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词条 2003 Masters Tournament
释义

  1. Field

     Nationalities in the field  Past champions in the field  Made the cut  Missed the cut 

  2. Round summaries

     First round  Second round  Third round  Final round  Scorecard  Playoff 

  3. References

  4. External links

{{Infobox individual golf tournament
| name = 2003 Masters Tournament
| image =
| dates = April 11–13, 2003
| location = Augusta, Georgia
| course = Augusta National Golf Club
| org = Augusta National Golf Club
| tour = PGA Tour
European Tour
Japan Golf Tour
| par = 72
| yardage = {{convert|7290|yd|0}}
| field = 93 players, 49 after cut
| cut = 149 (+5)
| purse = $6,000,000
€5,496,045
| winners_share = $1,080,000
€1,008,312
| champion = {{flagicon|CAN}} Mike Weir
| score = 281 (−7), playoff
| previous = 2002
| next = 2004
}}{{Location map
|USA
|relief = 1
|label = Augusta 
|lat = 33.503
|long = -82.020
|caption = Location in the United States
|marksize = 5
|float =
|background =
|width = 230
}}{{Location map
|USA Georgia
|relief = 1
|label = Augusta 
|lat = 33.503
|long = -82.020
|caption = Location in Georgia
|marksize = 5
|float =
|background =
|width = 120
}}

The 2003 Masters Tournament was the 67th Masters Tournament, held April 11–13 at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia. Mike Weir won his only major title in a one-hole playoff over Len Mattiace. He was the first Canadian to win a major, and also the first left-handed player to win the Masters.[1][2] He is also the only Canadian to win the tournament.[3]

The start of the first round was delayed until early Friday morning due to successive days of heavy rain; the second round was started on Friday afternoon and completed on Saturday morning.[4]

Field

1. Masters champions
Tommy Aaron, Seve Ballesteros, Charles Coody, Fred Couples, Ben Crenshaw, Nick Faldo (10,11), Raymond Floyd, Bernhard Langer (16,17), Sandy Lyle, Larry Mize, Jack Nicklaus, José María Olazábal (10,14,16), Mark O'Meara (3), Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Vijay Singh (4,10,14,15,16,17), Craig Stadler, Tom Watson, Tiger Woods (2,3,4,5,12,14,15,16,17), Ian Woosnam, Fuzzy Zoeller
  • George Archer, Gay Brewer, Jack Burke, Jr., Billy Casper, Doug Ford, Bob Goalby, Herman Keiser, and Byron Nelson did not play.
2.
//U.S. Open (golf)">U.S. Open champions (last five years)
Retief Goosen (10,14,16,17), Lee Janzen
3.
//The Open Championship">The Open champions (last five years)

David Duval (16,17), Ernie Els (10,14,15,16,17), Paul Lawrie (16)

4.
//PGA Championship">PGA champions (last five years)

Rich Beem (14,16,17), David Toms (14,16,17)

5.
//The Players Championship">The Players Championship winners (last three years)

Davis Love III (14,15,16,17), Craig Perks (14)

6.
//U.S. Amateur">U.S. Amateur champion and runner-up

Ricky Barnes (a), Hunter Mahan (a)

7.
//The Amateur Championship">The Amateur champion

Alejandro Larrazábal (a)

8.
//U.S. Amateur Public Links">U.S. Amateur Public Links champion

Ryan Moore (a)

9.
//U.S. Mid-Amateur">U.S. Mid-Amateur champion

George Zahringer (a)

10. Top 16 players and ties from the
//2002 Masters Tournament">2002 Masters

Ángel Cabrera (16,17), Chris DiMarco (14,16,17), Brad Faxon (14,16,17), Sergio García (11,14,16,17), Pádraig Harrington (11,16,17), Miguel Ángel Jiménez, Shigeki Maruyama (14,16,17), Phil Mickelson (11,14,16,17), Colin Montgomerie (16,17), Adam Scott (16,17)

11. Top eight players and ties from the
//2002 U.S. Open (golf)">2002 U.S. Open

Tom Byrum, Scott Hoch (14,15,16,17), Jeff Maggert, Billy Mayfair, Nick Price (14,16,17)

