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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Scott Murray

Masters 2022: Scheffler wins first major as McIlroy surges to second – as it happened

Scottie Scheffler celebrates on the 18th green after winning the Masters.
Scottie Scheffler celebrates on the 18th green after winning the Masters. Photograph: Tannen Maury/EPA

Congratulations to Scottie Scheffler, then, the 2022 Masters champion! Without question the deserved winner, the best player from the beginning of the week to its end. Cameron Smith pushed him all the way ... well, to the 12th ... while Rory McIlroy’s glorious 64 will live long in the memory, and augurs well for the Northern Irish star going forward in the majors, and his continuing search for a green jacket of his own. But when you shake it all down, Scheffler was just too darn good. And so it did become a procession after all ... although as processions go, a pretty exciting and memorable one. Thanks for reading this blog! Nighty night!

-10: Scheffler
-7: McIlroy
-5: Lowry, Smith
-4: Morikawa
-3; Zalatoris, Conners
-1: Thomas, Im
E: Champ, Schwartzel
+1: D Johnson, Willett
+2: Na, Fitzpatrick, MW Lee, Higgs, Westwood, Gooch, Matsuyama, Fleetwood, Kokrak
+3: MacIntyre, Varner III, Garcia, Spaun

Scottie Scheffler is awarded the Green Jacket by 2021 Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama.
Scottie Scheffler is awarded the Green Jacket by 2021 Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama. Photograph: David Cannon/Getty Images

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A word with the new Masters champion Scottie Scheffler in the Butler Cabin. “The shot on 3 was not one I expected to go in. It didn’t change the complexion of the day but it definitely got things rolling for me and I played some good golf after that. I can’t put into words what it means to be able to come back here for a lifetime. We’re going to go home and celebrate a little bit. I’m kind of glad I had a little hiccup on the last hole that made me a little less emotional so I can get through this interview!”

The 2021 champion Hideki Matsuyama then helps him on with his new green jacket. It takes Scheffler a couple of goes to get his left arm into the sleeve; file that alongside the double yip on the last! But these are silly little things that happen when it doesn’t matter. When the pressure was on, this brilliant 25-year-old from Dallas, Texas delivered time and time again.

Scottie Scheffler is only the fifth player to win the Masters while ranked number one in the world. He follows Ian Woosnam (1991), Fred Couples (1992), Tiger Woods (2001 and 2002) and Dustin Johnson (2020). He only won his first tournament on the PGA Tour two months ago! Now he’s got four wins under his belt: the Phoenix Open, the Arnold Palmer Invitational, the World Match Play, and the Masters. As hot streaks go, this is off the scale, though major success had been coming, even before the dam broke in Phoenix: he’d finished in the top ten at last year’s PGA, US Open and Open. It’s fair to say he’s been trending in the right direction.

While we wait for the interview in the Butler Cabin, a reminder of where the leading players finished.

-10: Scheffler
-7: McIlroy
-5: Lowry, Smith
-4: Morikawa
-3; Zalatoris, Conners
-1: Thomas, Im
E: Champ, Schwartzel
+1: D Johnson, Willett
+2: Na, Fitzpatrick, MW Lee, Higgs, Westwood, Gooch, Matsuyama, Fleetwood, Kokrak
+3: MacIntyre, Varner III, Garcia, Spaun

The hollers ring out around Augusta as the world number one celebrates a victory sealed from the front. Cam Smith threatened to come at him early doors; Rory McIlroy took a shy later on. But he never let either of them get too close, keeping calm whenever he found himself out of position, taking advantage when the chances came around. We’ll hear from him soon enough, but in the meantime, here’s Ewan Murray’s report!

Scottie Scheffler wins the 2022 Masters!

Scheffler lets his par putt slip by on the left ... then shoves the one coming back to the right! A slightly farcical end to an otherwise near-perfect performance! In goes his fourth putt, and he ends with a double-bogey six ... like he cares! He signs for his second 71 of the weekend, as the crowd erupt and he embraces his wife with glee!

-10: Scheffler (F)
-7: McIlroy (F)
-5: Lowry (F), Smith (F)

Scottie Scheffler of the U.S. celebrates on the 18th green after winning The Masters.
Scottie Scheffler of the U.S. celebrates on the 18th green after winning The Masters. Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters
Scottie Scheffler hugs his wife Meredith Scudder.
Scottie Scheffler hugs his wife Meredith Scudder. Photograph: David J Phillip/AP

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Cam Smith’s birdie effort shaves the left lip, but he won’t get his birdie. Just the par, and a share of third with Shane Lowry after a final round of 73. The tee shot at 12 will take some getting over, but he’ll surely recover. Maybe next year? It’s his second close call after 2020.

Scheffler rolls his birdie putt down the green. The ball slides to the left of the cup. Hey, nobody’s perfect.

Cam Smith, having split the fairway, sends his second pin high, 15 feet to the right of the flag. He’ll have that for sole possession of third spot. Scottie Scheffler then sends his approach over the flag, and he can soak up the ovation as he walks up to the green. Smith respectfully hangs back so the champion in waiting can bask in the glory!

Scottie Scheffler, Masters champion in waiting, sends his tee shot at 18 into the trees down the right ... but the ball squeaks back out into the first cut. One more iron, and Scheffler can enjoy the walk up the last!

