Viewing By Category : Masters / Main
Thursday, April 10, 2008


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2008 Masters ODDS as of Thursday morning !
SELECTION
ODDS
T Woods 11/8 
P Mickelson 10/1 
G Ogilvy 20/1 
V Singh 20/1 
E Els 25/1 
P Harrington 25/1 
R Goosen 25/1 
A Scott 33/1 
J Rose 33/1 
K J Choi 33/1 
J Furyk 40/1 
H Stenson 50/1 
L Donald 50/1 
S Garcia 50/1 
S Stricker 50/1 
A Baddeley 66/1 
L Westwood 66/1 
R Sabbatini 66/1 
S Cink 66/1 
Z Johnson 66/1 
A Cabrera 80/1 
A Romero 80/1 
F Couples 80/1 
M Weir 80/1 
P Casey 80/1 
S Appleby 80/1 
T Clark 80/1 
D Toms 100/1 
H Mahan 100/1 
J Leonard 100/1 
J M Olazabal 100/1 
JB Holmes 100/1 
M Kaymer 100/1 
S O'Hair 100/1 
S Verplank 125/1


Sunday, January 13, 2008


Want to visit the MASTERS for FREE?  Here is how !

Billy Payne, Chairman of the Masters Tournament and Augusta National Golf Club, announced today the first two initiatives of a multi-year, multifaceted program to utilize the Masters brand and resources to promote the game of golf around the world.

The first initiative employs one of sports' most coveted items, a ticket to the Masters.
Beginning with the 2008 Masters, a youngster age 8-16 will be admitted free on Tournament days (Thursday through Sunday) when accompanied by an accredited patron. An accredited patron is someone attending the Masters who is the individual named on a Series badge application.


"We want to inspire the next generation of golfers now," Payne said. "We're serious about exposing youngsters to golf and the Masters."
In a further effort to reach a broader and younger audience, Payne also announced that in 2008 the Masters new cable associate ESPN would televise the Par 3 Contest on Wednesday April 9th from 3:00-5:00 p.m. Added Payne: "The Par 3 Contest is fun and exciting for the entire family. It's an event everyone enjoys and we think it will demonstrate to kids just how fun golf can be."


The Par 3 Contest was first conducted in 1960 and is played over a nine hole, par 27 1,060 yard course. Since the event's inception there have been 63 holes-in-one, including five in 2002. "You don't need to be an avid golfer to cheer for a hole-in-one," said Payne.

"The Par 3 Contest is a lot of fun, one of the real highlights of every year," said two-time Masters winner Phil Mickelson. "It's been a wonderful experience to have my daughters caddie the last two years. It's special because it's a rare opportunity for both players and patrons to enjoy the game as families."

"These initiatives are important first steps and a great kickoff to our ongoing mission of growing the game," Payne added.


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Friday, October 5, 2007


Masters Committee Announces Augusta Changes

AUGUSTA, Ga. -- Billy Payne, Chairman of Augusta National Golf Club and the Masters Tournament, announced today changes to four holes, Nos. 1, 7, 9 and 11, for the 2008 Masters. In addition, other modifications were made on the grounds.
 
"Refinements to the golf course and grounds have been made almost every year since the Tournament's inception and this year was no exception," Payne said. "Overall, we are happy with the golf course. We think last year's exceptionally high scores were an anomaly due to the frigid, windy weather."
 
The changes for the 2008 Masters are:
 
  • Hole No. 1: Ten yards were added to the front of the Masters tee providing more flexibility in the event of a strong northwest wind. Back of the tee was reduced to ease patron movement. Masters scorecard remains 455 yards.
     
  • Hole No. 7: Green was changed for agronomic reasons and approximately six feet added to the left of the green allowing the possibility of 2-3 additional pin placements.
     
  • Hole No. 9: Green was changed for agronomic reasons and right pin placement softened on first and middle plateaus.
     
  • Hole No. 11: Consistent with last year, several trees were removed. The result allows for enhanced patron viewing.
     
