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Wikipedia

Masters Tournament

The Masters Tournament (usually referred to as simply the Masters, or as the U.S. Masters outside North America)[2][3] is one of the four men's major golf championships in professional golf. Scheduled for the first full week in April, the Masters is the first major golf tournament of the year. Unlike the other major tournaments, the Masters is always held at the same location: Augusta National Golf Club, a private course in the city of Augusta, Georgia.

Masters Tournament
Tournament information
LocationAugusta, Georgia, U.S.
Established1934
Course(s)Augusta National Golf Club
Par72
Length7,475 yards (6,835 m)[1]
Organized byAugusta National Golf Club
Tour(s)PGA Tour
European Tour
Japan Golf Tour
FormatStroke play
Prize fundUS$18,000,000
Month playedApril[a]
Tournament record score
Aggregate268 Dustin Johnson (2020)
To par−20[b] as above
Current champion
Jon Rahm
2023 Masters Tournament
Location Map
Augusta National GC
Location in United States
Augusta National GC
Location in Georgia

Amateur golf champion Bobby Jones and investment banker Clifford Roberts founded the Masters Tournament.[4] After his grand slam in 1930, Jones acquired the former plant nursery and co-designed Augusta National with course architect Alister MacKenzie.[1] First played in 1934, the Masters is an official money event on the PGA Tour, the European Tour, and the Japan Golf Tour. The field of players is smaller than those of the other major championships because it is an invitational event, held by the Augusta National Golf Club.

The tournament has a number of traditions. Since the 1949, a green jacket has been awarded to the champion, who must return it to the clubhouse one year after his victory, although it remains his personal property and is stored with other champions' jackets in a specially designated cloakroom. In most instances, only a first-time and currently reigning champion may remove his jacket from the club grounds. A golfer who wins the event multiple times uses the same green jacket awarded upon his initial win unless he needs to be re-fitted with a new jacket.[5] The Champions Dinner, inaugurated by Ben Hogan at the 1952 Masters Tournament, is held on the Tuesday before each Masters and is open only to past champions and certain board members of the Augusta National Golf Club. Beginning in 1963, distinguished golfers, usually past champions, have hit an honorary tee shot on the morning of the first round to commence play. These have included Fred McLeod, Jock Hutchinson, Gene Sarazen, Sam Snead, Byron Nelson, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player, Lee Elder, and Tom Watson. Since 1960, a semi-social contest on the par-3 course has been played on Wednesday, the day before the first round.

Nicklaus has the most Masters wins, with six between 1963 and 1986. Tiger Woods won five between 1997 and 2019. Palmer won four between 1958 and 1964. Five have won three titles at Augusta: Jimmy Demaret, Sam Snead, Gary Player, Nick Faldo, and Phil Mickelson. Player, from South Africa, was the first non-American player to win the tournament, in 1961; the second was Seve Ballesteros of Spain, the champion in 1980 and 1983.

The Augusta National course first opened in 1933 and has been modified many times by different architects. Among the changes: greens have been reshaped and, on occasion, entirely re-designed, bunkers have been added, water hazards have been extended, new tee boxes have been built, hundreds of trees have been planted, and several mounds have been installed.[6]

History edit

 
Masters logo at the club entrance

Augusta National Golf Club edit

The idea for Augusta National originated with Bobby Jones, who wanted to build a golf course after his retirement from the game. He sought advice from Clifford Roberts, who later became the chairman of the club. They came across a piece of land in Augusta, Georgia, of which Jones said: "Perfect! And to think this ground has been lying here all these years waiting for someone to come along and lay a golf course upon it."[7] The land had been an indigo plantation in the early nineteenth century and a plant nursery since 1857.[8] Jones hired Alister MacKenzie to help design the course, and work began in 1931. The course formally opened in 1933, but MacKenzie died before the first Masters Tournament was played.[9]

Early tournament years edit

The first "Augusta National Invitation Tournament", as the Masters was originally known, began on March 22, 1934, and was won by Horton Smith, who took the first prize of $1,500. The present name was adopted in 1939. The first tournament was played with current holes 10 through 18 played as the first nine, and 1 through 9 as the second nine[10] then reversed permanently to its present layout for the 1935 tournament.[4]

Initially the Augusta National Invitation field was composed of Bobby Jones' close associates. Jones had petitioned the USGA to hold the U.S. Open at Augusta but the USGA denied the petition, noting that the hot Georgia summers would create difficult playing conditions.[11]

Gene Sarazen hit the "shot heard 'round the world" in 1935, holing a shot from the fairway on the par 5 15th for a double eagle (albatross).[12] This tied Sarazen with Craig Wood, and in the ensuing 36-hole playoff, Sarazen was the victor by five strokes.[13]

Byron Nelson won the first of two Masters titles in 1937. Jimmy Demaret won three times as did Sam Snead in the 1940s and 1950s. Ben Hogan won the 1951 and 1953 Masters and was runner-up on four occasions.

In 1940, Clifford Roberts, chairmain of the Masters, stated that the Masters was one of the top tournaments in the United States, if not the biggest. He stated, "I am told that the Masters has outdistanced in attendance both the U.S. Amateur and the PGA."[14] The tournament was not played from 1943 to 1945, due to World War II. To assist the war effort, cattle and turkeys were raised on the Augusta National grounds.[4]

1960s–1970s edit

The Big Three of Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, and Jack Nicklaus dominated the Masters from 1960 through 1978, winning the event 11 times between them during that span. After winning by one stroke in 1958,[13] Palmer won by one stroke again in 1960 in memorable circumstances. Trailing Ken Venturi by one shot in the 1960 event, Palmer made birdies on the last two holes to prevail. Palmer would go on to win another two Masters in 1962 and 1964.[13]

 
Jack Nicklaus at the 2006 par 3 contest

Nicklaus emerged in the early 1960s and served as a rival to the popular Palmer. Nicklaus won his first green jacket in 1963, defeating Tony Lema by one stroke.[15] Two years later, he shot a then-course record of 271 (17 under par) for his second Masters win, leading Bobby Jones to say that Nicklaus played "a game with which I am not familiar."[16] The next year, Nicklaus won his third green jacket in a grueling 18-hole playoff against Tommy Jacobs and Gay Brewer.[17] This made Nicklaus the first player to win consecutive Masters. He won again in 1972 by three strokes.[13] In 1975, Nicklaus won by one stroke in a close contest with Tom Weiskopf and Johnny Miller in one of the most exciting Masters to date.[18]

Player became the first non-American to win the Masters in 1961, beating Palmer, the defending champion, by one stroke when Palmer double-bogeyed the final hole.[13] In 1974, he won again by two strokes.[13] After not winning a tournament on the U.S. PGA tour for nearly four years, and at the age of 42, Player won his third and final Masters in 1978 by one stroke over three players.[13] Player currently shares (with Fred Couples and Tiger Woods) the record of making 23 consecutive cuts, and has played in a record 52 Masters.[19][20]

A controversial ending to the Masters occurred in 1968. Argentine champion Roberto De Vicenzo signed his scorecard (attested by playing partner Tommy Aaron) incorrectly recording him as making a par 4 instead of a birdie 3 on the 17th hole of the final round. According to the rules of golf, if a player signs a scorecard (thereby attesting to its veracity) that records a score on a hole higher than what he actually made on the hole, the player receives the higher score for that hole. This extra stroke cost De Vicenzo a chance to be in an 18-hole Monday playoff with Bob Goalby, who won the green jacket. De Vicenzo's mistake led to the famous quote, "What a stupid I am."[13][21]

In 1975, Lee Elder became the first African American to play in the Masters,[22] doing so 15 years before Augusta National admitted its first black member, Ron Townsend, as a result of the Shoal Creek Controversy.[23]

1980s–2000s edit

Non-Americans collected 11 victories in 20 years in the 1980s and 1990s, by far the strongest run they have had in any of the three majors played in the United States since the early days of the U.S. Open. The first European to win the Masters was Seve Ballesteros in 1980. Nicklaus became the oldest player to win the Masters in 1986 when he won for the sixth time at age 46.[13][24]

During this period, no golfer suffered more disappointment at the Masters than Greg Norman. In his first appearance at Augusta in 1981, he led during the second nine but ended up finishing fourth. In 1986, after birdieing holes 14 through 17 to tie Nicklaus for the lead, he badly pushed his 4-iron approach on 18 into the patrons surrounding the green and missed his par putt for a closing bogey. In 1987, Norman lost a sudden-death playoff when Larry Mize holed out a remarkable 45-yard pitch shot to birdie the second playoff hole. Mize thus became the first Augusta native to win the Masters.[25] In 1996, Norman tied the course record with an opening-round 63 and had a six-stroke lead over Nick Faldo entering the final round. However, he stumbled to a closing 78 while Faldo, his playing partner that day, carded a 67 to win by five shots for his third Masters championship.[26] Norman also led the 1999 Masters on the second nine of the final round, only to falter again and finish third behind winner José María Olazábal, who won his second green jacket. Norman finished in the top five at the Masters eight times, but never won.

Two-time champion Ben Crenshaw captured an emotional Masters win in 1995, just days after the death of his lifelong teacher and mentor Harvey Penick. After making his final putt to win, he broke down sobbing at the hole and was consoled and embraced by his caddie. In the post-tournament interview, Crenshaw said: "I had a 15th club in my bag," a reference to Penick. (The "15th club" reference is based on the golf rule that limits a player to carrying 14 clubs during a round.) Crenshaw first won at Augusta in 1984.

In 1997, 21-year-old Tiger Woods became the youngest champion in Masters history, winning by 12 shots with an 18-under par 270 which broke the 72-hole record that had stood for 32 years.[4] In 2001, Woods completed his "Tiger Slam" by winning his fourth straight major championship at the Masters by two shots over David Duval.[13] He won again the following year, making him only the third player in history (after Nicklaus and Faldo) to win the tournament in consecutive years,[13] as well as in 2005 when he defeated Chris DiMarco in a playoff for his first major championship win in almost three years.[13]

In 2003, the Augusta National Golf Club was targeted by Martha Burk, who organized a failed protest at that year's Masters to pressure the club into accepting female members. Burk planned to protest at the front gates of Augusta National during the third day of the tournament, but her application for a permit to do so was denied.[27] A court appeal was dismissed.[28] In 2004, Burk stated that she had no further plans to protest against the club.[29] The club admitted its first two women members, Condoleezza Rice and Darla Moore, in 2012.

Augusta National chairman Billy Payne himself made headlines in April 2010 when he commented at the annual pre-Masters press conference on Tiger Woods' off-the-course behavior. "It's not simply the degree of his conduct that is so egregious here," Payne said, in his opening speech. "It is the fact he disappointed all of us and more importantly our kids and grandkids."[30][31][32]

In 2003, Mike Weir became the first Canadian to win a men's major championship and the first left-hander to win the Masters when he defeated Len Mattiace in a playoff.[13] The following year another left-hander, Phil Mickelson, won his first major championship by making a birdie on the final hole to beat Ernie Els by a stroke.[13] Mickelson also won the tournament in 2006 and 2010. In 2011, unheralded South African Charl Schwartzel birdied the final four holes to win by two strokes. In 2012, Bubba Watson won the tournament on the second playoff hole over Louis Oosthuizen. In 2013 Adam Scott won the Masters in a playoff over 2009 champion Ángel Cabrera, making him the first Australian to win the tournament.[33] Watson won the 2014 Masters by three strokes over Jordan Spieth and Jonas Blixt, his second Masters title in three years and the sixth for a left-hander in 12 years. In 2015, Spieth would become the second-youngest winner (behind Woods) in just his second Masters, equaling Woods' 72-hole scoring record.[34] In 2017, Sergio García beat Justin Rose in a playoff for his long-awaited first major title. In 2019, Tiger Woods captured his fifth Masters, his first win at Augusta National in 14 years and his first major title since 2008.

The 2020 Masters Tournament, originally scheduled to be played April 9–12, was postponed until November due to the ongoing coronavirus outbreak.[35] Dustin Johnson won the tournament by five strokes.

Traditions edit

Awards edit

The total prize money for the 2021 Masters Tournament was $11,500,000, with $2,070,000 going to the winner. In the inaugural year of 1934, the winner Horton Smith received $1,500 out of a $5,000 purse.[36] After Nicklaus's first win in 1963, he received $20,000, while after his final victory in 1986 he won $144,000.[37][38] In recent years the purse has grown quickly. Between 2001 and 2014, the winner's share grew by $612,000, and the purse grew by $3,400,000.[39][36][40]

Green jacket edit

In addition to a cash prize, the winner of the tournament is presented with a distinctive green jacket, formally awarded since 1949 and informally awarded to the champions from the years prior. The green sport coat is the official attire worn by members of Augusta National while on the club grounds; each Masters winner becomes an honorary member of the club. The recipient of the green jacket has it presented to him inside the Butler Cabin soon after the end of the tournament in a televised ceremony, and the presentation is then repeated outside near the 18th green in front of the patrons. Winners keep their jacket for the year after their victory, then return it to the club to wear whenever they are present on the club grounds. Sam Snead was the first Masters champion to be awarded the green jacket after he took his first Masters title in 1949.

The green jacket is only allowed to be removed from the Augusta National grounds by the reigning champion, after which it must remain at the club. Exceptions to this rule include Gary Player, who in his joy of winning mistakenly took his jacket home to South Africa after his 1961 victory (although he has always followed the spirit of the rule and has never worn the jacket);[41] Seve Ballesteros who, in an interview with Peter Alliss from his home in Pedreña, showed one of his two green jackets in his trophy room; and Henry Picard, whose jacket was removed from the club before the tradition was well established, remained in his closet for a number of years, and is now on display at Canterbury Golf Club in Beachwood, Ohio, where he was the club professional for many years.[42][43]

By tradition, the winner of the previous year's Masters Tournament puts the jacket on the current winner at the end of the tournament. In 1966, Jack Nicklaus became the first player to win in consecutive years and he donned the jacket himself.[17] When Nick Faldo (in 1990) and Tiger Woods (in 2002) repeated as champions, the chairman of Augusta National put the jacket on them.

In addition to the green jacket, winners of the tournament receive a gold medal. In 2017, a green jacket that was found at a thrift store in 1994 was sold at auction for $139,000.[44]

There are several awards presented to players who perform exceptional feats during the tournament. The player who has the daily lowest score receives a crystal vase, while players who score a hole-in-one or a double eagle win a large crystal bowl.[45] For each eagle a player makes, they receive a pair of crystal goblets.

