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19th Hole

Why Angel Cabrera will go down as one of the greatest pressure players of all time (Masters WITB 2009 & 2013)

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The 2020 Masters is finally underway, but one man intrinsically connected to the tournament is not in action: Angel Cabrera.

The 51-year-old who has been ever-present at the event since making his debut in 2000 is missing his first Masters tournament due to a wrist injury he underwent successful surgery on last month.

The Masters is an event which a litany of greats have failed to conquer, leaving a noticeable and painful gap in otherwise stellar careers: Greg Norman, Ernie Els, Lee Trevino, Tom Weiskopf, Johnny Miller, the list goes on. 

The mystique of the tournament intensifies the spotlight and pressure, for most that stress causes errors, for the rare few it helps them to shine. Angel Cabrera is one of those rare few.

The Argentine’s career has been fascinating. In 2005 he won the European Tour’s flagship event, the BMW Championship, and then didn’t win again until a major breakthrough victory at the 2007 U.S. Open at Oakmont. At that event, he stood tall to join an exclusive club who have outgunned Tiger Woods on the back nine of a major.

He did so by playing exceptional golf that Sunday, the only player in the top 10 to break par.

The win took him to 17th in the Official World Golf Rankings, but two years later he headed to Augusta National having slipped to 69th in the rankings and priced up as a rank outsider for the event at 150/1.

2009 Masters

At Oakmont in 2007, Cabrera had to fight off Tiger and Jim Furyk. At Augusta in 2009 it was Kenny Perry and Chad Campbell, and it was a Sunday where the Argentine was always on the back foot.

Cabrera trailed Perry by three with six holes to go, and despite two birdies in his next three holes, he was still down by two. On the 16th hole, the man known as ‘El Pato’ (‘The Duck’) struck his shot to 15 feet above the hole, while Perry hit the shot of life to kick in range for birdie.

Faced with a do or die putt, Cabrera answered the call.

From there, his American adversary felt the anxiety that comes with winning a green jacket. Two closing bogeys let Cabrera in, who poured in a slick 5-footer down the slope on 18 for par to secure his place in the three-man playoff.

On the first playoff hole, disaster struck for El Pato, when he found himself handcuffed in the woods after a wayward drive on the 18th hole.

Faced with needing to get up and down from the fairway to stand a chance of slipping on the green jacket, Cabrera once again answered the call in emphatic style. 

With just Perry remaining to defeat on the second playoff hole on one of the most challenging holes on the course – the 10th -, a stunning 8-iron sealed the deal after Perry hooked his approach to a devilish pin position.

The moment was too big for Kenny Perry. It was made for Cabrera.

Angel Cabrera 2009 Masters WITB

Driver: Ping Rapture (7.5 degrees)
Shaft: Aldila NV Proto

3-wood: Ping Rapture V2 (15.5 degrees)

Irons: Ping G10 (2),  Ping S57 (3-PW)

Wedges: Ping Tour-W 54 degrees, Ping Tour-W TS 60 degrees

Putter: Ping i Series 1/2 Craz-E Belly

2013 Masters

Four years on, Cabrera had done little else of note and arrived at Augusta ranked a lowly 273rd in the world. Like four years prior, Cabrera found himself in the mix, and once again his clutch-gene activated.

Fighting against a trio of Aussies – Scott, Day and Leishman – the man from Cordoba would once again step up in a monumentally big moment.

While Leishman and Day were faltering, on the 16th hole, El Pato saw only opportunity and faced with a lengthy putt underneath the hole, promptly rammed the ball into the back of the cup.

Then on 17, a hole where most players would bite your hand off for a four on a Sunday at the Masters, Cabrera wanted more, playing the hole supremely, and leaving himself a chance for what he felt could be a killer blow.

To this day, it still mystifies me how the ball didn’t move to the right as it ought to do.

From the fairway on 18, the then 44-year-old watched on as Adam Scott erupted with emotion after burying a birdie which he felt had given him his first major championship.

Like 2009, Cabrera’s hand was forced and he needed something special. What he did, was hit one of the best shots ever seen at Augusta National, striping an iron in the pouring rain to a couple of feet.

I asked my friend in Buenos Aires, what was said between Cabrera and his son on the bag, Angel Jr, as the shot was in the air, and this is how it went down:

Cabrera: Vuele! (Go/Fly) 

Angel Jr. Dejala Papi, deja (Leave it daddy, leave it.)

On the first playoff hole, Cabrera scared the hole with a birdie chip, and after trading pars on the hole, he made his way to the familiar tenth hole where his duel with Scott would come to a climax.

Both men hit excellent tee shots and approaches, and both were left with medium length birdie chances from almost identical distances. Cabrera got the nod to play first, and just as on 17, put a pure roll on the ball that looked destined to find the cup, but like on 17 the ball wouldn’t go down.

It was to be Scott’s time, who poured in his effort for his breakthrough major. 

