Hurricane Helene hit Augusta National. What it left is noticeable, not necessarily bad | Golf Insider
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — The patrons walking up the first fairway at Augusta National during a sun-splashed practice round for the Masters managed to find a nice viewpoint between a couple of pines, where they watched as Justin Rose hit an approach shot to the green.
There are quite a few more places for them to perch after Hurricane Helene tore through Georgia last summer.
By the time the deadly Category 4 storm churned north and finally dissipated, it left in its wake an estimated 1 million downed trees, thousands without power, and some 7 million cubic yards of debris to pick up. The city of Augusta was devastated, and the pristine property that annually hosts golf’s most revered tournament was left with its own massive clean-up effort.
Nearly six months later, it’s hard to tell anything was ever amiss. The fairways and greens are perfectly manicured, the azaleas once again in bloom. All that are missing are the hundreds of trees that failed to survive the storm.
“It almost felt like I was playing the back nine for the first time,” two-time major winner Xander Schauffele said. “There’s trees you aim at off the tee, and over the 11th green you can — when you’re walking down 10, you can see half the course.”
That sweeping vista left Schauffele with mixed feelings. In some respects, it was neat to see what was happening elsewhere on the property, thanks to panoramic views that are probably a lot like what Alister MacKenzie and Bobby Jones would have had as they plotted the layout on a former nursery and antebellum plantation in the early 1930s.
In other respects, Schauffele said, “it’s sad to see, too, how many trees have fallen.”
The missing trees should not demonstrably affect the way the course plays when the Masters begins Thursday. Some of those towering pines served as convenient aiming points — over the 11th green, for example — but markers that are just as helpful. And the most wayward shots will still be penalized by trunks and limbs among the pine straw.
“When you’re hitting into the trees,” Scottie Scheffler said, “you’re still going to be in a good amount of trouble.”
The more interesting discussion seems to center on whether the loss of so many trees was an unintended positive.
John Fought played in the Masters three times in the 1970s and ‘80s before his second career as a lauded golf course architect behind such well-known layouts as Pumpkin Ridge in Oregon. He’s among many who have embraced the removal of unnecessary trees at such classic courses as Oakmont, and restoring them to the what their original designers intended.
“In my opinion the course has undergone a lot of change. Not just in length — which is obvious — but also in its tree planting,” Fought said, pointing specifically to trees down the right of No. 11 and behind Nos. 15 and 17. “Some of this tree planting has been good, but overall it has changed the course markedly from the course Bobby Jones and Alister Mackenzie envisioned.”
Indeed, Jones and MacKenzie often said that St. Andrews served as an inspiration for Augusta National. It is evident in the large, undulating greens, the absence of penal rough, and the risk-reward opportunities that exist across the course.
There are no towering pines on the windswept Scottish coast, though.
“St. Andrews is wide open with many angles to play from. I would like to see more of that,” Fought said. “Don’t get me wrong, I love the Masters and how it is run, but I have observed that trees have become a dominating force in the design.”
Much of that has been by necessity.
One way to combat advancements in technology, and force players to hit similar shots to those of decades ago, has been to lengthen the course. But another has been to tighten it. When the club transplanted 36 pines in 2003, then-Masters chairman Hootie Johnson said the impetus was to continue “our long-standing emphasis on accuracy off the tee.”
In the late 1990s, longtime New Yorker and Golf Digest writer David Owen was asked to write a history of the club, and granted unfettered access to its vast archives. His book, “The Making of the Masters,” is considered its definitive account.
Owen points out that Jones “described the course as ‘of national design,’” and he embraced changes suggested by many people. And while Mackenzie did call St. Andrews the model, “you kind of have to suspend disbelief to see real similarities.”
“I would say the changes have been necessary,” Owen concluded. “Pros today would annihilate the course as it was in 1934.”
How they will fare in 2025 remains to be seen.
Thanks to Hurricane Helene, those walking the property this week at least will have different places to watch it.
“I just think it looks better. I don’t know why I say that,” admitted Fred Couples, the 1992 Masters champion. “The other day we played No. 1 and we were standing on the green and you just look right down and you see a lot more room on the ninth tee. I think that’s kind of cool. You can watch people hit. There’s a few areas where it blew right through there, but for me personally, I know a lot of trees went down. I know this town was devastated. But the golf course is unbelievable.
“There’s still a lot of trees,” Couples said. “My God.”
