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Best tradition of all

Eventual champion Tiger Woods reacts after his chip-in birdie on 16th hole during the final round of the 2005 Masters at the Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Ga., Sunday, April 10, 2005. Over the years, such shots have lifted the Masters to one of the world's best golf tournaments.
Memorable shots make Masters

They can stretch Augusta National beyond the county line, or move the tees downtown, as Jack Nicklaus once jokingly suggested. They can add a pond and remove a bunker, plant trees and cut them down.

But there is one thing about the Masters that doesn't change.

Somewhere along the way to a green jacket lies a shot so incredible, so unforgettable, that it becomes part of the legacy of the Masters, a signature moment on a stage built for such drama.

Gene Sarazen put the Masters on the map with his "shot heard 'round the world," a 4-wood from 235 yards on the par-5 15th that went into the cup for a double eagle and carried him into a playoff in 1935. And that was before television was around.

"It was just a piece of luck," Sarazen said.

And then there's Tiger Woods.

His 2 on the scorecard last year came with a 60-degree sand wedge from a much smaller distance, about 30 feet from behind the green to the hole, a shot that traveled twice that length by the time it climbed up the ridge on the par-3 16th, stopped like a school bus crossing railroad tracks, then made a slow, tantalizing trek toward the cup.

It stopped on the lip two full seconds, and history pulled it into the hole.

"I was never thinking it had a chance," said Steve Williams, Woods' caddie who stood by his side, crouching, hoping for one more turn, his heart stopped like the thousands of fans surrounding the green and millions watching on TV. "It was slowing down, and I said, 'I can't believe it's going to be short.' But for some reason, it kept going. It was just amazing. You're just about to go forward and give whatever your reaction you're going to give, and then it stops.

"And then, boom!"

Sarazen and Woods provided bookend memories, 70 years apart, shots that define the magic of the Masters.

No telling what this year will bring, even on an Augusta National course that again has been strengthened by adding 155 yards on six holes in chairman Hootie Johnson's attempt to keep the course current with the times.

Woods is the defending champion, joining Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer as the only players with at least four green jackets. He is remembered for the U-turn chip on the 16th green, but he is more proud of the 3-wood to the fairway, the 8-iron to 15 feet and the birdie putt to beat Chris DiMarco in a playoff.

The Masters starts Thursday without Nicklaus, who competed at Augusta National for the last time a year ago. Some say the longer course will make improbable a back-nine charge such as the one Nicklaus delivered 20 years ago when he shot 30 to win his sixth Masters.

But there will be something mystical that other majors rarely offer.

Seems like there always is.

Larry Mize chipping in from 140 feet to rip the heart out of Greg Norman. Fred Couples' ball rolling back toward Rae's Creek on the 12th hole, stopped by a blade of grass. Nicklaus making a 45-foot birdie putt on the 16th hole, as Tom Weiskopf and Johnny Miller watched dejectedly from the tee box."You can feel there is an aura seeping out of the ground," DiMarco said. "You remember Jack making that putt up the hill, and you remember Davis (Love III) chipping up the hill. I try to forget Tiger chipping in."Woods strives for perfection, which is why he is so proud of the 8-iron into the 18th green in the playoff. But even he concedes he will be remembered more, if not forever, because of that chip.He had a one-shot lead and was on the ropes, hitting an 8-iron that went too far and too much to the left, and he was lucky it found grass behind the 16th green, especially after DiMarco hit his tee shot into 15 feet."I knew that it was going to be virtually one of the most difficult shots you could possibly have on the whole golf course," Woods said.He feared the ball was against the first cut of rough, and was relieved to see he had room to get the sand wedge on it, although he had to pick up the club quicker than he would have liked."After I saw where the ball was, I thought I had an opportunity to put the ball inside of Chris, which was about 15 feet," he said. "And to be honest with you, that's all I was trying to do. Obviously, turned out a little better than that."It was important to get the chip inside DiMarco for two reasons. If DiMarco made his birdie putt, Woods could salvage par and lose only one shot, and still have a share of the lead. Or if DiMarco missed — and he had done that plenty in the final round — a par would maintain the lead and give Woods enormous momentum.But birdie?No one imagined that. Not Woods. Not DiMarco. And not Williams, who has seen Woods do the unthinkable."It was one of those shots you can stand there with 100 balls, and never do it again," Williams said.There was no discussion about the club — a 60-degree wedge. The idea was to hit a low spinner up the hill so that it slowed to a stop, rolled down the ridge to the cup and ideally stopped about 4 feet away at best, under the hole."I had a spot picked out," Williams said. "When it landed, I knew it was going to be a good shot. It got to the top of the hill, stopped, but I expected it to run farther to our right. It rolled a lot straighter than I thought. I think the golfing gods may have been there, because it broke a little less that what you think."The cheer might have registered on the Richter scale."He screamed so loud ... if you watch on TV, you cannot even think about hearing him," DiMarco said. "I said, 'Good job' to him four times at the top of my lungs before he saw me mouthing it and said thanks. You can't hear."

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