Scottie Scheffler plays his shot from the 18th tee.
Scottie Scheffler plays his shot from the 18th tee. Photograph: David Cannon/Getty Images

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Shane Lowry rattles in a 25-footer across 18, and that’s a final round of 69! He smiles wryly, perhaps thinking about the triple bogey on 4, or yesterday’s fudged lay-up at 13. Either way, he’s bounced back well from disappointment to finish with three birdies in the last six holes. Pars meanwhile for both Scheffler and Smith on 17.

-12: Scheffler (17)
-7: McIlroy (F)
-5: Lowry (F), Smith (17)

Shane Lowry of Ireland reacts after making birdie on the 18th green.
Shane Lowry of Ireland reacts after making birdie on the 18th green. Photograph: Jamie Squire/Getty Images

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Scheffler wedges to three feet. This has been a masterclass.

Scheffler takes 3-wood off the 17th tee for safety purposes ... only to slice into the trees down the right. After long deliberations with his caddy, he plays it smart, taking his medicine and chipping back out. No need for heroics. A textbook lesson in course management. Smith, by contrast, is in the trees down the left, but he understandably doesn’t care any more, so goes for the green. He whips over the trees and onto the front edge. Marvellous.

A two-putt par for Scheffler on 16 and he’s one step closer to his dream. Smith goes one better, though, rolling a left-to-right slider into the cup for another birdie. He’s grabbed third place back for himself, and after what he’s been through, surely only Morikawa and Lowry would begrudge him! A bogey finish for Justin Thomas, meanwhile, and he ends the week at -1 after a second 72 of the weekend.

-12: Scheffler (16)
-7: McIlroy (F)
-5: Smith (16)
-4: Morikawa (F), Lowry (17)
-3: Zalatoris (F), Conners (F)
-2: Im (17)
-1: Thomas (F)

Scheffler and Smith knock their tee shots to 15 feet or so. Perhaps the last banana skin given the bodyswerve by the world number one. Meanwhile up on 18, Charl Schwartzel makes a birdie that ensures the 2011 champion ends the week in the top ten. A 74 today, and he’s level par for the week.

Scottie Scheffler is relentless! His chip up from the back of 15 isn’t great, rolling eight feet past the flag, but he steers in the right-to-left curler coming back for another birdie. He’s got a five-shot lead with three holes to go. This is one of the great Masters performances! Birdie for Cam Smith, too, who seems to have battled his way through the worst of the disappointment and cuts a more relaxed figure now.

-12: Scheffler (15)
-7: McIlroy (F)
-4: Morikawa (F), Lowry (16), Smith (15)

Scottie Scheffler reacts after a birdie on the 15th.
Scottie Scheffler reacts after a birdie on the 15th. Photograph: Mike Segar/Reuters

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Corey Conners finishes in the top ten at the Masters for the third year in a row! The 30-year-old Canadian birdies 14, 17 and now 18 to end the day with a two-under-par 70. He ends the week at -3. Meanwhile a fine two-putt par from distance on 16 by Shane Lowry, who had shoved his tee shot miles wide right, 70 feet from the flag. He’s battling hard to keep hold of his share of third place.

Hats off to Scheffler, who seems determined to win in style. He’s not laying up! He draws a 7-iron around the trees on the left-hand side of the 15th fairway and lands his ball on the green. It topples off the back, but he’s close enough where getting down in two for birdie is more likely than not. Cam Smith is on in two, but he’s playing without fear now, the jig long up.

Birdie for Shane Lowry at 15! He’s suddenly grabbed a share of third place with Collin Morikawa at -4. Back on the tee, Scottie Scheffler whistles a drive down the left of the fairway. He’ll probably not have a route to the green from there; he’d probably have laid up wherever he ended up, with all those shots in his back pocket. Rory’s right, he’s almost certainly going to come up short, but this could be a performance that blows a lot of cobwebs away. He’s not really seriously contested in the majors for a while now, but he has today, and hopefully that’ll get the juices flowing. Never mind next year at Augusta: watch out Southern Hills at the PGA?

Scheffler makes his birdie from close range at 14. No fuss. A textbook way to play the hole. He’s now got a four-shot lead with four holes to play. Smith meanwhile makes another bogey. He’s thoroughly dejected, much as you’d expect.

-11: Scheffler (14)
-7: McIlroy (F)

Scottie Scheffler hits on the 14th fairway.
Scottie Scheffler hits on the 14th fairway. Photograph: Robert F Bukaty/AP

Updated

Rory McIlroy talks to Sky. “I got off to a great start and just kept it rolling. It’s probably not going to be low enough, but I can’t ask any more of myself. I played a really good round of golf. I may come up a couple short, but it’s the most fun I’ve had on a golf course for a very long time! I’m getting the hang of this place after 14 years of trying.”

A fine response here by Scottie Scheffler, who will surely know what’s gone down, and has just missed a short putt that would have further extended his lead. He blooters his drive down the middle of 14, then nearly spins his wedge into the cup for eagle! He’ll have a look at birdie from four feet. Anyone hoping for a collapse to give McIlroy the chance of pulling on that elusive green jacket looks likely to be sorely disappointed. Scheffler is one cool customer!

That was an absolutely outrageous bunker shot by Rory McIlroy! He couldn’t go anywhere near the flagstick, sending his ball a good 30 feet to the right, and letting the topography of Augusta National do the work. “I love Rory McIlroy,” swoons Matt Dony. “That was an unbelievable round, finished in cartoon style. Probably won’t be quite enough, and congratulations to Scheffler for all he’s done so far. You don’t want to wish bad on people, but I would love it if this falls into Rory’s lap. Argh! Tension! I’m going to pour another glass of wine.”

