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2019 Masters Tournament

Coordinates:33°30′11″N82°01′12″W / 33.503°N 82.020°W /33.503; -82.020
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Golf tournament held in 2019

Golf tournament
2019 Masters Tournament
Front cover of the 2019Masters Journal
Tournament information
DatesApril 11–14, 2019
LocationAugusta, Georgia, U.S.
33°30′11″N82°01′12″W / 33.503°N 82.020°W /33.503; -82.020
CourseAugusta National Golf Club
Tours
Statistics
Par72
Length7,475 yards (6,835 m)
Field87 players, 65 after cut
Cut147 (+3)
Prize fund$11,500,000
Winner's share$2,070,000
Champion
United StatesTiger Woods
275 (−13)
Location map
Augusta National is located in the United States
Augusta National
Augusta National
Location in theUnited States
Show map of the United States
Augusta National is located in Georgia
Augusta National
Augusta National
Location inGeorgia
Show map of Georgia
← 2018
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The2019 Masters Tournament was the 83rd edition of theMasters Tournament and the first of golf's fourmajor championships in2019, held between April 11 and 14 atAugusta National Golf Club inAugusta, Georgia.[1]

Tiger Woods won his fifthgreen jacket, and fifteenth major, by one stroke ahead of three runners-up. It left him one shy ofJack Nicklaus's record six Masters wins, and three short of his record eighteen major wins. At age 43, he became the eleventh oldest player to win a major, and the second oldest Masters winner, again only bettered by Nicklaus who won at age 46. It was 11 years after his last major win, the 2008U.S. Open, and 14 years since his last Masters win beating the previous record of 13 years held byGary Player. Due to the high profile of Woods, and his storied fall from the top of the game due to personal issues and injuries, the victory generated a large amount of publicity around the world, and is regarded as one of the great comebacks in the history of sports.[2][3]

Woods only emerged to lead the tournament in the final round, whenFrancesco Molinari, who had been leading the tournament, hit his ball into the water on the 12th hole and then again on the 15th after hitting a tree. It was the first time Woods won a major when not leading after the 54th hole.[4]

Most of the media, and theLas Vegasbookmakers, placedRory McIlroy,Justin Rose, andDustin Johnson the pre-tournament favorites. McIlroy, the only player to finish in the top ten in the previous five Masters, came into the tournament as thePlayers champion and with seven consecutive top-10PGA Tour finishes, but could only finish tied for 21st. Two-time runner-up Rose came in asworld number one, but missed the cut. Johnson, who came in as world number two, and had a dominant win in the2019 WGC-Mexico Championship, finished tied for second.[5][3]

A Masters record 65 players made the cut, including three amateurs. The leading amateur, and winner of the Silver Cup, wasNorwegianViktor Hovland who had qualified as theU.S. Amateur champion. He finished tied for 32nd at 3-under-par.

It was also the first time three players had shot 64 or better in a single round at the Masters, asPatrick Cantlay,Tony Finau, andWebb Simpson all shot 64 in the third round. This was partly attributed by the media to the soft conditions, lack of wind and accessible pin positions.[3][6]

Course

[edit]
Main article:Augusta National Golf Club
HoleNameYardsParHoleNameYardsPar
1Tea Olive445410Camellia4954
2Pink Dogwood575511White Dogwood5054
3Flowering Peach350412Golden Bell1553
4Flowering Crab Apple240313Azalea5105
5Magnolia495414Chinese Fir4404
6Juniper180315Firethorn5305
7Pampas450416Redbud1703
8Yellow Jasmine570517Nandina4404
9Carolina Cherry460418Holly4654
Out3,76536In3,71036
Source:[7][8]Total7,47572
  • The fifth hole (Magnolia) was lengthened by 40 yards (37 m) for this edition.[9]

Field

[edit]

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.[10][11] 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 (categories 6–10) must remain amateurs on the starting day of the tournament to be eligible to play.

