How Recent Masters Champions Fared in Final Starts Before Augusta

Scottie Scheffler holds the trophy after winning the Masters golf tournament at Augusta National Golf Club Sunday, April 14, 2024, in Augusta, Ga.
(AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

Not long after he prevailed in Monday morningโ€™s Players Championship playoff, Rory McIlroy revealed that he hasnโ€™t decided whether heโ€™ll play the Texas Childrenโ€™s Houston Open or the Valero Texas Open, but heโ€™s leaning toward Houston.

Scottie Scheffler will play that one. Tony Finau and Wyndham Clark have similarly committed.

Meanwhile, the Valero will host a surprisingly brawny field that includes Ludvig Aberg, Colin Morikawa, Patrick Cantlay and Hideki Matsuyama.

Thatโ€™s all after the likes of Xander Schauffele, Justin Thomas and Tommy Fleetwood compete at this weekโ€™s Valspar Championship.

You get the picture: Itโ€™s hardly a unanimous decision, but most of the worldโ€™s elite-level players will get in one or two more competitive reps before next monthโ€™s Masters Tournament.

We might have already been given a few clues as to whom might be ready to roll at Augusta National. McIlroy and Russell Henley won the last two big-time events, Morikawa and Corey Conners each finished top-10, and Fleetwood, Scheffler, Daniel Berger, Denny McCarthy, Keegan Bradley, Shane Lowry, Robert MacIntyre and Sepp Straka all posted a pair of top-20s.

But weโ€™ll need to keep our eyes peeled for the next three weeks in order to get the full picture.

What are we looking for, exactly? Well, letโ€™s take a look at how each of the last 10 winners of the Masters fared in their final starts beforehand.

How Recent Masters Champions Fared in Final Starts Before Augusta

2016: Danny Willett

Last start: T-28 at the WGC-Dell Match Play

For as indiscriminately entertaining as the old Match Play tournament was, and for as much as professional golf could use another match play format event โ€“ possibly at the Tour Championship as early as this season โ€“ it often didnโ€™t serve as a great barometer of performance leading into the Masters. Willett wasnโ€™t great there, but he did already have a win in Dubai and a T-3 at Doral in his back pocket before April rolled around.

2017: Sergio Garcia

Last start: T-30 at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play

If weโ€™re seeking a correlation here, thereโ€™s a strong comparison to Willett the previous year, who similarly won in Dubai and similarly didnโ€™t do much at the Match Play in his final start before the big one.

2018: Patrick Reed

Last start: T-9 at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play

Though he didnโ€™t win in the yearโ€™s first three months, Reed entered Augusta with a resume that showed results of T-2 (Valspar Championship), T-7 (Arnold Palmer Invitational) and T-9 (Match Play) in his last three starts beforehand, suggesting greater success was impending on a course which already suited his game.

2019: Tiger Woods

Last start: T-5 at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play

If it looks in retrospect like Tiger was building up to something big at the Masters, well, thatโ€™s because he was. Itโ€™s no secret that the majors โ€“ and especially this major โ€“ mean more to him than other events. Heโ€™d finished T-20, T-15, T-10 and T-30 before reaching the quarterfinals at the Match Play, surely showing enough form to be primed for a title run.

2020: Dustin Johnson

Last start: T-2 at the Vivint Houston Open

The world was a strange place in 2020, though it could be stated that things are much stranger in DJโ€™s world five years later, largely playing as an afterthought on the LIV Golf circuit. Back then, he rode an absolute heater into the Masters, with a win, three runners-up, a T-3 and a T-6 in his final half-dozen starts before the November major.

2021: Hideki Matsuyama

Last start: T-30 at the Valero Texas Open

Despite entering as the worldโ€™s 25th-ranked player, there were no real warning signs that Matsuyama was about to peak at Augusta. In a busy schedule that included 10 starts before the first major, he didnโ€™t have a result better than 15th place and had only gained strokes off the tee in five of nine measured starts and with his irons in six of nine.

2022: Scottie Scheffler

Last start: Win at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play

As silly as it sounds now, entering the 2022 campaign there were questions regarding Schefflerโ€™s ceiling, as he owned a bevy of close calls without a win. That drought ended at the WM Phoenix Open, which served as the first of three wins in his final five starts before arriving in Augusta.

2023: Jon Rahm

Last start: T-31 at WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play

Fresh off a withdrawal from The Players due to a stomach bug, Rahm went 1-2 in the group stage and didnโ€™t advance at the Match Play. That mightโ€™ve been a small reason for concern, but his three titles in the first two months of the year shouldโ€™ve helped to alleviate any lingering doubts as to whether heโ€™d be ready for the yearโ€™s first major.

2024: Scottie Scheffler

Last start: T-2 at the Texas Childrenโ€™s Houston Open

Already with victories at the Arnold Palmer Invitational and The Players before one final tune-up, Scheffler missed a 5-foot birdie attempt on the 72nd hole that wouldโ€™ve forced a playoff with Stephan Jaeger. Even so, there were plenty of clues that Scheffler was about to win his second green jacket, including the fact that heโ€™d gained strokes in all four major statistical categories in each of those three events leading into the Masters.

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About the Author

Jason Sobel

Read More @JasonSobelGolf

Jason Sobel is a Brand Ambassador for BetMGM. He joins after six years with Action Network. Prior to Action, Jason spent a total of 17 years in two stints at ESPN (1997-2011; 2015-18) and four years at Golf Channel (2011-15). He also currently works as a host for "Hitting the Green" on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio and contributes to the channel's on-site coverage during major championships. He's won four Sports Emmy awards, more than a dozen Golf Writers Association of America accolades and has earned an honorable mention in the Best of American Sportswriting series.

Jason Sobel is a Brand Ambassador for BetMGM. He joins after six years with Action Network. Prior to Action, Jason spent a total of 17 years in two stints at ESPN (1997-2011; 2015-18) and four years at Golf Channel (2011-15). He also currently works as a host for "Hitting the Green" on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio and contributes to the channel's on-site coverage during major championships. He's won four Sports Emmy awards, more than a dozen Golf Writers Association of America accolades and has earned an honorable mention in the Best of American Sportswriting series.