Masters Par 3 Contest: A tradition, a blessing — and a curse?

Nobody has ever won the Par 3 Contest and the Masters in the same week. That will remain true for at least another year due to COVID-19.

Masters patrons have long called it a curse, but few have experienced it.

This marks the 60th anniversary of the inaugural Par 3 Contest. Nobody has ever won Wednesday’s event and the Masters Tournament in the same week. And that will remain true for at least another year, with the pandemic prompting the Par 3’s cancellation in 2020.

Raymond Floyd came closest in 1990, when the 47-year-old was in line to become the oldest Masters champion. Floyd recorded his only Par 3 victory and seemed on course to snap the curse Sunday afternoon.

Following a birdie on No. 12, Floyd was four strokes clear of Nick Faldo with six holes to play. More importantly, two of those holes were par 5s. When Floyd lapped the field in 1976, he shot a then-record 14-under par on Augusta National’s par 5s and, with Nos. 13 and 15 looming, he was 10-under on par 5s in 1990.

However, an errant drive on No. 13 forced Floyd to lay up and settle for par. Playing a group ahead, Faldo went for the green in two shots and birdied. Another off-target tee shot by Floyd on No. 15 led to the same result as the 13th. Faldo cleared the water and made birdie. Floyd’s two pars opened the door for Faldo, who stole the tournament on the second playoff hole.

Sports Illustrated’s Rick Reilly wrote of Floyd, “There is a useful lesson in all this. Forget the par-3 tournament. Win the par-5 tournament.”

Three years later, the par-5 tournament was again an afterthought. Chip Beck, a University of Georgia graduate, won the warm-up act and was three strokes behind Bernhard Langer entering Sunday’s 15th hole. Following a center-cut drive, Beck laid up, and Langer coasted to his second Masters crown. Beck’s decision cemented his second-place finish, joining Floyd as the only Wednesday winners and Sunday runner-ups.

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Walker races to record

“A curse?” said Padraig Harrington, the contest’s only three-time champion. “That’s absolutely ridiculous.”

Harrington’s had the most opportunities to snap the curse, ridiculous as it may be, but no hand was hotter entering a Masters Tournament Thursday than Jimmy Walker in 2016. That year, the Texan became the first Par 3 participant to shoot in the teens, carding an 8-under-par 19.

Walker broke the previous mark of 20 shot by Art Wall Jr. (1965) and Gay Brewer (1973). More impressively, Wall and Brewer accomplished their feat prior to the course being altered in 1987.

The original Par 3 course was built in 1958 when Augusta National co-founder Clifford Roberts enlisted Savannah’s George Cobb as its principal architect. Cobb’s design called for the playing of the nine holes over DeSoto Springs Pond. Three decades later, the club turned to Tom Fazio to add two holes (Nos. 8 and 9) over Ike’s Pond, and Cobb’s opening two holes transitioned to spectator seating. Prior to Walker, the course record for the remodeled trek was 21.

Walker started hot in the 2016 contest, placing his opening tee shot to 4.9 inches and earned a prize for closest to the pin. On No. 2, Walker made a hole-in-one. More crystal. With his wife, Erin, and two sons caddying, Walker never teed up a shot.

“I just dropped it and hit,” he said.

Walker added birdies on Nos. 3 and 4, but his most memorable putt came on No. 5. After missing a birdie attempt, Walker left his ball on the green, when suddenly his son, McLain, darted to pick it up. Walker intercepted his son, calling it, “The only time all day I got serious.”

Walker capped the round with a 35-foot birdie on No. 8 to seal the lowest round in Par 3 history.

“It may never be tied. It may never be broken,” Walker said. “I was out of my mind those nine holes.”

Walker placed 29th in the 2016 Masters, as the curse lived on.

“I don’t believe in curses,” Walker said. “It just hasn’t happened yet.”

Prize with a purpose

After the 1960 competition, The Augusta Chronicle praised winner Sam Snead, boasting the headline, “Slammer’s 23 wins 9-hole par 3 event.” A silver service was awarded to Snead, as, like today, prizes were given for holes-in-one and shots closest to the pin.

A year later, Deane Beman won on Augusta’s short course, making him the first of three amateurs to win the event. Labron Harris Jr. (1964) and Jay Haas (1976) also prevailed as nonprofessionals.

