How many playoffs have there been in the masters




















Cameron Champ. Stewart Cink. Corey Conners. Fred Couples. Jason Day. Bryson DeChambeau. Harris English. Tony Finau. Matthew Fitzpatrick.

Tommy Fleetwood. Dylan Frittelli. Sergio Garcia. Brian Gay. Lanto Griffin. Brian Harman. Tyrrell Hatton. Jim Herman. Max Homa. Billy Horschel. Viktor Hovland. Mackenzie Hughes. Sungjae Im. Dustin Johnson. Zach Johnson. Matt Jones. Si Woo Kim. Kevin Kisner. Brooks Koepka.

Jason Kokrak. Matt Kuchar. Martin Laird. Open victory at the Olympic Club stands as one of the greatest upsets in golf history. Fleck, a club pro from a municipal course in Iowa, birdied the final four holes Sunday to force a playoff with the legendary Hogan, who was in pursuit of his fifth U. Open title. The magic continued for Fleck during the hole playoff the next day. Hogan, 42 at the time, stepped onto the tee at the final hole trailing Fleck by a stroke.

The Hawk slipped while striking his tee shot and made a double bogey on the hole. Fleck, for his part, parred the hole to conclude one of the most unexpected and near-surreal playoffs in major championship history.

The late Payne Stewart's U. Open victory at Hazeltine came after a back-and-forth hole playoff with Scott Simpson.

The plus-four aficionado tightened the noose on his competitor over the final few holes to win by two strokes. Stewart's second major victory didn't come as dramatically as his first, but it was an excellent competitive exhibition and a thrilling display of Stewart's match-play prowess. The greatest amateur of them all, Bobby Jones, won his first major at the U. Open in a playoff over another Bobby, Bobby Cruickshank. Jones entered the playoff on the heels of an unimpressive final-round 76 after holding the hole lead.

The contest between Jones and Cruickshank was a series of punches and counterpunches; through the first 17 holes, only three holes were halved by the pair. The players arrived at the 18th hole all square. Scott Hoch should have won it on the first extra hole, but missed a short around 2- to 3-foot birdie putt. And that's where Mize's famous chip-in for the win happened.

Mize was short of the green, but his foot chip shot bounded across the green an into the hole for the winning birdie.

Craig Stadler won with a par on the first extra hole No. Stadler was only in the playoff because he blew a 6-shot lead with nine holes to play. This was the first sudden-death playoff in Masters history, and it was won by Fuzzy Zoeller.

Prior to this, playoffs had been a full 18 holes or 36 holes, once. But in , The Masters switched to a sudden-death playoff format. This tournament is perhaps better-known for the way Ed Sneed lost: he led by three with three holes to play, but bogied all three holes. Zoeller won with a birdie on the second extra hole when both Sneed and Tom Watson parred.

This was the final hole playoff before The Masters switched to the sudden-death format. It paired two lifelong friends who grew up together in San Diego, Calif. It was Billy Casper 's second win of a major championship via playoff, and the third of his three majors; it was Gene Littler 's first of two playoff losses in majors. One year after Jack Nicklaus ran away with the title, he won again, but this time in a 3-way playoff.

Nicklaus thus became the first back-to-back winner of The Masters. Gay Brewer could have won in regulation with a par on the 72nd hole, but bogeyed. Brewer returned to win the Masters, however. Arnold Palmer won his third Masters title in the first 3-man playoff in tournament history. It was revenge of a sort for Palmer against Gary Player , who one year earlier caught and passed Palmer on the final green to deny Arnie the win. This was Ben Hogan 's second loss in a Masters playoff, both losses by one stroke.

And it was Sam Snead 's third Masters title and his seventh and final victory in a major championship. Hogan remains the only golfer to lose twice in Masters playoffs. Players start at 4 under; players start at 3 under; players start at 2 under; players start at 1 under; and players start at even par. In the event there are tied players at any position going into the TOUR Championship, tied players will be awarded the same number of Starting Strokes for round one.

For example, if two players are tied for second position, both players would start at 8 under and the No. Any professional that is qualified for the TOUR Championship but unable to participate will not be awarded Starting Strokes and Starting Stroke positions for the remaining players will not be reallocated. Any professional who is unable to play, is disqualified or withdraws for any reason will finish in last position for the TOUR Championship.

FedExCup points are distributed to players earning official money. Amateurs will not be eligible to earn FedExCup points.



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