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Dustin Johnson breaks scoring record in Masters win

AUGUSTA, Ga. - All week it wasn't just the Masters, it was the stripped-down acoustic version of the Masters. You could hear the biophany of bird life chirping, unseen golf carts motoring, the train whistles coming in on the breeze. The only other audio was the regular thwack of a golf shot and the hissing vapor trail of a ball flying through the air. The clubs did almost all the talking. It was a Dustin Johnson kind of week. In a game obsessed with youth, Johnson, 36, is just coming into his prime, a reminder that great careers are revealed over decades, not social media hot takes. After carrying a four-shot lead over three players into Sunday, Johnson, whose languid strut and taciturn nature recall an Old West cowboy, started slowly but steadied himself to shoot 68 and win by five. His 20-under total breaks the Masters record of 18, shared by Tiger Woods and Jordan Spieth. RELATED: Final leaderboard | What’s in DJ’s bag? Sungjae Im and Cameron Smith shot 69 to tie for second at 15 under. Johnson hugged his brother/caddie Austin on the 18th green, and Austin started crying first, the emotion soon spreading to his brother. They grew up an hour away, close enough to know all about Augusta National but not close enough to actually play it. "Well, as we’ve all seen, he’s an amazing athlete," said Woods, whose title defense ended with a 76 that featured a 10 at the par-3 12th hole. "He’s one of the first guys to ever bring athleticism to our sport. DJ has just an amazing ability to stay calm in tough moments ... and we all know as past champions how hard it is, the emotions we have to deal with out there." The day featured only fleeting suspense. Im cut the lead to one after Johnson made back-to-back bogeys, but Johnson restored order at the par-3 sixth, converting a short birdie putt. Smith made things interesting with a front-nine 33, including wild birdies at Nos. 7 and 9, but Johnson was always going to have to come back to the chase pack, and instead went the other way. There were polite claps amongst the 100 or so members - retired NFL greats Peyton Manning and Lynn Swan among them - plus wives and girlfriends and others following the final group. Absent the context you might have thought it was the club championship. By the time Smith, marching up the 15th fairway, looked back and saw that it was Johnson who was close to the pin on the 14th green, it was all but over. Smith frowned and looked down at the grass, Johnson made the six-foot putt, and the lead was five strokes with four holes remaining. This rain-delayed, pandemic-delayed Masters was essentially over. Was Johnson's arrival on this stage, the green jacket ceremony in Butler Cabin, also delayed? Not really. Before Woods, it was widely accepted that golfers peaked in their 30s. By that metric, Johnson is right on time. This is what he had in mind all those years ago when he honed his game at Weed Hill driving range in Columbia, South Carolina, just an hour or so from Augusta National. Johnson knew of the special tournament just down the road, even if he never had the connections to actually play here until he qualified for his first Masters in 2009. "Obviously growing up in Columbia, in high school, I hit a lot of golf balls at Weed Hill," he said in a rare reflective moment. "So definitely remember hitting up there in the dark. They had lights on the range, and most nights I would shut the lights off when I was leaving." It paid off. Johnson was twice a first-team All American at Coastal Carolina, where he won seven times, and his immediate success on TOUR was not unexpected. He won the 2008 Turning Stone Resort Championship and kept winning each year like clockwork from there. He had major championship type game, but the majors eluded him, sometimes gruesomely. All anyone wanted to talk about at Augusta was his 0-for-4 record closing them out when he had at least a share of the 54-hole lead - the gum on his shoe since the 2010 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, when he lost his three-shot lead with a second-hole triple bogey, shot 82, and finished T8. He almost atoned for his mistake at the PGA Championship at Whistling Straits two months later, but unintentionally grounded his club in a bunker on the 72nd hole. The ensuing two-stroke penalty kept him out of a playoff with Bubba Watson and eventual champion Martin Kaymer. Johnson had one hand on the trophy at two other U.S. Opens, but couldn't keep the lead there, either. A fellow player, of all things, mentioned these lapses