AUGUSTA, Ga. — Tiger Woods had emerged from a door near the Augusta National clubhouse, had turned left toward a tangle of reporters when his close aide, Rob McNamara, called out his name.
“Watch out for those security guards,” McNamara said.
The aide laughed. Woods laughed. Tiger would try to downplay the surreal scene on the 14th hole of the second round of the Masters, where an overheated Georgia Bureau of Investigations special agent nearly took out the most special golfer on the planet. But Tiger’s dramatic yearlong-and-change comeback could’ve crashed and burned right on the spot. Woods could have lost his shot at a fifth green jacket, and his chance to win his first major championship in more than a decade, because a man trying to protect him violated one of the many cardinal rules of Augusta National — no running allowed.
You can stand at Augusta. You can sit at Augusta. You can even walk at Augusta. But everyone who has ever passed through those forbidding gates and entered this monument to the 1950s knows you can never run at Augusta. Trust me, I found out the hard way covering my first Masters many years ago, where my slow jog from clubhouse to media center was interrupted by a security guard who thrust out his open right hand and screamed at me to stop.
Stop what? I said, more than a bit confused. “Stop running,” he barked. “Or you will be removed from the tournament.”