Key events
Min Woo Lee is down in Mize/Rai Country, the swale to the right of 11. He plays a high-tariff lob miles into the air, landing his ball softly on the edge of the green and letting it release to three feet. In goes the putt, and that’s one of the great up-and-downs. Nerves of steel and he remains at -1.
It’s three birdies in three holes for Justin Rose! What a start. Meanwhile in more good news for fans of English golfers, Tyrrell Hatton has birdied 8, while Harris picks up a stroke at 13. I’m here all week, try the pimento cheese.
-4: Jaeger (12)
-3: Scheffler (9), Hatton (8), Rose (3)
-2: English (13), Niemann (10), Spieth (8), Canter (6), McCarty (4), Homa (3)
Justin Rose has had his near misses here. He was in contention in 2007, when Zach Johnson won; in 2015 when Jordan Spieth broke through; and perhaps most famously lost a playoff in 2017 to Sergio Garcia. At 44, he’s enjoying a late-career resurgence in the majors, having finished in a tie for sixth at last year’s PGA, and a tie for second at the Open. Clearly not done yet, he’s opened his 20th Masters bid with two birdies. Speaking of Spieth, he’s just birdied 8 to move back to -2, alongside Rose and selected others.
Laurie Canter is making his Masters debut at the age of 35. A late bloomer, he won his first DP World Tour event at last year’s European Open, and followed that up with his second title at the Bahrain Championship a couple of months ago. Now one of the top 50 players in the world as a result, he’s secured his invite to Augusta and looks in the mood to grab the opportunity with both hands. Birdies at 3 and now 6, the latter the reward for sending his tee shot at the par-three pin high. Just a couple off the lead at -2!
Aaron Rai’s promising round is unravelling at pace. His wedge into 13 sails over the flag and generates no spin, and he’s left with a tricky downhill putt from 43 feet. He tickles it down the green, pin high. The only problem is, he’s completely misread it, setting it six feet wide right and watching in horror as it fails to break towards the hole. He can’t make the par saver, and that’s three consecutive bogeys. He’s -1.
Scottie Scheffler makes his move. His second into the par-five 8th disappears down a swale and rests in a divot. But he punches up cleverly, pitching into the backstop behind the flag, and letting the camber take his ball back to 14 feet. In goes the birdie putt, and the defending champion is going along very nicely indeed.
-4: Jaeger (11)
-3: Scheffler (8)
-2: Rai (12), Niemann (9), Hatton (7), Campbell (4), McCarty (3)
We haven’t turned our attention to Nicolai Højgaard for a while. Since that double bogey at 12, he’s since carded pars at 13 and 14, bogeys at 16 and 17 … and an eagle at 15. Just the four pars on his card today. Three doubles. Four bogeys. Six birdies and an eagle. He’s +3. His twin Rasmus is out in a minute. Match that, brother.
Another bogey for Aaron Rai. He dunks his tee shot at the par-three 12th into the bunker guarding the front – better than the drink, at least – and can’t get up and down. Back-to-back bogeys, and suddenly Stephan Jaeger has a two-shot lead. Things change fast at the Masters.
-4: Jaeger (10)
-2: Rai (12), Niemann (8), Scheffler (7), Hatton (7), Campbell (4), McCarty (2)
The first match is back in the clubhouse. A disappointing end to Davis Riley’s up-and-down round: bogey-bogey and the Masters debutant, a two-time winner on the PGA Tour, ends the day with a one-over 73. His playing partner Patton Kizzire never got going, and currently props up the entire leaderboard after shooting a seven-over 79.
Collin Morikawa’s second into the par-five 8th is a thing of beauty. A fairway wood that bounces off the camber to the right of the green and gathers into the heart of the playing surface. Two careful putts and that’s his first birdie of the day. He’s -1, and one of the pre-tournament favourites looks pretty pleased, having patiently waited for something to happen for him.
Aaron Rai looks to have played the treacherous 11th well. A drive down the middle. An approach into Larry Mize’s swale to the right of the green, taking the water on the left out of play and leaving a fairly basic (for these lads) uphill chip. But a weak chip dies off to the left, and he can’t make the dribbly four-footer that remains. A first bogey of the day out of nowhere.
