Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting 2017 Greenbrier Classic, Round 1: Leaderboad, tee times, TV schedule

2017 Greenbrier Classic, Round 1: Leaderboad, tee times, TV schedule

As we roll through the second half of the season, players look to make the final push for the FedExCup at The Old White TPC. Round 1 tee times Round 1 leaderboard HOW TO WATCH PGA TOUR LIVE: Featured Groups – (6 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. ET), Featured Holes – (3:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. ET) Telecast: Golf Channel (3:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. ET) Listen: SiriusXM PGA TOUR Radio, (12 p.m. – 6 p.m. ET) NOTABLE PAIRINGS Jonas Blixt, Patrick Reed, Charles Howell III 8:00 a.m. ET off the 10th tee Boo Weekley, Ricky Barnes, Luke List 12:00 p.m. ET off the 1st tee Jimmy Walker, Jim Herman, Smylie Kaufman 12:30 p.m. off the 10th tee Bubba Watson, Danny Lee, Phil Mickelson 1:00 p.m. off the 1st tee

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2nd Round 3-Balls - R. Cabrera / M. Armitage / J. Luiten
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Joost Luiten-111
Marcus Armitage+190
Rafael Cabrera Bello+350
2nd Round 3-Balls - M. Couvra / M. Jordan / B. Robinson
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Matthew Jordan+160
Martin Couvra+175
Brandon Robinson Thompson+185
2nd Round 3-Balls - J. Smith / C. Hill / D. Naidoo
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Jordan Smith+105
Calum Hill+170
Dylan Naidoo+320
2nd Round 3-Balls - A. Sullivan / N. Kimsey / A. Otaegui
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Adrian Otaegui+150
Andy Sullivan+165
Nathan Kimsey+220
2nd Round 3-Balls - M. Penge / J. Kruyswijk / R. Langasque
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Jacques Kruyswijk+175
Marco Penge+175
Romain Langasque+175
2nd Round 3-Balls - U. Coussaud / S. Bairstow / A. Fitzpatrick
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Sam Bairstow+150
Ugo Coussaud+185
Alex Fitzpatrick+190
Myrtle Beach Classic
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Mackenzie Hughes+350
Thorbjorn Olesen+700
Seamus Power+900
Alejandro Tosti+1600
Ryan Fox+1600
Andrew Putnam+2000
Jesper Svensson+2200
Chris Gotterup+2800
Danny Walker+2800
Niklas Norgaard+3500
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2nd Round Six-Shooter - Group A - M. Hughes / R. Fox / S. Power / V. Perez / A. Tosti / A. Putnam
Type: 2nd Round Six-Shooter - Status: OPEN
Mckenzie Hughes+320
Seamus Power+400
Alejandro Tosti+425
Ryan Fox+475
Victor Perez+475
Andrew Putnam+500
2nd Round Six-Shooter - Group B - T. Olesen / T. Moore / K. Yu / H. Hall / S. Valimaki / R. Hoey
Type: 2nd Round Six-Shooter - Status: OPEN
Thorbjorn Olesen+375
Kevin Yu+400
Sami Valimaki+400
Taylor Moore+450
Harry Hall+475
Rico Hoey+475
2nd Round 3-Balls - K. Kisner / C. Hadley / T. Olesen
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Thorbjorn Olesen-160
Chesson Hadley+240
Kevin Kisner+450
2nd Round 3-Balls - H. Norlander / H. Higgs / P. Fishburn
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Patrick Fishburn+150
Henrik Norlander+160
Harry Higgs+220
2nd Round 3-Balls - J. Guerrier / S. Kjeldsen / I. Cantero
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Julien Guerrier+105
Ivan Cantero+170
Soren Kjeldsen+320
2nd Round 3-Balls - R. Hisatsune / S. Valimaki / R. Hoey
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Sami Valimaki+165
Rico Hoey+170
Ryo Hisatsune+200
Mizuho Americas Open
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Jeeno Thitikul+185
Hae Ran Ryu+750
Nelly Korda+850
Celine Boutier+1600
Hye Jin Choi+1800
Esther Henseleit+2000
Minjee Lee+2200
Lauren Coughlin+2500
Lydia Ko+2800
Yealimi Noh+2800
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2nd Round 3-Balls - T. Moore / D. Riley / E. Grillo
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Taylor Moore+130
Davis Riley+200
Emiliano Grillo+210
2nd Round 3-Balls - K. Yu / C. Villegas / L. List
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Kevin Yu-140
