2012 Masters Tournament

2012 Masters Tournament
Tournament information
Dates April 5–8, 2012
Location Augusta, Georgia, U.S.
Course(s) Augusta National Golf Club
Organized by Augusta National Golf Club
Tour(s)
Statistics
Par 72
Length 7,435 yards (6,799 m)[1]
Field 95 players, 63 after cut
Cut 149 (+5)
Prize fund $8,000,000
6,124,726
Winner's share $1,440,000
€1,086,801
Champion
United States Bubba Watson
278 (−10), playoff
Augusta 
Location in the United States
Augusta 
Location in Georgia

The 2012 Masters Tournament was the 76th Masters Tournament, held April 5–8 at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia.[2] Bubba Watson won the year's first major championship on the second hole of a sudden-death playoff, defeating Louis Oosthuizen.[3] It was his first major title and his fourth victory on the PGA Tour.[3] Watson was the eighth consecutive first-time major champion, and the 14th winner in as many majors.[4][5] He won a second Masters two years later in 2014.

Two pre-tournament favorites,[3][6] Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy, both finished at 293 (+5) in a tie for 40th place. Phil Mickelson was in the final pairing and in contention during the final round, but a triple-bogey six on the fourth hole knocked him back and he finished two strokes behind, in a four-way tie for third.[3] Bo Van Pelt posted the lowest round of the tournament with a 64 (−8) early on Sunday, which propelled him up the leaderboard 35 places to tie for 17th.

It was the first playoff in three years at the Masters; Ángel Cabrera won on the second extra hole in 2009.

Course

HoleNameYardsParHoleNameYardsPar
1Tea Olive445410Camellia4954
2Pink Dogwood575511White Dogwood5054
3Flowering Peach350412Golden Bell1553
4Flowering Crab Apple240313Azalea5105
5Magnolia455414Chinese Fir4404
6Juniper180315Firethorn5305
7Pampas450416Redbud1703
8Yellow Jasmine570517Nandina4404
9Carolina Cherry460418Holly4654
Out3,72536In3,71036
Source:[1]Total7,43572

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.[7] Each player is classified according to the first category by which he qualified, but other categories are 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.

Three players were appearing in their first major: Kelly Kraft, Corbin Mills and Randal Lewis. Twelve others were appearing in their first Masters: Keegan Bradley, Patrick Cantlay, Bryden Macpherson, Kevin Chappell, Robert Garrigus, Webb Simpson, Harrison Frazar, Kyle Stanley, Scott Stallings, Brendan Steele, Bae Sang-moon and Gonzalo Fernández-Castaño.[8]

Notable absences included Mark O'Meara (injured), Ernie Els and Retief Goosen (not ranked high enough). O'Meara had appeared in the previous 27 Masters, Els in the previous 18, and Goosen in the previous 12. (Els would win the Open Championship in July to ensure an invitation to the next five Masters.)

1. Past Masters Champions
Ángel Cabrera (2,11), Fred Couples (11), Ben Crenshaw, Trevor Immelman (11), Zach Johnson (18,19), Bernhard Langer, Sandy Lyle, Phil Mickelson (13,15,16,17,18,19), Larry Mize, José María Olazábal, Charl Schwartzel (11,15,18,19), Vijay Singh (15,17), Craig Stadler, Tom Watson, Mike Weir, Tiger Woods (2,4,11,16,18,19), Ian Woosnam

(Past champions not playing: Tommy Aaron, Jack Burke, Jr., Billy Casper, Charles Coody, Nick Faldo, Raymond Floyd, Doug Ford, Bob Goalby, Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player and Fuzzy Zoeller. Player joined Nicklaus and Palmer to serve as "honorary starters" and teed off on the first day at the first hole to kick off the tournament.)

