Masters: One memorable event from every tournament at Augusta National

From Bobby Jones to Tiger Woods, here’s one memorable event from every Masters tournament held at Augusta National Golf Club.

2010

Phil Mickelson shot a bogey-free final round 67 to win his third Masters and fourth major title, three shots ahead of runner-up Lee Westwood.

2011

Eight players had at least a share of the lead in the final round in 2011, including Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy. McIlroy entered Sunday with a four stroke lead, but shot 80 to finish 10 strokes behind Charl Schwartzel, who won thanks to birdies on his final four holes.

2012

Gary Player joined Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer as an honorary starter, which made for some incredible moments for the next few years.

2013

Despite getting a penalty stroke for slow play, 14-year-old Guan Tianlang was the low amateur player and made the cut playing in his first Masters.

2014

The 2014 Masters featured 19 past champions in the field, and nine past champions made the cut, including five seniors: Vijay Singh (51), Fred Couples (54), Larry Mize (55), Bernhard Langer (56) and Sandy Lyle (56).

2015

Leading wire-to-wire and tying the record at 18-under par, Jordan Spieth won his first major title. The 21-year-old Texas was four strokes clear of Phil Mickelson and Justin Rose.

2016

Jordan Spieth’s epic collapse on the back nine on Sunday. The defending champion had a five-shot lead at the turn, but dropped six strokes through the next three holes. He quadruple-bogeyed No. 12 after hitting two balls into Rae’s Creek.

2017

Sergio Garcia played in 74 majors before 2017. He has 22 top-ten finishes, three at Augusta, before he finally claimed victory over Justin Rose in a playoff.

2018

Tom Watson won the Par 3 Contest, but all eyes were on Tony Finau’s hole-in-one and almost tragic celebration.

2019

“The return to glory,” Jim Nantz said on the broadcast. Chants of “Tiger! Tiger! Tiger!” rang around Augusta National as Woods won his fifth green jacket and 15th major championship.

“That will be the greatest scene in golf, forever,” said Nick Faldo.