Luke List+220
Camilo Villegas+400
2nd Round 3-Balls - H. Hall / N. Hardy / B. Snedeker
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Harry Hall-110
Nick Hardy+190
Brandt Snedeker+335
2nd Round Six-Shooter - Group C - R. McIIroy / R. Henley / L. Aberg / S. Lowry / J. Thomas / T. Fleetwood
Type: 2nd Round Six-Shooter - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+240
Ludvig Aberg+400
Justin Thomas+425
Russell Henley+500
Shane Lowry+550
Tommy Fleetwood+600
2nd Round Six-Shooter - Group D - C. Morikawa / H. Matsuyama / X. Schauffele / V. Hovland / S. Straka / A. Bhatia
Type: 2nd Round Six-Shooter - Status: OPEN
Collin Morikawa+300
Xander Schauffele+335
Hideki Matsuyama+450
Sepp Straka+450
Akshay Bhatia+550
Viktor Hovland+550
2nd Round Six-Shooter - Group A - P. Cantlay / A. Rai / C. Conners / S. Im / S. Burns / W. Zalatoris
Type: 2nd Round Six-Shooter - Status: OPEN
Patrick Cantlay+300
Corey Conners+375
Sam Burns+450
Aaron Rai+475
Sungjae Im+500
Will Zalatoris+550
2nd Round Six-Shooter - Group B - D. McCarthy / S. Theegala / D. Thompson / C. Young / S. Jaeger / T. Hoge
Type: 2nd Round Six-Shooter - Status: OPEN
Davis Thompson+335
Denny McCarthy+335
Stephan Jaeger+425
Cameron Young+500
Sahith Theegala+500
Tom Hoge+550
Collin Morikawa
Type: Collin Morikawa - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+100
Top 10 Finish-250
Top 20 Finish-750
2nd Round 3 Ball - K. Mitchell / M. Kim / M. Thorbjornsen
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Keith Mitchell+130
Michael Kim+185
Michael Thorbjornsen+220
2nd Round 3 Ball - MW Lee / M. McNealy / J. Spieth
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Jordan Spieth+160
Maverick McNealy+180
Min Woo Lee+185
2nd Round Match-Ups - A. Bhatia vs K. Mitchell
Type: 2nd Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Akshay Bhatia-110
Keith Mitchell-110
2nd Round Match-Ups - M. McNealy vs M.W. Lee
Type: 2nd Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Maverick McNealy-115
Min Woo Lee-105
Rory McIlroy
Type: Rory McIlroy - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+130
Top 10 Finish-185
Top 20 Finish-550
Keith Mitchell
Type: Keith Mitchell - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+140
Top 10 Finish-160
Top 20 Finish-500
Denny McCarthy
Type: Denny McCarthy - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+185
Top 10 Finish-135
Top 20 Finish-400
Sepp Straka
Type: Sepp Straka - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+225
Top 10 Finish-110
Top 20 Finish-330
Patrick Cantlay
Type: Patrick Cantlay - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+275
Top 10 Finish+110
Top 20 Finish-250
Shane Lowry
Type: Shane Lowry - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+275
Top 10 Finish+125
Top 20 Finish-250
Akshay Bhatia
Type: Akshay Bhatia - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+320
Top 10 Finish+140
Top 20 Finish-200
Ludvig Aberg
Type: Ludvig Aberg - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+320
Top 10 Finish+150
Top 20 Finish-200
Keegan Bradley
Type: Keegan Bradley - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+320
Top 10 Finish+140
Top 20 Finish-200
Justin Thomas
Type: Justin Thomas - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+350
Top 10 Finish+150
Top 20 Finish-185
2nd Round 3 Ball - K. Bradley / S. Lowry / J. Rose
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Shane Lowry+145
Keegan Bradley+165
Justin Rose+230
2nd Round 3 Ball - J. Thomas / R. McIIroy / T. Fleetwood
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+105
Justin Thomas+185
Tommy Fleetwood+300
2nd Round Match-Ups - T. Fleetwood vs S. Straka
Type: 2nd Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Sepp Straka-110
Tommy Fleetwood-110
2nd Round Match-Ups - C. Morikawa vs R. McIIroy
Type: 2nd Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy-120
Collin Morikawa+100
2nd Round Match-Ups - J. Thomas vs S. Lowry
Type: 2nd Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Justin Thomas-125
Shane Lowry+105
Hideki Matsuyama
