The Masters: Reports, scores, news and quotes


Recap a thrilling 81st Masters Tournament with our complete guide, including daily reports and blog replays.

Masters: Round-by-round scores & reports


Masters: Day four report

Sergio Garcia finally won his first major championship after an epic battle with Justin Rose. Click here to read

Masters: Day three blog

Recap day three as it happened with Ben Coley's Masters blog. Click here to read

Masters: Day three report

Justin Rose and Sergio Garcia are paired in the final group for the final round of the Masters. Click here to read

Masters: Day three blog

Recap day three as it happened with Ben Coley's Masters blog. Click here to read

Masters: Day two report 

Sergio Garcia put himself in position for a long-awaited major breakthrough on day two of the Masters. Click here to read

Masters: Day two blog

Recap day two as it happened with Ben Coley's Masters blog. Click here to read 

Clubhouse Scores

Get all the clubhouse scores from the Masters at Augusta National. Click here to view

Masters: Day one report

Charley Hoffman produced a stunning seven-under par round of 65 to surge clear on day one of the Masters. Click here to read

Masters: Day one blog

Recap day one as it happened with Ben Coley's Masters blog. Click here to read

Johnson withdraws from Masters

Dustin Johnson withdrew from the Masters following a freak accident on the eve of the tournament. Click here to read

Masters betting tips & odds


Outright Masters tips

Our golf expert Ben Coley is backing Rickie Fowler to win his first major this week. Click here to read

Our man also tipped Sergio Garcia for the title prior to Sunday's final round. Click here to read

Masters specials

Sergio Garcia landed a punt for David John in a profitable preview of the Masters specials. Click here to read

Masters round one tips - 100/1 winner

Ben Coley landed a 100/1 payout when Charley Hoffman led after round one of the Masters. Click here to read

Masters round two tips

Jordan Spieth is worth backing to win his three-ball. Click here to read

Masters round three tips

Bill Haas can overturn Jimmy Walker and win his two-ball. Click here to read

Masters round four tips

Sergio Garcia can end his long wait for a first major title. Click here to read 


Player profiles


Our golf expert  Ben Coley profiled every player in the Masters, including detailed course form and a look at how they've played in 2017. 

Click here to access them.

Player quotes


We have collated some of the best quotes and reaction from past renewals at Augusta National.

Click here to access them

Statistics, records and trends


Most wins - 6, Jack Nicklaus (1963, 1965, 1966, 1972, 1975, 1986)

Widest victory margin - 12, Tiger Woods (1997)

Wire-to-wire winners - Craig Wood (1941), Arnold Palmer (1960), Jack Nicklaus (1972), Raymond Floyd (1976), Jordan Spieth (2015)

Last champion who won the week before – Phil Mickleson (2006, BellSouth Classic)

Last back-to-back winner – Tiger Woods (2001-2002)

Highs and lows

Lowest round – 63, Nick Price (1986), Greg Norman (1996)

Lowest first 36 holes – 130, Jordan Spieth (2015)

Lowest 54 holes – 200, Jordan Spieth (2015)

Lowest total – 270, Tiger Woods (1997), Jordan Spieth (2015)

Lowest non-winning total – 274, David Duval (2001), Phil Mickleson (2015), Justin Rose (2015)

Highest winning total – 289, Sam Snead (1954), Jack Burke (1956) & Zach Johnson (2007)

Debutants

Debutant winners – Horton Smith (1934, 1st edition of tournament), Gene Sarazen (1935), Fuzzy Zoeller (1979)

Lowest debutant round – 64, Lloyd Mangrum (1940, R1), Mike Donald (1990, R1), David Toms (1998, R4) & Jason Day (2011, R2)

Lowest debutant total – 276, Jason Day (2011)

Amateurs

Best amateur finish – 2nd, Frank Stranahan (1947), Ken Venturi (1956) & Charles Coe (1961)

Lowest amateur round – 66, Ken Venturi (1956)

Lowest amateur total – 281, Charles Coe (1961)

Seniors

Lowest senior round – 66, Ben Hogan (1967), Fred Couples (2010), Miguel Angel Jimenez (2014)

Lowest senior total – 279, Fred Couples (2010)