“After I won, (PGA Tour Commissioner) Joe Dey mentioned to Cliff Roberts that there may be a problem because the sterling silver tea set was extremely valuable,” Beman said. “Joe Dey said it could affect my amateur status because it was not a trophy of symbolic value.”

After speaking with Dey, Roberts told Beman to leave behind the prize and that it would be mailed to him. A month later Beman received the gift, which had an engraving to honor his accomplishment.

“Mr. Roberts called and said, ‘Deane, it’s of symbolic value now!’” said Beman, laughing at the memory.

Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player during the par-3 contest at the 2013 Masters.

Everyone’s in on it

More than anything, though, the event has shifted from a competition to family affair. Donning white caddie jumpsuits, children of all ages have become the staple. Many attempt putts. Some high-five patrons along the ropes. Others have foot races down the hill of the No. 1 tee box.

There have been 100 holes-in-one, but arguably the most iconic came from a caddie. In 2018, GT Nicklaus, one of Jack Nicklaus’s 22 grandchildren, left his mark on Augusta National. Entering the 2018 Par 3 Contest, the 15-year-old had never carded a hole-in-one. He had also never caddied for his granddad at the Masters.

From the No. 9 tee box, GT sailed Jack’s 47-degree wedge over Ike’s Pond and found the bottom of the cup. The elder Nicklaus called GT’s shot, “My favorite Masters memory.”

“If I ever feel like I’m having a bad day, I take myself back to No. 9 tee box and remind myself of that moment,” GT said. “It was something that I’ll never forget. It’s a once-in-a-lifetime kind of thing.”

In 2018, Paul Casey let his 4-year-old son Lex caddie for the first time. Casey said his son hadn’t been bitten by the golf bug yet, admitting, “He prefers making pyramids with golf balls.”

“What I love most is there isn’t a stigma behind what the kids do out there,” Casey said. “The members get that. The tournament committee gets that.”

In 12 previous appearances, Casey has never won the Par 3 Contest. He has never earned a closest to the pin honor. He’s never recorded a hole-in-one. But there is one thing Casey believes in: curses.

“It doesn’t stop me from playing in it, but will it stop me from winning it? I don’t know,” Casey said. “If I ever get that final putt on nine I might have to think twice.”

Casey paused briefly to collect his thoughts.

“No, I’d make it. You want to be the one that breaks the curse.”

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Don’t overlook the twentysomethings like Bryson DeChambeau when making a Masters pick

Looking to make a Masters pick? Don’t overlook these three youngsters.

The perennial sports emblem of springtime, the Masters may feel strange squished into the middle of football season. Amen Corner and leftover Halloween candy might not seem to go together, but in 2020, anything goes.

This is the first time one of the four men’s major championships has been held in November since 1936, when Denny Shute won the PGA Championship at Pinehurst. More than 80 years later, the Masters will cap off an abridged men’s major championship season seven months after its traditional start date.

Tiger Woods will play a major as defending champion for the first time since the 2009 U.S. Open. While it seems like a lifetime ago that Woods embraced his family celebrating victory, he’s the man planning the menu for the Champions Dinner for the first time since 2006. Woods was exceptional with his irons last year, leading the field in strokes gained approach the green for the week. His 58 greens in regulation were the most by a Masters winner since Woods himself hit 60 in 2001.

This will mark Rory McIlroy’s sixth attempt at completing the career Grand Slam at Augusta National. While time is still firmly on the 31-year-old’s side, none of the five previous men to complete the Slam needed more than three attempts to win their respective final leg. McIlroy soared into Georgia last year with high expectations, having finished in the top 10 in all seven starts worldwide entering the week. He finished a disappointing 21st.

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The storylines at this year’s Masters are seemingly limitless, from how the course will look and play to the new data-fueled approaches taken by the world’s best players. Still, in this non-traditional setting, it will be impossible to not feel the familiar echoes of history ringing through the Georgia pines, even if they aren’t as green as we’re used to seeing them.

Golfweek partnered on this story with 15th Club, a firm that works with players, media entities, manufacturers and tours around the world in telling the true story of golf performance.

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For Masters first-timers, the lack of a Par 3 Contest doesn’t diminish a week at Augusta National

Amid a year of lost traditions, the par-3 course at Augusta National will be awfully quiet on Wednesday. First-timers took it in stride.

Amid a year of lost traditions, the par-3 course at Augusta National will be awfully quiet on Wednesday afternoon. Normally, Wednesday is the day players let loose, put a significant other on the bag – or track down tiny caddie bibs for their kids – and hit a few trick shots around the par-3 course on the northeast corner of the property.