12. Top four players and ties from
//2002 PGA Championship">2002 PGA Championship

Fred Funk (14,16,17), Justin Leonard (14,15,16,17), Chris Riley (14,16,17)

13. Top four players and ties from the
//2002 Open Championship">2002 Open Championship
Stuart Appleby (14,16,17), Steve Elkington, Thomas Levet
14. Top 40 players from the
//2002 PGA Tour">2002 PGA Tour money list
Robert Allenby (16,17), Jonathan Byrd, K. J. Choi (16,17), John Cook, Bob Estes (16,17), Jim Furyk (15,16,17), Charles Howell III (16,17), Jerry Kelly (16,17), Steve Lowery (16,17), Len Mattiace, Scott McCarron (16,17), Rocco Mediate (16,17), Craig Parry (16,17), Pat Perez, Kenny Perry (16,17), Loren Roberts, John Rollins, Jeff Sluman (16,17), Kevin Sutherland, Phil Tataurangi
15. Top 10 players from the
//2003 PGA Tour">2003 PGA Tour money list on March 30

Chad Campbell, Jay Haas (17), Mike Weir (16,17)

16. Top 50 players from the final 2002
//Official World Golf Ranking">world ranking

Michael Campbell (17), Darren Clarke (17), Niclas Fasth (17), Toshimitsu Izawa, Shingo Katayama, Peter Lonard (17), Eduardo Romero (17), Justin Rose (17), Toru Taniguchi, Scott Verplank (17)

  • Thomas Bjørn (17) did not play.
17. Top 50 players from world ranking published March 30
Tim Clark, John Huston, Tom Lehman, Kirk Triplett
18. Special foreign invitation

All the amateurs were playing in their first Masters, as were Rich Beem, Jonathan Byrd, Chad Campbell, K. J. Choi, Thomas Levet, Peter Lonard, Pat Perez, Chris Riley, John Rollins, Justin Rose, and Phil Tataurangi.

Nationalities in the field

North America (55)South America (2)Europe (15)Oceania (10)Asia (5)Africa (5)
{{CAN}} (1) {{ARG}} (2) {{ENG}} (2) {{AUS}} (6) {{JPN}} (4) {{ZAF}} (4)
{{USA}} (54) {{NIR}} (1) {{FJI}} (1) KOR|1997}} (1) {{ZIM}} (1)
{{SCO}} (3) {{NZL}} (3)
{{WAL}} (1)
{{ESP}} (5)
{{FRA}} (1)
{{DEU}} (1)
{{SWE}} (1)
{{IRL}} (1)

Past champions in the field

Made the cut

Player Country Year(s) won R1 R2 R3 R4 Total To par Finish
Vijay Singh{{FJI}} 2000 73 71 70 73 287 −1 T6
Mark O'Meara{{USA}} 1998 76 71 70 71 288 E T8
José María Olazábal{{ESP}} 1994, 1999 73 71 71 73 288 E T8
Tiger Woods{{USA}} 1997, 2001, 2002 76 73 66 75 290 +2 T15
Fred Couples{{USA}} 1992 73 75 69 77 294 +6 T28
Nick Faldo{{ENG}} 1989, 1990, 1996 74 73 75 73 295 +7 T33
Craig Stadler{{USA}} 1982 76 73 79 77 305 +17 49

Missed the cut

Player Country Year(s) won R1 R2 Total To par
Tom Watson{{USA}} 1977, 1981 75 77 152 +8
Larry Mize{{USA}} 1987 78 74 152 +8
Ian Woosnam{{WAL}} 1991 80 74 154 +10
Sandy Lyle{{SCO}} 1988 82 73 155 +11
Fuzzy Zoeller{{USA}} 1979 77 78 155 +11
Ben Crenshaw{{USA}} 1984, 1995 79 76 155 +11
Bernhard Langer{{GER}} 1985, 1993 79 76 155 +11
Raymond Floyd{{USA}} 1976 77 80 157 +13
Gary Player{{RSA}} 1961, 1974, 1978 82 80 162 +18
Jack Nicklaus{{USA}} 1963, 1965, 1966,
1972, 1975, 1986
85 77 162 +18
Seve Ballesteros{{ESP}} 1980, 1983 77 85 162 +18
Charles Coody{{USA}} 1971 83 81 164 +20
Arnold Palmer{{USA}} 1958, 1960,
1962, 1964
83 83 166 +22
Tommy Aaron{{USA}} 1973 92 80 172 +28

