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US Masters 2022: Matthew Wolff destroys his club after only four holes

Matthew Wolff and the Masters – a story all of its own. In his third participation in the prestigious Major at Augusta National Golf Club, things once again did not go entirely the way planned for the young American. The 22-year-old destroyed his club after only four holes of the US Masters 2022.

Matthew Wolff had a disastrous start to the US Masters 2022

Wolff had already started the tournament with a double bogey after he got stuck on the edge of the fairway bunker, only reached the green with his third shot and holed out from long distance with a three-putt. The one-time winner on the PGA Tour also recorded a 6 on his scorecard on the following hole – this time for a bogey. After another bogey, Matthew Wolff was already four-over-par after three holes of the US Masters 2022. Then, as his tee shot on hole 4, a par-3, landed in the greenside bunker, Wolff let off some steam – the club had to suffer.

At least for a few holes, the action obviously helped, because the American managed the par save from the sand and three pars followed. But things got even worse for Wolff as the round progressed. The three-time Masters participant collected six more bogeys and was only able to make two birdies at Augusta National. With nine strokes over par, Wolff is at the bottom of the leaderboard.

Wolff and the Masters – it’s complicated

For Wolff, this continues a string of frustrating performances at Augusta National. He missed the cut in his first appearance at the November Masters in 2020, and last year Wolff was disqualified after the second round. The reason: the then 21-year-old had registered an incorrect score on hole 17 and was therefore excluded from the tournament. Now the 45th in the world rankings is in danger of missing the cut again after a nine-over round.

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US Masters 2022: Paul Casey withdraws just before tee time

Paul Casey had to withdraw from the tournament shortly before his tee time for the first round of the US Masters 2022 due to an injury. He would have started at 4:53pm alongside Bryson DeChambeau and Players champion Cameron Smith and withdrew just minutes before. This means Casey, who is one of the best players without a win in one of the four major tournaments, will miss out on a chance to win one of the big titles. At already 44 years old, the Englishman is running out of time to hit the big time. On the Wednesday before the Masters, he still took part in the par-3 contest with his family.

Paul Casey already injured before the US Masters 2022?

Already at the end of March at the WGC Dell Match Play, Casey had to concede his first match after two holes due to back problems. He then did not play in any of the other matches. All three matches of the group phase were scored for his opponents. Nevertheless, he received 40,000 euros in prize money as the last player in the group. “The pain I feel is in my lower back, on the left side, it’s like a cramp,” Casey explained at the time. According to the physiotherapist, it is the gluteal muscle.

“The back issues are persistent and thus preventing me from being able to compete. I shall now focus on my treatment and recovery so I can return to competitive form as soon as possible,” Casey explained his withdraw from the US Masters 2022.

Since the US Masters is an invitational tournament, there is no list of players who advance if someone else withdraws, as is the case with normal tour events. So at least Casey cannot be accused of having made his decision earlier.

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US Masters 2022: Will Jon Rahm continue the Spanish tradition at Augusta?

We are in a week unlike any other in the entire year. When the gates of Augusta National Golf Club open in April, the entire golfing world goes into a trance for seven days, triggered by the uniqueness and simple beauty of this tournament. In Augusta, everything simply fits and the entire scenery seems perfectly coordinated, as if in a choreography that has been rehearsed for years. For this very reason – and because Augusta is Augusta – the US Masters is considered the most prestigious and important tournament of the year, even among players.

US Masters 2022 – Tee Times

That’s how Jon Rahm sees it, too. Although the Spaniard lost his first place in the world rankings to Scottie Scheffler a few weeks ago, the bookmakers still consider the 27-year-old to be the biggest contender for the title at the 2022 US Masters, and for good reason. For one thing, Rahm has always finished in the top 10 in his last four appearances at Augusta, and for another, this golf course has a very special Spanish aura about it. Seve Ballesteros, Jose Maria Olazabal and Sergio Garcia have already won the Green Jacket, and now the next great Spaniard is to follow. But Jon Rahm is aware of the difficulty of this task, as he revealed at the press conference on Tuesday.

US Masters 2022: No major like any other


The Masters is unique. Not only because of its history, but also because it is the only major tournament that is played on the same course every year. Admittedly, the Augusta National Golf Club has made some minor changes to the course again this year, but anyone who has ever played the Masters can gauge exactly what to expect. Jon Rahm knows that, too: “It makes preparation a little easier. You can simulate the situations for different shots a little easier in practice than you can at the other three majors, when you play a new course every year,” says the world number two.

