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Masters, Augusta National
The azaleas have yet to bloom at Augusta National, but the course could be much more colorful by Sunday's final round. (Getty Images)

Masters Notebook: Difficult winter makes grounds crew's job tougher

AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -- It's hard work making Augusta National look so beautiful. Especially when Mother Nature doesn't cooperate.

Augusta National Chairman Billy Payne admits that, as recently as a month ago, he worried whether the golf course would be in its usual shape for the Masters because of the unusually harsh winter. All of the South experienced rain, frost and low temperatures in recent months, and there was one day when 4 to 6 inches of snow blanketed Amen Corner.

"Our job is to worry about it," Payne said Wednesday. "So I think it's very fair to say that even a month ago, we were worried about whether or not we could recapture the quality and the brilliance of what we wanted to look like at the Masters. Our very capable staff kept assuring us, 'Quit worrying and quit bothering us.'

"They are just geniuses at what they do," Payne said. "There's a lot of love that goes in the preparation of that course and we are quite proud of it."

While there are always some spots where the grass comes in slower, the process was even longer and more noticeable this year, Payne said. And fans will see a difference in Amen Corner, which lacks its usual explosion of color because the azaleas have yet to bloom. That could change by Sunday, though, with the forecast calling for sun and warm temperatures much of the week.

TORN LOYALTIES: Stewart Cink tees off two groups ahead of Tiger Woods, so his mother will have no choice whom to watch.

It wasn't like that the first time they played in the same tournament.

Cink recalls playing in the Insurance Youth Golf Classic -- the "Big I" -- in Texas in 1990 when he was 17 and Woods was 14. Cink had a morning tee time in the opening round. When it was over and he was ready to leave, he noticed his mother heading back onto the course.

"She said she wanted to go see what this 'Tiger Woods' was all about," Cink said. "I remember I had to go find something to do because she had the car. But that was really the first time people were starting to find out about Tiger."

Cink wound up playing in the final group of that tournament with Woods and Notah Begay. Woods ended up winning, becoming the youngest winner of the tournament.

ASIAN AMATEUR: The winner of the inaugural Asian Amateur Championship is at the Masters, and the runner-up went on to qualify for the British Open.

But Augusta National Chairman Billy Payne is just as excited about the rest of the field.

Augusta National Golf Club and the Royal & Ancient Golf Club help sponsor the Asian Amateur as a way to spur development in golf's fastest-growing market. The first tournament, held the last week in October in Shenzhen, China, drew 116 players from 30 countries in the Asia Pacific Golf Confederation.

"The top two-thirds were good -- really good, competitive golfers," Payne said Wednesday. "But the experience of those that were not as good was just as important to us because of the way they now view the opportunity, and the way they now know that in us and the R&A, they have an ally. This is going to be a long-range, long-reaching effort on our part to help grow the game in these regions."
 

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