Matt Parziale's Epic Masters Week
4/15/2018 | by
see also: The Masters Tournament, Augusta National Golf Club

A Mercedes courtesy car, playing with Tiger and Rory, the Crow's Nest, crystal goblets, firefighters in the gallery and more
Matt Parziale was living out his own dream last week, but he was living out others’ dreams, too, a working-class hero given the keys to golf’s Xanadu.
A firefighter, who by definition is tougher than the front nine on Sunday at Augusta National, played in the Masters while his compatriots in the real world vicariously lived the experience with him.
Related: AmateurGolf.com Feature Interview: Matt Parziale
“It seemed like hundreds of firefighters were out there yelling,” Parziale said on Wednesday. “They were great. The support was incredible. Everyone was yelling ‘Thorny Lea.’” Thorny Lea is the club at which he plays in Brockton, Mass. “No way we have this many members down there.
Parziale played nine holes with Woods and Fred Couples on Wednesday. “Great conversation, telling jokes, everyone excited to be out there. It was so cool to play with those guys. Freddie, I’ve watched him so much over the years. He plays that course so well.”
The Saturday before, he played with three Augusta National members. On Sunday, he joined Louis Oosthuizen, Charl Schwartzel, Pat Perez and Matt Rollins, the latter the director of tournament player relations for PXG, for a practice round.
On Monday, it was 18 holes with Rory McIlroy and Wesley Bryan. “It was a great day,” he said. “When you get out there, all these guys are just golfers. They’re just getting ready to play the tournament. Everyone was great.”
Helpful, too, to a Masters rookie attempting to learn Augusta National’s nuances and mysteries in only a few days. “Golf is strange in that sense. The Patriots aren’t helping the Eagles get ready for the Super Bowl. That’s why our sport is so great. They were so great helping me around the course and showing spots where I might not want to hit it. Everyone is helpful.”
He enjoyed the perks to which every player in the field is entitled, the Mercedes-Benz courtesy car, for instance. “Probably the nicest car I’ve ever driven,” he said. There were the eight tickets a day he was provided and a few extras that he bought. “The toughest thing was getting tickets for everyone,” he said. “But the guys I couldn’t get tickets for found their own.”

Tournament Chairman Fred Ridley with the six Masters amateurs:
Ellis, Lin, Niemann, Ghim, Redman, Parziale (Masters photo)
Parziale, who won the U.S. Mid-Amateur Championship to earn his Masters invitation, stayed that night in the Crow’s Nest, where the amateurs typically stay. “We watched a little of the national championship [basketball] game,” he said. “It’s like living in the fire station, although it’s a lot nicer than the fire station, for sure. It was a great time.”
The rest of the time, he, his fiance Alison Hubbard, and his father Victor, who also caddied for him, stayed at the rental home of Paul Finn, a Thorny Lea member who has volunteered at the Masters for 16 years.
Parziale's week ended after posting scores of 81-79 and missing the cut. “But I’ve shot 160 on courses a lot easier,” he said. “It’s just golf. The thing I’m most happy about is that I felt great out there.”
“I didn’t even know about that,” he said. “That was pretty cool. Mike Weir said something when I was picking the ball up, but I didn’t quite hear him. Then Brendan Steele said, ‘dude, you got some crystal for making an eagle.’ That was pretty cool to know I was taking something away from that.”
The entire experience, from first practice round to the last holed putt on Friday, “was incredible. I think everyone has every high expectations for Augusta, but usually things like that don’t meet your expectations. Augusta exceeded them.”
It even impressed his fiance. “She was excited,” he said. “She didn’t know what to expect. We got home on Saturday afternoon and the Masters was in the middle of its [television] coverage. She said, ‘do you want to watch the Masters?’ That was the first time she ever wanted to watch golf.”
About the The Masters

One of Golf's four professional majors traditionally invites amateurs who have reached the finals of the US Amateur, or won the British Amateur or the US Mid Amateur. Also included are the winners of the relatively new Asia Pacific Amateur and Latin ...
Most Popular Articles

2025 PGA TOUR Q-School Guide: Sites, Scores, and Who Advanced
Dec 5, 2025Second Stage is complete and Final Stage awaits at Sawgrass — follow every Q-School leaderboard and the players still chasing
2025 LPGA TOUR Q-Series: Final Qualifying Stage FINAL SCORING
Dec 8, 2025Helen Briem earns medalist honors, 31 players headed to the LPGA next year
Australian Open at Royal Melbourne: Preview, amateur bios, and how to watch
Nov 30, 2025Rory McIlroy headlines one of the championship's top fields in years - at least four amateurs will have their chance at glory
Luke Ringkamp Cruises to Rolex Tournament of Champions Title at TPC San Antonio
Nov 26, 2025One week after committing to Pepperdine, Luke Ringkamp won the Rolex Tournament of Champions by nine shots.
Charlie Woods’ 2025 Breakout Has Junior Golf Watching — and College Coaches Waiting
Nov 24, 2025A 2025 breakout — AJGA winner, Rolex All-American, state champ — has made the top 2027 recruit still on the board.