Lanto Griffin is playing his first Masters this week after qualifying courtesy of his 2019 Houston Open win. He started thinking about Masters Wednesday shortly after.

“It’s weird, the Par 3 Contest and having – skipping the ball over the water on 16, all those things are things that you sit back and watch during Masters week,” he said. “It’s going to be weird not having that, but at the same time you’re at Augusta National playing for a green jacket.”

Griffin would have used Wednesday as a tribute for a man who became like a second father to him growing up. Stuart Swanson was among those to step in after Griffin’s father passed away in 2001 and helped him pursue his dream.

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“We threw a party at my home course after the Houston Open about a week and a half later and I actually presented Stu with a caddie bib and gave it to him,” Griffin said. “He was going to caddie for me there. That’s not going to be possible but luckily with making it to the Tour Championship…I’m going back there in April.”

While Griffin’s path back to Augusta National in 2021, that’s not the case for an amateur. There are six of them in the field this week at Augusta, living a dream week.

John Augenstein, a fifth-year senior at Vanderbilt, is one. Like Griffin, he would have put someone special on the bag for the Par 3 Contest: his dad Drew. The elder Augenstein will be on the grounds at Augusta National this week regardless, as Augenstein’s coach. Augenstein brought his mom Susan, too, who didn’t get to be on site during the U.S. Open.

“That would have been a really cool experience getting one of my parents out there to caddie,” he said. “I think they’re more excited than me even.”

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John Augenstein hadn’t made many plans for the Par 3 Contest otherwise. His caddie for the tournament, William Kane, is a friend of Webb Simpson’s and there was talk of Augenstein joining Simpson’s group.

“Obviously it’s an incredible tradition that the Masters has,” he said. “It really is unfortunate that I’m not going to be able to experience it the first time.”

It’s perhaps the only disappointment there is about this week. Augenstein made five trips to Augusta National in preparation for the Masters. He took in the history with each trip, saw the Crow’s Nest (he won’t stay there during tournament week), the champions locker room and the clubhouse. He got the lay of the land – where his locker is, where to eat breakfast – and he studied the course.

There wasn’t a big revelation regarding the latter.

“In the fairway is obviously a premium at all times, being able to control the ball going into the greens is very important,” he said.

Augenstein has been polishing what he has, not necessarily learning new shots. He took note of all the sidehills, downhills and uphills and discovered where he’d need to shape the ball one way or another. Augenstein works with instructor Matt Killen, who has much experience preparing players for Augusta.

“Our practice plans, for eight to 10 months I’d say, have been very centered around large, curving shots,” he said. “Whether I’m in trouble and I need to hook an iron 35 yards or hit something over a tree, under a tree, around a tree, whatever it is. Really, really working on distance, shape and height.”

Andy Ogletree, the man who defeated Augenstein in the final match of the 2019 U.S. Amateur, had an easier time, perhaps, getting to Augusta National as a student at Georgia Tech. On Monday of Masters week, he relayed memories of the annual trip the Yellow Jackets got to take the Augusta. It was always a perfect morning, and one in which the first few holes passed in a fog.

Ogletree’s Par 3 Contest plans won’t come to fruition this year, but he referenced a scenario in which he would rotate family members through the afternoon, if it had happened.

“I have two brothers, so maybe let one of them caddie for three holes, the other caddie for three holes and my dad caddie for three holes or something,” he noted Monday.

For James Sugrue, the 2019 British Amateur champion, the Par 3 Contest was earmarked for his dad.

Sugrue will play the Masters, much as he did the U.S. Open, without much of a cheering squad. As it stands, his father Michael won’t even be on the grounds because his travel from Ireland to the U.S. was deemed non-essential.

Regardless, it’s Augusta National, and Sugrue will soak in the full experience. He had never seen the course until this week and planned a single night’s stay in the Crow’s Nest, the lodging typically reserved for amateurs on property.

“In my practice I’ve been doing a lot of practice on side lies and downhill and uphill and every sort of a lie but a flat lie,” Sugrue said.

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With no patrons, ESPN and CBS planning unique Masters coverage

Don’t be surprised if you see some different camera angles at this year’s Masters Tournament, as CBS announced plans to experiment.

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AUGUSTA, Ga. — Don’t be surprised if you see some different camera angles at this year’s Masters Tournament.

