Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Masters Disaster: Why CBS Sports’s Coverage Went Off the Rails

TV insiders and experts spoke with FOS about what went wrong during CBS Sports’s coverage of the final round of the Masters on Sunday.

Apr 12, 2026; Augusta, Georgia, USA; Rory McIlroy celebrates after winning the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images
Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

Call them the shots not seen or heard around the golf world.

CBS Sports’s typically peerless coverage of The Masters imploded Sunday when the network lost the approach shots of leader Rory McIlroy and Cam Young on the 18th hole at Augusta National Golf Club.

For well over a minute, nobody was sure where McIlroy’s shot ended up—and whether the mercurial Ulsterman had blown his chance at a second green jacket. Not the announcers. Not the production truck. Not the millions of viewers left screaming in the dark.

Adding to the mystery: The Masters.com digital site did offer a camera angle showing McIlroy’s approach shot hooking out of the trees and ending up in a bunker in front of the 18th green. Call it the Zapruder film of the 2026 Masters.

But the frustration wasn’t over for viewers on Sunday. For his third shot, McIlroy blasted out of the bunker, then rolled his first putt a few inches away. As he stood over a tap-in bogey for the win, CBS inexplicably chose a camera angle that blocked viewers from seeing his putt fall into the cup. Instead, that view was blocked by McIlroy’s shoes. For a split second, some wondered: Did he flub it? Was he screaming in victory? Or agony?

Jim Nantz, the face and voice of CBS Sports, defended his team during an appearance onThe Pat McAfee Show on Tuesday.

“It’s live television. We all make mistakes,” admitted Nantz. “For the record, the putt was that long. If he would have missed it, we would have the all-time story in the history of golf. But I’m really proud of our crew. You’re making so many split-second decisions.”

Good for Nantz for loyally standing up for his crew. But I don’t blame golf fans either. They look forward to watching the Masters as a rite of spring. CBS’s sterling coverage is annually the gold standard. Viewers have come to expect excellence. It was surprising to watch CBS bungle coverage of the biggest shots on the biggest hole of the biggest major of the year. 

And woe to the network that tries something new with Masters coverage, such as ESPN injecting Jason Kelce into Wednesday’s coverage of the Par 3 tournament. The online fulminations about Kelce’s goofy appearance on Wednesday shattered brick and concrete.

So what really happened Sunday among the azaleas, TV towers, and Georgia Pines? Did CBS simply screw the pooch? Did the control freak Green Jackets at August National interfere? Bad luck?

CBS declined to comment. Ditto for Augusta National. So Front Office Sports talked to multiple experts in golf TV production for their thoughts. Here are five theories on CBS’s Masters Disaster on No. 18.

Human Error

The simplest explanation is usually the right explanation. Peter Kessler, the longtime Golf Channel talent turned host of the Voice of Golf, believed it was simply “human error” at CBS.

“It had to happen in the truck. Somebody didn’t hear something. Somebody didn’t punch the camera the director wanted. That’s my guess,” Kessler says. “It was internal: I didn’t hear you. I didn’t know which one you wanted. Something bordering on confusion at the worst possible time.”

Still Kessler won’t make excuses for the network’s miscues with McIlroy on No. 18.

“It was such a major screw-up. They had the easiest tasks left to do. One man putting twice, basically. They didn’t get that right. We couldn’t tell where his ball went on his second shot. We didn’t know the ball in the bunker was his–until he ID’d as his. They should have had a guy out there with a flag. Not seeing him tap in the little putt? That was an F. All you had to do was put a camera in front of the man. They had 400 cameras there.”

Differing Production Styles

CBS takes a different approach on golf than other networks. The network likes to “stack” shots on tape, then roll them out gradually to build a narrative. NBC Sports, on the other hand, prefers “live” player shots. Kevin Kisner, NBC’s lead golf analyst, blasted CBS’s coverage of the Masters. Speaking on Barstool Sports’s Fore Play podcast, Kisner said CBS was constantly behind the real-time action on the course. “They were literally showing shit that I knew happened 10 minutes ago all day long,” he said. 

