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Who is in 2025 Masters field? Scottie Scheffler, LIV golfers and more

Who is in 2025 Masters field? Scottie Scheffler, LIV golfers and more

Yahoo29-04-2025
The field for the 2025 Masters Tournament is just about complete.
One final qualifier could come Sunday from the Valero Texas Open for the first major on the men's professional golf calendar, set for April 10-13 at Augusta National Golf Club.
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Here are the 96 players in the field. They are listed in alphabetical order, with the numbers for their routes of qualification after their name. The full list of qualifications is at the bottom.
More: See all 96 players in the field, and how they've done at Augusta National Golf Club
More: How many putts does the field average at The Masters? It's a tricky question. Let us help.
More: Which LIV golfers are in the 2025 Masters field? Here's the list and how they qualified
More: How much has Augusta National Golf Club changed after Hurricane Helene? 'They do magic out here'
2025 Masters Field
# Denotes first Masters; * Denotes Amateur; ^ Special Invitee
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Ludvig Åberg, Sweden 13,17,18,19, 20
Byeong Hun An, Korea 18,19, 20
#* Jose Luis Ballester, Spain 7-A
#* Evan Beck 11
Christiaan Bezuidenhout, South Africa 18
Akshay Bhatia 18,19, 20
Keegan Bradley 17,18,19, 20
Sam Burns 18,19, 20
Angel Cabrera, Argentina 1
# Brian Campbell 17
# Rafael Campos, Puerto Rico 17
# Laurie Canter, England 20
Patrick Cantlay 14,18,19, 20
Wyndham Clark 2,18,19, 20
Corey Conners, Canada 19, 20
Fred Couples 1
Cameron Davis, Australia 13,17
Jason Day, Australia 19, 20
Bryson DeChambeau 2,13,16,19, 20
# Thomas Detry, Belgium 16,17, 20
Nick Dunlap 19, 20
# Nicolas Echavarria, Colombia 17, 20
Austin Eckroat 17,19
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Harris English 17, 20
Tony Finau 14,18,19, 20
Matt Fitzpatrick 2,19
Tommy Fleetwood 13,18,19, 20
Sergio Garcia, Spain 1
Lucas Glover 19, 20
# Max Greyserman 19, 20
Brian Harman 3,19, 20
#* Justin Hastings, Cayman Islands 10
Tyrrell Hatton, England 13,19, 20
Russell Henley 17,18,19, 20
# Joe Highsmith 17
Tom Hoge 18
^ Nicolai Højgaard, Denmark
# Rasmus Højgaard, Denmark 19
Max Homa 13,19
Billy Horschel 15,18,19, 20
Viktor Hovland, Norway 16,17,18,19, 20
Sungjae Im, Korea 18,19, 20
Dustin Johnson 1
Zach Johnson 1
#* Noah Kent 7-B
Tom Kim, Korea 19, 20
Chris Kirk 18
Patton Kizzire 17
Brooks Koepka 4
Bernhard Langer, Germany 1
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# Thriston Lawrence, South Africa 15,19
Min Woo Lee, Australia 17, 19, 20
Shane Lowry, Ireland 18,19, 20
Robert MacIntyre, Scotland 17,18,19, 20
Hideki Matsuyama, Japan 1,17,18,19, 20
Denny McCarthy 19, 20
# Matt McCarty 17,19
Rory McIlroy, Northern Ireland 5,14,17,18,19, 20
# Maverick McNealy 17,19, 20
Phil Mickelson 1,4
Collin Morikawa 3,4,13,16,18,19, 20
^ Joaquin Niemann, Chile
Jose Maria Olazabal, Spain 1
Matthieu Pavon, France 13,18,19
# Taylor Pendrith, Canada 17,18,19, 20
J.T.Poston 17,19, 20
Jon Rahm, Spain 1,2,19
# Aaron Rai, England 17,18,19, 20
Patrick Reed 1,13
# Davis Riley 17
Justin Rose, England 15,19, 20
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Xander Schauffele 3,4,13,18,19, 20
Scottie Scheffler 1,5,6,17,18,19, 20
Adam Schenk 13
Charl Schwartzel, South Africa 1
Adam Scott, Australia 1,18,19, 20
Vijay Singh, Fiji 1
Cameron Smith, Australia 3,13
JJ Spaun 20
Jordan Spieth 1
Sepp Straka, Austria 17,18,19, 20
#* Hiroshi Tai, Singapore 12
Nick Taylor, Canada 17, 20
Sahith Theegala 18,19, 20
Justin Thomas 4,18,19, 20
# Davis Thompson 17,19, 20
Jhonattan Vegas, Venezuela 17
Bubba Watson 1
Mike Weir, Canada 1
Danny Willett, England 1
Cameron Young 13,19
# Kevin Yu, Chinese Taipei 17
Will Zalatoris 13
Past Champions Not Playing
Tommy Aaron, Charles Coody, Ben Crenshaw, Nick Faldo, Raymond Floyd, Trevor Immelman, Sandy Lyle, Larry Mize, Jack Nicklaus, Mark O'Meara, Gary Player, Craig Stadler, Tom Watson, Tiger Woods, Ian Woosnam, Fuzzy Zoeller.
Qualifications for Invitation to the Masters Tournament
Masters Tournament Champions (Lifetime)
U.S. Open Champions (Honorary, non-competing after five years)
The Open Champions (Honorary, non-competing after five years)
PGA Champions (Honorary, non-competing after five years)
Winners of the Players Championship (Three years)
Current Olympic Gold Medalist (One Year)
Current U.S. Amateur Champion (7-A) (Honorary, non-competing after one year) and the Runner-up (7-B) to the current US Amateur Champion
Current The Amateur Champion (Honorary, non-competing after one year)
Current Asia-Pacific Amateur Champion (One year)
Current Latin America Amateur Champion (One year)
Current U.S. Mid-Amateur Champion (One year)
Current NCAA Division I Men's Individual Champion (One year)
The first 12 players, including ties, in the previous year's Masters Tournament
The first 4 players, including ties, in the previous year's U.S. Open
The first 4 players, including ties, in the previous year's The Open Championship
The first 4 players, including ties, in the previous year's PGA Championship
Individual winners of PGA Tour events that award a full-point allocation from previous Masters to current Masters
Those qualifying and eligible for the previous year's season-ending Tour Championship
The 50 leaders on the final Official World Golf Ranking for the previous calendar year
The 50 leaders on the final Official World Golf Ranking published during the week prior to the current Masters Tournament
This article originally appeared on Augusta Chronicle: 2025 Masters field: Scottie Scheffler, LIV players
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Jon Rahm loses playoff at LIV Golf Indianapolis to Sebastian Munoz but wins season title
Jon Rahm loses playoff at LIV Golf Indianapolis to Sebastian Munoz but wins season title

