Play resumes at Masters after lightning delay
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The 84th Masters began in a surreal atmosphere as starters Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player hit the ceremonial first tee shots in near darkness at Augusta National on Thursday before play was suspended because of lightning.
Nicklaus and Player emerged from the clubhouse at 6.57 a.m., the exact minute of sunrise, and strode to the tee before daylight had even punctuated the gloom in a light drizzle, as a drone buzzed nearby to film the occasion.
Despite this being a Masters like no other, without paying spectators due to novel coronavirus concerns, several hundred people surrounded the tee, mostly members and their guests.
Augusta chairman Fred Ridley introduced the players, and Player was first to hit. Swinging better than an 85-year-old has any right to do, he took a full backswing and struck the ball down the left side of the fairway.
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Spain’s Jon Rahm celebrated his 26th birthday by skipping a ball across the pond on the 16th hole and scoring a hole-in-one during a practice round prior to the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club. 3:32
Nicklaus, 80, followed suit with a swing slightly shorter than in his heyday that brought him 18 major championships. He too found the fairway.
“I was pleased it was dark because you didn’t see where the ball went,” Nicklaus said.
And with that the first Masters played in autumn was officially underway, though the first tee times were delayed by 10 minutes until 7.10 a.m.
However, less than 30 minutes of play was possible before competition was suspended due to lightning in the area, with only nine players having completed one hole.
Play did resume at Augusta National after a delay of nearly three hours because of rain and lightning in the area.
Only a handful of players managed to tee off for the opening round before an approaching storm prompted an evacuation of the course.
No one completed more than one hole. Because of the move to November and the tight window of daylight hours, play began off both sets of tees. After such a lengthy delay, it seems unlikely that the entire first round will be completed Thursday. Fortunately, the forecast for the rest of the weekend is much more promising: sunny skies with temperatures in the 70s.
Tiger Woods is the defending champion, while fellow American Bryson DeChambeau is the favourite.
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SOURCE NEWS