Based on this fact, but also on his strong results in recent years, the Spaniard considers himself well prepared for the coming week: “I know I can play well here and hopefully on Sunday I can be a little closer on the last nine holes than in recent years.”

Tiger Woods on US Master 2022: “I belive I can win!”

In addition to the beautiful golf course built by Perry Maxwell in 1937, it’s also the crowds of fans that make the tournament what it is today. For Rahm, the 2022 US Masters is unlike any other event. After limited crowds during the pandemic, they are returning to full capacity this year. And as if the anticipation wasn’t already high enough, Tiger Woods is also announcing his comeback for the same week. “We were on the 7 on Monday and Tiger was just playing the 2,” Rahm reports of his first impressions. “I’ve never seen such a big crowd on those two holes, even on a Sunday. There’s a lot more excitement in the air.”

Jon Rahm: “Justin Thomas is the only one who gets real tips from Tiger.”

If you want to hold your own at Augusta National Golf Club, you need a good mix of experience and your best golf game. Forty-two years ago, Seve Ballesteros became the first Spaniard to win the U.S. Masters, ushering in a small Spanish tradition that last continued in 2017 when Sergio Garcia won the Green Jacket. Jon Rahm knows about that tradition and would only be too happy to do his part:

“Since I’m the only Spanish player who is a Major champion but not a Masters champion, that would be something special. Hopefully I can be fourth on that list. There have been a lot of good Spanish stories here that I would like to add to.”

US Masters 2022: Hideki Matsuyama serves outrageous menu of Japanese cuisine

If Rahm can show his best game this week, he will undoubtedly be considered the top favorite. But the Masters wouldn’t be the Masters if even the best players in the world didn’t break a sweat in this setting. Experience is the be-all and end-all at Augusta. When Tiger Woods was about to play his first US Masters, then as an amateur, he got helpful tips from Seve Ballesteros about the condition of the greens and how best to master the difficult shots at Augusta. When asked if Rahm himself had ever asked Tiger for such tips, the Spaniard responded with a nice anecdote:

“Justin Thomas is the only one who gets real tips from Tiger. I asked him for tips once before, back in East Lake. He just turned around and said ‘it’s all about the feeling and just keep going’ and I stood there thinking ‘cool, thanks for that’. Then when I turned around he was standing next to JT telling him a whole dissertation.”

Even if Rahm can’t hope for any tips from Tiger, it should also be enough if he fully trusts his game; after all, it made him the best golfer in the world last year. And there’s one more thing to be hopeful about. Rahm has his biggest fan with him again this week for the 2022 US Masters. “My son Kepa was a lucky charm at the U.S. Open. He wasn’t there at the British Open, so I hope he makes it lucky again this time.”

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Tiger Woods at US Masters 2022: “I believe I can win”

Finally it is official, Tiger Woods will compete this year at the US Masters 2022. In the press conference on 05.04.2022 he confirms what many have wished for and some have already suspected. But Tiger goes even further and even does not exclude a possible victory. In the interview, the golf legend also talks about the difficult path to the Masters and how he was able to take this incredible step, only 14 months after his accident.

Tiger Woods Interview at the US Masters 2022

THE MODERATOR: Good morning, everyone. It’s a pleasure to see all of you here today, and it is a very special pleasure to welcome back to our media center our five-time Masters champion and the most recent inductee to the World Golf Hall of Fame.

Tiger, it is great seeing you, and we appreciate the time you’re spending with us today.

TIGER WOODS: Thank you, Rob. It’s hard to believe it’s been 25 years since I won here, but it’s great to be back and be able to feel the energy and the excitement of the patrons again. I hadn’t seen them since when I won, and obviously we had a COVID year and I missed last year. So it was neat to feel that energy out there on the golf course yesterday.

Hopefully this storm blows out of here, and we get to have a great week.

THE MODERATOR: Thank you. We join in celebrating your 25th anniversary of your first win because it was a transformational win and it changed forever the world of golf. So looking back is quite special.

TIGER WOODS: Thank you.

THE MODERATOR: Last year at the 2021 tournament, all of us missed Tiger Woods greatly, and you and your family were in our thoughts and prayers for the next 14 months hoping for a complete and total recovery. It is great seeing you here today.

