Player maintains Masters bragging rights as play gets under way at Augusta

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Gary Player and Jack Nicklaus continued their role as honorary starters
Posted on
April 11, 2019
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The Editorial Team in
Estimated reading time: 2 minutes
Player maintains Masters bragging rights as play gets under way at Augusta
Gary Player, right, claimed bragging rights over Jack Nicklaus after the duo both hit ceremonial tee shots on the first hole at the Masters (Matt Slocum/AP)

Gary Player was able to maintain bragging rights after joining Jack Nicklaus in getting the 83rd Masters under way on Thursday.

Player and Nicklaus continued their role as honorary starters by each hitting a tee shot on the opening hole, with 83-year-old Player producing the longest โ€“ and most accurate โ€“ drive by around 30 yards from 79-year-old Nicklaus.

With the formalities out of the way, American Andrew Landry got the tournament proper under way, with compatriot Adam Long and Canadaโ€™s Corey Conners making up the first group.

Conners came through a play-off to qualify for last weekโ€™s Valero Texas Open and went on to win his first PGA Tour title in San Antonio to claim the final place in the 87-man field at Augusta National.


Former world number one Tiger Woods was due out at 1104 local time (1604 BST) alongside Chinaโ€™s Li Haotong and Spainโ€™s Jon Rahm, with Rory McIlroy in the following group 11 minutes later with last yearโ€™s runner-up Rickie Fowler and Australian Cameron Smith.

McIlroy needs to win the Masters to complete the career grand slam while Woods โ€“ who is one of five members of golfโ€™s most elite club โ€“ is seeking a first major since the 2008 US Open.

Patrick Reed gets his title defence under way at 1031 local time (1531 BST) in the company of Webb Simpson and US Amateur champion Viktor Hovland, but 2015 winner Jordan Spieth will have to wait until the final tee time of 1400 local time (1900 BST) to get his campaign started.


Spieth, who has finished no worse than 11th in his five starts in the Masters, will play alongside Englandโ€™s Paul Casey and three-time major winner Brooks Koepka, who missed out last year due to a wrist injury.

Phil Mickelson, Justin Rose and Justin Thomas are in the preceding group at 1349 local time (1849 BST), with Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau and Jason Day making up another star-studded group 11 minutes earlier.


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