2005 Masters Tournament

2005 Masters Tournament
Tournament information
Dates April 7–10, 2005
Location Augusta, Georgia
Course(s) Augusta National Golf Club
Organized by Augusta National Golf Club
Tour(s) PGA Tour
European Tour
Japan Golf Tour
Statistics
Par 72
Length 7,290 yards (6,666 m)
Field 93 players, 50 after cut
Cut 148 (+4)
Prize fund $7,000,000
5,320,691
Winner's share $1,260,000
€977,045
Champion
United States Tiger Woods
276 (−12), playoff
«2004
2006»

The 2005 Masters Tournament was the 69th Masters Tournament, played from April 7–10 at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia.

Tiger Woods, 29, won his fourth green jacket on the first hole of a playoff with Chris DiMarco. Rain was a factor the whole week, and delayed much of the play.[1] The purse was $7.0 million with a winner's share of $1.26 million.[2] It was the ninth of Woods' fourteen major championships.

This Masters was the last as competitors for three former champions: Tommy Aaron (1973), Billy Casper (1970), and six-time winner Jack Nicklaus.

Ryan Moore was low amateur at 287 (−1), the best score by an amateur since 1978, and earned an exemption to the 2006 tournament.

Jerry Pate, a non-playing invitee, won the 46th Par-3 contest on Wednesday with a five-under 22.[3]

Course

HoleNameYardsPar HoleNameYardsPar
1Tea Olive4354 10Camellia4954
2Pink Dogwood575511White Dogwood4904
3Flowering Peach350412Golden Bell1553
4Flowering Crab Apple205313Azalea5105
5Magnolia455414Chinese Fir4404
6Juniper180315Firethorn5005
7Pampas410416Redbud1703
8Yellow Jasmine570517Nandina4254
9Carolina Cherry460418Holly4654
Out3,64036In3,65036
Source:[4]Total7,29072

Field

1. Masters champions
Tommy Aaron, Billy Casper, Charles Coody, Fred Couples (10,16,17), Ben Crenshaw, Nick Faldo, Raymond Floyd, Bernhard Langer (10), Sandy Lyle, Phil Mickelson (10,11,12,14,15,16,17), Larry Mize, Jack Nicklaus, José María Olazábal, Mark O'Meara, Gary Player, Vijay Singh (4,10,13,14,15,16,17), Craig Stadler, Tom Watson, Mike Weir (11,14,16,17), Tiger Woods (2,3,4,14,15,16,17), Ian Woosnam, Fuzzy Zoeller

2. U.S. Open champions (last five years)
Jim Furyk (16,17), Retief Goosen (10,11,14,15,16,17)

3. The Open champions (last five years)
Ben Curtis, David Duval, Ernie Els (10,12,13,14,16,17), Todd Hamilton (12,14,16,17)

4. PGA champions (last five years)
Rich Beem, Shaun Micheel, David Toms (14,15,16,17)

5. The Players Championship winners (last three years)
Fred Funk (11,14,15,17), Davis Love III (10,14,16,17), Adam Scott (14,15,16,17)

6. U.S. Amateur champion and runner-up
Luke List (a), Ryan Moore (a,8)

7. The Amateur champion
Stuart Wilson (a)

8. U.S. Amateur Public Links champion

9. U.S. Mid-Amateur champion
Austin Eaton III (a)

10. Top 16 players and ties from the 2004 Masters
Paul Casey (16,17), K. J. Choi (14,16,17), Chris DiMarco (13,14,16,17), Sergio García (14,16,17), Pádraig Harrington (16,17), Charles Howell III (14,17), Nick Price, Kirk Triplett (14), Casey Wittenberg

11. Top eight players and ties from the 2004 U.S. Open
Robert Allenby (16,17), Steve Flesch (14,16,17), Jeff Maggert, Shigeki Maruyama (14,16,17)

12. Top four players and ties from the 2004 Open Championship
Lee Westwood (16,17)

13. Top four players and ties from 2004 PGA Championship
Justin Leonard (16,17), Chris Riley (16)

14. Top 40 players from the 2004 PGA Tour money list
Stephen Ames (16,17), Stuart Appleby (16,17), Chad Campbell (16,17), Stewart Cink (16,17), Darren Clarke (16,17), John Daly (16), Luke Donald (15,16,17), Carlos Franco, Jay Haas (16,17), Mark Hensby (16,17), Tim Herron (17), Zach Johnson (16,17), Jonathan Kaye (16,17), Jerry Kelly (16,17), Ryan Palmer, Rod Pampling (16), Jesper Parnevik, Kenny Perry (16,17), Ted Purdy, Rory Sabbatini (16,17), Bo Van Pelt, Scott Verplank (16,17)

