
The Aftermath He spent a lot of time trying to figure out what went wrong on Sunday and some time trying to figure out why he was so emotional when it was over. He finally decided that it was a lot of things, but more than anything it was this: Candy. Candy was the one who took him to play at West Plains, and Candy taught him what to say when a customer came into the shop looking to pawn a boa constrictor. ("We don't take anything you have to feed.") Brandt is close to his father and closer yet to his mother. He describes himself as a "mama's boy." When he was at Vanderbilt , Candy's heart issues nearly claimed her life. Seeing his mother become suddenly frail, "grew him up," Larry Snedeker recently said of his son. But at the Masters she was able to trudge up and down Augusta 's mighty hills, exhausted though she was. Brandt's mother and father and brother will tell you that Brandt has a personality that impels him to please the people in his life, and there are a lot of them, but especially Candy. And what would please Candy more than seeing her son walk through their Nashville front door with a green jacket on? "I'm aware," Brandt said last week, "that she's living on borrowed time." That may be, but at the Masters this year, she had the time of her life: her family and friends together, chasing a dream. "I heard somebody say, 'Who's that blond boy with the smile?'" Candy Snedeker recalled the other day. "And I said, 'That's mine.'" A win wouldn't have changed a thing.
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