AUGUSTA, Ga. — One year ago, Bryson DeChambeau held the solo lead at the Masters on Sunday. After his very next round at Augusta National, he was nine strokes behind the clubhouse leader, looking for answers from an unforgiving course. And not even his homemade club could keep his card clean.
DeChambeau finished his first day at the 2026 Masters at 4-over, far behind clubhouse leaders Sam Burns and Rory McIlroy (-5). After his round, a visibly frustrated DeChambeau nonetheless spoke to the media. His normally analytical mind was spinning its wheels in mud, trying to figure out how everything had gone so wrong so quickly.
“Everybody has an ability for weird things to happen,” DeChambeau said in a short postround interview, “and today I just did not have my irons under control, which is weird.”
Bryson DeChambeau watches his tee shot on the 12th hole during the first round of the Masters golf tournament at the Augusta National Golf Club. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
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DeChambeau held at even par through the first 10 holes of the day, erasing an early bogey on 2 with a birdie on the very next hole. But he was clearly holding on desperately to a rattling train, and at the 11th, the train jumped the tracks.
After a strong drive, DeChambeau’s approach found a greenside bunker, and he needed three shots to get out. He walked off the hole with a round- (and possibly tournament-) killing triple bogey. “Bunker was softer than I anticipated,” was all he said afterward.
A closing bogey left him at +4 on the day, and he exhaled heavily as he walked from the 18th green to the scorer’s building.
One of the more fascinating stories of the practice side of Masters week was DeChambeau’s admission that he’d be using a literally homemade club in his bag this week — a 3D-printed five-iron. He used it only once Thursday, flying the green on the seventh hole and punching out of the bunker to save par.
While bringing a homemade golf club to the Masters seems like wheeling up Magnolia Lane on a loud Harley, there’s sound science behind what DeChambeau is doing. Plus, each club needs to meet certain USGA criteria to ensure it’s a proper fit. DeChambeau noted that the club takes about eight hours to print; full completion to USGA-conforming specs takes about a day and a half.
DeChambeau won’t tee off on Friday until 1:20 p.m., and by then the leaders may well be double-digits ahead of him. Winning may be out of reach this year, but DeChambeau will need to figure out what went so wrong Thursday if he wants to win someday.
AUGUSTA, Ga. — If you can, ask your father or grandfather about Jack Nicklaus’ Masters win 40 years ago in 1986. If you can’t, you can imagine what they’d say.
Greatest Masters ever. Greatest golf tournament ever. Among the greatest sports moments ever. Brought a tear to my eye.
When 46-year-old Nicklaus rolled in that long putt on the 17th hole to take the solo lead that long-ago April afternoon, when he donned his sixth green jacket, when he stared Father Time in the face and the clock blinked, he didn’t just win more accolades for himself.
With that 1986 Masters win, Jack Nicklaus created the greatest Dad Moment in American sports history. How many fathers, trapped between wanting to relive their own youth and wanting to pass on lessons to their children, connected with Nicklaus’ win? How many men and women alike could understand what it’s like to feel like you’ve got more to give, even when the rest of the world has decided you’re done?
“Obviously, '86 was the one that I wasn't expected to win,” Nicklaus said Thursday morning after his ceremonial tee shot to begin the 2026 Masters. “I was ‘over the hill’ and the whole routine, and I won. So that was very special.”
Back then, Nicklaus, now 86, had a line for the occasion: “I'm not as good a player as I once was,” he said in 1986. “I occasionally want to be as good as I once was.” Dismissed, disregarded, written off as too old, a relic of a past era, Nicklaus used some classic dad skills — wisdom, tenacity, steadfastness — to keep his head while everyone else lost theirs. And ever since, he’s been the perfect Dad role model — gracious, indulgent, just a tiny bit boastful when needed — as he’s recounted that miraculous day.
“I found a little lightning in the bottle, and it was kind of fun to find that,” he said. “At 46 I have my son Jackie on the bag, and my mother, my sister come to the Masters for the first time since 1959, all very special circumstances.”
How many days over the course of the last 40 years do you think Nicklaus hasn’t heard about his miraculous 1986 Masters victory? Ten? Five? Zero? Probably the only way Jack could escape a conversation about 1986 was aboard his fishing yacht Sea Bear … and only because CBS wasn’t broadcasting to fish back then.
The moments of that day have grown into legends, starting with an Atlanta Journal-Constitution article taped up on the refrigerator of Nicklaus’ Augusta rental home declaring him too old to win.
Jack Nicklaus receives the green jacket after winning the 1986 Masters. (David Cannon/Allsport)
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“I kind of agreed with (the article), I’m afraid,” Nicklaus said in 1986 after his win. “I kept thinking all week, I said, Done, through, washed up, huh? … A lot of times you get a little something like that, it can spur you on, you know?”
With his son caddying, Nicklaus steadily improved each round, carding scores of 74, 71, 69 and 65. He finished the tournament at 9-under, then could only wait as his pursuers finished their rounds. Seve Ballesteros, Tom Kite and Greg Norman all fell off the pace or crumbled under the pressure. The green jacket belonged again to Nicklaus, and a nation of sports dads all cheered as one.
“The sound coming from green to tee was actually deafening,” Nicklaus said in 1986, his ears still ringing. “Really, I couldn't hear a thing. People were unbelievable. They got excited and charged up, and they got me charged up. I didn't have a clue what I was shooting the back nine. All I knew is I was hitting it on the green and making birdie, and I was going to keep on doing it.”
A postscript to that moment: In 1998, Nicklaus, at age 58, made one more run at the Masters, tying for sixth place and finishing ahead of the defending champion, a guy by the name of Tiger Woods.
“Nice going, Jack,” Nicklaus chuckled to himself on Thursday when told of that feat. “But I didn't win the tournament, no. … To me, wherever you finish in the tournament is really not that important unless you win.”
These days, the Golden Bear only plays golf about once a year. He had carpal tunnel surgery on his hands a few weeks ago, but healed up enough to swing a club. Early Thursday morning, before a small gathering around the first tee behind the Augusta National clubhouse, Nicklaus popped a teed-up-high ball over the heads of the gallery and about 100 yards down the first fairway. And with that, the 90th Masters was underway.
“It's such a nice ceremony, and it's a real honor to be invited,” he said. “I hope to be able to do it as long as I can not kill anybody.”
But before everyone thinks the Bear is declawed, Nicklaus can still flash a bit of fire every now and then. At the traditional press conference following the ceremonial tee shot, Nicklaus was deferential to his fellow honorary starters … up to a point.
“When I was a kid, I watched the Masters in '58, '60, '62, '64,” Tom Watson said, listing all of Arnold Palmer’s Augusta victories, “and then this guy came along and beat my king right here.”
Nicklaus just smiled and shrugged. “Sorry,” he said, but you know he wasn’t. Not a bit.
Still needling, still inspiring after all these years. That’s about as fine a legacy as you can get.