How do you get tickets to the Masters?

It’s not an easy process to get tickets for the Masters.

Editor’s Note: This story was originally published on April 6, 2023. It has since been updated.

So, you’re all pumped up about the 2024 Masters and ready to watch seemingly endless hours of golf, imagining what it’s like to attend Augusta National’s famed event.

Masters Leaderboard: Live leaderboard, Schedule, Tee times

Maybe you joke about wanting to go to the Masters someday, and maybe that joke becomes more of a serious question, making you wonder: How do you even get tickets to the Masters?

Well, like just about everything with Augusta National, it’s not easy, and you have to win a lottery.

Unlike a lot of other sporting events, the Masters doesn’t just put tickets on sale. Each year, the tournament asks fans to fill out an application and then hope for the best. If you’re selected, then you have the option to buy tickets.

In 2023 for those who won the lottery, tickets for practice rounds were $100 each while tournament days were $140 each, according to Golf.com.

For the 2025 Masters, applications will be accepted from June 1-20, per the Masters site.

And if you don’t win the Masters lottery, as Golf.com notes:

Now, if you still want to go to the Masters but don’t win the lottery, there is a secondary market, but it’s not cheap. Tickets for practice rounds this year start around $700, and a ticket for Masters Sunday will cost you at least $1,000.

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The high-tech drainage system keeping Augusta National playable after rain, explained

How Augusta National and the Masters keep the course playable after it downpours.

Editor’s Note: This story was originally published on April 7, 2023.

Welcome to FTW Explains, a guide to catching up on and better understanding stuff going on in the world. If you’re watching the 2023 Masters, you already know the weather is gross. And maybe you’re wondering how golf can carry on in the rain. No worries, because we’re here to help.

Going into the 2023 Masters weekend, players and fans surely knew what to expect because if the weather remotely resembled the projected forecast from earlier this week, it was going to be a wet one.

The wind and rain had an impact on the tournament during Friday’s second round before play was briefly suspended multiple times thanks to inclement weather.

Masters Leaderboard: Live leaderboard, Schedule, Tee times

So what happens if the weather at Augusta National stays terrible all weekend? What if it’s just raining a lot, but the weather isn’t bad enough to stop playing? How can anyone play the course after rain?

We’re here to break it all down.

Rickie Fowler wins Masters Par 3 Contest on sunny day where aces were aplenty

Can Rickie break the curse?

AUGUSTA, Ga. — With so much focus on the competition the week of the Masters Tournament, Wednesday has become a welcome sight for many in the field.

The Masters Par 3 Contest is a way for players to decompress the day before the opening round, but also make lifelong memories with their families. Competing in his third Masters, Augusta resident Luke List embraces the ‘calm before the storm,’ so to speak.

“It’s a special week, and this kind of gets everything rolling,” he said. “Once this is over it’s time to go. Living here in Augusta now it’s really special being here, and, yeah, I just can’t wait to get going.”

Rickie Fowler took the day with a score of 5 under. Since its inception in 1960, no winner of the Par 3 Contest has ever donned a green jacket that same week. The level of superstition among the field continues to this day, with players letting caddies, significant others or their children step in to make the next shot, disqualifying them in the process.

Masters: Best Par 3 Contest photos | Kids galore at Par 3 Contest

Few moments are more iconic than a player’s child taking the club from their father. Gary Woodland knew long before setting foot on the No. 9 green who’d be taking his final stroke: his 6-year-old son, Jax.

“It was exciting. He’s thought about it all day,” he said. “He’s known that was going to be his shot. He told me to hit it a lot closer than that so I was apologizing I didn’t hit it closer for him. That was so cool. Just so see his reaction, that was very special.”

MASTERS: Live updates | Thursday tee times | TV, streaming

Of the 80 players in the field, just 16 turned in complete scores.

The Masters Par-3 Contest aces

Sepp Straka

Straka was the only player who aced a hole (No. 5) and played a complete round, finishing two strokes behind Fowler in a tie for second.

Luke List

The first hole-in-one of the day came from the Augusta resident. Oddly enough, this wasn’t List’s first ace during the Par-3 Contest, but to talk about that we’ll have to go back to when he was an amateur.

“A long time ago, 2005, I made one on No. 7 in the Par-3,” he said. “So this was kind of — it was awesome to have my family there. It was neat. I didn’t see it go in, just heard the crowd, you know it is. It’s organized chaos out there with the kids, but we had a good time.”

Gary Woodland

Woodland followed up List with the second ace of the day, which was also the first Par-3 Contest ace of his career.

