No roars at Augusta National: Masters will be played without fans in November

AP photo by Charlie Riedel / Fans walk along the first hole at Augusta National Golf Club on April 11, 2019, during the opening round of the Masters. The Georgia club announced Wednesday that it will not permit spectators when its hosts its annual major championship tournament, which was already moved from April to November because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
AP photo by Charlie Riedel / Fans walk along the first hole at Augusta National Golf Club on April 11, 2019, during the opening round of the Masters. The Georgia club announced Wednesday that it will not permit spectators when its hosts its annual major championship tournament, which was already moved from April to November because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Masters, known as much for the roars of fans as the beauty of Augusta National Golf Club, will be on mute this year. The club decided Wednesday there will be no spectators on the grounds.

That means all three major men's golf championship tournaments played this year will not have fans, and the silence figures to be most deafening at Augusta National - which famously refers to spectators as "patrons" - when the Masters is played Nov. 12-15.

From the opening holes down to Amen Corner all the way through the back nine at the Georgia club, players can often figure out what's happening with others just by listening. That will be missing this year, along with the azalea and dogwood blooms from having to move the tourney from April.

"Ultimately, we determined that the potential risks of welcoming patrons and guests to our grounds in November are simply too significant to overcome," club chairman Fred Ridley said of hosting an event amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Considered in some circles to be the cathedral of golf, Augusta National now will sound like one.

"Part of the allure and kind of majesty of Augusta National is the patrons," said PGA Tour golfer Brandt Snedeker, the Nashville native and former Vanderbilt player with three top-10 finishes at the Masters. "You have that electricity from the first moment on Thursday morning to the last putt goes in on Sunday night on every hole.

"It's not just on the back nine - it's on every hole. So to not have that there is going to be a different feeling."

Ridley said the health of everyone involved with the tournament during the pandemic was paramount in rescheduling the Masters from April and deciding whether it could have spectators, even in a limited fashion.

"The guests who come to Augusta each spring from around the world are a key component to making the tournament so special," he said. "Augusta National has the responsibility, however, to understand and accept the challenges associated with this virus and take the necessary precautions to conduct all aspects of the tournament in a safe manner.

"We look forward to the day when we can welcome all of our patrons back, hopefully in April 2021."

He said all tickets will be honored for next year, and that next month the club would contact ticket holders and those who have applied for tickets for next April's Masters.

Golf is coming off its first major without fans, with the PGA Championship finishing Sunday at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco. The U.S. Open, moved from June to Sept. 17-20 because of the pandemic, previously announced it won't have spectators at Winged Foot Golf Club in Mamaroneck, New York. The British Open announced in April it would be canceled this year.

The lack of noise was noticeable during the PGA Championship, especially in the final round when Collin Morikawa's shot put the ball seven feet from the 16th hole for an eagle that sent him to his first major title. There were a few media present - mainly the broadcast crew - along with a few volunteers and support staff, but a shot that will be talked about for a long time was greeted with mostly silence.

"This is the one time I really wish there were crowds right there," Morikawa said with a laugh.

The effect will be even more noticeable at Augusta National. Built on a former nursery, the back nine descends steeply toward Rae's Creek and Amen Corner before making a steady climb toward the clubhouse. Pockets of roars come from everywhere.

Tiger Woods leaned on them when he won his fifth green jacket last year, studying every white scoreboard so he would understand who was where and what a cheer might mean.

"When I got down to 13, I got a chance to look at the board and see where everyone stood," Woods said last year in an interview with GolfTV. "I'm like, 'OK, the next board I see is not until 15, because there's no board on 14.' So I get a good understanding, see where they all are, look at what holes they're on in case I hear any roars, who that might be.

"Obviously, there's significance to certain roars. But I want to know what players are in what position so after I played 14 and headed to 15, I have a pretty good understanding of what's going on."

The roars carried Jack Nicklaus to his astounding 30 on the back nine when he rallied to win his sixth Masters in 1986 at age 46. The fabled "Arnie's Army" of supporters for Arnold Palmer began at Augusta National with a group of soldiers from nearby Fort Gordon in the late 1950s, but it grew to include practically every patron on the grounds. Palmer felt as though he knew them all as they cheered him to four Masters victories.

Snedeker played his first Masters in 2004 as the U.S Amateur Public Links champion. He made the cut, finished early and stayed until the end as Phil Mickelson made an 18-foot birdie putt on the final hole to win his first major. Snedeker, watching on TV in the clubhouse, heard the cheer before it was captured on television.

"That's what you historically remember with Augusta, so to not have that is going to be totally different," he said. "It's going to be an odd feeling, to say the least. Last week at Harding Park it kind of felt odd, too, because you just didn't have the nerves as much because the fans weren't there adding a little bit of electricity to it and you didn't have the excitement."

Woods was making a charge in 2011 when two reporters waiting to cross the eighth fairway heard a roar that rattled the pines. What happened? A marshal said Woods had just hit his approach shot, and it was clear what the noise meant - an eagle that momentarily tied him for the lead.

A few minutes later, a roar from Amen Corner. And then another from behind the 13th green. And another from the second green. That was from all the scoreboards being changed to show Woods tied for the lead.

That's what will be missing in November.

It will be different for the television viewers, too. They will see Augusta National's fairways like never before, lined only by Georgia pines instead of patrons.

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