Q. Hi, Tiger. Are you surprised at all where you are right now physically? I think a lot of people are surprised that you’re here and giving it a try. How about you?

TIGER WOODS: I’ve worked hard. My team has been unbelievable. I’ve been lucky to have great surgeons and great PTs and physios that have worked on me virtually every day. We’ve worked hard to get to this point, to get to this opportunity to walk the grounds, test it out, and see if I can do this.

It’s been a tough, tough year and a lot of stuff that I had to deal with that I don’t wish on anyone, but here we are, Masters week. Being able to play and practice — for me, more importantly, just to say thank you to all the guys that have texted me, FaceTimed me, and called me and given me all their support, to see them in person and to say thank you has meant a lot.

US Masters 2022 with Tiger Woods? It’s a yes!

Q. Tiger, when will you decide whether you can play and what determines that?

TIGER WOODS: Well, as of right now, I feel like I am going to play, as of right now. I’m going to play nine more holes tomorrow. My recovery has been good. I’ve been very excited about how I’ve recovered each and every day, and that’s been the challenge. That’s why I came up here and tested it out for 27 holes because we play the par-3 course. Charlie couldn’t help himself. I was able to play 27 holes that day and at home testing it.

But it’s the recovery. How am I going to get all the swelling out and recover for the next day. My team has been fantastic and worked very hard. So we’ve got another day of nine more holes and then come game time.

Q. How much physical pain do you have to endure playing golf?

TIGER WOODS: Yeah, there is. There is each and every day. Obviously given what I’ve gone through with my back and obviously with my right leg. Yeah, there is each and every day.

Q. How much does that take away from your ability to play, or have you just mentally overcome it or have to overcome it every time you play?

TIGER WOODS: It’s been one of those things where I’ve had to endure pain before. This is different obviously. This is a lot more traumatic, what has transpired to my leg. We’ve had to put a lot of work. As I said, I’m very thankful to my surgeons and my PTs and physios that have worked on me and have given me this opportunity to play golf.

Q. Tiger, just go back to Sunday, 2019 for a minute. You’ve got 12 right behind you, made an incredible par there. It started to rain a little bit. You go to 13 tee. Your foot, it looked like you were trying to hit a cut shot, I’m not sure. Your foot slipped a little bit, and then your ball winds up in the middle of the fairway. I wonder if you ever got to see what the ball actually did?

TIGER WOODS: No, I didn’t. Jeff sets it up every year, and he moves that tee over maybe another step. There’s nowhere else to go. So everyone who has played there has teed off virtually from the same spot. It’s like digging into a batter’s box. And it’s sandy there. There’s really very little light that gets back in that area. So the grass is never as pristine as it is anywhere else on the golf course, and we’re all hitting from the same spot.

It’s not uncommon to see guys slip there, and I did. I slipped, and I hit it off the toe and hit a toe draw right around the corner.

Q. Draw? It didn’t go over the trees?

TIGER WOODS: No, I had a toe draw.

Q. How agonizing has it been just making the decision for you? Just talking about just the decision-making process.

TIGER WOODS: It’s just a matter of what my body’s able to do the next day and the recovery. That’s the hard part. Yes, we push it and try and recover the best we possibly can that night and see how it is the next morning. Then all the activations and going through that whole process again, and you warm it up, and then you warm it back down, or test it out, and then you’ve got to cool it back down. Then you’ve got to do that day in and day out.

It gets agonizing and teasing because of simple things that I would normally just go do that would take now a couple hours here and a couple hours there to prep and then wind down. So activity time to do what I want to do, it adds more time on both sides of it pre and post.

So that has been — it’s not like something I haven’t done, but the times have gotten longer on both sides.

Q. Tiger, you’ve said countless times throughout your career that you don’t enter a golf tournament unless you think you can win it. So the question is simple. Do you think you can win the Masters this week?

TIGER WOODS: I do.

Q. And what have you seen in your preparation that leads you to believe that?

TIGER WOODS: I can hit it just fine. I don’t have any qualms about what I can do physically from a golf standpoint. It’s now walking is the hard part. This is normally not an easy walk to begin with. Now given the conditions that my leg is in, it gets even more difficult.

You know, 72 holes is a long road, and it’s going to be a tough challenge and a challenge that I’m up for.

Q. Tiger, just on that topic, what part of the golf course is most difficult in terms of walking? Do you worry about slippage? Just also your assessment in the changes in the golf course.