Trophies edit

Winners also have their names engraved on the actual silver Masters trophy. The runner-up receives a silver medal, introduced in 1951. Beginning in 1978, a silver salver was added as an award for the runner-up.[4]

In 1952, the Masters began presenting an award, known as the Silver Cup, to the lowest scoring amateur to make the cut. In 1954, they began presenting an amateur silver medal to the low amateur runner-up.[4]

The original trophy weighs over 130 pounds and sits on a four-foot-wide base. It resides permanently at Augusta National and depicts the clubhouse of the classic course. The replica, which is significantly smaller, stands just 6.5 inches tall and weighs 20 pounds. The champion and the runner-up both have their names engraved on the permanent trophy, solidifying themselves in golf history.[46]

The Double Eagle trophy was introduced in 1967 when Bruce Devlin holed out for double eagle on number 8. He was only the second to do so, and the first in 32 years, following Gene Sarazen on hole 15 in 1932. The trophy is a large crystal bowl with "Masters Tournament" engraved around the top.[47]

Pre-tournament events edit

In 2013, Augusta National partnered with the USGA and the PGA of America to establish Drive, Chip and Putt, a youth golf skills competition which was first held in 2014. The event was established as part of an effort to help promote the sport of golf among youth; the winners of local qualifiers in different age groups advance to the national finals, which have been held at Augusta National on the Sunday immediately preceding the Masters. The driving and chipping portions of the event are held on the course's practice range, and the putting portion has been played on the 18th hole.[48][49][50]

On April 4, 2018, prior to the 2018 tournament, new Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley announced that the club would host the Augusta National Women's Amateur beginning in 2019. The first two rounds will be held at the Champion's Retreat club in Evans, Georgia, with the final two rounds hosted by Augusta National (the final round will take place on the Saturday directly preceding the tournament). Ridley stated that holding such an event at Augusta National would have the "greatest impact" on women's golf. Although concerns were raised that the event would conflict with the LPGA Tour's ANA Inspiration (which has invited top amateur players to compete), Ridley stated that he had discussed the event with commissioner Mike Whan, and stated that he agreed on the notion that any move to bolster the prominence of women's golf would be a "win" for the LPGA over time. The winner of the Augusta National Women's Amateur is exempt from two women's golf majors.[51][52]

Par-3 contest edit

 
The 9th hole on the par 3 course

The Par-3 contest was first introduced in 1960, and was won that year by Snead. Since then it has traditionally been played on the Wednesday before the tournament starts. The par 3 course was built in 1958. It is a nine-hole course, with a par of 27, and measures 1,060 yards (970 m) in length.[53]

There have been 94 holes-in-one in the history of the contest, with a record nine occurring in 2016, during which Rickie Fowler and Justin Thomas scored back-to-back holes in one on the 4th hole, while playing in a group with reigning champion Jordan Spieth. [54] [55] Camilo Villegas became the first player to card two holes-in-one in the same round during the 2015 Par 3 Contest. This achievement was duplicated by Séamus Power, who scored back-to-back holes in one on holes 8 and 9 during the 2023 par 3 contest. [56] No par 3 contest winner has also won the Masters in the same year.[57][58] There have been several repeat winners, including Pádraig Harrington, Sandy Lyle, Sam Snead, and Tom Watson. The former two won in successive years.

In this event, golfers may use their children as caddies, which helps to create a family-friendly atmosphere. In 2008, the event was televised for the first time by ESPN.

The winner of the par 3 competition, which is played the day before the tournament begins, wins a crystal bowl.[59]

Player invitations edit

As with the other majors, winning the Masters gives a golfer several privileges which make his career more secure. Masters champions are automatically invited to play in the other three majors (the U.S. Open, The Open Championship, and the PGA Championship) for the next five years (except for amateur winners, unless they turn pro within the five-year period), and earn a lifetime invitation to the Masters. They also receive membership on the PGA Tour for the following five seasons and invitations to The Players Championship for five years.[60]

Because the tournament was established by an amateur champion, Bobby Jones, the Masters has a tradition of honoring amateur golf. It invites winners of the most prestigious amateur tournaments in the world. Also, the current U.S. Amateur champion always plays in the same group as the defending Masters champion for the first two days of the tournament.

Amateurs in the field are welcome to stay in the "Crow's Nest" atop the Augusta National clubhouse during the tournament. The Crow's Nest is 1,200 square feet (110 m2) with lodging space for five during the competition.

Opening tee shot edit

Since 1963, the custom in most years has been to start the tournament with an honorary opening tee shot at the first hole, typically by one or more legendary players. For a number of years before 1963, Jock Hutchison and Fred McLeod had been the first pair to tee off, both being able to play as past major championship winners. However, in 1963 the eligibility rules were changed and they were no longer able to compete. The idea of honorary starters was introduced with Hutchison and McLeod being the first two. This twosome led off every tournament from 1963 until 1973 when poor health prevented Hutchison from swinging a club. McLeod continued on until his death in 1976. Byron Nelson and Gene Sarazen started in 1981 and were then joined by Sam Snead in 1984. This trio continued until 1999 when Sarazen died, while Nelson stopped in 2001. Snead hit his final opening tee shot in 2002, a little over a month before he died.

In 2007, Arnold Palmer took over as the honorary starter. Palmer also had the honor in 2008 and 2009.[61] At the 2010 and 2011 Masters Tournaments, Jack Nicklaus joined Palmer as an honorary co-starter for the event.[62] In 2012, Gary Player joined them. Palmer announced in March 2016 that a lingering shoulder issue would prevent him from partaking in the 2016 tee shot.[63] Palmer was still in attendance for the ceremony.[64]

Following Palmer's death in 2016, the 2017 ceremony featured tributes; his green jacket was draped over an empty white chair, while everyone in attendance wore "Arnie's Army" badges.[65][66]

In 2021 Lee Elder joined Nicklaus and Player as an honorary starter. He was invited to join them as he was the first African-American to take part in the Masters in 1975. Despite bad health preventing Elder from hitting a shot, he was still present and received a standing ovation from the crowd.

Two-time Masters champion Tom Watson joined Nicklaus and Player, starting in 2022.[67]

Champions' Dinner edit

The Champions' Dinner is held each year on the Tuesday evening preceding Thursday's first round. The dinner was first held in 1952, hosted by defending champion Ben Hogan, to honor the past champions of the tournament.[68] At that time 15 tournaments had been played, and the number of past champions was 11. Officially known as the "Masters Club", it includes only past winners of the Masters, although selected members of the Augusta National Golf Club have been included as honorary members, usually the chairman.

The defending champion, as host, selects the menu for the dinner. Frequently, Masters champions have served cuisine from their home regions prepared by the Masters chef. Notable examples have included haggis, served by Scotsman Sandy Lyle in 1989,[69] and bobotie, a South African dish, served at the behest of 2008 champion Trevor Immelman. Other examples include German Bernhard Langer's 1986 Wiener schnitzel, Britain's Nick Faldo's fish and chips, Canadian Mike Weir's elk and wild boar, and Vijay Singh's seafood tom kah and chicken panang curry. The 2011 dinner of Phil Mickelson was a Spanish-themed menu in hopes that Seve Ballesteros would attend, but he was too sick to attend and died weeks later.[70]

In 1998, Tiger Woods served cheeseburgers, chicken sandwiches, french fries and milkshakes. Woods was the youngest winner, and when asked about his food choices, he responded with "They said you could pick anything you want... Hey, it's part of being young, that's what I eat."[71] Fuzzy Zoeller, the 1979 champion, created a media storm when he suggested that Woods refrain from serving collard greens and fried chicken, dishes commonly associated with African-American culture.

Caddies edit

Until 1983, all players in the Masters were required to use the services of an Augusta National Club caddie,[72][73][74] who by club tradition was always an African-American man.[23] Club co-founder Clifford Roberts is reputed to have said, "As long as I'm alive, golfers will be white, and caddies will be black."[75] Since 1983—six years after Roberts's death in 1977—players have been allowed the option of bringing their own caddie to the tournament.

The Masters requires caddies to wear a uniform consisting of a white jumpsuit, a green Masters cap, and white tennis shoes. The surname, and sometimes first initial, of each player is found on the back of his caddie's uniform. The defending champion always receives caddie number "1": other golfers get their caddie numbers from the order in which they register for the tournament. The other majors and some PGA Tour events formerly had a similar policy concerning caddies well into the 1970s;[76][77][78] the U.S. Open first allowed players to use their own caddies in 1976.[79][80]

Format edit

The Masters is the first major championship of the year. Since 1948, its final round has been scheduled for the second Sunday of April, with several exceptions. It ended on the first Sunday four times (1952, 1957, 1958, 1959) and the 1979 and 1984 tournaments ended on April 15, the month's third Sunday.[4] The first edition in 1934 was held in late March and the next ten were in early April, with only the 1942 event scheduled to end on the second Sunday. The 2020 event, postponed by the COVID-19 pandemic, was held from November 12 to 15, thus being the last major of the year.

Similar to the other majors, the tournament consists of four rounds at 18 holes each, Thursday through Sunday (when there are no delays). The Masters has a relatively small field of contenders when compared with other golf tournaments, so the competitors play in groups of three for the first two rounds (36 holes) and the field is not split to start on the 1st and 10th tees unless weather shortens the available playing time. The tournament is unique in that it is the only major tournament conducted by a private club rather than a national golf organization like the PGA.[6]

Originally, the Masters was the only tournament to use two-man pairings during the first two rounds. It was also the only event to re-pair based on the leaderboard before Friday's round, as most tournaments only do this on the weekend. This practice ended in the early 2000s when the Masters switched to the more standard three-man groups and the groups are now kept intact on Friday, with players sharing the same playing partners in both of the first two rounds.[citation needed]

After 36 holes of play, a cut-off score is calculated to reduce the size of the field for the weekend rounds. In 2020, to "make the cut", players must be in the top 50 places (ties counting).[81] Before 1957, there was no 36-hole cut and all of the invitees played four rounds, if desired. From 1957 to 1961, the top 40 scores (including ties) made the cut. From 1962 to 2012, it was the top 44 (and ties) or within 10 strokes of the lead.[20] From 2013 to 2019, it was the top 50 (and ties) or within 10 strokes of the lead.[82]

Following the cut, an additional 36 holes are played over the final two days. Should the fourth round fail to produce a winner, all players tied for the lead enter a sudden-death playoff. Play begins on the 18th hole, followed by the adjacent 10th, repeating until one player remains. Adopted in 1976, the sudden-death playoff was originally formatted to start on the first hole,[83] but was not needed for the first three years. It was changed for 1979 to the inward (final) nine holes, starting at the tenth tee, where the television coverage began.[84] First employed that same year, the Masters' first sudden-death playoff, won by Fuzzy Zoeller, ended on the 11th green. The current arrangement, beginning at the 18th tee, was amended for 2004 and first used the following year. Through 2017, the eleven sudden-death playoffs have yet to advance past the second extra hole. Earlier playoffs were 18 holes on the following day, except for the first in 1935, which was 36 holes (Gene Sarazen defeated Craig Wood); the last 18-hole playoff was in 1970 when Billy Casper defeated Gene Littler, and none of the full-round playoffs went to additional holes.

Course edit

The golf course was formerly a plant nursery and each hole is named after the tree or shrub with which it has become associated.[8]
The course layout in 2023:

 
Layout of Augusta National Golf Club
Hole Name Yards Par Hole Name Yards Par
1 Tea Olive 445 4 10 Camellia 495 4
2 Pink Dogwood 575 5 11 White Dogwood 520 4
3 Flowering Peach 350 4 12 Golden Bell 155 3
4 Flowering Crab Apple 240 3 13 Azalea 545 5
5 Magnolia 495 4 14 Chinese Fir 440 4
6 Juniper 180 3 15 Firethorn 550 5
7 Pampas 450 4 16 Redbud 170 3
8 Yellow Jasmine 570 5 17 Nandina 440 4
9 Carolina Cherry 460 4 18 Holly 465 4
Out 3,765 36 In 3,780 36
Source:[1][85] Total 7,545 72

Lengths of the course for the Masters at the start of each decade:

  • 2022: 7,510 yards (6,870 m)
  • 2020: 7,475 yards (6,835 m)
  • 2010: 7,435 yards (6,799 m)
  • 2000: 6,985 yards (6,387 m)
  • 1990: 6,905 yards (6,314 m)
  • 1980: 7,040 yards (6,437 m)
  • 1970: 6,980 yards (6,383 m)
  • 1960: 6,980 yards (6,383 m)
  • 1950: 6,900 yards (6,309 m)
  • 1940: 6,800 yards (6,218 m)[1]

Course adjustments edit

As with many other courses, Augusta National's championship setup was lengthened in recent years. In 2001, the course measured 6,925 yards (6,332 m) and was extended to 7,270 yards (6,648 m) for 2002, and again in 2006 to 7,445 yards (6,808 m); 520 yards (475 m) longer than the 2001 course.[86][87] The changes attracted many critics, including the most successful players in Masters history, Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player and Tiger Woods. Woods claimed that the "shorter hitters are going to struggle". Augusta National chairman Hootie Johnson was unperturbed, stating, "We are comfortable with what we are doing with the golf course." After a practice round, Gary Player defended the changes, saying, "There have been a lot of criticisms, but I think unjustly so, now I've played it.... The guys are basically having to hit the same second shots that Jack Nicklaus had to hit (in his prime)".[88]

The first hole was shortened by 10 yards (9 m) for the 2009 Masters Tournament. For the 2019 Masters Tournament, the fifth hole was lengthened by 40 yards (37 m) from 455 yards to 495 yards, with two new gaping bunkers on the left side of the fairway.[89] The current length of the course is 7,475 yards (6,835 m).

