1994 Masters Tournament

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1994 Masters Tournament
Tournament information
DatesApril 7–10, 1994
LocationAugusta, Georgia
33°30′11″N 82°01′12″W / 33.503°N 82.020°W / 33.503; -82.020Coordinates: 33°30′11″N 82°01′12″W / 33.503°N 82.020°W / 33.503; -82.020
Course(s)Augusta National Golf Club
Organized byAugusta National Golf Club
Tour(s)PGA Tour
Statistics
Par72
Length6,925 yards (6,332 m)[1]
Field86 players, 51 after cut
Cut149 (+5)
Prize fundUS$2.0 million
Winner's share$360,000
Champion
Spain José María Olazábal
279 (−9)
Location Map
Augusta National is located in the United States
Augusta National
Augusta National
Location in the United States
← 1993
1995 →

The 1994 Masters Tournament was the 58th Masters Tournament, held April 7–10 at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia.

José María Olazábal won the first of his two Masters titles, two strokes ahead of runner-up Tom Lehman,[1][2][3] and became the sixth winner from Europe in the past seven Masters.[4][5] Olazábal was the second champion from Spain, following Seve Ballesteros, the winner in 1980 and 1983.

Larry Mize, the 1987 champion, led after each of the first two rounds,[6][7] and Lehman assumed the 54-hole lead with one of two 69s on Saturday; Olazábal had the other and was one stroke back, with Mize one behind in third.[8] Lehman, age 35, had yet to win on the PGA Tour.[9]

In the final round, Olazábal, Lehman, and Mize shared the lead entering the back nine.[4] Mize made three bogeys coming home and fell out of contention. Lehman bogeyed the par-3 12th to fall a stroke back, and at the par-5 15th hole, both Olazábal and Lehman had putts for eagle. Olazabal made his from 35 feet (11 m), but Lehman missed from fifteen (4.5 m), and the lead was two strokes.[3][4][5]

After pars at 16, Olazábal three-putted from off the 17th green for bogey, while Lehman missed a birdie from fifteen feet, and the lead was reduced to one at the final tee. Lehman's one-iron found the left fairway bunker, the approach shot was well short of the green, and he bogeyed; Olazábal put his approach into the gallery, but he scrambled for par and had a two-stroke victory.[3][4][5]

Fred Couples, the 1992 champion, did not enter due to back problems, withdrawing the previous Friday.[10] Olazábal won his second green jacket five years later in 1999. Lehman won his first tour event six weeks later at the Memorial,[11] and won a major at The Open Championship in 1996.

Course[]

Hole Name Yards Par Hole Name Yards Par
1 Tea Olive 400 4 10 Camellia 485 4
2 Pink Dogwood 555 5 11 White Dogwood 455 4
3 Flowering Peach 360 4 12 Golden Bell 155 3
4 Flowering Crab Apple 205 3 13 Azalea 485 5
5 Magnolia 435 4 14 Chinese Fir 405 4
6 Juniper 180 3 15 Firethorn 500 5
7 Pampas 360 4 16 Redbud 170 3
8 Yellow Jasmine 535 5 17 Nandina 400 4
9 Carolina Cherry 435 4 18 Holly 405 4
Out 3,465 36 In 3,460 36
Source:[1] Total 6,925 72

Field[]

1. Masters champions

Tommy Aaron, Seve Ballesteros (9), Gay Brewer, Billy Casper, Charles Coody, Ben Crenshaw (12), Nick Faldo (3,11), Raymond Floyd (9,10), Doug Ford, Bernhard Langer (13), Sandy Lyle (9), Larry Mize (9,12,13), Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Craig Stadler (12,13), Tom Watson (10,11), Ian Woosnam (9), Fuzzy Zoeller (9)

2. U.S. Open champions (last five years)

Hale Irwin (11), Lee Janzen (13), Tom Kite (13), Payne Stewart (4,9,10,13), Curtis Strange

3. The Open champions (last five years)

Mark Calcavecchia (9,13), Ian Baker-Finch, Greg Norman (11,12,13)

4. PGA champions (last five years)

John Daly (9), Wayne Grady, Nick Price (10,12,13)