-4: Jaeger (10)
-3: Rai (11)
-2: Niemann (8), Scheffler (7), Hatton (6)
Justin Thomas goes on walkabout again, this time up 7. Sort of up 7. He sends his tee shot to the left of the treeline down the left. Instead of chipping sideways to the fairway, he opts to knock his second up the 3rd, which runs parallel, to a spot between the 3rd tee and the 2nd green. From there, he wedges from 45 yards to ten feet, then strokes in the par saver. JT hanging on in there at +1.
Tyrrell Hatton suffers a rush of blood to the noggin. A lovely tee shot into the par-three 6th. Pin high, 15 feet to the right of the flag. A pretty straight putt. But he shoves it slightly, and gives it a rare old clack too. Six feet past. But while he can be notoriously rash, he’s a scrapper as well, and he makes the one coming back to salvage his par. He remains at -2.
Stephan Jaeger grabs a share of the lead, hitting the turn in 32 after knocking his approach from 140 yards at the gentle dogleg-left 9th to ten feet. With Jordan Spieth dropping a shot at 4, there’s now a little bit of separation at the top.
-4: Rai (10), Jaeger (9)
-2: Niemann (7), Scheffler (6), Hatton (5)
Scottie Scheffler very nearly rakes in another monster, this time from the fringe at the par-three 6th. Just a tap-in par. Just! What Bob MacIntyre would have given for one of those. Meanwhile some good news for Jose Luis Ballester, who responds to that seven on 5 by clipping his tee shot at 6 to eight feet and walking in the birdie putt. That’s met with a warm, supportive cheer from the patrons. And it’s a strange par for the third member of the group, Justin Thomas, who mishits his tee shot, carving it right and way short of the green. He wedges close to remain at +1, having shipped a stroke at 5.
A mini-disaster for Robert MacIntyre on 7. His approach finds greenside sand, but he looks to have salvaged par by splashing out to three feet. However he sends the par putt three feet past, then does exactly the same thing with the one coming back. Three putts from three feet, and suddenly that’s a double bogey out of nowhere. He’s +1.
The amateurs are finding it tough. Evan Beck bogeys 1. Noah Kent, who briefly held a share of the lead at -2, has followed up bogeys at 7 and 8 with a three-putt double at 10; he’s +2. And Jose Luis Ballester comes up short with his second at 5, then sends his chip through the green into sand at the back. A triple-bogey seven and the young Spaniard crashes down to +5.
Par for Aaron Rai at 9. The Masters debutant turns in 32. Meanwhile the very early leader Davis Riley hauls himself back into contention with birdies at 11, 12 and 15 to move back into red figures. He’s -1 again.
Scottie Scheffler rakes one in from downtown on the par-three 4th! That’s an absurd birdie! An average tee shot by his standards into the heart of the green, 62 feet away from the back-right flag. He whistles a putt across a ridge and straight in, hitting the back of the cup and slam-dunking down. Ooo-wee, that was going at some speed! Had it not been bang on line, he’d have been faced with a 15-footer coming back, and staring bogey in the face. But that’s a two, and he acknowledges the gallery with a nonchalance that suggests he always knew that was going in. Champions do what champions do, plus a full ten out of ten for poker face. Birdies for Tyrrell Hatton and Jordan Spieth at 3, meanwhile, and this leaderboard already has a lovely look to it!
-4: Rai (8)
-3: Jaeger (7)
-2: Niemann (5), Scheffler (4), Spieth (3), Hatton (3)
The 67-year-old veteran Bernhard Langer hits the turn in a blemish-free 35. He’d be able to sell that for cash money to some of the young pretenders. On that subject, here’s Simon McMahon: “Am praying that Langer makes it to the weekend, getting goosebumps already at the thought of him walking up 18 on Sunday. He’ll be assured of a tremendous ovation from the punters patrons whatever happens, one of the game’s good guys. Would be almost as good as seeing Bob ‘Robert’ MacIntyre donning the green jacket while facetiming his buddies in the pub in Oban to tell them to get them in, he’ll be back for opening on Monday morning.”
