Tough
Friday looms at Masters
The cold rain that soaked
Augusta National didn't just disrupt the Masters. It might have also washed out
the chances many players had of beating Tiger Woods.
A soggy, long course and
the promise of a numbing 36-hole marathon Friday leaves the future of this Masters
in the hands of a few young, long-hitting players.
Woods was going to be tough
enough to beat under any conditions. It might be impossible now for all but a
handful of would-be challengers.
"If you're not under
32 and can hit the ball 280, you've got no chance," Loren Roberts said.
For the record, Roberts
is 47, and two years ago he averaged 254 yards off the tee at Augusta National.
The "Boss of the Moss"
putts so well he finished third here three years ago. He's the kind of player
who might have won the Masters before they moved back tees and added yardage to
beef up the course.
Now, he's among a group
of players who will tee it up Friday knowing they have almost no chance on a 7,290-yard
course so wet that it will seem like it's playing closer to 8,000 yards.
"There's 10 guys who
can win it now, you think?" Roberts said.
Maybe not even that.
Woods, of course, is the
prohibitive favorite to win his third straight green jacket. Look at the other
92 players in the field, though, and most can be quickly eliminated as serious
contenders.
Most of them are proven
players like Nick Price, Mike Weir, Justin Leonard or Fred Funk. But none of them
hit the ball long and high - the combination Woods and guys like Ernie Els and
Davis Love III have.
The fairways will be soft
from four days of rain that dumped nearly 4 inches of rain on the course. The
rough will be wet and deep because it hasn't been cut since it started raining.
The combination will prove
lethal to most players. Some seem almost to be dreading the thought of trying
to compete on an uneven playing field.
"I always look forward
to playing the Masters but playing this long a course under these conditions is
no fun time," Funk said.
Funk was 163rd on the PGA
Tour in driving distance last year, but still managed to contend in the final
round of the PGA Championship before finishing fourth.
That's not likely on a water-logged
Augusta National
"The problem with me
is I can't hit it as far," Funk said. "I just have to find some part
of my game that is working. Hopefully, it will be the chipping and putting."
In a Wednesday practice
round, Scott Hoch hit what he called a "killer drive" and still needed
a 3-wood to reach the par-4 18th hole, which was stretched last year to 465 yards.
Weir also hit a 3-wood,
to a hole that a few years ago was a driver and wedge for many players.
"So if all of a sudden
a 460 hole is playing like 510, you're going uphill into the wind on a cold day,"
Weir said. "That's pretty close to 8,000."
David Toms got in two practice
rounds and only made one bogey in each. Still, he found himself gazing wistfully
at places the tees used to be.
"I was hoping there
would be some common sense and they would move some of the tees up so we can have
a fair tournament, bring some more people into it," Toms said.
The decision to play 36
holes on Friday after rain washed out the opening round could pose as many problems
as the muck and mire on the course itself.
It promises to be a long,
cold, wet day.
"We're going to play
about 15,000 yards and about 10,000 of it is going to be wet," Rocco Mediate.
"Fitness is a good thing."
A few players saw the unusual
chance to play the first two rounds of a major on the day as something positive.
Start making some birdies,
and you never know where momentum might lead you.
"If you're stroking
the ball well it's a blessing," Tom Lehman said. "You get on a roll
and you can play half the tournament in one day and put yourself in good position."
Start playing badly, though,
and the tournament will be over the same day it began.
In the end, there was only
one thing certain.
"Let's face it,"
Els said. "Tiger's going to be there."
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