The Argentine was gracious and honest in defeat. He may not have won the green jacket, but unlike greats who never got their hands on the green jacket, he went down while playing his best golf, hardly missing a shot.

“That’s how golf is. I came back and I had that chip on 18, I could have won it. But Adam’s a good winner. I would have been happier if I had won but he’s a great player.”

Angel is that rare breed whose game improves under the most intense of pressure. He is a predator, and one of the best pressure players of his generation. And if there is one player who I’d love to see in contention one last time on a Sunday at Augusta, Angel Cabrera would be at the top of the list.

Angel Cabrera 2013 Masters WITB

Driver: Ping G25 (8.5 degrees)
Shaft: Aldila Tour Green 75 X

3 wood: Ping G25 (15 Degrees)
Shaft: Aldila RIP Alpha 80X

Irons: Ping i20 (3), Ping S56 (4-PW)
Shaft: True Temper Dynamic Gold X100 Tour Issue

Wedges: Ping Gorge Tour 54, 58 and 62 Degrees
Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold X100 Tour Issue

Putter: Ping Scottsdale TR Shea H

Ball: Titleist Pro V1x

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Gianni is the Managing Editor at GolfWRX. He can be contacted at [email protected].

19th Hole

Butch Harmon reveals what he worked on with Rory McIlroy during visit earlier this year

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While speaking on the “Son of a Butch” Podcast, legendary swing coach Butch Harmon revealed what he worked on with Rory McIlroy when the four-time major champion went to visit him after the Players Championship this season.

“The work I did with him wasn’t a tremendous amount of changing what he did, it was his attitude and the way he played certain shots. From 150 yards and in he made a full swing like he was hitting a driver and I wanted him to make more 3 quarter swings and chop the follow through off a little. He’s a very high ball hitter, but with short irons high balls aren’t good, it’s hard to control, we wanted to bring the ball flight down.”

The work certainly seemed to help McIlroy, as he went on to win the Zurich Classic alongside Shane Lowry and the Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow in back-to-back starts.

Rory will now tee it up at Valhalla for the PGA Championship, which is the site of his most recent major victory in 2014.

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19th Hole

Brandel Chamblee says this technological development was key to Phil Mickelson winning major championships

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While speaking with GolfWRX, Golf Channel’s Brandel Chamblee shared that he believes the solid core golf ball helped Phil Mickelson win major championships.

“One of the consequences of the solid core golf ball coming around was it put the straightest of hitters in the rough.

“Phil started winning majors in 2004, I don’t think that’s any coincidence. I think he started winning majors after the solid core golf ball came along and put everybody in the rough.

“And so [Phil] is like ‘I got you in the rough, I’m going to kick your a**. This is my game. I’ve been in the rough my whole career. I can go over trees, through trees, around trees.’

“Because he’s got that amazing creativity and Phil is an underrated iron player, phenomenal iron player. Great, great great out of the trouble. If you put the top-40 players on a list and ranked them in terms of accuracy, he would be 40th.

“So, I think that was one of the consequences of the solid core golf balls was it allowed Phil to win major championships.”

Mickelson went on to win the Masters in 2004 as well as five additional majors from 2004-2021 including three total Masters, two PGA Championships, and an Open Championship.

Check out the full interview with Chamblee below:

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19th Hole

Former Augusta National employee pleads guilty to transporting stolen Masters memorabilia; Arnold Palmer’s green jacket among stolen items

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According to a report from the Chicago Tribune, a man was charged in Chicago with stealing millions of dollars’ worth of memorabilia from Augusta National last month.

The man, Robert Globensky, was charged with transporting the memorabilia across state lines.

The report states that between 2009 and 2022, Globensky allegedly transported “millions of dollars’ worth of Masters golf tournament merchandise and historical memorabilia” from Augusta National “and transported to Tampa, Florida, knowing the same had been stolen, converted and taken by fraud.”

The document was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.

Since then, more details have emerged about the case.

According to Darren Rovell of Cllct, one of the items that was stolen was Arnold Palmer’s green jacket.

The Chicago Tribune also reported that Globensky was able to steal the merchandise due to his role as a former warehouse coordinator at Augusta National who oversaw the Masters merchandise that was sold.

Rovell states that “A source with intimate knowledge of the case said an Augusta National member, who knew the jacket was missing, contacted a well-known collector who had gained a reputation for tracking down rare items. The member’s goal was to return the jacket to Augusta under the guise of purchasing it in a private sale.”

The plan worked, and the man agreed to sell the jacket for an agreed upon price of $3.6 million. After the sale was complete, the FBI swarmed the house of the thief.

Cllct also reported that Globensky pled guilty in a federal court in Chicago on Wednesday and now faces up to 10 years in prison.

The Chicago Tribune adds that Globensky’s plea deal includes an agreement to provide the government a cashier’s check for $1.5 million in the next few days.

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