AUGUSTA, Ga. — Bubba Watson‘s shot out of the trees on the second hole of a sudden-death playoff at the 2012 Masters is one of the most famous in golf history.
His shot with a gap wedge off pine straw from deep in the woods at Augusta National hooked about 40 yards onto the elevated 10th green. The ball settled about 10 feet from the hole and Watson made par to win his first green jacket.
Near the 10th anniversary of that epic shot, Watson, now a two-time Masters champion, believes he might have hit an even better one in the second round on Friday.
“I’ll be honest, not that you want to know, but that was the best shot I’ve ever hit at Augusta National,” Watson said. “That one right there.”
After Watson, a left-hander, hooked his tee shot deep into the woods down the right side of the 18th fairway, he found his ball sitting on a stick and surrounded by leaves.
“My ball was two inches in the air,” Watson said. “There was a like a piece of a branch — about that big — that fell on the ground, and my ball was sitting on top of it. There were two leaves behind it that I couldn’t move and two leaves touching it that I couldn’t move.”
When Watson looked up into the trees, he saw a small gap toward the hole.
“[The gap was] very high up, probably the highest point of the trees there,” Watson said. “All I was trying to do was hit a wedge. It’s teed up, right? If I hit a pitching wedge as hard as I can straight up, I thought I could hit that gap. I wasn’t looking at the green.”
As Watson stood over his ball, a gust of wind blew a leaf right on top of it. He called a rules official over and informed him that his ball hadn’t moved. The rules official assured Watson that he wouldn’t incur a penalty, and he carefully removed the leaf.
Watson took a whack at his ball and it soared high into the air. Somehow, it got through the pine trees untouched and bounced on the green before settling 2 feet from the hole.
“It came out,” Watson said. “Because of that lie and because of the tree branch, because of the leaves — these were big, thick leaves — it caught a flier. It caught like a knuckler. It went straight up, and then a gust from the gods flew.”
Watson knocked in a birdie putt to finish the round at 1-over 73. He is 2 over after 36 holes, ten shots behind second-round leader Scottie Scheffler. Regardless of what happens over the weekend, Watson has another indelible memory at Augusta National.
“Nobody in the world would have tried that shot that I tried,” Watson said. “There’s nobody on the planet that would have tried it. We can sit here and they can tell me they would try it. There’s nobody that would have tried it [that I] believe could have pulled it off.”