when Johnson took the lead into the final round of the PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park in August, and it happened again. The snakebit leader shot a solid 68 only to lose to 23-year-old Collin Morikawa (64) by two. But good luck asking Johnson to get worked up about any of this. "That stuff doesn't bother me," he has said more than once. He just keeps on giving himself chances. The Masters marked the fifth time in his last seven TOUR starts that Johnson had held the 54-hole lead/co-lead, a run in which he'd already won THE NORTHERN TRUST and TOUR Championship to take the FedExCup. He also lost a wild head-to-head showdown with Jon Rahm at the BMW Championship. "I think I’ve got a good game plan," Johnson said from the stately, wood-paneled interview room in Augusta's cavernous press building Saturday night. "I’m not going to change it." And he hasn't. Instead of getting into a war of words over his major letdowns, the Johnson way has been to answer with blistered drives, laser-like approaches, and an improved putting stroke built with input from his caddie/brother Austin, and a lesson from World Golf Hall of Famer Greg Norman. And now he's gone and converted a 54-hole lead at the major players covet most just three months after his fitness for doing so was questioned more publicly than ever. Norman, of course, never did win here. He bled away a six-shot advantage and more to lose to Nick Faldo in '96. Rory McIlroy collapsed on the back nine and carded a final-round 80 in 2011, and Jordan Spieth quadruple-bogeyed the 12th hole to lose in 2016. Both lost four-shot leads. There are no guarantees at Augusta, or anywhere. At the 2017 World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions, Johnson shot 77 and became the second player in TOUR history to lose a six-shot 54-hole lead. He won the Sentry Tournament of Champions in his next start, five weeks later. Johnson is like the metal man in "Terminator 2" who keeps moving ever forward even as he keeps getting holes blown through him. He forgets quickly. He's a fast healer. This was Johnson's second major (2016 U.S. Open) and 24th TOUR win. He pulls even with Woods for most consecutive seasons with a win to start a career with 14, and moves from 17th to first in the FedExCup, which is where he ended last season. We are seeing the peak years of perhaps the most gifted golfer of his generation; Johnson's best may be better than anyone else's. The Weed Hill driving range closed in 2015, sold for development. But Bobby Weed, who built it when he was in high school to work on his own game, has gone on to a successful golf course design business. Johnson, meanwhile, glides and strides ever forward into the golf history books. His clubs have never spoken so loudly.

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Golf in these times: FloridaGolf in these times: Florida

ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. – It’s 2 p.m. on Monday. That means the Mark McCumber-designed course at Marsh Creek Country Club is open for play. No tee times. No greens fees. No carts. Just walk up and pick out one of the six set of tees that awaits on every hole. Our foursome includes trivia night buddies Dillon, Kevin and Burt, the latter having recently performed in a production of Horton Foote’s “The Young Man from Atlantaâ€� at the Limelight, a community theatre just north of the Historic District. Yes, he’s the entertainer of the group. They each have push carts. I’m carrying. I make a mental note to search Amazon that night in hopes of rectifying my mistake. GOLF IN THESE TIMES • California: Ben Everill plays historic Rancho Park just before city courses in Los Angeles are shut down • Massachusetts: Jim McCabe sees the start of golf season delayed at Presidents Golf Course • Arizona: Rob Bolton sets the scene from an Outlaw Tour event at Western Skies Golf Club • North Carolina: Helen Ross reflects on memories of golf in her home state It’s the first time I’ve seen the guys since everything changed. I had set up Burt with two tickets for THE PLAYERS Championship. Luckily for him, he wanted to attend the first round. “Had a blast,â€� he said. A few hours later, there was no live golf to watch — for the rest of that week, then for the next month, then the month after that, and now who knows how long. But there is still golf to play, at least for those fortunate to have open courses and the ability to visit them. Florida fits the description … for now. Given how packed Marsh Creek’s parking lot was the few times I had driven by, it was obvious that others also are eager to get out, all of them of course employing social distancing and the other necessary safety precautions. Even the time I saw eight people on the smallish range, they were evenly spread out, the new rule of thumb we currently live by. Six feet now means something more than just another putt I’m doomed to miss. “Heard they were booked up on Saturday,â€� Dillon says. “I don’t think I’ve ever heard that happening before.