1. PastMasters Champions

Ángel Cabrera,Fred Couples,Sergio García (17,18),Trevor Immelman,Zach Johnson (3),Bernhard Langer,Sandy Lyle,Phil Mickelson (15,16,17,18),Larry Mize,José María Olazábal,Patrick Reed (11,12,16,17,18),Charl Schwartzel,Adam Scott (14,17,18),Vijay Singh,Jordan Spieth (2,3,11,17,18),Bubba Watson (11,15,16,17,18),Mike Weir,Danny Willett,Tiger Woods (14,15,16,17,18),Ian Woosnam

2. Last fiveU.S. Open Champions

Dustin Johnson (11,12,15,16,17,18),Martin Kaymer,Brooks Koepka (4,12,14,15,16,17,18)

3. Last fiveOpen Champions

Rory McIlroy (4,5,11,13,15,16,17,18),Francesco Molinari (13,15,16,17,18),Henrik Stenson (11,17,18)

4. Last fivePGA Champions

Jason Day (5,15,16,17,18),Justin Thomas (15,16,17,18),Jimmy Walker

5. Last four winners ofThe Players Championship

Kim Si-woo,Webb Simpson (15,16,17,18)

6. Top two finishers in the 2018U.S. Amateur

Devon Bling (a),Viktor Hovland (a)

7. Winner of the 2018Amateur Championship

Jovan Rebula (a)

8. Winner of the 2018Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship

Takumi Kanaya (a)

9. Winner of the 2018U.S. Mid-Amateur

Kevin O'Connell (a)

10. Winner of the 2019Latin America Amateur Championship

Álvaro Ortiz (a)

11. The top 12 finishers and ties in the2018 Masters Tournament

Tony Finau (16,17,18),Rickie Fowler (15,16,17,18),Charley Hoffman,Marc Leishman (15,16,17,18),Louis Oosthuizen (17,18),Jon Rahm (14,16,17,18),Justin Rose (13,15,16,17,18),Cameron Smith (16,17,18)

12. Top 4 finishers and ties in the2018 U.S. Open

Tommy Fleetwood (16,17,18)

13. Top 4 finishers and ties in the2018 Open Championship

Kevin Kisner (15,17,18),Xander Schauffele (15,16,17,18)

14. Top 4 finishers and ties in the2018 PGA Championship

Stewart Cink

15. Winners of PGA Tour events that award a full-point allocation for the FedEx Cup, between the2018 Masters Tournament and the 2019 Masters Tournament

Keegan Bradley (16,17,18),Paul Casey (16,17,18),Corey Conners,Bryson DeChambeau (16,17,18),J. B. Holmes (18),Charles Howell III (18),Michael Kim,Satoshi Kodaira (17),Matt Kuchar (17,18),Andrew Landry,Adam Long,Keith Mitchell,Kevin Na (16,17),Brandt Snedeker (17,18),Kevin Tway,Aaron Wise (16)

16. All players qualifying for the 2018 edition ofThe Tour Championship

Patrick Cantlay (17,18),Billy Horschel (17,18),Patton Kizzire,Hideki Matsuyama (17,18),Kyle Stanley (17,18),Gary Woodland (17,18)

17. Top 50 on the final 2018Official World Golf Ranking list

Kiradech Aphibarnrat (18),Lucas Bjerregaard (18),Rafa Cabrera-Bello (18),Matt Fitzpatrick (18),Branden Grace (18),Emiliano Grillo,Tyrrell Hatton (18),Li Haotong (18),Alex Norén (18),Thorbjørn Olesen,Eddie Pepperell (18),Ian Poulter (18),Matt Wallace (18)

18. Top 50 on theOfficial World Golf Ranking list on April 1, 2019

Justin Harding,Shane Lowry

19. International invitees

Shugo Imahira[12]

Par 3 contest

[edit]

Wednesday, April 10, 2019

Matt Wallace won thepar-3 contest on the third playoff hole againstSandy Lyle after both players finished with a score of 22 (−5). Wallace made ahole-in-one on the 8th hole, while three other aces were recorded byMark O'Meara,Shane Lowry, and amateur Devon Bling.[13] Wallace missed the 36-hole cut by five strokes.[7]

Weather

[edit]

Thursday: Partly cloudy. High of 84 °F/29 °C. Wind SE 10-15 mph.

Friday: Mostly cloudy with scattered showers. High of 84 °F/29 °C. Wind SSE 5-10 mph. Play was suspended at 5:05 p.m. due to dangerous weather and resumed at 5:34 p.m., a delay of 29 minutes.

Saturday: Mostly cloudy. High of 85 °F/29 °C. Wind SE 5-10 mph.