15. Top 10 players from the 2005 PGA Tour money list on March 28
Tom Lehman (17), Joe Ogilvie

16. Top 50 players from the final 2004 world ranking
Thomas Bjørn (17), Ángel Cabrera (17), Joakim Haeggman, David Howell (17), Trevor Immelman, Fredrik Jacobson, Miguel Ángel Jiménez (17), Thomas Levet, Peter Lonard (17), Nick O'Hern (17), Ian Poulter (17)

17. Top 50 players from world ranking published March 28
Tim Clark, Graeme McDowell, Craig Parry

18. Special foreign invitation
Shingo Katayama

Past champions in the field

Made the cut

Player Country Year(s) won R1 R2 R3 R4 Total To par Finish
Tiger Woods  United States 1997, 2001, 2002 74 66 65 71 276 −12 1
Vijay Singh  Fiji 2000 68 73 71 72 284 −4 T5
Mike Weir  Canada 2003 74 71 68 71 284 −4 T5
Phil Mickelson  United States 2004 70 72 69 74 285 −3 10
Bernhard Langer  Germany 1985, 1993 74 74 70 71 289 +1 T20
Mark O'Meara  United States 1998 72 74 72 75 293 +5 T31
Fred Couples  United States 1992 75 71 77 72 295 +7 T39
Craig Stadler  United States 1982 75 73 79 79 306 +18 50

Source[5]

Missed the cut

Player Country Year(s) won R1 R2 Total To par
Raymond Floyd  United States 1976 76 76 152 +8
Sandy Lyle  Scotland 1988 74 78 152 +8
Larry Mize  United States 1987 78 75 153 +9
Jack Nicklaus  United States 1963, 1965, 1966,
1972, 1975, 1986
77 76 153 +9
José María Olazábal  Spain 1994, 1999 77 76 153 +9
Tom Watson  United States 1977, 1981 77 76 153 +9
Ben Crenshaw  United States 1984, 1995 76 80 156 +12
Ian Woosnam  Wales 1991 78 78 156 +12
Tommy Aaron  United States 1973 79 82 161 +17
Fuzzy Zoeller  United States 1979 84 78 162 +18
Gary Player  South Africa 1961, 1974, 1978 88 79 167 +23
Charles Coody  United States 1971 88 83 171 +27
Billy Casper  United States 1970 106 WD
Nick Faldo  England 1989, 1990, 1996 WD

Source[5]

Round summaries

First round

Thursday, April 7, 2005
Friday, April 8, 2005

Sixty-eight players were on the course when darkness suspended the first round since the start of the round was delayed by over five hours due to heavy morning rain. The round was completed Friday morning. Chris DiMarco shot a five-under 67 to take the first round lead. Vijay Singh and Luke Donald were at 68, one stroke behind in second. Tiger Woods struggled through much of his round ending at two over par. After the round, Woods was questioned by rules officials for an illegal putting stance on the 14th before getting the all-clear. In his final appearance, Billy Casper shot the worst round in Masters history on Thursday, a triple-digit 106 (+34), but the round was unofficial because he withdrew.[3][7] Three-time champion Nick Faldo withdrew while playing the ninth hole due to back spasms.[6]

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Chris DiMarco United States67−5
T2Luke Donald England68−4
Vijay Singh Fiji
T4Stuart Appleby Australia69−3
Mark Hensby Australia
T6Phil Mickelson United States70−2
Ryan Palmer United States
T8Thomas Bjørn Denmark71−1
Retief Goosen South Africa
Thomas Levet France
Ryan Moore (a)  United States
Chris Riley United States
Adam Scott Australia

Second round

Friday, April 8, 2005
Saturday, April 9, 2005

Rain suspended play for much of the day and the second round spilled into Saturday. Chris DiMarco posted another five-under 67 to take a four-stroke lead at the halfway point. Thomas Bjørn also shot a 67 to take second place by himself at −6. Tiger Woods recovered from his poor first round with a six-under 66, six strokes back in third place.