2. Last five U.S. Open Champions
Lucas Glover (16), Graeme McDowell (18,19), Rory McIlroy (11,12,16,18,19)

3. Last five British Open Champions
Stewart Cink, Darren Clarke (13,18), Pádraig Harrington (4), Louis Oosthuizen (18,19)

4. Last five PGA Champions
Keegan Bradley (14,15,16,17,18,19), Martin Kaymer (18,19), Y. E. Yang (12,17,18,19)

5. Last three winners of The Players Championship
K. J. Choi (11,15,17,18,19), Tim Clark, Henrik Stenson

6. Top two finishers in the 2011 U.S. Amateur
Patrick Cantlay (a), Kelly Kraft (a)

7. Winner of the 2011 Amateur Championship
Bryden Macpherson (a)

8. Winner of the 2011 Asian Amateur
Hideki Matsuyama (a)

9. Winner of the 2011 U.S. Amateur Public Links
Corbin Mills (a)

10. Winner of the 2011 U.S. Mid-Amateur
Randal Lewis (a)

11. The top 16 finishers and ties in the 2011 Masters Tournament
Jason Day (12,15,17,18,19), Luke Donald (15,16,17,18,19), Ross Fisher, Edoardo Molinari, Geoff Ogilvy (17,18,19), Ryan Palmer, Justin Rose (15,16,17,18,19), Adam Scott (15,16,17,18,19), Brandt Snedeker (15,16,17,18,19), Steve Stricker (15,16,17,18,19), Bo Van Pelt (15,17,18,19), Lee Westwood (12,18,19)

12. Top 8 finishers and ties in the 2011 U.S. Open
Kevin Chappell, Sergio García (18,19), Robert Garrigus, Peter Hanson (18,19)

13. Top 4 finishers and ties in the 2011 British Open Championship
Thomas Bjørn (18,19)

  • Dustin Johnson (15,16,17,18,19) withdrew with a back injury prior to the start of the tournament.[10]

14. Top 4 finishers and ties in the 2011 PGA Championship
Jason Dufner (15,17,18,19), Anders Hansen (18,19), Robert Karlsson (18,19), David Toms (15,16,17,18,19), Scott Verplank

15. Top 30 leaders on the 2011 PGA Tour official money earnings list
Aaron Baddeley (17,18,19), Jonathan Byrd (17), Bill Haas (16,17,18,19), Charles Howell III (17), Fredrik Jacobson (16,17,18,19), Matt Kuchar (17,18,19), Martin Laird (18,19), Hunter Mahan (16,17,18,19), Kevin Na, Rory Sabbatini, Webb Simpson (16,17,18,19), Nick Watney (16,17,18,19), Bubba Watson (16,17,18,19), Mark Wilson (16,17,19), Gary Woodland (17)

16. Winners of PGA Tour events that award a full-point allocation for the season-ending Tour Championship, between the 2011 Masters Tournament and the 2012 Masters Tournament
Harrison Frazar, Sean O'Hair, Scott Stallings, Kyle Stanley (19), Brendan Steele, Johnson Wagner

17. All players qualifying for the 2011 edition of The Tour Championship
Chez Reavie, John Senden (18,19)

18. Top 50 on the final 2011 Official World Golf Ranking list
Bae Sang-moon (19), Paul Casey (19), Simon Dyson (19), Gonzalo Fernández-Castaño, Rickie Fowler (19), Jim Furyk (19), Miguel Ángel Jiménez, Kim Kyung-tae (19), Francesco Molinari (19), Ian Poulter (19), Álvaro Quirós (19)

19. Top 50 on the Official World Golf Ranking list on March 25, 2012
Ben Crane, Paul Lawrie

20. International invitees
Ryo Ishikawa[11]

Past champions in the field

Made the cut

PlayerCountryYear(s) wonR1R2R3R4TotalTo parFinish
Phil Mickelson United States2004, 2006, 201074686672280−8T3
Fred Couples United States199272677572286−2T12
Vijay Singh Fiji200070727672290+2T27
Ángel Cabrera Argentina200971787171291+3T32
Zach Johnson United States200770747572291+3T32
Tiger Woods United States1997, 2001, 2002, 200572757274293+5T40
Charl Schwartzel South Africa201172757574296+8T50
Trevor Immelman South Africa200878717676301+1360

Missed the cut

PlayerCountryYear(s) wonR1R2TotalTo par
José María Olazábal Spain1994, 19997576151+7
Larry Mize United States19877675151+7
Mike Weir Canada20037279151+7
Tom Watson United States1977, 19817774151+7
Bernhard Langer Germany1985, 19937280152+8
Ian Woosnam Wales19917777154+10
Ben Crenshaw United States1984, 19957683159+15
Craig Stadler United States19828182163+19
Sandy Lyle Scotland19888678164+20
Mark O'Meara United States1998WD