With no patrons hustling around the course, following their favorite golfers and filling Augusta National Golf Club with the roars prompted by a beautiful chip, hole-in-one or eagle putt, CBS announced plans to experiment with camera angles it wouldn’t have been able to provide.

“Right now, we’re still working on it,” said Lance Barrow, coordinating producer for golf on CBS.

He added that they will “try some shots between now and Thursday,” and make a “game-time” decision on whether to send them live. He also said they are experimenting with live drones in the practices rounds and could utilize those as well.

Along with CBS’s main coverage of the tournament, ESPN announced it will be host College GameDay at the club Saturday morning.

“I think College GameDay is the best show we do at ESPN and Rece Davis is as good a host as there is in television. And so you have people that are going to have reverence and understanding and appreciation for the venue where they are,” said ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt in a media Zoom conference last week.

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“So you’re not going to see them show up and have marching bands up and down the fairways and things of that nature. You know where you are. You’re at one of the most storied golf venues on the planet and at an event that there’s a certain level of decorum that’s understood.”

Van Pelt added the usual “pomp and circumstance” of College GameDay won’t filter into the Masters, but that it will be a great intersection of golf and football, even to the most casual golf spectator.

ESPN will have coverage the first two days of the Masters, with coverage starting at 1 p.m. on Thursday and Friday. It also plans to show special coverage on ESPN+ with Featured Holes and Featured Groups all four days of the tournament. SportsCenter will also have extensive coverage throughout the week.

CBS will take over coverage Saturday and Sunday, from 1 -5 p.m. on Saturday but the LSU-Alabama scheduled for 5 p.m. on Saturday on CBS has been postponed due to a COVID-19 outbreak on the LSU football team, the Southeastern Conference office announced on Tuesday afternoon.

On Sunday, CBS will air final-round coverage from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., ahead of its national NFL game coverage at 4 p.m. ET.

CBS chairman Sean McManus said the network has allotted the hour in-between coverage to supplement any unexpected, extended Masters coverage.

One unexpected moment could come on College GameDay during co-host Lee Corso’s famous “helmet reveal,” said Van Pelt.

“I have no idea what Lee Corso is going to do. I think it’s a cool idea and a cool marriage of, you know, an unusual concept of a fall Masters and the opportunity to bring an event – to bring that show (College GameDay) there,” Van Pelt said.

“I think, what a cool concept. What an amazing job they have done with Lee, last week for Halloween. So I’m sure they will come up with something. I don’t know, I haven’t asked them, and like you, I look forward to finding out.”

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Masters: Jon Rahm skipped his shot off the water for a jaw-dropping hole-in-one

If you ever needed more evidence of how ridiculously good pro golfers are, look no further than the sorcery Jon Rahm pulled off Tuesday.

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If you ever needed more evidence of how ridiculously good professional golfers are at golf, look no further than the sorcery that Jon Rahm pulled off at Augusta on Tuesday.

It has been a tradition over the years to attempt to skip your shot off the water on No. 16 during practice rounds. And while any regular golfer would simply send their shot plunging into a pond (you know, because gravity), pro golfers turn that pond into a playable avenue of some sort.

But man, Rahm’s attempt at No. 16 on Tuesday may legitimately be the most remarkable golf shot I’ve ever seen. He skipped his shot off the water for a hole-in-one.

Like, what?! How? That is real.

“Yeah, pretty nice birthday present,” said Rahm, who turned 26 on Tuesday. “Can’t complain. Hit my normal tee shot to two feet and then skipped it and made it, which is the craziest thing, the second hole-in-one of the week.”

Indeed, it was his second ace this week. Rahm made a hole-on-one on the fourth hole on Monday.

“Well, yesterday it was on 4, I hit a 5 iron, and we didn’t know it went in. A couple people on the green, and we didn’t know until we basically got to the green. But the one on 16 today was visible, so very different. You don’t see people skipping it and actually hitting it on the green very often, and to make it to that back pin, clearly we were all pretty shocked.”

Rahm said he isn’t counting the skip ace towards his career total.

“The one on 16 doesn’t really count as an ace. With the one on 4 yesterday, that’s four. Two in competition,” he said.

And, sure, Rahm might not be the first player to successfully hole that pond-to-pin shot on 16.

But I’m going all in on my recency bias and declaring it the greatest golf shot ever. Sorry not sorry. Twitter seemed to agree.

