2006 Masters Tournament

  Presented by Augusta.com

Home

News

Photos

The Course

The Players

The History

Leaderboard

Augusta Guide

Shop

Contact Us

Swede isn't dwelling on poor finish

Posted Sunday, April 13, 2008

Email

|

Robert Karlsson didn't look at the leaderboard Saturday until a post-round interview with a television crew from his native Sweden.

There was his name, listed for the moment on the big board at No. 18 along with Trevor Immelman, Brandt Snedeker and Tiger Woods.

"There are too many holes to go," said Karlsson, at 2-under and tied for seventh after his 71 on Saturday. "There are no prizes for being on the leaderboard on Saturday. It's nice it's there. I can sit here now and look at it."

Karlsson, 38, looked tan and relaxed. Smiles came easily. He could have been playing a course in Sweden, or his current residence, Monaco, not fresh off another major battle with par in only his second Masters Tournament.

He also could have been stewing over his outcome at the par-4 18, a double bogey that moved his score from 4-under to 2-under, but it was a non-issue.

"That happened, and I can't do anything about it," Karlsson said. "Obviously, you're going to hit bad shots on this course. You have to deal with whatever happens. You're going to look like a fool sometimes, like I did on 18. That's a part of golf."

He had looked like a champ two holes earlier, when he sank a 40-foot birdie putt from the bottom of the green on the par-3 16.

"It was good fun," he said. "I don't usually get emotionally caught up."

In his rookie attempt in 2007, Karlsson tied for 30th at 13-over 301 after averaging 75.25 per round and not posting a round under par. He learned by trial and too many errors.

He came to Augusta this year with "no expectations whatsoever, just to be here and enjoy the week." "I did enjoy it last year," he said, "but was a bit disappointed with how many mistakes I did around the course. So far, over three days, I've made two mental mistakes. That's really, really good."

He has posted rounds of 70, 73 and 71.

After Saturday's round, Karlsson was going to work on what he called "clumsy bunker shots," then go feed his children and relax with his family.

"The most important thing here is not to put yourself into position where you don't have a chance to get up and down," Karlsson said. "If you don't get up and down, that's one thing. But you hit it into position where you're sort of, 'Oops, I shouldn't have put it here,' that's the key to this course."

After a round with four birdies, one bogey and the double bogey, Karlsson was pleased.

"All in all, it was a pretty good round," he said. "I'm looking forward to tomorrow to keep it going."

In this Story
Trevor Immelman
(Stats | Bio | Photos)
Tiger Woods
(Stats | Bio | Photos)
Brandt Snedeker
(Stats | Bio | Photos)
Robert Karlsson
(Stats | Bio | Photos)
Reader Comments
Note: Posts are not edited and don't necessarily reflect the views of Augusta.com.
YOUR MESSAGE:
You have 1200 characters left.

Name: Public - Will be displayed.
E-mail: Private - Won't be displayed.
Remember my name and e-mail address.


advertisement
 
Leaderboard
Go to full leaderboard
Interactive Tournament
Sign up now to connect with tournament coverage in new ways.
  • E-newsletters bring the best photos and stories from Augusta.com and The Augusta Chronicle to your inbox twice daily during the tournament
  • Track up to five golfers' progress with customizable e-mail or mobile SMS alerts
  • Keep your favorite golfers pegged to the top of our new continually updating leaderboard (available Thursday through Sunday)

ADVERTISEMENT



Copyright © 2008 The Augusta Chronicle. All Rights Reserved. | Privacy Statement | Contact us | Advertise with us

This site and all its content are representative of The Augusta Chronicle's Masters® Tournament coverage and information. The Augusta Chronicle and Augusta.com are our trademarks. Augusta.com is an online publication of The Augusta Chronicle and is neither affiliated with nor endorsed by the Masters or the Augusta National Golf Club.