Comebacks and mishaps

Biggest comeback after 18 holes – 7, Nick Faldo (1990), Tiger Woods (2005)

Biggest comeback after 36 holes – 8, Jack Burke (1956)

Biggest comeback after 54 holes – 8, Jack Burke (1956)

Biggest lead lost (after 54 holes) – 6, Greg Norman (1996)

Highest hole score – 13, Tsuneyuki Nakajima (1978, 13th), Tom Weiskopf (1980, 12th)

Play-offs – 16 in 81 tournaments (last in 2013)

Young and old

Youngest champion – Tiger Woods, 21 (1997)

Oldest champion – Jack Nicklaus, 46 (1986)

Oldest first-time winner – Mark O'Meara, 41 (1998) 

Aces

Holes in one – 27 (18 on hole 16, 3 on hole 12, 5 on hole 6 & 1 on hole 4)

Most holes in one at single tournament – 3 (2004, 2016)

Birdie club

Most birdies in round 11, Anthony Kim (2009)

Most birdies in tournament – 28, Jordan Spieth (2015)

Most consecutive birdies – 7, Steve Pate (1999), Tiger Woods (2005)

More facts

No winner of the par-three contest has ever gone on to win the main tournament in the same year

The hardest hole on the course, based on all-time average scores, is the 10th (par 4, average score 4.31)

The easiest hole on the course, based on all-time average scores, is the 15th (par 5, average score 4.78)

Sky Bet have priced up a number of would-be record breakers, such as an amateur to shoot 65 or better, or any player to win by 13 or more shots.

Click here for all their stats-based odds

Augusta National course guide


Hole 1: Tea Olive, par 4, 445 yards

Augusta's opening hole is a mid-range par-four, which gives players a clear sight of a fairway which sits just below the level of the tee box. To the right and typically unmistakable is the first of Augusta's bunkers, and it offers a good target for those who hit the favoured right-to-left shot-shape. This hole, however, shapes steadily from left-to-right following the fairway bunker, which means many tee-shots edge towards the left to open up the best angle from which to attack the green. Up ahead, there is just one bunker to the front-left, one of the least visited at Augusta. The green itself is typically undulating, with a steep false-front and sharp run-off to the right. Sunday's usual flag position is centre-right, which means distance control on approach is vital to setting up what could be an early opportunity.

Hole 2: Pink Dogwood, par 5, 575 yards

Played downhill and from right-to-left, this par-five offers virtually every player in the field the opportunity to set up an eagle chance. Again, there is one fairway bunker, perfectly positioned to the upper right section of the hole, and big-hitters will look to move their ball off the trap and kick down the hill to within mid-iron range. Anyone erring to the left runs the risk of being blocked out with their second shot, while there's a creek running deep within the trees there, too. Anything wildly left likely requires a chip out but accurate drives reduce the hole's difficulty. Indeed it was here that Louis Oosthuizen holed his second shot for a rare albatross in 2012. The green is shallow and triangular, with the back-right hole location providing the opportunity to use its contours. It's guarded by two bunkers, both of which represent decent misses.

Hole 3: Flowering Peach, par 4, 350 yards

A short but dangerous par-four, which in today's game can be driveable depending on conditions. A series of fairway bunkers ensure that there's a big element of risk to go with the potential rewards of attacking this hole, where playing the second from the fairway is important given steep run-offs all around the green, particularly to the back-left. En route to winning, Charl Schwartzel holed out for eagle here and it was that year, 2011, which saw the hole register its lowest average (3.88) in Masters history. Typically, it plays slightly over-par but remains one of the best par-four scoring opportunities.

Hole 4: Flowering Crab Apple, par 3, 240 yards

A long, demanding par-three, the toughest 'short' hole at Augusta National and probably the worst of them. Not that it is a particularly bad hole, but when the pin is tucked away to the back-right it can be impossible to attack - anything short risks being plugged in sand, anything long leaves a devilishly quick downhill chip. The most accessible pin is to the front-left, and this does offer the opportunity to get a long-iron close. However, now the challenge is in the narrow nature of the target as anything either side of the green leaves a very delicate second. Wherever the pin is, par on this hole is a fine score.