Originally, the grass on the putting greens was wide-bladed Bermuda. The greens lost speed, especially during the late 1970s, after the introduction of a healthier strain of narrow-bladed Bermuda, which thrived and grew thicker. In 1978, the greens on the par 3 course were reconstructed with bentgrass, a narrow-bladed species that could be mowed shorter, eliminating grain.[90] After this test run, the greens on the main course were replaced with bentgrass in time for the 1981 Masters. The bentgrass resulted in significantly faster putting surfaces, which has required a reduction in some of the contours of the greens over time.[90]

Just before the 1975 tournament, the common beige sand in the bunkers was replaced with the now-signature white feldspar. It is a quartz derivative of the mining of feldspar and is shipped in from North Carolina.[91]

Field edit

The Masters has the smallest field of the major championships, with 85–100 players. Unlike other majors, there are no alternates or qualifying tournaments. It is an invitational event, with invitations largely issued on an automatic basis to players who meet published criteria. The top 50 players in the Official World Golf Ranking are all invited.[92]

Past champions are always eligible, but since 2002 the Augusta National Golf Club has discouraged them from continuing to participate at an advanced age. Some will later become honorary starters.[93]

Invitation categories (from 2024) edit

See footnote.[94]
Note: Categories 7–12 are honored only if the participants maintain their amateur status prior to the tournament.
  1. Masters Tournament Champions (lifetime)
  2. U.S. Open champions (five years)
  3. The Open champions (five years)
  4. PGA champions (five years)
  5. Winners of the Players Championship (three years)
  6. Current Olympic Gold Medalist (one year)
  7. Current U.S. Amateur champion and runner-up
  8. Current British Amateur champion
  9. Current Asia-Pacific Amateur champion
  10. Current Latin America Amateur champion
  11. Current U.S. Mid-Amateur champion
  12. Current NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship individual champion
  13. The first 12 players, including ties, in the previous year's Masters Tournament
  14. The first 4 players, including ties, in the previous year's U.S. Open
  15. The first 4 players, including ties, in the previous year's Open Championship
  16. The first 4 players, including ties, in the previous year's PGA Championship
  17. Winners of PGA Tour events that award at least a full-point allocation for the FedEx Cup, from one Masters Tournament to the next
  18. Those qualifying and eligible for the previous year's season-ending Tour Championship (top 30 in FedEx Cup prior to tournament)
  19. The 50 leaders on the final Official World Golf Ranking for the previous calendar year
  20. The 50 leaders on the Official World Golf Ranking published during the week prior to the current Masters Tournament

Most of the top current players will meet the criteria of multiple categories for invitation. The Masters Committee, at its discretion, can also invite any golfer not otherwise qualified, although in practice these invitations are mostly reserved for international players.[95]

Changes since 2014 edit

Changes for the 2014 tournament include invitations now being awarded to the autumn events in the PGA Tour, which now begin the wraparound season, tightening of qualifications (top 12 plus ties from the Masters, top 4 from the U.S. Open, Open Championship, and PGA Championship), and the top 30 on the PGA Tour now referencing the season-ending points before the Tour Championship, not the former annual money list.[82] The 2015 Masters added the winner of the newly established Latin America Amateur Championship, which effectively replaced the exemption for the U.S. Amateur Public Links, which ended after the 2014 tournament. (The final Public Links champion played in the 2015 Masters.)[96]

Prior to the start of the 2023 Masters Tournament, several changes to the criteria were announced to come into effect from 2024. An additional criterion was added for amateur golfers, for the reigning individual champion of the NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship,[97] and PGA Tour criteria were modified to account for scheduling changes (previously only regular season and playoff events were included) and to clarify that players must remain eligible for the Tour Championship.[98][99]

Most wins edit

The first winner of the Masters Tournament was Horton Smith in 1934, and he repeated in 1936. The player with the most Masters victories is Jack Nicklaus, who won six times between 1963 and 1986. Tiger Woods has five wins, followed by Arnold Palmer with four, and Jimmy Demaret, Gary Player, Sam Snead, Nick Faldo, and Phil Mickelson have three titles to their name. Player was the tournament's first overseas winner with his first victory in 1961. Two-time champions include Byron Nelson, Ben Hogan, Tom Watson, Seve Ballesteros, Bernhard Langer, Ben Crenshaw, José María Olazábal, and Bubba Watson.[100]

Winners edit

Year Winner Score To par Margin of
victory
Runner(s)-up Winner's
share ($)
2023   Jon Rahm 276 −12 4 strokes   Brooks Koepka
  Phil Mickelson
3,240,000
2022   Scottie Scheffler 278 −10 3 strokes   Rory McIlroy 2,700,000
2021   Hideki Matsuyama 278 −10 1 stroke   Will Zalatoris 2,070,000
2020   Dustin Johnson 268 −20 5 strokes   Im Sung-jae
  Cameron Smith
2,070,000
2019   Tiger Woods (5) 275 −13 1 stroke   Dustin Johnson
  Brooks Koepka
  Xander Schauffele
2,070,000
2018   Patrick Reed 273 −15 1 stroke   Rickie Fowler 1,980,000
2017   Sergio García 279 −9 Playoff   Justin Rose 1,980,000
2016   Danny Willett 283 −5 3 strokes   Jordan Spieth
  Lee Westwood
1,800,000
2015   Jordan Spieth 270 −18 4 strokes   Phil Mickelson
  Justin Rose
1,800,000
2014   Bubba Watson (2) 280 −8 3 strokes   Jonas Blixt
  Jordan Spieth
1,620,000
2013   Adam Scott 279 −9 Playoff   Ángel Cabrera 1,440,000
2012   Bubba Watson 278 −10 Playoff   Louis Oosthuizen 1,440,000
2011   Charl Schwartzel 274 −14 2 strokes   Jason Day
  Adam Scott
1,440,000
2010   Phil Mickelson (3) 272 −16 3 strokes   Lee Westwood 1,350,000
2009   Ángel Cabrera 276 −12 Playoff   Kenny Perry
  Chad Campbell
1,350,000
2008   Trevor Immelman 280 −8 3 strokes   Tiger Woods 1,350,000
2007   Zach Johnson 289 +1 2 strokes   Retief Goosen
  Rory Sabbatini
  Tiger Woods
1,305,000
2006   Phil Mickelson (2) 281 −7 2 strokes   Tim Clark 1,260,000
2005   Tiger Woods (4) 276 −12 Playoff   Chris DiMarco 1,260,000
2004   Phil Mickelson 279 −9 1 stroke   Ernie Els 1,117,000
2003   Mike Weir 281 −7 Playoff   Len Mattiace 1,080,000
2002   Tiger Woods (3) 276 −12 3 strokes   Retief Goosen 1,008,000
2001   Tiger Woods (2) 272 −16 2 strokes   David Duval 1,008,000
2000   Vijay Singh 278 −10 3 strokes   Ernie Els 828,000
1999   José María Olazábal (2) 280 −8 2 strokes   Davis Love III 720,000
1998   Mark O'Meara 279 −9 1 stroke   Fred Couples
  David Duval
576,000
1997   Tiger Woods 270 −18 12 strokes   Tom Kite 486,000
1996   Nick Faldo (3) 276 −12 5 strokes   Greg Norman 450,000
1995   Ben Crenshaw (2) 274 −14 1 stroke   Davis Love III 396,000
1994   José María Olazábal 279 −9 2 strokes   Tom Lehman 360,000
1993   Bernhard Langer (2) 277 −11 4 strokes   Chip Beck 306,000
1992   Fred Couples 275 −13 2 strokes   Raymond Floyd 270,000
1991   Ian Woosnam 277 −11 1 stroke   José María Olazábal 243,000
1990   Nick Faldo (2) 278 −10 Playoff   Raymond Floyd 225,000
1989   Nick Faldo 283 −5 Playoff   Scott Hoch 200,000
1988   Sandy Lyle 281 −7 1 stroke   Mark Calcavecchia 183,800
1987   Larry Mize 285 −3 Playoff   Seve Ballesteros
  Greg Norman
162,000
1986   Jack Nicklaus (6) 279 −9 1 stroke   Tom Kite
  Greg Norman
144,000
1985   Bernhard Langer 282 −6 2 strokes   Seve Ballesteros
  Raymond Floyd
  Curtis Strange
126,000
1984   Ben Crenshaw 277 −11 2 strokes   Tom Watson 108,000
1983   Seve Ballesteros (2) 280 −8 4 strokes   Ben Crenshaw
  Tom Kite
90,000
1982   Craig Stadler 284 −4 Playoff   Dan Pohl 64,000
1981   Tom Watson (2) 280 −8 2 strokes   Johnny Miller
  Jack Nicklaus
60,000
1980   Seve Ballesteros 275 −13 4 strokes   Gibby Gilbert
  Jack Newton
55,000
1979   Fuzzy Zoeller 280 −8 Playoff   Ed Sneed
  Tom Watson
50,000
1978   Gary Player (3) 277 −11 1 stroke   Rod Funseth
  Hubert Green
  Tom Watson
45,000
1977   Tom Watson 276 −12 2 strokes   Jack Nicklaus 40,000
1976   Raymond Floyd 271 −17 8 strokes   Ben Crenshaw 40,000
1975   Jack Nicklaus (5) 276 −12 1 stroke   Johnny Miller
  Tom Weiskopf
40,000
1974   Gary Player (2) 278 −10 2 strokes   Dave Stockton
  Tom Weiskopf
35,000
1973   Tommy Aaron 283 −5 1 stroke   J. C. Snead 30,000
1972   Jack Nicklaus (4) 286 −2 3 strokes   Bruce Crampton
  Bobby Mitchell
  Tom Weiskopf
25,000
1971   Charles Coody 279 −9 2 strokes   Johnny Miller
  Jack Nicklaus
25,000
1970   Billy Casper 279 −9 Playoff   Gene Littler 25,000
1969   George Archer 281 −7 1 stroke   Billy Casper
  George Knudson
  Tom Weiskopf
20,000
1968   Bob Goalby 277 −11 1 stroke   Roberto De Vicenzo 20,000
1967   Gay Brewer 280 −8 1 stroke   Bobby Nichols 20,000
1966   Jack Nicklaus (3) 288 E Playoff   Tommy Jacobs (2nd)
  Gay Brewer (3rd)
20,000
1965   Jack Nicklaus (2) 271 −17 9 strokes   Arnold Palmer
  Gary Player
20,000
1964   Arnold Palmer (4) 276 −12 6 strokes   Dave Marr
  Jack Nicklaus
20,000
1963   Jack Nicklaus 286 −2 1 stroke   Tony Lema 20,000
1962   Arnold Palmer (3) 280 −8 Playoff   Gary Player (2nd)
  Dow Finsterwald (3rd)
20,000
1961   Gary Player 280 −8 1 stroke   Charles Coe (a)
  Arnold Palmer
20,000
1960   Arnold Palmer (2) 282 −6 1 stroke   Ken Venturi 17,500
1959   Art Wall Jr. 284 −4 1 stroke   Cary Middlecoff 15,000
1958   Arnold Palmer 284 −4 1 stroke   Doug Ford
  Fred Hawkins
11,250
1957   Doug Ford 283 −5 3 strokes   Sam Snead 8,750
1956   Jack Burke Jr. 289 +1 1 stroke   Ken Venturi (a) 6,000
1955   Cary Middlecoff 279 −9 7 strokes   Ben Hogan 5,000
1954   Sam Snead (3) 289 +1 Playoff   Ben Hogan 5,000
1953   Ben Hogan (2) 274 −14 5 strokes   Ed Oliver 4,000
1952   Sam Snead (2) 286 −2 4 strokes   Jack Burke Jr. 4,000
1951   Ben Hogan 280 −8 2 strokes   Skee Riegel 3,000
1950   Jimmy Demaret (3) 283 −5 2 strokes   Jim Ferrier 2,400
1949   Sam Snead 282 −6 3 strokes   Johnny Bulla
  Lloyd Mangrum
2,750
1948   Claude Harmon 279 −9 5 strokes   Cary Middlecoff 2,500
1947   Jimmy Demaret (2) 281 −7 2 strokes   Byron Nelson
  Frank Stranahan (a)
2,500
1946   Herman Keiser 282 −6 1 stroke   Ben Hogan 2,500
1943–45: Cancelled due to World War II
1942   Byron Nelson (2) 280 −8 Playoff   Ben Hogan 1,500
1941   Craig Wood 280 −8 3 strokes   Byron Nelson 1,500
1940   Jimmy Demaret 280 −8 4 strokes   Lloyd Mangrum 1,500
1939   Ralph Guldahl 279 −9 1 stroke   Sam Snead 1,500
1938   Henry Picard 285 −3 2 strokes   Harry Cooper
  Ralph Guldahl
1,500
1937   Byron Nelson 283 −5 2 strokes   Ralph Guldahl 1,500
1936   Horton Smith (2) 285 −3 1 stroke   Harry Cooper 1,500
1935   Gene Sarazen 282 −6 Playoff   Craig Wood 1,500
1934   Horton Smith 284 −4 2 strokes   Craig Wood 1,500
  • In the "Runner(s)-up" column, the names are sorted alphabetically, based on the last name of that year's runner(s)-up.
  • The sudden-death format was adopted in 1976, first used in 1979, and revised in 2004.[101]
    • None of the 11 sudden-death playoffs has advanced past the second hole; four were decided at the first hole, seven at the second.
  • Playoffs prior to 1976 were full 18-hole rounds, except for 1935, which was 36 holes.

Low amateurs edit

In 1952, the Masters began presenting an award, known as the Silver Cup, to the lowest-scoring amateur to make the cut. In 1954 they began presenting an amateur silver medal to the low amateur runner-up. There have been seven players to win low amateur and then go on to win the Masters as a professional. These players are Cary Middlecoff, Jack Nicklaus, Ben Crenshaw, Phil Mickelson, Tiger Woods, Sergio García, and Hideki Matsuyama.

Year Champion To par Place
1934   Charlie Yates +9 T21
1935   Lawson Little E 6
1936   Johnny Dawson +6 T9
1937   Charlie Yates (2) +13 T26
1938   Tommy Suffern Tailer +10 T18
1939   Chick Harbert
  Charlie Yates (3)
+8 T18
1940   Charlie Yates (4) +5 T17
1941   Dick Chapman +9 T19
1942   Bud Ward
  Charlie Yates (5)
+16 T28
1943–1945 Cancelled due to World War II
1946   Cary Middlecoff +5 T12
1947   Frank Stranahan −5 T2
1948   Skee Riegel +5 T13
1949   Charles Coe
  Johnny Dawson (2)
+7 T16
1950   Frank Stranahan (2) +9 T14
1951   Charles Coe (2) +5 T12
1952   Chuck Kocsis +9 T14
1953   Frank Stranahan (3)
  Harvie Ward
+3 T14
1954   Billy Joe Patton +2 3
1955   Harvie Ward (2) +2 T8
1956   Ken Venturi +2 2
1957   Harvie Ward (3) E 4
1958   Billy Joe Patton (2) E 8
1959   Charles Coe (3) E 6
1960   Jack Nicklaus
  Billy Joe Patton (3)
+5 T13
1961   Charles Coe (4) −7 T2
1962   Charles Coe (5) E T9
1963   Labron Harris Jr. +10 T32
1964   Deane Beman
  Gary Cowan
E T25
1965   Downing Gray +6 T31
1966   Jimmy Grant +11 T28
1967   Downing Gray (2) +9 T36
1968   Vinny Giles E T22
1969   Bruce Fleisher +12 44
1970   Charles Coe (6) +4 T23
1971   Steve Melnyk +4 T24
1972   Ben Crenshaw +7 T19
1973   Ben Crenshaw (2) +7 T24
1974 None made the cut
1975   George Burns +4 T30
1976   Curtis Strange +3 T15
1977   Bill Sander +11 49
1978   Lindy Miller −2 T16
1979   Bobby Clampett +2 T23
1980   Jay Sigel +1 T26
1981   Jay Sigel (2) +6 T35
1982   Jodie Mudd +6 T20
1983   Jim Hallet +9 T40
1984   Rick Fehr E T25
1985   Sam Randolph +2 T18
1986   Sam Randolph (2) +5 T36
1987   Bob Lewis +21 54
1988   Jay Sigel (3) +12 T39
1989 None made the cut
1990   Chris Patton +9 T39
1991   Phil Mickelson +2 T46
1992   Manny Zerman +6 T59
1993 None made the cut
1994   John Harris +17 T50
1995   Tiger Woods +5 T41
1996 None made the cut
1997 None made the cut
1998   Matt Kuchar E T21
1999   Sergio García +7 T38
2000   David Gossett +15 T54
2001 None made the cut
2002 None made the cut
2003   Ricky Barnes +3 21
2004   Casey Wittenberg E T13
2005   Ryan Moore −1 T13
2006 None made the cut
2007 None made the cut
2008 None made the cut
2009 None made the cut
2010   Matteo Manassero +4 T36
2011   Hideki Matsuyama −1 T27
2012   Patrick Cantlay +7 T47
2013   Guan Tianlang +12 58
2014   Oliver Goss +10 49
2015 None made the cut
2016   Bryson DeChambeau +5 T21
2017   Stewart Hagestad +6 T36
2018   Doug Ghim +8 T50
2019   Viktor Hovland −3 T32
2020   Andy Ogletree −2 T34
2021 None made the cut
2022 None made the cut
2023   Sam Bennett −2 T16

Records edit

Jack Nicklaus has won the most Masters (six) and was 46 years, 82 days old when he won in 1986, making him the oldest winner of the Masters.[24] Nicklaus is the record holder for the most top tens, with 22, and the most cuts made, with 37.[20][102] The youngest winner of the Masters is Tiger Woods, who was 21 years, 104 days old when he won in 1997. In that year, Woods also broke the records for the widest winning margin (12 strokes), and the lowest winning score, with 270 (−18). Jordan Spieth tied his score record in 2015, and Dustin Johnson broke it in 2020.[103]

In 2013, Guan Tianlang became the youngest player ever to compete in the Masters, at age 14 years, 168 days on the opening day of the tournament;[104] the following day, he became the youngest ever to make the cut at the Masters or any men's major championship.[105]

Gary Player holds the record for most appearances, with 52. Player also holds the record for the number of consecutive cuts made, with 23 between 1959 and 1982 (Player did not compete in 1973 as he was recovering from recent surgery). He shares this record with Fred Couples, who made his consecutive cuts between 1983 and 2007, not competing in 1987 and 1994;[20] and Tiger Woods, who matched the feat between 1997 and 2023, not competing in 2014, 2016, 2017, and 2021.[106] Also in 2023, Couples became the oldest player to make the cut, doing so at age 63 years, 186 days.[107]

Nick Price and Greg Norman share the course record of 63, with their rounds coming in 1986 and 1996 respectively.