Trouble for Joaquin Niemann at 5. He carves his drive into the pine straw down the right, and is forced to take his medicine by chipping out. His third only just holds the fringe of the green, and two putts later the Chilean is dropping his first stroke of the day. Meanwhile a third birdie of the day for Stephan Jaeger: 2, 4 and now 7, and the 35-year-old German moves to -3. But he doesn’t get a share of the lead, because Aaron Rai booms two fine shots down the par-five 8th, and two putts later it’s his second back-to-back birdie burst of the day.
-4: Rai (8)
-3: Jaeger (7)
-2: Niemann (5)
-1: Kirk (10), Langer (9), Zalatoris (9), Poston (8), Harman (7), MacIntyre (5), Scheffler (3), Spieth (2), Hatton (2), McNealy (2), Eckroat (1)
The numbers already on Nicolai Højgaard’s card: 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7. All that’s left is 1. And so, on the storied short par-three 12th, he … clanks his tee shot into the Freddie Couples Bank†, the ball toppling back into Rae’s Creek. Oh my. That leads to a double bogey five. He’s +3 and has still only made one par today.
†: Not official Masters nomenclature
We have a new leading duo. Joaquin Niemann makes it three birdies in four after clipping his tee shot at the par-three 4th to nine feet, while Aaron Rai whip-cracks an iron from the centre of the 7th fairway from 152 yards to five feet. Just gloriously controlled golf. Meanwhile even Scottie Scheffler can’t reach the downhill par-five 2nd in two, but he screeches a chip to four feet and tidies up to move into the red in short order.
-3: Rai (7), Niemann (4)
-2: Kirk (9), Jaeger (6)
-1: M Kim (10), Z Johnson (9), Thompson (8), Langer (8), Harman (6), An (5), MacIntyre (4), Bradley (3), Scheffler (2), Spieth (1), Hatton (1)
Six players have played the notoriously difficult 10th so far. The stats: two pars, three bogeys, and a double. That double has been run up by Nicolai Højgaard, who flew the green from a bunker front right and paid the consequences. He’s played ten holes and has shot every number between two and seven, a sequence that features two doubles, two bogeys and five birdies. Just the one par. Marvellous entertainment, though I doubt the 24-year-old Dane would agree. He’s +1, and well, you’d follow him round, wouldn’t you?
Scottie Scheffler and Justin Thomas make their pars on 1. The amateur Jose Luis Ballester does not. A bogey after always finding himself just out of position. Meanwhile Bob MacIntyre, bidding to become the second Scot after 1988 champ Sandy Lyle to win the Tournament, birdies 2 and is -1 through 4. And a fast start for Jordan Spieth, who loves this place both because and despite of it all. The 2015 champion and 2016 fall guy opens with a birdie at Tea Olive. He’s slowly working his way back into form after a relatively quiet couple of years. What a popular winner he’d be, an entertainer and escapologist of almost Seve-esque proportions.
Another par for Collin Morikawa, this time at 3. Not the worst result in the end, his chip up from the bottom of the big slope at the front nearly toppling down the bank at the back. He nudges a fairway wood from the fringe to kick-in distance. The 2004 Open champion Todd Hamilton would surely approve. Morikawa remains at level par, as does Min-Woo Lee, who also pars the hole. Joaquin Niemann makes it three pars out of three in the group; he’s in a shrinking leading group at -2.
-2: Kirk (8), Rai (6), Jaeger (5), Niemann (3)
The 30-year-old Colombian Nicolas Echavarria is making his Masters debut. He won the Par Three Tournament yesterday, beating JJ Spaun on the second hole of a play-off. A lovely thing to have on your resumé, albeit a mixed blessing: since the Wednesday tourney was first played in 1960, nobody has won it and then claimed a Green Jacket the following Sunday. Bogeys at 6 and 7 suggest Echavarria won’t be breaking new ground this week; he’s +2. His moment of glory upstaged by Poppy McIlroy, and all.
Birdies at 2 for Joaquin Niemann and Min-Woo Lee. Another par for Collin Morikawa, who passes up a good opportunity on a hole that has already coughed 14 birdies, having dumped his second into the bunker guarding the front right of the green, the pin over on the left. Lee and Morikawa are level par, but Niemann joins the leading group, one that no longer features Nicolai Højgaard, who drops a stroke after flaying his tee shot at 9 into the pines down the right.
