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2004 Masters Tournament


FieldValue
name2004 Masters Tournament
image2004_Masters_Tournament_Official_Program_cover.jpg
captionFront cover of the 2004 *Masters Journal*
datesApril 8–11, 2004
locationAugusta, Georgia
courseAugusta National Golf Club
orgAugusta National Golf Club
tourPGA Tour
European Tour
Japan Golf Tour
par72
yardage7290 yd
field93 players, 44 after cut
cut148 (+4)
purseUS$6,000,000
winners_share$1,170,000
championUSA Phil Mickelson
score279 (−9)
previous[2003](2003-masters-tournament)
next[2005](2005-masters-tournament)
mapUSA#USA Georgia
map_reliefyes
map_labelAugusta National
map_captionLocation in the United States##Location in Georgia
coordinates

European Tour Japan Golf Tour The 2004 Masters Tournament was the 68th Masters Tournament, held April 8–11 at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia. Phil Mickelson, 33, won his first major championship with a birdie on the final hole to win by one stroke over runner-up Ernie Els. The purse was $6.0 million and the winner's share was $1.17 million.

This was the 50th consecutive and final Masters appearance for four-time champion Arnold Palmer.

Playoff alteration

Prior to this Masters, the sudden-death playoff was changed to begin on the 18th hole and alternate with the 10th hole. This new starting point was first used the following year in 2005. When the playoff format was changed to sudden-death for 1976, it began at the 10th hole, then went to the 11th, and was first used in 1979. Prior to 1976, playoffs at Augusta were full 18-hole rounds on Monday, and the last was won by Billy Casper in 1970. The exception was the first playoff in 1935, which was 36 holes.

Course

Main article: Augusta National Golf Club

HoleNameYardsParHoleNameYardsPar
1Tea Olive435410Camellia495
2Pink Dogwood575511White Dogwood4904
3Flowering Peach350412Golden Bell1553
4Flowering Crab Apple205313Azalea5105
5Magnolia455414Chinese Fir4404
6Juniper180315Firethorn5005
7Pampas410416Redbud1703
8Yellow Jasmine570517Nandina4254
9Carolina Cherry460418Holly4654
**Out****3,640****36****In****3,650****36**
**Total****7,290****72**

Field

;1. Masters champions Tommy Aaron, Charles Coody, Fred Couples (14,16,17), Ben Crenshaw, Nick Faldo, Raymond Floyd, Bernhard Langer, Sandy Lyle, Larry Mize, Jack Nicklaus, José María Olazábal (10), Mark O'Meara (10), Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Vijay Singh (10,12,14,15,16,17), Craig Stadler, Tom Watson, Mike Weir (10,11,14,15,16,17), Tiger Woods (2,3,4,10,12,14,15,16,17), Ian Woosnam, Fuzzy Zoeller

  • George Archer, Seve Ballesteros, Gay Brewer, Jack Burke Jr., Billy Casper, Doug Ford, Bob Goalby, and Byron Nelson did not play.

;2. U.S. Open champions (last five years) Retief Goosen (10,14,16,17)

  • Jim Furyk (10,11,14,16,17) did not play.

;3. The Open champions (last five years) Ben Curtis (12,16,17), Ernie Els (10,11,14,16,17), Paul Lawrie (10)

  • David Duval did not play.

;4. PGA champions (last five years) Rich Beem (10,16), Shaun Micheel (13,14,16,17), David Toms (10,11,14,16,17)

;5. The Players Championship winners (last three years) Davis Love III (10,12,14,15,16,17), Craig Perks, Adam Scott (15,16,17)

;6. U.S. Amateur champion and runner-up Nick Flanagan (a), Casey Wittenberg (a)

;7. The Amateur champion Gary Wolstenholme (a)

;8. U.S. Amateur Public Links champion Brandt Snedeker (a)

;9. U.S. Mid-Amateur champion Nathan Smith (a)

;10. Top 16 players and ties from the 2003 Masters Jonathan Byrd, Ángel Cabrera, K. J. Choi (14,16,17), Tim Clark (13), Jeff Maggert, Len Mattiace, Phil Mickelson (14,16,17), Scott Verplank (14,16,17)

;11. Top eight players and ties from the 2003 U.S. Open Freddie Jacobson (16,17), Stephen Leaney (16,17), Kenny Perry (14,16,17), Nick Price (14,16,17), Justin Rose

;12. Top four players and ties from the 2003 Open Championship Thomas Bjørn (16,17)

