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Are you not entertained?! The 85th Masters is getting really, really... - Golf.com

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Jordan Spieth shot 68 on Friday and is two shots off the lead.

Stephen Denton

Let’s begin in the middle, after the seemingly endless preamble to this 85th Masters golf tournament. Let’s begin not with who do you like or what’s wrong with Rory or any of that. Let’s begin with the question that is at the very heart of every spring golf experience and this one most especially:

Are
you
having
fun
now?

Oh, we forgot something important, the dateline. Dateline: AUGUSTA, Ga.

Augusta, Georgia! There’s a pandemic going and we (all of us, in some fashion) are gathered in this Deep South city for this tournament that is being played, with limited commercial interruption, at its usual time and in its usual location.

Fore
please
golf
party
in
progress!

Your leader at intermission, Justin Rose, shot a Friday 72, even par. He did the slow, 65-hangover leak thing on his way out (39), then did his this-is-my-nine recovery thing playing in (33). If 72 is Rose’s bad round, watch out. If 10 under wins (feels like a good number), Rose is 70 percent of the way there, with the hardest parts still to come. You know what they say: the Masters begins on Saturday afternoon, when Jim Nantz says, “Yo, yo, party people — what up!”

As you get your weekend bearings here, you will find that one shot back of the veteran Englishman are the ying and yang of this 85th Masters golf tournament, former Walker Cupper Will Zalatoris and former Walker Cupper Brian Harman.

Let us introduce to you T2 No. 1 Willie Z, or William P. Zalatoris, as he was listed on his birth certificate, issued in San Francisco in 1996. Yes, Tiger won his first Masters eight months later.

Zalatoris is tall, lanky, blond, hollow-cheeked. Johnny Millerish, circa 1970, if you will, though Zalatoris came of age not in the Bay Area (as John did) but in greater Dallas (Trinity Christian, class of ‘14). When he cites Lanny (Wadkins), Tony (Romo) and Jordan (Spieth), he’s not first-name name-dropping. These are his people, people.

jordan spieth
The 6th bites back: How one Augusta National par-3 became a brutal beast, at least for a day
By: Sean Zak

You may find this curious:

Jordan Spieth won the 2009 and 2011 USGA junior title for boys.

Johnny Miller won it in 1964.

Brian Harman won it in 2003.

And Willie Z (as he was sometimes known at Wake Forest) won it in 2014.

Zalatoris will be in the third round’s last twosome in his first Masters, playing with a major winner, the talented Mr. Rose. Yes, you’re thinking what we’re thinking: in 1981, in his first Masters, Greg Norman also played in Saturday’s last twosome with a major winner, Jack Nicklaus his own self.

T2 No. 2 (only because he is playing in Saturday’s second-to-last pairing) is Brian Harman, mid-30s (34), a husband and a father and a lefthander, who challenges Rory McIlroy for shortest winner on Tour (and aren’t they all winners?), a man who does not spend great sums on hair conditioner. (He grooms in the tradition of Scott V.P. of ESPN.)

Harman T2ed at the 2017 U.S. Open (Erin Hills). Zalatoris T6ed at the 2020 U.S. Open (Winged Foot). Rose won at the 2013 U.S. Open (Merion Golf and Comedy Club). You don’t get lucky and notch those finishes.

Hold it, hold it, hold it:

JordanSpiethis2shotsback;
JordanSpiethis2shotsback;
JordanSpiethis2shotsback.

There’s a term of the trade that covers this sort of error in judgment and maybe you know it: it’s called burying the lede.

But let’s get back to Masters rookie Will Zalatoris, who is carrying around Lanny’s course knowledge, Romo’s money (because Romo is good but he’s not that good) and his own Bay Area Italian restaurant recommendation.

Surprised to see Will Zalatoris near the top of the leaderboard? You shouldn’t be.

getty images

Lanny, on playing Augusta’s par-3 12th, as Zalatoris described it after his Friday 68:

“I don’t even know if he remembers this or not, but Lanny just said that whenever it’s into the wind, when you get that kind of southwest-southeast wind, it just doesn’t really affect the ball much. And when it’s downwind, that’s where guys tend to struggle.

“Today, it was [blowing] in, out of the left, and I think I had 153. I hit a shot, it carried 150, and it was a good 10 miles an hour back into us.

“Like I said, I don’t know if he even remembers [saying] that. But of course, me being a student of the game, I’ve known that for 10 years.”

Zalatoris on NFL/CBS legend Tony Romo:

“Tony Romo has been a great friend and a great sounding board. He’s basically been a big brother to me.”

As for his Italian restaurant, it’s called Ristorante Vivace, off the 101, about halfway between the Olympic Club and the Stanford golf course. It came up in his Friday night interview because he was describing the moment he locked into Masters golf. It was Sunday of the 2005 Masters. He was 8. He was not eating alone. A TV was on CBS. Tiger holed out an improbable pitch shot from over the 16th green. Three holes later — after a one-hole playoff — Woods won his fourth Masters title.

“Normally the restaurant was pretty quiet, and when that ball dropped it got pretty loud,” Zalatoris said. “It was just cool. That was probably when I realized how special the Masters is.”

Indeed it is!

But let us give Brian Harman the final word here, as he had his own Masters moment, when a fellow lefty, Phil Mickelson, won this celebrated tournament.

“I’m a golf fan, and I love watching golf, and all the majors have something special,” Harman said. “Growing up in Georgia, [someday] getting to play this place was always something in the back of my mind. You always want to do well at Augusta. Everyone I know, all my friends and family, are reaching out to me.

“But you have to realize that it’s one golf tournament amongst many more that I’m going to play. And that’s about the only way that I can probably calm down and play well this weekend.”

There is a lot of insight in those comments. The weekend at Augusta. How nice.

Hold it, hold it, hold it: we’ve done it again. What is wrong with us today?

JustinThomasis3shotsback;
JustinThomasis3shotsback;
JustinThomasis3shotsback!

This is rhetorical: Are you having fun now?

Michael Bamberger welcomes your comments at Michael.Bamberger@golf.com.

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Michael Bamberger

Golf.com Contributor

Michael Bamberger writes for GOLF Magazine and GOLF.com. Before that, he spent nearly 23 years as senior writer for Sports Illustrated. After college, he worked as a newspaper reporter, first for the (Martha’s) Vineyard Gazette, later for The Philadelphia Inquirer. He has written a variety books about golf and other subjects, the most recent of which is The Second Life of Tiger Woods. His magazine work has been featured in multiple editions of The Best American Sports Writing. He holds a U.S. patent on The E-Club, a utility golf club. In 2016, he was given the Donald Ross Award by the American Society of Golf Course Architects, the organization’s highest honor.

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