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Bryson DeChambeau looks to overpower Augusta National: ‘I have no idea where the end game is on this’

What makes Bryson DeChambeau unique is he has combined the best qualities of long-drive competitors with only minimal loss in accuracy.

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AUGUSTA, Ga. – ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt worked the range for last-minute tidbits before going on air during the PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park in May when one of the top-ranked players in the world, a major winner to boot, asked him if he’d seen Bryson DeChambeau hit driver yet.

“I said, ‘No.’ He said, ‘Stick around it’s worth watching,’ ” Van Pelt said. “Guys with their name on the bag don’t watch other guys hit balls. It’s like that with that dude. It’s just insane. And I was mad because he was working through a wedge all day. I’m like, ‘Pull out the driver and let me see what it looks like, man. I never saw it up close.”

Van Pelt’s TV partner, Andy North, the former U.S. Open champion, did witness DeChambeau’s power game, which he used to bludgeon Winged Foot en route to winning the U.S. Open in September, and gushed, “Until you’re standing next to him and actually watch the violence that he’s creating and how the golf ball leaves the club head, you can’t believe it. It’s absolutely astounding.”

The Masters 2020
Bryson DeChambeau and Tiger Woods talk on the 13th green during a Monday practice round for the 2020 Masters Tournament at Augusta National GC. Photo by Michael Madrid/USA TODAY Sports

It was a little more than a year ago at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in Las Vegas that DeChambeau announced his intentions to transform his body in the gym in pursuit of gaining speed and thus distance. He added 20 pounds, mostly to his upper body, before the COVID-19 break and another 20 while he was isolating, spending 2-3 hours per day lifting in the gym.

At the Charles Schwab Challenge, the first tournament when the PGA Tour resumed its season, DeChambeau hit 10 of the 50 longest drives with eight of them over 349 yards. He led the PGA Tour in driving last season, averaging 322 yards, and DeChambeau nearly broke the Internet when he posted to Instagram a drive during a training session that carried 403 yards.

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“Every day I’m trying to get faster and stronger and I’m trying to hit it as far as possible. I will say that I have no idea where the end game is on this,” said DeChambeau ahead of his fourth appearance at the Masters. “I will say that I am hitting it farther now than I was at Shriners, and I am hitting it farther than the U.S. Open, and I’m trying a driver this week that may help me hit it even a little bit farther, so we’ll see. I don’t know. Still up in the air.”

That driver features a 48-inch shaft, the maximum length allowed by the Rules of Golf. The ability to drive the ball farther could turn Augusta National into a pitch-and-putt course, with DeChambeau going so far as to say that he considers the famed Alister MacKenzie layout to be a par 67 for him, not a par 72 as the scorecard indicates, since he can reach all four of the par 5s in two shots.

No less than Jack Nicklaus predicted that DeChambeau could drive the 455-yard par 4 first hole to which CBS commentator and three-time Masters champion Nick Faldo said, “When he does, I will leap out of my tower and run naked around Augusta National.”

To which CBS colleague Dottie Pepper replied, “Let’s not do that, but I’m with you.”

The Masters 2020
Bryson DeChambeau hits his second shot on 13 during his Monday practice round for the 2020 Masters Tournament at Augusta National GC. Photo by Michael Madrid/USA TODAY Sports

DeChambeau has been mapping out target lines never before dreamed up, including possibly aiming for where patrons would usually be standing between the 13th fairway and 14th hole, and could leave him a mere wedge into the 510-yard par 5 13thhole.

“When he gets on that tee, the entire world of golf is going to hold its collective breath,” said Golf Channel analyst Brandel Chamblee.

DeChambeau is still fiddling with his equipment, and experimented with a fourth iteration of driver shaft on Monday that he deemed “the most promising one yet.”

“Yesterday I had about four to five miles an hour in ball speed increase. I got my swing speed up to 143, 144 on the range yesterday, and the dispersion is the same and spin rate was even down. … I’m not 100 percent sure if I’ll put it in play yet just because of the unknown; it’s so close to the Masters, but it is an improvement if every facet of launch conditions, then I don’t see why not.”

DeChambeau’s change in physique is impressive, but golf has always had its share of long hitters. What makes DeChambeau unique is he has combined the best qualities of long-drive competitors with only minimal loss in accuracy.

“He’s kind of found, what I would call the Holy Grail of power,” said Golf Channel analyst Notah Begay III. “He’s actually been successful in achieving increased distance and ball speeds without sacrificing the other elements of the game.”