Nationalities in the field

North America (46)South America (1)Europe (30)Oceania (7)Asia (6)Africa (5)
 Canada (1) Argentina (1) England (7) Australia (6) Japan (2) South Africa (5)
 United States (45) Northern Ireland (3) Fiji (1) South Korea (4)
 Scotland (3)
 Wales (1)
 Denmark (2)
 Spain (5)
 Germany (2)
 Italy (2)
 Sweden (4)
 Ireland (1)

Round summaries

First round

Thursday, April 5, 2012

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Lee Westwood England67−5
T2Peter Hanson Sweden68−4
Louis Oosthuizen South Africa
T4Ben Crane United States69−3
Jason Dufner United States
Miguel Ángel Jiménez Spain
Paul Lawrie Scotland
Francesco Molinari Italy
Bubba Watson United States
T10Jim Furyk United States70−2
Zach Johnson United States
Vijay Singh Fiji
Scott Stallings United States

Source:[12]

Second round

Friday, April 6, 2012

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
T1Fred Couples United States72-67=139−5
Jason Dufner United States69-70=139
T3Sergio García Spain72-68=140−4
Rory McIlroy Northern Ireland71-69=140
Louis Oosthuizen South Africa68-72=140
Bubba Watson United States69-71=140
Lee Westwood England67-73=140
T8Miguel Ángel Jiménez Spain69-72=141−3
Matt Kuchar United States71-70=141
Paul Lawrie Scotland69-72=141

Source:[13]

Amateurs: Matsuyama (+1), Cantlay (+5), Kraft (+5), Macpherson (+9), Mills (+11), Lewis (+15).

Third round

Saturday, April 7, 2012

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Peter Hanson Sweden68-74-65=207−9
2Phil Mickelson United States74-68-66=208−8
3Louis Oosthuizen South Africa68-72-69=209−7
4Bubba Watson United States69-71-70=210−6
5Matt Kuchar United States71-70-70=211−5
T6Pádraig Harrington Ireland71-73-68=212−4
Hunter Mahan United States72-72-68=212
Henrik Stenson Sweden71-71-70=212
Lee Westwood England67-73-72=212
10Paul Lawrie Scotland69-72-72=213−3

Source:[14]

Final round

Sunday, April 8, 2012

For the third time in seven years, the Masters concluded on Easter Sunday. The leaderboard was active, as four players held at least a share of the lead during the final round. Louis Oosthuizen charged into the lead at the second hole with a double eagle two on the par-5. It was only the fourth double eagle in Masters history and the first-ever on the second hole. The final pairing faltered: 54-hole leader Peter Hanson never got it going, with three bogeys before he carded his first birdie at the 15th hole. Three holes earlier, Hanson shanked his tee shot on the par-3 12th short of the water, bogeyed, and fell from contention. On the front nine, three-time Masters champion Phil Mickelson pushed his tee shot left at the par-3 fourth and it caromed off a greenside grandstand. He made his second triple bogey of the week and came up two shots short of the playoff.[3]

In the end, it came down to a three player race between Oosthuizen, Bubba Watson, and Matt Kuchar. Kuchar hit his approach at the 15th hole to three feet (0.9 m) and eagled to temporarily tie Oosthuizen at −9, but followed it with a bogey at the par-3 16th hole and finished two strokes back, in the four-way tie for third. After Watson made a two at the 16th for his fourth consecutive birdie, he was tied at the top with Oosthuizen at −10. Playing together in the penultimate pairing, both parred the 17th hole and were on the green in regulation at the uphill 18th. Oosthuizen missed a 35-foot (11 m) birdie putt from the back shelf and Watson had 25 feet (8 m) for his first major, but he missed the putt on the high side. After Watson tapped in, Oosthuizen holed his four-footer (1.2 m) to force a sudden death playoff.[15]

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney ($)
T1Bubba Watson United States69-71-70-68=278−10Playoff
Louis Oosthuizen South Africa68-72-69-69=278
T3Peter Hanson Sweden68-74-65-73=280−8384,000
Matt Kuchar United States71-70-70-69=280
Phil Mickelson United States74-68-66-72=280
Lee Westwood England67-73-72-68=280
7Ian Poulter England72-72-70-69=283−5268,000
T8Pádraig Harrington Ireland71-73-68-72=284−4232,000
Justin Rose England72-72-72-68=284
Adam Scott Australia75-70-73-66=284

Amateurs: Cantlay (+7), Matsuyama (+9), Kraft (+18).

