2017 Masters Tournament


The 2017 Masters Tournament was the 81st edition of the Masters Tournament and the first of golf's four major championships in 2017. It was held at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia.
Sergio García defeated Justin Rose in a sudden-death playoff, after they both completed the 72 holes in nine-under-par. This was his first major title, which came in his 74th attempt. Previously, García had 22 top-ten finishes in majors. He was the first Spaniard to win at Augusta in eighteen years, since José María Olazábal

Course

Field

The Masters has the smallest field of the four major championships. Officially, the Masters remains an invitation event, but there is a set of qualifying criteria that determines who is included in the field. Each player is classified according to the first category by which he qualified, with other categories in which he qualified shown in parentheses.
Golfers who qualify based solely on their performance in amateur tournaments must remain amateurs on the starting day of the tournament to be eligible to play.
;1. Past Masters Champions
Ángel Cabrera, Fred Couples, Trevor Immelman, Zach Johnson, Bernhard Langer, Sandy Lyle, Phil Mickelson, Larry Mize, José María Olazábal, Mark O'Meara, Charl Schwartzel, Adam Scott, Vijay Singh, Jordan Spieth, Bubba Watson, Mike Weir, Danny Willett, Ian Woosnam
;2. Winners of the last five U.S. Opens
Martin Kaymer, Justin Rose, Webb Simpson
;3. Winners of the last five British Opens
Ernie Els, Rory McIlroy, Henrik Stenson
;4. Winners of the last five PGA Championships
Jason Day, Jason Dufner, Jimmy Walker
;5. Winners of the last three The Players Championships
Rickie Fowler
;6. Winner of the 2016 Olympic Golf Tournament
;7. Top two finishers in the 2016 U.S. Amateur
Brad Dalke, Curtis Luck
;8. Winner of the 2016 Amateur Championship
Scott Gregory
;9. Winner of the 2016 Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship
;10. Winner of the 2017 Latin America Amateur Championship
Toto Gana
;11. Winner of the 2016 U.S. Mid-Amateur
Stewart Hagestad
;12. The top 12 finishers and ties in the 2016 Masters Tournament
Daniel Berger, Paul Casey, Matthew Fitzpatrick, J. B. Holmes, Søren Kjeldsen, Hideki Matsuyama, Brandt Snedeker, Lee Westwood
;13. Top 4 finishers and ties in the 2016 U.S. Open
Jim Furyk, Shane Lowry, Scott Piercy
;14. Top 4 finishers and ties in the 2016 British Open Championship
Steve Stricker
;15. Top 4 finishers and ties in the 2016 PGA Championship
Branden Grace, Brooks Koepka, Daniel Summerhays
;16. Winners of PGA Tour events that award a full-point allocation for the FedEx Cup, between the 2016 Masters Tournament and the 2017 Masters Tournament
Sergio García, Adam Hadwin, James Hahn, Russell Henley, Charley Hoffman, Mackenzie Hughes, Billy Hurley III, Kim Si-woo, Russell Knox, Marc Leishman, William McGirt, Ryan Moore, Rod Pampling, Pat Perez, Jon Rahm, Patrick Reed, Brendan Steele, Brian Stuard, Hudson Swafford, Justin Thomas, Jhonattan Vegas
;17. All players qualifying for the 2016 edition of the Tour Championship
Roberto Castro, Kevin Chappell, Emiliano Grillo, Kevin Kisner, Matt Kuchar, Kevin Na, Sean O'Hair, Gary Woodland
;18. Top 50 on the final 2016 Official World Golf Ranking list
An Byeong-hun, Rafa Cabrera-Bello, Bill Haas, Tyrrell Hatton, Yuta Ikeda, Francesco Molinari, Alex Norén, Louis Oosthuizen, Thomas Pieters, Andy Sullivan, Bernd Wiesberger, Chris Wood
;19. Top 50 on the Official World Golf Ranking list on March 27
Ross Fisher, Tommy Fleetwood, Hideto Tanihara, Wang Jeung-hun
;20. International invitees
None
All five amateurs were appearing in their first Masters, as were fourteen professionals: Tommy Fleetwood, Adam Hadwin, Tyrrell Hatton, Mackenzie Hughes, Billy Hurley III, Kim Si-woo, William McGirt, Alex Norén, Thomas Pieters, Jon Rahm, Brian Stuard, Daniel Summerhays, Hudson Swafford, and Wang Jeung-hun. All the professionals, and Scott Gregory, had previously appeared in a major.

Nationalities in the field

Par 3 contest

Wednesday, April 5, 2017
Heavy rain forced the cancellation of the Par-3 contest for the first time in its history. Mike Weir recorded the only hole-in-one before play was suspended.

Round summaries

First round

Thursday, April 6, 2017
After being one-over after five holes, Charley Hoffman birdied eight of his next twelve holes for 65. His four-stroke advantage after the first round was the largest at the Masters since 1955.
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Charley Hoffman65−7
2William McGirt69−3
3Lee Westwood70−2
T4Kevin Chappell71−1
T4Jason Dufner71−1
T4Matthew Fitzpatrick71−1
T4Sergio García71−1
T4Russell Henley71−1
T4Phil Mickelson71−1
T4Justin Rose71−1
T4Andy Sullivan71−1

