The BulleTin • Friday, april 9, 2021 B5 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY SATURDAY TONIGHT HIGH 64° LOW 31° Partly sunny, pleasant and warmer Partly cloudy 46° 25° 55° 24° Cooler with partial sunshine Warmer with sunshine and patchy clouds ALMANAC TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 50° 55° 81° in 1996 36° 30° 10° in 1953 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.71" in 1935 Month to date (normal) 0.00" (0.20") Year to date (normal) 1.18" (3.55") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30.22" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Rise/Set Sun Moon Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus New MONDAY TUESDAY 55° 30° Today Sat. 6:32am/7:42pm 6:30am/7:43pm 6:01am/5:26pm 6:22am/6:29pm 6:21am/6:47pm 6:20am/6:53pm 6:46am/7:58pm 6:45am/8:01pm 9:28am/1:06am 9:26am/1:05am 4:34am/2:50pm 4:31am/2:47pm 4:00am/1:43pm 3:56am/1:39pm 7:20am/9:21pm 7:17am/9:18pm First Full Last Apr 11 Apr 19 Apr 26 May 3 Tonight's sky: Corvus, the crow, is low in the southeast at nightfall and glides across the south during the night. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 6 6 4 The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index ™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. ROAD CONDITONS For web cameras of our passes, go to www.bendbulletin.com/webcams I-84 at Cabbage Hill: Partly sunny today. Increasing clouds tonight. US 20 at Santiam Pass: Clouds and sun today. Cloudy tonight with some snow late. US 26 at Gov't Camp: Turning cloudy today. Periods of snow tonight. US 26 at Ochoco Divide: Partly sunny today. Increasing cloudiness tonight. ORE 58 at Willamette Pass: Partly sunny today. Turning cloudy tonight. A mix of rain and snow tomorrow. ORE 138 at Diamond Lake: Some sunshine today. Partly cloudy tonight. SKI REPORT 55° 29° Plenty of sunshine Plenty of sunshine EAST: Partly sunny and a bit warmer Friday. Partly cloudy and turning breezy at night. Astoria 50/39 Sunny, breezy and pleasant Hood River NATIONAL WEATHER -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s Base 80-80 0-95 53-70 95-112 0-222 66-91 0-189 0-45 48-68 52-85 0-105 45-58 41-70 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 90/45/0.00 Akron 83/60/0.11 Albany 72/37/0.00 Albuquerque 79/39/0.00 Anchorage 24/22/0.08 Atlanta 78/61/0.00 Atlantic City 58/40/0.00 Austin 89/44/0.00 Baltimore 71/52/0.00 Billings 64/45/0.12 Birmingham 82/66/0.01 Bismarck 69/24/0.00 Boise 55/45/0.00 Boston 56/48/0.00 Bridgeport, CT 67/45/0.00 Buffalo 83/50/0.00 Burlington, VT 73/39/0.00 Caribou, ME 64/41/0.00 Charleston, SC 83/56/0.00 Charlotte 79/56/Tr Chattanooga 80/62/0.18 Cheyenne 64/35/0.00 Chicago 63/56/0.36 Cincinnati 68/60/0.02 Cleveland 83/61/0.10 Colorado Springs 71/35/0.00 Columbia, MO 52/47/0.34 Columbia, SC 83/55/Tr Columbus, GA 81/61/0.00 Columbus, OH 78/60/0.21 Concord, NH 71/41/0.00 Corpus Christi 88/64/Tr Dallas 85/49/0.00 Dayton 71/61/0.11 Denver 70/37/0.00 Des Moines 54/48/0.19 Detroit 77/53/0.23 Duluth 43/40/0.22 El Paso 88/66/0.00 Fairbanks 14/13/Tr Fargo 44/42/0.67 Flagstaff 67/45/0.00 Grand Rapids 74/57/0.33 Green Bay 66/49/0.11 Greensboro 82/55/0.06 Harrisburg 74/51/0.00 Hartford, CT 74/39/0.00 Helena 51/37/Tr Honolulu 80/69/0.01 Houston 88/54/0.03 Huntsville 77/58/1.64 Indianapolis 67/60/0.27 Jackson, MS 83/60/0.08 Jacksonville 83/51/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 91/48/s 