Augusta has women, but it’s certainly no leader

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Augusta has women, but it’s certainly no leader

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Former U.S. Secretary of State ?Condoleezza Rice, left, speaks with Gary Player on Wednesday at the Masters tournament. [REUTERS/NEWSIS]

AUGUSTA, Georgia - The men in green jackets could barely contain themselves, sitting there smugly as if they had done something to transform the game of golf.

Augusta National now has women members and, if it was a long time coming, they now seem to think it’s the best addition to the Masters since flowering azaleas were planted on the back nine.

“It’s just awesome,” Masters chairman Billy Payne said.

Condoleezza Rice surely agrees, though for now she’s not saying. The former secretary of state avoided reporters Wednesday as she made her way around the Par 3 Contest, smartly attired in a tailored green jacket over a tan skirt.

Rice and South Carolina financier Darla Moore are trailblazers in a way, though few outside of golf would confuse their admittance in August to one of the most exclusive clubs in the world to be on a par with some of the equality battles of the past century.

Indeed, the guardians of Augusta National are hardly ?visionaries. For years the only places for black people at the club were waiting on tables or carrying the bags of members, and the concept that women could actually be members didn’t take hold until more than a decade after Martha Burk tried in vain to rally support for the cause.

Now that they’re here, though, things couldn’t be peachier. Seems the fears of women running amok on the perfectly green fairways of Augusta National were? a bit overblown.

“These two ladies have been very special and it’s just been delightful,” Payne said.

They might have been a decade ago, too, but the green jackets are a stubborn bunch when it comes to changing the traditions that have served them so well. Former chairman Hootie Johnson famously dug his heels in when challenged by Burk, writing her at the time that Augusta National might someday admit women “but that timetable will be ours and not at the point of a bayonet.”

The timetable apparently called for women last year, and luckily a few of them were available. They managed to snare a prominent name in Rice, and as a bonus put to rest any lingering controversy over the membership of America’s most famous golf club.

They could have gone further, but didn’t. On a day when Payne talked about girls and boys putting and chipping on the 18th green the Sunday before next year’s tournament and a day before a 14-year-old from China tees off in the Masters, he also spoke about Augusta National becoming “a beacon in the world of golf” and doing its best to influence others in the game.

Except, of course, the green jackets won’t do any of that. In his annual pre-Masters news conference, Payne refused to give a position on belly putters, declined to take a stand on smoking on the golf course, and wouldn’t discuss details of Augusta National’s new corporate party complex.

And if you think a delegation from Augusta is going to travel to Scotland to urge members at all-male Muirfield - host of this year’s British Open - to also enter the modern world and accept women, well, think again.

“I think they should do what they want to do, and I would not interject the way I feel on the issue,” Payne said.

?Augusta National handled the issue of women members the way it wanted to, and if it took them longer than it should, well, the green jackets aren’t entirely to blame. Those playing in the Masters never dared - or cared - to push the issue, and there was ?no outcry among golf fans lucky enough to wander around Amen Corner.

?Inside the gates they can be heavy handed, overbearing and simply wrong on many issues. It’s a different world, one we’re privileged to be invited to visit only one week a year - and only as long as we toe the company line.

They do have plenty of things to be proud of over the years. Admitting a few token women isn’t one of them.

AP
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