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AUGUSTA, Ga. — For years the Masters has marked a moment of reunion on the calendar — PGA Tour players alongside LIV golfers for the first time in eight months. And here, in 2026? No different. Except that one relevant player falls oddly outside of either camp: Patrick Nathaniel Reed.

Reed is the only player in transition at the moment — “doing my time,” as he called it Thursday — playing a few scrappy international tournaments outside of the majors, as he moves from a life on LIV to a renewed life on the PGA Tour. That alone would make him the Masters champion of these weird, fractured times, were he to turn his first-round 69 into a second green jacket.

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But it would be so much more than that, right?

A Reed win would serve as an important reminder that it is players and their own history who make a golf tour, not the other way around. The wizards with the wands — the beloved ones and the heels — have been in control the whole time. Confident, self-assured players like Reed are the reason LIV was able to exist in the first place. (McKinsey and Co. advised LIV’s owners to pursue top talent exclusively.) Talent is a finite business. Reed is as talented as they come, and 2026 has showed it.

The golf world started considering a Reed Masters run in January, when he blitzed through a few events in the Middle East, winning twice and losing in one playoff. He flew down to South Africa for a couple more in March, just before LIV held its own South African event, and managed a few solid results. About three or four weeks ago was when he really started dialing in his focus on Augusta National, just as everyone started to look elsewhere: to Collin Morikawa’s back, to Rory McIlroy’s back, to Scottie Scheffler’s second stint of paternity leave, to Cameron Young and Bryson DeChambeau and Jon Rahm.

Reed receded to the background, right until the moment he holed an eagle putt on the 2nd hole Thursday morning, and then holed an even longer eagle putt on the 8th about 90 minutes later. Just two shots back after 18 holes, he’s firmly at the center of attention once again.

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A Reed win would guarantee him every ounce of Tour access he desires — not to mention a level-up in the Masters pantheon — but it would be more of an endorsement of the vibes he was seeking. On Monday, Reed said he wanted to “get back to the traditional way of golf,” by which he meant 72 holes of individual stroke play with a cut and the leaders going off last after everyone has cleared from the driving range. He saw that in Dubai when he won in January. It felt like “adrenaline,” he said, something he’ll have no problem finding on a weekend at Augusta National.

His Thursday finished with two moments that would test anyone’s mettle. He pulled his tee shot on 17 into jail, nearly onto the 7th fairway. He played an 8-iron over the trees and long of the green — which, with a back pin, was only slightly less jail. Then he pitched on to 7 feet for a putt as quick as you might find in a jail-cell floor. He escaped with par. His up-and-down on 18 was just as impressive, from the short greenside bunker, holing another squeamish 10-footer for par.

Reed thought he played better than he scored and he better get comfortable with that. It’s going to be a central theme at a course everyone is calling “crusty.” Meaning it could get fast. Reed broke a tee in one of the greens Thursday just trying to fix a ball mark.

Through 18 holes, he has to consider this a massive step toward his future, staring up at a leaderboard that features Rory McIlroy, a player he has long felt a rivalry with, and Sam Burns, a player he has played alongside once in the last five years. He finds names like Day and Rose and Scheffler and Schauffele that, frankly, he’s been yearning to compete with.

So … here he goes.

The post Patrick Reed would be the Masters champion of our fractured times appeared first on Golf.

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