Type: Hideki Matsuyama - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+400
Top 10 Finish+170
Top 20 Finish-185
2nd Round 3 Ball - R. Henley / L. Aberg / S. Straka
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Russell Henley+165
Ludvig Aberg+170
Sepp Straka+190
2nd Round 3 Ball - V. Hovland / W. Clark / C. Morikawa
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Collin Morikawa+105
Viktor Hovland+190
Wyndham Clark+280
2nd Round Match-Ups - L. Aberg vs X. Schauffele
Type: 2nd Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Ludvig Aberg-110
Xander Schauffele-110
2nd Round Match-Ups - R. Henley vs V. Hovland
Type: 2nd Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Russell Henley-120
Viktor Hovland+100
2nd Round 3 Ball - H. Matsuyama / X. Schauffele / A. Bhatia
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Xander Schauffele+150
Hideki Matsuyama+170
Akshay Bhatia+210
2nd Round 3 Ball - T. Pendrith / T. Finau / M. Homa
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Taylor Pendrith+150
Tony Finau+165
Max Homa+225
2nd Round Match-Ups - H. Matsuyama vs D. Berger
Type: 2nd Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Hideki Matsuyama-120
Daniel Berger+100
2nd Round Match-Ups - T. Pendrith vs T. Finau
Type: 2nd Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Taylor Pendrith-110
Tony Finau-110
2nd Round 3 Ball - N. Dunlap / M. Pavon / S.W. Kim
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Si Woo Kim-140
Matthieu Pavon+230
Nick Dunlap+375
2nd Round 3 Ball - T. Detry / M. Fitzpatrick / C. Bezuidenhout
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Thomas Detry+145
Matt Fitzpatrick+175
Christiaan Bezuidenhout+210
2nd Round 3 Ball - B. Campbell / P. Rodgers / R. Gerard
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Ryan Gerard+160
Patrick Rodgers+180
Brian Campbell+185
2nd Round 3 Ball - G. Higgo / D. Berger / J. Bridgeman
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Daniel Berger+100
Jacob Bridgeman+225
Garrick Higgo+250
2nd Round 3 Ball - J. Highsmith / H. English / R. Hojgaard
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Harris English+165
Rasmus Hojgaard+170
Joe Highsmith+185
2nd Round 3 Ball - B. Griffin / L. Glover / S. Stevens
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Ben Griffin+150
Sam Stevens+165
Lucas Glover+225
2nd Round Match-Ups - R. Hojgaard vs H. English
Type: 2nd Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Harris English-110
Rasmus Hojgaard-110
2nd Round 3 Ball - B. Harman / P. Cantlay / T. Hoge
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Patrick Cantlay-110
Brian Harman+225
Tom Hoge+280
2nd Round 3 Ball - R. MacIntyre / D. Thompson / D. McCarthy
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Denny McCarthy+150
Davis Thompson+175
Robert MacIntyre+200
2nd Round Match-Ups - A. Novak vs D. Thompson
Type: 2nd Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Andrew Novak-110
Davis Thompson-110
2nd Round 3 Ball - C. Kirk / C. Conners / A. Hadwin
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Corey Conners-110
Chris Kirk+220
Adam Hadwin+300
2nd Round 3 Ball - S. Theegala / C. Young / M. Greyserman
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Max Greyserman+170
Cameron Young+180
Sahith Theegala+180
2nd Round Match-Ups - S. Theegala vs C. Young
Type: 2nd Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Sahith Theegala-125
Cameron Young+105
2nd Round 3 Ball - S. Burns / B. Hun An / E. Cole
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Sam Burns+150
Eric Cole+185
Byeong Hun An+190
2nd Round 3 Ball - S. Im / A. Scott / A. Noren
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Sungjae Im+130
Alex Noren+185
Adam Scott+225
2nd Round 3 Ball - A. Eckroat / A. Rai / W. Zalatoris
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Aaron Rai+135
Will Zalatoris+175
Austin Eckroat+220
2nd Round 3 Ball - J.T. Poston / C. Davis / S. Jaeger
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
J.T. Poston+130
Stephan Jaeger+170
Cam Davis+250
2nd Round Match-Ups - A. Rai vs S. Jaeger
