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Being pre-Masters favorite no guarantee for Tiger Woods
Tiger Woods was at Augusta National Golf Club on Sunday, playing a quiet practice round with Steve Stricker and U.S. Amateur Public Links champion T.J. Vogel while tuning up for the 77th Masters Tournament.
The first major of the year has Woods as the favorite. That will be the case at least during the buildup to Thursday’s first round, with the hype starting with today’s first “official” practice rounds for the 94-player field.
When the tournament ends, Woods, the world’s No. 1-ranked player, is expected to have his fifth green jacket (one away from tying Jack Nicklaus), 15th major championship (three away from tying Nicklaus) and 78th PGA Tour win (four away from Sam Snead’s record).
There’s one problem with that scenario: The consensus pretournament favorite seldom wins these days in the Masters. In the past seven years, none has.
Of course, most of that is because Woods, the favorite or co-favorite five of those years, hasn’t won the Masters since he beat Chris DiMarco in a sudden-death playoff in 2005.
But Woods is so hot this year, with three PGA Tour wins, that he could break the pretournament favorite jinx, not to mention his seven-year winless streak in the Masters and his nearly five-year major championship drought.
“I’m always surprised when he doesn’t play well because we all expect Tiger to either win or play well at all times,” 1998 Masters champion Mark O’Meara said Sunday before a practice round at Augusta National. “There has been a little bit of lull certainly in what he’s accomplished in the game. He had a lot of personal, off-course and health issues going on in his life.”
O’Meara said Woods is winning regularly this year because he has regained his putting form (thanks in part to a tip from Stricker) and because his swing has “settled down” under the watchful eye of instructor Sean Foley.
“Winning breeds winning,” O’Meara said. “When a guy’s won three out of five tournaments this year (on the PGA Tour) and he comes to Augusta, where he’s had great success and he’s putting the way he’s been putting, there is reason to believe he’s the odds-on favorite to win.
“But there are 90-plus other guys here that are very good that are going to challenge him. But I wouldn’t be surprised to see him play well
again this week with an opportunity to win.”
Will Woods win it? Not if recent history has a say.
Since the 2006 Masters, the only times Woods wasn’t the favorite were 2010 and 2011. In 2010, he was playing in his first tournament in nearly five months in the wake of a self-imposed break after his life exploded into scandal. Ernie Els, who had won two of his previous starts, was favored. He tied for 18th place, and Phil Mickelson won his third green jacket.
In 2011, Mickelson was the man to beat. Not only was he the defending champion, but he’d also just come off a torrid weekend at the Houston Open (63-65), where he finished at 20-under and won by three shots. Talk of Mickelson winning was so prevalent that Graeme McDowell said sarcastically before the tournament that they should go ahead and give Mickelson the green jacket.
Mickelson ended up tying for 27th place as Charl Schwartzel won.
“I wouldn’t be surprised if any of the guys in the field win, and I won’t be surprised if any of the guys in the field don’t win,” 2007 Masters champion Zach Johnson said.
As for Woods, Johnson said “he’s playing well and he knows this golf course, but the talent is so deep.”
Johnson said just because a player isn’t in great form coming into the Masters doesn’t mean he can’t win this week.
“There’s no cycle to it, there’s no rhythm to it,” said Johnson, who was ranked 56th in the world when he won the 2007 Masters.
“I think it’s very rare when the favorite wins any tournament,” Keegan Bradley said Sunday. “It’s so random sometimes. Anybody can win any given week. But here especially, the guys who have been here a bunch are tough to beat.”
Last year, Woods was the Masters favorite for the first time in three years, alongside Rory McIlroy. Both ended up tying for 40th, with only McIlroy shooting a round in the 60s.
Just because Woods has won three times this season doesn’t make him a shoo-in for that fifth green jacket. The last player to have won three times in the first leg of the PGA Tour season leading into the Masters was Woods, in 2003. He shot 76-73-66-75 and tied for 15th place.
Tiger Woods |
SLIDESHOW: Tiger's Sunday Practice
Browse photos from Tiger's Sunday at Augusta National
Steve Stricker |
T.J. Vogel |
Mark O'Meara |
Zach Johnson |
BEING FAVORITE, NO. 1 PLAYER DOESN’T GUARANTEE THE GREEN JACKET
YEAR MASTERS FAVORITE NO. 1 BEFORE MASTERS MASTERS FINISH MASTERS WINNER RANK PVS WEEK RANK AFTER WIN
2006 Tiger Woods Tiger Woods T3 Phil Mickelson 4 2
2007 Tiger Woods Tiger Woods T2 Zach Johnson 56 15
2008 Tiger Woods Tiger Woods 2 Trevor Immelman 29 15
2009 Tiger Woods Tiger Woods T6 Angel Cabrera 69 18
2010 Ernie Els Tiger Woods T4 Phil Mickelson 3 2
2011 Phil Mickelson Martin Kaymer MC Charl Schwartzel 29 11
2012 Tiger Woods/Rory McIlroy Luke Donald 32 Bubba Watson 16 4