5 Players Who Need Win At Valero Texas Open to Qualify for Masters

Rickie Fowler hits his drive from the 16th tee during the third round of the Players Championship golf tournament Saturday, March 11, 2023, in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.
(AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

At last yearโ€™s Valero Texas Open, Akshay Bhatia outlasted Denny McCarthy in a playoff and one day later was at Augusta National Golf Club practicing for his first career Masters start after earning the final spot in that exclusive field.

Among the hundreds of cool little details about the yearโ€™s first major championship is the one where the folks who run things leave a final potential spot open in their field, but only if an unqualified player wins the final tournament beforehand.

There are 119 players in this weekโ€™s field in San Antonio who are hoping to claim that final spot in next weekโ€™s Masters.

Letโ€™s identify five (OK, six) who would be among the bigger stories if any of them are able to make it happen.

5 Players Who Need Win At Valero Texas Open to Qualify for Masters

Rickie Fowler

Once upon a time, Fowler wasnโ€™t just a lock for the Masters field, he was among the young players believed to have a chance to slide his arms into a green jacket someday. He owns three career top-10s and two others where he was just a stroke out of that range, but suffered a three-year absence from the tournament before returning last year and finishing in a share of 30th place.

While he remains one of the gameโ€™s more popular players, his game is no longer what it once was, as heโ€™s dropped to 110th in the Official World Golf Ranking and last weekโ€™s T-52 in Houston didnโ€™t even have anyone calculating his potential for getting into the Masters field. Even so, heโ€™s played some of his best golf when his back is up against the proverbial wall, so donโ€™t discredit Fowlerโ€™s chances at that final spot, especially in windy conditions.ย 

Ben Griffin

While Fowlerโ€™s chances werenโ€™t being calculated last week, Griffinโ€™s certainly were, as his T-18 finish left him in 51st place in the OWGR โ€“ one spot shy of automatically qualifying. On Monday morning, he tweeted, โ€œThank you everyone for the kind messages after yesterdayโ€™s round. Unfortunately the media was a bit misleading about a top 28 qualifying me for The Masters.โ€ While I obviously donโ€™t see, hear and read everything out there, itโ€™s tough to pin this one on โ€œthe media,โ€ but Griffin mightโ€™ve gotten some bad intel as to where he needed to finish. In any case, heโ€™s now playing for a 13th week in a row, a streak which began at the Sony Open back in early January. For a guy whoโ€™s never before played in the Masters, finishing 0.0098 average points out of the final spot and then qualifying with a victory would be the sweetest way to make it happen.

Gary Woodland

As I said on the SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio postgame show Sunday evening, if the PGA Tour was like high school and voted for Homecoming King and Prom King each year, Woodland would probably win in a landslide. As if to exemplify just how classy he is, during his interview with our radio team after his runner-up finish, he deflected initial praise of his game in order to first commend Min Woo Lee on his long-awaited first PGA Tour victory. The fact that Woodland is not only playing golf at a high level, but contending for tournament titles just 18 months after surgery to remove a benign brain tumor is remarkable in itself. If the 2019 U.S. Open champion is to make his way back to Augusta National this Sunday, there wonโ€™t be a dry eye in the house.

Alejandro Tosti

I probably couldโ€™ve gone with three-time major champion Padraig Harrington or sweet swinging Jake Knapp or big-hitting Aldrich Potgieter in this spot, but I chose the combustible Tosti because, well, heโ€™s combustible! Playing in the final grouping at last weekโ€™s Texas Childrenโ€™s Houston Open, he was either complaining about his playing partnersโ€™ slow pace of play or slowing things down himself in an obvious maneuver to keep from winning friends amongst his peers, even if the behavior didnโ€™t make too much sense from an outsiderโ€™s perspective.

Even if youโ€™re not a fan of his antics, Tostiโ€™s game is admittedly so much fun to watch, as he pulls driver on nearly every drivable hole and relentlessly fires at flagsticks. That strategy might not work at Augusta National, but if heโ€™s already got a trophy to his name this week, he might not care and freewheel it anyway.

Ben James/Preston Summerhays

There are five amateurs in next weekโ€™s Masters field, as Bobby Jonesโ€™ imprints are still all over the tradition of allowing such up-and-comers to stay in the famed Crowsโ€™ Nest and compete at Augusta National. They are largely not, however, the best of the best. U.S. Amateur champion Jose Luis Ballester is ranked fifth in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, while Evan Beck is 15th, Justin Hastings is 22nd, Hiroshi Tai is 44th and Noah Kent is 143rd.

Luke Clanton and Jackson Koivun, who are ranked 1-2 and the two most celebrated ams in the game, wonโ€™t be in the field. Neither are James, who is ranked third, or Summerhays, whoโ€™s 11th, but a Nick Dunlap-like triumph as an amateur could mean someone needs to bunk together high atop the clubhouse, providing both an unlikely and unbelievable story entering next week.

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About the Author

Jason Sobel

Read More @JasonSobelGolf

Jason Sobel is a Brand Ambassador for BetMGM. He joins after six years with Action Network. Prior to Action, Jason spent a total of 17 years in two stints at ESPN (1997-2011; 2015-18) and four years at Golf Channel (2011-15). He also currently works as a host for "Hitting the Green" on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio and contributes to the channel's on-site coverage during major championships. He's won four Sports Emmy awards, more than a dozen Golf Writers Association of America accolades and has earned an honorable mention in the Best of American Sportswriting series.

Jason Sobel is a Brand Ambassador for BetMGM. He joins after six years with Action Network. Prior to Action, Jason spent a total of 17 years in two stints at ESPN (1997-2011; 2015-18) and four years at Golf Channel (2011-15). He also currently works as a host for "Hitting the Green" on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio and contributes to the channel's on-site coverage during major championships. He's won four Sports Emmy awards, more than a dozen Golf Writers Association of America accolades and has earned an honorable mention in the Best of American Sportswriting series.