The Maui News

Masters history

Matsuyama wins green jacket

- By DOUG FERGUSON

AUGUSTA, Ga. — The pressure was even more than Hideki Matsuyama could have imagined when he stood on the first tee Sunday at Augusta National. So was the emotion when he walked off the 18th green as the first Masters champion from golf-mad Japan.

His arms securely inside the sleeves of the green jacket, he thrust them in the air.

Ten years after he made a sterling debut as the best amateur at the Masters, the 29-year-old Matsuyama claimed the ultimate prize and took his place in history.

Whether he’s Japan’s greatest male player is not his concern.

“However, I’m the first to win a major,” he said through his interprete­r. “And if that’s the bar, then I’ve set it.”

Staked to a four-shot lead, the nerves stayed with Matsuyama — from the time he hit his opening tee shot into the trees, to back-to-back birdies that led to a six-shot lead, to a few nervous moments at the end when Xander Schauffele made a late run at him.

Only when he belted his drive down the 18th fairway and twirled the club in his hands could he feel this victory was in hand. He played so well for so long that three bogeys over the last four holes made this Masters look closer than it was.

He closed with a 1-over 73 for a one-shot victory over Masters rookie Will Zalatoris (70).

Schauffele ran off four straight birdies to get within two shots with three holes to play, only to hit 8-iron into the water on the par-3 16th for a triple bogey that ended his hopes. He shot a 72 with a triple bogey and a double bogey on his card and tied for third with Jordan Spieth (70).

“Man, he was something else. He played like a winner needs to play,” Schauffele said. “Sixteen, I really would have loved to have put more pressure on him there, but basically gave him the tournament at that point.”

Then his thoughts turned to the significan­ce of what Matsuyama achieved. Schauffele’s mother was raised in Japan and his grandparen­ts still live there.

“No one really wants to talk about how much pressure is on him,” Schauffele said. “You look at the media that follows him. You look at what he’s done in his career. He’s a topranked player with a ton of pressure on him, and that’s the hardest way to play. He’s able to do it.”

And he did it.

The emotion for a player who says so little was never more evident. Moments before Dustin Johnson helped him into the green jacket, Matsuyama needed no interprete­r in Butler Cabin when he said in English, “I’m really happy.”

So masterful was this performanc­e that Matsuyama stretched his lead to six shots on the back nine until a few moments of drama. With a four-shot lead, he went for the green in two on the par-5 15th and it bounded hard off the back slope and into the pond on the 16th hole.

Matsuyama did well to walk

away with bogey, and with Schauffele making a fourth straight birdie, the lead was down to two shots. And then it was over.

Schauffele was in the water. Matsuyama made a safe par on the 17th and ripped one down the middle of the 18th fairway. He made bogey from the bunker to finish at 10-under 278, soaking in the moment with a few thousand spectators on their feet to celebrate a career-changing moment.

Matsuyama won for the 15th time worldwide, and it was his sixth PGA Tour title. He had gone 93 tournament­s without winning, the longest drought for a Masters champion since 1987, and went to No. 14 in the world.

He becomes the second man from an Asian country to win a major. Y.E. Yang of South Korea won the 2009 PGA Championsh­ip at Hazeltine over Tiger Woods.

Most of the usually large contingent of Japanese media were absent from Augusta this year due to COVID-19 travel restrictio­ns, and Matsuyama had said on the eve of the final round that he had felt a lot less stress.

There was plenty on the golf course, right from the start.

“I felt really good going to the first tee, until I stood on the first tee, and then it hit me that I’m in the last group of the Masters Tournament and I’m the leader by four strokes. And then I was really nervous,” he said. “But I caught myself. And the plan today was just go out and do my best for 18 holes. And so that was my thought throughout the day, just keep doing my best.”

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 ?? AP photo ?? Hideki Matsuyama celebrates after putting on the champion’s green jacket after winning the Masters on Sunday. Matsuyama closed with a 1-over 73 for a one-shot victory over Masters rookie Will Zalatoris.
AP photo Hideki Matsuyama celebrates after putting on the champion’s green jacket after winning the Masters on Sunday. Matsuyama closed with a 1-over 73 for a one-shot victory over Masters rookie Will Zalatoris.
 ?? AP photo ?? ABOVE PHOTO: Hideki Matsuyama hits out of a bunker at the 18th green during the final round of the Masters on Sunday. RIGHT
PHOTO: Matsuyama tips his cap after completing his victory.
AP photo ABOVE PHOTO: Hideki Matsuyama hits out of a bunker at the 18th green during the final round of the Masters on Sunday. RIGHT PHOTO: Matsuyama tips his cap after completing his victory.
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