Augusta, Ga. – Tiger Woods has been injured for a while and Freddie Couples recently hurt his back, removing two older players from the Masters field who could have leveraged their course knowledge and ball striking into a weekend of contention.
In Woods' increasingly ominous absence, golf has been buoyed by a handful of young stars and a slew of other youngsters who could become stars any day, making the game's popularity less dependent on Woods' dominance. In some ways, it has made the game more likable.
Jason Day, Jordan Spieth and Rory McIlroy are young, phenomenally talented and charismatic. Spieth and McIlroy have won multiple majors at young ages, and Day is ranked No. 1 in the world. Rickie Fowler has shown signs of growing into a major champion but might not get there before a dozen other talented young players who, as Jack Nicklaus said Wednesday, all seem to be 6-4 with long arms, gym memberships and Iron Byron mechanics.
There is one forty-something player in this year's Masters field who might be able to fend off time and youth. Just ask him. Phil Mickelson, 45, is entering his 24th Masters. He won in 2004, 2006 and 2010 and with the gamesmanship of a man who appears to bet on everything, including himself, Mickelson pretended this week that his age is his 15th club, not a set of cement golf spikes.
"I don't feel old at all," he said. "I feel great."
But Mickelson can't just feel great. What would be the point of just feeling great? He has to turn feeling great into a competitive advantage.
"I feel like I'm in some of the best shape I've been in," he said. "I feel like I'm driving the ball better than I have in well over a decade. I'm so excited to play golf.
"So I also have a message, like an internal message that I want to ultimately get out, and that is: You can play golf for a lifetime and be injury-free if you swing the club like Bobby Jones did, like Ernest Jones used to teach, where it's a swinging motion rather than a violent movement.