Hole 5: Magnolia, par 4, 455 yards

Another dogleg from right-to-left and a sharp one, visibly, from the tee. To the left are two large, fearsome bunkers, from which reaching the green can be difficult, but to the right are thick trees which present an even more significant problem if flirted with. A steadily climbing hole, the challenge remains intense throughout as approach shots from the fairway are typically from some distance back, to one of the most dramatic greens at Augusta. One bunker to the back-left sees very little traffic; instead expect to see players take a cautious approach to the centre or front of the green and attempt to two-putt.

Hole 6: Juniper, par 3, 180 yards

A gem of a par-three, one of the most underrated in golf given that it is overshadowed by the more famous 12th and 16th holes. Players tee off from well above the level of the green, which has a steep ridge running from front-right to back-left. There are therefore three notable pin positions: front-left, which provides a genuine hole-in-one opportunity, using the contours; back-left, which is hard to locate due to the small top tier in that corner; back-right, which is again a small target and will often see players watch their ball fall away to the front portion of the green, as they're afraid to go long and leave another downhill chip. A delightful test which will see plenty of birdies but more than one disaster and that's without considering the sole bunker, at the front-left, which is best avoided.

Hole 7: Pampas, par 4, 450 yards

A rare thing at Augusta in that it's an almost perfectly straight hole, which for some players presents an even more demanding question from the tee as the shot shape can be hard to visualise. Tall trees overshadow the fairway, but it's up at the green where the big challenge lies as this one tilts steeply from back-to-front and is guarded on all sides by bunkers. As such it's hugely important to approach from the fairway, and when doing so front pin positions are easy to attack. However, stray but a yard or two long or short and scrambling par becomes extremely difficult.

Hole 8: Yellow Jasmine, par 5, 570 yards

The second of four par-fives plays the longest, as following a slightly downhill tee-shot the approach is uphill and blind to a green which then sits below the level of the fairway. A large fairway bunker to the right tends to see plenty of action and from there it's a lay-up for everyone, but those who do find the fairway can usually reach the green, with the contoured mounds which line it effectively widening the target area. The green itself is narrow at first but widens towards the back, which is where they'll tuck a pin out of site on at least one of the four days, and does not have any bunkers surrounding it.

Hole 9: Carolina Cherry, par 4, 460 yards

An iconic par-four, which can make a player look extremely foolish. The first challenge is to find the fairway, which is wide enough yet the trouble found to the left is such that many will bail out to the right, where even from the pine straw there tends to be a route to the green. Those who do find the short stuff will have a short-iron in hand for their approach to a multi-tiered green, which is guarded to the left by two bunkers. Its primary defence, however, is the size of each tier and how difficult it can be for a player to first find the appropriate one and then avoid spinning their ball off it, potentially 50 or 60 yards back down the fairway given the severity of the slope. Another brilliant example of Dr. Alister MacKenzie's green design and a fun hole - for most.

Hole 10: Camellia, par 4, 495 yards

Statistically the toughest hole at Augusta National and one which as recently at 2013 ultimately decided the outcome, as Adam Scott shook off Angel Cabrera in their title play-off. As with the ninth, the first challenge is to find the fairway on this right-to-left hole, and those most comfortable hitting a draw will find that task easiest. A well-hit drive can bound a long way down the fairway, which slopes from right-to-left, and that helps given the approach shot is played uphill to a relatively small target. Bunkers short of the putting surface are more aesthetic but the one to the front-right is there to punish those attacking a pin position in that area. To the left is another steep run-off, where Rory McIlroy's Masters hopes ended in 2011.

Hole 11: White Dogwood, par 4, 505 yards

From the toughest hole on the course to Amen Corner, beginning with the devilishly difficult 11th hole - which ranks second in the all-time charts in terms of difficulty. The test here is relentless. First, trees to the right mean luck is required to find a route to the green, and any such attempt runs the risk of finding the water which guards it. Trees to the left, on the other hand, extend the hole's already-formidable length and almost force the player to bail out right of the green towards the 12th tee, which then means chipping up onto the surface and again towards water. A wonderful hole, on which Larry Mize chipped in to break Greg Norman's heart some 30 years ago.