TIGER WOODS: I don’t worry about slipping. I’ve got metals in, so I don’t have to worry about that. Even with the rain, it doesn’t really concern me.

Some of the changes are — some of them more drastic than others. Others are very subtle. Resurfacing on 3, but they’ve resurfaced every green since I’ve been here.

What they did on 11 is interesting, just from the standpoint that we’re further back, and then we thought the Larry Mize shot is gone, now it’s really gone with them raising the green up even more on the right-hand side, and we’re further back so we’re more prone to hit the ball over there anyways. So it’s a harder and more difficult pitch.

Other than that, the softening of 13. I understand it, trying to add a couple new pins, which they tend to do here. Over the years I’ve never seen them take away pins. They always added to areas in which they could grow more pins and more hole locations options for the committee to give us as a challenge. But I’ve never seen them take away pins. So 13 kind of fits into what their philosophy has been here.

Q. From that day early last year to this day, and this of all weeks, when you reflect on all you’ve been through, on all you’ve overcome, what words do you choose today to now reflect on these 14 months?

TIGER WOODS: Thankful. Yeah, very, very thankful. Thankful for just everyone’s support, everyone who’s been involved in my process of the work that I’ve put in each and every day, the people I work with, my whole team. And just as I was alluding to, all the support from the players out here.

We’re a big fraternity. The amount of texts and FaceTimes and calls I’ve gotten over the past year have meant a lot. To see some of the guys at home, whether I’ve been out at Medalist, out there playing, to see them again, or to see them yesterday in person and say thanks. I saw a few of them at the Hall of Fame induction.

I’m sure as the week goes on I’ll see more of them. So it’s been great. Tonight is the night of all nights to see all the guys again and listen to all the chiding and the stuff that I can’t ever repeat here and we don’t ever repeat, but the fact of what we’re able to say to each other is just awesome.

Q. If someone had told you in the first few days or weeks after your accident that you would be able to compete in this Masters with the expectation of winning it, what would you have said or thought?

TIGER WOODS: Well, at that time I was still in a hospital bed, and I was out for the next three months. I never left that hospital bed even to see my living room for three months. So that was a tough road. To finally get out of that where I wasn’t in a wheelchair or crutches and walking and still had more surgeries ahead of me, to say that I was going to be here playing and talking to you guys again, it would have been very unlikely.

Q. Tiger, what do the shoes that you’re wearing now give you that the shoes that you were wearing before don’t?

TIGER WOODS: Well, I have very limited mobility now. Just with the rods and plates and screws that are in my leg, I needed something different, something that allowed me to be more stable. That’s what I’ve gone to.

Nike’s been fantastic over the years of providing me with equipment and work, and we have worked, we’ve been working on trying to find something to allow me to do this and swing again. We’re still going to continue doing it, and hopefully we’ll have something soon.

Q. Tiger, you spoke in the Bahamas in November about being at peace with what the future held because you came back, you won here, you scaled that mountain. What’s been the main motivation to do that again, to put yourself through it all again?

TIGER WOODS: Well, I love competing, and I feel like if I can still compete at the highest level, I’m going to, and if I feel like I can still win, I’m going to play. But if I feel like I can’t, then you won’t see me out here. You guys know me better than that.

As Dee asked earlier, I don’t show up to an event unless I think I can win it. So that’s the attitude I’ve had. There will be a day when it won’t happen, and I’ll know when that is, but physically the challenge this week is I don’t have to worry about the ball striking or the game of golf, it’s actually just the hills out here. That’s going to be the challenge, and it’s going to be a challenge of a major marathon.

Q. Are there any particular weather conditions that would make it more difficult for you to decide to play?

TIGER WOODS: Oh, kind of just in general with my body, anytime it’s cold, it doesn’t feel very good. I think anyone who’s in this room who’s older than me can probably attest to that (Laughter).

Q. I just want to follow up on this notion of your rehab process. If you hadn’t been able to go, would you be satisfied with your career here and your career in general? And how much of that idea, I’ve still got work to do here, was fueling the rehab process?

TIGER WOODS: No, I feel like I could — if everything went well — my surgeons gave me a chance, and then my PTs and with my surgeons, they all said that I could do this again. Now, it’s up to me to endure the pain and all that, but I felt like I could still do this. I don’t know how many more years I can do this.