The highest winning score of 289 (+1) has occurred three times: Sam Snead in 1954, Jack Burke Jr. in 1956, and Zach Johnson in 2007. Anthony Kim holds the record for most birdies in a round with 11 in 2009 during his second round.[103]

There have been only four double eagles carded in the history of the Masters; the latest was by a contender in the fourth round in 2012. In the penultimate pairing with eventual champion Bubba Watson, Louis Oosthuizen's 260-yard (238 m) downhill 4 iron from the fairway made the left side of the green at the par-5 second hole, called Pink Dogwood, rolled downhill, and in.[108] The other two rare occurrences of this feat after Sarazen's double eagle on the fabled course's Fire Thorn hole in 1935: Bruce Devlin made double eagle from 248 yards (227 m) out with a 4-wood at the eighth hole (Yellow Jasmine) in the first round in 1967, while Jeff Maggert hit a 3-iron 222 yards (203 m) at the 13th hole (Azalea) in the fourth round in 1994.[109]

Three players share the record for most runner-up finishes with four – Ben Hogan (1942, 1946, 1954, 1955), Tom Weiskopf (1969, 1972, 1974, 1975), and Jack Nicklaus (1964, 1971, 1977, 1981). Nicklaus and Tiger Woods are the only golfers to have won the Masters in three separate decades.

Broadcasting edit

United States television edit

Network Years of broadcast
CBS 1956–present
USA Network 19822007
ESPN 2008–present

CBS has televised the Masters in the United States every year since 1956,[110] when it used six cameras and covered only the final four holes. Tournament coverage of the first eight holes did not begin until 1993 because of resistance from the tournament organizers, but by 2006, more than 50 cameras were used. Chairman Jack Stephens felt that the back nine was always more "compelling", increased coverage would increase the need for sponsorship spending, and that broadcasting the front nine of the course on television would cut down on attendance and television viewership for the tournament.[110][111][112] USA Network added first- and second-round coverage in 1982.[113] In 2008, ESPN replaced USA as broadcaster of early-round coverage. These broadcasts use the CBS Sports production staff and commentators, but with ESPN personality Scott Van Pelt (succeeding Mike Tirico, who replaced Bill Macatee's similar role under USA Network) as studio host, as well as Curtis Strange as studio analyst.[114][113][115] CBS carries two 15-minute highlight programs in late night covering the first and second rounds, which airs after their affiliates' late night local newscasts.

In 2005, CBS broadcast the tournament with high-definition fixed and handheld wired cameras, as well as standard-definition wireless handheld cameras. In 2006, a webstream called "Amen Corner Live" began providing coverage of all players passing through holes 11, 12, and 13 through all four rounds.[116] This was the first full tournament multi-hole webcast from a major championship. In 2007, CBS added "Masters Extra," an extra hour of full-field bonus coverage daily on the internet, preceding the television broadcasts. In 2008, CBS added full coverage of holes 15 and 16 live on the web. In 2011, "Masters Extra" was dropped after officials gave ESPN an extra hour each day on Thursday and Friday. In 2016, the Amen Corner feed was broadcast in 4K ultra high definition exclusively on DirecTV—as one of the first live U.S. sports telecasts in the format.[117][118] A second channel of 4K coverage covering holes 15 and 16 was added in 2017,[119] and this coverage was produced with high-dynamic-range (HDR) color in 2018.[120]

While Augusta National Golf Club has consistently chosen CBS as its U.S. broadcast partner, it has done so in successive one-year contracts.[121] Former CBS Sports president Neal Pilson stated that their relationship had gotten to the point where the contracts could be negotiated in just hours.[110] Due to the lack of long-term contractual security, as well as the club's limited dependence on broadcast rights fees (owing to its affluent membership), it is widely held that CBS allows Augusta National greater control over the content of the broadcast, or at least performs some form of self-censorship, in order to maintain future rights. The club, however, has insisted it does not make any demands with respect to the content of the broadcast.[122][123] Despite this, announcers who have been deemed not to have acted with the decorum expected by the club have been removed, notably Jack Whitaker and Gary McCord,[122] and there also tends to be a lack of discussion of any controversy involving Augusta National, such as the 2003 Martha Burk protests.[123]

The coverage itself carries a more formal style than other golf telecasts; announcers refer to the gallery as patrons rather than as spectators or fans. Gallery itself is also used.[124] The club also disallows promotions for other network programs, or other forms of sponsored features.[124] Significant restrictions have been placed on the tournament's broadcast hours compared to other major championships. Only in the 21st century did the tournament allow CBS to air 18-hole coverage of the leaders, a standard at the other three majors.[122] Since 1982, CBS has used "Augusta" by Dave Loggins as the event telecast's distinctive theme music. Loggins originally came up with the song during his first trip to the Augusta course in 1981.[125]

The club mandates minimal commercial interruption, currently limited to four minutes per hour (as opposed to the usual 12 or more); this is subsidized by selling exclusive sponsorship packages to two or three companies – currently these "global sponsors" are AT&T, IBM, and Mercedes-Benz.[124] AT&T (then SBC) and IBM have sponsored the tournament since 2005, joined at first by ExxonMobil, which in 2014 was replaced as a global sponsor by Mercedes-Benz.[126] In 2002, in the wake of calls to boycott tournament sponsors over the Martha Burk controversy, club chairman Hootie Johnson suspended all television sponsorship of the 2003 tournament. He argued that it was "unfair" to have the Masters' sponsors become involved with the controversy by means of association with the tournament, as their sponsorship is of the Masters and not Augusta National itself. CBS agreed to split production costs for the tournament with the club to make up for the lack of sponsorship. After the arrangement continued into 2004, the tournament reinstated sponsorships for 2005, with the new partners of ExxonMobil, IBM, and SBC.[127][128]

The club also sells separate sponsorship packages, which do not provide rights to air commercials on the U.S. telecasts, to two "international partners"; in 2014, those companies were Rolex and UPS (the latter of which replaced Mercedes-Benz upon that company's elevation to "global sponsor" status).[126]

Radio coverage edit

Westwood One (previously Dial Global and CBS Radio) has provided live radio play-by-play coverage in the United States since 1956. This coverage can also be heard on the official Masters website. The network provides short two- or three-minute updates throughout the tournament, as well as longer three- and four-hour segments towards the end of the day.[129]

International television edit

The first UK live coverage of the event was in 1984 when Channel 4 aired coverage of the closing moments of the 3rd and 4th rounds. Channel 4 repeated this level of coverage in 1985. The rights then transferred to the BBC which also initially only provided coverage of the 3rd and 4th rounds. With the 2007 launch of BBC HD, UK viewers were able to watch the championship in that format. BBC Sport held the exclusive TV and radio rights through to 2010.[130] The BBC's coverage airs without commercials because it is financed by a licence fee. From the 2011 Masters, Sky Sports began broadcasting all four days, as well as the par 3 contest in HD and, for the first time ever, in 3D. The BBC continued to air live coverage of the weekend rounds in parallel with Sky until 2019, when it was announced that Sky will hold exclusive rights to live coverage of all four rounds beginning 2020. The BBC will only hold rights to delayed highlights. With its loss of live rights to the Open Championship to Sky in 2016, it marks the first time since 1955 that the BBC no longer holds any rights to live professional golf.[131][132][133] although the Corporation continues to provide live radio commentary on Radio Five Live.

In Ireland, Setanta Ireland previously showed all four rounds, and now since 2017 Eir Sport broadcast all four rounds live having previously broadcast the opening two rounds with RTÉ broadcasting the weekend coverage.[134] After Eir Sport's closure in 2021, Sky Sports will broadcast the event exclusively in Ireland for the first time, like in the UK.[135]

In Canada, broadcast rights to the Masters are held by Bell Media, with coverage divided between TSN (cable), which carries live simulcasts and primetime encores of CBS and ESPN coverage for all four rounds, CTV (broadcast), which simulcasts CBS's coverage of the weekend rounds, and RDS, which carries French-language coverage. Prior to 2013, Canadian broadcast rights were held by a marketing company, Graham Sanborn Media,[136] which in turn bought time on the Global Television Network, TSN, and RDS (except for 2012 when French-language coverage aired on TVA and TVA Sports) to air the broadcasts, also selling all of the advertising for the Canadian broadcasts. This was an unusual arrangement in Canadian sports broadcasting, as in most cases broadcasters acquire their rights directly from the event organizers or through partnerships with international rightsholders, such as ESPN International (ESPN owns a minority stake in TSN). In 2013, Global and TSN began selling advertising directly, and co-produced supplemental programs covering the tournament (while still carrying U.S. coverage for the tournament itself).[137][138]

On December 15, 2015, TSN parent company Bell Media announced that it had acquired exclusive Canadian rights to the tournament beginning 2016 under a multi-year deal. Broadcast television coverage moved to co-owned broadcast network CTV, while TSN uses its expanded five-channel service to carry supplemental feeds (including the Amen Corner feed and early coverage of each round) that were previously exclusive to digital platforms.[139][140]

In France, the Masters is broadcast live on Canal+ and Canal+ Sport.

In 53 countries, including much of Latin America, broadcast rights for the entire tournament are held by the ESPN International networks.[141]

Ticketing edit

Although tickets (more commonly referred to as "badges") for the Masters are not expensive at face value, they are very difficult to come by. Masters tickets are considered the second-hardest to obtain in sports, trailing only the Super Bowl.[142] Even the practice rounds can be difficult to gain entrance into. Practice rounds and daily tournament tickets are sold in advance, through a selection process, only after receipt of an online application. All tickets are sold in advance and there are no tickets sold at the gates.[143] Additionally, Georgia state law prohibits tickets from being bought, sold or handed off within a 2,700 foot boundary around the Augusta National Golf Club.[144][145]

Open applications for practice rounds and individual daily tournament tickets have to be made nearly a year in advance and the successful applicants are chosen by random selection. Series badges for the actual tournament, that is a badge valid for all four tournament rounds, are made available and sold only to individuals of a patrons list, which is closed. A waiting list for the patrons list was opened in 1972 and closed in 1978. It was reopened in 2000 and subsequently closed once again.[146][147] Individuals who are fortunate enough to be on the patron list are given the recurring opportunity to purchase series badges each year for life. According to Augusta National, after the death of a badge holder, the series badge account is transferable only to a surviving spouse and cannot be transferred to other family members.[146][148][149]

In 2008, as part of their Junior Pass Program, the Masters also began allowing children (between the ages of 8 and 16) to enter on tournament days for free if they are accompanied by the patron who is the original applicant of his or her series badge. The Junior Pass Program does not apply to individual daily tournament tickets, only to series badge patrons.[150][145]

The difficulty in acquiring Masters badges has made the tournament one of the largest events on the secondary resale ticket market.[151] Since a majority of the badges for the Masters are made available to the same group of patrons each year, these perennial ticket holders sometimes decide to sell their badges through large ticket marketplaces and/or third party ticket brokers. Although they do so at their own detriment as this action is strictly prohibited in the ticket purchase agreement and ticket policy.[152]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Notable exception includes the 2020 Masters Tournament, which was played in November due to the suspension of the 2019–20 PGA Tour from March to mid-June due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  2. ^ Equals record for all major championships.

