SHARE
COPY LINK

GOLF

Stenson spoils US party with bungled final hole

Henrik Stenson looked set to celebrate his 36th birthday in fine style at the 76th US Masters until he tossed away a hard-earned lead with a nightmare last hole at Augusta National on Thursday.

Stenson spoils US party with bungled final hole

Sweden’s Stenson, boosted by two eagles on the front nine, was atop the leaderboard by two strokes at the 18th tee, only to take a quadruple-bogey 8

on the closing hole and settle for a one-under par 71.

“It was a very disappointing finish,” Stenson said. “But I had good fun out there. I had two eagles and I got it going. I didn’t hit a fairway after 11. I hit it all over the place.”

Stenson still has not cracked 70 in 19 rounds at Augusta National.

“If you can’t get the ball in play off the tee you’re going to drop shots,” Stenson said.

“Playing out of the forest most of the back nine, it’s going to cost a little bit sooner or later — disappointing that it cost that much.”

Stenson’s eight matched the worst score ever recorded at Augusta National’s closing hole, the seventh time it had been shot there and the first since Colombia’s Camilo Villegas did it in 2007.

Just last year, Stenson took an 8 at the fourth for the worst score in Masters history at that par-3 hole.

“I didn’t expect it to cost as much as it did on 18,” Stenson said. “That’s normally what happens. You make a little mistake and then you compound it with another one and it just keeps on snowballing and I got the snowman in the end.”

Stenson eagled the par-5 third and seventh holes with 15-foot putts and birdied the par-4 fourth as well. After starting the back nine with a birdie, he went bogey-birdie on 14 and 15 but had a two-shot cushion at the par-4 18th.

On 18, Stenson hooked his tee shot left into trees and chipped out into a squishy footprint lie.

“It was like in a pretty worn spot in the pine needles where everybody has walked,” Stenson said.

“If I would have gotten the second shot out on the fairway, it would have been a different story.”

He hit into the right rough, went over the green into the green with his fourth shot, then chipped to the fringe.

“The worst part of 18 was really over-hitting the wedge and hitting it up in the crowds behind the green and then it took me four to get down from there,” Stenson said.

The Swede ran his downhill putt past the cup, then missed a three-footer coming back before tapping in to end the misery.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

FOOTBALL

Tennis courts and golf courses to reopen in Denmark

Danes will be able to take up their tennis rackets and golf clubs again after the country's two biggest sports associations announced that outdoor sports with no physical contact can resume again.

Tennis courts and golf courses to reopen in Denmark
Tennis will be one of the first sports to restart. Photo: Søren Bidstrup/Ritzau Scanpix
The Sports Confederation of Denmark and the country's other sports association DGI announced that they had agreed new guidelines for restarting group sports with the Danish Health Authority, in a press release issued on Tuesday. 
 
READ ALSO: 
 
“This is the first sign of sport opening up, and we are really pleased that the health authorities have given us guidelines so that some activities can start up again,” Charlotte Bach Thomassen, chair of the Danish sports association DGI, said. 
 
“Of course, joining together in sports clubs must be safe from a  health point of view, so it is important to be aware that in many sports associations you will not be able to meet physically.” 
 
 
DIF chairman Niels Nygaard told Ritzau that the announcement did not mean any organisation would be required to restart activities they did not regard as safe. 
 
“These are voluntary associations where there are differences from association to association and sport to sport,” he said. “Our recommendations are not a requirement for associations to start activities. They can do it if it can be done under safe conditions, and if they have doubts about whether it can be done, then they shouldn't do it.”
 
According to the joint press release, group sports can now restart if: 
 
  • they take place outside 
  • participants can keep a distance of two meters from others
  • participants pay special attention to hand hygiene
  • rackets, clubs or other props are frequently cleaned
  • participants cough or sneeze into your elbow or a paper towel
  • participants stay home if they have a fever, cough or muscle soreness. 
  • shared facilities such as clubhouses and dressing and shower facilities are not used 
 
SHOW COMMENTS