;13. Top four players and ties from 2003 PGA Championship Chad Campbell (14,15,16,17), Alex Čejka (16,17)

;14. Top 40 players from the 2003 PGA Tour money list Robert Allenby (16,17), Stuart Appleby (15,16,17), Briny Baird, Stewart Cink (17), Chris DiMarco (16,17), Bob Estes (16), Brad Faxon (16,17), Steve Flesch (17), Fred Funk (16,17), Jay Haas (16,17), Tim Herron (16), Charles Howell III (16,17), Jonathan Kaye (15,16,17), Jerry Kelly (16,17), Justin Leonard (16,17), J. L. Lewis, Shigeki Maruyama (16,17), Rocco Mediate (16,17), Tim Petrovic, Chris Riley (16,17), John Rollins, Jeff Sluman, Kirk Triplett (17), Bob Tway (16,17)

;15. Top 10 players from the 2004 PGA Tour money list on March 28 John Daly

;16. Top 50 players from the final 2003 world ranking Michael Campbell, Paul Casey (17), Darren Clarke (17), Sergio García (17), Pádraig Harrington (17), Toshimitsu Izawa, Peter Lonard (17), Colin Montgomerie (17), Ian Poulter (17), Phillip Price, Eduardo Romero

;17. Top 50 players from world ranking published March 28 Brian Davis, Todd Hamilton, Trevor Immelman, Craig Parry

;18. Special foreign invitation Zhang Lianwei

Round-by-round results

First round

Thursday, April 8, 2004

Friday, April 9, 2004

23-year-old Englishman Justin Rose posted a five-under 67 to lead after the first round. Americans Chris DiMarco and Jay Haas shot 69 (−3) and two-time U.S. Open champion Ernie Els was among a group tied for fourth with 70 (−2). Among the seven players tied at 71 (−1) was two-time Masters champion, José María Olazábal. Phil Mickelson shot an even-par 72, and three-time Masters champion Tiger Woods shot a 75 (+3). The winner of the previous major (2003 PGA Championship), Shaun Micheel, was at even-par 72. Play was suspended for roughly two hours due to rain, so 18 players completed their opening round on Friday morning.

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1ENG Justin Rose67−5
T2USA Chris DiMarco69−3
USA Jay Haas
T4DEU Alex Čejka70−2
NIR Darren Clarke
ZAF Ernie Els
USA Chris Riley
T8KOR K. J. Choi71−1
USA Charles Howell III
DEU Bernhard Langer
SCO Colin Montgomerie
ESP José María Olazábal
WAL Phillip Price
USA Kirk Triplett

Second round

Friday, April 9, 2004

First round leader Rose put together another good round (71) to take the 36-hole lead at 138 (−6). Olazábal shot a 69 to close within two strokes of the lead in a tie for second with Alex Čejka, who shot 70. Mickelson, trying to remove the best player never to win a major championship label, moved into a share of fourth with a 69, alongside K. J. Choi. Davis Love III was one of two to shoot the round of the day with a 67 (−5), which moved him into a tie for sixth with Els, DiMarco, Charles Howell III, and 1992 champion Fred Couples. Most notables made the cut at 148 (+4), but among those failing to advance were defending champion Mike Weir and Ben Curtis, the 2003 Open Champion.

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1ENG Justin Rose67-71=138−6
T2DEU Alex Čejka70-70=140−4
ESP José María Olazábal71-69=140
T4KOR K. J. Choi71-70=141−3
USA Phil Mickelson72-69=141
T6USA Fred Couples73-69=142−2
USA Chris DiMarco69-73=142
ZAF Ernie Els70-72=142
USA Charles Howell III71-71=142
USA Davis Love III75-67=142

Amateurs: Snedeker (+4), Wittenberg (+4), Smith (+6), Flanagan (+8), Wolstenholme (+9).

Third round

Saturday, April 10, 2004

Mickelson moved from fourth to a share of the 54-hole lead with a three-under 69, while the top three golfers after round two collapsed. Rose shot an 81, Olazábal a 79, and Čejka a 78. This collective meltdown by the top three allowed Mickelson and DiMarco to rise to the top. DiMarco finished tied for the 54-hole lead with a four-under 68. Paul Casey put together a 68 as well to move within two strokes of the co-leaders at the end of the day. Els continued his steady play with a one-under 71 to move into a three-way tie for fourth. Kirk Triplett and Freddie Jacobson put themselves in contention at seventh and eighth, respectively.