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Chris DiMarco United States67-67=134−10
2Thomas Bjørn Denmark71-67=138−6
3Tiger Woods United States74-66=140−4
T4David Howell England72-69=141−3
Vijay Singh Fiji68-73=141
T6Mark Hensby Australia69-73=142−2
Phil Mickelson United States70-72=142
Ryan Moore (a) United States71-71=142
T9Jim Furyk United States76-67=143−1
Kirk Triplett United States75-68=143

Amateurs: Moore (−2), List (+2), Eaton III (+14), Wilson (+20).

Third round

Saturday, April 9, 2005
Sunday, April 10, 2005

Chris DiMarco continued his hot ways shooting a three-under 33 on the front nine before play was suspended due to darkness. His −13 through 45 holes was four strokes better than Tiger Woods, who shot a five-under 31 on the first nine holes. Thomas Bjørn stayed in contention with a two-under 34 for nine holes and was −8 for the championship.

PlacePlayerCountryTo parHole
1Chris DiMarco United States−13 9
2Tiger Woods United States−9 9
3Thomas Bjørn Denmark−8 9
T4Mark Hensby Australia−4 9
Vijay Singh Fiji10
Rod Pampling Australia12

Tiger Woods resumed play on Sunday morning on the back nine and made four consecutive birdies to card a 7-under 65 and take the 54-hole lead. Dating back to play on Saturday, Woods birdied seven straight holes in the third round, tying a record by Steve Pate. Chris DiMarco struggled in with a 41 (+5) back nine for a third round 74 (+2), losing seven shots to Woods in the final nine holes. DiMarco's troubles began when his second shot at the 10th went into a bush and was unplayable. After a drop, he chipped onto the green and two-putted for the double bogey, which ended a streak of 44 holes at par or better.

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Tiger Woods United States 74-66-65=205 −11
2Chris DiMarco United States 67-67-74=208 −8
3Thomas Bjørn Denmark 71-67-71=209 −7
T4Trevor Immelman South Africa 73-73-65=211 −5
Phil Mickelson United States 70-72-69=211
T6Mark Hensby Australia 69-73-70=212 −4
Vijay Singh Fiji 68-73-71=212
T8Chad Campbell United States 73-73-67=213 −3
Mike Weir Canada 74-71-68=213
T10Luke Donald England 68-77-69=214 −2
Tim Herron United States 76-68-70=214
Thomas Levet France 71-75-68=214
Rod Pampling Australia 73-71-70=214

Scorecard

Third round

Hole 1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 101112131415161718
Par454343454 443545344
United States Woods −4−5−6−6−6−6−7−8−9−10−11−12−13−12−11−11−11−11
United States DiMarco −10−11−11−11−11−11−12−13−13−11−11−11−10−9−9−9−8−8

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par
Source:[8]

Final round

Sunday, April 10, 2005

A thrilling final round came down to a two-man duel between Tiger Woods and Chris DiMarco. DiMarco narrowed the three shot lead to one by the 11th with a second birdie in three holes after Woods had dropped a shot at the 10th. The lead stretched back to two when DiMarco bogeyed the 12th at the heart of Amen Corner, but a stunning approach on 14 set up a birdie for DiMarco and cut the gap back to one.

Both players birdied 15 and set up a dramatic and memorable 16th hole. With DiMarco sitting comfortably in the center of the green Woods pulled his tee shot just off the green. Woods made a sensational chip, aiming 20 feet (6 m) to the left of the hole and using the sloping green to run the ball towards the hole. The ball crept towards the cup and appeared to stop on the lip of the hole before toppling in for a dramatic birdie. DiMarco missed his birdie putt and the lead grew back to two with just two to play. Woods pushed his drive on 17 leading to a bogey, cutting the lead to one as they went to the 72nd hole.

Woods approach on 18 ended up in the greenside bunker while DiMarco ended up just short of the green. DiMarco's chip for birdie hit the pin and rebounded ten feet away when it could easily have jammed in the hole. Woods hit his chip to 14 feet (4 m), but missed his par putt to win. DiMarco calmly sank a ten-foot (3 m) putt to force a playoff.

Retief Goosen had the round of the day, firing a five under 67 which was the only round better than DiMarco's 68.

