The 2007 Masters at
Augusta National
Most people know Augusta because it is the site of the Masters
Tournament, played each spring at the Augusta National Golf
Club. The tourist boom in the early years of the 1900s brought golf
to Augusta, and a number of excellent golf courses soon sprang up.
The courses attracted many, including a young Atlantan named Bobby
Jones, who often came to town to play at what are now the Forest
Hills Golf Club and the Augusta Country Club.
Jones remembered Augusta fondly in later years when he and friend
Clifford Roberts began to plan a special "winter course,"
suitable for play when most everyone else was shivering.
Jones is said to have favored Augusta over his native Atlanta
because of its milder winters.
In 1930, he persuaded a Scottish architect named Alister MacKenzie
to design what would become Augusta National on a 365-acre site
off then-rural Washington Road.
It opened for members' play in December 1932. There was soon talk
of holding a U.S. Open at the course, but Jones and Roberts thought
it might be better to hold their own tournament.
So was born The Masters - although for years Jones avoided calling
it that.
"We realized," Roberts later wrote, "that in order
to build a tournament of stature that could survive Bob's eventual
separation from the event, it needed to be operated in a better
fashion and made more enjoyable than any other."
Roberts, the club chairman until his death in 1977, and Jones,
the club president until he died in 1971, succeeded magnificently.
The Masters was, and still is, considered the best-run golf
tournament in the world by fans and golfers alike.
|