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
T1USA Chris DiMarco69-73-68=210−6
USA Phil Mickelson72-69-69=210
3ENG Paul Casey75-69-68=212−4
T4KOR K. J. Choi71-70-72=213−3
ZAF Ernie Els70-72-71=213
DEU Bernhard Langer71-73-69=213
7USA Kirk Triplett71-74-69=214−2
8SWE Freddie Jacobson74-74-67=215−1
T9USA Stewart Cink74-73-69=216E
USA Fred Couples73-69-74=216
USA Jay Haas69-75-72=216
IRL Pádraig Harrington74-74-68=216
USA Davis Love III75-67-74=216
ZWE Nick Price72-73-71=216

Final round

Sunday, April 11, 2004

Summary

In one of the most exciting back nines in Masters history, Mickelson dueled Els to claim his first major championship. Mickelson shot a final round 69, sealed with an 18 ft birdie on the 18th green to win by a stroke. Playing two groups ahead of Mickelson, Els started the day at −3 and posted a 67 (−5). As Mickelson approached the final hole, Els' total of 280 (−8) appeared enough to at least get him into a playoff. Els stumbled out of the gate with two bogeys in his first five holes, but quickly regained his form. He collected two eagles on his round, at the par-5 8th and 13th holes. Els also connected on a birdie at the 15th to get him to −8. Seeing his first major possibly slip away with a 38 (+2) on his front nine, Mickelson had to match Els' fire on the back nine, and shot a bogey-free 31, with birdies on five of the final seven holes. Mickelson birdied the par-3 12th and par-5 13th. He briefly tied Els with his third consecutive birdie at the par-4 14th, then had a disappointing par on the par-5 15th. At the par-3 16th, Mickelson put his tee shot 20 ft above the pin and holed the dramatic putt to tie for the lead. He remained tied heading to the final tee, and when his approach shot landed on the green, a winning putt was before him. As Mickelson sunk the putt, he jumped for joy as he won his first major title.

K. J. Choi finished third, which was his best major finish, with a final round 69 to total 282 (−6). Sergio García shot the round of the tournament with a 66 (−6) to tie for fourth with two-time Masters champion Bernhard Langer. Four major champions, including two former Masters champions (Vijay Singh, Couples, Love, and Nick Price) were in the group who finished tied for sixth at 286 (−2). Woods' streak of not winning a major extended to seven with a disappointing 290 (+2), the same score tallied by first and second round leader Rose.