I was very fortunate to have come back at the end of ’17 when I did because I didn’t know if I could still do it again at that time, but again, my surgeons gave me an opportunity and my PTs did the same. This is kind of the same scenario but a little bit more severe than it was back then.

Q. But if you couldn’t have, would you have been satisfied to say —

TIGER WOODS: Yes, I would have. I think 82 is a pretty good number, and 15’s not too bad either.

Q. Tiger, when you were here last week, would that have been your first time back since the 2020 Masters?

TIGER WOODS: Yes, that was. It was, yes.

Q. So given all you’ve been through, was it at all emotional coming here even on a practice day? And how much did having Charlie play with you add to the whole experience?

TIGER WOODS: Yeah, it meant a lot to both of us. He had a chance to play right before the ’20 Masters, and he’s grown a lot since then, become a lot better player. So it was fun to see the changes in him, and for us as a family to go out here and have Robbie out here and J.T., who’s like my younger brother and Charlie’s older brother, for us to come out here and just play together, we just had a blast.

Couldn’t ask for a better day temperature-wise. It was just a perfect day. It was fun for me as a parent to see him enjoy it. And then just trying to remind him, these putts break a little more than they do back home. Florida greens are not quite like Augusta.

So a couple of the putts, it was pretty funny, he says, Just outside left? I said, No, it’s more like three feet outside left.

So we had a great time. Like I said, it was a blast. For me to have that opportunity again, as Ian was asking earlier whether or not a year ago would I have said yes to that, it was a totally different scenario.

Q. Would it be easier for you to go out early Thursday and later on Friday than vice versa in terms of recovery? Secondly, you’ve been used to adulation throughout your career, and understandably so. Have you ever felt the sense of warmth and reverence you got on that practice round yesterday? Because it seemed to be remarkable the outpouring of warmth in your direction.

TIGER WOODS: As I said earlier, the last time I’d had patrons out here was on that Sunday when I won, and it felt a little bit like that. Not quite as frenzied as that was. That was a little bit different. That was on a Sunday of a championship Sunday.

But yesterday was incredible. Everyone loves Freddie. That’s why they all came out (Laughter).

Q. Tiger, what do the doctors tell you about moving forward? Is this as good as you’re going to feel, or will it get better?

TIGER WOODS: My movement probably will not get much better. Will I feel better? Yes, I will. I’m going to get stronger, and the whole limb will get stronger. But as far as movement, probably not much more. I’m so limited with the hardware in there, I won’t get much more.

Q. Tiger, when you came back from the spinal fusion, you were asked and you would respond about Ben Hogan and the severity of what he went through after his crash. Are you drawing any inspiration now from his story given that, like you, his problem really wasn’t ball striking but just surviving the walk?

TIGER WOODS: Yeah, what he went through pre — obviously, he didn’t have the technology that we have now, but the amount of hot tubs that he would have to take pre-round, post-round, in the middle of the night, just to be able to get up and swing a club the next day, I certainly appreciate that.

The treatments have gotten so much better, and I’m very thankful for that because, if the treatments hadn’t gotten any — if I had to go through with my accident, given what had happened to me, during his era, I wouldn’t be playing this week, that’s for sure.

Q. Tiger, given your leg, what are the more troublesome lies for you? Are they uphill, downhill, or side hill?

TIGER WOODS: All (Laughter).

Q. Are there certain parts of some fairways that you might try to avoid that you maybe wouldn’t have thought about a few years ago?

TIGER WOODS: No, if I’m in a fairway, it’s all good. The only flat spots out here are the 18 tee boxes. Other than that, there’s nothing flat about this place.

If I have to worry about it being in 14 fairways, I’ll take that any day.

Q. I know you’re here feeling you can win, but given the challenges you have with your body and the competitive arena and now these new ones and the challenges you have overcome, how do you define a successful week here at the Masters?

TIGER WOODS: Well, I think that the fact that I was able to get myself here to this point is a success, and now that I am playing, now that everything is focused on how do I get myself into the position where I’m on that back nine on Sunday with a chance? Just like I did a few years ago.

Q. Two real quick if you don’t mind. Do you have a personal tradition unlike any other here? And if this place were flat, would your decision be a lot easier?

TIGER WOODS: Any traditions? I don’t know how to answer that one. I’ve been coming here since ’95. As far as a flat golf course, if it was back home at Medalist, it would have been a helluva lot easier, yes.

