2006 Masters Tournament

  Presented by Augusta.com

Home

News

Photos

The Course

The Players

The History

Leaderboard

Augusta Guide

Shop

Contact Us

Golfers have better frame of reference, course architect says


Web posted 04/10/99


Tom Fazio pointed toward the first fairway at the Augusta National Golf Club on Friday morning and explained some of the course change that has been a huge topic at this week's 63rd Masters Tournament.

``We wanted to do something to define the golf hole,'' Fazio said as he pointed toward the visual differences between the rough and fairway cuts. ``When you look down the first fairway you can really see where to hit the ball. Any time you design a course, you want to frame the hole. If you have a picture, and the frame doesn't work, then you get a new frame.

``If anything, I think the second cut may help the golfer line up some.''

Fazio, 54, is the consulting golf course architect for Augusta National and the man responsible for implementing the massive changes that took place to the course from last summer until this spring. He has been affiliated with Augusta National in some capacity since the 1960s when his uncle George, a course designer, worked with Augusta National co-chairman Cliff Roberts on course alterations. More recently, Fazio has been the club's main consultant on course changes. Fazio said this is his 29th Masters.

There never has been as busy a time as last summer. Redesigned Nos. 2, 11, 15 and 17 were long-range plans he put in place starting last May. Adding rough was something Fazio and Augusta National chairman Hootie Johnson decided last fall when the course re-opened for membership play. Accuracy, he said, was the premium in all the moves.

``It's not just something that happens,'' Fazio said. ``They plan here and do everything thoroughly. That's one of the great things about this place. There is no spur-of-the-moment decision.''

Fazio said his team is monitoring how the changes are affecting play this year. One person stakes out each of the redesigned holes to determine how the players are performing.

``We want to see how the ball bounces, see how far it rolls, what side of the fairway people play from -- everything,'' Fazio said. ``We do this so if there is some discussion, we won't be basing any decisions on chance. There is information we can refer to.''

Fazio said he has heard that the lengthened par-4 17th is ``the strongest, the hardest'' change. He said his monitors noted that seven or eight drives rattled around in Ike's Tree during Thursday's first round, an unusually high number for that hazard down the left side of the fairway.

The players' reaction?

``I usually don't see many of the players this week,`` Fazio said. ``I usually run into them next week or the week after and get their feedback. Most of their comments, I just hear about or read about until then.''

Fazio, who lives in Hendersonville, N.C., with his wife and six children, has become one of the nation's top designers in the 1990s, with courses such as Wild Dunes in Charleston, S.C.; Shadow Creek in Las Vegas; and Black Diamond in Lecanto, Fla.

advertisements
Leaderboard
Go to full leaderboard
Interactive Tournament
Sign up now to connect with tournament coverage in new ways.
  • E-newsletters bring the best photos and stories from Augusta.com and The Augusta Chronicle to your inbox twice daily during the tournament
  • Track up to five golfers' progress with customizable e-mail or mobile SMS alerts
  • Keep your favorite golfers pegged to the top of our new continually updating leaderboard (available Thursday through Sunday)

ADVERTISEMENT



Copyright © 2009 The Augusta Chronicle. All Rights Reserved. | Privacy Statement | Contact us | Advertise with us

This site and all its content are representative of The Augusta Chronicle's Masters® Tournament coverage and information. The Augusta Chronicle and Augusta.com are our trademarks. Augusta.com is an online publication of The Augusta Chronicle and is neither affiliated with nor endorsed by the Masters or the Augusta National Golf Club.