Scorecard

Final round

Hole  1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8    9   10  11  12  13  14 15161718
Par454343454443545344
United States Watson−5−6−6−6−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−6−7−8−9−10−10−10
South Africa Oosthuizen−7−10−10−9−9−9−9−9−9−8−8−8−9−9−10−10−10−10
Sweden Hanson−8−8−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−6−6−6−7−7−7−8
United States Kuchar−5−5−6−6−6−6−7−7−5−5−5−6−7−7−9−8−8−8
United States Mickelson−8−8−8−5−5−5−5−6−6−6−6−6−7−7−8−8−8−8
England Westwood−3−4−3−3−3−4−5−4−4−4−4−4−5−6−7−7−7−8

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par

Double Eagle/Albatross Eagle Birdie Bogey Double bogey Triple bogey +

Source:[16]

Playoff

The sudden death playoff started at the par-4 18th hole, where both players hit the fairway and green, and similar to the final round, Bubba Watson was closer to the pin than Louis Oosthuizen. Oosthuizen narrowly missed his 18-foot (5.5 m) birdie effort which gave Watson another opportunity to secure the title. Watson's putt from 16 feet (5 m) was low the entire way, and after both players tapped in to tie they headed to the next tee at the downhill par-4 10th hole.

Both players hit poor drives to the right, and Oosthuizen's second shot ended up short of the green. The left-handed Watson, playing from the pine straw deep in the woods, hooked his approach shot nearly 90 degrees to within 10 feet (3 m) of the hole. Oosthuizen chipped to the back of the green and narrowly missed his par putt to give Watson two putts to win. He lagged his first to a foot (0.3 m) and tapped in to become the Masters champion.[17][18]

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney ($)
1Bubba Watson United States4-4=8E1,440,000
2Louis Oosthuizen South Africa4-5=9+1864,000

Scorecard

Hole 18  10 
Par44
United States WatsonEE
South Africa OosthuizenE+1

Cumulative playoff scores, relative to par

References

  1. 1 2 "Course Tour: 2012 Masters". PGA of America: Major Championships. Archived from the original on August 27, 2012. Retrieved August 24, 2012.
  2. "2012 Tournament Field Takes Shape". Masters. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "Bubba Watson wins Masters". ESPN. Associated Press. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  4. "Watson moves up to 4th in world". Toronto Sun. April 9, 2012. Retrieved April 10, 2012.
  5. "Masters 2012: Bubba Watson beats Louis Oosthuizen in play-off". BBC Sport. April 8, 2012. Archived from the original on April 10, 2012. Retrieved April 10, 2012.
  6. "Tiger Woods's Win Fuels Record-Setting Golf Wagering at Masters". Businessweek. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  7. "Players – 2012 Tournament Invitees". Masters. March 26, 2012. Archived from the original on April 11, 2012. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  8. "2012 Masters Round 1 and 2 tee times". ESPN. April 4, 2012. Archived from the original on April 4, 2012. Retrieved April 4, 2012.
  9. "The Tour Report – The Masters: Day 1". PGA Tour. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  10. "Johnson withdraws from Masters". PGA Tour. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  11. "Ryo Ishikawa gets Masters exemption". ESPN. Associated Press. March 6, 2012. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  12. "Masters 2012: day one – as it happened". The Guardian. London. April 6, 2012. Archived from the original on April 10, 2012. Retrieved April 10, 2012.
  13. "Masters 2012: day two – as it happened". The Guardian. London. April 7, 2012. Archived from the original on April 10, 2012. Retrieved April 10, 2012.
  14. "Masters 2012: day three – as it happened". The Guardian. London. April 8, 2012. Archived from the original on April 10, 2012. Retrieved April 10, 2012.
  15. "Final Leaderboard". Masters.com. April 8, 2012. Archived from the original on April 10, 2012. Retrieved April 10, 2012.
  16. "Leaderboard". Masters.com. Retrieved January 3, 2012.
  17. "The Masters 2012: day four live". The Daily Telegraph. April 8, 2012. Archived from the original on April 10, 2012. Retrieved April 10, 2012.
  18. "2012 Masters: Day four as it happened". BBC Sport. April 8, 2012. Archived from the original on April 10, 2012. Retrieved April 10, 2012.
Preceded by
2011 PGA Championship
Major Championships Succeeded by
2012 U.S. Open

Coordinates: 33°30′11″N 82°01′12″W / 33.503°N 82.020°W / 33.503; -82.020

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