“This is my 12th time playing the par-3. I’ve had some close calls. It was nice to see one go in,” he said. “Nice to see my kids’ reaction. They were so excited. I will say, my son making the putt on the last was more exciting for me than that ball going in.”

Viktor Hovland

Hovland was the third to ace No. 6 and the final hole-in-one of the day.

Lucas Glover

Glover aced No. 7.

Brennan: The magic of the Masters can’t overshadow fact that men’s golf is in some trouble

This is a revered tournament, the most famous on earth, but it’s also something more.

AUGUSTA, Ga. — The game of men’s golf marks time from one year to the next when Augusta National opens its doors for another Masters. This is a revered tournament, the most famous on earth, but it’s also something more.

It’s a measuring stick of sorts, an annual gathering to tell us how the men’s game is doing. How is Tiger holding up? Is Rory ready to finally win here? And, perhaps most important, where does the game stand in these fraught times, with the sport increasingly and devastatingly sectioning itself off from the people it needs the most, its fans, all because the game’s most compelling matchup these days is PGA Tour vs. LIV?

By any measure, as the Masters begins Thursday morning, golf is a sport in some significant trouble. The glory days of Tiger are long since over, replaced by little more than hope: hope that he can make the cut here this week, hope that the people who love and miss him can will him into the weekend and up the leaderboard.

MASTERS: Live updates | Thursday tee times | TV, streaming

TV ratings are down (the Players’ Championship dropped 15 percent from last year to this), and while it’s convenient to say that’s happening in all sports, we know that’s not true because we just lived through the past magical month following a certain player in March Madness.

The players themselves are concerned, even though some of the biggest worry-warts are the ones who bolted their multi-million-dollar lives for LIV’s Saudi blood money.

Bryson DeChambeau for example.

“It’s great to have the majors where we come together, but we want to be competing, at least I want to be competing every week, with all of the best players in the world for sure,” said the man who walked away from playing against the best players in the world to go to a no-cut, exhibition style shell of a golf tour. “And it needs to happen fast. It’s not a two-year thing. Like it needs to happen quicker rather than later just for the good of the sport. Too many people are losing interest.”

There’s a sentence, as problematic as it is honest, that you don’t see very often from a pro athlete in a big-time sport: “Too many people are losing interest.” Of course, they are losing interest precisely because of the actions of people like the guy who uttered the quote.

Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley, watching the game he loves descend into what it never was supposed to become, is also understandably concerned.

“I will acknowledge that, if you look at the data this year, golf viewers are down (on) linear television while other sports, some other sports are up,” he said Wednesday. “So you can draw your own conclusions. Certainly the fact that the best players in the world are not convening very often is not helpful. Whether or not there’s a direct causal effect, I don’t know. But I think that it would be a lot better if they were together more often.”

One of the allures of golf has always been how players have conducted themselves. Golfers call penalties on themselves. That’s unique and notable, something that requires at least an element of honesty.

Keep that in mind as we consider defending Masters champion Jon Rahm. Back in 2022, as golf’s civil war was exploding, Rahm was quite adamant that he had absolutely no interest in joining LIV.

“Money is great, but when (his wife) Kelley and I started talking about it, and we’re like, Will our lifestyle change if I got $400 million? No, it will not change one bit,” Rahm said.

“Truth be told, I could retire right now with what I’ve made and live a very happy life and not play golf again. So I’ve never really played the game of golf for monetary reasons. I play for the love of the game, and I want to play against the best in the world. I’ve always been interested in history and legacy, and right now the PGA Tour has that.”

In December 2023, he left the PGA Tour for LIV.

Rahm will get his applause and cheers here this week, but he will never be able to recapture his honor. It’s so fitting in golf’s troubled times: the man who lied and sold out for money is the reigning Masters champion.

LIV Golf’s Greg Norman shows up at Augusta National to support his players at Masters 2024

There are 13 LIV players in the field this year, down from 18 last year.

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Ahead of last year’s 2023 Masters, LIV Golf CEO and Commissioner Greg Norman said there would be a party on the 18th green if one of his players were to win at Augusta National. An invitation was withheld from Norman in 2023 “to keep the focus on the competition” after Norman and company blew up professional golf as we know it.

This year, the Great White Shark showed up to the party among the Georgia pines on Wednesday with a pair of LIV executives.

“I’m here because we have 13 players that won 10 Masters between them,” Norman told the Washington Post. “So I’m here just to support them, do the best I can to show them, ‘Hey, you know, the boss is here rooting for you.’”

