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Sports / Golf

Women green with envy no more at Masters

Published: 12 Apr 2013 - 04:59 am | Last Updated: 02 Feb 2022 - 11:53 am

AUGUSTA, Georgia: For 80 years a defiant Augusta National Golf Club had nothing to say about its male-only membership policy.

But on the eve the 2013 Masters, the club’s chairman had just one word to describe the decision last August to finally open its doors to women.

“Awesome,” Billy Payne said in a disarming southern drawl.

Take a walk up Magnolia Lane, the short road that leads to the Augusta National clubhouse, and it is as if time stands still at one of the world’s most famous golf courses.

The breathtaking view is the same as it has been for decades, the home of the Masters golf tournament a bastion of tradition unmoved by outside forces and events. But this April change is in the air, mixed with the fragrant smell of blooming Azaleas, with former US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and financier Darla Moore becoming the first women to don the iconic green jackets. Despite ending a membership controversy that had reached the White House and became increasingly difficult to simply dismiss as a club matter, Augusta has offered little insight into the timing of their decision and why it took so long.

“It went about the same process and the same amount of time as any other member,” Payne told reporters as golfers went through final preparations for the opening round. “I wouldn’t have any comment on that.”

As Masters week began Rice was attracting as much attention as the world’s top golfers.

Certainly there are good reasons for the gawkers since there have been fewer women to land an Augusta green jacket then men who have landed on the moon.

Augusta’s invitation-only membership has been steeped in secrecy since the club opened in 1932. The club does not reveal its full list of members, believed to be around 300, although it is known that some of the most powerful men from industry and finance, including Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, are members. Change commonly occurs a glacial pace at Augusta.

It was not until 1990 that Augusta National invited its first black member, businessman Ron Townsend, following accusations of racial discrimination at Alabama’s whites-only Shoal Creek Golf and Country Club that was selected to host the PGA Championship, another of golf’s four major tournaments.

Prior to Augusta National’s ground-breaking announcement last August, women were allowed to play the course only if invited by a member. Pushed by the National Council of Women’s Organizations to admit women, former Augusta chairman William “Hootie” Johnson dug in his heels saying the club would not be forced to open its doors “at the point of a bayonet.”

Even though the controversy has been largely defused, it is a subject Augusta National and Masters champions past and present continue to tip-toe around. REUTERS