Masters Live feed catches tree falling at the 17th tee
The Masters Live feed caught heavy winds down a massive tree at Augusta National.
The Masters Live feed caught heavy winds down a massive tree at Augusta National.
While 54 holes remain to be played at the 2023 Masters, the first 18 holes set up a lot of intrigue for the weekend in Augusta.
Rain will have an effect on The Masters today. You can watch the coverage online starting at 8:15 a.m. and then on ESPN at 3 p.m.
Masters viewers were treated to a welcome surprise when Rory McIlroy donned a microphone as he played the ninth hole.
"Nobody wants to be the guy who is at the Masters and made it about LIV versus the PGA Tour and not the Masters tournament."
Coverage of a tradition unlike any other, The Masters, begins online at 7:45 a.m. ET then on ESPN at 3 p.m.
The description of changes to hole No. 13 here would have been better with some video.
Masters Week tees off in earnest today with the Par 3 Contest on ESPN+ at noon ET and then on ESPN at 3 p.m.
"Phil, we were told, declined an invitation."
"The storylines are the storylines, and we’re there to cover those."
The joyful story hasn’t caused Woods to lose any of his competitive spirit
"Do you want to take this home?"
It'll be good to have Tirico back at Augusta National, and it's a great addition for SiriusXM.
If your favorite team won or you have a cherished World Series memory, Boswell was probably there and wrote about it better than anybody.
The key moments from Matsuyama's historic win, as seen and heard in Japan.
Hopefully more tests come back negative for everyone involved.
Out of context, this isn't good, but there's no such thing as out of context.
Nantz, 61, doesn't see any reason to plan his Masters retirement just yet.
A long-running Masters might finish on a different broadcast network.
If this works, it could be really, really cool.
It's unfortunate, but they'd have been pushing daylight anyway in the middle of November.
In between golf, Nantz would also have the NFL season (and Super Bowl) and the NCAA Tournament to call.
"All aspects of this report are entirely and completely false. We have not been asked by anyone to remove Sage from future coverage."
Jim Nantz found that the best way to call the moment was to say nothing.
One Atlanta meteorologist even received death threats for breaking into the Masters