Bubba Watson's putting cost him dearly at The Masters last week, surrendering his title to Jordan Spieth. Andrew Gombert / EPA
Bubba Watson's putting cost him dearly at The Masters last week, surrendering his title to Jordan Spieth. Andrew Gombert / EPA
Bubba Watson's putting cost him dearly at The Masters last week, surrendering his title to Jordan Spieth. Andrew Gombert / EPA
Bubba Watson's putting cost him dearly at The Masters last week, surrendering his title to Jordan Spieth. Andrew Gombert / EPA

Bubba Watson aims to fix putting problems at Shenzhen Open


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Shenzhen, China // Bubba Watson hardly had time to wipe the sleep out of his eyes before he was back on the golf course, half a world away from the disappointment that was this year’s Masters.

As defending champion, Watson, 36, finished on one-over par, 19 strokes behind runaway winner Jordan Spieth when play came to end on Sunday at Augusta National.

Watson presented the new champion with his green jacket then got on a plane before dusting his jet lag down with a practice round at Genzon Golf Club ahead of today’s inaugural Shenzhen International in the southern Chinese metropolis.

“I just didn’t make any putts,” was the world No 4’s frank verdict of his effort to retain his Augusta title.

“And then Jordan played unbelievable,” he told reporters yesterday. “He was the first person ever to get 19 under. Made all his putts.

“It’s pretty special to see him battling the year before and me beating him, and then him coming with that performance the following year. Pretty amazing.”

Watson said the Shenzhen event, which is co-sanctioned by the European and China PGA Tours, would give him time to reassess the putting that let him down as he sought to add a third green jacket to his 2012 and 2014 triumphs.

“What I took from it is that I’m hitting the ball well. I just didn’t make the putts,” he said before taking part in yesterday’s pro-am event, adding that, in golf, momentum is everything.

“When you hit a great bunker shot or something to six feet and you miss the putt, it slows momentum. I had no momentum.”

Watson has happy memories of previous trips to China, most recently his victory at last November’s WGC-HSBC Championship in Shanghai where a trademark audacious 35-yard blast from a bunker for eagle on the final green put him into a play-off against South Africa’s Tim Clark, which he won on the first extra hole.

Watson said he would be happy to share his experience with China’s rising generation of players, not least playing partner for the first two days Li Haotong, who at 194 is the highest ranked of the home golfers. The third member of the marquee group for the first two days will be last year’s Volvo China Open winner Alexander Levy, as the Frenchman returns to the scene of that triumph.

“The game of golf is growing over here,” Watson said, adding that he was looking forward to watching Li “and helping if he has questions”.

Li, 20, has been a standout on the China PGA Tour with wins in three of the final four events last year and said he is relishing the chance to play alongside one of the world’s best.

“I feel very lucky,” Li said. “I’ve seen him on TV and also winning the Masters and so forth.

“I’m very lucky that I have a chance to be with him in the same group for two days.

“All I want to do right now is step by step earn my ranking points and prize money in order to get to the US PGA Tour.”

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