Type: 2nd Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Aaron Rai-125
Stephan Jaeger+105
2nd Round Match-Ups - W. Zalatoris vs J.T. Poston
Type: 2nd Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
J.T. Poston-110
Will Zalatoris-110
2nd Round 3 Ball - A. Novak / R. Fowler / G. Woodland
Type: 2nd Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Andrew Novak+130
Rickie Fowler+175
Gary Woodland+240
2nd Round 3 Ball - N. Taylor / E. Van Rooyen / J.J. Spaun
Type: Erik Van Rooyen - Status: OPEN
J J Spaun+150
Erik Van Rooyen+185
Nick Taylor+190
2nd Round 3-Balls - A. Smalley / D. Wu / D. Skinns
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Alex Smalley+120
Dylan Wu+165
David Skinns+300
2nd Round 3-Balls - A. Putnam / V. Perez / R. Fox
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Ryan Fox+160
Andrew Putnam+175
Victor Perez+190
2nd Round 3-Balls - C. Gotterup / T. Kim / A. Potgieter
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Chris Gotterup+135
Tom Kim+170
Aldrich Potgieter+230
2nd Round 3-Balls - S. Power / M. Hughes / F. Molinari
Type: 2nd Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Mackenzie Hughes+105
Seamus Power+130
Francesco Molinari+475
Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
Ludvig Aberg+400
Collin Morikawa+450
Jon Rahm+450
Justin Thomas+550
Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+450
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1600
Xander Schauffele+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Collin Morikawa+2200
Jon Rahm+2200
Joaquin Niemann+3000
Viktor Hovland+3500
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Viktor Hovland+2000
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

Related Post

Nine Things about Augusta National Golf ClubNine Things about Augusta National Golf Club

We now return to our regularly scheduled programming. After the pandemic-delayed Masters Tournament was moved all the way to November in 2020, here we are back in April again, some five months later, for the 2021 iteration. The azaleas will be back in bloom, the patrons will be back (in limited capacity), and the course will have a chance to play fast and bouncy - the usual stuff, with a few new wrinkles. To get you ready for the Masters, here are Nine Things to Know about Augusta National Golf Club. 1. RETURN TO APRIL With more heat necessitating more irrigation in the months leading up to it, and more rain, a November Masters was always going to play softer. Players suddenly had to worry about spinning shots off the fronts of the greens, and the bigger hitters had a bigger advantage than usual. You could see it all the way down the board, starting, of course, with Dustin Johnson, who won by five shots at a record 20 under par. He also set records for most greens in regulation (60) and fewest bogeys (four). Also finishing in the top 20 were big hitters like Justin Thomas (solo fourth), Rory McIlroy (T5), Brooks Koepka (T7), Jon Rahm (T7), Cameron Champ (T19) and Sebastian Muñoz (T19). Meanwhile, modest to shorter hitters did well just to make the cut (past champs Zach Johnson, Mike Weir) or had the weekend off (Brendon Todd, Kevin Kisner, Graeme McDowell, Francesco Molinari). At times - like when long-distance approaches landed on the green and actually stayed there - playing in November was so different that Rahm told Patrick Reed they were going to have to delete the whole experience from their hard drives, "because it's never, ever going to play like this again." Thomas said course knowledge was less of a factor. With no patrons on site, the Par 3 Contest was cancelled. So was the Drive, Chip & Putt, and the Augusta National Women's Amateur. With two hours less daylight, players were sent off the first and 10th tees. This year the kids from the Drive, Chip & Putt National Finals will return with limited fans, and the Augusta National Women's Amateur is back, too. The Par 3 Contest won't happen for the second straight year. 2. ALWAYS INNOVATING As Fenway Park or Wrigley Field are for