Sunday: Play began at 7:30 a.m. due to threat of thunderstorms. Cloudy with scattered showers. High of 80 °F/27 °C. Wind SSE 15-20 mph, with gusts to 25 mph.[3]

Round summaries

[edit]

First round

[edit]

Thursday, April 11, 2019

Bryson DeChambeau and reigningPGA Championship andU.S. Open championBrooks Koepka tied for the lead at 66 (−6). DeChambeau's round included six birdies in his final seven holes. One stroke behind was three-time Masters championPhil Mickelson with world number twoDustin Johnson andIan Poulter two behind.[14] Ten players were tied for 11th place at 70 (−2), including two of the pre-tournament favorites,Rickie Fowler andTiger Woods. Defending championPatrick Reed opened with 73 (+1).[15][16]

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
T1United StatesBryson DeChambeau66−6
United StatesBrooks Koepka
3United StatesPhil Mickelson67−5
T4United StatesDustin Johnson68−4
EnglandIan Poulter
T6ThailandKiradech Aphibarnrat69−3
South AfricaJustin Harding
United StatesKevin Kisner
SpainJon Rahm
AustraliaAdam Scott
Source:[7]

Second round

[edit]

Friday, April 12, 2019

Five players, all major champions, shared the lead at the end of the second day. First-round co-leaderBrooks Koepka struggled early with two bogeys and a double, but recovered with three birdies to score 71 (−1).Jason Day andFrancesco Molinari both scored 67 (−5), whileLouis Oosthuizen shot the second best round of the day, 66 (−6).2013 championAdam Scott shot a 68 (−4) that included an eagle on the par-5 15th. In the group one back wereDustin Johnson,Tiger Woods, andXander Schauffele, the last of whom shot a 65 (−7), the lowest round of the first two days. Woods, seeking his first major since the2008 U.S. Open, made two front-nine bogeys in a round of 68 (−4). The other first round co-leader,Bryson DeChambeau, struggled with a 75 (+3) whilePhil Mickelson followed up his opening round 67 (−5) with a 73 (+1).[17]

There was a 29-minute delay during the afternoon because of thunderstorms in the area. Players remained on the course during the delay. The Masters has a "10 shot rule" whereby all players within 10 shots of the leaders make the 36-hole cut. With the leaders on 137 (−7) the cut was at 147 (+3). 65 players made the cut, the most since the cut was introduced in 1957.[18] Four amateurs made the cut, the most since 1999. World number oneJustin Rose was among the players to miss the cut, his first missed cut in his 14th appearance. Also missing the cut was1991 Masters ChampionIan Woosnam, who announced his retirement as an active Masters competitor shortly after completion of play.[19]

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
T1AustraliaJason Day70-67=137−7
United StatesBrooks Koepka66-71=137
ItalyFrancesco Molinari70-67=137
South AfricaLouis Oosthuizen71-66=137
AustraliaAdam Scott69-68=137
T6South AfricaJustin Harding69-69=138−6
United StatesDustin Johnson68-70=138
United StatesXander Schauffele73-65=138
United StatesTiger Woods70-68=138
T10EnglandIan Poulter68-71=139−5
SpainJon Rahm69-70=139

Amateurs:Hovland (−1),Ortiz (E),Bling (+3),Kanaya (+3),O'Connell (+4),Rebula (+8)

Source:[7]

Third round

[edit]

Saturday, April 13, 2019

Francesco Molinari, part of a five-way tie for the lead at the start of the round, made four straight birdies from holes 12 to 15 on his way to a round of 66 (−6) and a two-shot lead after 54 holes.Tony Finau began his round with three straight birdies and made an eagle at the par-5 8th hole, tying the Masters record with 30 on the front-nine. He ended up with a round of 64 (−8), one off the course record, to jump into a tie for second. Four-time Masters championTiger Woods was one-over through 5 holes before birdieing 6 to 8, and after three more birdies on the back-nine shot 67 (−5) to join Finau at 11 under par.[20]

Webb Simpson andPatrick Cantlay also shot 64, the first time in Masters history three rounds of 64 or better were shot on the same day. The field combined to shoot 80-under for the round, the lowest in tournament history.[21]

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1ItalyFrancesco Molinari70-67-66=203−13
T2United StatesTony Finau71-70-64=205−11
United StatesTiger Woods70-68-67=205
4United StatesBrooks Koepka66-71-69=206−10
T5EnglandIan Poulter68-71-68=207−9
United StatesWebb Simpson72-71-64=207
T7South AfricaJustin Harding69-69-70=208−8
United StatesDustin Johnson68-70-70=208
United StatesMatt Kuchar71-69-68=208
South AfricaLouis Oosthuizen71-66-71=208
United StatesXander Schauffele73-65-70=208