Further reading edit

  • Bantock, Jack (April 5, 2023). "For nearly 50 years, only Black men caddied The Masters. One day, they all but vanished". CNN.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d . Sports Network. April 9, 2014. Archived from the original on April 15, 2014. Retrieved April 14, 2014.
  2. ^ Bacon, Shane (July 16, 2012). "British Open or Open Championship? The debate stops now". CBS Sports. from the original on November 7, 2020. Retrieved July 18, 2017.
  3. ^ Ryan, Shane (July 14, 2015). "Americans: It's okay to call this major "The British Open," and don't let anyone tell you otherwise". Golf Digest. from the original on November 11, 2020. Retrieved July 18, 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "Masters Milestones". www.masters.org. from the original on April 16, 2019. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  5. ^ Kelley, Brent. "Do Masters Champions Get to Keep the Green Jacket?". About.com. from the original on December 5, 2016. Retrieved April 10, 2012.
  6. ^ a b Owen, David (1999). The Making of the Masters: Clifford Roberts, Augusta National, and Golf's Most Prestigious Tournament. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-684-85729-9.
  7. ^ Sampson, Curt (1999). The Masters: Golf, Money, and Power in Augusta, Georgia. New York City: Villard Books. p. 22. ISBN 0375753370.
  8. ^ a b Boyette, John (April 3, 2006). . Augusta Chronicle. Archived from the original on August 21, 2014. Retrieved August 27, 2012.
  9. ^ . www.masters.org. Archived from the original on January 19, 2008. Retrieved January 22, 2008.
  10. ^ Although front and back are the terms more commonly used, for the Masters they are called the "first" and "second" nines
  11. ^ . February 8, 2012. Archived from the original on March 27, 2011. Retrieved April 8, 2012.
  12. ^ Boyette, John (April 10, 2002). . The Augusta Chronicle. Archived from the original on April 7, 2008. Retrieved April 13, 2008.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Past Winners & Results". from the original on October 30, 2020. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  14. ^ "The Macon Telegraph 17 Mar 1940, page 9". Newspapers.com. Retrieved August 2, 2023.
  15. ^ "1963: Jack Nicklaus wins second pro Masters". The Augusta Chronicle. March 22, 2012. from the original on October 31, 2020. Retrieved January 25, 2008.
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masters, tournament, masters, redirects, here, other, sports, tournaments, that, referred, masters, master, snow, novel, masters, novel, usually, referred, simply, masters, masters, outside, north, america, four, major, golf, championships, professional, golf,. The Masters redirects here For other sports tournaments that may be referred to as The Masters see Master For the C P Snow novel see The Masters novel The Masters Tournament usually referred to as simply the Masters or as the U S Masters outside North America 2 3 is one of the four men s major golf championships in professional golf Scheduled for the first full week in April the Masters is the first major golf tournament of the year Unlike the other major tournaments the Masters is always held at the same location Augusta National Golf Club a private course in the city of Augusta Georgia Masters TournamentTournament informationLocationAugusta Georgia U S Established1934Course s Augusta National Golf ClubPar72Length7 475 yards 6 835 m 1 Organized byAugusta National Golf ClubTour s PGA TourEuropean TourJapan Golf TourFormatStroke playPrize fundUS 18 000 000Month playedApril a Tournament record scoreAggregate268 Dustin Johnson 2020 To par 20 b as aboveCurrent championJon Rahm2023 Masters TournamentLocation MapAugusta National GCLocation in United StatesShow map of the United StatesAugusta National GCLocation in GeorgiaShow map of GeorgiaAmateur golf champion Bobby Jones and investment banker Clifford Roberts founded the Masters Tournament 4 After his grand slam in 1930 Jones acquired the former plant nursery and co designed Augusta National with course architect Alister MacKenzie 1 First played in 1934 the Masters is an official money event on the PGA Tour the European Tour and the Japan Golf Tour The field of players is smaller than those of the other major championships because it is an invitational event held by the Augusta National Golf Club The tournament has a number of traditions Since the 1949 a green jacket has been awarded to the champion who must return it to the clubhouse one year after his victory although it remains his personal property and is stored with other champions jackets in a specially designated cloakroom In most instances only a first time and currently reigning champion may remove his jacket from the club grounds A golfer who wins the event multiple times uses the same green jacket awarded upon his initial win unless he needs to be re fitted with a new jacket 5 The Champions Dinner inaugurated by Ben Hogan at the 1952 Masters Tournament is held on the Tuesday before each Masters and is open only to past champions and certain board members of the Augusta National Golf Club Beginning in 1963 distinguished golfers usually past champions have hit an honorary tee shot on the morning of the first round to commence play These have included Fred McLeod Jock Hutchinson Gene Sarazen Sam Snead Byron Nelson Arnold Palmer Jack Nicklaus Gary Player Lee Elder and Tom Watson Since 1960 a semi social contest on the par 3 course has been played on Wednesday the day before the first round Nicklaus has the most Masters wins with six between 1963 and 1986 Tiger Woods won five between 1997 and 2019 Palmer won four between 1958 and 1964 Five have won three titles at Augusta Jimmy Demaret Sam Snead Gary Player Nick Faldo and Phil Mickelson Player from South Africa was the first non American player to win the tournament in 1961 the second was Seve Ballesteros of Spain the champion in 1980 and 1983 The Augusta National course first opened in 1933 and has been modified many times by different architects Among the changes greens have been reshaped and on occasion entirely re designed bunkers have been added water hazards have been extended new tee boxes have been built hundreds of trees have been planted and several mounds have been installed 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Augusta National Golf Club 1 2 Early tournament years 1 3 1960s 1970s 1 4 1980s 2000s 2 Traditions 2 1 Awards 2 1 1 Green jacket 2 1 2 Trophies 2 2 Pre tournament events 2 3 Par 3 contest 2 4 Player invitations 2 5 Opening tee shot 2 6 Champions Dinner 2 7 Caddies 3 Format 4 Course 4 1 Course adjustments 5 Field 5 1 Invitation categories from 2024 5 2 Changes since 2014 6 Most wins 7 Winners 8 Low amateurs 9 Records 10 Broadcasting 10 1 United States television 10 2 Radio coverage 10 3 International television 11 Ticketing 12 Notes 13 Further reading 14 References 15 External linksHistory edit nbsp Masters logo at the club entranceAugusta National Golf Club edit Main article Augusta National Golf Club The idea for Augusta National originated with Bobby Jones who wanted to build a golf course after his retirement from the game He sought advice from Clifford Roberts who later became the chairman of the club They came across a piece of land in Augusta Georgia of which Jones said Perfect And to think this ground has been lying here all these years waiting for someone to come along and lay a golf course upon it 7 The land had been an indigo plantation in the early nineteenth century and a plant nursery since 1857 8 Jones hired Alister MacKenzie to help design the course and work began in 1931 The course formally opened in 1933 but MacKenzie died before the first Masters Tournament was played 9 Early tournament years edit The first Augusta National Invitation Tournament as the Masters was originally known began on March 22 1934 and was won by Horton Smith who took the first prize of 1 500 The present name was adopted in 1939 The first tournament was played with current holes 10 through 18 played as the first nine and 1 through 9 as the second nine 10 then reversed permanently to its present layout for the 1935 tournament 4 Initially the Augusta National Invitation field was composed of Bobby Jones close associates Jones had petitioned the USGA to hold the U S Open at Augusta but the USGA denied the petition noting that the hot Georgia summers would create difficult playing conditions 11 Gene Sarazen hit the shot heard round the world in 1935 holing a shot from the fairway on the par 5 15th for a double eagle albatross 12 This tied Sarazen with Craig Wood and in the ensuing 36 hole playoff Sarazen was the victor by five strokes 13 Byron Nelson won the first of two Masters titles in 1937 Jimmy Demaret won three times as did Sam Snead in the 1940s and 1950s Ben Hogan won the 1951 and 1953 Masters and was runner up on four occasions In 1940 Clifford Roberts chairmain of the Masters stated that the Masters was one of the top tournaments in the United States if not the biggest He stated I am told that the Masters has outdistanced in attendance both the U S Amateur and the PGA 14 The tournament was not played from 1943 to 1945 due to World War II To assist the war effort cattle and turkeys were raised on the Augusta National grounds 4 1960s 1970s edit The Big Three of Arnold Palmer Gary Player and Jack Nicklaus dominated the Masters from 1960 through 1978 winning the event 11 times between them during that span After winning by one stroke in 1958 13 Palmer won by one stroke again in 1960 in memorable circumstances Trailing Ken Venturi by one shot in the 1960 event Palmer made birdies on the last two holes to prevail Palmer would go on to win another two Masters in 1962 and 1964 13 nbsp Jack Nicklaus at the 2006 par 3 contestNicklaus emerged in the early 1960s and served as a rival to the popular Palmer Nicklaus won his first green jacket in 1963 defeating Tony Lema by one stroke 15 Two years later he shot a then course record of 271 17 under par for his second Masters win leading Bobby Jones to say that Nicklaus played a game with which I am not familiar 16 The next year Nicklaus won his third green jacket in a grueling 18 hole playoff against Tommy Jacobs and Gay Brewer 17 This made Nicklaus the first player to win consecutive Masters He won again in 1972 by three strokes 13 In 1975 Nicklaus won by one stroke in a close contest with Tom Weiskopf and Johnny Miller in one of the most exciting Masters to date 18 Player became the first non American to win the Masters in 1961 beating Palmer the defending champion by one stroke when Palmer double bogeyed the final hole 13 In 1974 he won again by two strokes 13 After not winning a tournament on the U S PGA tour for nearly four years and at the age of 42 Player won his third and final Masters in 1978 by one stroke over three players 13 Player currently shares with Fred Couples and Tiger Woods the record of making 23 consecutive cuts and has played in a record 52 Masters 19 20 A controversial ending to the Masters occurred in 1968 Argentine champion Roberto De Vicenzo signed his scorecard attested by playing partner Tommy Aaron incorrectly recording him as making a par 4 instead of a birdie 3 on the 17th hole of the final round According to the rules of golf if a player signs a scorecard thereby attesting to its veracity that records a score on a hole higher than what he actually made on the hole the player receives the higher score for that hole This extra stroke cost De Vicenzo a chance to be in an 18 hole Monday playoff with Bob Goalby who won the green jacket De Vicenzo s mistake led to the famous quote What a stupid I am 13 21 In 1975 Lee Elder became the first African American to play in the Masters 22 doing so 15 years before Augusta National admitted its first black member Ron Townsend as a result of the Shoal Creek Controversy 23 1980s 2000s edit Non Americans collected 11 victories in 20 years in the 1980s and 1990s by far the strongest run they have had in any of the three majors played in the United States since the early days of the U S Open The first European to win the Masters was Seve Ballesteros in 1980 Nicklaus became the oldest player to win the Masters in 1986 when he won for the sixth time at age 46 13 24 During this period no golfer suffered more disappointment at the Masters than Greg Norman In his first appearance at Augusta in 1981 he led during the second nine but ended up finishing fourth In 1986 after birdieing holes 14 through 17 to tie Nicklaus for the lead he badly pushed his 4 iron approach on 18 into the patrons surrounding the green and missed his par putt for a closing bogey In 1987 Norman lost a sudden death playoff when Larry Mize holed out a remarkable 45 yard pitch shot to birdie the second playoff hole Mize thus became the first Augusta native to win the Masters 25 In 1996 Norman tied the course record with an opening round 63 and had a six stroke lead over Nick Faldo entering the final round However he stumbled to a closing 78 while Faldo his playing partner that day carded a 67 to win by five shots for his third Masters championship 26 Norman also led the 1999 Masters on the second nine of the final round only to falter again and finish third behind winner Jose Maria Olazabal who won his second green jacket Norman finished in the top five at the Masters eight times but never won Two time champion Ben Crenshaw captured an emotional Masters win in 1995 just days after the death of his lifelong teacher and mentor Harvey Penick After making his final putt to win he broke down sobbing at the hole and was consoled and embraced by his caddie In the post tournament interview Crenshaw said I had a 15th club in my bag a reference to Penick The 15th club reference is based on the golf rule that limits a player to carrying 14 clubs during a round Crenshaw first won at Augusta in 1984 In 1997 21 year old Tiger Woods became the youngest champion in Masters history winning by 12 shots with an 18 under par 270 which broke the 72 hole record that had stood for 32 years 4 In 2001 Woods completed his Tiger Slam by winning his fourth straight major championship at the Masters by two shots over David Duval 13 He won again the following year making him only the third player in history after Nicklaus and Faldo to win the tournament in consecutive years 13 as well as in 2005 when he defeated Chris DiMarco in a playoff for his first major championship win in almost three years 13 In 2003 the Augusta National Golf Club was targeted by Martha Burk who organized a failed protest at that year s Masters to pressure the club into accepting female members Burk planned to protest at the front gates of Augusta National during the third day of the tournament but her application for a permit to do so was denied 27 A court appeal was dismissed 28 In 2004 Burk stated that she had no further plans to protest against the club 29 The club admitted its first two women members Condoleezza Rice and Darla Moore in 2012 Augusta National chairman Billy Payne himself made headlines in April 2010 when he commented at the annual pre Masters press conference on Tiger Woods off the course behavior It s not simply the degree of his conduct that is so egregious here Payne said in his opening speech It is the fact he disappointed all of us and more importantly our kids and grandkids 30 31 32 In 2003 Mike Weir became the first Canadian to win a men s major championship and the first left hander to win the Masters when he defeated Len Mattiace in a playoff 13 The following year another left hander Phil Mickelson won his first major championship by making a birdie on the final hole to beat Ernie Els by a stroke 13 Mickelson also won the tournament in 2006 and 2010 In 2011 unheralded South African Charl Schwartzel birdied the final four holes to win by two strokes In 2012 Bubba Watson won the tournament on the second playoff hole over Louis Oosthuizen In 2013 Adam Scott won the Masters in a playoff over 2009 champion Angel Cabrera making him the first Australian to win the tournament 33 Watson won the 2014 Masters by three strokes over Jordan Spieth and Jonas Blixt his second Masters title in three years and the sixth for a left hander in 12 years In 2015 Spieth would become the second youngest winner behind Woods in just his second Masters equaling Woods 72 hole scoring record 34 In 2017 Sergio Garcia beat Justin Rose in a playoff for his long awaited first major title In 2019 Tiger Woods captured his fifth Masters his first win at Augusta National in 14 years and his first major title since 2008 The 2020 Masters