In 23 appearances at the Masters as a player, Norman logged eight top-five finishes, including a trio of runners-up showings highlighted by his blown six-shot lead on Sunday in 1996. This year marks Norman’s first time back at Augusta National since 2021 when he was a SiriusXM radio analyst.

Earlier on Wednesday, Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley addressed LIV Golf and their desire for a special qualification criteria.

MASTERS: Live updates | Thursday tee times | TV, streaming

“Now, historically, and as stated in our qualification criteria, we consider international players for special invitations,” Ridley continued. “But we do look at those every year and we, I will say that if we felt that there were a player or players, whether they played on the LIV tour or any other tour, who were deserving of an invitation to the Masters, that we would exercise that discretion with regard to special invitations.”

In fact, one was given to LIV’s Joaquin Niemann due to his performances on the DP World Tour over the last several months. Norman thinks a few more players should have been invited.

“I think there’s probably a couple that have been overlooked that should be in,” Norman said. “What is that number? I’m not going to give it a definitive number, but they’re definitely quality players that have done incredible performances over the last six to nine months that are worthy of it.”

There are 13 LIV players in the field of 89 this week, down from the 18 that made their way down Magnolia Lane in 2023.

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Schupak: Rory McIlroy, the Masters and facing his Greg Norman complex

Ever since the emergence of LIV, McIlroy and Norman have been diametrically opposed.

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Ever since the emergence of LIV Golf, Rory McIlroy and Greg Norman have been diametrically opposed in their view of professional golf.

McIlroy served as the PGA Tour’s unofficial spokesman while Norman joined the Saudi payroll as LIV CEO with an unlimited budget to make his longtime dream of a new world order for golf a reality. They butted heads making headlines through a war of words, with McIlroy famously declaring that “Greg must go,” and throwing shade on Norman when he won the 2022 RBC Canadian Open for his 21st Tour title, or as he put it, “one more than someone else.” But when it comes to the majors and the Masters in particular, McIlroy might look in a mirror and see Norman’s sad reflection.

While McIlroy’s major total of four majors by age 25 is twice the haul that Norman collected, Norman was the dominant player of his era and shoulda-coulda-woulda won seven or eight majors. He dominated the game as the best driver of his generation much like McIlroy. The one major his game was designed for was supposed to be Augusta National. As the years passed by and Norman experienced his share of heartbreaking misses, he faced the inevitable question of how does he not win? Whenever McIlroy shows up at Augusta now, he faces the same relentless questioning in the lead up to April.

MASTERS: Live updates | Thursday tee times | TV, streaming

Both also endured their career low points at the Masters – Norman blowing a six-stroke lead heading into the final round in 1996 and McIlroy shooting 80 to squander the 54-hole lead in 2011. Both ended with the loser needing a hug – Norman from Nick Faldo, who lapped him with a 67to win the title and McIlroy from CBS’s Peter Kostis before he gave a heartfelt interview.

“Greg in 1996 was hard to watch,” said Butch Harmon, Norman’s coach at the time. “That was the longest day I’ve ever spent on a golf course. But it’s a cruel game and it will get you.”

As McIlroy attempts to complete the career Grand Slam for a 10th time this week and end a major-less streak nearing a decade in length, he’s facing his Norman complex by turning to, of all people, Norman’s old coach. He went to see Harmon in Las Vegas two weeks ago for a lesson.

“Rory wants it so badly that he can’t get out of his own way,” Harmon said. “I was trying to help him to relax, don’t be so aggressive in the first round. Just go shoot 70, put yourself in the mix and see what happens. He gets so amped up here because it’s the last one he hasn’t won. He understands it but understanding it and being able to do it are two different things.”

2024 Masters Tournament
Rory McIlroy hits from the fairway on No. 10 during a practice round for the 2024 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. (Photo: Rob Schumacher-USA TODAY Sports)

Golf Channel’s Brandel Chamblee noted McIlroy’s struggles out of the gate – in his last five Masters, McIlroy averages 73.8 in the first round.

“That speaks to not being in the right place mentally,” Chamblee said. “But whenever he is in a good place — when he does manage to get himself into a good place, say in 2018, he was second after 54 holes, he shot 74 Sunday. In 2016 he was second after 36 holes, and he shot 77 Saturday.

“He plays his best when it means the least, and he plays his worst when it means the most. Now, we can dive in and parse out technical reasons why that is, but the larger landscape is it’s just mental. I think him trying to get over that hurdle and become the sixth person to win the Grand Slam is mentally the most compelling thing that will take place at the Masters.”

