Hot
press conference expected for Johnson
The chairman of Augusta National traditionally holds a news conference on the
eve of the Masters, a time to probe into the minds of the men in green jackets
without getting much in return.
Jack Stephens once was asked
for an update on when the club might allow the front nine of the Masters to be
televised.
"Progress is slow,"
Stephens said.
Question: Why is progress
so slow? And what kind of discussions have you had with CBS?
"Well," Stephens
said in his rich, Arkansas drawl, "progress is slow because we don't want
it to happen."
Expect no less Wednesday
when Hootie Johnson holds what figures to be the most highly charged press conference
in the 67-year history of the Masters.
Tiger Woods is defending
his title, but most of the media attention is on how Johnson will defend the all-male
membership at perhaps the most famous golf club on Earth.
Johnson revealed more about
Augusta National in his 932-word statement on July 9 than he ever does during
his Wednesday news conference.
It was that statement that
set the vitriolic course for the membership debate, especially when Johnson said
there might be a time when Augusta National Golf Club has a female member, but
it will be on the club's timetable and "not at the point of a bayonet."
Don't look for him to bring
a bayonet of his own on Wednesday.
Johnson is expected to read
a statement at the start of his press conference.
He probably will take some
questions, hardly any of them about the canyon-sized bunker on No. 5 or whether
Augusta plans to enlarge its driving range.
Where it goes from there
is anyone's guess. But if tradition holds form - and tradition is everything at
the Masters - the answers will not break any new ground.
Johnson indicated as much
in 1999 during his first news conference as chairman.
Question: If you wouldn't
mind telling us, how many African-Americans are there at Augusta National, and
how many women members? And if there are no women members, why aren't there?
"Well, that's a club
matter, ma'am, and all club matters are private," Johnson replied.
Club matters apparently
go beyond who gets invited to join.
Johnson was asked a year
later, after Arnold Palmer became the first former champion to be a regular member,
what the King shot in the annual club tournament.
"We don't discuss member
matters," he replied without even the hint of a smile.
It's all part of the privacy
that shrouds Augusta National, no matter the issue, no matter the chairman, dating
to Clifford Roberts when the Masters began in 1934.
Even some public topics
are answered with few words, if that many, such as the time Stephens was asked
about the cigar craze in 1998.
Question: Any thoughts on
making part of the course, or all of the course, no smoking?
Stephens quietly removed
a pack of Winstons and his cigarette lighter from his jacket and placed them on
the table during a 1998 press conference.
"No sir," said
Will Nicholson, chairman of the competition committees, for anyone who needed
clarification. "We're not going to make it no smoking."
Another time, Stephens was
grilled on the Masters' old policy of live television for only the back nine at
Augusta National, how it robs a worldwide audience of the drama that can unfold
over the first nine holes.
Question: Do you watch the
Super Bowl?
"Fourth quarter,"
Stephens replied.
Johnson, as with other chairmen
before him, will expound endlessly on the competition itself or constant changes
to the golf course. He has defended some of his decisions, such as the letter
he sent last year to three aging champions asking them to no longer play.
But there is always an out.
Question: What would you
think of getting some past champions together on Wednesday morning for a competition?
"I would not think
of it at all," Johnson said.
And why would that be?
"I don't have to give
you a reason," he replied. "Mr. Roberts wouldn't give you a reason."
Augusta National, however,
is not immune to change.
CBS began televising the
front nine in 2000 when storm delays caused the leaders to tee off when its broadcast
came on, and the Masters now features 18-hole TV coverage on the weekend.
"That just shows you
persistence pays off," Johnson said last year. "We knew that there was
a great demand for it, and we just decided that we ought to satisfy that demand."
In Johnson's first year
as chairman in 1999, he ordered a second cut of rough and significantly altered
three holes - adding 25 yards on Nos. 2 and 17, and planting a cluster of trees
on the par-5 15th to make it harder to reach the green in two.
Question: Why were these
done now rather than last year or two years ago or two years down the road?
"Well, we just hadn't
been comfortable in making them," Johnson said. "It just takes us a
while to make up our minds."
That usually applies only
to tournament issues, not membership issues.
And even if it did, Johnson
wouldn't tell.
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