McIlroy flung his club into the bunker in sheer delight before wheeling off on cloud nine! The roar, no doubt, could be heard all over the course. Certainly at 13, where Scheffler pushes his short birdie putt wide right. This isn’t over quite yet! And then back on 18, another lovely moment as McIlroy’s partner Collin Morikawa holes out from sand as well. McIlroy, arms aloft, celebrates almost as giddily as he did his own. The pair embrace, and whatever happens, that’s a Masters memory for the ages!

-10: Scheffler (13)
-7: McIlroy (F)
-4: Morikawa (F), Smith (13)

Rory McIlroy shoots 64 and posts -7!

Astonishing scenes on 18! McIlroy sent his second from the bunker on the left of the fairway into the big trap guarding the right of the green. He then swishes his sand shot into the heart of the green, utilising the camber to bring his ball curling to the left, then rolling down the hill and into the cup! That always looked like it was heading in, and that’s a sensational end to an amazing round of golf! Just one off the course record, and he’s posted a mark that, you never know, may yet spook Scottie Scheffler!

Rory McIlroy reacts after holing out from the bunker.
Rory McIlroy reacts after holing out from the bunker. Photograph: Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

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Scheffler nips a wedge from 50 yards to five feet. Smith can only send his third shot to 25 feet, and he hammers the hosel of his wedge into the bank of Rae’s Creek. You can’t blame him; the disappointment so brutally administered at the 12th must be crushing. Meanwhile up on 18 ...

Rory McIlroy larrups his drive at 18 into the bunker on the left. He needs to channel the spirit of Sandy Lyle from there. Back on 13, Cam Smith, who may as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb, goes for the green with his second. He doesn’t catch his 5-wood, which is probably for the best as it stops short of Rae’s Creek. Scottie Scheffler, meanwhile, lays up. No risks. No point. He’s four shots clear, and six holes away from his first major championship!

Will Zalatoris, last year’s runner-up, makes par on 18. He signs for a 67 that gives him the clubhouse lead at -3. Meanwhile a fine up and down from sand at the front of 17 by Rory McIlroy, who was always out of position after sending his drive into the trees down the left. He remains alone in second place at -6, but needs a birdie up the last, plus Scottie Scheffler to become overwhelmed with the enormity of what he’s about to pull off, if he’s to have any chance at all.

This is Scottie Scheffler’s Masters to lose now. His response to Smith’s tragedy isn’t great, an overly conservative tee shot that nearly disappears into the azaleas back left. But his ball snags in the fringe, and he’s able to bundle a chip up to ten feet. Smith meanwhile sends his third from the dropzone wide right of the green, and doesn’t get particularly close when chipping up four. Scheffler makes his par putt and strides off the green to the 13th tee, leaving Smith to miss his double-bogey putt. A triple-bogey six, and he clatters down the standings to -4. Ten minutes ago, Smith’s hopes were a going concern. Now it’s all over for him.

-10: Scheffler (12)
-6: McIlroy (16)
-4: Smith (12)

What Amen Corner gives with one hand, it takes with another. Smith, coming off the high of birdie at 11, sends a dismal tee shot at 12 slicing to the right. Into the briny it plops. Nowhere near getting over the creek! Cameron Smith joins a long list of players to come a cropper at Golden Bell. Jordan Spieth, Francesco Molinari, Tom Weiskopf (see No5 below), all that.

Cameron Smith of Australia reacts to his poor shot from the 12th tee.
Cameron Smith of Australia reacts to his poor shot from the 12th tee. Photograph: David Cannon/Getty Images

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Scheffler leaves his chip eight feet short. Hmm. The door’s slightly ajar ... and Smith barrels through it, ramming a confident birdie putt into the cup. Big pressure on Scheffler to make his par saver now ... but he’s up to it. Ice in the veins! The gap closes, but Scheffler has ensured it’s not a two-shot swing with a staunch effort.

-10: Scheffler (11)
-7: Smith (11)

The outgoing champion Hideki Matsuyama soaks up the love of the patrons as he walks up 18. He finishes his title defence by letting a birdie opportunity slip by. A level-par 72. He ends the week at +2, and we’ll see him again soon in the Butler Cabin, draping a jacket of Pantone 342 over the shoulders of ... well ... who? Back on 11, Scheffler, with shots in hand, lays up, seeing no point in dicing with the pond on the left and swales to the right. Smith has to go for it, though, and arrows one of the shots of the day at the flag. He ends pin high, 15 feet from the flag. Big moment coming up!

Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama acknowledges the patrons on the 18th green.
Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama acknowledges the patrons on the 18th green. Photograph: Brian Snyder/Reuters

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McIlroy’s playing partner Morikawa makes birdie on 15 to join the group at -3. He then sets up a 12-foot uphill putt for birdie at the par-three 16th. Rory up next, and he needs to go close. He whips his 7-iron into the heart of the dancefloor ... but the slope doesn’t take his ball closer to the hole as he’d have hoped. A couple of steps further on, and the ball would have taken the break. Still, he’ll have a look at birdie from 15 feet.