73/56/pc 68/49/pc 72/41/s 17/4/s 78/63/t 54/51/c 93/60/pc 62/54/c 56/37/s 80/64/t 57/23/c 63/39/s 60/48/s 57/46/pc 71/54/sh 74/53/pc 63/41/pc 81/63/c 82/61/pc 81/63/t 47/28/pc 63/48/c 76/59/pc 74/57/pc 54/30/s 74/50/pc 83/61/t 76/63/t 75/56/pc 71/43/s 89/69/s 86/54/t 76/56/t 52/32/s 61/44/pc 71/53/t 50/39/r 85/53/s 5/-24/pc 49/31/sn 67/28/s 62/48/c 55/45/r 79/59/c 60/51/r 70/48/pc 60/36/pc 80/67/s 87/69/c 79/63/t 75/57/c 84/66/t 84/62/pc Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Beirut Berlin Bogota Budapest Buenos Aires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun Dublin Edinburgh Geneva Harare Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Lima Lisbon London Madrid Manila 50/39/sh 59/44/s 70/64/pc 97/67/pc 92/79/pc 70/41/s 69/56/t 54/40/c 65/51/c 58/37/s 75/69/r 85/67/s 77/52/s 52/28/pc 87/78/pc 45/28/sh 46/25/pc 62/42/c 79/55/s 76/70/r 51/38/pc 63/50/pc 77/56/s 75/67/c 67/56/t 52/40/sh 58/48/t 92/80/s Saturday Hi/Lo/W 76/52/s 77/54/t 73/54/pc 73/44/s 19/14/pc 70/58/t 61/55/c 78/47/s 71/60/c 63/30/c 73/54/t 70/37/s 56/27/s 67/48/pc 58/49/c 82/56/pc 74/53/pc 59/33/pc 80/63/c 78/60/sh 72/55/t 63/32/s 56/46/r 71/49/t 80/54/t 67/39/s 54/43/r 82/61/sh 69/60/t 75/50/t 74/47/pc 84/64/pc 76/52/s 72/49/t 68/39/s 56/39/pc 72/51/t 48/40/c 84/57/s 13/5/s 58/29/pc 67/31/s 66/47/r 55/45/c 75/59/sh 73/60/c 73/54/pc 49/27/c 80/65/pc 81/56/pc 74/51/t 66/46/sh 79/53/t 86/63/c City Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, WI Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa Fe Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfi eld, MO Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington, DC Wichita Yakima Yuma Yesterday Hi/Lo/Prec. 36/24/0.27 53/47/0.36 75/58/0.03 87/66/0.00 66/58/0.15 51/45/1.28 76/46/0.07 75/55/Tr 74/61/0.05 63/58/0.38 71/52/0.22 81/63/0.00 62/54/0.35 65/50/0.30 77/59/0.47 82/65/2.69 70/49/0.00 68/46/0.00 69/59/0.00 79/44/0.00 50/46/0.49 83/58/0.00 98/65/0.00 56/51/0.30 72/45/0.00 93/64/0.00 82/55/0.02 59/42/0.00 68/45/0.00 83/53/0.00 68/29/0.00 69/35/0.00 74/54/0.00 78/39/0.00 77/44/0.00 57/51/0.44 65/43/0.00 94/63/Tr 70/58/0.00 62/51/0.00 68/44/0.00 74/26/0.00 82/56/0.00 54/40/0.23 47/45/0.85 52/36/0.01 68/44/Tr 82/64/0.00 90/59/0.00 78/48/0.00 72/53/Tr 73/43/Tr 57/36/0.00 95/68/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 40/21/c 72/46/s 67/49/c 82/59/s 77/59/pc 65/42/pc 72/57/t 77/57/pc 81/62/pc 57/43/sh 77/62/t 83/71/s 59/47/c 53/41/r 82/62/s 83/72/t 60/50/pc 60/50/pc 72/59/c 74/42/t 65/43/pc 87/63/pc 96/67/pc 68/49/c 62/52/c 93/64/s 75/53/t 61/42/pc 65/45/s 82/60/t 51/27/sn 71/39/s 71/56/c 70/51/sh 74/43/s 79/58/pc 56/40/s 97/64/pc 70/56/pc 59/49/pc 64/46/pc 71/31/s 79/63/sh 51/38/pc 58/35/pc 54/34/c 76/47/pc 84/68/s 89/58/s 76/46/pc 63/56/c 72/41/pc 63/38/c 95/59/pc Saturday Hi/Lo/W 33/25/c 59/40/r 72/48/r 86/62/s 70/47/t 64/35/s 70/46/s 78/56/pc 73/50/t 55/44/c 72/49/t 84/73/s 53/45/sh 54/39/pc 73/49/t 81/64/t 64/54/c 65/54/c 77/65/sh 68/43/s 62/38/pc 89/67/pc 97/69/s 55/44/r 70/59/c 93/63/s 78/54/t 62/44/pc 67/51/pc 80/63/t 66/34/s 73/39/s 77/62/sh 79/57/pc 78/46/s 61/47/sh 69/36/s 82/57/pc 70/56/pc 63/47/s 69/45/pc 71/35/s 82/61/c 50/33/pc 62/32/pc 45/24/pc 54/40/sh 84/71/pc 90/59/s 66/46/s 72/62/c 66/42/s 53/25/pc 94/58/s 101/74/0.00 79/55/0.00 70/43/0.00 39/35/0.39 79/63/0.22 79/63/0.00 93/72/0.00 68/46/0.04 41/27/0.26 72/43/0.00 55/39/0.00 79/71/0.01 57/32/0.00 73/57/0.00 77/64/0.00 