-2: Vegas (9), Z Johnson (7), Kirk (7), Kent -a- (6), Rai (6), Harman (4), Jaeger (4), Niemann (2)
The world number one and defending champion Scottie Scheffler arrives for work. He’s going for a third win in four years! “Hallelujah!” cries a preacher man as Scottie splits the fairway. Justin Thomas sends his tee shot into the trees down the right, while the third member of the group, the US Amateur champion Jose Luis Ballester finds the first cut on the left. Ballester, the first Spaniard to win the US Amateur, will surely be boosted by the record here of his countryfolk. Seve, Ollie, Sergio and Jon Rahm, of course … but also Carla Bernat Escuder, who won the Augusta National Women’s Amateur last week with three consecutive rounds of 68 (two at Champions Retreat, one at Augusta National). No country, other than the USA, has a better record at this storied course.
Joaquin Niemann is one of the hottest players on the LIV Tour right now. Some would argue he’s the most in-form golfer on the planet. The 26-year-old from Chile is living up to that billing, albeit with a data sample size of one hole. Birdie, having found the semi-rough down the right of the fairway, sending his second into the heart of the green, and stroking in the 20-footer that remains. His playing partner Collin Morikawa, another much-tipped player going into this week, makes a fuss-free par, but the third member of this group, Min-Woo Lee – who kept Scottie Scheffler at arm’s length, just, to win the recent Houston Open – bogeys, having hooked his opening drive into the pines down the left. Scottie very soon, by the way.
Nicolai Højgaard continues apace with his spectacular repair job. His fourth birdie of the day on 7; his fifth on 8. The young Dane is absolutely flying, and we’d already be thinking about possible course-record tilts … were it not for that appalling bogey, double bogey start. But what a response. What mettle. What moxie! He joins a leading pack that now also features the latest PGA Tour winner Brian Harman. The 2023 Open champ landed the Texas Open last weekend in typical street-fighting style, and has opened this week’s work with birdies at 1 and 3.
-2: N Højgaard (8), Z Johnson (7), Kirk (6), Kent -a- (5), Rai (4), Harman (3)
Noah Kent qualified for this year’s Tournament by finishing runner-up at the US Amateur. One of five amateurs in this year’s field – along with US Amateur champion Jose Luis Ballester, NCAA individual title winner Hiroshi Tai, US Mid-Am champ Evan Beck and Latin American Amateur winner Justin Hastings – he’s made back-to-back birdies at 3 and 4, and like Davis Riley before him, can now always say he once led the Masters. A fast start for Wolverhampton’s Aaron Rai on debut, too, with birdies at 2 and 3. Rai has yet to make a serious impression on any of the majors, but he broke his PGA Tour duck last year at the Wyndham, formerly the Greater Greensboro Open, so knows what it takes to enter the winners circle. Sandy Lyle’s first victory in the USA was at the Greater Greensboro, incidentally, for anyone interested in extremely tenuous omens.
-2: Z Johnson (5), Kirk (5), Kent -a- (4), Rai (3)
The Honorary Starters. The dawn ceremony went strictly to plan. Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus and Tom Watson – 140 Masters appearances and 11 Green Jackets between them – were love-bombed by the gallery. Of course they were. “The fairway gets a little more narrow every year,” cracked 1964, 1974 and 1976 winner Player, before teeing off and performing a high-kick, just because he can. They don’t call him Mr Fitness for nothing. “It got off the ground!” quipped 1963, 1965, 1966, 1972, 1975 and 1986 champion Nicklaus of his shot, but of course it did. “It’s hard for me to get down,” laughed 1977 and 1981 champ Watson when teeing it up, despite looking so very nimble for a 75-year-old. Flush, stripe, flush. Beloved heroes one and all.