  • Paul Azinger (10,12,13) did not play
5. U.S. Amateur champion and runner-up

(a), John Harris (a)

6. The Amateur champion

Iain Pyman (a)

7. U.S. Amateur Public Links champion
8. U.S. Mid-Amateur champion

(a)

9. Top 24 players and ties from the 1993 Masters

Chip Beck (13), Russ Cochran, Steve Elkington (13), Brad Faxon, Anders Forsbrand, Dan Forsman, Tom Lehman, Jeff Maggert (12,13), José María Olazábal, Mark O'Meara, Corey Pavin (12,13), Scott Simpson (11,12,13), Jeff Sluman (10), Howard Twitty, Lanny Wadkins

10. Top 16 players and ties from the 1993 U.S. Open

John Adams, David Edwards (12,13), Ernie Els, Fred Funk, Nolan Henke (11,12), Scott Hoch (11,12), Barry Lane, Craig Parry, Loren Roberts (12), Mike Standly

11. Top eight players and ties from 1993 PGA Championship

John Cook, Bob Estes, Dudley Hart, Vijay Singh (12,13)

  • Phil Mickelson (12,13) did not play
12. Winners of PGA Tour events since the previous Masters

Fulton Allem (13), Jim Gallagher Jr. (13), Bill Glasson, David Frost (13), Jay Haas (13), John Huston (13), John Inman, Davis Love III (13), Andrew Magee, Billy Mayfair (13), Blaine McCallister, Jim McGovern (13), Johnny Miller, Brett Ogle, Grant Waite

  • Rocco Mediate (13) did not play
13. Top 30 players from the 1993 PGA Tour money list

Rick Fehr, Gil Morgan

14. Special foreign invitation

Peter Baker, Hajime Meshiai, Colin Montgomerie, Masashi Ozaki, Costantino Rocca, Sam Torrance

Round summaries[]

First round[]

Thursday, April 7, 1994

Place Player Country Score To par
1 Larry Mize  United States 68 −4
T2 Fulton Allem  South Africa 69 −3
Tom Kite  United States
T4 Seve Ballesteros  Spain 70 −2
Raymond Floyd  United States
Tom Lehman  United States
Greg Norman  Australia
Vijay Singh  Fiji
Tom Watson  United States
T10 Ian Baker-Finch  Australia 71 −1
Chip Beck  United States
Russ Cochran  United States
Brad Faxon  United States
Hajime Meshiai  Japan
Corey Pavin  United States
Gary Player  South Africa

Source:[12]

Second round[]

Friday, April 8, 1994

Place Player Country Score To par
1 Larry Mize  United States 68-71=139 −5
T2 Dan Forsman  United States 74-66=140 −4
Tom Lehman  United States 70-70=140
Greg Norman  Australia 70-70=140
T5 Ernie Els  South Africa 74-67=141 −3
Hale Irwin  United States 73-68=141
Tom Kite  United States 69-72=141
José María Olazábal  Spain 74-67=141
Tom Watson  United States 70-71=141
T10 Ian Baker-Finch  Australia 71-71=142 −2
Chip Beck  United States 71-71=142
Jim McGovern  United States 72-70=142
Hajime Meshiai  Japan 71-71=142

Amateurs: Harris (+4), Ellis (+6), Thomas (+12), Pyman (+17)

Third round[]

Saturday, April 9, 1994

Place Player Country Score To par
1 Tom Lehman  United States 70-70-69=209 −7
2 José María Olazábal  Spain 74-67-69=210 −6
3 Larry Mize  United States 68-71-72=211 −5
4 Tom Kite  United States 69-72-71=212 −4
T5 Ian Baker-Finch  Australia 71-71-71=213 −3
Jim McGovern  United States 72-70-71=213
7 Tom Watson  United States 70-71-73=214 −2
T8 Ernie Els  South Africa 74-67-74=215 −1
Raymond Floyd  United States 70-74-71=215
Greg Norman  Australia 70-70-75=215
Loren Roberts  United States 75-68-72=215

Final round[]

Sunday, April 10, 1994

Final leaderboard[]