“I just am trying to get up there like I’m in a batter’s box swinging as hard as I can trying to hit a home run,” DeChambeau said.

Even DeChambeau, who has improved to No. 6 in the world, is surprised by how quickly he has been able to transform his game, saying he was expecting it to be a three-to-four year process before he experienced such success. What  most impressed ESPN’s North is how DeChambeau has found yet another way to skin a cat.

“There’s a million ways to play this game and there’s no one perfect way to do it,” he said, “and I think that’s really refreshing.”

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Masters Thursday tee times: Tiger Woods grouped with Shane Lowry, Andy Ogletree

The November Masters is here. Seven months after its originally scheduled dates, Augusta National will host a field of 92 golfers starting Thursday. It’s the final major on the 2020 calendar and it’s brimming with anticipation. Fall colors have …

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The November Masters is here. Seven months after its originally scheduled dates, Augusta National will host a field of 92 golfers starting Thursday.

It’s the final major on the 2020 calendar and it’s brimming with anticipation.

Fall colors have taken over the course, with the reds, oranges and yellows of the changing leaves providing a stunning backdrop.

Tiger Woods is back to defend his title. He starts his week at 7:55 a.m. ET on the 10th tee on Thursday.

Golfers will play off both tees this week and that’s due to the time of year. There was an average of 12 hours, 53 minutes of sunlight during April 9-12 in Augusta, but from Nov. 12-15 that number shrinks to a daily average of 10 hours, 27½ minutes.

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1st tee

Tee time Players
7 a.m. Lucas Glover, Corey Conners, C.T. Pan
7:11 a.m. Brandt Snedeker, Charles Howell III, Jazz Janewattananond
7:22 a.m. Larry Mize, Andrew Landry, Lukas Michel (a)
7:33 a.m. Matt Kuchar, Lee Westwood, Kevin Na
7:44 a.m. Xander Schauffele, Jason Kokrak, Henrik Stenson
7:55 a.m. Charl Schwartzel, Jason Day, Abel Gallegos (a)
8:06 a.m. Vijay Singh, Lanto Griffin, Tyler Duncan
8:17 a.m. Mike Weir, Rafael Cabrera Bello, Matt Wallace
11:05 a.m. Sung Kang, Erik Van Rooyen
11:16 a.m. Danny Willett, Rickie Fowler, John Augenstein (a)
11:27 a.m. Phil Mickelson, Abraham Ancer, Bernd Wiesberger
11:38 a.m. Adam Scott, Collin Morikawa, Tyrrell Hatton
11:49 a.m. Justin Thomas, Matthew Fitzpatrick, Brooks Koepka
Noon Dustin Johnson, Patrick Cantlay, Rory McIlroy
12:11 p.m. Zach Johnson, Justin Rose, Cameron Champ
12:22 p.m. Victor Perez, Sungjae Im, Brendon Todd

10th tee

 

7 a.m. Sandy Lyle, Jimmy Walker, Yuxin Lin (a)
7:11 a.m. Webb Simpson, Marc Leishman, Hideki Matsuyama
7:22 a.m. Kevin Kisner, Adam Hadwin, Scottie Scheffler
7:33 a.m. Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau, Louis Oosthuizen
7:44 a.m. Patrick Reed, Paul Casey, Tony Finau
7:55 a.m. Tiger Woods, Shane Lowry, Andy Ogletree
8:06 a.m. Jordan Spieth, Gary Woodland, Ian Poulter
8:17 a.m. Graeme McDowell, Si Woo Kim, Nate Lashley
11:05 a.m. Justin Harding, Shugo Imahira, Nick Taylor
11:16 a.m. Chez Reavie, Sebastian Munoz, Byeong Hun An
11:27 a.m. Bubba Watson, Matthew Wolff, Tommy Fleetwood
11:38 a.m. Francesco Molinari, Billy Horschel, Cameron Smith
11:49 a.m. Bernhard Langer, J.T. Poston, Christiaan Bezuidenhout
Noon Fred Couples, Max Homa, Dylan Frittelli
12:11 p.m. Jose Maria Olazabal, Andrew Putnam, James Sugrue (a)

TV information

The live TV coverage on ESPN and CBS is listed below. Click here for the complete listing of TV, streaming and radio options for the Masters. Times listed are ET.

Thursday, Nov. 12

First round, 1 – 5:30 p.m., ESPN.