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney ($)
T1 Chris DiMarco  United States 67-67-74-68=276 −12Playoff
Tiger Woods  United States 74-66-65-71=276
T3 Luke Donald  England 68-77-69-69=283 −5406,000
Retief Goosen  South Africa 71-75-70-67=283
T5 Mark Hensby  Australia 69-73-70-72=284 −4237,300
Trevor Immelman  South Africa 73-73-65-73=284
Rod Pampling  Australia 73-71-70-70=284
Vijay Singh  Fiji 68-73-71-72=284
Mike Weir  Canada 74-71-68-71=284
10 Phil Mickelson  United States 70-72-69-74=285 −3189,000

Amateurs: Moore (−1), List (+6).

Full Leaderboard

Scorecard

Final round

Hole 1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 101112131415161718
Par454343454 443545344
United States Woods −12−13−13−13−12−12−12−12−13−12−12−12−12−12−13−14−13−12
United States DiMarco −8−9−9−9−9−9−9−9−10−10−11−10−10−11−12−12−12−12
England Donald −2 −2 −2 −2 −2 −2 −1 −1 −1 +1 E E −2 −2 −4 −5 −5 −5
South Africa Goosen −1 −2 −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −2 −2 −3 −4 −4 −5
Denmark Bjørn −7 −5 −5 −5 −5 −4 −4 −4 −4 −3 −2 E E E +1 +1 +1 +2

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par
Source:[8]

Playoff

The previous six sudden-death playoffs (going back to 1979) at Augusta began at the 10th hole; this was the first to start at the 18th hole,[9] where both put their drives in the fairway. DiMarco hit his approach to the very front section of the green and the ball backed off the green a bit, ending up in almost the exact spot he was at the end of regulation. Woods knocked his approach to 15 feet (4.6 m) past the flag. DiMarco then chipped up to around a foot and tapped in for par. After taking a long time to study the putt, Woods buried his birdie putt to win his fourth green jacket and ninth major title. It was the second consecutive major that DiMarco lost in a playoff following his loss in the PGA Championship in 2004 to Vijay Singh.

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney ($)
1 Tiger Woods  United States 3 −11,260,000
2 Chris DiMarco  United States 4 E756,000

Quotes

"Here it comes ... Oh, my goodness! ... OH, WOW! IN YOUR LIFE, have you seen anything like that?!" - CBS's Verne Lundquist's famous call of Tiger Woods' chip-in on the 16th hole.

"Chris is a tough competitor and a fighter. He's never going to back off and he proved that again." - Tiger Woods on the gutsy final round of runner up Chris DiMarco.

""I was just trying to throw the ball up there on the hill and let it feed down there and hopefully have a makeable putt. All of a sudden, it looked really good, and it looked like how could it not go in, and how did it not go in, and all of a sudden it went in." - Tiger Woods on his remarkable chip on 16.

"I went out and shot 68 around here on Sunday, which is a very good round, and 12-under is usually good enough to win. It was just that I was playing against Tiger Woods." - Chris DiMarco on his runner up finish.

"I would let it hurt if I gave it away but I didn't. I really didn't." - Chris DiMarco

"You know I played him as hard as I could down the stretch, birdieing a bunch of holes coming down the back nine and putting it on him really. And since I put that behind me and went out and put a good number on the back nine, I feel very good." - Chris DiMarco on his final round.

"That was a hard-fought week with the rain delays, I didn't get off to the greatest of starts." - Tiger Woods on the long week of golf.

References

  1. Shipnuck, Alan (April 18, 2005). "Perfect Pitch". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved January 7, 2013.
  2. Hackenberg, Dave (April 11, 2005). "Fantastic Fourth". Toledo Blade. Toledo, Ohio. p. C1. Retrieved January 7, 2013.
  3. 1 2 3 Bonk, Thomas (April 8, 2005). "Casper's last shot ends up being 106 of them". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 5, 2014.
  4. "Augusta lengthened to 7,290 yards for '03 Masters". ESPN. Reuters. August 20, 2002. Retrieved January 7, 2013.
  5. 1 2 "2005 Masters". databasegolf.com. Retrieved May 5, 2014.
  6. 1 2 Armour, Nancy (April 8, 2005). "Back spasms force Faldo out". Lakeland Ledger. Associated Press. p. C3.
  7. "2005 Masters". About.com. Retrieved January 7, 2013.
  8. 1 2 "Leaderboard: 2005 Masters". Yahoo! Sports. April 10, 2005. Retrieved April 10, 2013.
  9. "Masters playoff format is changed". CNN.com. April 7, 2004. Retrieved April 10, 2013.

External links

Preceded by
2004 PGA Championship
Major Championships Succeeded by
2005 U.S. Open

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

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.