Final leaderboard

(c) = past champion
PlacePlayerScoreTo parMoney (US$)
1USA Phil Mickelson72-69-69-69=279−91,170,000
2ZAF Ernie Els70-72-71-67=280−8702,000
3KOR K. J. Choi71-70-72-69=282−6442,000
T4ESP Sergio García72-72-75-66=285−3286,000
DEU Bernhard Langer (c)71-73-69-72=285
T6ENG Paul Casey75-69-68-74=286−2189,893
USA Fred Couples (c)73-69-74-70=286
USA Chris DiMarco69-73-68-76=286
USA Davis Love III75-67-74-70=286
ZWE Nick Price72-73-71-70=286
FJI Vijay Singh (c)75-73-69-69=286
USA Kirk Triplett71-74-69-72=286
Leaderboard below the top 10PlacePlayerScoreTo parMoney ($)
T13ZAF Retief Goosen75-73-70-70=288E125,667
IRL Pádraig Harrington74-74-68-72=288
USA Charles Howell III71-71-76-70=288
USA Casey Wittenberg (a)76-72-71-69=2880
T17USA Stewart Cink74-73-69-73=289+197,500
USA Steve Flesch76-67-77-69=289
USA Jay Haas69-75-72-73=289
SWE Freddie Jacobson74-74-67-74=289
AUS Stephen Leaney76-71-73-69=289
T22AUS Stuart Appleby73-74-73-70=290+270,200
USA Shaun Micheel72-76-72-70=290
ENG Justin Rose67-71-81-71=290
USA Tiger Woods (c)75-69-75-71=290
26DEU Alex Čejka70-70-78-73=291+357,200
T27USA Mark O'Meara (c)73-70-75-74=292+451,025
USA Bob Tway75-71-74-72=292
29USA Scott Verplank74-71-76-72=293+548,100
30ESP José María Olazábal (c)71-69-79-75=294+646,150
T31USA Bob Estes76-72-73-74=295+741,275
USA Brad Faxon72-76-76-71=295
USA Jerry Kelly74-72-73-76=295
ENG Ian Poulter75-73-74-73=295
T35USA Justin Leonard76-72-72-76=296+835,913
WAL Phillip Price71-76-73-76=296
T37SCO Paul Lawrie77-70-73-77=297+932,663
SCO Sandy Lyle (c)72-74-75-76=297
39ARG Eduardo Romero74-73-74-77=298+1030,550
40USA Todd Hamilton77-71-76-75=299+1129,250
T41USA Tim Petrovic72-75-75-78=300+1227,950
USA Brandt Snedeker (a)73-75-75-77=3000
43USA Jeff Sluman73-70-82-77=302+1426,650
44USA Chris Riley70-78-78-78=304+1625,350
CUTAUS Robert Allenby73-76=149+5
NZL Michael Campbell76-73=149
NIR Darren Clarke70-79=149
USA Ben Crenshaw (c)74-75=149
USA John Daly78-71=149
USA Raymond Floyd (c)73-76=149
USA J. L. Lewis77-72=149
AUS Peter Lonard74-75=149
NZL Craig Perks76-73=149
USA John Rollins74-75=149
USA Craig Stadler (c)74-75=149
CAN Mike Weir (c)79-70=149
CHN Zhang Lianwei77-72=149
USA Briny Baird77-73=150+6
USA Rich Beem77-73=150
USA Ben Curtis73-77=150
USA Fred Funk80-70=150
USA Jeff Maggert78-72=150
USA Larry Mize (c)76-74=150
USA Jack Nicklaus (c)75-75=150
AUS Craig Parry74-76=150
USA Nathan Smith (a)78-72=150
ARG Ángel Cabrera74-77=151+7
ENG Nick Faldo (c)76-75=151
USA Jonathan Kaye79-72=151
USA Len Mattiace76-75=151
USA Rocco Mediate75-76=151
SCO Colin Montgomerie71-80=151
USA David Toms78-73=151
WAL Ian Woosnam (c)76-75=151
AUS Nick Flanagan (a)78-74=152+8
JPN Toshimitsu Izawa76-76=152
USA Kenny Perry74-78=152
USA Tom Watson (c)76-76=152
USA Jonathan Byrd79-74=153+9
USA Chad Campbell76-77=153
ZAF Trevor Immelman77-76=153
JPN Shigeki Maruyama82-71=153
AUS Adam Scott80-73=153
ENG Gary Wolstenholme (a)77-76=153
ZAF Tim Clark73-81=154+10
USA Tim Herron80-74=154
ENG Brian Davis82-73=155+11
DNK Thomas Bjørn80-77=157+13
USA Fuzzy Zoeller (c)79-81=160+16
ZAF Gary Player (c)82-80=162+18
USA Charles Coody (c)88-79=167+23
USA Arnold Palmer (c)84-84=168+24
USA Tommy Aaron (c)87-83=170+26

Scorecard

Hole123456789101112131415161718
Par454343454443545344
USA Mickelson−6−7−6−6−5−4−4−4−4−4−4−5−6−7−7−8−8−9
ZAF Els−3−4−3−3−2−2−3−5−5−5−5−5−7−7−8−8−8−8
KOR Choi−3−3−3−3−3−3−2−2−1−1−3−3−4−5−5−6−6−6
ESP García+3+3+3+3+3+5+4+3+2+2+2+1E+1−1−2−3−3
DEU Langer−4−5−5−4−4−4−3−4−4−4−4−4−4−5−3−4−3−3
ENG Casey−4−4−4−4−4−3−3−4−3−3−3−2−2−3−3−3−2−2
USA DiMarco−6−7−6−5−5−3−2−3−3−3−3−3−4−4−4−4−4−2
USA Triplett−2−2−1EE+1E−1−1−1EE−1−1E−2−2−2

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par :{|class="wikitable" span = 50 style="font-size:85%; |- |Eagle |Birdie |Bogey |Double bogey |Triple bogey+ -- |} Source:

Quotes

  • "Is it his time? YES! At long last!" – Jim Nantz's (CBS Sports) call as Mickelson sunk his birdie putt on the 18th hole to defeat Ernie Els and win the tournament.

References

References

  1. Dulac, Gerry. (April 12, 2004). "Finally!". [[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]].
  2. Shipnuck, Alan. (April 19, 2004). "Amen".
  3. (April 7, 2004). "Masters playoff format is changed". CNN.com.
  4. (April 11, 2004). "Leaderboard: 2004 Masters". Yahoo! Sports.
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