baseball, Augusta National is a sort of cathedral of golf. There's a timelessness about it. The towering Georgia pines, the spectacular canvas of flowers (azaleas, pink dogwood, etc.), the wildly undulating terrain - it never changes. But it always changes. The club reversed the nines in 1935, the year after Horton Smith won the first Augusta National Invitation Tournament, which wasn't called the Masters until '39. The pond at the 16th hole was built after the damming of a stream at the 11th in '50. And after Tiger Woods went 18 under to win by a dozen shots in 1997, the course gradually went from less than 7,000 yards to almost 7,500. "Well, Augusta National has been at the forefront of trying to keep it competitive, keep it fair, keep it fun, and they have been at the forefront of lengthening the golf course," Tiger Woods said last year. "Granted, they have the property; they can do virtually whatever they want. Complete autonomy. It’s kind of nice. "But also, they have been at the forefront of trying to keep it exciting," he continued. "As the game has evolved, we have has gotten longer, equipment’s changed, and they are trying to keep it so that the winning score is right around that 12- to 18-under par mark, and they have." 3. PROUD AMATEUR TRADITION Bobby Jones, the consummate amateur, co-founded the club (with Clifford Roberts). This year's amateur contingent will feature U.S. Amateur Tyler Strafaci, whose grandfather also competed in the Masters, U.S. Amateur runner-up Ollie Osborne and British Amateur champ Joe Long. Fun fact: Then-amateur Bryson DeChambeau was just one off the lead as he stood on the 18th tee Friday in 2016, but he triple-bogeyed the hole and ultimately finished 21st. He turned pro the next week. The Masters started recognizing the low amateur in 1952. A player must make the 36-hole cut to receive the prize, which is now a silver cup. The best finish by an amateur at Augusta National remains Ken Venturi's second-place finish in 1956, when he entered the final round with a four-shot lead but shot 80 on Sunday. Because of cancellations caused by COVID, there are just three amateurs in this year's Masters, tying the fewest in tournament history. There were also just three in 2008 - when Colt Knost, winner of the U.S. Amateur and U.S. Amateur Public Links, turned pro before the Masters - and 1942. 4. OLD AND NEW Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player will be the Honorary Starters this year as Augusta National honors its past champions. In a new twist, so will Lee Elder, who in 1975 received death threats when he became the first Black player to compete in the tournament. Winners come back for life, spinning yarns about the old days at the Champions' Dinner. More history: The clubhouse dates to 1854 as a private home and is believed to be the first concrete house built in the South. Fruitland Nurseries, which was bought as the future Augusta National Golf Club site in 1931, billed itself as the "South's oldest nursery," dating to 1856. The course was closed and used to raise cattle and turkeys for three years during the war effort of World War II. On the other hand, Augusta National has always been a place to identify the game's next wave, from 21-year-old mega-talent Tiger Woods in '97 - still the youngest ever to win - to Tianlang Guan, who was just 14 when he became the youngest to make the cut in 2013. 5. ON THE CUTTING EDGE Longtime network partner CBS used just six cameras, covering only holes 15-18, in its first tournament broadcast in '56. Nowadays the network uses 75-100 cameras to cover all 18 holes. The '66 Masters was the first tournament to use a stop-action technique seen only in football; 2001 gave us the first golf telecast to use HDTV; and the 2010 Masters was the first major sporting event produced and presented in 3D on television and the Internet. Ancillary feeds like "Masters on The Range" and "Amen Corner" broke ground, as did the club's 2019 commitment to capture every shot on camera. And speaking of innovations, the state-of-the-art press building, which opened in 2017, features white columns and gray stonework; a huge atrium with skylight; grand staircase; a wall of windows opening up to the driving range; 350 seats; and men's and women's locker rooms. It's a far cry from the reporters' old tent and Quonset hut, and even a far cry from the press building that one reporter dubbed it "our Taj Mahal" when it opened off the first fairway in 1990. 