Billy Horschel playing Texas Open
with Masters on his mind
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[April 03, 2024]
Billy Horschel hasn't missed a major championship since 2018.
He's played in nine of the past 10 Masters, with a career-best
finish of T17.
But the PGA Tour veteran is facing a new reality following a rough
2022-23 season. Unless and until he plays better golf, he won't be
in any major field.
Horschel, 37, arrived at this week's Valero Texas Open at TPC San
Antonio at No. 80 in the Official World Golf Ranking; had he been
inside the top 50 at this point, he would qualify for next week's
Masters.
The only way for him to get back to Georgia is to win the Texas
Open. The winner of this week's tournament, if not already
qualified, will be the final player into the Masters field.
And Horschel is plenty aware.
"Yeah, I'm not in Augusta and my main focus this week is to win,"
Horschel said Tuesday. "I think if you're in Augusta, you're sort of
-- ultimately you always want to win, but I think you're sort of
assessing where your game is, what you need to work on, some of the
shots you may need to have to be able to play well at Augusta.
"So yeah, there's two different mindsets between the players that
are in Augusta and the players that aren't in Augusta."
Horschel made just 13 cuts in 23 starts in the 2022-23 tour season
and notched three top-10 finishes. He didn't make the FedEx Cup
playoffs, leaving him on the outside looking in at the tour's
Signature Events to start 2024.
"Yeah, I'm not happy that I'm not in Augusta or any of the majors as
we sit here right now, but listen, it's my own fault," Horschel
said. "I can't do anything about that, I didn't play well last year,
but the great thing is this game of golf gives you opportunities to
correct that wrong and I'm trying the best I can right now to make
up for a bad year last year and get myself back to where I feel like
I deserve to be in the game of golf or I want to be in the game of
golf."
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He's begun making up for that bad year by putting
together a strong March. He tied for ninth at the Cognizant Classic,
tied for 12th at the Valspar Championship and rallied to a tie for
seventh at last week's Texas Children's Houston Open with a
final-round 64. So he's already two-thirds of the way to last
season's top-10 total.
Now Horschel will play the Texas Open for the first
time since 2019. He has three top-five finishes at the event in his
career.
"It's nice to be back and hopefully the success I've had in the past
can continue to happen this week," he said.
Horschel's recent performances have earned him fifth place in the
Aon Swing 5 standings, which determine eligibility for upcoming
Signature Events. As long as he stays inside that top five, Horschel
will play his way into the RBC Heritage the week after the Masters.
And Horschel sees that as the gateway he needs.
"I know I've had to play well this year," Horschel said. "I haven't
played bad, I just haven't played well enough, and to play well the
last couple weeks to finally get myself in a position to be able to
qualify for one of the Signature Events is huge.
"We know what those events are. We can talk about the money, we can
talk about the (FedEx Cup) points, but for me it's more or less the
world ranking points, getting to play against the best players in
the world and compare myself against the best players is the world
is where I want to be. Get myself back up in the world rankings, get
myself back into the majors."
--Field Level Media
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