MASTERS '14: Masters prepares for a mixed field, without Tiger

ADVANCE FOR WEEKEND EDITIONS, APRIL 5-6 - FILE - In this March 9, 2014, file photo, Patrick Reed watches his shot on the 11th hole during the final round of the Cadillac Championship golf tournament in Doral, Fla. The rookie class at Augusta National might be the strongest ever at the Masters, from Jordan Spieth and Patrick Reed to Victor Dubuisson and Jimmy Walker. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee, File) (The Associated Press)

ADVANCE FOR WEEKEND EDITIONS, APRIL 5-6 - FILE - In this Jan. 26, 2014, file photo, Jordan Spieth reacts as his tee shot flies to the left of the fairway on the fourth hole of the South Course at Torrey Pines during the final round of the Farmers Insurance Open golf tournament in San Diego. The rookie class at Augusta National might be the strongest ever for the Masters, from Jimmy Walker and Patrick Reed to Victor Dubuisson and Jordan Spieth. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File) (The Associated Press)

This Masters is all about a green jacket, not a red shirt.

Tiger Woods, who has slipped that coveted coat over his Sunday shirt four times, was finishing up his senior year of high school in southern California the last time he wasn't at Augusta National the first full week of April. That was 20 years ago.

Jose Maria Olazabal won the Masters in 1994, making him the 14th player to win the last 14 majors. Greg Norman was No. 1 in the world, but golf didn't have anyone truly dominating the game. Phil Mickelson was 23 and already had three PGA Tour victories, but he missed the Masters with a broken leg from a skiing accident.

The landscape is so much different without Woods and his red shirt, his power color that he has worn in every final round of his career.

He already was hobbling on his road to the Masters. Woods withdrew from the Honda Classic in the final round with lower back pain. He withdrew as two-time defending champion at Bay Hill before the tournament even started. And nine days before the opening round of the Masters, the world's No. 1 player disclosed he had surgery for a pinched nerve in his back that will keep out of golf until the summer.

"Tiger in any golf tournament creates an unbelievable atmosphere," said Steven Bowditch of Australia, the last man to qualify for Augusta after winning the Texas Open. "To not have him there at the Masters is not the greatest."

Golf goes on.

The 78th Masters, which starts Thursday, typically brings the most anticipation of any of the four majors and gets the highest television ratings. It sets the tone for the year, and it was seen as particularly important for Woods, who is going on six years without a major.

The anticipation is different now. Maybe it's more of a curiosity. The Masters has the smallest field of the four majors — 96 players this year — and for years had the shortest list of candidates to win the green jacket.

Now, the list keeps getting longer.

"I don't think it's just the Masters," Rory McIlroy said. "Golf in general is just very wide open at the moment."

In some respects, the landscape is not much different from when Woods last missed the Masters.

Twenty-one players have won the last 24 majors, with only Mickelson, McIlroy and Padraig Harrington winning more than one since 2008. Woods remains No. 1 in the world on the strength of eight wins in the last two years, though he has won only one time in the last 11 months as his body slowly has started to break down.

Winning has never appeared to be more difficult — for everyone.

Through 20 tournaments on the PGA Tour this season, the only multiple winners are Jimmy Walker (three times) and Patrick Reed (twice). Both will be playing in the Masters for the first time. The 23-year-old Reed, who wears a red shirt and black pants on Sunday as a tribute to Woods, has never played in any major.

In the last month alone, McIlroy and Masters champion Adam Scott have lost leads in the final round to players outside the top 100 in the world — McIlroy to Russell Henley in a playoff at the Honda Classic, Scott to Matt Every at Bay Hill.

As for Woods and Mickelson?

Golf's biggest stars for the last two decades, with seven Masters between them, are winless this year. Mickelson has a 2-1 advantage over Woods in a most peculiar category: withdrawing in the middle of a tournament. He had to quit at Torrey Pines and San Antonio, both times with a back injury.

It's almost as if golf is waiting for a new star to emerge.

"You look at the winners on tour the last few months," McIlroy said. "It's been a different guy each week. We've seen players in the past like Tiger and Vijay (Singh) winning nine, 10 times a year. Haven't seen much of that since. You know, it's harder to win out here. There's so many more guys that have chances to win every time they tee it up.

"It would be nice to see someone sort of break away," he said. "I hope it's me."

McIlroy has assumed the role as betting favorite now that Woods is out of the Masters. Even at 24, he knows his way around Augusta National. Three years ago, Boy Wonder took a four-shot lead into the final round only to close with an 80. He bounced back to win the U.S. Open by eight shots that summer, and then added an eight-shot win at the PGA Championship a year later. And after a troublesome year with new equipment and off-course distractions, his game appears to be back on track.

Scott and FedEx Cup champion Henrik Stenson both have a chance at the Masters to replace Woods at the top of the world ranking. Neither has won a tournament this year. In fact, Jason Day is the only player from the top seven in the world to have won this year, and he hasn't played in the six weeks since winning the Match Play Championship because of a thumb injury.

It's been a strange season heading into the first major.

When he was just starting out his pro career, Scott played a practice round with Woods before the 2000 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, which Woods won by a record 15 shots. Scott put the notion of being No. 1 out of his head. Now it's different. Equipment is better. Players are better. What once seemed unfathomable is now within reach.

"There's a different benchmark that may not seem as high," Scott said. "I think the depth of talent, that talent pool is much bigger now. And I can see maybe because that benchmark doesn't seem as high, a lot more guys are working harder to get there. Because more guys think they can."