The azaleas and dogwoods are blooming, Butler Cabin is glistening, and the green jacket is waiting for its winner. Make yourself comfortable… golf’s most glamourous week is finally here! Can Scottie win his third despite an unfortunate ravioli incident? Can Rory finally break his major curse? Or can Min Woo cook up something special?
We can’t wait to find out…
Who’s the defending champion?
World No.1 Scottie Scheffler is aiming to become just the fourth player to successfully defend at the Masters. If he does, he will join elite company, with Jack, Tiger and Sir Nick Faldo the only players to do so. Scottie blitzed his way to a second green jacket last year, beating Ludvig Aberg by four strokes. It was a highlight in a season featuring another seven PGA Tour wins and an Olympic gold medal. Scottie missed the first few tournaments of 2025 after slicing his hand open on Christmas Day while making ravioli. That unfortunate incident may explain why Scottie hasn’t won yet, but the 28-year-old appears to be gathering momentum for Augusta. He finished second at the Houston Open, firing a 62 on Friday and a 63 on Sunday. And you can’t help but respect the world No.1’s sense of humour: an entrée of ravioli bites features on his champion’s dinner menu.
How many Aussies are teeing it up?
Five. Cameron Davis, Jason Day, Min Woo Lee, Adam Scott and Cam Smith.
Which Aussie has the best hope of winning the green jacket?
After his Houston Open win last week, it might be Min Woo Lee. He showcased his prodigious talent all week but the grit he displayed down the stretch, when hanging tough after an errant tee shot on the 16th, will fuel his belief in majors. Despite recording the equal-lowest front nine at Augusta, Min Woo has only carded one sub-70 round from his 10 attempts at the Masters. If he turns that alarming stat around this year, he’ll no doubt be contending on Sunday.
Who’s flying under the radar this week?
Blame the recency bias, but 2017 Masters champion Sergio Garcia appears a real smokey this year. Sergio has been playing better than ever, winning LIV Hong Kong last month and captaining the pace-setting Fireballs to three straight wins, and his petulant outbursts also appear a thing of the past. Chalk it up to mental maturity, but Sergio’s ball-striking prowess has always been his superpower. At the 2023 US Open 36-hole qualifier, veteran pro Scott Harrington described Sergio’s ball striking and shotmaking as “the most impressive I’ve seen”. High praise indeed.