While calling the Masters for SiriusXM, the outspoken Kisner was frustrated by the gap between live shots and what was shown on CBS’s broadcast. Kisner added he would have been better off following the action on the Masters app.

“What are we doing? You have no commercials. Play live shots,” Kisner said. “Our production team at NBC prides themselves at showing every shot that they possibly can live… And when we don’t, we have to say, ‘a moment ago,’ because we are trying to make the whole movie make sense.”

TV vs. Digital Coverage

On the digital side, Augusta National has done an amazing job bringing fans inside the tournament. Maybe too good. As Kisner said, it felt at times as if the TV broadcast lagged behind real-time digital coverage. The perfect example is Masters.com, where fans can still replay every shot by McIlroy from Sunday. If you fast-forward to the 12:30 mark, you can see their camera around the green did a much better job capturing McIlroy’s vital approach shot on No. 18. So the ball really wasn’t lost for a minute—except to CBS and its viewers.

Whit Watson, the long-time announcer for Golf Channel and NBC Sports, wonders if that camera shot was available to CBS producers and directors at the moment of truth. 

“Those were the Masters.com (cameras). CBS only has what they have available to them. That’s where it gets a little squirrelly,” warns Watson, who covered Tiger Woods’s last Masters win in 2019. “I don’t know if those feeds were available to the guys in the truck.”

Augusta Meddling?

The powerful private club is famous for micromanaging Masters media coverage. CBS and the Masters have the longest relationship in sports TV, dating back to 1956. But to ensure control, Augusta has kept CBS on one-year contracts ever since. When CBS offered little coverage of Haotong Li’s disastrous 10 on the Par 5 13th hole, some saw the invisible hands of the green jackets at work.

On the one hand, watching Li chop through the bushes like an Amazon explorer would have made for great TV drama. Viewers wanted to see more of the Chinese golfer’s agonizing journey through Amen Corner. On the other hand, the white-shoe members of Augusta have their genteel Southern side. They might have told CBS to lay off to shield the 30-year-old from further shame.

“It certainly wasn’t explained as to why Li was causing this huge delay,” says one source. “Other than maybe Augusta National didn’t want to embarrass the kid. I mean, the guy made a 10. I don’t think Augusta National is in the business of embarrassing their players. There might have been a little bit of, ‘Let’s turn the cameras away.’” 

Meanwhile, Augusta National’s insistence on media partners showing off the bucolic beauty of the course and happy “patrons” means you get fewer live shots during a Masters telecast. You can get wide shots of the blooming azaleas. Or as much live action as possible. But you can’t get both.

“There’s not a single golf tournament that has more to do with a broadcast than Augusta National and the Masters,” added the source. “They have so much say in the way it’s produced and the way it is shown.”

Force Majeure

Year after year, CBS has brilliantly covered the Masters. But everybody has off days. As Nantz noted to McAfee, the same CBS golf team that got roasted this weekend is also nominated for a Sports Emmy for its coverage of McIlroy’s first win last year. In the end, CBS may have been victimized by bad breaks from the golf gods.

Holding a two-shot lead on the 18th tee, and needing only a bogey to win, McIlroy could have and should have played it safe. Instead, the long hitter took out his driver, then wildly blasted his tee shot into a place that CBS was unfamiliar with. From that moment, the network was playing catch-up. By the time McIlroy stepped up for his tap-in, CBS’s flustered camera operator was out of position by maybe six feet. Again, if you go to Masters.com you can see their camera operator did capture the ball rolling in. Wrong place at the wrong time. But it made all the difference.

After the drama was over on No. 18, Nantz put it into perspective. “I tell you, the way they played this last hole is kind of a fitting finale for what’s been a wild, chaotic weekend of golf at Augusta National.”

You’re not just whistling Dixie, Jim.

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