Hole 12: Golden Bell, par 3, 155 yards

One of if not the most iconic hole in golf, largely due to its sheer beauty and the simplicity of the design. To make a great par-three, you need a small green, a short yardage, hazards aplenty, beautiful surroundings, hard-to-judge wind... and this hole has all of them. It really is the blueprint when it comes to quality holes and will throw up everything from a potential ace to as many as six or seven. It was here that Jordan Spieth's Masters bid went up in smoke last year, whereas Fred Couples remembers the hole fondly as his ball somehow stayed on the bank when it appeared destined for a watery grave, as he went on to win his sole major championship some 25 years ago. Just a wedge for some, no more than a seven-iron for anyone, but a hole which requires clear thinking, control of distance, and execution. Perfection.

Hole 13: Azalea, par 5, 510 yards

The shortest of Augusta's par-fives and a hole which has struggled somewhat to keep up with the times. On his way to title number two here, Bubba Watson reduced this hole to a driver and a wedge and there must be a chance that somewhere down the line it is made a par-four. For now, it's a five and not to be labelled a pushover, as most players cannot take Watson's line and will have to flirt with trees both left and right, with the former also guarded by Rae's Creek. That runs all the way up to the green and will catch any mishit approaches, be they second or third shots. The green has some subtle run-off areas, which create penal bowls, while the back bunkers are to be avoided. A hole to attack but with due caution.

Hole 14: Chinese Fir, par 4, 440 yards

There is not a single bunker on the 14th hole and while the fairway is reasonably narrow, you'll see most players approaching the green from it. The green itself presents the key challenge, as it is possibly the most dramatic on the course, with humps and hollows more familiar with those who play the Old Course at St Andrews. Watch out for the back-centre pin location, which is in a bowl and therefore will be threatened by accurate approach shots, but we'll also see a high portion of three-putts and even four on this subtly tricky hole.

Hole 15: Firethorn, par 5, 530 yards

The final par-five and statistically the easiest hole on the course, despite being guarded by a lake. From the tee, the fairway target is wide but it is effectively narrowed by tall pines to the left, which block the path to the green. Even so, most can attempt to sling their ball around them, with the right-hand greenside bunker a good target and one from which getting up and down is fairly straightforward. Those laying up must ensure they control their spin, otherwise their ball may fall down another steep bank and into water. A genuine eagle chance.

Hole 16: Redbud, par 3, 170 yards

Another brilliant par-three, made so by its topography which helps make for a natural amphitheatre. The first task here is to avoid water to the left and, depending on the pin position, doing so should set up a birdie chance. Pins to the left are in effect bigger targets because the green slopes that way and you may well see an ace or two, particularly on Sunday where the traditional hole location lends itself to the possibility. In contrast, the hole is made much more challenging when the pin is tucked over the front bunker or in the top-right, with players forced to gamble if they want to hit it close. Danny Willett made birdie here en route to victory last year.

Hole 17: Nandina, par 4, 440 yards

A hole which changed in 2014 when the Eisenhower Tree was cut down having been damaged beyond repair by a storm. In its absence, the fairway is a wider target and, much like hole 14, the real challenge here is up at the green. From the fairway, the target appears shallow and slopes away in each corner, while getting up and down from either of the bunkers guarding it is extremely difficult. Watch for shots going through the green, leaving tricky up-and-downs.

Hole 18: Holly, par 4, 465 yards

And so to the final hole, another demanding par-four and one made famous by the drama it has witnessed down the years. Off the tee, the fact that this hole is left-to-right is clever in itself as for so much of the round, players will have been asked to hit the ball right-to-left. Failure to get the shot right on demand means either sand to the left, or trees to the right, from where Angel Cabrera forged an unlikely escape on the way to his Green Jacket. The green is narrow and long, guarded to the front by sand and again to the right. Three tiers make for various hole locations but Sunday's is always behind the front-left bunker, on the middle tier, and accessible only via the best, bravest approaches. A fitting end to a sublime golf course which lives up to its reputation.

