2005 Masters Tournament
The 2005 Masters Tournament was the 69th Masters Tournament, played from April 7–10 at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia.
Tiger Woods, 29, won his fourth green jacket on the first hole of a playoff with Chris DiMarco. Rain was a factor the whole week, and delayed much of the play. The purse was $7.0 million with a winner's share of $1.26 million. It was the ninth of Woods' fifteen major championships.
This Masters was the last as competitors for three former champions: Tommy Aaron, Billy Casper, and six-time winner Jack Nicklaus.
Ryan Moore was low amateur at 287, the best score by an amateur since 1978, and earned an exemption to the 2006 tournament.
Jerry Pate, a non-playing invitee, won the 46th Par-3 contest on Wednesday with a five-under 22.
Course
Field
1. Masters championsTommy Aaron, Billy Casper, Charles Coody, Fred Couples, Ben Crenshaw, Nick Faldo, Raymond Floyd, Bernhard Langer, Sandy Lyle, Phil Mickelson, Larry Mize, Jack Nicklaus, José María Olazábal, Mark O'Meara, Gary Player, Vijay Singh, Craig Stadler, Tom Watson, Mike Weir, Tiger Woods, Ian Woosnam, Fuzzy Zoeller
- George Archer, Seve Ballesteros, Gay Brewer, Jack Burke Jr., Doug Ford, Bob Goalby, Byron Nelson, and Arnold Palmer did not play.
Jim Furyk, Retief Goosen
3. The Open champions
Ben Curtis, David Duval, Ernie Els, Todd Hamilton
4. PGA champions
Rich Beem, Shaun Micheel, David Toms
5. The Players Championship winners
Fred Funk, Davis Love III, Adam Scott
6. U.S. Amateur champion and runner-up
Luke List, Ryan Moore
7. The Amateur champion
Stuart Wilson
8. U.S. Amateur Public Links champion
- Eligible under category 6
Austin Eaton III
10. Top 16 players and ties from the 2004 Masters
Paul Casey, K. J. Choi, Chris DiMarco, Sergio García, Pádraig Harrington, Charles Howell III, Nick Price, Kirk Triplett, Casey Wittenberg
11. Top eight players and ties from the 2004 U.S. Open
Robert Allenby, Steve Flesch, Jeff Maggert, Shigeki Maruyama
12. Top four players and ties from the 2004 Open Championship
Lee Westwood
13. Top four players and ties from 2004 PGA Championship
Justin Leonard, Chris Riley
14. Top 40 players from the 2004 PGA Tour money list
Stephen Ames, Stuart Appleby, Chad Campbell, Stewart Cink, Darren Clarke, John Daly, Luke Donald, Carlos Franco, Jay Haas, Mark Hensby, Tim Herron, Zach Johnson, Jonathan Kaye, Jerry Kelly, Ryan Palmer, Rod Pampling, Jesper Parnevik, Kenny Perry, Ted Purdy, Rory Sabbatini, Bo Van Pelt, Scott Verplank
15. Top 10 players from the 2005 PGA Tour money list on March 28
Tom Lehman, Joe Ogilvie
16. Top 50 players from the final 2004 world ranking
Thomas Bjørn, Ángel Cabrera, Joakim Haeggman, David Howell, Trevor Immelman, Freddie Jacobson, Miguel Ángel Jiménez, Thomas Levet, Peter Lonard, Nick O'Hern, Ian Poulter
17. Top 50 players from world ranking published March 28
Tim Clark, Graeme McDowell, Craig Parry
18. Special foreign invitation
Shingo Katayama
Round summaries
First round
Thursday, April 7, 2005Friday, April 8, 2005
Sixty-eight players were on the course when darkness suspended the first round since the start of the round was delayed by over five hours due to heavy morning rain. The round was completed Friday morning. Chris DiMarco shot a five-under 67 to take the first round lead. Vijay Singh and Luke Donald were at 68, one stroke behind in second. Tiger Woods struggled through much of his round ending at two over par. After the round, Woods was questioned by rules officials for an illegal putting stance on the 14th before getting the all-clear. In his final appearance, Billy Casper shot the worst round in Masters history on Thursday, a triple-digit 106, but the round was unofficial because he withdrew.
Three-time champion Nick Faldo withdrew while playing the ninth hole due to back spasms.
| Place | Player | Score | To par | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1 | ![]() Second roundFriday, April 8, 2005Saturday, April 9, 2005 Rain suspended play for much of the day and the second round spilled into Saturday. Chris DiMarco posted another five-under 67 to take a four-stroke lead at the halfway point. Thomas Bjørn also shot a 67 to take second place by himself at −6. Tiger Woods recovered from his poor first round with a six-under 66, six strokes back in third place.
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