When Roberto De Vicenzo signed an incorrect scorecard to lose the 1968 Masters, it represented not just his failure, but the failure of several individuals and institutions, including Augusta National itself. This is the story of what really happened that day on the course, and why De Vicenzo is only partly to blame for the greatest blunder in the history of major championship golf.
Golf’s holy land: A way-too-brief history of the Old Course
Golf's major dilemma
The Ultimate Cinderella Story: U.S. Open qualifiers and the impossible dream
Game Changer: How a 50-year-old law changed women's golf forever
What do YOU do? Inside a PGA Tour entourage
The Talent Trap: The hidden reason some golfers succeed
“The Fyre Festival of golf”: The broken promise of The Big Money Classic
You just won the Masters. Here’s what happens next
Tiger and Phil: It’s Complicated
Why pro golf is going all in on Netflix
How far is too far? Unpacking the distance debate
Why a PGA Tour star disappeared into the jungle
“Lower Scores Today!!” The rise and fall of the golf infomercial
Greg Norman vs. the PGA Tour, Part II
The Best of Local Knowledge: Tour Life
The Best of Local Knowledge: Mind Games
The Best of Local Knowledge: Money Talks
The Best of Local Knowledge: Compelling Characters
Pro golf’s mental health reckoning
The inside story of how Tin Cup became a classic
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