There have been plenty of records set since the Masters Tournament started in 1934. Hole-by-hole scoring records, round records, tournament records – tons of interesting marks and a Hall of Fame list of familiar names stacked in the official book for Augusta National Golf Club.
Which record matters most?
That has to be most wins, and that would be Jack Nicklaus with six (1963, 1965, 1966, 1972, 1975, 1986). Tiger Woods is entered this year, and a victory by Woods (1997, 2001, 2022, 2005, 2019) would tie Nicklaus for that record. They are followed by Arnold Palmer with four titles (1958, 1960, 1962, 1964), then five players with three wins at Augusta National (Jimmy Demaret, Sam Snead, Gary Player, Nick Faldo and Phil Mickelson).
Check out some of the other interesting records below, courtesy of the official Masters media guide.
Low 18
63
Nick Price, third round, 1986 (33-30)
Greg Norman, first round, 1996 (33-30)
Low first nine
30
Johnny Miller, third round, 1975
Greg Norman, final round, 1988
K.J. Choi, second round, 2004
Phil Mickelson, final round, 2009
Gary Woodland, third round, 2014
Tony Finau, third round, 2019
Low second nine
29
Mark Calcavecchia, final round, 1992
David Toms, final round, 1998
Low final round
64
Maurice Bembridge, 1974 (34-30)
Hale Irwin, 1975 (32-32)
Gary Player, 1978 (34-30)
Greg Norman, 1988 (30-34)
David Toms, 1998 (35-29)
Bo Van Pelt, 2012 (34-30)
Jordan Spieth, 2018 (31-33)
Rory McIlroy, 2022 (32-32)
Low 72 holes
268, Dustin Johnson, 2020 (65-70-65-68)
270, Tiger Woods, 1997
270, Jordan Spieth, 2015
271, Jack Nicklaus, 1965
271, Raymond Floyd, 1976
272, Tiger Woods, 2001
272, Phil Mickelson, 2010
273, Patrick Reed, 2018
273, Cameron Smith, 2020 (non-winner)
273, Sungjae Im, 2020 (non-winner)
Highest scores
Highest round: 95, Charles Kunkle, final round, 1956
Highest first nine holes: 49, Charles Kunkle, final round, 1956
Highest second nine holes: 49, Jess Sweetser, first round, 1936; 49, Richard D. Chapman, final round, 1955; 49, Tony Manero, first round, 1955; 49, Frank Conner, first round, 1982
Highest 72 holes: 340 (78-82-85-95), Charles Kunkle, 1956
Highest winning scores: 289, Sam Snead, 1954; 289, Jack Burke Jr., 1956; 289, Zach Johnson, 2007
Assorted records
Consecutive holes par or better: 50, Stuart Appleby, 2001 (starting with 5th hole, 45 pars, five birdies)
Most subpar rounds: 71, Jack Nicklaus (163 rounds, 43.56 percent); 58, Tom Watson (134 rounds, 43.28 percent); 57, Raymond Floyd (144 rounds, 39.58 percent); 57, Phil Mickelson (110 rounds, 51.82 percent)
Most consecutive subpar rounds: 11, Dustin Johnson, 2018 (second round) – 2020 final round)
Most par or better rounds: 93, Jack Nicklaus (163 rounds, 57.06 percent)
Most consecutive par or better rounds: 16, Tiger Woods (2007 (third round) through 2011 (second round)
Most birdies in a career: 506, Jack Nicklaus
Most birdies in one round: 11, Anthony Kim (65), second round, 2009
Most birdies in one tournament: 28, Jordan Spieth, 2015
Most birdies in a row: 7, Steve Pate, 1999, third round, starting with No. 7; 7, Tiger Woods, 2005, third round, starting with No. 7
Most eagles in a career: 24, Jack Nicklaus (3 on par 4s, 21 on par 5s)
Most eagles in one round: 3, Dustin Johnson, 2015, second round, Nos. 2, 8 and 15
Most eagles in one tournament: 4, Bruce Crampton, 1974 (first round, No. 13; third and final rounds, No. 15; final round, No. 3); 4, Dustin Johnson, 2009 (second round, Nos. 8 and 15; final round, Nos. 13 and 14); 4, Tiger Woods, 2010 (first round, Nos. 8 and 15; final round, Nos. 7 and 15)
Double eagles in masters history: Hole No. 2, Louis Oosthuizen, 2012, final round (4-iron, 253 yards); Hole No. 8, Bruce Devlin, 1967, first round (4-wood, 248 yards); Hole No. 13, Jeff Maggert, 1994, final round (3-iron, 222 yards); Hole No. 15, Gene Sarazen, 1935, final round (4-wood, 235 yards)
Top finishes
Top-5 finishes in a career: Jack Nicklaus 15; Tiger Woods 12; Phil Mickelson 11; Ben Hogan 9; Tom Kite 9, Arnold Palmer 9; Sam Snead 9; Tom Watson 9
Top-10 finishes in a career: Jack Nicklaus 22; Ben Hogan 17; Phil Mickelson 15, Gary Player 15, Sam Snead 15, Tom Watson 15
Top-25 finishes in a career: Jack Nicklaus 29; Sam Snead 26; Raymond Floyd 22; Gary Player 22; Ben Hogan 21; Fred Couples 20, Phil Mickelson 20, Byron Nelson 20, Tom Watson 20
Most cuts made: Jack Nicklaus 37; Fred Couples 30, Gary Player 30; Raymond Floyd 27, Bernhard Langer 26, Phil Mickelson 25, Ben Crenshaw 24, Tom Watson 27; Billy Casper 23, Arnold Palmer 23; Tiger Woods 23