Amateurs:Hovland (−2),Kanaya (−1),Ortiz (+1),Bling (+2)

Source:[7]

Final round

[edit]

Sunday, April 14, 2019

Summary

[edit]
Tiger Woods won his fifth Masters title
External videos
video iconFull final round coverage on CBS onYouTube

Due to the threat of thunderstorms forecast for the final day, the players were grouped into threesomes with tee times at 7:30 a.m.EDT off the first and tenth tees; the leaders teed off at 9:20 a.m.[22]

Francesco Molinari held the lead throughout the first eleven holes before his tee shot at No. 12 came up well short and rolled back into Rae's Creek, leading to a double bogey and a tie withTiger Woods at 11 under par. As the final threesome played No. 15, Molinari, Woods,Xander Schauffele,Dustin Johnson andBrooks Koepka were tied at −12, but none of the latter three recorded another birdie and Molinari hit into the water again at the 15th before Woods birdied the hole. Woods doubled his advantage at 16, after his tee shot came within mere inches of going in before stopping three feet away from the cup, and made a tap-in par at 17. Needing only a bogey at the 18th to clinch the tournament, Woods chipped on and two-putted for the 5 and a 2-under-par 70 for the win.[23] It was the first time that Woods had won a major championship when he was trailing after 54 holes.[24][25]

Woods became the fifth player to have a gap of over a decade between major wins. The others wereHenry Cotton,Julius Boros,Hale Irwin andBen Crenshaw.[26]

Timeline of key events

[edit]

12.13pm

Most of the leaders entered Amen corner in or around par for the round. Patrick Cantlay scored 3 under par through the first eleven holes to move up the leaderboard. Some commentators were suggesting Francesco Molinari was showing the same composure that enabled him to win the2018 Open Championship.

Leaderboard:−13: Molinari (10);−11: Koepka (10), Woods (10);−10: Cantlay (12), Schauffele (12), Poulter (10), Finau (10)

12.31pm:

Brooks Koepka and Ian Poulter both find Rae's Creek on the 12th to score double bogeys. After a birdie on the 15th, backing up birdies on the 2nd, 7th, 8th, and 13th, Jason Day reaches 10 under par.

12.39pm:

Bubba Watson makes an eagle on the 15th, to back up birdies on the 13th and 14th and charge up the leaderboard.

12.47pm:

The leading group tee up on the par 3 12th, with the wind swirling. Francesco Molinari targets the flag and lands on the false front to roll back into Rae's Creek. Tiger Woods hits the centre of the green, after deciding not to go for the flag. Tony Finau goes for the flag, finding Rae's Creek as well. Molinari and Finau, like Koepka and Poulter before them, end up with a double bogey on the 12th, severely hurting their chances of victory.

Leaderboard:−11: Schauffele (13), Molinari (12), Woods (12);−10: Day (16), Watson (16), Cantlay (14)

1.00pm:

Brooks Koepka bounces back from his double bogey on 12, to eagle the 13th. Jon Rahm birdies the 16th to go four under for the round, and 10 under overall. Xander Schuffele birdies the 14th, and Patrick Cantlay eagles the 15th to move into joint lead.

Leaderboard:−12: Cantlay (15), Schauffele (14);−11: Koepka (13), Molinari (12), Woods (12);−10: Day (17), Rahm (16)

1.03pm:

Viktor Hovland of Norway wins the Silver Cup for low amateur. Hovland shot 71 to end the week at −3, one shot ahead of Mexican Alvaro Ortiz.

1.07pm:

Tiger Woods and Francesco Molinari birdie the 13th to move into a share of the lead, whilst Patrick Cantlay bogeys the 16th to move out of the leading pack.

Leaderboard:−12: Schauffele (14), Molinari (13), Woods (13);−11: Cantlay (16), Koepka (13)

1.18pm:

Jason Day birdies the last to finish with a 67, −11 overall, to set the clubhouse lead

1.33pm:

Dustin Johnson birdies the 17th, to back up birdies on the 13th, 15th and 16th and join the leaders at 12 under par. Rickie Fowler also birdies the 17th, to back up birdies on the 13th, 14th and 15th and sit one shot behind.

Leaderboard:−12: D Johnson (17), Schauffele (16), Koepka (15), Molinari (14), Woods (14);−11: Day (F), Fowler (17)

1.46pm:

Francesco Molinari drives into the trees on the 15th, and follows up with a misplaced lay-up. Playing from a tricky angle he hits an overhanging branch and his ball lands the pond guarding the front of the green. He ends up with a double bogey. Tiger Woods makes birdie to take sole lead of the tournament.

