Tony Finau was to the right of the 11th green at Augusta National trying to chip to an imaginary front pin, a tough shot when it matters.
This was the first full day of practice on Monday at the Masters, and it wasn't any easier. The first attempt rolled across the green and off the putting surface. So did the second.
It was like that all over the famed course, where the azaleas blooms are on their last leg and turf is firm under a blazing sun, save for a few minutes during the solar eclipse.
The conditions — always pristine, because everything is at Augusta National — is as good as players can remember. There is rain in the forecast for the opening round, but otherwise players are faced with what could be the two 'F' words that take on different meanings to different games — firm and fast.
"The course is very firm," Xander Schauffele said.
"It's probably some of the best shape I've seen in previous years.It's a shame that it might rain at some point this week because it's looking like a really hard, really firm."
Tiger Woods was first out when the course opened at 8 am playing nine holes with Will Zalatoris. Several of them stopped in mid-afternoon to don special solar sunglasses — Masters green with the famous logo, sure to be a keepsake — for a look at the eclipse.
"Get to watch the end of the world at Augusta National, right?" British Open champion Brian Harman said with a grin.
This is the start of the major championship season, and the anticipation has been greater than ever, mainly because of the field. It's the first time players from the Saudi-funded LIV Golf are competing against those who stayed on PGA Tour. There is more curiosity than animosity, evident by Schauffele planning a practice round with Dustin Johnson.
Johnson, among the first batch of players who defected to LIV, set the 72-hole record at 268 in the 2020 Masters in conditions as soft as any because it was played in November when the tournament was postponed because of the pandemic.
"If the course is playing hard and fast, it's more difficult," Hideki Matsuyama said, who won the year after Johnson.
Among players who chose not to play was Akshay Bhatia, for good reason. The Valero Texas Open was his fourth week in a row playing, and then his work was extended when he won in a playoff to qualify for the final spot in the Masters.
Bhatia's left shoulder came out of its socket celebrating a playoff-forcing birdie putt on the final hole. He taped it up in time to hit wedge to the 18th on the first extra hole.
And then he headed straight for Augusta and arrived about 1:30 am Monday. Even for a 22-year-old, that's a lot to take in.
"There's still a lot to learn this week," Bhatia said. "Just registering, getting the lay of the land."
Bhatia is a true Masters rookie, one of 17 players (including four amateurs) who are competing at Augusta National for the first time.