Chris Kirk hasn’t got much of a record in the majors. A top-five finish at the 2022 PGA Championship and that’s it. But the 39-year-old from Knoxville is coming off the back of two consecutive top-25 finishes at the Masters, shooting a best-of-day third-round score of 68 last year, and he’s taking that form into this year’s Tournament. Birdies at 2 and 4, and he’s the joint leader now with his playing partner today, the 2007 champ Zach Johnson, who has picked up strokes at 2 and 3. Meanwhile birdies for the old boys: Bernhard Langer at 3 and 1992 hero Freddie Couples at 1. Five former champions on this early leaderboard!
-2: Z Johnson (4), Kirk (4)
-1: Vegas (6), Weir (5), M Kim (5), Willett (4), Thompson (3), Langer (3), Kent -a- (3), Poston (2), Rai (2), Couples (1), Harman (1)
Nicolai Højgaard clearly loves this place. A top-20 finish on debut last year, and he’s not letting that aforementioned cold start of bogey, double bogey get him down. He’s followed up his birdie at 3 by landing his tee shot at the 182-yard par-three 4th to six feet, then from trees down the left of 5, sending a draw through a gap from 194 yards to 14 feet, making the putt on both occasions. Three birdies in a row, and having now carded his first par of the round at 6, he’s level again. That’s some response after that horror start to his round.
The two-time champion Bernhard Langer is playing in his final Masters this year. The 1985 and 1993 winner eases his opening drive down the middle of Tea Olive, then finds the centre of the green en route to par. Langer is 67 years old and still looks as young and sprightly as he did in his pomp. The German made the cut here as recently as a 63-year-old in 2020, becoming the oldest player ever to do so. (See below.) “My knees are shot,” he sighed that year, so it’s nice to hear he’ll be chauffeured to and from the course this week in a bespoke Masters-themed Mercedes-Benz with green paint, his own signature on the upholstery, all the trimmings. A living legend who deserves his pimped ride.
Erstwhile champions are out and about, and three of them have joined the leading pack with an early birdie. Mike Weir, who became the first left-handed player to win the Masters in 2003, has birdied 3, while the 2007 champion Zach Johnson and 2016 shock-winner Danny Willett pick up a stroke at 2. The early leader Davis Riley goes backwards, though, the first victim this week of those huge, deep bunkers down the left of the 5th fairway. Bogey, followed by another at the par-three 6th, the result of a weak chip from the bottom of the swale back left, and all of a sudden he’s +1. Welcome to Augusta National!
-1: Vegas (4), Weir (3), M Kim (3), Z Johnson (2), Kirk (2), Willett (2)
It’s cool early in the morning in Augusta, which explains the lack of early birdie action. (Only Jhonattan Vegas, at 3, and Michael Kim, at 2, have matched Davis Riley’s achievement of carding a red number so far.) Given that it should warm up later, and that there’s wind and possibly a thunderstorm expected tomorrow afternoon, today’s early starters appear to be on the wrong side of the draw. Good news for Rory McIlroy, then. In theory at least. Hopefully the thunderstorm will give Augusta National the bodyswerve tomorrow, and after that we should enjoy a sunny and dry weekend, if not a particularly warm one.
Nicolai Højgaard made his debut here last year, and on Thursday posted a magnificent 67. The young Dane ended the week in a very respectable tie for 16th, by some distance the best finish of his fledgeling major career. He’s making his presence felt this Thursday too, albeit in a more scattershot manner. He’s unable to get up and down from the bunker to the left of the 1st green, and follows that bogey by hooking wildly into the woods at 2, necessitating a reload, and leading to a double bogey. Birdie at the nearly drivable par-four 3rd takes him back up to +2, but the 24-year-old is currently propping up the current 14-player-strong leaderboard.
There are so many traditions to be observed at the beginning of each Masters. Arriving via Magnolia Lane. The Amateur Dinner. The Champions Dinner. Skipping the water at 16. The par-three contest. The Honorary Starters. And someone unexpected nearly always flies out of the traps early doors, able to say for ever more that they once led the Masters, and even though there were only a handful of fellow pros out on the course at the time, facts are facts and there isn’t anything anyone can ever do to rebut it. Step forward then Davis Riley, who took the opening shot of this year’s Tournament and followed a par at Tea Olive with birdie on the par-five 2nd, reward for wedging his approach to ten feet. The 28-year-old from Mississippi is on debut, so this is some introduction to life at golf’s most glamorous major. Great stuff, with the caveat that, unless Riley is to become the first debutant to win since Fuzzy Zoeller in 1979, the only way from here is down.