41/35/0.08 65/39/0.00 66/51/0.00 88/79/0.40 45/21/0.00 77/65/0.00 71/64/0.35 75/59/0.00 63/49/0.06 68/48/0.00 50/39/Tr 46/34/0.01 46/32/0.25 100/72/s 79/55/pc 72/50/s 48/35/s 77/61/t 81/69/s 96/69/pc 59/41/pc 50/29/sn 68/48/pc 62/48/c 82/70/s 59/45/pc 72/46/s 81/61/s 43/37/sn 66/43/s 66/49/s 89/77/t 47/33/c 81/62/pc 66/65/r 70/55/pc 60/44/pc 64/49/r 48/38/r 61/35/pc 52/38/c 97/67/s 80/58/pc 72/47/pc 53/38/c 80/61/t 82/70/s 98/70/pc 62/41/s 47/29/s 74/49/pc 56/42/r 83/69/s 60/50/c 70/44/s 83/60/s 51/30/pc 63/40/s 68/57/pc 91/77/pc 47/29/c 74/57/pc 71/68/sh 63/57/c 57/47/s 69/53/pc 48/34/s 64/44/pc 60/43/pc INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 103° at Zapata, TX National low: 13° at Gould, CO Precipitation: 2.86" at Laurel, MS T-storms Sunshine NATIONAL Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 52/41/0.11 50/39/c 49/34/c La Grande 46/36/0.00 63/33/pc 43/20/sh Portland 57/42/0.04 59/41/pc 53/34/pc Baker City 48/34/Tr 62/30/pc 48/20/pc La Pine 49/33/0.00 60/27/pc 44/19/pc Prineville 50/32/0.00 66/28/pc 44/23/pc Brookings 56/42/0.00 52/40/s 55/40/pc Medford 62/44/0.00 69/37/s 58/32/pc Redmond 51/37/Tr 64/28/pc 48/20/pc Newport 50/41/0.09 49/40/pc 48/33/c Roseburg 58/46/Tr 63/37/s 53/31/pc Burns 53/30/0.00 65/29/s 52/17/pc Eugene 59/45/0.02 60/39/pc 51/31/pc North Bend 53/45/0.17 52/42/pc 51/36/pc Salem 57/42/0.05 58/40/pc 51/30/pc Klamath Falls 55/28/0.00 65/27/pc 55/22/s Ontario 59/46/0.00 65/35/s 59/30/pc Sisters 45/37/0.00 63/30/pc 45/24/sf Lakeview 58/31/0.00 65/28/s 56/18/s Pendleton 54/40/Tr 63/39/pc 50/26/sh The Dalles 56/42/0.03 62/41/pc 52/30/pc Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, Tr-trace, Yesterday data as of 5 p.m. yesterday -10s 66° 29° TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 65/41 Rufus Hermiston 58/39 65/41 62/42 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 64/42 58/37 59/41 60/31 Wasco 61/30 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles CENTRAL: Turning a Tillamook 60/27 59/40 63/39 Sandy 62/41 McMinnville 50/39 bit milder Friday with Joseph Heppner La Grande 58/39 Maupin Government 58/41 a mixture of clouds 63/33 58/27 Camp 63/39 Condon 61/35 Union Lincoln City and sunshine. Breezy 59/34 48/30 62/32 Salem 49/40 Spray at night with some Granite Warm Springs 58/40 Madras 66/32 Albany 57/28 clouds. Newport Baker City 64/33 66/35 Mitchell 49/40 57/41 62/30 WEST: Dry Friday Camp Sherman 63/32 Redmond Corvallis John Unity with clouds and some Yachats 60/31 64/28 55/40 Day Prineville 49/41 64/30 sunshine. Cloudy at Ontario Sisters 66/28 Paulina 65/31 65/35 night with some late- Florence Eugene 63/30 Bend Brothers 63/26 Vale night rain. 50/42 60/39 64/31 61/27 Sunriver 66/33 Nyssa 62/28 Hampton Cottage La Pine 67/32 Juntura Oakridge Grove 60/27 63/27 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 66/34 59/34 63/39 Fort Rock 51/41 65/29 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 64/26 66/30 High: 63° 59/26 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at Grants Pass Beaver Frenchglen Silver 51/42 63/37 66/27 61/30 Low: 28° Marsh Lake 65/33 Port Orford 60/25 65/28 at Klamath Falls Grants Burns Junction Paisley 52/41 Pass 68/31 Chiloquin 67/30 71/36 Rome Medford 62/25 Gold Beach 69/37 69/33 50/42 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 66/34 66/36 65/27 62/31 52/40 65/28 Seaside 50/39 Cannon Beach 48/39 THURSDAY 61° 26° Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday