Nick
Price wins Augusta Par 3 contest
Sometimes, winning at Augusta isn't the ultimate goal. As champion of the
Masters par-3 contest Wednesday, Nick Price knows the feeling. Price
defeated Mark Calcavecchia on the second hole of a playoff to earn one of the
more dubious titles in golf. No player who has won the par-3 contest has gone
on to win the main tournament that year. Price
and Calcavecchia tied with scores of 5-under 22 on the cute little course, located
just behind the 10th hole at Augusta National. Price
won when Calcavecchia dumped two shots into the huge lake on the second playoff
hole. After the second water ball, Calcavecchia reached over and shook Price's
hand. While Price
won the tournament, the star of the day was Toshi Izawa of Japan. Izawa
made holes-in-one on Nos. 5 and 6 and joined Claude Harmon (1968) as only the
second player to ace back-to-back holes on the par-3 course. Izawa
also made quadruple-bogey on No. 4 and finished at 1 under. ``I
don't want to use up all my luck today,'' he said. ``I want to save somefor the
tournament.'' NO
CHANGE HERE Augusta
National chairman Hootie Johnson said the fifth hole needs to be lengthened, but
it won't come at the expense of moving the fourth green, as many people thought
it might. ``It
will probably involve moving the bunkers,'' Johnson said. It
takes only 230 yards to carry the fairway bunkers on the left side of the dogleg-left
hole. Moving the traps further down the fairway or enlarging them would demand
more from the drive. In
the most drastic overhaul of the course ever, nine holes were lengthened for this
year's tournament, but No. 5 was left alone. ``We're
always going to have changes here,'' Johnson said. ``We have got todo something
with No. 5, no question about it.'' STATE
OF THE BEAR Jack
Nicklaus thinks his days of being competitive at the highest levels of golf are
nearing an end. This
year, back problems forced Nicklaus to skip the Masters. He believes his game
right now is not ``for public consumption.'' ``I'll
never play world-class golf again,'' he said. ``I'd like to play some. I'd like
to play some senior golf. I enjoy playing. I really don't care about whether I'm
a world-class golfer again. It's not important to me.'' It's
an odd turn for the Golden Bear, who has long discarded the notion that he's getting
close to playing at the Masters more for show than for real competition. Last
year, the 62-year-old Nicklaus missed the cut for only the fourth time in 42 trips
to Augusta. He
finished sixth in 1998. In 2000, he shot 70 in the second round to briefly get
in contention. Despite
his negative outlook, Nicklaus says he won't rule out returning to the Masters
next year. ``If
I can play and play decently, I'd love to come back,'' Nicklaus said. ``If I can't,
I'm not going to go out there with 4-woods and 3-woods on everyhole'' for approach
shots into the green. PERKS
PICK Because he
passed the test on the Island Hole, Craig Perks gets to see how another of the
toughest par 3s in golf plays. It's
No. 12 at the Masters. Perks drew an invitation to Augusta after he won The Players
Championship three weeks ago with a thrilling finish that included a birdie on
the famed 17th. So,
which hole is more difficult? ``I'd
say 12 here is going to be more difficult, because there's a smaller margin for
error,'' Perks said after a practice round. ``But 17 at TPC is more nerve-racking,
because you know it's coming, you know it's coming, and then it's there.'' On
12 at Augusta, the heart of Amen Corner, players must clear the water and get
the ball to land and stay on a narrow, multitiered green. Unpredictable, shifting
winds make it hard to know which club to hit, or which direction to start the
ball. Tom Weiskopf made a 13 there in 1980. On
17 at Sawgrass, wind can play a factor, but usually it's nerves that play a bigger
role. A seemingly simple 140-yard hole becomes a lot more difficult with a tournament
and a $1 million first prize on the line. Having
tamed the first challenge, Perks looks forward to the next. ``Should
be a piece of cake, right?'' he said jokingly. The
answer awaits, starting Thursday. |