the inaugural Par 3 Contest. Nobody has ever won Wednesday’s event and the Masters Tournament in the same week. And that will remain true for at least another year, with the pandemic prompting the Par 3’s cancellation in 2020.

Raymond Floyd came closest in 1990, when the 47-year-old was in line to become the oldest Masters champion. Floyd recorded his only Par 3 victory and seemed on course to snap the curse Sunday afternoon.

Following a birdie on No. 12, Floyd was four strokes clear of Nick Faldo with six holes to play. More importantly, two of those holes were par 5s. When Floyd lapped the field in 1976, he shot a then-record 14-under par on Augusta National’s par 5s and, with Nos. 13 and 15 looming, he was 10-under on par 5s in 1990.

However, an errant drive on No. 13 forced Floyd to lay up and settle for par. Playing a group ahead, Faldo went for the green in two shots and birdied. Another off-target tee shot by Floyd on No. 15 led to the same result as the 13th. Faldo cleared the water and made birdie. Floyd’s two pars opened the door for Faldo, who stole the tournament on the second playoff hole.

Sports Illustrated’s Rick Reilly wrote of Floyd, “There is a useful lesson in all this. Forget the par-3 tournament. Win the par-5 tournament.”

Three years later, the par-5 tournament was again an afterthought. Chip Beck, a University of Georgia graduate, won the warm-up act and was three strokes behind Bernhard Langer entering Sunday’s 15th hole. Following a center-cut drive, Beck laid up, and Langer coasted to his second Masters crown. Beck’s decision cemented his second-place finish, joining Floyd as the only Wednesday winners and Sunday runner-ups.

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Walker races to record

“A curse?” said Padraig Harrington, the contest’s only three-time champion. “That’s absolutely ridiculous.”

Harrington’s had the most opportunities to snap the curse, ridiculous as it may be, but no hand was hotter entering a Masters Tournament Thursday than Jimmy Walker in 2016. That year, the Texan became the first Par 3 participant to shoot in the teens, carding an 8-under-par 19.

Walker broke the previous mark of 20 shot by Art Wall Jr. (1965) and Gay Brewer (1973). More impressively, Wall and Brewer accomplished their feat prior to the course being altered in 1987.

The original Par 3 course was built in 1958 when Augusta National co-founder Clifford Roberts enlisted Savannah’s George Cobb as its principal architect. Cobb’s design called for the playing of the nine holes over DeSoto Springs Pond. Three decades later, the club turned to Tom Fazio to add two holes (Nos. 8 and 9) over Ike’s Pond, and Cobb’s opening two holes transitioned to spectator seating. Prior to Walker, the course record for the remodeled trek was 21.

Walker started hot in the 2016 contest, placing his opening tee shot to 4.9 inches and earned a prize for closest to the pin. On No. 2, Walker made a hole-in-one. More crystal. With his wife, Erin, and two sons caddying, Walker never teed up a shot.

“I just dropped it and hit,” he said.

Walker added birdies on Nos. 3 and 4, but his most memorable putt came on No. 5. After missing a birdie attempt, Walker left his ball on the green, when suddenly his son, McLain, darted to pick it up. Walker intercepted his son, calling it, “The only time all day I got serious.”

Walker capped the round with a 35-foot birdie on No. 8 to seal the lowest round in Par 3 history.

“It may never be tied. It may never be broken,” Walker said. “I was out of my mind those nine holes.”

Walker placed 29th in the 2016 Masters, as the curse lived on.

“I don’t believe in curses,” Walker said. “It just hasn’t happened yet.”

Prize with a purpose

After the 1960 competition, The Augusta Chronicle praised winner Sam Snead, boasting the headline, “Slammer’s 23 wins 9-hole par 3 event.” A silver service was awarded to Snead, as, like today, prizes were given for holes-in-one and shots closest to the pin.

A year later, Deane Beman won on Augusta’s short course, making him the first of three amateurs to win the event. Labron Harris Jr. (1964) and Jay Haas (1976) also prevailed as nonprofessionals.

“After I won, (PGA Tour Commissioner) Joe Dey mentioned to Cliff Roberts that there may be a problem because the sterling silver tea set was extremely valuable,” Beman said. “Joe Dey said it could affect my amateur status because it was not a trophy of symbolic value.”

After speaking with Dey, Roberts told Beman to leave behind the prize and that it would be mailed to him. A month later Beman received the gift, which had an engraving to honor his accomplishment.

“Mr. Roberts called and said, ‘Deane, it’s of symbolic value now!’” said Beman, laughing at the memory.

Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player during the par-3 contest at the 2013 Masters.

Everyone’s in on it

More than anything, though, the event has shifted from a competition to family affair. Donning white caddie jumpsuits, children of all ages have become the staple. Many attempt putts. Some high-five patrons along the ropes. Others have foot races down the hill of the No. 1 tee box.

There have been 100 holes-in-one, but arguably the most iconic came from a caddie. In 2018, GT Nicklaus, one of Jack Nicklaus’s 22 grandchildren, left his mark on Augusta National. Entering the 2018 Par 3 Contest, the 15-year-old had never carded a hole-in-one. He had also never caddied for his granddad at the Masters.

From the No. 9 tee box, GT sailed Jack’s 47-degree wedge over Ike’s Pond and found the bottom of the cup. The elder Nicklaus called GT’s shot, “My favorite Masters memory.”

“If I ever feel like I’m having a bad day, I take myself back to No. 9 tee box and remind myself of that moment,” GT said. “It was something that I’ll never forget. It’s a once-in-a-lifetime kind of thing.”

In 2018, Paul Casey let his 4-year-old son Lex caddie for the first time. Casey said his son hadn’t been bitten by the golf bug yet, admitting, “He prefers making pyramids with golf balls.”

“What I love most is there isn’t a stigma behind what the kids do out there,” Casey said. “The members get that. The tournament committee gets that.”

In 12 previous appearances, Casey has never won the Par 3 Contest. He has never earned a closest to the pin honor. He’s never recorded a hole-in-one. But there is one thing Casey believes in: curses.

“It doesn’t stop me from playing in it, but will it stop me from winning it? I don’t know,” Casey said. “If I ever get that final putt on nine I might have to think twice.”

Casey paused briefly to collect his thoughts.

“No, I’d make it. You want to be the one that breaks the curse.”

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The 34 best 4-day totals in Masters history

The best from Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Arnold Palmer and more in this recap of lowest totals at the storied Augusta National.

While one impeccable round of golf at the Masters can catapult someone to the front of the pack, it takes four days of steady play to ultimately earn a place in PGA history.

The setting for the tradition unlike any other, Augusta National is one of the most challenging courses in golf … that, actually, has never been “officially rated.” (However, there are occasional whispers of 78-point-something.)

As the golfing world looks ahead at what will be a quiet second week in April this year—the 2020 Masters joining a long list of postponed events due to the coronavirus pandemic—let’s take a look back at the pros who overcame the nerves, “Amen Corner,” and the pressures of major championship golf to card the best four-day totals in Masters history.

And, as golf can oftentimes provide, pay attention to the touch of Lady Luck because not all of these scores ended with a green jacket.

Arnold Palmer, 1964: 276

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Arnie came up two strokes short of tying the then-record total of 274 (held by Ben Hogan). But he did outlast his rival Jack Nicklaus while picking up his fourth Masters—which would be his last major win.