Friday, Nov. 13

Second round, 1 – 5:30 p.m., ESPN.

Saturday, Nov. 14

Third round, 1 – 5 p.m., CBS.

Sunday, Nov. 15

Final round, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., CBS.

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Masters matchups, placings and first-round leader bets and predictions

In search of the best value bets in the 2020 Masters, we’ll highlight the top tournament matchups, placings and first-round leader picks.

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The pinnacle event of the PGA Tour season has arrived at long last as the world’s best arrive at Augusta National Golf Club for the 2020 Masters.

In search of the best value bets in the 2020 Masters, we’ll highlight the top tournament matchups, placings and first-round leader (FRL) picks and predictions.

Stream the 2020 Masters on ESPN+CBS All Access and FUBO. Sign up at those links and don’t miss a shot.

2020 Masters bets: Matchups

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Tuesday at 11:40 a.m. ET.

Jason Day (-112) vs. Collin Morikawa

The 23-year-old Morikawa has won twice since the PGA Tour’s mid-June restart, including the PGA Championship in early August. Therefore, Day, a former world No. 1, comes into this head-to-head tournament matchup as a slight underdog. He has had a strong season in his own right, with five top 10s in 15 events since mid-June, including a T-4 at the PGA Championship.

Morikawa is trying to become the first to win the Masters in their first appearance since Fuzzy Zoeller in 1979. Day has finished inside the top 10 at the Masters four times, including a T-5 last year.

Bryson DeChambeau vs. Xander Schauffele (+105)

DeChambeau is the tournament betting favorite at +750. After winning the U.S. Open by six strokes, there’s a strong possibility he runs away with this tournament as well. There’s also a chance he struggles on the greens and his added distance fails him on the tight fairways. Hedge an outright bet on DeChambeau by taking the steady Schauffele at plus-money in a head-to-head matchup.

2020 Masters bets: Placings

Top American: Brooks Koepka (+1000)

Koepka, a four-time major champion, closed with back-to-back rounds of 65 at last week’s Vivint Houston Open to finish in a tie for fifth. It was the second-best finish of any American who competed in the Houston Open and will compete in the Masters. He’s the first golfer in this pool getting a 10-1 return on investment and was a co-runner-up with Dustin Johnson (+550 for Top American) last year.

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Top 10: Phil Mickelson (+750)

“Lefty” has started 2-for-2 on the PGA Tour Champions circuit and at 50 years old will look to dethrone Jack Nicklaus (46 years, 82 days) as the oldest Masters winner. Mickelson’s last PGA Tour win was last year’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, but he was the runner-up at the marquee WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational this summer. He tied for 18th at last year’s Masters and has the distance and short game to still contend here.

Lowest score over 72 holes – Group A: Bryson DeChambeau (+275)

This is an interesting group given the notable omission of Koepka. DeChambeau is getting +275 odds against Dustin Johnson (+320), Jon Rahm (+350), Justin Thomas (+400) and Rory McIlroy (+450). None have won the Masters before and DeChambeau is the most recent major champion.

2020 Masters bets: First-round leader

Jordan Spieth (+4000)

Spieth’s struggles over the last couple of years are well documented, yet his betting odds at the Masters remain suppressed as a public favorite. The 2015 Masters champ leads all golfers in the field with an average of 3.38 strokes gained on the field per round at Augusta National, according to Data Golf. He opened with a 75 at the 2019 Masters but broke par in each of the next three rounds en route to a 21st-place finish.

Christiaan Bezuidenhout (+10000)

Bezuidenhout ranks 106th in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings and will be making his debut at Augusta National. One of the greatest tests at the Masters is the ability to block out the large crowds, but that’s not an issue in 2020 with no patrons allowed. It will play to the advantage of Bezuidenhout and all other first-time competitors. He ranked fourth on Tour in Strokes Gained: Putting last year with an average of 0.90 per round and could get out to a quick start before the pressure begins to rise.

Get some action on the 2020 Masters by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com. Please gamble responsibly.

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Masters: Augusta National’s fall grass already noticed by competitors

Jordan Spieth played Monday at Augusta National Golf Club and said the fall layout left similar yardages to how the course plays in April.

Jordan Spieth played nine holes Monday at Augusta National Golf Club and said the fall layout left similar yardages to how the course plays in April. One difference, the 2015 Masters Champion found, was the length of the grass.