-1: Riley (3)
E: Vegas (2), Weir (10), M Kim (1), Young (1), Z Johnson (1), Kirk (1)
Preamble
Welcome, patrons, to the 89th staging of the Masters Tournament. The contestants are invited guests and should be treated with courtesy and respect. Although cheering and positive responses to great play are encouraged, unsolicited or consistent calls from the gallery are prohibited. Running is considered to be unacceptable behaviour. Prohibited items include Cell Phones, Beepers, Electronic devices, Tablets, any device with recording and/or transmission capability, Flags, Banners, Signs, Ladders, Periscopes and Weapons of any kind (regardless of permit). Pimento Cheese sandwiches are $1.50 and Iced Tea is two bucks. Defending champion Scottie Scheffler is the favourite, all the tee times are below, and this is the famous CBS theme on a looooong loop to get you in the mood. It’s on! Masters fever is real; won’t someone please call Dr Golf?
First-round tee times (USA unless stated, all times BST)
12.40 Patton Kizzire, Davis Riley
12.51 Nicolai Hoejgaard (Den), Jhonattan Vegas (Ven), Chun-An Yu (Tai)
13.02 Michael Kim, Mike Weir (Can), Cameron Young
13.13 Joe Highsmith, Zach Johnson, Chris Kirk
13.24 Nicolas Echavarria (Col), Davis Thompson, Danny Willett (Eng)
13.35 Noah Kent, Bernhard Langer (Ger), Will Zalatoris
13.52 J. T. Poston, Aaron Rai (Eng), Cameron Smith (Aus)
14.03 Fred Couples, Harris English, Taylor Pendrith (Can)
14.14 Corey Conners (Can), Brian Harman, Stephan Jaeger (Ger)
14.25 Byeong-Hun An (Kor), Max Greyserman, Patrick Reed
14.36 Nick Dunlap, Billy Horschel, Robert MacIntyre (Sco)
14.47 Min-Woo Lee (Aus), Collin Morikawa, Joaquin Niemann (Chi)
14.58 Keegan Bradley, Jason Day (Aus), Phil Mickelson
15.15 Jose Luis Ballester (Spa), Scottie Scheffler, Justin Thomas
15.26 Tyrrell Hatton (Eng), Joo-Hyung Kim (Kor), Jordan Spieth
15.37 Thomas Detry (Bel), Tony Finau, Maverick McNealy
15.48 Rafael Campos (Pur), Cameron Davis (Aus), Austin Eckroat
15.59 Angel Cabrera (Arg), Laurie Canter (Eng), Adam Schenk
16.10 Brian Campbell, Thriston Lawrence (Rsa), Jose Maria Olazabal (Spa)
16.21 Evan Beck, Matthieu Pavon (Fra), Bubba Watson
16.38 Christiaan Bezuidenhout (Rsa), Tom Hoge, Matt McCarty
16.49 Denny McCarthy, Charl Schwartzel (Rsa), Hiroshi Tai (Sgp)
17.00 Max Homa, Justin Rose (Eng), J. J. Spaun
17.11 Justin Hastings (Cay), Dustin Johnson, Nick Taylor (Can)
17.22 Daniel Berger, Sergio Garcia (Spa), Lucas Glover
17.33 Patrick Cantlay, Matthew Fitzpatrick (Eng), Rasmus Hoejgaard (Den)
17.50 Russell Henley, Sung-Jae Im (Kor), Brooks Koepka
18.01 Viktor Hovland (Nor), Xander Schauffele, Adam Scott (Aus)
18.12 Ludvig Aaberg (Swe), Akshay Bhatia, Rory McIlroy (NIrl)
18.23 Bryson DeChambeau, Shane Lowry (Irl), Hideki Matsuyama (Jpn)
18.34 Wyndham Clark, Tommy Fleetwood (Eng), Jon Rahm (Spa)
18.45 Sam Burns, Sepp Straka (Aut), Sahith Theegala