Harmon has covered this territory before and spoke to McIlroy about the importance of being aggressive when he should be aggressive and conservative when he should be conservative. Just because he’s got six gears doesn’t mean he has to always be in sixth gear. Follow that mantra, the way another former Harmon world No. 1 did back in the day, and he’ll see Woods’s visage in the mirror and have a good chance to win.

“I explained to him that Greg was so amped up that he almost couldn’t play,” Harmon said of the fateful final round of the 1996 Masters. “You can’t tee off on Thursday and be aggressive on every shot. You can’t do that here. He has to let it happen.”

When Woods was asked Tuesday if he felt McIlroy would join him and Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player and Jack Nicklaus in exclusive company, he said, “No question, he’ll do it at some point. He’s just – Rory’s too talented, too good. He’s going to be playing this event for a very long time. He’ll get it done. It’s just a matter of when.”

But superstars from Lee Trevino to Tom Watson to Arnold Palmer fell short of the career Grand Slam. McIlroy has another chance this week to soar into the company of the all-time greats. Or he can go down alongside Norman as one of the greats who could only get one arm in a Green Jacket. Whose reflection will McIlroy see this week when he looks in the mirror?

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Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley said Masters 12th hole ‘would not be lengthened during my tenure’

“That’s almost like asking, you know, can we touch up the Mona Lisa a little bit.”

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Fred Ridley shot down any notion that the world-famous 12th hole would be lengthened at any time, if ever.

“Well, forever is a long time. I would say with a hundred percent certainty that it would not be lengthened during my tenure,” the Augusta National Golf Club and Masters Tournament Chairman said on Wednesday.

In his annual pretournament “State of the Masters” news conference, Ridley addressed a suggestion made this week by former Masters champ Vijay Singh that at least 10 yards be added to the 155-yard par-3 hole because he thinks it’s playing too easy.

“That’s almost like asking, you know, can we touch up the Mona Lisa a little bit. I mean, I think that the 12th hole at Augusta is the most iconic par-3 in the world. It has been and I won’t say it always will be, but I think it always will be,” said Ridley, who played the hole as a participant three times in the late 1970s, which makes him the first chairman in club history to have played in the Masters.

MASTERS: Live updates | Thursday tee times | TV, streaming

The 12th hole, called Golden Bell, is the signature hole at Augusta National Golf Club and is the lone one that has never been lengthened since the Masters debuted in 1934.

“There’s something about – I don’t know what it is, but there’s something about the topography, the trees, the wind, the beauty that just – it just captures your imagination,” Ridley said. “When you combine that with the history that’s been made there, I mean, the most recent being the tragedies and triumphs when Tiger Woods won in 2019.

“You know, Freddie Couples’ ball, you know, hanging up on the edge of Rae’s Creek, which is part of the – made part of the song ‘Augusta.’ And so I just think it is such an iconic hole that’s had so many important moments in the Masters that I’m not sure that another 10 yards would really make a difference. Players are hitting short irons, but doesn’t seem to matter, the hole is very difficult.”

Historically, the hole is the fourth-most difficult at Augusta National, playing an averge of .270 strokes over par.

That’s almost like asking, you know, can we touch up the Mona Lisa a little bit

In a wide-ranging news conference that included an update the Augusta National’s plans to take over the Augusta Municipal Golf Course with Augusta Tech, the biggest news centered around the breakaway LIV Golf tour, with Ridley saying there is a possibility some of its American players could receive a special invitation to play in the Masters in the future. Special invitations have only gone to international players in the past.

With no world ranking points for the players on that tour, some top players who left the PGA Tour for the money at LIV are not here this week, including Talor Gooch, the tour’s player of the year last season.

2024 Masters Tournament
Jon Rahm tees off on No. 1 during a practice round at Augusta National Golf Club ahead of the 2024 Masters. (Photo: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Network)

The top 50 players in the world at the end of each calendar year qualify for the Masters. Many of the LIV players have dropped out of the top 50 since jumping to the rebel circuit, which opened shop in June 2021. Thirteen LIV golfers are here this week and seven of them are former Masters champions who have lifetime invitations into the tournament.

“But I think in our case, we’re an invitational, and we can adjust as necessary … Now, historically, and as stated in our qualification criteria, we consider international players for special invitations,” he said.

That’s how LIV golfer Joaquin Niemann of Chile got into the field this year. After he concluded his LIV event commitments, he added tournaments like the Australian PGA and the Australian Open, which he won, to his schedule.

