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The young contenders at Augusta: Patrick Reed, Jordan Spieth, Hideki Matsuyama and Webb Simpson. Photos: AP/AFP/Reuters/MCT

Time for the kids to take command of the fairways

Ages of recent PGA Tour winners point to a new champion emerging from the burgeoning ranks of the youth brigade this weekend

APSPT

Jordan Spieth speaks with reverence when hanging out with the greats of the game at Augusta National.

It's always "Mr Watson" this, "Mr Crenshaw" that. But, in his first trip to the Masters, Spieth feels he's got as good a chance as anyone to capture a green jacket. That's the way it is with these kids today. They're not very patient.

A new wave of 20-somethings is taking golf by storm, eager to make their mark and not at all beaten down by the aura of Tiger Woods, who hasn't won a major since 2008 and isn't even at Augusta this week as he recovers from his latest injury.

Nine players under the age of 30 have won PGA Tour events since the official start of the season last autumn, including a pair of victories by brash 23-year-old Patrick Reed.

That list doesn't even include perhaps the best of the youngsters: Rory McIlroy, already a two-time major champion at age 24, and Spieth, who last summer at 19 became the youngest tour winner since 1931.

"It helps me when I'm on the course when I can see younger and younger guys winning golf tournaments," Spieth said. "I believe that it doesn't take as much experience as maybe guys would have thought five years ago, six years ago."

Arnold Palmer is certainly impressed with a group that also includes Webb Simpson, Dustin Johnson, Jason Day, Harris English, Chris Kirk, Scott Stallings, Russell Henley and Chesson Hadley.

"I've been watching these young guys," Palmer said, "and it's amazing how they hit the golf ball, how well they play. I've never ceased to be pleased and surprised to see the physical conditioning that these young people are coming with, to see their ability, to see how they play the game.

"I look at them and you think about a 23, 22, 25-year-old, and you see the shots they are hitting and how far they are hitting the golf ball, I'm startled, surprised and pleased."

Spieth credits players such as Woods and Phil Mickelson for inspiring this new generation - and not just in the United States. Look at someone such as Japan's Hideki Matsuyama, who turned pro a year ago and, before the season was done, had tied for sixth at the British Open. He's 22, and getting ready for his first Masters as a pro. "Everybody in the field has a chance to win it," said Matsuyama, who was the low amateur at the 2011 Masters. "I feel like I'm one of those, too."

Spieth feels the same way, even though he's playing the Masters for the first time.

The last Augusta rookie to claim the green jacket was Fuzzy Zoeller in 1979. The only other ones to do it were the first two winners: Horton Smith in 1934 and Gene Sarazen in 1935.

"It's getting younger," Spieth said, talking about contenders. "The game is getting better, younger, and vastly spreading to different and more places. I think that we'll continue to see younger and younger players step up and be able to win early, such as we have."

Reed is as confident as anyone. He's won three times in seven months going back to last season, including a World Golf Championship, and declared that he already feels like one of the top five players in the world.

For the record, the Masters will be his first major.

"It doesn't matter if you've played here once or if you've played here 50 times," Reed said. "When it comes down to it, it's just going to be one of those things that whoever is playing the best is going to walk away with the trophy."

There were plenty of talented players who came along at the same time as Woods, but they knew their chances of winning the biggest tournament were pretty much nil when he was on his game. Now, there's no such roadblock standing in the way.

"It's changed now," Spieth said. "With the younger guys not being scared to win, I think that can only be better for the game."

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Time for the kids to take command of the fairways
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