- CONTINUED FROM ABOVE -
With the hole located on the back portion of the green, I hit a 7 iron for my approach. The ball bounded over the back of the green and down a severe slope resting 10 feet below the green surface leaving a difficult elevated chip. Moe struck his approach to the center of the green approximately 25 feet.
“Never past the hole at Augusta, Never long on one,” Moe chirped.
Augusta National has always been known for its treacherously fast, hard and undulated greens. Ben Hogan took 40 putts during his round in 1952 the same year that hole 14 averaged 3.5 putts per player to get the ball into the hole once they got onto the green. Originally built with Bermuda grass greens, Augusta National was converted to bent grass in 1980 but the hard fast greens Augusta was known for have remained.

Players in past Masters Tournaments have often complained about the difficulty of the greens at Augusta. One year Tom Kite commented that balls landing on the greens were landing so hard that they weren’t leaving ball marks. “It left what looked more like a burn mark,” Kite commented. Many of the slopes on the greens are not visible to anyone watching television but the players on the course know that a shot below the hole is a safe bet at Augusta.
Number 9 is one of my favorite golf holes on the front nine. From your recliner, you can’t see the tremendous elevation of the approach shot from the fairway into the green. The flag was near the center of the green. There is so much altitude from the fairway that the bottom of the flagstick is invisible.
“Never hit it above the hole. Keep it short if you can. Use the slopes. Have them work for you not against you,” Moe said.
From the middle of the fairway about 150 yards hitting a 7 iron, Moe hit one of his best shots of the day. The ball approached the front of the green traveling low taking one bounce on the front of the green and then a second stopping just short of the hole five feet.
My shot approached the green differently. Hitting a 9 iron sent my ball high into the air and it landed just about where Moe’s ball had stopped. Spinning, the ball reversed down the slope off of the front of the green.
“Too much spin, you lose control with too much spin,” Moe said. I realized that this was the reason for the lower than normal height of his shot into the green. His trajectory took the spin off of the golf ball giving the ball a chance to bounce forward.
I was always learning from Moe.
Hole number 10 doglegs left, and is a great hole for a right-handed golfer to draw the ball around the corner.
Moe said that this was one hole where a straight shot wasn’t the best choice. “Hit a draw on this hole, the fairway slopes left, you can get more roll,” Moe said.
Unfortunately, I hit a straight shot to the right side of the fairway leaving a longer than necessary approach to the green with an awkward carry over a bunker protecting the right side of the green. Moe turned the ball slightly right-to-left around the corner outdriving me by 20 yards leaving a much easier approach into the green.
Named by writer Herbert Warren Wind after the miraculous way Arnold Palmer played these holes to win his first major championship, an infamous part of Augusta National is the stretch of holes 11 through 13 which he gave the moniker Amen corner.
| On hole 11, a 455 yard par four, Moe struck the best shot of the day hitting a 4 wood from the fairway to three feet from the hole, tapping in for birdie.
“Simple, sooo simple,” Moe said.
The size slope and shape of the green makes hole number 12, Golden Bell, one of the most difficult holes on tour. Moe and I both hit our shots to the back right side of the green. We then walked across Ben Hogan’s bridge.
“Oh what a feeling, what a feeling,” Moe said. Moe was in his element. He was enjoying himself.
Of all the rounds I played with Moe, he was particularly animated during this round. Moe was excited and complimentary as we completed Amen Corner and struck our shots off on the 14th tee.
|
|
 |
"Best I’ve seen you hit the driver,” Moe said.
“Thanks Moe, what do you see different today?” I asked.
Moving his shoulders in and backward and forward motion. “You’re more like this today,” Moe said, demonstrating my swing motion. “You’re longer today, best I’ve seen.”
We finished the 14th hole and made our way to 15th, a reachable 500 yard par five.
A good shot from the tee can carry far enough to strike the down-slope in the fairway allowing the ball to roll within mid-iron distance from the green. If the tee shot misses the down-slope, it can leave a long approach over Rae’s Creek. Many Masters Tournaments have been won and lost on number 15.
Moe and I both struck our tee shots missing the down-slope leaving 230 yards to the green. Known for its “upside- down” bowl shape and the false front sloping into the creek, some will choose to lay up from this position leaving a short wedge. That’s not why we came. We both struck 3 woods to the green, both balls finishing in Rae’s Creek.
Moe and I walked toward the green to drop another ball to strike an approach. Thinking it to be advantageous to drop as close to the green as possible, I continued to drop 50 yards from the green. As I dropped, I heard Moe strike his approach landing the ball 10 feet left of the hole. I looked back and noticed Moe approximately 100 yards behind me. I continued with my shot, attempting to hit a lob wedge. The ball rolled up the slope toward the flag. The ball stopped and then began rolling backward resting in Rae’s Creek. Taking another ball from my bag, I took another drop and struck another ball, once again rolling back into Rae’s Creek.
“Never drop there,” Moe said as he walked passed. “Never drop there.”
Moe knew the extreme difficulty of a wedge shot to the severely sloped green and had struck a 9 iron from 150 yards allowing him to have a full swing with better distance control.
Hole 15 ruined my chance to play well and so I realized that I was not playing Augusta for a low score that day but instead, feeling the spirits of the great players who had walked the grounds before me. I understood that playing at Augusta with Moe was about being in a special place with a very special person. Augusta National humbled me and at the same time lifted me to a new understanding of why I play golf.
As the sun was lowering on the final three holes, Moe and I walked together, mostly in silence, appreciating the richness of the green grass and the beauty of the trees. I couldn’t help but experience Augusta National as truly a sacred place.
From the drive down Magnolia Lane to the last putt on “Holly,” the final hole, Augusta had welcomed us with open Azaleas giving Moe and me an opportunity to commune together, learn more about each other, and revel in the spiritual nature of the game itself.