Leaderboard:−13: Woods (15);−12: D Johnson (F), Schauffele (16), Koepka (16)

2.22pm:

After a birdie on the 16th, and a par on the 17th, Tiger Woods heads to the 18th knowing a bogey is all he needs to win his 5th Masters.

Leaderboard:−14: Woods (17);−12: D Johnson (F), Schauffele (F), Koepka (F)

2.29pm:

Tiger Woods bogeys the 18th, to win the Masters by one shot.[27]

Final leaderboard

[edit]
Champion
Silver Cup winner (low amateur)
(a) = amateur
(c) = past champion
Top 10
PlacePlayerScoreTo parMoney (US$)
1United StatesTiger Woods (c)70-68-67-70=275−132,070,000
T2United StatesDustin Johnson68-70-70-68=276−12858,667
United StatesBrooks Koepka66-71-69-70=276
United StatesXander Schauffele73-65-70-68=276
T5AustraliaJason Day70-67-73-67=277−11403,938
United StatesTony Finau71-70-64-72=277
ItalyFrancesco Molinari70-67-66-74=277
United StatesWebb Simpson72-71-64-70=277
T9United StatesPatrick Cantlay73-73-64-68=278−10310,500
United StatesRickie Fowler70-71-68-69=278
SpainJon Rahm69-70-71-68=278
Leaderboard below the top 10
PlacePlayerScoreTo parMoney ($)
T12South AfricaJustin Harding69-69-70-72=280−8225,400
United StatesMatt Kuchar71-69-68-72=280
EnglandIan Poulter68-71-68-73=280
United StatesJustin Thomas73-68-69-70=280
United StatesBubba Watson (c)72-72-67-69=280
17United StatesAaron Wise75-71-68-67=281−7184,000
T18United StatesPatton Kizzire70-70-73-69=282−6161,000
United StatesPhil Mickelson (c)67-73-70-72=282
AustraliaAdam Scott (c)69-68-72-73=282
T21DenmarkLucas Bjerregaard70-72-69-72=283−5107,956
EnglandMatt Fitzpatrick78-67-68-70=283
South KoreaKim Si-woo72-72-70-69=283
United StatesKevin Kisner69-73-72-69=283
Northern IrelandRory McIlroy73-71-71-68=283
DenmarkThorbjørn Olesen71-71-68-73=283
United StatesJordan Spieth (c)75-68-69-71=283
United StatesKyle Stanley72-72-70-69=283
T29United StatesBryson DeChambeau66-75-73-70=284−478,200
United StatesCharley Hoffman71-71-72-70=284
South AfricaLouis Oosthuizen71-66-71-76=284
T32NorwayViktor Hovland (a)72-71-71-71=285−30
United StatesCharles Howell III73-67-76-69=28568,042
JapanHideki Matsuyama75-70-68-72=285
United StatesGary Woodland70-71-74-70=285
T36SpainRafa Cabrera-Bello73-70-75-68=286−255,488
EnglandTommy Fleetwood71-71-70-74=286
MexicoÁlvaro Ortiz (a)73-71-73-69=2860
United StatesPatrick Reed (c)73-70-74-69=28655,488
SwedenHenrik Stenson74-72-67-73=286
United StatesKevin Tway72-71-70-73=286
United StatesJimmy Walker72-72-72-70=286
T43United StatesKeegan Bradley76-68-71-72=287−144,850
ChinaLi Haotong72-74-73-68=287
United StatesKeith Mitchell72-74-72-69=287
T46CanadaCorey Conners70-71-71-76=288E37,950
United StatesAndrew Landry72-73-73-70=288
United StatesKevin Na71-73-73-71=288
T49ThailandKiradech Aphibarnrat69-72-75-73=289+132,430
AustraliaMarc Leishman72-72-70-75=289
T51South AfricaTrevor Immelman (c)74-72-75-69=290+228,693
GermanyMartin Kaymer73-74-72-71=290
EnglandEddie Pepperell74-73-72-71=290
AustraliaCameron Smith70-74-69-77=290
55United StatesDevon Bling (a)74-73-71-73=291+30
T56EnglandTyrrell Hatton73-73-72-74=292+426,910
United StatesBilly Horschel72-75-74-71=292
T58South AfricaBranden Grace72-75-72-74=293+526,335
United StatesZach Johnson (c)74-73-73-73=293
JapanTakumi Kanaya (a)73-74-68-78=2930
61JapanSatoshi Kodaira75-70-73-76=294+625,990
T62ArgentinaEmiliano Grillo72-75-73-76=296+825,415
United StatesJ. B. Holmes70-72-74-80=296
GermanyBernhard Langer (c)71-72-75-78=296
SwedenAlex Norén75-72-75-74=296
CUTUnited StatesStewart Cink76-72=148+4
SpainSergio García (c)73-75=148
ScotlandSandy Lyle (c)73-75=148
United StatesKevin O'Connell (a)77-71=148
EnglandJustin Rose75-73=148
CanadaMike Weir (c)72-76=148
EnglandDanny Willett (c)75-73=148
United StatesFred Couples (c)78-71=149+5
United StatesAdam Long75-74=149
South AfricaCharl Schwartzel (c)77-72=149
United StatesBrandt Snedeker75-74=149
JapanShugo Imahira76-74=150+6
Republic of IrelandShane Lowry78-73=151+7
United StatesLarry Mize (c)77-74=151
South AfricaJovan Rebula (a)73-79=152+8
EnglandMatt Wallace75-77=152
EnglandPaul Casey81-73=154+10
United StatesMichael Kim76-78=154
FijiVijay Singh (c)80-76=156+12
WalesIan Woosnam (c)80-76=156
ArgentinaÁngel Cabrera (c)82-75=157+13
SpainJosé María Olazábal (c)78-79=157
Source:[7]

