- AUGUSTA, Ga. – Louis Oosthuizen needed 13 holes to record his first birdie on Masters Sunday. Instead, it was the rarest of the rare that propelled him to the brink of adding a green jacket to his claret jug. (Hartford Courant)
- Today is shaping up to be a Sunday to remember. (Hotair.com)
- AUGUSTA, Ga. – Call it a double eagle. Or call it an albatross. It's the rarest of the rare. And Louis Oosthuizen did it on Sunday at the Masters – to seize the lead. Oosthuizen drained his second shot on the par-5 second from 260 yards out. (Sun Sentinel)
- Streeter Lecka/Getty ImagesWayne Mitchell, left, eventually decided to give Louis Oosthuizens double-eagle ball back to Augusta National. It landed in the hands of Mitchell, a 59-year old from New Tripoli, Pa., who was making his fifth trip to the tournament. (ESPN)
- AUGUSTA, Ga. - Instead of leaving with the green jacket, Louis Oosthuizen will have to settle for an albatross. (Tulsa World)
- The double eagle was the Masters first-ever on the 575-yard hole and only the fourth overall. (Abc Local Web)
- He made double-eagle, otherwise known as an albatross. It erased a three-shot deficit to Craig Wood in one swing. The two went to a playoff that Sarazen won. (NBC Sports)
- Louis Oosthuizen pulls his ball out of the hole on No. 2 after making the fourth double eagle in Masters history on Sunday. (Getty Images) AUGUSTA, Ga. (CBS Sports)
- But when it comes to shot of the day, Adam Scott and Bo Van Pelt had to settle for joint second, behind Louis Oosthuizen's double eagle on No. 2. (The Boston Globe)
Monday, April 9, 2012
Oosthuizen Double Eagle
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