Hole averages
Figure in brackets denotes difficulty, 1 being hardest, 18 easiest

1. 4.24 (6)
2. 4.79 (16)
3. 4.08 (14)
4. 3.29 (4)
5. 4.27 (5)
6. 3.14 (13)
7. 4.15 (11)
8. 4.83 (15)
9. 4.15 (12)

10. 4.31 (1)
11. 4.29 (2)
12. 3.29 (3)
13. 4.79 (17)
14. 4.18 (8)
15. 4.78 (18)
16. 3.15 (10)
17. 4.16 (9)
18. 4.23 (7)

About the Masters


The Masters Tournament is the first of golf's four major championships and, since its inception 83 years ago, has always been played at Augusta National Golf Club.

It's that which distinguishes the Masters from the US Open, the Open Championship, and the PGA Championship, each of which changes location year-to-year.

As such, the Masters is steeped in history and packed with traditions, the latter including the ceremonial opening tee-shot and Wednesday's Par 3 Tournament, both of which involve some of the event's former champions.

Those former champions are all invited back to play in what's the smallest major field of the season - typically around 90 players.

It's made up of the best from across the world but, unlike the other three majors, there is no open qualifying process. Players must earn their places via specific events or prolonged success, while a top-12 finish in the preceding Masters also guarantees a place.

The history of the event itself includes a record-breaking, game-changing success for Tiger Woods in 1997, a famous chip-in play-off win for Larry Mize a decade earlier, and the last of six Green Jackets for Jack Nicklaus, who came back for one last hurrah in 1986.

Last year, Danny Willett became the first European to win the event since Jose Maria Olazabal in 1999, and the first Englishman since Sir Nick Faldo secured the last of three victories in 1996.

Behind Nicklaus, the late Arnold Palmer won four Masters titles, a figure matched by Woods, while the likes of Sam Snead, Gary Player and Phil Mickelson each have three.

Masters history & last 20 winners


The history of the Masters is still less than a century old, but virtually every great of the game has won at Augusta National ever since Sam Snead (1949) and Ben Hogan (1951) took turns to measure up for Green Jackets.

1958 saw Arnold Palmer land the first of what would be four titles and he'd surely have won many more but for the emergence of great rival Jack Nicklaus, whose six wins cover three decades and 23 years.

Nicklaus first won the Masters in 1963, with Snead among those close behind, before beating Palmer and Gary Player by fully nine strokes two years later.

In 1966, Nicklaus went from leading after round one to having to work his way back through the field following a Friday 76, a mission he completed by winning a three-way play-off which took place over 18 holes on Monday.

The next two wins for Nicklaus came in '72 and '75, but surely most popular was his comeback triumph in 1986, as the Golden Bear went eagle-birdie-birdie on holes 15-17 before a par at the last sealed an unlikely come-from-behind win.

Even Nicklaus may have won more but for Player, whose three titles came in 1961, 1974 and 1978, while the 1980s began with a first of two wins for Seve Ballesteros as he paved the way for fellow Europeans Bernhard Langer, Sandy Lyle and Nick Faldo, who combined for wins in 1985 (Langer), 1988 (Lyle) 1989 and 1990 (both Faldo).

The 90s began with another for Faldo - a rare thing, as a champion who defended at the first time of asking - before Welshman Ian Woosnam secured his one and only major championship.

So too did Fred Couples, before Langer doubled his tally and then Jose Maria Olazabal followed his great friend Seve in winning one for Spain, a tally he would double in 1999.

The new century began with victory for Fiji and Vijay Singh, but three years earlier it was a record-breaking triumph for Tiger Woods which changed golf's path forever.

Woods would somehow only win four, when most thought he would at least equal Nicklaus, and Phil Mickelson's three have him only one behind.

Here is a list of the last 20 winners:

2016 - Danny Willett
2015 - Jordan Spieth
2014 - Bubba Watson
2013 - Adam Scott
2012 - Bubba Watson
2011 - Charl Schwartzel
2010 - Phil Mickelson
2009 - Angel Cabrera
2008 - Trevor Immelman
2007 - Zach Johnson
2006 - Phil Mickelson
2005 - Tiger Woods
2004 - Phil Mickelson
2003 - Mike Weir
2002 - Tiger Woods
2001 - Tiger Woods
2000 - Vijay Singh
1999 - Jose Maria Olazabal
1998 - Mark O'Meara
1997 - Tiger Woods

Relive Tiger Woods' 1997 victory at the Masters by clicking here.

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