Round summaries

First round

Friday, April 11, 2003

With play canceled due to rain on Thursday, the first round started at 7 am Friday with players teeing off at the 1st and 10th holes. The round was dominated by Darren Clarke, who posted a six-under 66. The score was even more impressive considering only seven shot under par for the round. Sergio García shot 69 (−3), in a second place tie with 2002 U.S. Amateur champion Ricky Barnes. Three-time major champion, Nick Price, shot 70 (−2), for a fourth place tie with Canadian Mike Weir. Two-time defending champ and three-time Masters champion, Tiger Woods shot a disappointing 76 (+4), ten strokes back.[4]

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Darren Clarke{{NIR}}66−6
T2Ricky Barnes (a){{USA}}69−3
Sergio García{{ESP}}
T4Nick Price{{ZWE}}70−2
Mike Weir{{CAN}}
T6Toru Taniguchi{{JPN}}71−1
David Toms{{USA}}
T8Tim Clark{{ZAF}}72E
Jerry Kelly{{USA}}
Paul Lawrie{{SCO}}
Jeff Maggert{{USA}}

Second round

Friday, April 11, 2003
Saturday, April 12, 2003

Due the postponement of play on Thursday, the second round started at 2 pm on Friday with players starting at the 1st and 10th tees. In what proved to be another very difficult round at Augusta, Weir took a four stroke 36-hole lead with a four-under 68 for 138 (−6). Only 16 of the 93 competitors finished with a round below par, and only four were under par at the halfway mark. First round leader Clarke came back to earth with 76 (+4) for solo second at 142 (−2). Phil Mickelson charged up the leaderboard with a two-under 70 into a tie for third place with amateur Barnes. (Two other amateurs also made the cut, Hunter Mahan and Ryan Moore.) Five were tied for fifth place at even-par 144, including two former Masters champions in Vijay Singh and José María Olazábal. The round was completed on Saturday morning and the 36-hole cut was set at 149 (+5). The biggest name to fail to make the weekend was Colin Montgomerie.

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Mike Weir{{CAN}}70-68=138−6
2Darren Clarke{{NIR}}66-76=142−2
T3Ricky Barnes (a){{USA}}69-74=143−1
Phil Mickelson{{USA}}73-70=143
T5Brad Faxon{{USA}}73-71=144E
Paul Lawrie{{SCO}}72-72=144
José María Olazábal{{ESP}}73-71=144
Vijay Singh{{FJI}}73-71=144
David Toms{{USA}}71-73=144
T10Jonathan Byrd{{USA}}74-71=145+1
K. J. ChoiKOR|1997}}76-69=145
Ernie Els{{ZAF}}79-66=145
Jim Furyk{{USA}}73-72=145
Charles Howell III{{USA}}73-72=145
Jeff Maggert{{USA}}72-73=145
Hunter Mahan (a){{USA}}73-72=145
Billy Mayfair{{USA}}75-70=145
Nick Price{{ZWE}}70-75=145
John Rollins{{USA}}74-71=145
Phil Tataurangi{{NZL}}75-70=145

Amateurs: Barnes (-1), Mahan (+1), Moore (+3), Larrázabal (+19), Zahringer (+23).

