The late golf writer Charles Price — who was a close friend of Bobby Jones and wrote the book A Golf Story: Bobby Jones, Augusta National, and the Masters Tournament — got it just right in his assessment of the fabled Georgia layout. “Augusta National was never the most revolutionary design in America," he wrote, “but it was certainly the most evolutionary."
Indeed, the Masters mavens have never been shy about tinkering with their remarkable venue. Starting in 1935, when the club reversed the nines for the second playing of the Masters, the only constant at Augusta National Golf Club has been change. See more here.