6. REVERED ARCHITECTURE Dr. Alister Mackenzie of Scotland was the original architect and brought design concepts inspired by some of the classics in his home country, including the Old Course at St. Andrews. He would design masterpieces from coast to coast - Cypress Point in Monterey, California stands out - and spanning the globe. (This in an era in which globe-trotting was not easy.) Tom Fazio helped the club add yardage and trees for the 2002 Masters, and more wrinkles arrive seemingly non-stop. The newly lengthened fifth hole played to nearly 500 yards and elicited copious bogeys last year. The par-5 13th will reportedly get a new back tee, although it may not be ready yet. The club considers every detail - Bobby Jones, for example, initially disliked the fairway bunkers at the fifth hole - adjusting on the fly where needed. How it might adapt after DeChambeau makes his mark this year, assuming he does, is anybody's guess and one of the dominant pretournament storylines. 7. EVERY HOLE HAS A STORY It was dubbed "the shot heard 'round the world" when Gene Sarazen made an albatross at the par-5 15th hole in 1935. He won a playoff the next day and said the shot wouldn't have meant anything without the title. He's probably right. Jeff Maggert made the first albatross at the 13th hole in 1994, and Louis Oosthuizen made an albatross at the second hole in 2012 to get in a playoff with eventual winner Bubba Watson. Both shots were soon forgotten relative to Sarazen's. More storytelling: Augusta National co-founder Clifford Roberts and renowned sportswriter Grantland Rice hosted a private train party for the official opening of the club in 1933. Herbert Warren Wind, another sportswriter, coined the term "Amen Corner." Oh, and every hole is named in a sort of homage to the old nursery: Tea Olive for the first hole, Pink Dogwood for the second, Flowering Peach for the third, and so on. The most famous is arguably Golden Bell, the short, par-3 12th hole, where club selection is key and train wrecks are not uncommon, often separating the winners from the also-rans. 8. GUILE IS REWARDED First-timer Fuzzy Zoeller won the tournament in 1979, but he's the only newbie to don the green jacket. More often than not, players require seasoning to grasp the course's intricacies. Veterans sometimes turn back the clock at Augusta National: Jack in '86, Tiger in 2019. You also get compelling sidebars like Bernhard Langer making the cut last year at age 61. Don't count out Phil Mickelson, 50. The flip side is the near-misses that tug on the heartstrings, like 48-year-old Kenny Perry bogeying the last two holes to fall into a playoff, which he lost to Angel Cabrera, in 2009. More agonizing still was veteran Greg Norman's collapse as he lost a six-shot lead and Nick Faldo won in 1996. 9. YOUTH IS IRREPRESSIBLE Woods was 21 when he won in '97. Jordan Spieth was a marginally older 21 when he won in 2015, tying Woods' 72-hole scoring record of 18-under 270. They're the two youngest winners ever. It helps to be too young to have scar tissue. Conversely, as with the oldies, the kids have suffered their own wipeouts. A shellshocked Spieth made a quadruple-bogey 7 at the 12th hole and lost the '16 Masters in his title defense. Brandt Snedeker, then 27, shot a final-round 77 to finish T3, four back of winner Trevor Immelman, in 2008. Rory McIlroy, then 21, shot a final-round 80 to lose in 2011. Ah, well, maybe tears are inevitable at Augusta for both the winners and the losers. The trick is just being young enough to survive it and come back next year.

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