Tournament originally scheduled to be played April 9 12 was postponed until November due to the ongoing coronavirus outbreak 35 Dustin Johnson won the tournament by five strokes Traditions editAwards edit The total prize money for the 2021 Masters Tournament was 11 500 000 with 2 070 000 going to the winner In the inaugural year of 1934 the winner Horton Smith received 1 500 out of a 5 000 purse 36 After Nicklaus s first win in 1963 he received 20 000 while after his final victory in 1986 he won 144 000 37 38 In recent years the purse has grown quickly Between 2001 and 2014 the winner s share grew by 612 000 and the purse grew by 3 400 000 39 36 40 Green jacket edit Further information Augusta National Golf Club Green jacket In addition to a cash prize the winner of the tournament is presented with a distinctive green jacket formally awarded since 1949 and informally awarded to the champions from the years prior The green sport coat is the official attire worn by members of Augusta National while on the club grounds each Masters winner becomes an honorary member of the club The recipient of the green jacket has it presented to him inside the Butler Cabin soon after the end of the tournament in a televised ceremony and the presentation is then repeated outside near the 18th green in front of the patrons Winners keep their jacket for the year after their victory then return it to the club to wear whenever they are present on the club grounds Sam Snead was the first Masters champion to be awarded the green jacket after he took his first Masters title in 1949 The green jacket is only allowed to be removed from the Augusta National grounds by the reigning champion after which it must remain at the club Exceptions to this rule include Gary Player who in his joy of winning mistakenly took his jacket home to South Africa after his 1961 victory although he has always followed the spirit of the rule and has never worn the jacket 41 Seve Ballesteros who in an interview with Peter Alliss from his home in Pedrena showed one of his two green jackets in his trophy room and Henry Picard whose jacket was removed from the club before the tradition was well established remained in his closet for a number of years and is now on display at Canterbury Golf Club in Beachwood Ohio where he was the club professional for many years 42 43 By tradition the winner of the previous year s Masters Tournament puts the jacket on the current winner at the end of the tournament In 1966 Jack Nicklaus became the first player to win in consecutive years and he donned the jacket himself 17 When Nick Faldo in 1990 and Tiger Woods in 2002 repeated as champions the chairman of Augusta National put the jacket on them In addition to the green jacket winners of the tournament receive a gold medal In 2017 a green jacket that was found at a thrift store in 1994 was sold at auction for 139 000 44 There are several awards presented to players who perform exceptional feats during the tournament The player who has the daily lowest score receives a crystal vase while players who score a hole in one or a double eagle win a large crystal bowl 45 For each eagle a player makes they receive a pair of crystal goblets Trophies edit Winners also have their names engraved on the actual silver Masters trophy The runner up receives a silver medal introduced in 1951 Beginning in 1978 a silver salver was added as an award for the runner up 4 In 1952 the Masters began presenting an award known as the Silver Cup to the lowest scoring amateur to make the cut In 1954 they began presenting an amateur silver medal to the low amateur runner up 4 The original trophy weighs over 130 pounds and sits on a four foot wide base It resides permanently at Augusta National and depicts the clubhouse of the classic course The replica which is significantly smaller stands just 6 5 inches tall and weighs 20 pounds The champion and the runner up both have their names engraved on the permanent trophy solidifying themselves in golf history 46 The Double Eagle trophy was introduced in 1967 when Bruce Devlin holed out for double eagle on number 8 He was only the second to do so and the first in 32 years following Gene Sarazen on hole 15 in 1932 The trophy is a large crystal bowl with Masters Tournament engraved around the top 47 Pre tournament events edit In 2013 Augusta National partnered with the USGA and the PGA of America to establish Drive Chip and Putt a youth golf skills competition which was first held in 2014 The event was established as part of an effort to help promote the sport of golf among youth the winners of local qualifiers in different age groups advance to the national finals which have been held at Augusta National on the Sunday immediately preceding the Masters The driving and chipping portions of the event are held on the course s practice range and the putting portion has been played on the 18th hole 48 49 50 On April 4 2018 prior to the 2018 tournament new Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley announced that the club would host the Augusta National Women s Amateur beginning in 2019 The first two rounds will be held at the Champion s Retreat club in Evans Georgia with the final two rounds hosted by Augusta National the final round will take place on the Saturday directly preceding the tournament Ridley stated that holding such an event at Augusta National would have the greatest impact on women s golf Although concerns were raised that the event would conflict with the LPGA Tour s ANA Inspiration which has invited top amateur players to compete Ridley stated that he had discussed the event with commissioner Mike Whan and stated that he agreed on the notion that any move to bolster the prominence of women s golf would be a win for the LPGA over time The winner of the Augusta National Women s Amateur is exempt from two women s golf majors 51 52 Par 3 contest edit Main article Masters Tournament Par 3 contest nbsp The 9th hole on the par 3 courseThe Par 3 contest was first introduced in 1960 and was won that year by Snead Since then it has traditionally been played on the Wednesday before the tournament starts The par 3 course was built in 1958 It is a nine hole course with a par of 27 and measures 1 060 yards 970 m in length 53 There have been 94 holes in one in the history of the contest with a record nine occurring in 2016 during which Rickie Fowler and Justin Thomas scored back to back holes in one on the 4th hole while playing in a group with reigning champion Jordan Spieth 54 55 Camilo Villegas became the first player to card two holes in one in the same round during the 2015 Par 3 Contest This achievement was duplicated by Seamus Power who scored back to back holes in one on holes 8 and 9 during the 2023 par 3 contest 56 No par 3 contest winner has also won the Masters in the same year 57 58 There have been several repeat winners including Padraig Harrington Sandy Lyle Sam Snead and Tom Watson The former two won in successive years In this event golfers may use their children as caddies which helps to create a family friendly atmosphere In 2008 the event was televised for the first time by ESPN The winner of the par 3 competition which is played the day before the tournament begins wins a crystal bowl 59 Player invitations edit As with the other majors winning the Masters gives a golfer several privileges which make his career more secure Masters champions are automatically invited to play in the other three majors the U S Open The Open Championship and the PGA Championship for the next five years except for amateur winners unless they turn pro within the five year period and earn a lifetime invitation to the Masters They also receive membership on the PGA Tour for the following five seasons and invitations to The Players Championship for five years 60 Because the tournament was established by an amateur champion Bobby Jones the Masters has a tradition of honoring amateur golf It invites winners of the most prestigious amateur tournaments in the world Also the current U S Amateur champion always plays in the same group as the defending Masters champion for the first two days of the tournament Amateurs in the field are welcome to stay in the Crow s Nest atop the Augusta National clubhouse during the tournament The Crow s Nest is 1 200 square feet 110 m2 with lodging space for five during the competition Opening tee shot edit Since 1963 the custom in most years has been to start the tournament with an honorary opening tee shot at the first hole typically by one or more legendary players For a number of years before 1963 Jock Hutchison and Fred McLeod had been the first pair to tee off both being able to play as past major championship winners However in 1963 the eligibility rules were changed and they were no longer able to compete The idea of honorary starters was introduced with Hutchison and McLeod being the first two This twosome led off every tournament from 1963 until 1973 when poor health prevented Hutchison from swinging a club McLeod continued on until his death in 1976 Byron Nelson and Gene Sarazen started in 1981 and were then joined by Sam Snead in 1984 This trio continued until 1999 when Sarazen died while Nelson stopped in 2001 Snead hit his final opening tee shot in 2002 a little over a month before he died In 2007 Arnold Palmer took over as the honorary starter Palmer also had the honor in 2008 and 2009 61 At the 2010 and 2011 Masters Tournaments Jack Nicklaus joined Palmer as an honorary co starter for the event 62 In 2012 Gary Player joined them Palmer announced in March 2016 that a lingering shoulder issue would prevent him from partaking in the 2016 tee shot 63 Palmer was still in attendance for the ceremony 64 Following Palmer s death in 2016 the 2017 ceremony featured tributes his green jacket was draped over an empty white chair while everyone in attendance wore Arnie s Army badges 65 66 In 2021 Lee Elder joined Nicklaus and Player as an honorary starter He was invited to join them as he was the first African American to take part in the Masters in 1975 Despite bad health preventing Elder from hitting a shot he was still present and received a standing ovation from the crowd Two time Masters champion Tom Watson joined Nicklaus and Player starting in 2022 67 Champions Dinner edit The Champions Dinner is held each year on the Tuesday evening preceding Thursday s first round The dinner was first held in 1952 hosted by defending champion Ben Hogan to honor the past champions of the tournament 68 At that time 15 tournaments had been played and the number of past champions was 11 Officially known as the Masters Club it includes only past winners of the Masters although selected members of the Augusta National Golf Club have been included as honorary members usually the chairman The defending champion as host selects the menu for the dinner Frequently Masters champions have served cuisine from their home regions prepared by the Masters chef Notable examples have included haggis served by Scotsman Sandy Lyle in 1989 69 and bobotie a South African dish served at the behest of 2008 champion Trevor Immelman Other examples include German Bernhard Langer s 1986 Wiener schnitzel Britain s Nick Faldo s fish and chips Canadian Mike Weir s elk and wild boar and Vijay Singh s seafood tom kah and chicken panang curry The 2011 dinner of Phil Mickelson was a Spanish themed menu in hopes that Seve Ballesteros would attend but he was too sick to attend and died weeks later 70 In 1998 Tiger Woods served cheeseburgers chicken sandwiches french fries and milkshakes Woods was the youngest winner and when asked about his food choices he responded with They said you could pick anything you want Hey it s part of being young that s what I eat 71 Fuzzy Zoeller the 1979 champion created a media storm when he suggested that Woods refrain from serving collard greens and fried chicken dishes commonly associated with African American culture Caddies edit Until 1983 all players in the Masters were required to use the services of an Augusta National Club caddie 72 73 74 who by club tradition was always an African American man 23 Club co founder Clifford Roberts is reputed to have said As long as I m alive golfers will be white and caddies will be black 75 Since 1983 six years after Roberts s death in 1977 players have been allowed the option of bringing their own caddie to the tournament The Masters requires caddies to wear a uniform consisting of a white jumpsuit a green Masters cap and white tennis shoes The surname and sometimes first initial of each player is found on the back of his caddie s uniform The defending champion always receives caddie number 1 other golfers get their caddie numbers from the order in which they register for the tournament The other majors and some PGA Tour events formerly had a similar policy concerning caddies well into the 1970s 76 77 78 the U S Open first allowed players to use their own caddies in 1976 79 80 Format editThe Masters is the first major championship of the year Since 1948 its final round has been scheduled for the second Sunday of April with several exceptions It ended on the first Sunday four times 1952 1957 1958 1959 and the 1979 and 1984 tournaments ended on April 15 the month s third Sunday 4 The first edition in 1934 was held in late March and the next ten were in early April with only the 1942 event scheduled to end on the second Sunday The 2020 event postponed by the COVID 19 pandemic was held from November 12 to 15 thus being the last major of the year Similar to the other majors the tournament consists of four rounds at 18 holes each Thursday through Sunday when there are no delays The Masters has a relatively small field of contenders when compared with other golf tournaments so the competitors play in groups of three for the first two rounds 36 holes and the field is not split to start on the 1st and 10th tees unless weather shortens the available playing time The tournament is unique in that it is the only major tournament conducted by a private club rather than a national golf organization like the PGA 6 Originally the Masters was the only tournament to use two man pairings during the first two rounds It was also the only event to re pair based on the leaderboard before Friday s round as most tournaments only do this on the weekend This practice ended in the early 2000s when the Masters switched to the more standard three man groups and the groups are now kept intact on Friday with players sharing the same playing partners in both of the first two rounds citation needed After 36 holes of play a cut off score is calculated to reduce the size of the field for the weekend rounds In 2020 to make the cut players must be in the top 50 places ties counting 81 Before 1957 there was no 36 hole cut and all of the invitees played four rounds if desired From 1957 to 1961 the top 40 scores including ties made the cut From 1962 to 2012 it was the top 44 and ties or within 10 strokes of the lead 20 From 2013 to 2019 it was the top 50 and ties or within 10 strokes of the lead 82 Following the cut an additional 36 holes are played over the final two days Should the fourth round fail to produce a winner all players tied for the lead enter a sudden death playoff Play begins on the 18th hole followed by the adjacent 10th repeating until one player remains Adopted in 1976 the sudden death playoff was originally formatted to start on the first hole 83 but was not needed for the first three years It was changed for 1979 to the inward final nine holes starting at the tenth tee where the television coverage began 84 First employed that same year the Masters first sudden death playoff won by Fuzzy Zoeller ended on the 11th green The current arrangement beginning at the 18th tee was amended for 2004 and first used the following year Through 2017 the eleven sudden death playoffs have yet to advance past the second extra hole Earlier playoffs were 18 holes on the following day except for the first in 1935 which was 36 holes Gene Sarazen defeated Craig Wood the last 18 hole playoff was in 1970 when Billy Casper defeated Gene Littler and none of the full round playoffs went to additional holes Course editThe golf course was formerly a plant nursery and each hole is named after the tree or shrub with which it has become associated 8 The course layout in 2023 nbsp Layout of Augusta National Golf ClubHole Name Yards Par Hole Name Yards Par1 Tea Olive 445 4 10 Camellia 495 42 Pink Dogwood 575 5 11 White Dogwood 520 43 Flowering Peach 350 4 12 Golden Bell 155 34 Flowering Crab Apple 240 3 13 Azalea 545 55 Magnolia 