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Brandon Holtz, the amateur world No 3,262, swaps real estate for Masters

about 10 hours ago
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There are two Masters taking place this year, the one you’re watching, and the one you’re playing in.Well.Maybe not you, exactly, unless you can count your handicap on two fingers, but the best player you know, that guy on the school run who used to play off scratch, that cousin who won the sports scholarship, or the uncle who everyone says could have made it back in the day.His name is Brandon Holtz and, if you haven’t spotted him yet, he is, he says himself, “the old fat guy” who has been playing with the two-time Masters champion Bubba Watson this week.Holtz is 39 and works full time as a real estate broker in Bloomington, Illinois.

He plays as much golf as he can but, given that he has two kids, a five-year-old son and a two-year-old daughter, it isn’t nearly as much as he’d like.He is currently 3,262 in the world amateur golf rankings.Which of course means he is a hell of a good golfer.And also that he is ranked a full 3,160 places below his nearest competitor among the six amateurs in the field here.And that’s before you even get to the other 10,000 or so professionals in the Official Golf World Rankings, where he is currently unlisted.

Holtz qualified by winning the US Mid-Am, which is the route into the Masters for amateur players aged 25 and over,The last three players who came in that way, Evan Beck, Stewart Hagestad and Matthew McClean, were all ranked inside the world’s top 100 at the time,It’s hard to say for sure, the amateur records are patchy and only go back so far, but it would be odds-on that Holtz is the lowest‑ranked player ever to qualify for the Masters,It’s not his first time here, mind you,It’s just that all the others were on the other side of the ropes.

His dad, Jeff, who is caddying for him this week, won a patron’s badge in the lottery in 2004, and they’ve been back here pretty much every year since.They usually sit behind the 6th and bet beers on who of the players in front of them is going to end up closest to the pin.This year the patrons there are betting on him.Which is a hell of a thing.Holtz didn’t even play golf at college.

He was on a basketball scholarship at Illinois State.He always had a good swing and was on his high school team, but he says himself that he never really bothered practising.He only took it up seriously after he had finished.He spent his early 20s on the mini tour trying to make it as a pro, but it cost him a lot more than he won.His best finish was second place in the Illinois Open, which earned him $14,000 (£10,400).

That was well over a decade ago now.In 2024 he paid $200 to the US Golf Association to have his amateur status reinstated.There’s been some grumbling among the amateur community that Holtz ought not to have been reinstated as an amateur.“The US Mid-Am was basically built for this in my opinion,” he’s said.“I’m a working man, I got a couple of kids, got a wife.

Like, for me, as far as competition is concerned, what else am I going to play in?” The rest of the time, he’s just out there trying to make a living, same as the rest of us.To be honest, Holtz’s background in elite college basketball is a lot more helpful than what he learned during his short time on the Hooters Tour.“Have I teed the ball up in front of 50,000? No, but have I played in front of 20,000? I have.” He was a shooter.By Division One standards he couldn’t dribble, or dunk, or do much of anything else on a basketball court, but he knew how to shoot under pressure.

The Mid-Am is a matchplay event, “mano a mano”, he says, and that suited him just fine.Holtz won it with his driver, which, he says, is the best club in his bag.Trouble is that he just switched it up, and the replacement hasn’t been behaving.The one he used in the Mid-Am ended up in the USGA Hall of Fame.They’ve shipped it back to him to use this week.

It arrived right in time for his opening round, when, if you were wondering, he scored 81 on the first day, and 78 on the second, when he had a run of eight straight bogeys.The week has been one long lesson in the difference between amateur and professional golf.“I mean, they rarely miss and their wedges are just incredible.Just the action on the ball, the control they have with it, it’s far in between mid-ams and big-time players,” he said.But still.

“This is a dream come true really,” he said afterward.“The experience as a whole is incredible.It was definitely not what I wanted to do on the golf course, but I had a lot of fun.You know, like I said, I’ve kind of already won.I’m 39, chasing a dream and here we are.

