1989 Masters Tournament
The 1989 Masters Tournament was the 53rd Masters Tournament, held April 6–9 at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia.
Nick Faldo won the first of his three Masters titles, the second of his six major golf championships|major] championships. After a third round 77, he shot a final round 65 and won with a birdie on the second hole of a sudden-death playoff with Scott Hoch. The 1989 Masters is remembered for Hoch missing a putt on the first playoff hole that would have won him the green jacket. Greg Norman continued his misfortunes at the Masters with a bogey on the 72nd hole to miss a playoff by a stroke, similar to 1986. Third round leader Ben Crenshaw also bogeyed the final hole to tie Norman for third.
Faldo became the first man from England to win the Masters and was the second consecutive winner from the United Kingdom. Defending champion Sandy Lyle of Scotland missed the cut by two strokes, but made history at the champions' dinner on Tuesday by sporting a kilt and serving haggis.
Field
;1. Masters championsTommy Aaron, George Archer, Seve Ballesteros, Gay Brewer, Billy Casper, Charles Coody, Ben Crenshaw, Raymond Floyd, Doug Ford, Bernhard Langer, Sandy Lyle, Larry Mize, Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Craig Stadler, Tom Watson, Fuzzy Zoeller
- Jack Burke Jr., Bob Goalby, Claude Harmon, Ben Hogan, Herman Keiser, Cary Middlecoff, Byron Nelson, Henry Picard, Gene Sarazen, Sam Snead, and Art Wall Jr. did not play.
Andy North, Scott Simpson, Curtis Strange
;3. The Open champions
Nick Faldo, Greg Norman
;4. PGA champions
Hubert Green, Larry Nelson, Jeff Sluman, Lee Trevino, Bob Tway
;5. U.S. Amateur champion and runner-up
Eric Meeks, Danny Yates
;6. The Amateur champion
Christian Hardin
;7. U.S. Amateur Public Links champion
Ralph Howe III
;8. U.S. Mid-Amateur champion
David Eger
;9. Top 24 players and ties from the 1988 Masters Tournament
Chip Beck, Mark Calcavecchia, Chen Tze-chung, Fred Couples, David Frost, Mark McCumber, Mark McNulty, Dan Pohl, Don Pooley, Nick Price, Doug Tewell, Lanny Wadkins
;10. Top 16 players and ties from the 1988 U.S. Open
Paul Azinger, Andy Bean, Bob Gilder, Mark O'Meara, Steve Pate, Payne Stewart, D. A. Weibring
;11. Top eight players and ties from 1988 PGA Championship
Tom Kite, Tsuneyuki Nakajima, Dave Rummells
;12. Winners of PGA Tour events since the previous Masters
Jim Benepe, Mark Brooks, Bill Glasson, Ken Green, Morris Hatalsky, Steve Jones, Gary Koch, Bruce Lietzke, Bob Lohr, Andrew Magee, Blaine McCallister, Jodie Mudd, Corey Pavin, Tom Purtzer, Mike Reid, Gene Sauers, Tom Sieckmann, Tim Simpson, Joey Sindelar, Mike Sullivan, Greg Twiggs, Scott Verplank
- Phil Blackmar, the winner of the Provident Classic was not invited.
Jay Haas, Scott Hoch, Peter Jacobsen, Mark Wiebe
;14. Members of the U.S. 1987 Ryder Cup team
Hal Sutton
;15. Special foreign invitation
José María Olazábal, Masashi Ozaki, Ian Woosnam
Round summaries
First round
Thursday, April 6, 1989Lee Trevino, vying for an elusive Masters title, shot an opening round 67 to lead Nick Faldo by one shot. Only 10 players broke par on day one, including 1984 champion Ben Crenshaw and 1980 and 1983 champion Seve Ballesteros. Defending champion Sandy Lyle birdied 18 to shoot a disappointing 77.
| Place | Player | Score | To par | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1 | ![]() Second roundFriday, April 7, 1989Lee Trevino and Nick Faldo, who both shot over par on the day, shared the lead after a difficult scoring day. Only four players broke par including Ken Green, who shot 69 and had the round of the day. Seve Ballesteros shot 72 even though he had a 4 putt on the 15th hole.
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