Amazing Golf Shots

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Posts Tagged ‘the masters’

Gene Sarazen – #15 Augusta National – 1935 Masters

No account of great golf shots should omit Gene Sarazen’s double eagle (albatross) on the 15th at Augusta National in the 1935 US Masters. Dubbed “the shot heard around the world” it has gone down in folklore. Unfortunately no footage of the shot was taken and other than Sarazen, his playing partner Walter Hagen, their caddies and probably 25 other hardy souls no one else saw it, so fortunately for history one of those souls was Bobby Jones.
There is no doubt that the context of the shot makes it one of the most legendary shots in golf. Sarazen did say later that over the years he met about 20,000 people who claimed to be there at the critical moment. When standing on the tee at #15 Sarazen thought he would need to birdie 3 of the last 4 holes to catch Craig Wood who himself had birdied the 18th posting a clubhouse score of 282. Television coverage of The Masters has made #15 a familiar hole with a lake in front of the green sowing seeds of doubt in the mind of a golfer wanting to go for it in two. Sarazen knew that this hole was critical if he was to catch Wood so he just had to go for the green.
Following a drive of 255 yards he still had 232 to go, over water from a lie that was sitting down in the grass and to a slick putting surface. After consulting with his caddie, who thought he needed a 3 wood, Sarazen decided on a 4 wood but toed it in for a little more distance, it’s a good job he did because his ball barely cleared the lake guarding the green, skimmed low onto the green, rolled out to the flag at the right back of the green and dropped in for a double eagle.
Can you imagine the pandemonium, fist pumps and high fives that such a shot would create today? Sarazen was much more phlegmatic, calculating only what he needed to do to catch Craig Wood. He subsequently parred the last three holes, by all accounts with difficult putts, to force a 36 hole play off the following day. It was obviously pre-ordained that he would win claim the title as he triumphed by 5 shots.

Even though there is no actual recording of the historic shot I thought you might like to see some archive footage of Gene Sarazen’s swing.

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Phil Mickelson – #13 Augusta National – 2010 Masters

It is said that fortune favours the brave and there are fewer braver on the golf course that Phil Mickelson. Locked in a duel with Lee Westwood he had started the final round of the 2010 The Masters tournament one shot adrift but was two ahead coming down the Par 5 13th. Left handed Mickelson had pulled his drive into the trees on the right hand side of the fairway the famous #13 hole at Augusta National is part of the infamous Amen Corner a classic risk & reward Par 5 that challenges golfers to go for the green in two across the treacherous Rae’s Creek from a hanging lie of the fairway to a wickedly sloping green. With his ball laying on pine straw and only a limited view of the putting surface over 200 yards away Mickelson would have been quite justified in playing out conservatively and relying on a pitch and putt birdie opportunity but what happened next was one of the most spectacular shots in modern golf. Phil selected a 6 iron and thread his shot through the trees and soared onto the green pulling up sharply 7 feet from the hole signalling to Westwood that he wanted that green jacket very badly indeed.

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Larry Mize – #11 Augusta – 1987 Masters Play Off

Missing the 11th green at Augusta in The Masters results in a very very difficult up and down. A slick chip over a grassy bank with a lake beckoning behind must make for a knee-knocking experience. When Greg Norman saw his opponent Larry Mize faced with exactly that shot on the second hole of a sudden-death playoff in 1987 he must have been confident of victory. Imagine then his thoughts as he watched Mize’s 140 foot chip skip twice before the green and then track straight into the hole. Norman couldn’t believe it and nor, I’m sure, could Mize. But, what an amazing golf shot with which to win a Major.

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