Augusta, Ga. – In golf, the future isn't merely filled with uncertainty, it's dotted with hazards real and imagined. Trees, bunkers, bad backs, swing flaws, relationship problems, caddie relations, gusting winds, self-inflicted pressure and hundreds of fellow competitors who would like to beat you in a skins game on Tuesday and for a million bucks on Sunday.
Golf is hard when you're playing for fun on an empty course. Add galleries and TV cameras pressure and it can turn the cranium into a funhouse.
Take Jason Day. The last time he played in a major, he beat Jordan Spieth, who was trying to finish one of the greatest golf seasons ever with a third major victory.
Day overpowered him at the 2015 PGA Championship at Whistling Straits and has surged to No. 1 in the world. He is the obvious favorite to win the 2016 Masters. He's powerful, has putted extremely well under pressure of late and has proved he can win a major.
But golf is the rare sport in which being the favorite means you're probably not going to win.
No player ranked No. 1 in the world has won the Masters since 2002, according to the Golf Channel. Tiger Woods' dominance fooled us into thinking that the best golfer in the world should win frequently, but at even his best Woods won about a quarter of the majors in which he entered.
Day might be the best golfer in the world. He also has dealt with illness and a back injury and is playing a course that sets up perfectly for Bubba Watson, and is facing a player in Rickie Fowler who might be ready to win a major, and is dueling a field filled with talented players who might be peaking while Day is nursing his ailments.
"Golf is a very, very frustrating game," Day said Tuesday. "It really is. I can sympathize with everyone in this room that's played golf. It's a very difficult game at times and especially as a professional.