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politicsSee all
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Starmer says he is ‘fed up’ with Trump and Putin’s impact on UK energy costs

Keir Starmer has said he is “fed up” with the effect that Donald Trump’s actions in the Middle East are having on the British public, while appearing to draw a comparison between the US president and Vladimir Putin.Speaking to ITV’s Robert Peston on Thursday, the prime minister said: “I’m fed up with the fact that families across the country see their bills go up and down on energy, businesses’ bills go up and down on energy because of the actions of Putin or Trump across the world.”Starmer, who has been heavily criticised, and at times mocked, by Trump for not committing British forces to the war on Iran, also appeared to condemn Benjamin Netanyahu for Israel’s continued strikes on Lebanon, despite Iran calling for Lebanon to be included in the ceasefire that was agreed on 7 April.“That should stop – that’s my strong view – and therefore, the question isn’t a technical one of whether it’s a breach of the agreement or not,” Starmer said.Starmer and Trump spoke on Thursday about the need for a “practical plan” to get shipping going through the strait of Hormuz after the Middle East ceasefire

about 18 hours ago
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Israel’s attacks on Lebanon should not be happening, says Keir Starmer

Israel’s continued attacks on Lebanon “shouldn’t be happening”, Keir Starmer has said on his visit to the Middle East, as he called for the Iran conflict to become a watershed moment for the future security of the UK.In an article for the Guardian, the prime minister said the UK’s response to the crisis must involve a fundamental reset in terms of making the country more resilient, including by boosting defence and having closer links to Europe.His comments on Israel echoed criticisms by Yvette Cooper, the foreign secretary; and John Healey, the defence secretary, emphasising a potentially widening gap between the UK and Donald Trump’s US over the Iran conflict and its aftermath.As well as the condemnation over Lebanon, Starmer and his ministers have been adamant that the strait of Hormuz must be free of any sort of tolls or levies, after Trump mooted the idea of a “joint venture” between the US and Iran to do this.Speaking in Bahrain on a trip in which he has also held talks in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates on shoring up the tentative ceasefire between Iran, the US and Israel, and fully reopening the strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping, Starmer criticised Israel’s intensified bombing in Lebanon, which has killed more than 250 people

1 day ago
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Starmer says talks with Gulf leaders have reinforced sense Iran war ceasefire is ‘fragile’ – as it happened

Keir Starmer has said he discussed the “fragile” nature of the US-Iran ceasefire with Gulf allies and that “it takes more than just words” to make it permanent, the Press Association reports.After talks with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman and UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Starmer told broadcasters:double quotation markI think the mood is very much one of the shock that they were attacked in the first place, because of course they weren’t attacking Iran, and the intensity of some of the attacks.Relief that there’s now a ceasefire. I think a general sense that it’s fragile, that there’s work to do in relation to it.And then a lot of reflection and discussion, me with them, about the work we did over the last six to seven weeks together, the collective self-defence, the capabilities

1 day ago
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‘No more bending to Westminster’s will’ if Plaid Cymru wins power, leader vows

Plaid Cymru’s leader has promised “no more bending to Westminster’s will” as the nationalist party stands on the brink of taking office for the first time in next month’s Senedd elections.Speaking at Plaid Cymru’s manifesto launch in Wrexham on Thursday – chosen because of its football team, which has showcased Wales’s potential to the world – Rhun ap Iorwerth told a packed room of supporters there would be “no more toeing the London party line, no more defending the status quo and no more saying no to Wales”.He said: “Together, and for the first time, we can give our nation the leadership it deserves, leadership that takes its cue from the people of Wales and nobody else.”Labour has led Wales since devolution in 1999 but it appears destined for opposition. Polls consistently suggest the May contest is a two-horse race between Plaid Cymru and Reform UK, with Labour a distant third or even fourth after the Green party

1 day ago
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Why colluding with King Donald’s insanity is the only game in town | John Crace

The Madness of King Donald. Unless you’ve spent most of the last few years on a silent retreat – and who could blame you? – it can’t have escaped you that the American president is both not that bright and borderline sociopathic. A lethal combination. Posting “Open the Fuckin’ Strait you crazy bastards or you’ll be living in Hell” on his social media account is not the action of a well man. Certainly not when the Middle East is on a knife-edge

1 day ago
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UK spending on foreign aid hits lowest level since 2008

The UK government’s spending on foreign aid has hit its lowest level in nearly two decades, figures show, as humanitarian experts say the cuts are costing lives.Provisional data shows the government allocated 0.43% of national income to official development assistance (ODA) in 2025, down from 0.5% in 2024 and matching the level in 2008.The total ODA spend in 2025 was just over £13bn, an annual decrease of £1bn, or 7

1 day ago
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European airports ‘face jet fuel shortages within three weeks’; Irish army called in over fuel protests - as it happened

about 11 hours ago
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US inflation soars in March as war on Iran drives economy into uncertainty

about 13 hours ago
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US summons bank bosses over cyber risks from Anthropic’s latest AI model

about 18 hours ago
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‘Irresponsible failure’: Google, Meta, Snap and Microsoft slam EU over child sexual abuse law lapse

about 20 hours ago
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Justin Rose struggles to keep his cool in the heat but Masters dream lives on | Andy Bull

about 4 hours ago
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Bath hit back to reach semi-final after stunning Northampton in 11-try epic

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