For golf fans, the phrase “it’s the most wonderful time of the year”
isn’t spoken around Christmas. No, it’s every spring at Augusta
National, where the 82nd edition of the Masters Tournament will take
place April 5-8. The season’s first major has produced some of the more
memorable finishes in the tournament’s history of late, including last
year when Spain’s Sergio Garcia captured his first major title in a
playoff over Justin Rose. This year should be no different, as the
Masters features one of the most exciting fields in recent memory.
Here are some frequently asked questions regarding the 2018 Masters.
This year Masters begins on April 5 and ends on April 8.
The Masters is played each year at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Ga. It’s the only one of the four men’s major championships that is played on the same course every year.
Augusta National was founded by Bobby Jones and Clifford Roberts. The course was designed by Alister MacKenzie.
Augusta National is a par 72, and it plays at 7,435 yards for the Masters.
The first Masters was played in 1934, and Horton Smith won by two strokes with a score of four-under-par 284.
This year will mark the 82nd playing of the Masters.
The Masters is a 72-hole stroke play event contested over four days. The field is one of the smaller ones on the PGA Tour schedule, typically featuring between 90-100 players.
There are no qualifying tournaments for the Masters, and no alternate spots in the field. Players qualify for the Masters by invitation only, if they fulfill one of the 19 criteria, which can be found here at Masters.com. There are special exemptions, which are rarely given out. This year, Augusta National extended a special exemption to India’s Shubhankar Sharma.
In order to make the cut after 36 holes, players must be in the top 50 places, counting ties. Those within 10 strokes of the lead also make the cut.
The official Masters purse is announced during Masters week. In 2017, the total purse was $11 million, with the winner receiving $1.98 million.
In 2017, the Masters runner-up gets $1.18 million.
Yes, the winner receives a sterling replica of the Masters trophy, a gold medal and the club’s green jacket, which they began giving out in 1949.
No, a player that wins the Masters multiple times receives the same green jacket from his initial win, unless he needs to be refitted.
If players are tied after 72 holes, the winner is decided in a sudden-death playoff, beginning at the 18th hole and going to the 10th hole if necessary. If it goes to a third hole, it would go back to the 18th. Prior to 1979, tournaments that ended in a tie were decided by an 18-hole playoff.
There have been 11 sudden-death playoffs in Masters history, and none of them have ever advanced past two holes.
Sergio Garcia won the 2017 Masters for his first major title, defeating Justin Rose in a playoff with a birdie on the first extra hole.
Tiger Woods is expected to play in this year’s Masters for the first time since 2015, when he finished in a tie for 17th.
Tiger Woods has won the Masters four times, his last victory coming in 2005.
Tiger Woods won his first Masters in 1997 at the age of 21. He is still the youngest player to ever win the Masters.
Jack Nicklaus has won the most Masters, with six, his last coming in 1986 at the age of 46. He is remains the oldest player to ever win the Masters.
Yes, three players have defended their title at the Masters, Jack Nicklaus (1965-1966), Nick Faldo (1989-1990) and Tiger Woods (2001-2002).
Tiger Woods and Jordan Spieth share the lowest 72-hole score in Masters history, which is 18-under (270). Woods did it in 1997, and Spieth in 2015.
Tiger Woods’ victory in 1997 was by 12 strokes, which is the largest margin of victory in Masters history.
The highest winning score of the Masters is one-over-par 289. Three players have won at one over: Sam Snead (1954), Jack Burke, Jr. (1956) and Zach Johnson (2007).
Yes, five players have won the Masters wire-to-wire: Craig Wood (1941), Arnold Palmer (1960), Jack Nicklaus (1972), Raymond Floyd (1976) and Jordan Spieth (2015).
No, an amateur has never won the Masters.
Yes, each year the lowest amateur to make the cut is awarded with the Silver Cup, which was first given in 1952. In 1954, they also began presenting a silver medal to the second-lowest amateur.
Three players have finished runner-up at the Masters: Frank Stranahan (1947), Ken Venturi (1956) and Charles Coe (1961).
The amateur scoring record is seven-under-par (281), shot by Charles Coe in 1961.
The youngest player to ever play in the Masters is China’s Tianlang Guan, who competed in the event in 2013 at the age of 14, having qualified by winning the 2012 Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship. He’s also the youngest player to ever make the cut in a major championship.
First- and second-round coverage of the Masters is broadcasted live on ESPN, beginning at 3 p.m. EST on Thursday and Friday. On Saturday, live coverage is on CBS beginning at 3 p.m. and on Sunday beginning at 2 p.m. The Par-3 Contest is also on ESPN on Wednesday at 3 p.m.
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