***
Denver’s Clark paired Rahm, Fleetwood at Masters
Denver native Wyndham Clark is set for his second trip to the Masters and will be part of a pretty star-studded group for the first and second rounds.
Clark will be playing with 2023 Masters winner Jon Rahm and Ryder Cup star Tommy Fleetwood in the first and second rounds. On Thursday they are set to tee off at 11:34 a.m. and Friday will be at 8:26 a.m.
The Valor Christian graduate struggled in his first trip to Augusta National last year. He started out hot by going 3-under in the first 10 holes but faltered after that and missed the cut.
Since his win at the U.S. Open in 2023, the majors have been a struggle for Clark. In 2024, he missed the cut at The Masters, PGA Championship and Open Championship. At the U.S. Open, he finished in a tie for 56th and was never in contention.
***
What they’re saying
“It’s hard to believe it’s that number. That number is really staggering if I pause for a second, which I try not to allow myself to do. But if I do, and it has happened, and I think about 40 years, which ties the great Verne Lundquist for the most ever at 40, I just feel so grateful.”
– CBS broadcaster Jim Nantz on getting ready to call his 40th Masters
***
Odds to win Masters
Scottie Scheffler +400
Rory McIlroy +650
Jon Rahm +1400
Collin Morikawa +1600
Ludvig Aberg +1800
Xander Schauffele +2000
Bryson DeChambeau +2000
Justin Thomas +2200
Brooks Koepka +3000
Wyndham Clark +9000
***
This week in golf
Augusta National Golf Club
THE MASTERS
Site: Augusta, Ga.
Course: Augusta National GC. Yardage: 7,555. Par: 72.
Prize money: TBA ($20 million in 2024). Winner’s share: TBA ($3.6 million in 2024).
Television: Thursday-Friday, 1-5:30 p.m. (ESPN); Saturday-Sunday, 10 a.m.-Noon (Paramount+), Noon-5 p.m. (CBS).
Defending champion: Scottie Scheffler.
***
FedEx Cup standings
Points Money
1. Rory McIlroy 1,683 $9,057,558
2. Sepp Straka 1,308 $4,195,617
3. Russell Henley 1,229 $5,643,775
4. Collin Morikawa 1,081 $5,558,964
5. J.J. Spaun 1,059 $4,581,472
6. Corey Conners 1,034 $3,565,631
7. Ludvig Aberg 1,018 $4,956,223
8. Hideki Matsuyama 949 $4,464,913
9. Justin Thomas 944 $3,219,600
10. Scottie Scheffler 928 $3,341,197
11. Thomas Detry 889 $2,757,678
12. Michael Kim 870 $2,785,623
13. Maverick McNealy 847 $3,726,513
14. Shane Lowry 829 $3,613,011
15. Lucas Glover 828 $3,033,613
16. Nick Taylor 807 $2,643,264
17. Min Woo Lee 742 $2,658,736
18. Tom Hoge 696 $2,678,618
19. Brian Harman 683 $2,352,137
20. Akshay Bhatia 645 $2,416,394
21. Joe Highsmith 633 $2,095,856
22. Harris English 629 $2,172,204
23. Patrick Cantlay 616 $2,200,317
24. Daniel Berger 587 $2,098,816
25. Jacob Bridgeman 583 $1,950,029
26. Andrew Novak 580 $2,098,205
27. Keegan Bradley 574 $1,920,628
28. Sungjae Im 570 $2,243,500
29. Denny McCarthy 569 $1,975,330
30. Viktor Hovland 561 $1,822,023
31. Ryan Gerard 546 $1,778,572
32. Tommy Fleetwood 538 $1,914,188
33. Justin Rose 522 $1,787,476
34. Bud Cauley 521 $1,687,545
35. Jason Day 515 $1,740,872
36. Brian Campbell 514 $1,304,837
37. Patrick Rodgers 510 $1,797,112
38. Robert Macintyre 493 $1,871,762
39. Taylor Pendrith 485 $1,772,226
40. Sam Stevens 475 $1,686,791
41. Tony Finau 457 $1,567,701
42. Ben Griffin 445 $1,368,690
43. Stephan Jaeger 443 $1,478,578
44. Cameron Davis 440 $1,290,400
45. Nicolas Echavarria 426 $1,388,286
46. Aaron Rai 423 $1,639,875
47. Jake Knapp 399 $1,494,373
48. Gary Woodland 394 $1,297,954
49. Jhonattan Vegas 368 $1,152,270
50. Billy Horschel 364 $1,193,354