Q. Billy Horschel talked about saying you wanted to walk away. Getting here and getting yourself to this position was all about walking away on your own terms. Has that been a bit of motivation for you to compete and possibly win at Augusta?

TIGER WOODS: It has. When I decide to hang it up when I feel like I can’t win anymore, then that will be it. But I feel like I can still do it, and I feel like I still have the hands to do it, the body’s moving good enough. I’ve been in worse situations and played and won tournaments. Now, I haven’t been in situations like this where I’ve had to walk and endure what I’m going to try and endure, that’s going to be different. It’s a different challenge.

But my back surgeries that I’ve had before and the stuff I had to play through, even going back to the U.S. Open when my leg was a little bit busted, those are all times that I can draw upon where I was successful, how I’ve learned to block things out and focus on what I need to focus on. That’s certainly going to be the challenge this week.

THE MODERATOR: Tiger, no matter what your decision is, it has been a joy to have you back at Augusta and best of luck to you.

TIGER WOODS: Thank you.

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He’s back! – Tiger Woods confirms participation in US Masters 2022

Just 14 months ago golf legend Tiger Woods suffered a serious accident, now he’s back at the US Masters 2022!
After he already traveled to Augusta last week and completed some practice rounds together with Justin Thomas, he now announced, two days before the start of the tournament: “As of right now, I feel like I am going to play.”

Tiger Woods is back in Augusta

In the press conference on Tuesday morning, Tiger Woods confirmed the hopes of his fans:

Sixth title for Tiger Woods?

But his participation is not enough for the GOAT (Greatest of all Time). Asked if he believes in a sixth victory in this edition of the Masters, the record-breaking winner replies simply: “I do.”

Already in his practice rounds, Tiger Woods appeared confident. His flight partners reported that he had no more signs of injury and was playing at his high level. Find out how Tiger Woods will fare in the coming days in our live scoring and live ticker!

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Who are the favorites for the US Masters 2022?

The first major is just around the corner this week. The starting field is relatively small with 91 players and the venue is Augusta National Golf Club, as it is every year. With the help of the performances of the past weeks as well as the statistics of the past years we can identify the biggest favorites. At the same time, some players can also be excluded as favorites. However, it should not be forgotten: “Unexpected often comes”…

Especially in focus at the US Masters 2022

Future hope Viktor Hovland already proved several times in his young years that he has what it takes to become a champion. Hovland leads the DP World Tour Rankings this season with just three tournaments played, and he currently sits seventh in the FedEx Cup rankings thanks to one win and four top-10 finishes. He finished the 2019 Masters as the top amateur and just missed the top 20 (T21) last year.

Australian Cameron Smith has already prevailed in two significant tournaments this year. Tournament number 1 of 2022, the Tournament of Champions in Hawaii, was won by Smith with a record score of 34 strokes under par. He also took the winning prize money in the unofficial “fifth” major, the Players Championship. With these two victories, he is currently in third place in the FedEx Cup. Smith is definitely a dangerous competitor in this form.

Since the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play, no one has been able to get past the name Scottie Scheffler. With his third win in six weeks, he reached the top of the world rankings two weeks before the Masters. There is no denying that the American is in absolute top form. Although he “only” finished T18 at the last Masters, he made it into the top 10 at the other 2021 Major tournaments.

The absolute favorite is, among others, Jon Rahm, who until last week had been at the top of the world rankings for a total of 43 weeks. Major tournaments seem to suit him particularly well: The Spaniard has finished in the top 10 in each of his last four Masters appearances, while he also played his way into the top 10 twice in the other three majors last year and achieved his first major victory at the US Open. Based on these results, Rahm is not the top favorite for no reason.

Collin Morikawa is the high-flyer of 2020/21. At just 25 years of age, he is already a two-time major winner and has worked his way up to second place in the world rankings thanks to numerous victories and placings. The Masters is the major at which he has been least successful in his still young career. His best result so far was a shared 18th place last year, which he will try to beat this year.

Looking at the Masters stats

In addition to the five favorites listed, there are several other players who, according to various statistics, will have the best chance of winning the 2022 US Masters. For example, each of the last ten Masters winners was in the top 25 of the official world golf rankings in the week of their victory. Patrick Cantlay, Justin Thomas, Dustin Johnson, Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele, Billy Horschel, Louis Oosthuizen, Abraham Ancer, Tyrrell Hatton, Brooks Koepka, Jordan Spieth, Bryson DeChambeau, Joaquin Niemann, Daniel Berger, Tony Finau, Harris English, Matt Fitzpatrick and Paul Casey also have good chances.