Ski resort New snow Anthony Lakes Mtn 0 Hoodoo Ski Area 0 Mt. Ashland 0 Mt. Bachelor 1 Mt. Hood Meadows 0 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 Timberline Lodge 0 Willamette Pass 0 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 Squaw Valley, CA 0 Park City Mountain, UT 0 Sun Valley, ID 0 WEDNESDAY OREGON WEATHER Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low SUNDAY Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Rain Showers Snow Flurries Ice Warm Front Stationary Front Cold Front Source: OnTheSnow.com 50/34/0.01 56/54/0.04 70/57/0.00 93/73/Tr 95/77/0.01 68/40/0.00 73/63/0.00 45/35/Tr 64/50/0.22 47/25/0.25 77/73/0.36 91/63/0.00 80/60/0.00 41/32/0.03 86/75/0.02 52/39/0.13 50/36/0.08 57/27/0.00 78/52/0.00 80/70/0.33 46/43/0.43 72/56/0.00 75/53/0.00 73/66/0.00 70/48/0.00 54/37/0.24 64/48/0.00 91/79/0.00 46/36/sh 62/46/s 69/64/r 91/59/pc 91/79/t 67/56/c 58/53/sh 47/44/r 65/50/c 63/40/pc 72/58/t 80/63/s 67/51/s 41/22/c 87/78/pc 44/29/sh 44/25/sh 64/47/sh 78/56/pc 78/72/pc 53/38/s 51/50/c 79/57/s 75/66/c 65/55/t 43/34/sh 66/50/t 94/79/pc Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nairobi Nassau New Delhi Osaka Oslo Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Sapporo Seoul Shanghai Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei City Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw COLLEGE SPORTS Bill would compensate Oregon athletes for use of name, image, likeness BY JAMES CREPEA The Oregonian The latest proposed state legislation to permit college athletes in Oregon to be compensated for their name, image and likeness was scheduled for its first public hearing Thursday afternoon. Although the University of Oregon and Oregon State University are sup- portive of athletes being able to profit from what’s known as their NIL, the schools are opposed to the bill, which also calls for “royalty payments to each student athlete who is a current member of the team” related to an athletic department’s merchandising and apparel agreements. Senate Bill 5, sponsored by Sens. Peter Courtney, D-Salem, and James Manning Jr., D-Eugene, would allow college athletes in the state to earn compensation for use of their name, image or likeness and to retain rep- resentation related to those oppor- tunities so long as their agent didn’t represent the school in the prior four years. It would not allow athletes to enter into contracts that conflict with “team rules” or contracts between the athletes’ school and third parties that pertain to when an athlete is engaged in official team activities (i.e., conflict- ing apparel providers while playing), and would require “royalty payments to current members of team” from a school’s merchandise and apparel deals and “royalty payments plus pre- mium to current or former member of team whose name, image or like- ness is used.” If passed, the bill would go into ef- fect immediately, with Oregon college athletes able to earn NIL compensa- tion beginning July 1, the same day that numerous similar laws are set to go into effect in a growing number of other states. Courtney, the Oregon Senate Pres- ident, crafted the proposed legislation and made it clear his intention is for all athletes on college teams to be able to earn a share of the apparel deals, which is the unique and controversial aspect of the bill compared to those in other states. “You have to start with