“The grass has been a little thicker and longer than we see in April,” Spieth said. “We just came off No. 9, and if the ball lands short of that green, sometimes it rolls back 20, 25 yards. Right now it’s only going to go five or 10.”

Tommy Fleetwood also noticed.

“Around the greens it has played a little bit different,” Fleetwood said. “With a little bit more grass, it feels like at times to strike a chip is a bit easier.”

Spieth arrived at Augusta National on Sunday and played a practice round with Justin Thomas and Rickie Fowler. On Monday, he joined Zach Johnson and J.T. Poston, and acknowledged the course had already changed between his rounds.

“From yesterday to today was a change,” Spieth said. “I’m used to seeing a significant change Wednesday to Thursday and then a significant change Friday to Saturday.”

In 2019, Spieth finished 21st, his worst showing in six events here. As for how he plans to attack the 2020 tournament, the Texan believes ball placement off the tee box is key.

“You need to dial it in to one side of the fairway or the other,” Spieth said. “And you play the hole backwards from where the hole location is. So you get on holes like No. 6, a par 3 where you might see hole‑in‑ones to the front-left pin, but on the right pins, where am I playing to? What shot am I hitting to make sure I’m walking off with a 3? You play the hole backwards and figure out where you can take advantage and where you can’t.”

Spieth, despite winning the tournament in his second appearance, believes experience is crucial, unless the threatening rain softens the course.

“When you can throw some darts, it could be anybody that wins,” Spieth said. “It doesn’t require as much experience with softer conditions.”

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Betting odds, predictions for Tiger Woods at the Masters

Taking a look at Tiger Woods’ odds to win the 2020 Masters and make predictions for his most interesting prop bets for 2020’s final major.

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The Masters sees Tiger Woods attempt to tie Jack Nicklaus’ all-time record of six green jackets with back-to-back victories at Augusta National Golf Club.

A victory will also give him sole possession of the PGA Tour’s all-time wins record at 83.

Below, we look at Tiger Woods’ odds to win the 2020 Masters and make predictions for his most interesting prop bets for the year’s final major.

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Tiger Woods’ odds to win

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. ET.

  • Tiger’s odds to win: +4000

Woods shares the 17th-best odds to win the Masters with Matthew Wolff. The +4000 odds represent a win probability of 2.44 percent and can also be expressed fractionally as 40/1 and as a decimal of 41.00.

Tiger enters Masters week at No. 60 in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings. He’s the 36th-best golfer in the 92-man field by that measure.

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Tiger Woods’ history at Augusta National

Woods has gained an average of 2.95 strokes per round on the field over 52 career rounds at Augusta National, according to Data Golf. In addition to his five career victories here, he has two runner-ups, five other top 5s and two more top 10s.

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Tiger has long excelled in par 4 scoring. While his putting has been wildly inconsistent over the last year, the greens of Augusta National are a test unlike any other, and he has aced it many times before.

Best bets, predictions

  • To win the Masters: +4000

The profit margin is high enough to warrant a wager on Tiger to win his second straight green jacket. No one has gone back-to-back here since he did so in 2001-2002, but there’s no fun in a total fade.

  • Woods and Phil Mickelson both to make the cut (+110)

Woods hasn’t missed the cut at the Masters since 1996 after finishing as the low amateur in 1995. He won the next year and has never looked back. Mickelson has won the Masters three times with 12 other top 10s. He last missed the cut in 2016 but finished T-18 last year.

  • Top 20: +125

The top-20 placing is still offering plus-money with a wide margin of insurance. Woods finished outside the top 20 just three times in 20 appearances since 1997.

  • Top former winner: +550
The Masters 2020
Justin Thomas and Tiger Woods wait to hit on the 15th tee during a practice round for the 2020 Masters Tournament at Augusta National GC. Photo by Michael Madrid/USA TODAY Sports

Patrick Reed (+300), Bubba Watson (+350) and Adam Scott (+500) all have lower odds than Tiger in this pool. While Reed and Watson, especially, are entering in much better form and are both +2800 to win outright, Woods is a strong value as he shoots for the green jacket record.

  • Lowest score over 72 holes – Group D: +375

Woods is grouped with Collin Morikawa (+275), Wolff (+300), Tommy Fleetwood (+400) and Louis Oosthuizen (+450). The first two are both making their Masters debut and no one has won here in their first attempt since Fuzzy Zoeller in 1979.

Get some action on the 2020 Masters by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com. Please gamble responsibly.

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