    Additional work throughout the course included construction of a new patron viewing area on the hillside at No. 16, further work on the new practice facility that will open in 2010, adding and extending azalea beds to increase course color and replacing grass with pine straw between Nos. 15 and 17 (pine straw was also added to the left of No. 15).
     
    The hillside seating area is located to the left of the pond at No. 16 and will provide viewing for over 2,000 patrons. Holes that can be viewed from this location include No. 6 green, the second shot and every putt at No. 15, the green complex at No. 16 and the tee shot and second shot at No. 17.
     
    Easy access can be gained to this area from a newly renovated back entrance. From there, patrons can travel to No. 16 hillside, No. 5 fairway or to holes Nos. 13, 14 and Amen Corner.
  • Monday, April 9, 2007


    The MASTERS on THE WEB
     
    The Web sites masters.org and CBS Sportsline.com released combined internet numbers today for the first six days of Masters Tournament week including live streaming video from Masters Extra and Amen Corner Live. Some live and archived Masters elements were also available on three-screen applications from AT&T.

    Masters Extra, new in 2007, featured live internet-only play-by-play available one hour prior to the cable and network broadcast Thursday through Sunday. Amen Corner Live, coverage from hole Nos. 11, 12 and 13, returned for its second year and was also available daily during Tournament rounds.

    Combined traffic numbers for the two sites included:

    · Nearly 4 million video streams of live golf action were served

    · An average time spent on the two sites viewing the live applications of almost three hours per visit

    · A total of approximately 45 hours of live video from Augusta National Golf Club over the four days of the Masters

    "We are slowly and deliberately testing the internet with the objective of providing our patrons with the best possible experience," said Billy Payne, Chairman of Augusta National Golf Club and the Masters Tournament. "One of our chief objectives is to utilize the Masters and its Web site, masters.org, as a catalyst to grow this great game of golf. The internet and other new initiatives provide us that opportunity."

    Other figures unique to masters.org with one day remaining in the Tournament include:

    · 3.9 million unique visitors, already surpassing last year's total of 3.7 million

    · 2.8 million downloads of live Masters content including Masters Extra, Amen Corner Live, interviews from the press building and practice at the driving range

    · 88.6 million page views, a 35 percent increase from 2006


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    Saturday, April 7, 2007


    Inside the Masters Mystique

    Masters weekend, how sweet the sound. True, the tournament started Thursday and many of us caught replay broadcasts the last two nights. But live coverage of the third round begins Saturday afternoon with a wide-open leaderboard and Tiger only barely in the hunt, and for my money, Sunday is the best sporting afternoon of the year. For a golfer, Masters weekend is Christmas morning, so long-awaited you can hardly believe it's finally here.

    [Masters Photo]
    Phil Mickelson struggles during the first round Thursday

    Several things about the Masters and its telecast never fail to rankle, starting with that hokey bird twittering behind CBS's sepia-tinted opening montage and ending with the soporific champion's interview in "historic Butler Cabin." (What's the deal with Butler Cabin? We're never told why it's so darn historic or even what it is exactly.) The producers at CBS turn the sentimentality meter up to 11 (out of 10) and keep it there all week, especially during the endless stream of tributes to past champions.

    Still, beneath all the hushed, reverential clichés, nothing diminishes the mystical pull of the Masters. Since a lot of the publicity surrounding the tournament concerns things like the off-season personal lives of Augusta caddies and how many layers of sand and gravel lie beneath the resurfaced 16th green, it's easy to forget why we love it in the first place. So back to fundamentals. Here's my list:

     It's proof that spring is here.
     

    Forget the groundhog. Those of us in Northern climes are just now grouchily emerging from our hibernative caves. Our yards are still mud pits. But Augusta's blazing azaleas confirm that the clubs are coming out of the garage.

     It's the year's first major.
     

    Officially, this is week 14 on the PGA Tour/FedEx Cup schedule, and Tiger Woods has already won twice. But for the Tour's top players and the fans, all until now is prologue. The Masters and the majors are what count, and you can detect the new vibe in the step of every player. This year, it's even more pronounced, because the Players Championship, a quasi-major formerly held in March, is now taking place in May.