the stu- dent-athlete and end with the stu- dent-athlete or you’re not going to make any movement here,” Courtney said. “That’s why the NCAA is bogged down because these big institutions, if you start up there, you’re not going to get there. “I have long felt … that this is an abomination.” Manning, whose district includes the University of Oregon, views the is- sue in terms of equity and equality for “You have to start with the student- athlete and end with the student- athlete or you’re not going to make any movement here. That’s why the NCAA is bogged down because these big institutions, if you start up there, you’re not going to get there. I have long felt … that this is an abomination.” — Peter Courtney, D-Salem, Oregon Senate President all athletes, particularly those who are minorities and women. He cited how former Ducks women’s basketball star Sabrina Ionescu, now with the New York Liberty, was not able to profit from her name, image or likeness during her college career. “They’re still using her likeness and her image; it’s directly tied towards U of O,” Manning said. “She’s not bene- fiting from that at all but the univer- sity certainly is. … These students are being taken advantage of and there’s no compensation.” Both UO and OSU support the overarching issue of college athletes Masters Continued from B3 Twice a runner-up, including a playoff loss to Sergio Garcia four years ago, Rose tied a Masters record by taking at least a share of first-round lead for the fourth time. The other to do that was Jack Nicklaus. The differ- ence? Nicklaus went on to win two of his six green jackets from that po- sition. Rose likes to say he’s only had one arm in the jacket. Brian Harman, the last player to get into the 88-man field, and Hideki Matsuyama were wrapping up their rounds of 69 about the time Rose began on a course that was dry and crusty, on greens that were so fast there were splotches of brown. Among those at 70 were former Masters champion Patrick Reed and Masters newcomer Will Zalatoris. Jor- dan Spieth overcame a triple bogey from the trees on No. 9 for a 71.De- fending champion Dustin Johnson, Charlie Riedel/AP Bryson DeChambeau yawns as he waits to putt on the 16th hole during the first round of the Masters on Thursday in Augusta, Georgia. who set the record last year at 20-un- der 268, failed to break par for the first time since the opening round in 2018. He three-putted for double bo- gey on the 18th for a 74. “I feel sorry for the guys’ first Mas- ters in November, and then they’re walking out there today wondering what the hell is going on,” Kevin Kis- ner said after a hard-earned 72. being compensated for their NIL, an issue being addressed by a growing number of state Legislatures, Con- gress and the NCAA. Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden is among the co-sponsors of the College Athlete Bill of Rights in Congress. But both UO and OSU are opposed to Senate Bill 5 in its current form. “The University of Oregon sup- ports the ability of its student-athletes to benefit from the use of their name, image and likeness,” the university said in a statement to The Oregonian/ OregonLive. “Our interest lies in mak- ing this a reality in the most efficient way possible, and one that best serves all student-athletes. We believe a na- tional solution is the best approach that would support student-athletes equitably regardless of the