Third round

Saturday, April 12, 2003

Following the completion of the second round on Saturday morning, "Moving day" lived up to its name in the third round as Jeff Maggert charged to the 54-hole lead with a six-under 66 for 211 (−5). Second round leader Weir shot 75 (+3) to fall back to 213 (−3), in solo second place and the final Sunday pairing with Maggert. Singh moved into a tie for third with another major champion in David Toms at 214 (−2). Woods matched the round of the day with a 66 (−6) to ascend the leaderboard to keep his bid for three-straight Masters alive. Mickelson and Olazábal were tied with Woods at 215 for fifth place. Len Mattiace shot 69 (−3) to get to even-par 216, five strokes back in a tie for eighth. The third round was completed late on Saturday, and the tournament was finally back on schedule.[5]

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Jeff Maggert{{USA}}72-73-66=211−5
2Mike Weir{{CAN}}70-68-75=213−3
T3Vijay Singh{{FIJ}}73-71-70=214−2
David Toms{{USA}}71-73-70=214
T5Phil Mickelson{{USA}}73-70-72=215−1
José María Olazábal{{ESP}}73-71-71=215
Tiger Woods{{USA}}76-73-66=215
T8Jonathan Byrd{{USA}}74-71-71=216E
Jim Furyk{{USA}}73-72-71=216
Len Mattiace{{USA}}73-74-69=216

Source:[6]

Final round

Sunday, April 13, 2003

Despite one of the largest major championship final round comebacks by Mattiace, Mike Weir bested him in a sudden death playoff for his first major title. Weir became the first Canadian ever to win a major championship, and also became the first left-handed player to win the Masters. The sudden death playoff at the par 4 10th was the only extra hole needed, as Weir's bogey was good enough as Mattiace double-bogeyed the hole. Weir recovered from his disappointing third round with his second 68 of the tournament to force the playoff. To get into the sudden death playoff, Weir made a {{convert|7|ft|0|sing=on}} putt for par on the 18th green. Mattiace's only bogey (besides the playoff hole) of his tournament-low 65 (−7) was at the 18th hole. He teed off forty minutes and four groups ahead of the final pairing,[6] so Mattiace had about an hour between the completion of his round and the start of the playoff.

Third round leader Maggert shot a disappointing 75 (+3) to finish in solo fifth place. Maggert had no bogeys or double bogeys, but made a triple bogey 7 on the third hole and a quintuple bogey 8 on the twelfth hole. Mickelson's 68 (−4) was only enough for solo third, two strokes behind Weir and Mattiace. It marked Mickelson's third straight third-place finish at the Masters (he would win the green jacket in 2004, 2006, and 2010). Jim Furyk also shot a four-under 68 for a fourth-place finish which equaled his best Masters finish at 284 (−4). (He would win the next major, at the U.S. Open in June.) Ernie Els and Singh rounded out the under par finishers at 287 (−1), in a tie for sixth. Toms shot 74 and fell back to even-par 288, in a five-way tie for eighth. Woods' bid for his third straight Masters victory came up well short with a disappointing 75 (+3) for 290 (+2), nine strokes back. Amateur Barnes was the low-amateur, after being near the top of the leaderboard the first two rounds.

This was the last year the sudden-death playoff began on the 10th tee. Beginning in 2004, the playoff starting point was changed to the 18th hole, which then alternated with the 10th hole until a winner emerged;[7] the first use was in 2005.

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney ($)
T1 Mike Weir {{CAN}} 70-68-75-68=281 −7Playoff
Len Mattiace {{USA}} 73-74-69-65=281
3 Phil Mickelson {{USA}} 73-70-72-68=283 −5408,000
4 Jim Furyk {{USA}} 73-72-71-68=284 −4288,000
5 Jeff Maggert {{USA}} 72-73-66-75=286 −2240,000
T6 Ernie Els {{ZAF}} 79-66-72-70=287 −1208,500
Vijay Singh {{FJI}} 73-71-70-73=287
T8 Jonathan Byrd {{USA}} 74-71-71-72=288 E162,000
José María Olazábal {{ESP}} 73-71-71-73=288
Mark O'Meara {{USA}} 76-71-70-71=288
David Toms {{USA}} 71-73-70-74=288
Scott Verplank {{USA}} 76-73-70-69=288

Amateurs: Barnes (+3), Mahan (+6), Moore (+13).