Two players were excluded in this enumeration: Sam Burns and Hideki Matsuyama. Sam Burns is competing at the Masters for the first time, making him a newcomer to Augusta. At 86 Masters, only one rookie has managed to win the tournament so far, so the chances for players competing for the first time are pretty slim. This also applies to Harold Varner III, Sepp Straka, Tom Hoge and JJ Spaun, among others. Hideki Matsuyama will start as defending champion at the 2022 Masters, which is why he is denied a favorite position. Only three players have managed to defend the title in the entire Masters era.

Looking at the Strokes Gained statistics, some players get another plus point. Eight of the last ten Masters winners were at least 1.5 strokes per round better from tee to green than their competitors in the three months leading up to the Masters. Jon Rahm, Joqauin Niemann, Justin Thomas, Scottie Scheffler, Matt Fitzpatrick, Rory McIlroy, Daniel Berger, Paul Casey and Viktor Hovland all figure in that trend.

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US Masters 2022: Bryson DeChambeau plays despite injuries

In recent weeks and months, headlines have not reported Bryson DeChambeau’s strong performances, but his numerous health problems. Among them his wrist problems and hip pain. On Monday, he spoke about his health condition and how he is dealing with it at the 2022 US Masters. An important message for his fans: He will compete, but he is not yet back to 100 percent performance.

Bryson DeChambeau: “I’m at 80 percent performance”

DeChambeau is back in Augusta and training together with his coaching team. But due to his injuries, he can’t follow his usual training path. “I can give about 80 percent right now,” he answered in an interview when asked about his form. “That’s why I can’t do swing speed training and I have to train smarter in general. I have to be careful and effective in the things I practice.” But DeChambeau also sees improvement in recent weeks, just in time for the 2022 U.S. Masters. “I’m proud that I made it here in such a short time. I’m pleased with that,” he said. ““Hitting golf balls on the range today, I was able to sustain practice for a good amount of time,” he said. Despite his weaker form, he still manages a ball speed of around 190 miles per hour.

US Masters 2022: Doctors advise against participation

DeChambeau’s hip injury developed two years ago, he explained in an interview. The small tear in his hip labrum first became relevant when he slipped “Charlie Brown-like” during a table tennis match against Sergio Garcia and Joaquin Niemann in front of the Saudi International and fell on said hip, as well as his injured hand.
After that, DeChambeau underwent CTs and MRIs resulting in a hairline fracture of the hamate bone. This common injury, especially among baseball players, could also stem from his excessive workouts at the driving range, according to DeChambeau. Back in November, he was probably struggling with problems in his hand: “Last November, before I played against Brooks, I felt something. There was something on my hand that kind of popped, and I was like, ‘Ah, this isn’t normal.’ It didn’t really feel good either. It was hard to hit balls.”
The American’s injuries usually entail a four-month break, but DeChambeau was back on the golf course after just two months. This decision is not without risks and in the worst case could lead to surgery one his left hand. But for DeChambeau, one thing is certain, “the Masters is only once a year and I have to give it a go.”

For “The Hulk,” the last six weeks off were not a punishment. He himself said he used the time to give back to his viewers and to golf. “It’s really made me a different person, and – I hope – a better person who also has a different perspective on the game of golf.” He also learned to listen to his body better and give himself rest breaks, he said.
But despite that positive outlook, his comeback to the golf course was frustrating. After six weeks without playing practice, his rounds were marked by shouts of “Fore.” “It’s just not fun. It’s very difficult on your mental psyche as well.”

Bryson DeChambeau wants to take it slower

For him, the last few months have been a learning phase. He had to deal with the first major injury of his career and (at least partially) revise many attitudes toward sports. “You have to pay attention to every part of your body,” he explained in the interview. Still, he said he continues to enjoy pushing his limits and making improvements as a result. Due to his injuries, however, that approach hasn’t necessarily been possible, “i’ve taken more of a reserved approach now through this season, I’ll start ramping back up when I feel 100 percent again.” For now, he is confident of playing up front again at Augusta, despite his weaker form. “It’s been a bit of unravelling this knot that I’ve had in my game for the past four years,” he said of his search for greater consistency with his swing. “We’re finally moving in a direction that I feel is positive for me being able to win again, hopefully, regularly like I did in 2018.”

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