495 4 14 Chinese Fir 440 46 Juniper 180 3 15 Firethorn 550 57 Pampas 450 4 16 Redbud 170 38 Yellow Jasmine 570 5 17 Nandina 440 49 Carolina Cherry 460 4 18 Holly 465 4Out 3 765 36 In 3 780 36Source 1 85 Total 7 545 72Lengths of the course for the Masters at the start of each decade 2022 7 510 yards 6 870 m 2020 7 475 yards 6 835 m 2010 7 435 yards 6 799 m 2000 6 985 yards 6 387 m 1990 6 905 yards 6 314 m 1980 7 040 yards 6 437 m 1970 6 980 yards 6 383 m 1960 6 980 yards 6 383 m 1950 6 900 yards 6 309 m 1940 6 800 yards 6 218 m 1 Course adjustments edit As with many other courses Augusta National s championship setup was lengthened in recent years In 2001 the course measured 6 925 yards 6 332 m and was extended to 7 270 yards 6 648 m for 2002 and again in 2006 to 7 445 yards 6 808 m 520 yards 475 m longer than the 2001 course 86 87 The changes attracted many critics including the most successful players in Masters history Jack Nicklaus Arnold Palmer Gary Player and Tiger Woods Woods claimed that the shorter hitters are going to struggle Augusta National chairman Hootie Johnson was unperturbed stating We are comfortable with what we are doing with the golf course After a practice round Gary Player defended the changes saying There have been a lot of criticisms but I think unjustly so now I ve played it The guys are basically having to hit the same second shots that Jack Nicklaus had to hit in his prime 88 The first hole was shortened by 10 yards 9 m for the 2009 Masters Tournament For the 2019 Masters Tournament the fifth hole was lengthened by 40 yards 37 m from 455 yards to 495 yards with two new gaping bunkers on the left side of the fairway 89 The current length of the course is 7 475 yards 6 835 m Originally the grass on the putting greens was wide bladed Bermuda The greens lost speed especially during the late 1970s after the introduction of a healthier strain of narrow bladed Bermuda which thrived and grew thicker In 1978 the greens on the par 3 course were reconstructed with bentgrass a narrow bladed species that could be mowed shorter eliminating grain 90 After this test run the greens on the main course were replaced with bentgrass in time for the 1981 Masters The bentgrass resulted in significantly faster putting surfaces which has required a reduction in some of the contours of the greens over time 90 Just before the 1975 tournament the common beige sand in the bunkers was replaced with the now signature white feldspar It is a quartz derivative of the mining of feldspar and is shipped in from North Carolina 91 Field editThe Masters has the smallest field of the major championships with 85 100 players Unlike other majors there are no alternates or qualifying tournaments It is an invitational event with invitations largely issued on an automatic basis to players who meet published criteria The top 50 players in the Official World Golf Ranking are all invited 92 Past champions are always eligible but since 2002 the Augusta National Golf Club has discouraged them from continuing to participate at an advanced age Some will later become honorary starters 93 Invitation categories from 2024 edit See footnote 94 Note Categories 7 12 are honored only if the participants maintain their amateur status prior to the tournament Masters Tournament Champions lifetime U S Open champions five years The Open champions five years PGA champions five years Winners of the Players Championship three years Current Olympic Gold Medalist one year Current U S Amateur champion and runner up Current British Amateur champion Current Asia Pacific Amateur champion Current Latin America Amateur champion Current U S Mid Amateur champion Current NCAA Division I Men s Golf Championship individual champion The first 12 players including ties in the previous year s Masters Tournament The first 4 players including ties in the previous year s U S Open The first 4 players including ties in the previous year s Open Championship The first 4 players including ties in the previous year s PGA Championship Winners of PGA Tour events that award at least a full point allocation for the FedEx Cup from one Masters Tournament to the next Those qualifying and eligible for the previous year s season ending Tour Championship top 30 in FedEx Cup prior to tournament The 50 leaders on the final Official World Golf Ranking for the previous calendar year The 50 leaders on the Official World Golf Ranking published during the week prior to the current Masters TournamentMost of the top current players will meet the criteria of multiple categories for invitation The Masters Committee at its discretion can also invite any golfer not otherwise qualified although in practice these invitations are mostly reserved for international players 95 Changes since 2014 edit Changes for the 2014 tournament include invitations now being awarded to the autumn events in the PGA Tour which now begin the wraparound season tightening of qualifications top 12 plus ties from the Masters top 4 from the U S Open Open Championship and PGA Championship and the top 30 on the PGA Tour now referencing the season ending points before the Tour Championship not the former annual money list 82 The 2015 Masters added the winner of the newly established Latin America Amateur Championship which effectively replaced the exemption for the U S Amateur Public Links which ended after the 2014 tournament The final Public Links champion played in the 2015 Masters 96 Prior to the start of the 2023 Masters Tournament several changes to the criteria were announced to come into effect from 2024 An additional criterion was added for amateur golfers for the reigning individual champion of the NCAA Division I Men s Golf Championship 97 and PGA Tour criteria were modified to account for scheduling changes previously only regular season and playoff events were included and to clarify that players must remain eligible for the Tour Championship 98 99 Most wins editThe first winner of the Masters Tournament was Horton Smith in 1934 and he repeated in 1936 The player with the most Masters victories is Jack Nicklaus who won six times between 1963 and 1986 Tiger Woods has five wins followed by Arnold Palmer with four and Jimmy Demaret Gary Player Sam Snead Nick Faldo and Phil Mickelson have three titles to their name Player was the tournament s first overseas winner with his first victory in 1961 Two time champions include Byron Nelson Ben Hogan Tom Watson Seve Ballesteros Bernhard Langer Ben Crenshaw Jose Maria Olazabal and Bubba Watson 100 Winners editMain article List of Masters Tournament champions Year Winner Score To par Margin ofvictory Runner s up Winner sshare 2023 nbsp Jon Rahm 276 12 4 strokes nbsp Brooks Koepka nbsp Phil Mickelson 3 240 0002022 nbsp Scottie Scheffler 278 10 3 strokes nbsp Rory McIlroy 2 700 0002021 nbsp Hideki Matsuyama 278 10 1 stroke nbsp Will Zalatoris 2 070 0002020 nbsp Dustin Johnson 268 20 5 strokes nbsp Im Sung jae nbsp Cameron Smith 2 070 0002019 nbsp Tiger Woods 5 275 13 1 stroke nbsp Dustin Johnson nbsp Brooks Koepka nbsp Xander Schauffele 2 070 0002018 nbsp Patrick Reed 273 15 1 stroke nbsp Rickie Fowler 1 980 0002017 nbsp Sergio Garcia 279 9 Playoff nbsp Justin Rose 1 980 0002016 nbsp Danny Willett 283 5 3 strokes nbsp Jordan Spieth nbsp Lee Westwood 1 800 0002015 nbsp Jordan Spieth 270 18 4 strokes nbsp Phil Mickelson nbsp Justin Rose 1 800 0002014 nbsp Bubba Watson 2 280 8 3 strokes nbsp Jonas Blixt nbsp Jordan Spieth 1 620 0002013 nbsp Adam Scott 279 9 Playoff nbsp Angel Cabrera 1 440 0002012 nbsp Bubba Watson 278 10 Playoff nbsp Louis Oosthuizen 1 440 0002011 nbsp Charl Schwartzel 274 14 2 strokes nbsp Jason Day nbsp Adam Scott 1 440 0002010 nbsp Phil Mickelson 3 272 16 3 strokes nbsp Lee Westwood 1 350 0002009 nbsp Angel Cabrera 276 12 Playoff nbsp Kenny Perry nbsp Chad Campbell 1 350 0002008 nbsp Trevor Immelman 280 8 3 strokes nbsp Tiger Woods 1 350 0002007 nbsp Zach Johnson 289 1 2 strokes nbsp Retief Goosen nbsp Rory Sabbatini nbsp Tiger Woods 1 305 0002006 nbsp Phil Mickelson 2 281 7 2 strokes nbsp Tim Clark 1 260 0002005 nbsp Tiger Woods 4 276 12 Playoff nbsp Chris DiMarco 1 260 0002004 nbsp Phil Mickelson 279 9 1 stroke nbsp Ernie Els 1 117 0002003 nbsp Mike Weir 281 7 Playoff nbsp Len Mattiace 1 080 0002002 nbsp Tiger Woods 3 276 12 3 strokes nbsp Retief Goosen 1 008 0002001 nbsp Tiger Woods 2 272 16 2 strokes nbsp David Duval 1 008 0002000 nbsp Vijay Singh 278 10 3 strokes nbsp Ernie Els 828 0001999 nbsp Jose Maria Olazabal 2 280 8 2 strokes nbsp Davis Love III 720 0001998 nbsp Mark O Meara 279 9 1 stroke nbsp Fred Couples nbsp David Duval 576 0001997 nbsp Tiger Woods 270 18 12 strokes nbsp Tom Kite 486 0001996 nbsp Nick Faldo 3 276 12 5 strokes nbsp Greg Norman 450 0001995 nbsp Ben Crenshaw 2 274 14 1 stroke nbsp Davis Love III 396 0001994 nbsp Jose Maria Olazabal 279 9 2 strokes nbsp Tom Lehman 360 0001993 nbsp Bernhard Langer 2 277 11 4 strokes nbsp Chip Beck 306 0001992 nbsp Fred Couples 275 13 2 strokes nbsp Raymond Floyd 270 0001991 nbsp Ian Woosnam 277 11 1 stroke nbsp Jose Maria Olazabal 243 0001990 nbsp Nick Faldo 2 278 10 Playoff nbsp Raymond Floyd 225 0001989 nbsp Nick Faldo 283 5 Playoff nbsp Scott Hoch 200 0001988 nbsp Sandy Lyle 281 7 1 stroke nbsp Mark Calcavecchia 183 8001987 nbsp Larry Mize 285 3 Playoff nbsp Seve Ballesteros nbsp Greg Norman 162 0001986 nbsp Jack Nicklaus 6 279 9 1 stroke nbsp Tom Kite nbsp Greg Norman 144 0001985 nbsp Bernhard Langer 282 6 2 strokes nbsp Seve Ballesteros nbsp Raymond Floyd nbsp Curtis Strange 126 0001984 nbsp Ben Crenshaw 277 11 2 strokes nbsp Tom Watson 108 0001983 nbsp Seve Ballesteros 2 280 8 4 strokes nbsp Ben Crenshaw nbsp Tom Kite 90 0001982 nbsp Craig Stadler 284 4 Playoff nbsp Dan Pohl 64 0001981 nbsp Tom Watson 2 280 8 2 strokes nbsp Johnny Miller nbsp Jack Nicklaus 60 0001980 nbsp Seve Ballesteros 275 13 4 strokes nbsp Gibby Gilbert nbsp Jack Newton 55 0001979 nbsp Fuzzy Zoeller 280 8 Playoff nbsp Ed Sneed nbsp Tom Watson 50 0001978 nbsp Gary Player 3 277 11 1 stroke nbsp Rod Funseth nbsp Hubert Green nbsp Tom Watson 45 0001977 nbsp Tom Watson 276 12 2 strokes nbsp Jack Nicklaus 40 0001976 nbsp Raymond Floyd 271 17 8 strokes nbsp Ben Crenshaw 40 0001975 nbsp Jack Nicklaus 5 276 12 1 stroke nbsp Johnny Miller nbsp Tom Weiskopf 40 0001974 nbsp Gary Player 2 278 10 2 strokes nbsp Dave Stockton nbsp Tom Weiskopf 35 0001973 nbsp Tommy Aaron 283 5 1 stroke nbsp J C Snead 30 0001972 nbsp Jack Nicklaus 4 286 2 3 strokes nbsp Bruce Crampton nbsp Bobby Mitchell nbsp Tom Weiskopf 25 0001971 nbsp Charles Coody 279 9 2 strokes nbsp Johnny Miller nbsp Jack Nicklaus 25 0001970 nbsp Billy Casper 279 9 Playoff nbsp Gene Littler 25 0001969 nbsp George Archer 281 7 1 stroke nbsp Billy Casper nbsp George Knudson nbsp Tom Weiskopf 20 0001968 nbsp Bob Goalby 277 11 1 stroke nbsp Roberto De Vicenzo 20 0001967 nbsp Gay Brewer 280 8 1 stroke nbsp Bobby Nichols 20 0001966 nbsp Jack Nicklaus 3 288 E Playoff nbsp Tommy Jacobs 2nd nbsp Gay Brewer 3rd 20 0001965 nbsp Jack Nicklaus 2 271 17 9 strokes nbsp Arnold Palmer nbsp Gary Player 20 0001964 nbsp Arnold Palmer 4 276 12 6 strokes nbsp Dave Marr nbsp Jack Nicklaus 20 0001963 nbsp Jack Nicklaus 286 2 1 stroke nbsp Tony Lema 20 0001962 nbsp Arnold Palmer 3 280 8 Playoff nbsp Gary Player 2nd nbsp Dow Finsterwald 3rd 20 0001961 nbsp Gary Player 280 8 1 stroke nbsp Charles Coe a nbsp Arnold Palmer 20 0001960 nbsp Arnold Palmer 2 282 6 1 stroke nbsp Ken Venturi 17 5001959 nbsp Art Wall Jr 284 4 1 stroke nbsp Cary Middlecoff 15 0001958 nbsp Arnold Palmer 284 4 1 stroke nbsp Doug Ford nbsp Fred Hawkins 11 2501957 nbsp Doug Ford 283 5 3 strokes nbsp Sam Snead 8 7501956 nbsp Jack Burke Jr 289 1 1 stroke nbsp Ken Venturi a 6 0001955 nbsp Cary Middlecoff 279 9 7 strokes nbsp Ben Hogan 5 0001954 nbsp Sam Snead 3 289 1 Playoff nbsp Ben Hogan 5 0001953 nbsp Ben Hogan 2 274 14 5 strokes nbsp Ed Oliver 4 0001952 nbsp Sam Snead 2 286 2 4 strokes nbsp Jack Burke Jr 4 0001951 nbsp Ben Hogan 280 8 2 strokes nbsp Skee Riegel 3 0001950 nbsp Jimmy Demaret 3 283 5 2 strokes nbsp Jim Ferrier 2 4001949 nbsp Sam Snead 282 6 3 strokes nbsp Johnny Bulla nbsp Lloyd Mangrum 2 7501948 nbsp Claude Harmon 279 9 5 strokes nbsp Cary Middlecoff 2 5001947 nbsp Jimmy Demaret 2 281 7 2 strokes nbsp Byron Nelson nbsp Frank Stranahan a 2 5001946 nbsp Herman Keiser 282 6 1 stroke nbsp Ben Hogan 2 5001943 45 Cancelled due to World War II1942 nbsp Byron Nelson 2 280 8 Playoff nbsp Ben Hogan 1 5001941 nbsp Craig Wood 280 8 3 strokes nbsp Byron Nelson 1 5001940 nbsp Jimmy Demaret 280 8 4 strokes nbsp Lloyd Mangrum 1 5001939 nbsp Ralph Guldahl 279 9 1 stroke nbsp Sam Snead 1 5001938 nbsp Henry Picard 285 3 2 strokes nbsp Harry Cooper nbsp Ralph Guldahl 1 5001937 nbsp Byron Nelson 283 5 2 strokes nbsp Ralph Guldahl 1 5001936 nbsp Horton Smith 2 285 3 1 stroke nbsp Harry Cooper 1 5001935 nbsp Gene Sarazen 282 6 Playoff nbsp Craig Wood 1 5001934 nbsp Horton Smith 284 4 2 strokes nbsp Craig Wood 1 500In the Runner s up column the names are sorted alphabetically based on the last name of that year s runner s up The sudden death format was adopted in 1976 first used in 1979 and revised in 2004 101 None of the 11 sudden death playoffs has advanced past the second hole four were decided at the first hole seven at the second Playoffs prior to 1976 were full 18 hole rounds except for 1935 which was 36 holes None of the 6 full round playoffs were tied at the end of the round the closest margin was one stroke in 1942 and 1954 The 1962 playoff included three players Arnold Palmer 68 Gary Player 71 and Dow Finsterwald 77 The 1966 playoff included three players Jack Nicklaus 70 Tommy Jacobs 72 and Gay Brewer 78 Low amateurs editIn 1952 the Masters began presenting an award known as the Silver Cup to the lowest scoring amateur to make the cut In 1954 they began presenting an amateur silver medal to the low amateur runner up There have been seven players to win low amateur and then go on to win the Masters as a professional These players are Cary Middlecoff Jack Nicklaus Ben Crenshaw Phil Mickelson Tiger Woods Sergio Garcia and Hideki Matsuyama Year Champion To par Place1934 nbsp Charlie Yates 9 T211935 nbsp Lawson Little E 61936 nbsp Johnny Dawson 6 T91937 nbsp Charlie Yates 2 13 T261938 nbsp Tommy Suffern Tailer 10 T181939 nbsp Chick Harbert nbsp Charlie Yates 3 8 T181940 nbsp Charlie Yates 4 5 T171941 nbsp Dick Chapman 9 T191942 nbsp Bud Ward nbsp Charlie Yates 5 16 T281943 1945 Cancelled due to World War II1946 nbsp Cary Middlecoff 5 T121947 nbsp Frank Stranahan 5 T21948 nbsp Skee Riegel 5 T131949 nbsp Charles Coe nbsp Johnny Dawson 2 7 T161950 nbsp Frank Stranahan 2 9 T141951 nbsp Charles Coe 2 5 T121952 nbsp Chuck Kocsis 9 T141953 nbsp Frank Stranahan 3 nbsp Harvie Ward 3 T141954 nbsp Billy Joe Patton 2 31955 nbsp Harvie Ward 2 2 T81956 nbsp Ken Venturi 2 21957 nbsp Harvie Ward 3 E 41958 nbsp Billy Joe Patton 2 E 81959 nbsp Charles Coe 3 E 61960 nbsp Jack Nicklaus nbsp Billy Joe Patton 3 5 T131961 nbsp Charles Coe 4 7 T21962 nbsp Charles Coe 5 E T91963 nbsp Labron Harris Jr 10 T321964 nbsp Deane Beman nbsp Gary Cowan E T251965 nbsp Downing Gray 6 T311966 nbsp Jimmy Grant 11 T281967 nbsp Downing Gray 2 9 T361968 nbsp Vinny Giles E T221969 nbsp Bruce Fleisher 12 441970 nbsp Charles Coe 6 4 T231971 nbsp Steve Melnyk 4 T241972 nbsp Ben Crenshaw 7 T191973 nbsp Ben Crenshaw 2 7 T241974 None made the cut1975 nbsp George Burns 4 T301976 nbsp Curtis Strange 3 T151977 nbsp Bill Sander 11 491978 nbsp Lindy Miller 2 T161979 nbsp Bobby Clampett 2 T231980 nbsp Jay Sigel 1 T261981 nbsp Jay Sigel 2 6 T351982 nbsp Jodie Mudd 6 T201983 nbsp Jim Hallet 9 T401984 nbsp Rick Fehr E T251985 nbsp Sam Randolph 2 T181986 nbsp Sam Randolph 2 5 T361987 nbsp Bob Lewis 21 541988 nbsp Jay Sigel 3 12 T391989 None made the cut1990 nbsp Chris Patton 9 T391991 nbsp Phil Mickelson 2 T461992 nbsp Manny Zerman 6 T591993 None made the cut1994 nbsp John Harris 17 T501995 nbsp Tiger Woods 5 T411996 None made the cut1997 None made the cut1998 nbsp Matt Kuchar E T211999 nbsp Sergio Garcia 7 T382000 nbsp David Gossett 15 T542001 None made the cut2002 None made the cut2003 nbsp Ricky Barnes 3 212004 nbsp Casey Wittenberg E T132005 nbsp Ryan Moore 1 T132006 None made the cut2007 None made the cut2008 None made the cut2009 None made the cut2010 nbsp Matteo Manassero 4 T362011 nbsp Hideki Matsuyama 1 T272012 nbsp Patrick Cantlay 7 T472013 nbsp Guan Tianlang 12 582014 nbsp Oliver Goss 10 492015 None made the cut2016 nbsp Bryson DeChambeau 5 T212017 nbsp Stewart Hagestad 6 T362018 nbsp Doug Ghim 8 T502019 nbsp Viktor Hovland 3 T322020 nbsp Andy