
20 Things you didn’t know about Augusta Week – #16 amazed me!
20 Things you didn’t know about Augusta Week – #16 amazed me!
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Every Golfer in the World looks forward to the first week in April and Augusta Week!
It has all the hype and drama of a Steven Spielberg Movie and the serenity and beauty of Princess Grace of Monaco! The final 9 on Sunday at the Masters has to be one of the most-watched events on TV! Here are 20 things you did not know about the tournament, just in time to impress your buddies on Sunday. Brought to you by Jamie Kennedy and Will Pearson writing for EuropeanTour.com

So much to see – So little time!
With little more than a week left before the 2015 Masters Tournament kicks off, europeantour.com uncovers some facts and figures about Augusta National and the year’s first Major that will amaze you.
1) There was once a Presidential hostage situation.
In 1983, then-United States President Ronald Reagan played Augusta National as a guest of his Secretary of State, George Schultz. An Augusta native, Charles Harris, interrupted their round by crashing his truck through the club’s gates, demanding to see the President. Harris then held hostages at gunpoint in the pro shop for two hours before US Secret Service agents eventually subdued him.
2) Caddies play free.
Each year, on the last day the course is open before closing for the summer, Augusta National’s caddies can play for free. All-day.

Caddies play for free on the last day of the season!
3) Augusta’s 19th hole.
When Alister MacKenzie originally created Augusta National, he included a short 19th hole, named ‘Double or Quits,’ designed to settle on-course wagers. At 90 yards long, it was the only hole not named after a tree or shrub and was used as the practice putting surface during the inaugural Master’s Tournament in 1934.
4) Amen Corner is not holes 11, 12, and 13.
This is a common misconception. Amen Corner is actually the approach to the 11th, all of the iconic, par three 12th, and the tee shot on the 13th.

Amen Corner.
20 Things you didn’t know about Augusta Week – #16 amazed me!
5) Affordable Augusta.
An original membership share at Augusta National cost $350. That equates to roughly $4,000 in today’s money.
6) The myth of the Champions Dinner.
While the previous year’s Masters winner does get to pick the menu for the famous Champions Dinner on the Tuesday night of tournament week, former champions don’t have to eat it. Players are free to order off the clubhouse menu, and many do. After Sandy Lyle won the Masters in 1988, he served haggis, leaving six-time winner Jack Nicklaus to reflect: “Oh, I hope he enjoys it.”

Master’s Dinner – Winner Decides.
7) Clifford Roberts.
After falling ill at the age of 83, Augusta National co-founder Clifford Roberts ended his life in 1977 on the slope next to Ike’s Pond on the par-three course, a spot he dearly loved.
8) The anti-Par Three Contest curse.
It’s common knowledge that no player has ever won the pre-tournament Par Three Contest and gone on to win the Masters proper. However, four players have won the nine-hole shoot-out and gone on to win a Major Championship that same year: Tom Watson (1982 US Open and The Open), Hubert Green (1985 US PGA), David Toms (2001 US PGA), and Louis Oosthuizen (2010 Open). Not all bad, then.
9) The Masters Long Drive Contest.
Before the Par Three Contest became an annual ritual in 1960, players at the Masters used to compete in a long drive competition and complete accuracy challenges and best-ball matches in the days before the event.
10) Beware the first-round leader.
In 78 editions of the Masters, just four players have gone wire-to-wire to win the Green Jacket (Craig Wood, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, and Raymond Floyd). There hasn’t been a wire-to-wire winner at Augusta in 38 years.
11) Unbelievable, Jeff!
There have been 24 holes in one in the fabled history of the Master’s Tournament. However, only one of those has come at the long par-three fourth hole. American Jeff Sluman achieved this rarest of Augusta aces on ‘Flowering Crab Apple’ in 1992, holing out with a four-iron from a distance of 213 yards.
20 Things you didn’t know about Augusta Week – #16 amazed me!
12) Better Ball.
If you take the best score on each hole over the course of Masters history, the scorecard would add up to 32, with just 16 shots needed on each nine. The highest eclectic score is 166.
13) Fantastic Four.
Of all the players who’ve played more than 30 rounds at the Masters, only four have a scoring average below par: Tiger Woods – 70.86, Phil Mickelson – 71.21, Fred Couples – 71.91, and Jack Nicklaus – 71.98.
14) Switching Nines.
Augusta National’s front and back nines were switched after the inaugural Masters in 1934. Yet, records show Alister MacKenzie had first conceived of the current configuration, then changed the plan before construction in 1931, possibly to have the 18th (the present ninth) finish near the ‘new’ clubhouse. The nines were reversed, to their present order, because the lowest parts of the course (today’s tenth to 12th holes) were susceptible to frost and drainage issues. Switching the nines allowed play to start earlier – and yes, for more drama as the round neared completion.
15) Alister MacKenzie never saw a Master’s.
Augusta’s original course designer Alister MacKenzie’s last visit to Augusta was in the summer of 1932. He died on January 6, 1934, three months before the first Masters.
16) No ads.
The Masters famously does not allow on-course advertising. When beer and soda trucks drive onto the property to fill concession stands, their side panels and logos are covered in Masters green tarp.
17) Masters Inflation.
The first nine winners of the Masters took home $1,500 each in prize money. In 2014, Bubba Watson won $1.62million for his troubles. That’s an increase of more than 100,000 percent in 81 years.
18) Bobby Jones’ Struggles.
Despite being credited with creating the Masters, Bobby Jones never finished in the top ten. He played 11 times with a best finish of 13th in his debut in 1934.
19) Barefoot Sam Snead.
Few players can match Sam Snead’s success at Augusta. In 44 appearances, Slammin’ Sammy notched three wins and 15 top-ten finishes. However, in 1942 the American wasn’t feeling comfortable with his game, so he played nine holes barefoot. He went on to finish seventh.
20) Breaking New Ground.
The Masters was the first golf tournament to host a 72-hole event spread over four days. It also pioneered the over/under par system.
Source: European Tour Jamie Kennedy and Will Pearson
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Tags: European Tour, europeantour.com, Getty Images, Jamie Kennedy, Masters Tournament, Masters Week, The Masters, Will Pearson