McIlroy gives his putt from the fringe a good go. He tickles it down, left to right from 20 feet, the ball stopping a dimple’s width to the left. He squats down on his haunches in anguish. It’s not a disaster, but he really needed birdie there, to keep the scoreboard pressure up. He stays at -6. Meanwhile on 17, Zalatoris is a couple of inches away from rolling in a 30-footer for yet another birdie. It’s not to be. He remains at -3.

Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland reacts to a missed birdie putt on the fifteenth hole.
Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland reacts to a missed birdie putt on the fifteenth hole. Photograph: Erik S Lesser/EPA

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Nope. He prods at his downhill left-to-right slider in a very ginger fashion, and it rolls off to the right well before the cup. He’s got a tricky three footer coming back, too. You’d say this was all good news for McIlroy, but his wedge into 15 sticks on the fringe at the back of the green, and that’s not exactly the greatest birdie chance. He might have to make it if he’s to post a score to seriously worry Scheffler and Smith, who may have yet to negotiate Amen Corner, but they’ll have the two par fives to come afterwards.

-10: Scheffler (10)
-6: McIlroy (14), Smith (10)
-3: Zalatoris (16), Lowry (11)

It looks like another high finish for last year’s runner-up Will Zalatoris. He’s just birdied six of his last nine holes - 8, 9, 10, 13, 15 and now 16 - to rise to -3 and a share of fourth. Meanwhile up on 15, McIlroy whacks his ball out of leafy bother down the left. Effectively a lay-up. And back on 10, Scheffler hits a thin chip up the bank and ten feet past the hole. He can’t make the putt coming back, the ball always dying to the left, and that’s his first bogey of the day. Can Smith nail his par saver to take advantage?

... but Scheffler pulls his approach down the swale to the left of the green! He’s not quite into the pine straw, but with the flag tucked on that side of the green, that’s not going to be the easiest of chips. Can he pull another miracle out of the hat? He’ll be hoping so, especially as Smith then calmly swishes a 9-iron to six feet! A great chance to save an unlikely par.

It’s all looking good for Scottie Scheffler right now. He crashes his drive at 10 down the middle, but Smith hooks wildly into the bushes down the left. He’s forced to hack back out. Meanwhile on 15, McIlroy pulls his tee shot down the left of 15. He won’t be getting on in two from there. Eagle now a pipe dream. Scheffler’s closest challengers in a wee bit of trouble.

A glorious par for Rory on 14 to keep his challenge on track. His drive finds the second cut down the left, and he’s forced to deal with overhanging branches. He doesn’t quite get enough on his punch out to reach the green, leaving himself just short. No matter! He sends what looks like a misread chip wide left, his ball nearly toppling off the back left ... but he’s using the backstop to bring his ball all the way around to the right, rolling gracefully to a stop, two feet from the flag. He tidies up to remain at -6.

Welcome to the start of the 2022 Masters Tournament! Yep, the leaders have made it to the back nine. Here we go, then.

Scottie Scheffler of the U.S. tees off on the 10th.
Scottie Scheffler of the U.S. tees off on the 10th. Photograph: Mike Segar/Reuters

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Smith goes very close with a 25-foot left-to-right curler, but it’s always missing on the high side. He’ll tap in for par from three feet. But before he can do that, Scheffler races his birdie chance wide left. A mis-read and another chance to put extra distance between himself and Smith goes by. But he’s turning in two-under 34 nonetheless, and retains a four-shot lead.

-11: Scheffler (9)
-7: Smith (9)
-6: McIlroy (13)
-3: Im (10), Lowry (10)

Min Woo Lee, out in 30 strokes, comes back in 40. He signs for a 70 and finishes the week at +2. A fine debut that puts plenty of experience in the bank. Back on 9, both Smith and Scheffler are on in regulation, but the leader is closer, pin high with a fairly straight eight-footer begging to be made for birdie.

It’s three birdies in four holes for Shane Lowry, who rolls one in from 30 feet on 9. He turns in 35, and will have fever dreams about that tee shot on 4 tonight. He’s -3. His partner Im is moving the other way, sadly, making a three-putt bogey. He’s also -3 now. Meanwhile on 13, McIlroy sends a glorious long iron to ten feet ... then knocks in the eagle putt! He’s suddenly seven under for his round ... and only one shot off the second-placed Cam Smith! Eagle for his playing partner Collin Morikawa, too, the reigning Open champion rising to -2 overall. Masters Sunday, right here!

-11: Scheffler (8)
-7: Smith (8)
-6: McIlroy (13)
-3: Im (9), Lowry (9)

Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy reacts after his eagle on the 13th.
Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy reacts after his eagle on the 13th. Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters

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Scheffler rather clunks his chip up, and leaves a 17-footer for birdie. Has a chance to further turn the screw on Smith been spurned? Smith gets relief from the stand behind the green, then clips a cute chip up to three feet. That’s a great up and down in the circumstances, doubly so when Scheffler fails to make his birdie putt. It’s as you were, and Smith will be the happier with the way that panned out.

Smith chips out of the sand at 8 ... then flies his approach over the back of the green. That’s a poor shot, and Scheffler, who is in the swales to the right of the green in two, and has a relatively easy chip over a mound, has a serious advantage over his playing partner now. The lead could be getting bigger soon.

Par for Rory McIlroy at the iconic 12th. Then he draws a 3-wood around the corner at 13, so he’s negotiated Amen Corner without issue. Meanwhile back on 9, Justin Thomas eases a lovely wedge into 9 but then misses the four-footer for birdie. Irritated, he then flays his tee shot at 10 into the trees down the right. It doesn’t take much for the wheels to come of at Augusta.