That caught the eye of Augusta National and helped him get the invite.

Familiar LIV members who have qualified for past Masters but not this year include Gooch, Louis Oosthuizen, Abraham Ancer, Mito Pereira, Harold Varner III, Paul Casey and Dean Burmester, a four-time DP World Tour winner before signing on the with LIV. He won last week’s LIV event in Doral, Florida.

“I will say that if we felt that there were a player or players, whether they played on the LIV Tour or any other tour, who were deserving of an invitation to the Masters, that we would exercise that discretion with regard to special invitations,” Ridley said.

Ridley discounted the idea of creating a qualification system for LIV golfers based on how they play on that tour.

“Yeah, I don’t know the answer to that,” he said. “I think it will be difficult to establish any type of point system that had any connection to the rest of the world of golf because they’re basically, not totally, but for the most part, a closed shop.”

This is the second year that the Masters – and golf in general – has dealt with the specter of LIV. Two LIV players – Phil Mickelson and Brooks Koepka – tied for second in the 2023 Masters, and winner Jon Rahm later jumped ship to LIV in December.

Since the 2023 Masters, the PGA Tour and LIV have agreed to a framework to possibly work together, but progress has been slow and an agreement might not be struck by the 2025 Masters.

Taking over Augusta Municipal

As for Augusta National’s plans for the Augusta Municipal Golf Course, the club will take over the lease in January 2025. It will be for $1 a year for up to 50 years. Ridley said work will start in January with a projected April 2026 completion date.

Augusta Municipal Golf Course
The Augusta Municipal Golf Course. (Photo: Katie Goodale/The Augusta Chronicle-USA TODAY Network)

“We have reached an agreement with the City of Augusta to lease this facility, and over the past year we have had multiple community input sessions with the many stakeholders who frequent The Patch,” Ridley said. “With the insightful feedback we received, we are on a great path to make significant improvements to The Patch and to the First Tee facilities. In that regard, we have retained two of golf’s most respected course designers, Tom Fazio and Beau Welling, to lead the renovation of this historic municipal course. So, while planning is still in process, we’ll have more details next year, I think it’s just going to be fantastic.”

Ridley praised the success of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur, which just completed its fifth edition, but doesn’t think women professionals will ever have a tournament or team competition at Augusta National.

“There are some fundamental difficulties in that,” Ridley said. “We happily were able to find a way to have a competition for juniors and a competition for women amateurs sort of wrapped around the Masters Tournament, and it just seems to fit really well. To have another tournament of any kind would be very difficult based on our season, based on the fact that this is essentially a winter and spring golf course.

“It’s not open in the summer. It doesn’t play the way we want it to play in the fall for a major tournament,” he said.

Dustin Johnson set the tournament record of 20-under 268 in the 2020 Masters, which was played in November because of COVID-19.

Ridley noted that the only hole that was lengthened on the course this year was No. 2, where 10 yards were added to the tee. The course has constantly added yardage – including 35 last year to No. 13 – in an effort to stay ahead of golf equipment technology and stronger athletes. He’s hoping that a proposed rollback of the distance the golf ball can travel will be approved in January 2028.

“Adding distance to the Augusta National golf course has become standard operation over the past two decades,” Ridley said. “For almost 70 years, the Masters was played at just over 6,900 yards. Today the course measures 7,550 yards from the markers, and we may well play one of the tournament rounds this year at more than 7,600 yards. I’ve said in the past that I hope we will not play the Masters at 8,000 yards. But that is likely to happen in the not too distant future under current standards. Accordingly, we support the decisions that have been made by the R&A and the USGA as they have addressed the impact of distance.”

Referring to what he called the 8,000 yard “red line,” Ridley said “We have some more room, but we don’t have a lot. So I’m holding to that 8,000-yard red line, and I just hope we never get there.”

There was much talk last year that the added distance to the 13th hole – the second-most famous hole at Augusta National after No. 12 – would take some excitement out of the tournament because fewer players would go for the green in two shots, making it a “three shot” par 5.

The club found that on the two dry days in the 2023 Masters that wasn’t the case.

“But one thing I do know for certain is that, in the two days we had data, that more players went for the green in two on their second shot, that went for the green in two, than did the previous year,” Ridley said. “Now, there’s a real simple reason for that. If you look at the scatter chart from the year before there were a lot of balls up in the trees. Last year those same drives didn’t reach the trees and they were a little bit further to the right, the perfect drive. They were further from the green, but they were in the fairway; 250 yards is not a problem for most of these guys. So, it kind of brought back, in a way, that momentous (risk-reward) decision that Bobby Jones talked about and really, in sort of a counterintuitive way, made the hole a more exciting hole. The concern by many was that by making it longer we were going to take the excitement out of it.

