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.
A long drive champ takes aim at the PGA Tour
Living room visits with golf’s greatest players
The last days of the true amateur
The near demise of Augusta National
Team Game: Inside the life of the modern PGA Tour caddie
The bootstrapping life of an LPGA Tour player
The dirty secrets of sandbaggers
“I’m such an idiot”: The hidden lessons in a collapse
Funny Money On Tour: The lucrative life of a PGA Tour golfer
The Golf Savant: The life and career of Moe Norman
Bob May and the curse of the very good golfer
Swing Oil: Does alcohol really help your golf?
Golfing While Black
Introducing: Local Knowledge
How the Tour is combating the spread of COVID-19, Dustin Johnson’s Travelers victory
Sir Nick Faldo, high drama at the RBC Heritage
The PGA Tour’s return at Colonial, caddie John Wood
Behind the scenes of the PGA Tour’s return
Annika Sorenstam, the Euro Tour’s bold new strategy
Why The Match worked so well
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