Scorecard

Final round
Hole 1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 101112131415161718
Par454343454 443545344
{{flagicon|CAN}} Weir−3−4−4−4−4−5−5−5−5−5−5−5−6−6−7−7−7−7
{{flagicon|USA}} MattiaceE−1−2−2−2−2−2−3−3−4−4−4−6−6−7−8−8−7
{{flagicon|USA}} Mickelson−1−2−2−2−2−1−2−2−2−2−2−2−3−3−4−4−4−5
{{flagicon|USA}} FurykE−1−1−1−1−1−1−2−2−2−2−1−1−1−3−3−4−4
{{flagicon|USA}} Maggert−5−5−2−2−3−3−3−3−3−4−4+1+1E−1−2−2−2
{{flagicon|ZAF}} ElsEE+1+1+2+1+1E−1−1EE−1−1−1−1−1−1
{{flagicon|FIJ}} Singh−2−3−3−3−2−2−2−2−2−3−4−3−2−2−1−1−1−1
{{flagicon|USA}} Toms−1−2−2−2−2−2−1−2−2−2−2−1E+1+1EEE
{{flagicon|USA}} Woods−1−2E+1+1+1+2+3+2+2+2+2+1+2+2+2+2+2
Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par
EagleBirdieBogeyDouble bogeyTriple bogey+
Source:[8]

Playoff

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney ($)
1 Mike Weir {{CAN}} 5+11,080,000
2 Len Mattiace {{USA}} x648,000
  • Sudden-death playoff began and ended on par-4 10th hole; Weir's bogey defeated Mattiace.[1]

References

1. ^{{cite magazine|url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1028601/index.htm|magazine=Sports Illustrated|title=Weir and Wonderful|last=Price|first=S.L.|date=April 21, 2003}}
2. ^{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=65pjAAAAIBAJ&sjid=RAQEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6394%2C4063932|newspaper=Toledo Blade|title=A Weir-d Masters|last=Dulac|first=Gerry|agency=Block News Alliance|date=April 14, 2003|page=C1}}
3. ^{{cite web |url=https://www.sportsnet.ca/golf/mike-weir-2003-masters-win/ |title=Behind the scenes of Mike Weir's 2003 Masters win |last=Grange |first=Michael |publisher=SportsNet |date=April 2018 |access-date=May 13, 2018 |quote=Weir was the first lefty and remains the only Canadian to win the Masters, and the memories of those who experienced it with him are still fresh today.}}
4. ^{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=M2ZWAAAAIBAJ&sjid=q_IDAAAAIBAJ&pg=2425%2C673275 |newspaper=Spokesman-Review |last=Ferguson |first=Dave |agency=Associated Press|title=On long day at Augusta, it's even longer for Woods|date=April 12, 2003 |page=C1}}
5. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=FlBWAAAAIBAJ&sjid=r-sDAAAAIBAJ&pg=6616%2C2885623 |newspaper=Eugene Register-Guard |last=Bonk |first=Thomas |title=Tiger goes from near-miss to near lead|agency=(Los Angeles Times) |date=April 13, 2003 |page=D1}}
6. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=FlBWAAAAIBAJ&sjid=r-sDAAAAIBAJ&pg=2334%2C2899137 |newspaper=Eugene Register-Guard |title=Tournament Scoreboard: The 67th Masters |date=April 13, 2003 |page=D4}}
7. ^{{cite web |url=http://edition.cnn.com/2004/SPORT/04/07/golf.usmasters/ |publisher=CNN.com |title=Masters playoff format is changed |date=April 7, 2004 |accessdate=January 7, 2013}}
8. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.augusta.com/masters/historic/leaderboards/2003leaderboard.shtml |publisher=Augusta.com |title=2003 Masters leaderboard |date= April 13, 2003|accessdate=June 20, 2013}}

External links

  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20131012024707/http://www.masters.com/en_US/discover/past_winners.html Masters.com] – past winners and results
  • Coverage on the European Tour's official site
  • About.com – 2003 Masters
  • Augusta.com – 2003 Masters leaderboard and scorecards
{{s-start}}{{succession box | before=2002 PGA Championship| title=Major Championships | years= | after=2003 U.S. Open}}{{s-end}}{{Golf Major Championships master|2003}}{{Masters Tournaments}}{{coord|33.503|N|82.020|W|display=t|type:event}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Masters Tournament}}

5 : Masters Tournament|2003 in golf|2003 in American sports|2003 in sports in Georgia (U.S. state)|April 2003 sports events

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