Twenty-five years in the past, at age 41, Mark O’Meara did what many males want they might, particularly in center age: He gained the Masters Tournament with a putt at No. 18. Three months later, he added a British Open victory, the second and remaining main event win in a Hall of Fame profession that started throughout Jimmy Carter’s presidency and continues right this moment on the PGA Tour Champions circuit.
O’Meara’s achievement at Augusta National Golf Club punctuated his fifteenth Masters. A variety of time enjoying with a prodigy named Tiger Woods didn’t harm. Neither did expertise.
“It’s one of those golf courses that the more you play it, the more you understand it,” O’Meara mentioned in an interview in March. “The more you’ve played there, the better your chances are.”
O’Meara final appeared in the Masters in 2018, when he performed for the thirty fourth time. But he, like so many different Masters winners, can nonetheless rattle off from reminiscence a long time of the course’s pleasures and perils.
“You’re going to hit bad shots,” he mentioned. “But the best advice I can give to anyone is appreciate the good ones — because sometimes they don’t come that often — and just forget about the bad ones.”
No. 2: Pink Dogwood
Par 5, 575 yards
2022 common: 4.583 (18). Cumulative common: 4.777 (17).
“18” signifies that No. 2 was the best gap in 2022.
Augusta National is hardly crammed with forgiving holes. “All of them kept me up at night,” O’Meara mentioned, possibly solely partly in jest. But No. 2, a right-to-left downhill gap, can set an encouraging tone for a spherical.
“As long as you don’t try to bite off too much and overdraw your tee shot to where it can end up down in the trees and in the creek down there on the left, it’s a hole that’s gettable,” O’Meara mentioned. Even enjoying to simply wanting the gap’s first bunker, O’Meara mentioned, is okay in the period of gamers with immense energy: Many of them can knock the ball to the inexperienced from the space.
“If you make bogey there, you’re definitely giving away shots,” he mentioned of the gap. “You should be able to make par and, most likely, birdie or eagle.”
The distress cranks up quickly sufficient on No. 3, the shortest par-4 gap. Loaded with 5 bunkers, O’Meara all however shuddered at the reminiscence: “No. 3 can be a very treacherous hole.”
Beyond placing properly, O’Meara argued it was important for the potential Masters champion to know the course properly sufficient to steer round awkward positions like the ones that may befall a participant at No. 3.
“You’re going to find some awkward positions out there, but the more you can avoid that, the better off you’re going to be,” he mentioned.
No. 6: Juniper
Par 3, 180 yards
2022 common: 3.152 (10). Cumulative common: 3.137 (13).
A downhill gap that O’Meara normally discovered to play between 170 and 202 yards, it ends with “a green that is just wickedly severe.”
Look out, he mentioned, if the pin is at the high proper of the inexperienced.
“It’d be like trying to hit to your coffee table at your house,” O’Meara mentioned. “You’ve got to be dead accurate. Otherwise, you’re going to have a very dramatic, uphill, difficult putt for birdie because it rolls down that front left, and then you’ve got a long, demanding putt. Really, just a two-putt is a bonus.”
The seventh gap, a 450-yard par 4, doesn’t supply a lot aid.
“Narrow tee shot, with all of the amount of trees that over the years have been planted, a fairway that slopes pretty good from left to right and then an elevated green — that’s perched up between these massive sand bunkers — that has a couple of different levels to it, O’Meara rued. “And it’s narrow, so you’ve got to be precise coming into that green, too.”
No. 12: Golden Bell
Par 3, 155 yards
2022 common: 3.233 (T6). Cumulative common: 3.273 (4).
The perils that make up Amen Corner start at No. 11, a 520-yard, par-4 check whose chaos quotient will be dictated by the wind in the second. But O’Meara, like many Masters winners, has specific affection for No. 12, a horticultural splendor and the shortest par-3 gap at Augusta National.
“It plays anywhere from 128 to, maybe, 162 yards in length,” O’Meara mentioned. “But the fact that the green is so narrow and there is danger at every” — right here, he chuckled nervously — “corner of that hole, we’ve seen a lot of drama.” No much less a participant than Woods carded a ten there in 2020.
“When you look at a short iron in a top professional’s hand, you think, ‘Oh, that shouldn’t be a problem,’” O’Meara mentioned. “But yet you get a little bit of wind blowing down there in Amen Corner and where you’ve got to be so precise in where you land your golf ball on the green there, it causes havoc.”
The first aspect of a profitable method for No. 12, after all, is to maintain the ball out of Rae’s Creek. “But,” O’Meara added, “I think you’ve got to be committed when you stand on that tee shot and, most of the time, playing for the center of the green.”
He has recommended buddies and amateurs at No. 12 to “pick a club with a nice, solid swing: not like you’re trying to kill it, not trying to baby it, just a normal golf swing, whether that might be an 8-iron or 9-iron or 7-iron.”
“You just have to play for the middle of the green on that hole,” he mentioned. “If the wind’s blowing, for sure that’s where you’ve got to play. If not, then you can be more aggressive to the front left pin or back right pin.”
No. 13: Azalea
Par 5, 545 yards
2022 common: 4.852 (16). Cumulative common: 4.775 (18).
The solely gap to be lengthened for this yr’s event, No. 13 will play 35 yards longer than it did final spring. In O’Meara’s prime, extra tall, thick bushes defended No. 13. Many of them, although, are gone now, and gamers are hitting the ball farther, so, maybe, O’Meara mused, the size will discourage gamers from making an attempt to bend their pictures round the nook.
“Maybe the players won’t try to take on the corner as much; they’ll just kind of hit it more straight away,” O’Meara mentioned. “They might have a longer shot into the green, but instead of having 190 to 205, they might have 215 to 225 yards.”
But O’Meara, who was removed from the PGA Tour’s longest hitter, estimated that he went for the inexperienced in two pictures maybe 20 % of the time.
“Play the smart shot,” he mentioned. “Don’t be overly aggressive on that hole. Don’t get greedy.”
No. 18: Holly
Par 4, 465 yards
2022 common: 4.389 (2). Cumulative common: 4.229 (7).
Even because it declares No. 18 to be “one of the most famous finishing holes in golf,” Augusta National’s official description would possibly undersell the stress for a participant pursuing a victory: “This uphill dogleg right is protected off the tee by two bunkers at the left elbow of the fairway. A drive hit down the center will often require a middle iron for a second shot to a deep, narrow green guarded by one bunker short left and another hard right.”
O’Meara confessed that earlier than 1998, he had lengthy questioned how anybody might stand on the 18th inexperienced and make a putt to win.
“Everybody’s nervous. Everybody’s trying to do their best,” O’Meara mentioned. “But I think that for me, the plus was that I never once thought when I was on the green, ‘Hey Mark, you make this putt, you win the green jacket, you win the Masters, blah, blah, blah.’ I just don’t think you can get ahead of yourself.”
Instead, dealing with the chance of a playoff, he reasoned that he must make a putt someday, someplace. Why not, he figured, attempt to make an honest putt now?
“When I hit my putt and it was about two feet off the putter, I thought, ‘Oh, thank God I hit a decent putt,’ but I didn’t know what was getting ready to happen, and then I was just tracking,” he mentioned.
People got here to their toes. The telecast ran. Everyone peered towards the cup.
“About two feet from the hole, I’m thinking: ‘Wait a minute. That looks pretty good,’” O’Meara mentioned. “And then when it got about a foot from the hole, my last thought was, ‘Please don’t lip out.’”
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