    [Masters Photo]
    Jack Nicklaus celebrates a birdie in 1986
     The back nine on Sunday.
     

    At no other major, and few tournaments, can so much ground be made up -- or lost -- so quickly as in the lengthening shadows at Augusta on Sunday. At least a couple of holes are set up each year so that decently struck balls collect near the pins. On the two par fives, the 13th and the 15th, players make eagle or find disaster in the waters in approximately equal numbers. The short par-three 12th, thanks to unpredictable wind gusts, is a roll of the dice, and the 16th is a lightning rod for drama -- this is where Mr. Woods, on his way to victory in 2005, chipped in from outer space for birdie, and Jack Nicklaus, riding the emotional high of the fans on a thrilling back-nine charge in 1975, putted in for birdie from an equally far-fetched distance. The 18th, lengthened and toughened, is a great, nervy finisher.

     The course's style.
     

    Hilly, gorgeous and requiring imagination to play well. Like many, I hate that Augusta National has felt compelled to add rough and trees in recent years to make the course more resistant to scoring. These changes limit the options for players and stifle the creativity that used to be so much fun to watch. But compared with the severe, straitjacketed courses of the U.S. Open and PGA, Augusta still has a lot of spunk, especially around the greens.

     The familiarity of the course.
     

    Because the Masters is the only major played at the same venue every year, we, the fans, know every inch of the course, even if we've never been there. When the club adds trees down the right side of No. 15, we're entitled to our opinion. Flyovers and a wealth of other graphics available on the Internet make it our virtual home course.

     The tradition.
     

    Nowhere in sports is the connection with the past, both immediate and distant, so palpable as at the Masters. The huge, revolving casts at other majors, filled by open-qualification processes, include freak low scorers, obscure international players and, at the PGA, everyday club pros. The Masters, by contrast, is an invitational. Its limited field includes the world's hottest, freshest talent, but always also many familiar faces. Former champions have permanent invitations to compete, and most do so into their 50s and 60s -- accompanied by the ghosts of all the ancients who have played in the event. Every fan, player and TV announcer knows the stories as well as they do their own family histories: This is the spot on No. 15 from which Gene Sarazen hit his four wood for the famous double eagle in 1935; this is how Ben Hogan always played No. 11 (favoring the right side); this is where Freddie Couples's ball came to rest on the brink of Rae's Creek at No. 12 in 1992.

    [Masters Photo]
    Tiger Woods last year after teeing off on the 12th hole
     Arnold and Jack.
     

    Jack Nicklaus, the greatest golfer ever (until proven otherwise by Mr. Woods) and Arnold Palmer, the most charismatic, dominated the competition and spirit of the Masters for a quarter-century. They are still around. Mr. Palmer this year re-inaugurated the tradition of hitting a ceremonial first ball, and hopefully in the years ahead will be joined by Mr. Nicklaus. (Note: CBS will broadcast the restored and colorized original telecast of Mr. Palmer's 1960 Masters win Sunday afternoon; it includes footage of Mr. Nicklaus, still an amateur, playing in his second Masters. True fans should not miss it.)

     The Augusta National Golf Club.
     

    Founded in 1931 by Bobby Jones not long after he quit competitive golf at the peak of his powers, the club is stuffy, rich, enigmatic and -- as a result of its late admission of blacks and continuing barring of women from membership -- controversial. Clearly, Augusta National isn't for everyone, but no club has more enduring mystique -- or a course that, say what you will, more golfers would more like to be invited to play.

     The television coverage.
     

    OK, so I began by dissing the coverage, and I'll continue. The club insists that announcers call fans "patrons," fairway humps "mounds," and rough "the first cut." Gary McCord was banned for using the words "bikini waxed" in connection with the speed of the greens. But even so, in 52 years of continuous coverage, CBS has figured out how to milk the tournament for maximum drama. No broadcast of any sort looks better in high definition, and I'm happy to forgive Augusta National everything for not allowing more than four minutes of advertising per hour.

    The Masters on TV: Round 3, 3:30-7 p.m. Saturday, CBS; Final Round, 2:30-7 p.m. Sunday, CBS.




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