Scheffler stripes his drive down the par-five 8th. That’s gone miles. He’ll be able to get on in two. Smith tries to replicate it, but sends his tee shot into the bunker on the right. That’ll enforce a lay-up. Up on the green, Im misses a six-footer for birdie and stays stuck at -4, but Lowry makes his putt from similar distance to repair the last scrap of damage from that triple-bogey six on 4. He’s level par for his round again and -2 overall.

Smith rolls his downhill birdie putt straight into the cup. He’s as good as anyone from close range. A birdie ... and it’s one matched by Scheffler, as the pair pull one shot further away from the chasing pack.

-11: Scheffler (7)
-7: Smith (7)
-4: McIlroy (11), Im (7)
-3: Thomas (8)
-2: Conners (9)
-1: Willett (9), Lowry (7)
E: Zalatoris (12), Champ (12), Morikawa (11), Schwartzel (8)

Scheffler splits the fairway at 7, then lands his wedge from 130 yards right next to the hole. It spins back maybe four feet. He’ll have a good look at birdie. Smith gently throws his sand wedge over the flag, allowing the slope to bring his ball to a similar distance. But he’ll have a downhill putt, while Scheffler has the easier uphill version. Meanwhile over on 11, McIlroy sends his approach into the new swales down in Larry Mize Country. His chip is decent, but trundles eight feet past. He makes the saver coming back, though, and the hardest hole on the course this week is now behind him. He remains at -4.

Im Sung-jae makes up for bogey at 4 with birdie at 7, and joins McIlroy in a share of third spot. Back on 6, Smith leaves his first putt nine feet short, but once again makes a par putt that, under the current circumstances, he simply can’t miss. Scheffler rolled his first one to four feet, and he makes no mistake. They move on, once again as they were. Meanwhile JT, bedecked in the blue and yellow of Ukraine, is forced to chip out from the trees on 8, then pulls his approach wide left. He clips his ball through a swale to tap-in range, and that’s a great par save in the circumstances.

-10: Scheffler (6)
-6: Smith (6)
-4: McIlroy (10), Im (7)
-3: Thomas (8)

Rory McIlroy sends his second at 10 into the heart of the green. The ball topples over the back right. Just. Out comes the wedge ... and he trundles it in from 40 feet! Birdie, and he’s definitely not out of this yet. Not least because both Scheffler and Smith have sent bang average tee shots into 6, almost identically so, the ball landing in the middle of the green before being taken 60 feet away from the hole by the slope. Putting competition coming up! Scheffler to go first, just as he did with the chipping comp on 3. This is getting increasingly absurd! This is Masters Sunday!

-10: Scheffler (5)
-6: Smith (5)
-4: McIlroy (10)
-3: Thomas (7), Im (6)

A second birdie in three holes at 7 for Justin Thomas, who moves to -3 and must be seriously cursing his opening round of 76. Actually, he’ll be cursing his drive at 8, too, hooking it into the trees down the left. Back on 5, Smith is faced with an 80-footer over a huge ridge. For a second, it looks as though his putt is going to break miles right and topple off down the wrong side of the green, but he’s had to dice with death in order to get his ball to eventually turn left. He leaves himself a six-footer, which under extreme pressure he makes. Scheffler’s birdie putt shaves the hole, but the lead remains four. On Sky, Butch Harmon suggests getting down in two putts from where Smith found himself was a 50 to one shot. Well, if that’s the case, that’ll give Smith a boost. That could easily have been a two-shot swing in Scheffler’s favour. As it is, they play on as they were.

A break for Smith, whose drive lands between the two bunkers to the left of the 5th fairway. He doesn’t take advantage, though, only just finding the front of the green, from where two putts for par is far from certain. Scheffler knocks his pin high, and after a shaky start, looks every inch the champion now. Meanwhile an update on Shane Lowry: he found his first ball on 4, but had to take a drop, then dumped his third weakly into sand. He ended up with a triple-bogey six ... but he’s just rattled in a birdie putt on 6 to move back into red figures at -1.

Golf’s a game of two halves all right. Having hit the turn in 30, with four straight birdies, Min Woo Lee makes four straight bogeys. He crashes back down the standings to +2, and it was good while it lasted. McIlroy meanwhile pars 9 to hit the turn in 32. And back on 5, Scheffler splits the fairway, but Smith may have found a bunker to the left. Advantage Scheffler ... though we’ve already found out how quickly things can turn.

Scheffler pulls his tee shot at 4 long and left. He leaves himself yet another tricky pitch ... and yet again he’s up to the task! He bundles another one up to kick-in distance from 30 yards. He’ll tidy up for par. Smith however can’t get up and down from the bunker at the front - his tee shot was a yard away from being perfect - and suddenly the lead is four. Smith has probably been playing the better golf, but Scheffler has conjured up two magnificent up and downs, on 1 and 4, as well as that fortunate chip at 3. It’s all going his way at the moment!

-10: Scheffler (4)
-6: Smith (4)
-3: McIlroy (8), Im (5)
-2: Schwartzel (6), Thomas (6)

Probably worth taking a moment or two to calm down. Some pretty pictures will help.

Smith is faced with a downhill tickle. Anything too aggressive will slide miles past. He nearly rolls the left-to-right slider into the hole, but in the end has to tap in for bogey. A huge swing, and all of Smith’s early progress is for nothing. Meanwhile another birdie for Rory, this time at 8, and suddenly he’s in a tie for third!

