Contested the second weekend in April each year since 1934, the
Masters is the world 's most prestigious golf tournament and
most-watched tournament on television. Tickets are in such demand that
even the waiting list is closed, and players value the title above all
others. In Making the Masters, award-winning golf writer David Barrett
focuses his attention on how the Masters was conceived, how it got off
the ground in 1934, and how it fully established itself in 1935.
The
key figure in the tournament 's creation and success was Bobby Jones,
who was a living legend after winning the Grand Slam in 1930 and
immediately retiring at the age of twenty-eight. He went on to found
Augusta National and sought a high-profile tournament for his new
course. But nearly as important was Clifford Roberts, a banker friend of
Jones who not only embraced Jones 's vision but became his right-hand
man in working to bring that vision to reality.
Barrett explores
how Jones and Roberts built the Masters from scratch, creating a golf
institution embellished by the often surprising details of what that
entailed as they were trying to establish a golf club and golf
tournament in tough economic times. It also vividly chronicles the
events of the 1934 and 1935 Masters, with Gene Sarazen 's spectacular
victory in 1935 providing the climax. Set against the backdrop of golf,
and America, in the 1930s, the book provides an informative and
entertaining read for fans of the Masters and students of golf history.
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