â€� “This is the height of our season, so regardless of the situation, we’re usually packed this time of year,â€� Marsh Creek director of golf Cary Splane tells me later. “But we definitely haven’t lost many rounds.â€� It certainly was starting to get crowded on Monday. Burt’s friend Frank from Michigan’s Upper Peninsula joined us right before we teed off, and our fivesome gets going. We chat a little bit about the coronavirus pandemic, but it’s not the major topic of discussion. Even so, when we reach the green at the par-4 opening hole, someone from the previous day had left a stray ball about 10 feet from the pin. Admittedly, an odd place to leave a ball, but still … a freebie. “Any other day, I’d pick it up and put it in my bag,â€� Kevin says. We’re now standing on the second tee. It’s not a shot I look forward to hitting – a forced carry over marshland front and right. I’m usually good for at least one lost ball. But just as we’re about to hit, Bob – my neighbor from across the street, the one with the stylish new makeover to the front of his house — is finishing up on the first green. We invite him to join, giving us the potentially ponderous sixsome. I then pump two into the marsh. No worries – I carry plenty of spares. The sixsome is fun, but there are others behind us catching up fast. So one hole later, we split into threesomes. I’m in the first group with Bob and Kevin. Energy-wise, they’re each dragging a bit, with good reason. Earlier in the day, Kevin had played tennis at the club’s nearby courts for two hours. Meanwhile, Bob had participated in a 45-minute softball workout, plus he went fishing over the weekend, traveling 75 miles out to sea to catch dolphin and skipjack tuna. I’m guessing each is in training for the next season of American Ninja Warrior. I ask Bob about playing golf during this pandemic. Did it give him any pause for concern? “Not at all,â€� he said. “It’s nice to walk and get some exercise. And it’s a good way to socialize without getting too close to anybody.â€� Certainly, I’m not getting close to Bob or Kevin. I’ve yet to find the fairway with any of my tee shots. Even so, these two hours on the course have been terrific, a chance to escape from my CNN binge-watching, to feel normal again during a time in which nothing seems normal. Or as Cary describes it: “It’s one of the last bastions of normality we have, playing golf instead of losing our minds at home. We call it a day after nine holes, and then I wait in the parking lot for the other threesome to arrive. In addition to his acting skills, Burt is also a musician. He tells me he’s writing a song about the current state of the world – and more to the point, the current state of his mind. “I’ve been thinking about these lyrics,â€� he says. I just lost my longitude I don’t know where I’m going to Like a pirate learning how to pray “Everybody’s kind of lost their bearings,â€� he explains. And yet on this Monday, he found his way to the golf course. It’s a safe harbor. “Golf is a great microcosm for life,â€� Burt says. “You experience ups and downs. You can’t get too excited and you can’t get too depressed. When you make a birdie, you better not chortle because you know you’ll make a bogey at some point. It’s really great therapy for dealing with times like these.â€� Adds Dillon, who often plays golf alone: “It provides me quiet time and reflection.â€� I look over to see Bob reading the instructions on how to fold up his new push cart. It’s a six-step process and evidently requires an engineering degree. And then a clatter of balls – Frank from Michigan accidently left open the large pocket of his golf bag, and a dozen or so spilled out onto the asphalt. So much for quiet reflection. And now a guy driving a white sedan pulls into the parking lot and rolls down his window. “I think I left my wedge somewhere on the ninth hole,â€� he said. “You guys didn’t happen to pick it up?â€� Alas, we didn’t. But the question is oddly comforting. So much uncertainty right now. So much fear. Things have changed. In golf, we no longer shake hands or touch flagsticks or drive two to a cart. But at least we can still count on someone leaving behind a wedge.

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