“So, I was really happy to see that data, because it really showed that more players are pulling out their hybrids or even three metals or five metals and going for the green and that was established by that data last year.”

Surprisingly, since Augusta National rarely announces club changes off the course, Ridley revealed what he called a “two-phase project that will significantly elevate the experience of all Masters competitors.”

He said Phase 1 will include underground parking and will be operational next year. The second phase, he said, will be finished by the 2026 Masters and “will feature a three-level state-of-the-art facility, designed to anticipate every need for players, their families, and support teams.”

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Bubba Watson’s daughter Dakota dominated the Masters Par 3 Contest with her putting

Future ANWA champion Dakota Watson?

Bubba Watson is one of the better golfers in the world and a former Masters champion, and it looks like excelling in Augusta runs in the family.

During Wednesday’s Par 3 tournament for professional golfers and their families, Watson’s daughter Dakota showed off her incredible putting skills with two very impressive nudges that landed right on target.

Bubba Watson had to be a proud father watching Dakota wowing the Masters crowd like that, as her second putt in particular elicited the type of roaring cheer usually reserved for the weekend.

MASTERS: Live updates | Thursday tee times | TV, streaming

Maybe Dakota Watson will be competing in professional golf one of these days and carry on the family legacy of winning in the majors.

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Jordan Spieth’s golf bag at 2024 Masters has special gold plate

It’s been nine April’s since Jordan Spieth left Georgia in green.

AUGUSTA, Ga. — It’s been nine April’s since Jordan Spieth left Georgia in green.

And in case he forgot — albeit unlikely — his golf bag can serve as a reminder this week.

AT&T annually designs a commemorative bag for each major championship, according to Spieth. This year, instead of embroidering the golfer’s name in traditional bold letters, AT&T chose a different route — a golden nameplate.

“It’s a nice little accent,” Spieth said after Wednesday’s Par 3 Contest. “Every year at Augusta I get an updated bag, and it always turns out cool.”

The feature is reminiscent of the gold and rectangular nameplate that’s inside the Champions Locker Room.

MASTERS: Live updates | Thursday tee times | TV, streaming

In addition to the plate, the base of Spieth’s bag reads, “88th Masters Tournament” and at the top sits the Masters emblem.

Spieth, the 2015 winner, will tee off at 1:48 p.m. local time alongside Ludvig Aberg and Sahith Theegala.

Sunglasses are the new must-have scavenger-hunt item at Masters 2024 at Augusta National

Move over garden gnome, there’s a new item flying off the shelves at Augusta National.

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Move over garden gnome, there’s a new item flying off the shelves at Augusta National.

Located at the satellite golf shops — which are strategically placed around the course — are Goodr sunglasses with an array of Masters designs.

“Look at this,” said Brittany Smart, to no one in particular. “It matches my hat.”

Smart, of New Orleans, slid on a pair of white lenses, which the Masters Tournament has coined “The Caddie.”

“The Caddie,” along with yellow glasses called “The Pin Flag” are being sold at Stand 8 — next to No. 8 tee box.

And that’s where the scavenger hunt begins.

MASTERS: Live updates | Thursday tee times | TV, streaming

At Stand 12 — located in the heart of Amen Corner — designs being sold are called “The Hogan Bridge,” “Azalea” and “Florals.”

Each pair is $39.

According to a Goodr representative, the Hogan Bridge, which had black rims and an emblem of the famed stone bridge, is sold out.

“I love the case they come in,” Andy Mitchell, who attended his first Masters on Wednesday, said of the Florals pattern. “Even when I leave the course today, it’ll feel like I’m still here.”

From Stand 12, the nearest satellite stand is adjacent to No. 14 tee box, which are selling designs called “Augusta Pines,” “Badges” and “Peach Ice Cream.”

Similar to The Hogan Bridge, Augusta Pines was gone by Tuesday afternoon.

“These are perfect,” said Liz Garrett, who purchased two pairs of “Peach Ice Cream” glasses. “I forgot sunglasses at home, and was worried they weren’t going to sell any here.”

The final shop, Stand 7, is near No. 7 tee, and they sell orange rims called “Pimento Cheese” and blue glasses coined “Skip It.”

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