-10: Scheffler (3)
-7: Smith (3)
-3: McIlroy (8), Im (4)

Smith, slightly discombobulated by what just happened, flies his chip 12 feet past the flag. He’s now got work to do for his par. This is wild. Meanwhile on 5, birdie for Justin Thomas who moves back to -2.

Well, well, well. Both Scheffler and Smith take turns to chip up onto 3. Both hit them fat, hitting the steep bank at the front of the green, their balls rolling back down to the bottom. They’re playing some friendly golf here, following each other around the hole. It’s a chipping contest now ... and Scheffler sends his ball flying up the bank and straight into the cup! Not 100 percent sure he meant that. Whatever, had that not hit the flag, it was going miles past! A fortunate moment that turns potential crisis into precious birdie! Over to you, Cam.

Scottie Scheffler of the U.S. fist pumps his caddie after making birdie on the third.
Scottie Scheffler of the U.S. fist pumps his caddie after making birdie on the third. Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters

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Corey Conners made a hole in one on 6 last year. He very nearly does it again today! A gentle draw to kick-in distance, and he joins McIlroy and Schwartzel at -2.

Lowry slices his tee shot at the par-three 4th. That could be out of bounds. He has to play a provisional. He knocks his second into the heart of the green, and trudges up the hole with the funk on. Meanwhile back on 2, Scheffler and Smith both get relief, the former snookered by a leader board, the latter hindered by a sprinkler lead. Scheffler in particular may have got a break there, as he didn’t have a route to the green before, leader board or no leader board. Now he has!

Scheffler seriously overcooks his bunker shot at 2, and can’t make the 12-footer he leaves himself. Just the par. Smith’s eagle putt is a bit wayward, too, but he’s able to steer in a right-to-left six footer for a second birdie. Suddenly, the gap is just one! But then some very odd things happen on the 3rd tee. Smith sends a wild hook into the patrons down the left ... then with the door ajar, Scheffler hooks even more spectacularly! He’s miles left. Meanwhile on 7, McIlroy rakes in a long birdie putt, and this is Sunday at the Masters, ladies and gentlemen!

-9: Scheffler (2)
-8: Smith (2)
-4: Im (3)
-3: Lowry (3)
-2: McIlroy (7), Schwartzel (4)

Australia’s Cameron Smith reacts to a birdie on the second green.
Australia’s Cameron Smith reacts to a birdie on the second green. Photograph: Brian Snyder/Reuters

Updated

Tiger confirms he'll play the Open!

Tiger has a chat with Sky, and confirms that whatever happens in between times, he will definitely tee it up at St Andrews at the Open in July. “I won’t be playing a full schedule ever again. It will just be the big events. I don’t know if I will play Southern Hills [next month’s PGA Championship] or not. But I am looking forward to St Andrews. It’s something near and dear to my heart, I’ve won two Opens there, it’s the home of golf, it’s my favourite golf course in the world. So I will be there for that one.” Yes!

McIlroy de-greens an hysterical 80-foot putt on 6. No matter! The fringe stops the ball rolling soon enough, and he rolls in the 12-footer coming back for his par. At -1, he’s still not out of this, but of course is reliant on the leaders bringing each other down. Speaking of the last pair, Scheffler dumps his second at 2 into the bunker guarding the front left of the green, and will have a long up and down for birdie. Smith then clears the sand guarding front right, but doesn’t get far enough onto the green for his ball to take Oosthuizen’s route towards the hole. Still, he’ll have two putts from 45 feet for his birdie.

Min Woo Lee can’t keep the run of birdies going. His first misstep of the day comes at 10, sending his second long and left. Shortsided, he can’t get up and down, and he slips back to -1. Birdie for Shane Lowry at 2, having nearly holed out for eagle with a long bunker shot. He’s -3. And a stroke of bad luck for Danny Willett, who having birdied 2, rocked back on his heels in amazement as his six-foot birdie putt on 3 defies gravity on the left lip. He’s -1.

Tiger can’t end his round with a dream birdie. A par. A second 78 of the weekend, when the gas understandably started running out, but it doesn’t really matter. Being here, and making it round in one piece, is what this was all about. The love pours down from the gallery, and the volume doesn’t drop as he makes the long limp towards the scorer’s hut. That opening-day 71 will live long in the memory. Despite all the odds, he’s back, baby ... and you wouldn’t bet against him next year, would you?

Scheffler tidies up for his par, but his lead has been cut nonetheless: Smith rolls his birdie putt straight into the cup, and this is on! That could have gone better for the leader, but it could have ended up a whole lot worse. That was some chip back up. Meanwhile Charl Schwartzel holes out from the bunker at the front of 2, albeit only for par, while his partner Justin Thomas makes birdie to join him at -2.

-9: Scheffler (1)
-7: Smith (1)
-4: Im (1)

Scheffler’s nerves must be jangling like billy-o. He doesn’t let on, though. He bumps his chip up the bank, carefully, gently, and lets the slope do the work. His ball rolls serenely to three feet, and he’ll surely escape with a par that’ll feel like a birdie. Meanwhile up on 18, Tiger knocks his second pin high, then receives the sort of ovation normally reserved for the winner. Deserved reward for his efforts, and a lovely moment.

Scheffler is able to negotiate a route off the pine straw and through the trees, but he can’t hold the green. His ball rolls hysterically down the bank at the back. Smith calmly lands his ball pin high, and will have a 15-foot look at a fast start. Big chip coming up for the leader here!

