BLOOMINGTON, Ill. — One dollar changes hands.

One ball is closer.

They run it back. From a spot around Augusta National’s 6th green, Brandon Holtz picks his golfer, and the man Brandon had just become best friends with chooses his. The two rubberneck as a pair of shots make their way down to the par-3’s putting surface. At the Masters, you can usually find Holtz at the 6th. Earlier, he had negotiated himself all the way up to the rope line at the tee box, the position he said is his favorite, because it’s a front-row laboratory seat. Wind gauging. Club selecting. Some decisions work. Some don’t. “One year,” Holtz said, “I’m with Tiger Woods right here and he hit a bad shot, and he’s got his hands over his mouth and just saying a few choice words, and I’m like yeah, he does it, too.”

After a while, Holtz headed to the green, where he and his wife, Liz, met another couple, and the game of nearest-to-the-pin started. Soon, everyone was playing. Soon after that, dollar bets became beer wagers. Concessions are close by, after all. No one disputes what follows — the wives, Brandon said, “are keeping up.”

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But not everyone’s ending matches.

Brandon?

“It took a little bit of a while to get back to home base after that.”

Liz?

“That’s not how the story goes.”

How does it go? 

“She doesn’t remember, probably,” Brandon said.

“Had a great time on 6,” Liz said, “and skipped right back.”

Brandon howls.

That’s how the story goes,” Liz said.

And here’s where Brandon Holtz’s story gets good.

Starting Thursday, another Masters begins. Rory McIlroy, last year’s winner, will be there. Scheffler. Rahm. DeChambeau. Augusta members clad in green jackets. Jim Nantz. Azaleas. Thousands of patrons eating pimento cheese between a couple of slices of white bread.

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And Brandon.

Holtz lives where he grew up, in Bloomington, about two hours away from Chicago, St. Louis and Indianapolis, home to State Farm and a bunch of the state’s farms, a Midwest city where folks get gas and breakfast burritos at Casey’s and pick up groceries at Schnucks. Holtz was a college athlete next door in Normal, at Illinois State University, but in basketball, not golf. His neighbors might buy a home from Holtz, though to call him only a real estate guy would be akin to calling Augusta National a patch of grass. He’s 39 but not pushing away 19, charmingly so.

Every April since 2004, the Holtzes have also come down to Georgia, after Brandon’s dad, Jeff, was picked to receive lifetime Masters badges, and they’re visiting again this week.

Because Jeff is caddying.

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And Liz is, too, during Wednesday’s Par-3 Contest, and she’ll be joined by Baker, 6, and Millie, 2.

Which means, yes, fore please, now driving will be Brandon Holtz, the unlikeliest entrant into the Masters maybe ever — and perhaps its most relatable. While he is better than most every man at golf, he is very much the everyman, and this year, for him, that gallery rope will be raised. His fellow patrons could be beer-betting on him.

And if they did?

“Honestly,” Holtz said, “I wish I could get in there. ‘Hey, you want to buy me a beer after we’re done?’

“That’d be fun.”

HOLTZ ONCE SCORED 68 POINTS IN A HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL GAME. In his prime, he wasn’t a dribbler. Playing defense offended him. But he could shoot it. And still can. Though he hasn’t played even a pick-up game in a while, the fundamentals have kept warm — shoulders squared to the rim, fingertips pressed into the ball’s black grooves, forearm pointed to the ceiling, right wrist cocked slightly back, and a ball flung end over end, until it flicks through the net. In a game of P-A-R with a recent visitor (think H-O-R-S-E, but shorter), he won handily. On the 68 night, he kept shooting and he kept making, though he needed three overtimes to reach his total. “I didn’t have to tell everybody that part,” Holtz joked.

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Colleges covet unapologetic shooters, and 15 offered Holtz scholarships when he was at Bloomington High, before he signed with Illinois State, his hometown’s university, where the Holtzes have held basketball season tickets since the ’90s. From the school’s arena, the scent of popcorn and Papa John’s pizza wafts for a couple of blocks, and inside, the faithful never forget a Redbird. At a game in early March, a few fans said they remembered Holtz, listed as 6-foot-4 and No. 45 in your old programs. Some diehards have even posted a highlight package of him to YouTube.

Over four years, Holtz played mostly as a reserve. Season 1, in 2005-06, he averaged four points and 12 minutes of playing time. Year 2, those numbers fell to two and eight, and after the season, the school fired the coach who recruited him and hired Tim Jankovich, a charmer who left an assistant’s job with the University of Kansas one year before the Jayhawks won the national championship. Jank met with returning players, and 19 years later, he still remembered his Holtz talk. He asked: Why should I have faith in you?

“And he just totally won me over,” Jankovich said.

“He’s just like, just give me a chance, just give me a chance. And I knew right then, just the way he handled himself, he was so honest and mature. And honestly, I loved him from that point on.

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“But in no way in my wildest dreams, if you’d have said then, hey, he might play in the Masters one day, I mean, no, I would have fainted.”

And how, exactly, did that happen? As far as anyone can tell, Holtz’s appearance will be a first by a former Division I basketball player.

There’s talent obviously given by the hooper and hacker above. And there’s maybe a little seamlessness between the sports. For the basketball player, golf fulfills. Tee balls that arch ahead feel a whole lot like 3-pointers. Free throws that require accurate repetition resemble 3-footers. Shoot, golf and basketball even share a key word — shot. But really, golf is just a game of one-on-one. Arrive to the ball, check the defense, make your move — across 18 holes and however many strokes. If you’ve at all wondered why MJ and LeBron and numerous other basketball players have come to golf, there you go. Holtz did play golf as a kid and played on his high school team, and he kept playing in college, shooting mostly in the 70s. After his final two seasons with the Illinois State basketball team — while he never averaged more than eight minutes of playing time, he did lead them out of the locker room ahead of games — he took a job at a course in town. His scores started to drop. The country clubbers in town couldn’t believe this basketball player was taking their money.

But could Holtz actually play for money? Jankovich remembered feeling stunned after hearing that his backup shooting guard was turning pro at golf about a year after his final basketball game. “You didn’t even play in college. You didn’t, you haven’t been playing. Like, you’ve just been at the driving range a little bit,” the coach said. But Jeff, his dad, was good with it, and Brandon was off. He planned to play two years — and played nearly four, from 2010 to 2014, at events in the Midwest and Southeast. Some good. Some bad. Once, while on the road, he opened the door to a hotel room to find two people — living there. “So there was a whole story,” he said.

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Holtz lost money as a pro, though. While he played well, earnings couldn’t beat expenses. He stopped playing professionally, outside of a couple events a year. He moved back home. On New Year’s Eve 2016, Brandon and Liz married. Baker and Millie soon arrived. And would you look at that, a lovely foursome, right smack dab in the middle of the Midwest, as idyllic as it can get. Cue Mellencamp’s “Small Town.”

But here’s the thing about shooters: They shoot.

And shoot, shoot, shoot and shoot, be it before college, in college, after college, at the age of 39.

Because the next one might drop.

“I will say, I do feel like I failed him as a coach in the sense that if I had any idea that he was capable of this,” Jankovich said, “I would have begged him to play golf.”



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