institution or league for which they compete. We are working with the Pac-12, other conferences, and members of Con- gress to accomplish this goal.” The royalty payments from apparel contracts in the proposed legislation are what differentiates Senate Bill 5 from similar bills and laws across the country. Courtney said he’s confident that, if the bill passes, schools in the state, apparel providers like Nike, which has contracts with both UO and OSU, and the Higher Education Coordi- nating Commission would be able to “figure out how to do it in a very fair and meaningful way and a in way that really can promote themselves and promote students” for what would be pioneering merchandising deals in college athletics. But the lack of specificity regarding this aspect of the proposed legislation is concerning to UO and OSU. “Royalty language in the bill is vague and makes it difficult to assess how the legislation would actually be implemented, or what would be the impacts on athletic departments, including non-revenue generating sports and Title IX requirements,” OSU acting president Edward Feser said in a statement. OSU athletic director Scott Barnes said the school “enthusiastically sup- ports” its athletes being able to benefit from their NIL and “the OSU Athletic Department is well-positioned to as- sist student-athletes in maximizing opportunities that result from state or national legislation.” A request for comment from UO athletic director Rob Mullens was re- ferred to the university’s statement. Nike did not immediately return a request for comment regarding the proposed bill. This was no surprise. Augusta Na- tional has not had rain in more than a week, and players could not recall the last time greens were this fast. “It’s my 10th year, but I’ve never seen the greens so firm and fast,” Mat- suyama said. “So it was like a new course for me playing today, and I was fortunate to get around it well.” And what to say of Rose? Even in more forgiving conditions, he had never done better than 67. “I didn’t feel like today was the day for a 65, if I’m honest,” Rose said. No one needed convincing, least of all Bryson DeChambeau and Rory McIlroy, among top players who struggled with the wind and had just as many problems when the ball was on the ground. DeChambeau, the U.S. Open champion who has been licking his chops about bringing his super-sized game to Augusta National, didn’t make a birdie until the 15th hole and shot 76, his highest score as a pro at the Masters. Patrick Cantlay hit into the water on both par 3s on the back nine and shot 79. “Guys are going to shoot them- selves out of the golf tournament on day one,” Webb Simpson said after a late double bogey forced him to settle for a 70. McIlroy, needing a green jacket to complete the career Grand Slam, hit his father with a shot on the seventh hole. That was about the most inter- esting moment in his round of 76. Rose looked as though he might be headed that direction. He made a soft bogey on No. 1. He three-putted across the green on No. 7. He was 2 over, though not ready to panic. He knew it was tough. He also knew he was headed in the wrong direction. “You can’t win the golf tournament today. Even with a 65 you can’t win it today,” Rose said. “You can only prob- ably lose it today, obviously. I reset just prior to that and thought if I can get myself back around even par, that would be a good day’s work.”