Does it get much better than hitting a hole-in-one and celebrating with a family member?
Well, Stewart Cink is living the dream.
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The 48-year-old, after a tough opening round and a half at The Masters, added some energy to his round with one shot.
At the par-three 16th hole, the 2009 Open champion hit his looping shot to the right of the tee onto the green.
And because of the green's slope, his ball began its gradual journey toward the hole.
With every passing inch, as the ball approached the hole, the crowd's excitement built, until it sparked pandemonium when it eventually rolled in.
The first person to run to celebrate with Cink was his son Reagan, who also happens to be his caddie.
"Happy birthday," Stewart Cink told his son, who turned 25 on Friday, Reagan Cink recalled in an interview later. "It's a pretty good present."
"The way I do things with my approach shot, I don't just try to hit a number — I try to hit a zone of numbers, usually like seven to 10 yards of space," Cink, whose best finish at the Masters was a tie for third in 2008, said after his round.
https://twitter.com/TheMasters/status/1512535271069339650?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw"On that one, I knew to push it a little further back because that bank brings the ball not only left but also back toward the tee. So that extra couple yards is exactly where it landed, and it hit my spot. It was the exact right curve, perfect contact."
The Masters official Twitter account tweeted: "A good day to have your son on the bag."
The hole-in-one means that Cink now has an ace in four different decades as a professional player, beginning in the 1990s.
According to PGA Tour statistics, it was his sixth career hole-in-one. And with his sixth, Cink is tied for eighth-most holes-in-one on the PGA Tour since it began tracking hole-by-hole data in 1983.
It left Cink six-over for the tournament, a couple of shots off the projected cut line.
For a daily dose of the best of the breaking news and exclusive content from Wide World of Sports, subscribe to our newsletter by clicking here!
Does it get much better than hitting a hole-in-one and celebrating with a family member?
Well, Stewart Cink is living the dream.
READ MORE: Johnson sinks Cowboys with golden-point field goal
READ MORE: Young gun seals Roosters win in 'crazy' match
READ MORE: Port gun still in hospital with scary condition
The 48-year-old, after a tough opening round and a half at The Masters, added some energy to his round with one shot.
At the par-three 16th hole, the 2009 Open champion hit his looping shot to the right of the tee onto the green.
And because of the green's slope, his ball began its gradual journey toward the hole.
With every passing inch, as the ball approached the hole, the crowd's excitement built, until it sparked pandemonium when it eventually rolled in.
The first person to run to celebrate with Cink was his son Reagan, who also happens to be his caddie.
"Happy birthday," Stewart Cink told his son, who turned 25 on Friday, Reagan Cink recalled in an interview later. "It's a pretty good present."
"The way I do things with my approach shot, I don't just try to hit a number — I try to hit a zone of numbers, usually like seven to 10 yards of space," Cink, whose best finish at the Masters was a tie for third in 2008, said after his round.
https://twitter.com/TheMasters/status/1512535271069339650?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw"On that one, I knew to push it a little further back because that bank brings the ball not only left but also back toward the tee. So that extra couple yards is exactly where it landed, and it hit my spot. It was the exact right curve, perfect contact."
The Masters official Twitter account tweeted: "A good day to have your son on the bag."
The hole-in-one means that Cink now has an ace in four different decades as a professional player, beginning in the 1990s.
According to PGA Tour statistics, it was his sixth career hole-in-one. And with his sixth, Cink is tied for eighth-most holes-in-one on the PGA Tour since it began tracking hole-by-hole data in 1983.
It left Cink six-over for the tournament, a couple of shots off the projected cut line.
For a daily dose of the best of the breaking news and exclusive content from Wide World of Sports, subscribe to our newsletter by clicking here!
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