The Augusta National Golf Course is immortal. The course is so grand that it was used in the title of the third Championship Tournament that the PGA ever sanctioned. The Masters was once called the Augusta National Invitational Tournament. Augusta is in the rare position of being still vital, while considered a landmark of history, simultaneously. The story of Robert T. Jones and the building of his dream golf course is one for the ages. The essential quality of this course alone is reason to invest in attending VIP week at the Masters.
No golf event can compete with the fun of the Masters. The tournament is full of tradition, dinners, social gatherings and semi-social matches. The unofficial hero of the Masters, Jack Nicklaus, won six times, most of any golfer. His ventures into Georgia for this tournament alone have wowed millions of fans. When the architect of Augusta, last revisited his handy work, he was known to have said humbly that it was his finest achievement. If you look at how he accomplished the wide fairways, massive greens, it certainly is impressive. With a scarcity of traps, low amount of bunkers, and balance between tough and soft pin positions, Augusta is awesome to behold, tops in the PGA. And VIP Week might just be the best party in golf.
But the Masters offers more. The site of an old indigo plantation having traversed into a perfect golf course that incorporates ideas from some of the greatest golf courses in the world is one thing. The talent, intensity and fun seen and had by those who attend are the real factors that excite the modern day golf fan. The audience for this tournament seems to increase every year. Each year the famous Masters jacket seems greener. In the world of distracting commerce, the Masters stands proud as representing what golf is all about. In the world of golf, VIP Week at this tournament is a treat, an isolated focus on golf, along with like-minded friends to share in celebration.


