| Could
an amateur prevail at Augusta?
Matt Kuchar unpacked
his bags in the Crow's Nest, the cozy quarters atop the clubhouse at Augusta National
where Jack Nicklaus, Mark O'Meara and Ben Crenshaw all stayed when they were amateurs.
He drove down
Magnolia Lane, walked the same fairways as Gene Sarazen, Sam Snead and Ben Hogan,
and had a tee time Thursday morning with Tiger Woods. If
that's not enough to make Kuchar's smile wider and his eyes a little brighter,
just mention the Amateur Dinner on Wednesday night at the Masters. "You
get all riled up," he said. "There's just something special about being an amateur.
At the U.S. Open and the British Open, you're just another contestant. At Augusta,
you feel like you're representing Bobby Jones." Charlie
Yates is the host of the Wednesday night dinner that honors the Masters' amateurs
-- the U.S. Amateur champion and runner-up, British Amateur champion and the winners
of the U.S. Mid-Amateur and U.S. Amateur Public Links. Yates
won the British Amateur in 1938, played in the first Masters alongside Jones,
and is believed to be the only person who has seen all 62 Masters tournaments.
He tells the young players about Jones' contributions to amateur golf, how the
Masters began and one fact that essentially becomes a challenge. No
amateur has ever won the Masters. "It's
a huge pep talk," Woods said, recalling his two trips to Augusta as an amateur.
"Every amateur who is alive and can be at the tournament is there. They get you
all fired up about the fact no amateur has ever won." Frank
Stranahan came within two strokes of Jimmy Demaret in 1947. Billy Joe Patton finished
one stroke out of the 1954 playoff between Snead and Hogan. Ken Venturi's name
will be brought up before dessert is served. Venturi
had a four-stroke lead over Cary Middlecoff going into the final round in 1956
but shot a staggering 80. Jack Burke Jr. wound up winning by a stroke after starting
the last round nine strokes back.
Still, the Amateur
Dinner is full of hope, not disaster.
"Everyone comes
away feeling like they can win," Kuchar said. "I came away feeling like I could
win. I couldn't wait to play."
Kuchar played like
he took the message to heart. The former U.S. Amateur champion finished at even-par
288, the first amateur to make the cut since 1992 and the best score by an amateur
since Rick Fehr in 1984.
He finished in a
tie for 21st, which earned him another trip to Augusta. He will be part of the
deepest and most talented crop of amateurs at the Masters in years.
It includes Sergio
Garcia, the 19-year-old British Amateur champion with the flair and confidence
of another Spanish master from 20 years ago, Seve Ballesteros.
Also making his
Masters debut is Hank Kuehne, the U.S. Amateur champion who is said to hit the
ball even farther than Woods.
But is Wednesday
night's pep talk worth listening to? Can an amateur really win the Masters at
a time when the PGA Tour has so much depth?
"Anything is possible,
but it's highly unlikely," said O'Meara, the defending champion. "Even though
the amateurs are very talented now, professionals have a lot more experience.
I think the possibilities are very remote."
No one told Kuchar
that last year.
He was just six
strokes off the lead going into the final round and made an early run before finishing
nine strokes back.
"When you see somebody
that you play against every week in your college tournaments and you see how much
success they have out there, it kind of makes you feel like you're not that far
off," Kuehne said. "He had a great year, so it gave me a little bit of confidence.
It's proof that it's possible for an amateur to come and play well at Augusta."
Garcia,
who is expected to turn pro after the Masters, made a cut on the European tour
at age 14, won the Catalonian Open at 17 and last year tied for third at a Nike
Tour event. He played Kuehne last week outside Atlanta and beat him 6 and 4.
Kuchar lost to Garcia
in the quarterfinals of the U.S. Amateur and had not been playing well. Then he
showed up at the Bay Hill Invitational and got to within five strokes of the lead
on Saturday before falling back into a tie for 60th with Lee Westwood and Colin
Montgomerie.
"They can win," Woods said.
"They are young, they are brash and they will be just fine."
Throughout the week,
Garcia, Kuchar and Kuehne will end the day together in the Crow's Nest, a 30-by-40-foot
room with four cubicles, five beds, one bathroom.
If the Amateur Dinner
doesn't inspire them, the path to the Crow's Nest should. It heads right toward
the Champions Locker Room, then veers left up a flight of stairs.
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