Jason Day burst into laughter and left a group of reporters howling when he hilariously misheard a question on Tuesday’s practice round at the 2025 Masters.
The Masters and rules go together like pimento cheese and white bread. No running, no phones, no cash. Heck, there’s even a rule for where swing coaches stand while working with their player on the driving range… oh, and don’t under any circumstances call it the “driving range”. That’s according to Golf Channel’s Brandel Chamblee, Read more…
Australians Jason Day, Adam Scott and Min Woo Lee have been given star groupings for the Masters with recent Houston Open winner Lee bestowed the honour of an official Masters featured group on the tournament feed.
Rory McIlroy is not one of the storylines heading into this Masters as he is the story, the Northern Irishman arrived at Augusta National playing perhaps the best golf of his storied career.
Family man Adam Scott says his intensity comes and goes but there’s nothing like the Masters to kick him into gear as Augusta National reminds the Australian it’s been 12 years since his historic green jacket triumph.
The 2022 Open champion Cam Smith has opened up to our writer at Augusta about his Masters close calls, describing them as agonising missed opportunities but hopes to become a multiple major winner this week. READ:
Does LIV’s shotgun starts and 54-hole tournaments, plus a lighter, 14-event schedule, send its higher-ranked players to the majors with the match fitness required to compete at the highest level?
With LIV Golf’s globetrotting schedule, three-time Masters champion Phil Mickelson has not found time to make his annual scouting mission to Augusta National ahead of the tournament this spring.
For the first time in more than four decades, Verne Lundquist won’t be in the 16th hole tower at this year’s Masters. However, that doesn’t mean golf fans won’t hear another familiar voice at one of Augusta National’s most famous spots.
While Chamblee says he’s never felt Augusta is a perfect course fit for McIlroy’s game, he stated that the problems, particularly in the first round, seem more mental than physical.
The greens are how Augusta National confuses the best golfers in the game, pushing them outside their comfort zones. Almost every hole forces players to make a binary choice: Option A or Option B.