Hole by hole scorecard progression

[edit]
Hole123456789101112131415161718
Par454343454443545344
United States Woods−11−11−12−11−10−10−11−12−12−11−11−11−12−12−13−14−14−13
United States D. Johnson−8−8−7−7−7−7−7−8−8−8−8−8−9−9−10−11−12−12
United States Koepka−10−11−11−11−11−10−10−11−11−11−11−9−11−11−12−12−12−12
United States Schauffele−9−10−9−9−8−8−7−8−9−9−10−10−11−12−12−12−12−12
Australia Day−6−7−7−6−6−6−7−8−8−8−8−8−9−9−10−10−10−11
United States Finau−11−11−11−11−10−10−10−11−11−10−10−8−9−9−10−11−11−11
Italy Molinari−13−13−13−13−13−13−12−13−13−13−13−11−12−12−10−10−11−11
United States Simpson−9−9−9−9−9−8−8−8−8−8−8−8−9−10−10−10−10−11
United States Cantlay−7−8−8−7−8−8−9−9−9−9−10−10−10−10−12−11−10−10
United States Fowler−8−8−8−8−8−8−7−8−8−8−8−7−8−9−10−10−11−10
Spain Rahm−6−7−6−6−6−5−6−8−8−8−8−8−9−9−9−10−10−10
South Africa Harding−9−8−8−7−7−8−7−7−7−6−6−7−8−8−7−7−7−8
United States Kuchar−8−9−9−8−8−7−7−8−8−9−9−8−8−8−8−8−8−8
England Poulter−9−8−8−8−8−9−10−10−10−10−9−7−8−8−9−9−8−8
United States Thomas−6−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−8−9−8−7−9−9−8
United States Watson−5−5−5−5−5−5−5−5−6−6−6−6−7−8−10−10−9−8

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par

EagleBirdieBogeyDouble bogey
Source:[7]

Reaction from Woods

[edit]

As is traditional, Woods was interviewed in Butler Cabin, where he discussed his victory:[27]

I'm a little hoarse from yelling. I was just trying to plot my way round. Then all of a sudden I had the lead. When I tapped the putt in, I don't know what I did. I know I screamed. And to have my kids there ... it's come full circle. In 1997 my dad was here. Now I'm the dad.
It's overwhelming, because of what has transpired. Last year I was just very lucky to be playing again. I missed a couple of years of playing this great tournament. And to now be the champion ... what, is it 22 years? It's a long time! It's unreal. My mom was here, she was here in 97 as well. I'm kind of at a loss for words. This is up there. It's one of the hardest I've ever had to win. I was close last year in the majors. I learned from those, and was able to seal the deal today.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"PGA Tour unveils significantly revamped 2018-19 Season schedule". PGA Tour. RetrievedDecember 16, 2018.
  2. ^Scrivener, Peter (April 14, 2019)."Tiger Woods wins 2019 Masters at Augusta to claim 15th major".BBC Sport. RetrievedApril 15, 2019.
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