The last match takes to the 1st tee ... and it’s not an ideal start for the leader Scottie Scheffler. He pulls a nervous drive into the trees down the left, and that might not be too pretty. We’ll see. Meanwhile his playing partner Cam Smith splits the fairway in the fuss-free style. Sunday at the Masters didn’t take long to get interesting!

Min Woo Lee is on a serious tear-up around Augusta. Sending his second at 9 over the flag, he nearly spins his ball back into the cup for eagle. He taps in for his fourth birdie in a row, and he’s out in 30 strokes. That ties a front-nine record held jointly by Johnny Miller, Greg Norman, KJ Choi, Phil Mickelson and Gary Woodland. A reminder that the course record is 63, held jointly by Nick Price and Greg Norman. But let’s not get ahead of ourselves again. God speed, Min Woo. He’s -2.

Updated

A second birdie of the day for Rory McIlroy, who has clearly decided to attack the day. This one comes at 3, where he’d driven the green. It really should be his third birdie in a row, but he’d taken an uncertain prod at a short putt on 2 and had to make do with par. Anyway, the birdie moves him into red figures, and gives us an excuse to update the leader board for the first time.

-9: Scheffler
-6: Smith
-4: Im
-2: Schwartzel (1), Lowry
-1: MW Lee (8), McIlroy (3), Thomas (1), Conners (1)
E: Morikawa (3), Willett (1)

Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy tees off on the 3rd.
Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy tees off on the 3rd. Photograph: Mike Segar/Reuters

Updated

Yet another birdie for Lee, who is having a stormer! He sends his second at the par-five 8th towards the trees down the left, but scoops up to four feet, and rattles in the putt. He moves into red figures for the week at -1. Meanwhile up on 16, the gallery stands as one to acclaim the brilliance and bravery of Tiger, whose tee shot momentarily threatened to curl right-to-left and roll towards the hole, but stopped eight feet short. As ovations go, it’s not half bad, although nothing on the one heard after the chip that slayed Chris DiMarco back in 2005. In your life! Just a par in the end, but his round isn’t really about the score any more. Incidentally, he’s going around with Jon Rahm today, and the pair seem to be enjoying each other’s company. Rahm, three under for his round, sends his tee shot into the bunker between green and water, then throws his ball 12 feet past the pin, using the slope to bring the ball back to kick-in distance. So close to an outrageous birdie. He’s +4 for his week, and this final-round performance will give him succour for next year.

Will we see an albatross on 2 today? It’s not beyond the realms, because the pin is in Oosthuizen’s position, and Min Woo Lee isn’t the only player to have gone close. Harry Higgs went even closer not long after, his ball stopping one dimple’s width wide to the right. It really did look a facsimile copy of Louis’s famous shot in 2012, but the final frame of the footage betrayed us. Shame, not least because it would have been great to see how Higgs - who got the old puppies out at the Phoenix Open a couple of months ago - would have celebrated. To be fair, the vibe is a bit more rarified here, and he would have acted accordingly. Still, one can dream. Higgs is now +3 for his round through 7.

Tiger just being here this week has been so life-affirming. Who really expected this? Pure magic. The old fellow is beginning to struggle after four days of herculean effort, though, understandably so given all he’s been through. After yesterday’s tired 78, walking is signally harder today, and he’s just dropped a shot at 14, his fifth bogey of the day. But this is Tiger, and even his bogeys can get the gallery whooping and hollering. This one is sensational! Having sent a huge slice into the trees down the right, he pitched out, then left himself a 27-footer for par. He barely touched the treacherous downhill putt, which missed to the right and rolled 37 feet past. You already know what he did next, don’t you. Yep. The long bogey putt back up the green was never missing, and the great man limped away wearing the most infectious smile as the patrons poured on the love. He’s +11 overall, and for reasons that transcend sport, this week deserves to be filed alongside his many other memorable achievements at this great place. You have got to love Tiger. Tiger!

Tiger Woods of the U.S. plays from the pine straw on the 14th.
Tiger Woods of the U.S. plays from the pine straw on the 14th. Photograph: Mike Segar/Reuters

Updated

A perfect start for Rory McIlroy. He cracks his opening drive down the middle, then wedges to ten feet. He rolls confidently into the cup, and the birdie brings him back to level par in short order. Rory isn’t out of this, but he’ll need to shoot something in the mid to low 60s and hope Scottie Scheffler, Cam Smith and Im Sung-jae have off days to varying degrees. Meanwhile Min Woo Lee keeps on keepin’ on: from the centre of 7, he spins a glorious approach to six feet and makes a second birdie in a row. He’s level par, and looks a real prospect. He’s already got the Scottish Open on his CV.

Minjee Lee finally won her maiden major last year at the Evian, after a couple of close shaves at the Dinah Shore and the British Open. Her little brother Min Woo isn’t half bad at golf either. The 23-year-old Aussie has hit what could already be the shot of the day, coming four feet shy of replicating Louis Oosthuizen’s 2012 albatross at 2. Lee tidied up for his eagle, and he’s since made birdie at 6. He’s whisked up the leader board to +1 as a result. A pretty impressive performance on debut, this.

