Morikawa taking things ‘day by day’ as back injury clouds Masters hopes

Golf – The Masters – Augusta National Golf Club, Augusta, Georgia, U.S. – April 6, 2026 Collin Morikawa of the U.S. plays out from the bunker on the practice range during a practice round REUTERS
AUGUSTA, Georgia,  (Reuters) – World number seven Collin Morikawa said on Monday he is taking things “day by day” after a recent back injury that threatens to ​jeopardise his chances at this week’s Masters.
The two-time major winner has not ‌played since pulling out of The Players Championship in mid-March after one hole due to back spasms. He then withdrew from last week’s Masters tune-up in San Antonio with a back injury.
“The honest ​truth is I’m taking it day by day,” Morikawa told reporters at ​Augusta National. “It’s not exactly where I want to be, and it’s unfortunate, ⁠but that’s just the body, and I can’t push it.
“It’s been a little ​bit of a mental battle, I think, just trying to trust with where it’s at. ​The back actually feels fine. It’s just other parts of the body not cooperating a little bit how I want.”
A seven-times winner on the PGA Tour, Morikawa has been hitting balls for the ​past week but does not yet have the comfort level he would like ​going into the year’s first major and said there are some shots he cannot hit given his ‌physical ⁠and mental restrictions.
“It’s a work in progress. But each day just staying positive, trying to get through it,” said Morikawa.
He spent part of Monday playing a nine-hole practice round alongside four-times major champion Scottie Scheffler and world number three Cameron Young.
Morikawa, who earlier ​this year won ​the AT&T Pebble Beach ⁠Pro-Am and finished fifth in the Arnold Palmer Invitational, is looking to make his seventh Masters start this week at Augusta ​National where he has finished inside the top 20 in each ​of the ⁠past five years.
“It’s frustrating, but at the same time, I can’t do anything stupid and push my body in a way it doesn’t want to do,” said Morikawa.
“What’s amazing ⁠is chipping ​and putting still feel great. The putter feels ​amazing. Just got to be able to get the ball there, which is like the opposite of how ​I’ve been, I think, my entire career.”

Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto Editing by Christian Radnedge

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