Monday, April 9, 2012

Oosthuizen Double Eagle

  • 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)

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