Second round

Friday, April 7, 2017
Charley Hoffman fell back to the pack with 75 and into a four-way tie for the lead at Rickie Fowler had four birdies and an eagle on his way to a round of 67, the lowest score of the round, and tied for the lead along with Sergio García and Thomas Pieters. García was originally credited with a triple-bogey seven on the 10th, but his score was later corrected to a five. Fifteen players were within five shots of the lead, including past champions Fred Couples, Phil Mickelson, Adam Scott, and Jordan Spieth. Amateur Stewart Hagestad became the first U.S. Mid-Amateur champion to make the cut at the Masters since the winner of that tournament was granted entry in 1989.
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
T1Rickie Fowler73-67=140−4
T1Sergio García71-69=140−4
T1Charley Hoffman65-75=140−4
T1Thomas Pieters72-68=140−4
5William McGirt69-73=142−2
T6Fred Couples73-70=143−1
T6Ryan Moore74-69=143−1
T6Jon Rahm73-70=143−1
T6Justin Rose71-72=143−1
T10Phil Mickelson71-73=144E
T10Adam Scott75-69=144E
T10Jordan Spieth75-69=144E

Amateurs: Hagestad , Luck , Dalke, Gregory, Gana

Third round

Saturday, April 8, 2017
Justin Rose birdied five of his final seven holes for 67, the lowest of the round, and tied Sergio García for the lead. Charley Hoffman held solo possession of the lead before a bogey at 14 and double-bogey at 16 after hitting his tee shot in the water, finishing two shots behind. Jordan Spieth was five-under on his round and within a shot of the lead until a bogey at 18 tied him with Hoffman.
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
T1Sergio García71-69-70=210−6
T1Justin Rose71-72-67=210−6
3Rickie Fowler73-67-71=211−5
T4Charley Hoffman65-75-72=212−4
T4Ryan Moore74-69-69=212−4
T4Jordan Spieth75-69-68=212−4
7Adam Scott75-69-69=213−3
8Charl Schwartzel74-72-68=214−2
T9Thomas Pieters72-68-75=215−1
T9Lee Westwood70-77-68=215−1

Final round

Sunday, April 9, 2017

Summary

birdied two of his first three holes to open up a three-shot lead. Starting at the 6th, Justin Rose recorded three consecutive birdies to tie; with bogeys by García at the 10th and 11th, Rose went ahead by two shots. At the 13th, García was forced to take a drop when his tee shot found the trees, but was able to get up and down to save par while Rose missed his birdie attempt. García made birdie at the 14th to get within one and hit his approach to the par-5 15th to. After converting the eagle attempt, he once again tied Rose, who made birdie. On the par-3 16th, both hit approaches to within, and Rose made his birdie while García missed. At the 17th, however, Rose found the greenside bunker and suffered a bogey while Garcia two-putted for par, once again tying for the lead heading to the last hole. Rose missed a seven-footer for birdie, while García missed from to win the championship, forcing a sudden-death playoff.
Charl Schwartzel, the 2011 champion, had four birdies on the back-nine for 68 and third place, three shots behind García and Rose. Thomas Pieters also shot 68 after making four straight birdies on holes 12–15 and tied for fourth place. Matt Kuchar birdied three consecutive holes on his final nine, then made a hole-in-one at 16 to equal the lowest score of the round with 67 and tied Pieters. Rickie Fowler began the round a shot out of the lead, but seven bogeys yielded a 76 and dropped him to eleventh, while 2015 champion Jordan Spieth, two back at the start of the round, shot 75 and tied Fowler. Charley Hoffman carded 41 on the final nine for 78 and tied for 22nd place.
After García took his drop on 13, some TV viewers reported the possibility that he caused his ball to move while removing some pine straw near his ball. Prior to the conclusion of the round Masters Officials determined there was no penalty. Per Rule 18-2 even if high definition TV camera evidence shows movement, there is no penalty if it is deemed that the movement was not reasonably discernible to the naked eye at the time.

Final leaderboard

Note: Top 12 and ties qualify for the 2018 Masters Tournament
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney
T1Sergio García71-69-70-69=279−9Playoff
T1Justin Rose71-72-67-69=279−9Playoff
3Charl Schwartzel 74-72-68-68=282−6748,000
T4Matt Kuchar72-73-71-67=283−5484,000
T4Thomas Pieters72-68-75-68=283−5484,000
6Paul Casey72-75-69-68=284−4396,000
T7Kevin Chappell71-76-70-68=285−3354,750
T7Rory McIlroy72-73-71-69=285−3354,750
T9Ryan Moore74-69-69-74=286−2308,000
T9Adam Scott 75-69-69-73=286−2308,000

Scorecard

Final round
Hole123456789101112131415161718
Par454343454443545344
García−7−7−8−8−8−8−8−8−8−7−6−6−6−7−9−9−9−9
Rose−6−6−6−6−5−6−7−8−8−8−8−8−8−8−9−10−9−9
Schwartzel−2−3−2−2−2−2−2−2−3−3−4−4−5−4−5−5−5−6
Kuchar+1E+1+1+1E−1−1EEE−1−2−3−3−5−5−5
Pieters−1−2−2−1−1−1−1−2−2−2−2−3−4−5−6−5−5−5
Fowler−5−5−6−5−4−4−4−5−5−5−4−3−4−4−4−3−2−1
Spieth−3−4−3−3−3−2−2−2−2−1−1+1+1+2+1EE−1

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par

Playoff

The sudden-death playoff began at the par four 18th; Rose's drive found the trees and he was forced to chip out. García's drive was in the fairway and he hit his approach to, while Rose was away for par. Rose missed the putt, giving García two putts to win the championship, but he converted the birdie to win his first major championship. The win came in García's 19th Masters appearance and 74th major, the most by any player before their first title.
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney
1Sergio García3−11,980,000
2Justin Rose5+11,188,000