April 6, 2009
BUNKER
George Archer's hidden pain now helping others
Sign of the times: Tiger hosts a corporate outing
John Daly on the losing side again -- this time in court
Golfers rarely respect their grips?but they should
COLUMNS & DEPARTMENTS
EQUIPMENT
The inventive minds of two green jacket winners
By E. Michael Johnson
GRILLROOM
Juli Inkster finally gets to see Augusta National
By Bob Verdi
OPINION
Adam Scott is relaxed and ready to win a major
By Bob Verdi
TOUR TALK
LPGA
• A muny, Papago GC, gave Phoenix an event to be proud of
PGA
• Time is running out for Davis Love III to make the Masters field
CHAMPIONS
• Eagle brings Keith Fergus a win, keeps Mark O'Meara winless
AMATEURS
• Making the cut has proven no easy task for Masters amateurs
BACK 9/STATS & SCORES
FEATURES
ORLANDO
MAGICIAN
Tiger Woods (again) drains a dramatic final-hole putt to claim victory at Bay Hill, making
plain the obvious: The best is back
By John Hawkins
MASTERS PREVIEW
BRINGING BACK THE
BUZZ
Something is missing from today's
Augusta National. Here's a plan to
change that
By John Hawkins
FIRST
IMPRESSIONS
Augusta National's par-4 opening hole
has evolved into a starter that daunts
even the longest hitters
By Nick Seitz
AUGUSTA NATIONAL MAP
A rendering of the course along with a
look at the key holes
By Brett Avery
GREEN
THUMBS
Billy Payne and Augusta National are
making a concerted effort to grow the game
By Ron Sirak
A QUESTION OF
CONFIDENCE
Padraig Harrington, off to a slow start in 2009, remains resolute as he seeks his third
straight major
By Dave Shedloski
ONE FOR THE
MONEY
As he readies for Augusta, Danny Lee leads a wave of poised young guns armed with lots of
game
By Max Adler
RISING
SON
Japan's Ryo Ishikawa is a teen on a mission
By Reiko Takekawa
MEMORY
LANE
Ben Crenshaw wishes Augusta National hadn't lost some of its strategic brilliance, but the
two-time champ wouldn't miss the Masters for the world
By Bill Fields
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