While we’re on the subject of required reading, just in case you missed it yesterday, this piece is a blast. Dan Davies recounts his efforts to build nine holes in his back yard, “a ridiculous, homemade homage to the par-three course at Augusta, albeit with many more opportunities for Tony Finau to pop his ankle.” Hey, Augusta National was once just a field, too, until Bobby Jones, Clifford Roberts and Alister Mackenzie made their dream real. Entertainment and inspiration is just a click away!

Some light reading for anyone worried that Masters Sunday is destined to turn into a procession led by Scottie Scheffler. It might, of course. But then it might not. History tells us a three-shot lead is nothing at the turn, never mind with the whole 18 still stretched out in front of us. Oh Greg!

The Russell Henley dream couldn’t last. Yet another birdie putt, this time from the back of 10, shaves the hole but trundles six feet past. He can’t make the one coming back, and it’s a three-putt bogey. Now he’s pulled his approach at 11 into the pond. He does well to get up and down from the drop zone to limit the damage to bogey, but any chance of matching that record 63, having gone out on 30, is gone. He’s +4.

Russell Henley on his final round.
Russell Henley on his final round. Photograph: Andrew Redington/Getty Images

Updated

Another sign that we could get some lower scoring today: some good old-fashioned Masters weather has finally arrived in Georgia. It’s sunny, warm, and there’s not much in the way of wind at all. A slight breeze, maybe. The course should play long and fast and hard, certainly by the standards of the first three days. Pretty much perfect conditions for a Masters Sunday!

Bob MacIntyre is going along nicely, too. Having opened with a bogey, he’s since birdied 2, 3, 7 and 8, and hits the turn in 33 strokes. The 25-year-old from Oban is +3 overall and clearly likes Augusta, though he won’t end the week high enough to claim a place for next year, as he did last time round after finishing tied for 12th.

Here we go, then, and should any of the pack chasing Scottie Scheffler require any encouragement ahead of their quest, some has come in the shape of Russell Henley. The 32-year-old, playing in his home state, hasn’t got much of a record at the Masters. A tie for 11th in 2017 is the best he’s achieved. He’s unlikely to better that today, but he could make some impression nonetheless. He’s out in just 30 strokes, following up a birdie at 2 with four consecutive birdies at 6, 7, 8 and 9. So there’s a score out there if anybody fancies seizing the day. Too early to get excited, of course, but a reminder that the lowest round at the Masters is 63, shot by Nick Price in 1986 and Greg Norman ten years later. Henley’s +2 overall.

There’s only one way to start. The greatest piece of music ever put out under the CBS banner, and that includes the Byrds, Bob Dylan and Miles Davis.

Welcome, patrons!

For a short time yesterday afternoon, the 2022 Masters threatened to turn into a procession, with the outrageously talented world number one, Scottie Scheffler, perambulating calmly at its head. But the realisation of where he was and what he was doing inevitably kicked in, and he wobbled a little on the way back home. Meanwhile the 2020 runners-up, the equally well-equipped Cameron Smith and Im Sung-jae, took the opportunity to close the gap.

Scheffler is still strong favourite, three clear of Smith, five shots better off than Im. But bigger leads have been shipped on the back nine on Sunday alone. So nothing’s in the can. Most of the names near the top of the leader board will need help from Scheffler if they’re to pull off an outrageous comeback victory, but right now they’ll all retain hope in the knowledge that anything is possible on Masters Sunday. Anything. Here’s the top of the leader board after 54 holes ...

-9: Scheffler
-6: Smith
-4: Im
-2: Lowry, Schwartzel
-1: Thomas, Conners
E: Willett
+1: Fleetwood, Kokrak, McIlroy, Morikawa, D Johnson
+2: Champ, Simpson, Zalatoris, Matsuyama

… and here’s when everybody’s teeing off today. (USA unless stated, all times BST). We’ll get going here at 6pm BST. It’s on!

15.10 Cameron Davis (Aus), Adam Scott (Aus)
15.20 Tyrrell Hatton (Eng), Billy Horschel
15.30 Patrick Cantlay, Mackenzie Hughes (Can)
15.40 Bubba Watson, Max Homa
15.50 Tiger Woods, Jon Rahm (Spa)
16.00 Russell Henley, Daniel Berger
16.10 Harold Varner III, Robert MacIntyre (Sco)
16.20 Sepp Straka (Aut), Tom Hoge
16.30 Seamus Power (Irl), Kevin Na
16.50 Joaquin Niemann (Chi), Christiaan Bezuidenhout (Rsa)
17.00 Kevin Kisner, Matthew Fitzpatrick (Eng)
17.10 Sergio Garcia (Spa), Tony Finau
17.20 Patrick Reed, Lucas Glover
17.30 JJ Spaun, Min-Woo Lee (Aus)
17.40 Lee Westwood (Eng), Harry Higgs
17.50 Hudson Swafford, Si Woo Kim (Kor)
18.00 Marc Leishman (Aus), Talor Gooch
18.10 Hideki Matsuyama (Jpn), Viktor Hovland (Nor)
18.30 Will Zalatoris, Webb Simpson
18.40 Dustin Johnson, Cameron Champ
18.50 Collin Morikawa, Rory McIlroy (NIrl)
19.00 Jason Kokrak, Tommy Fleetwood (Eng)
19.10 Danny Willett (Eng), Corey Conners (Can)
19.20 Justin Thomas, Charl Schwartzel (Rsa)
19.30 Shane Lowry (Irl), Im Sung-jae (Kor)
19.40 Cameron Smith (Aus), Scottie Scheffler

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