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Pennsylvania man donates double-eagle ball on No. 2 to Augusta National
Wayne Mitchell was front and center on the No. 2 green Sunday when he became a part of Masters Tournament history.
The 59-year-old chemical company vice president from Pennsylvania had been seated beside his wife,
waiting for something to happen for more than four hours.
“It would be kind of neat to see an eagle here,” he thought to himself.
Minutes later, South Africa’s Louis Oosthuizen recorded the tournament’s first double eagle at the par-5 second. It was the fourth albatross in Masters history, and the first since Jeff Maggert made one on the par-5 13th in 1994.
The gallery went wild around Mitchell.
After Oosthuizen pulled the ball from the cup, he turned toward the patrons and picked Mitchell.
“He caught my eye and threw it to me,” Mitchell said.
A quiet day at the Masters became a whirlwind. Patrons across the course were talking about the man who caught Oosthuizen’s ball. Journalists and photographers swarmed Mitchell, and a huddle of Augusta National Golf Club members arrived in a golf cart to escort him to the clubhouse.
“I came here anonymous, and I don’t feel so anonymous,” Mitchell said.
With the ball tucked in his left pocket, Mitchell said, he wasn’t sure what he’d do with it. He’s never been the type to keep souvenirs and couldn’t think of the last one he has held on to.
Patrons around Mitchell said the moment was electrifying.
“When it fell into the cup, it was almost disbelief,” said Steve Ganz, of Leesburg, Va. He was two rows behind Mitchell when Oosthuizen tossed the ball.
Ganz said the reaction of the gallery was nothing rowdy. There was no scuffle to grab the ball or take it from Mitchell.
Ganz wondered what Augusta National would offer Mitchell in exchange for the ball.
“Maybe a membership?” he said. “It would be like, ‘Oh, there’s the CEO of
IBM and there’s the guy who caught the Oosthuizen ball.’ ”
An Augusta National spokesman said Mitchell chose to donate the ball to the club’s archives. He did not have information about what he might have been given in return.
The spokesman said the club displays items with historical value, including the double-eagle ball hit by Gene Sarazen in 1935 that sits in the clubhouse’s Trophy Room.
“Wherever it goes, it’s history,” Ganz said.