Champion
Silver Cup winner (low amateur)
(a) = amateur
(c) = past champion
Top 10
Place Player Score To par Money (US$)
1 Spain José María Olazábal 74-67-69-69=279 −9 360,000
2 United States Tom Lehman 70-70-69-72=281 −7 216,000
3 United States Larry Mize (c) 68-71-72-71=282 −6 136,000
4 United States Tom Kite 69-72-71-71=283 −5 96,000
T5 United States Jay Haas 72-72-72-69=285 −3 73,000
United States Jim McGovern 72-70-71-72=285
United States Loren Roberts 75-68-72-70=285
T8 South Africa Ernie Els 74-67-74-71=286 −2 60,000
United States Corey Pavin 71-72-73-70=286
T10 Australia Ian Baker-Finch 71-71-71-74=287 −1 50,000
United States Raymond Floyd (c) 70-74-71-72=287
United States John Huston 72-72-74-69=287

Sources:[13][14]

Scorecard[]

Hole 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
Par 4 5 4 3 4 3 4 5 4 4 4 3 5 4 5 3 4 4
Spain Olazábal −6 −7 −7 −7 −7 −7 −7 −8 −8 −8 −8 −8 −8 −8 −10 −10 −9 −9
United States Lehman −7 −8 −8 −8 −8 −8 −8 −8 −8 −8 −8 −7 −7 −7 −8 −8 −8 −7
United States Mize −5 −6 −6 −6 −5 −6 −7 −8 −8 −8 −8 −7 −8 −7 −7 −7 −7 −6
United States Kite −4 −5 −5 −5 −4 −4 −4 −4 −4 −4 −4 −3 −4 −4 −5 −4 −5 −5
United States Haas E −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −2 −3 −3 −3 −3 −3 −2 −2 −2 −3 −3 −3
United States McGovern −3 −3 −1 −1 −2 +1 +1 E −1 −1 −2 −2 −3 −3 −3 −4 −3 −3
United States Roberts −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −2 −2 −2 −2 −2 −2 E −1 −2 −3 −3 −3 −3
South Africa Els −2 −2 −2 −2 −2 −2 −2 −4 −4 −4 −4 −5 −4 −4 −3 −2 −2 −2
United States Pavin +1 E E E E E E −1 −1 −2 −2 −1 −2 −2 −1 −1 −2 −2

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par

Eagle Birdie Bogey Double bogey Triple bogey+

Source:[15]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c "Olazabal masters arduous Augusta". Milwaukee Sentinel. Associated Press. April 11, 1994. p. 1B.
  2. ^ Reilly, Rick (April 19, 1994). "Olé! Olé!". Sports Illustrated. p. 18.
  3. ^ a b c Cherwa, John (April 11, 1994). "Olazabal completes his Masters". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). (Los Angeles Times). p. 1B.
  4. ^ a b c d Shapiro, Leonard (April 11, 1994). "Augusta gives reign to Spain". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). (Washington Post). p. C1.
  5. ^ a b c Parascenzo, Marino (April 11, 1994). "Olazabal masters Augusta". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. D1.
  6. ^ Cherwa, John (April 9, 1994). "Mize tops tight Masters field". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). (Los Angeles Times). p. 1C.
  7. ^ Parascenzo, Marino (April 9, 1994). "Norman lurking, but Mize leads by 1". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. D1.
  8. ^ Markus, Don (April 10, 1994). "Lehman aims to make first win a major". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). (Baltimore Sun). p. 1E.
  9. ^ Shapiro, Leonard (April 10, 1994). "Golf, in Lehman's terms". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). (Washington Post). p. C1.
  10. ^ "Couples to miss Masters". Toledo Blade. (Ohio). Associated Press. April 2, 1994. p. 24.
  11. ^ "'Unbelievable' Lehman wins". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). Associated Press. May 23, 1994. p. C3.
  12. ^ "1994 Masters". databasegolf.com. Retrieved April 27, 2014.
  13. ^ "Masters – Past Winners & Results". Augusta National Inc. Retrieved April 20, 2021.
  14. ^ "Past results – Masters tournament". PGA Tour. Retrieved April 20, 2021.
  15. ^ "Historic Leaderboards: 1994 Masters". Augusta Chronicle. Retrieved September 21, 2015.

External links[]

Preceded by Major Championships Succeeded by
1994 U.S. Open
Retrieved from ""