Ogletree 2 T342021 None made the cut2022 None made the cut2023 nbsp Sam Bennett 2 T16Records editJack Nicklaus has won the most Masters six and was 46 years 82 days old when he won in 1986 making him the oldest winner of the Masters 24 Nicklaus is the record holder for the most top tens with 22 and the most cuts made with 37 20 102 The youngest winner of the Masters is Tiger Woods who was 21 years 104 days old when he won in 1997 In that year Woods also broke the records for the widest winning margin 12 strokes and the lowest winning score with 270 18 Jordan Spieth tied his score record in 2015 and Dustin Johnson broke it in 2020 103 In 2013 Guan Tianlang became the youngest player ever to compete in the Masters at age 14 years 168 days on the opening day of the tournament 104 the following day he became the youngest ever to make the cut at the Masters or any men s major championship 105 Gary Player holds the record for most appearances with 52 Player also holds the record for the number of consecutive cuts made with 23 between 1959 and 1982 Player did not compete in 1973 as he was recovering from recent surgery He shares this record with Fred Couples who made his consecutive cuts between 1983 and 2007 not competing in 1987 and 1994 20 and Tiger Woods who matched the feat between 1997 and 2023 not competing in 2014 2016 2017 and 2021 106 Also in 2023 Couples became the oldest player to make the cut doing so at age 63 years 186 days 107 Nick Price and Greg Norman share the course record of 63 with their rounds coming in 1986 and 1996 respectively The highest winning score of 289 1 has occurred three times Sam Snead in 1954 Jack Burke Jr in 1956 and Zach Johnson in 2007 Anthony Kim holds the record for most birdies in a round with 11 in 2009 during his second round 103 There have been only four double eagles carded in the history of the Masters the latest was by a contender in the fourth round in 2012 In the penultimate pairing with eventual champion Bubba Watson Louis Oosthuizen s 260 yard 238 m downhill 4 iron from the fairway made the left side of the green at the par 5 second hole called Pink Dogwood rolled downhill and in 108 The other two rare occurrences of this feat after Sarazen s double eagle on the fabled course s Fire Thorn hole in 1935 Bruce Devlin made double eagle from 248 yards 227 m out with a 4 wood at the eighth hole Yellow Jasmine in the first round in 1967 while Jeff Maggert hit a 3 iron 222 yards 203 m at the 13th hole Azalea in the fourth round in 1994 109 Three players share the record for most runner up finishes with four Ben Hogan 1942 1946 1954 1955 Tom Weiskopf 1969 1972 1974 1975 and Jack Nicklaus 1964 1971 1977 1981 Nicklaus and Tiger Woods are the only golfers to have won the Masters in three separate decades Broadcasting editSee also List of Masters Tournament broadcasters United States television edit Network Years of broadcastCBS 1956 presentUSA Network 1982 2007ESPN 2008 presentCBS has televised the Masters in the United States every year since 1956 110 when it used six cameras and covered only the final four holes Tournament coverage of the first eight holes did not begin until 1993 because of resistance from the tournament organizers but by 2006 more than 50 cameras were used Chairman Jack Stephens felt that the back nine was always more compelling increased coverage would increase the need for sponsorship spending and that broadcasting the front nine of the course on television would cut down on attendance and television viewership for the tournament 110 111 112 USA Network added first and second round coverage in 1982 113 In 2008 ESPN replaced USA as broadcaster of early round coverage These broadcasts use the CBS Sports production staff and commentators but with ESPN personality Scott Van Pelt succeeding Mike Tirico who replaced Bill Macatee s similar role under USA Network as studio host as well as Curtis Strange as studio analyst 114 113 115 CBS carries two 15 minute highlight programs in late night covering the first and second rounds which airs after their affiliates late night local newscasts In 2005 CBS broadcast the tournament with high definition fixed and handheld wired cameras as well as standard definition wireless handheld cameras In 2006 a webstream called Amen Corner Live began providing coverage of all players passing through holes 11 12 and 13 through all four rounds 116 This was the first full tournament multi hole webcast from a major championship In 2007 CBS added Masters Extra an extra hour of full field bonus coverage daily on the internet preceding the television broadcasts In 2008 CBS added full coverage of holes 15 and 16 live on the web In 2011 Masters Extra was dropped after officials gave ESPN an extra hour each day on Thursday and Friday In 2016 the Amen Corner feed was broadcast in 4K ultra high definition exclusively on DirecTV as one of the first live U S sports telecasts in the format 117 118 A second channel of 4K coverage covering holes 15 and 16 was added in 2017 119 and this coverage was produced with high dynamic range HDR color in 2018 120 While Augusta National Golf Club has consistently chosen CBS as its U S broadcast partner it has done so in successive one year contracts 121 Former CBS Sports president Neal Pilson stated that their relationship had gotten to the point where the contracts could be negotiated in just hours 110 Due to the lack of long term contractual security as well as the club s limited dependence on broadcast rights fees owing to its affluent membership it is widely held that CBS allows Augusta National greater control over the content of the broadcast or at least performs some form of self censorship in order to maintain future rights The club however has insisted it does not make any demands with respect to the content of the broadcast 122 123 Despite this announcers who have been deemed not to have acted with the decorum expected by the club have been removed notably Jack Whitaker and Gary McCord 122 and there also tends to be a lack of discussion of any controversy involving Augusta National such as the 2003 Martha Burk protests 123 The coverage itself carries a more formal style than other golf telecasts announcers refer to the gallery as patrons rather than as spectators or fans Gallery itself is also used 124 The club also disallows promotions for other network programs or other forms of sponsored features 124 Significant restrictions have been placed on the tournament s broadcast hours compared to other major championships Only in the 21st century did the tournament allow CBS to air 18 hole coverage of the leaders a standard at the other three majors 122 Since 1982 CBS has used Augusta by Dave Loggins as the event telecast s distinctive theme music Loggins originally came up with the song during his first trip to the Augusta course in 1981 125 The club mandates minimal commercial interruption currently limited to four minutes per hour as opposed to the usual 12 or more this is subsidized by selling exclusive sponsorship packages to two or three companies currently these global sponsors are AT amp T IBM and Mercedes Benz 124 AT amp T then SBC and IBM have sponsored the tournament since 2005 joined at first by ExxonMobil which in 2014 was replaced as a global sponsor by Mercedes Benz 126 In 2002 in the wake of calls to boycott tournament sponsors over the Martha Burk controversy club chairman Hootie Johnson suspended all television sponsorship of the 2003 tournament He argued that it was unfair to have the Masters sponsors become involved with the controversy by means of association with the tournament as their sponsorship is of the Masters and not Augusta National itself CBS agreed to split production costs for the tournament with the club to make up for the lack of sponsorship After the arrangement continued into 2004 the tournament reinstated sponsorships for 2005 with the new partners of ExxonMobil IBM and SBC 127 128 The club also sells separate sponsorship packages which do not provide rights to air commercials on the U S telecasts to two international partners in 2014 those companies were Rolex and UPS the latter of which replaced Mercedes Benz upon that company s elevation to global sponsor status 126 Radio coverage edit Westwood One previously Dial Global and CBS Radio has provided live radio play by play coverage in the United States since 1956 This coverage can also be heard on the official Masters website The network provides short two or three minute updates throughout the tournament as well as longer three and four hour segments towards the end of the day 129 International television edit The first UK live coverage of the event was in 1984 when Channel 4 aired coverage of the closing moments of the 3rd and 4th rounds Channel 4 repeated this level of coverage in 1985 The rights then transferred to the BBC which also initially only provided coverage of the 3rd and 4th rounds With the 2007 launch of BBC HD UK viewers were able to watch the championship in that format BBC Sport held the exclusive TV and radio rights through to 2010 130 The BBC s coverage airs without commercials because it is financed by a licence fee From the 2011 Masters Sky Sports began broadcasting all four days as well as the par 3 contest in HD and for the first time ever in 3D The BBC continued to air live coverage of the weekend rounds in parallel with Sky until 2019 when it was announced that Sky will hold exclusive rights to live coverage of all four rounds beginning 2020 The BBC will only hold rights to delayed highlights With its loss of live rights to the Open Championship to Sky in 2016 it marks the first time since 1955 that the BBC no longer holds any rights to live professional golf 131 132 133 although the Corporation continues to provide live radio commentary on Radio Five Live In Ireland Setanta Ireland previously showed all four rounds and now since 2017 Eir Sport broadcast all four rounds live having previously broadcast the opening two rounds with RTE broadcasting the weekend coverage 134 After Eir Sport s closure in 2021 Sky Sports will broadcast the event exclusively in Ireland for the first time like in the UK 135 In Canada broadcast rights to the Masters are held by Bell Media with coverage divided between TSN cable which carries live simulcasts and primetime encores of CBS and ESPN coverage for all four rounds CTV broadcast which simulcasts CBS s coverage of the weekend rounds and RDS which carries French language coverage Prior to 2013 Canadian broadcast rights were held by a marketing company Graham Sanborn Media 136 which in turn bought time on the Global Television Network TSN and RDS except for 2012 when French language coverage aired on TVA and TVA Sports to air the broadcasts also selling all of the advertising for the Canadian broadcasts This was an unusual arrangement in Canadian sports broadcasting as in most cases broadcasters acquire their rights directly from the event organizers or through partnerships with international rightsholders such as ESPN International ESPN owns a minority stake in TSN In 2013 Global and TSN began selling advertising directly and co produced supplemental programs covering the tournament while still carrying U S coverage for the tournament itself 137 138 On December 15 2015 TSN parent company Bell Media announced that it had acquired exclusive Canadian rights to the tournament beginning 2016 under a multi year deal Broadcast television coverage moved to co owned broadcast network CTV while TSN uses its expanded five channel service to carry supplemental feeds including the Amen Corner feed and early coverage of each round that were previously exclusive to digital platforms 139 140 In France the Masters is broadcast live on Canal and Canal Sport In 53 countries including much of Latin America broadcast rights for the entire tournament are held by the ESPN International networks 141 Ticketing editAlthough tickets more commonly referred to as badges for the Masters are not expensive at face value they are very difficult to come by Masters tickets are considered the second hardest to obtain in sports trailing only the Super Bowl 142 Even the practice rounds can be difficult to gain entrance into Practice rounds and daily tournament tickets are sold in advance through a selection process only after receipt of an online application All tickets are sold in advance and there are no tickets sold at the gates 143 Additionally Georgia state law prohibits tickets from being bought sold or handed off within a 2 700 foot boundary around the Augusta National Golf Club 144 145 Open applications for practice rounds and individual daily tournament tickets have to be made nearly a year in advance and the successful applicants are chosen by random selection Series badges for the actual tournament that is a badge valid for all four tournament rounds are made available and sold only to individuals of a patrons list which is closed A waiting list for the patrons list was opened in 1972 and closed in 1978 It was reopened in 2000 and subsequently closed once again 146 147 Individuals who are fortunate enough to be on the patron list are given the recurring opportunity to purchase series badges each year for life According to Augusta National after the death of a badge holder the series badge account is transferable only to a surviving spouse and cannot be transferred to other family members 146 148 149 In 2008 as part of their Junior Pass Program the Masters also began allowing children between the ages of 8 and 16 to enter on tournament days for free if they are accompanied by the patron who is the original applicant of his or her series badge The Junior Pass Program does not apply to individual daily tournament tickets only to series badge patrons 150 145 The difficulty in acquiring Masters badges has made the tournament one of the largest events on the secondary resale ticket market 151 Since a majority of the badges for the Masters are made available to the same group of patrons each year these perennial ticket holders sometimes decide to sell their badges through large ticket marketplaces and or third party ticket brokers Although they do so at their own detriment as this action is strictly prohibited in the ticket purchase agreement and ticket policy 152 Notes edit Notable exception includes the 2020 Masters Tournament which was played in November due to the suspension of the 2019 20 PGA Tour from March to mid June due to the COVID 19 pandemic Equals record for all major championships Further reading editBantock Jack April 5 2023 For nearly 50 years only Black men caddied The Masters One day they all but vanished CNN References edit a b c d 2014 Masters Preview Sports Network April 9 2014 Archived from the original on April 15 2014 Retrieved April 14 2014 Bacon Shane July 16 2012 British Open or Open Championship The debate stops now CBS Sports Archived from the original on November 7 2020 Retrieved July 18 2017 Ryan Shane July 14 2015 Americans It s okay to call this major The British Open and don t let anyone tell you otherwise Golf Digest Archived from the original on November 11 2020 Retrieved July 18 2017 a b c d e f g Masters Milestones www masters org Archived from the original on April 16 2019 Retrieved February 9 2016 Kelley Brent Do Masters Champions Get to Keep the Green Jacket About com Archived from the original on December 5 2016 Retrieved April 10 2012 a b Owen David 1999 The Making of the Masters Clifford Roberts Augusta National and Golf s Most Prestigious Tournament Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 684 85729 9 Sampson Curt 1999 The Masters Golf Money and Power in Augusta Georgia New York City Villard Books p 22 ISBN 0375753370 a b Boyette John April 3 2006 Augusta National s natural beauty was born in nursery Augusta Chronicle Archived from the original on August 21 2014 Retrieved August 27 2012 History of the Club www masters org Archived from the original on January 19 2008 Retrieved January 22 2008 Although front and back are the terms more commonly used for the Masters they are called the first and second nines The Augusta National Golf Club February 8 2012 Archived from the original on March 27 2011 Retrieved April 8 2012 Boyette John April 10 2002 With 1 shot Sarazen gave Masters fame The Augusta Chronicle Archived from the original on April 7 2008 Retrieved April 13 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Past Winners amp Results Archived from the original on October 30 2020 Retrieved February 9 2016 The Macon Telegraph 17 Mar 1940 page 9 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