
Victor Hovland and Augusta National can be made for each other even if the adaptation is not clear.
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Victor Hovland is a researcher. The Norwegian star is deeply curious about all things – not just golf. His curious soul leads him Constant tinkering with its swing and equipment. Hovland wants to know. Not just what but how and why and why. And why behind why.
Hovland and its inquisitive nature climbed to no. 3 in the official ranking of world golf. He since the slide. But can he want more than the desire to know more hovland Choose the mysteries in his game and those presented by Augusta National This week?
Since 1934, the hostage course has challenged, defeated, and best the leading players in the world. Faces change. Skill groups change. Technology improves.
But Augusta National and Masters continue to be the golden standard because the course requires your game to have all the answers; Here, there is no shortcut.
For hovland, the demands of Augusta National Short Games presented issues for early. He has only one top 10 in the four beginnings of his career and lost cutting last year after shooting a second round 81 while in the golf desert.
Augusta has a way to expose your weaknesses, Hovland said. It is a course that only a golf player who is in full control of the game and his mind can conquer.
“It looks like all this place is just set in a way where it doesn’t allow you to leave with poor technique,” Hovland said on Tuesday at his pre-Turneut press conference. “It doesn’t matter what it is. It is like, you have to hit the ball at a certain distance. You need to be able to hit the ball a certain height. You need to be able to bend the ball somewhat. About the greens, because it’s a longer grass, it’s always the yogurt in you, and if you have a sub -parapin technique, you will actually. Top, you will have a really difficult time.
“It forces you to be a better kind in every part of your game to be able to win this championship, and I think that’s just a sign of a great tour, that it really tests the best players.”
Victor Hovland is deep in Ufos. That is why this can simply help it with masters
At 27, Hovland is still young, and he is still building a Library of Knowledge in Augusta. He is young and curious, filled with freedom of mind and soul, forced to wander and seek. Perhaps eventually we will see a different version of Hovland – a more reserved and less ready to walk to the branch of the unknown. But not yet.
Instead, Hovland opened on its own. There was a reference to the movie “8 Miles” with Eminem. My colleague Nick Pastowski wrote about The fascination of hovland with ufos and how it relates to his pursuit of a green jacket.
“I think it’s just interesting when you have an open mind and you question nothing,” Hovland said. “I think even in the shaking of golf can get a lot of dogmatic and look at things like, oh, this should be a real one, it must be correct, and sometimes the beliefs you keep deeper can deceive yourself. When you doubt things and look at things from different angles, you can reach a deeper truth.”
This deep interest in the mysteries of life, the pursuit of the unknown, is a window in a golf player whose nature is perfectly matched with what Augusta National requires for its champions – creativity, imagination, fear.
“When you try to put yourself in a position where you can learn and try it yourself, a kind of view of the world as you are a scientist and try things for yourself and then write down or see the results you try and then try something different to see if it works better,” Hovland said. “I think this is just an exciting way to spend life instead of being just in a permanent routine, where you do the same things every single day and hoping for a better result. That’s not really how I’m wire. I just like to try new things and see what happens.”
Augusta National asks deep questions of players walking on her ways and trying to read her greens. Requires accuracy and a willingness to look beyond what you already know about the game and for yourself. There are the answers. Enter the hovland, the type of spirit of anxious golf and curious excited to follow the mysteries of Augusta, opening himself in a whole new plane of golf understanding in the process.

Seduce
Golfit.com editor
Josh Schrock is a writer and reporter for golf. com before entering Golf, Josh was the interior of Chicago Bears for NBC Sports Chicago. He previously covered 49ers and Warriors for NBC Sports Bay Area. A native Oregonian and Uo alum, seduces and spends his free time walking with his wife and dog, thinking about how the ducks will break his heart again, and trying to become half a professor into pieces. A true romantic for golf, Josh will never stop trying to break the 90 and will never lose confidence that Rory Mcilroy’s main drought will end. Josh can be reached in josh.schrock@golf.com.