AUGUSTA, GA. - This could be a Masters unlike any other.
For the first time, members of a rogue golf tour will play for a green jacket at Augusta National Golf Course, which long has considered itself a staid keeper of golf's most hallowed traditions.
Scottie Scheffler will try to become the fourth player to successfully defend his Masters championship.
Rain is threatening to wash away weekend rounds, presenting at least the remote possibility that the Masters could finish on a Monday for the first time since 1983.
Tiger Woods is here with his limp, and Phil Mickelson without his patented braggadocio.
Augusta National has lengthened its signature 13th hole, turning the beauty into something resembling a beast.
The two issues dominating many conversations this week — the proposed rollback of the golf ball and the presence of LIV golfers — have little to do with the green jacket.
On Thursday morning, golf itself will reclaim one of the world's most picturesque stages, with three clear favorites trying to overcome personal and historical challenges to win the season's first major.