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Jon Rahm loses playoff at LIV Golf Indianapolis to Sebastian Munoz but wins season title

WESTFIELD – Earlier this week, Jon Rahm hinted at a milk celebration if he crossed the finish line victorious during the LIV Golf Indianapolis tournament at The Club at Chatham Hills. The Legion XIII captain almost got his wish. The defending LIV Individual Champion shot his lowest round of the season at 11 under 60 on Sunday in Westfield and forced a playoff tiebreaker on the 18th hole with Torque GC's Sebastian Munoz before coming up short by one stroke. However, Rahm left with a significant consolation prize by overtaking Torque GC captain Joaquin Niemann to repeat as LIV's individual points standings champion. Rahm entered Sunday's round tied for ninth on the leaderboard. He needed a strong regular-season finale to best Niemann, who carried a slim 12.27 points advantage into the event in hopes of becoming the league's fourth different individual points winner. Yet, Rahm's 10 birdies overall, an eagle on 13 and four straight birdies to cap regulation at 22 under moved him atop the leaderboard and into a playoff with Munoz, who completed the individual and team sweep with a birdie putt on 18. 'I was trying not to worry too much about Joaquin. I was trying to keep my mind on the individual title,' Rahm said. 'If he didn't finish second, I was going to get it done, and that was the task at hand.' Rahmbo, as he's known on social media, had a locked in mindset after shooting 4 under on Friday and 7 under on Saturday. 'For anybody that understands competitive Call of Duty, we're going to call it scrap time,' Rahm said. 'It's really about not directly thinking about moments like this, but it's truly what I would say is my MO as a competitor. It's 54 holes, so just because you had a rough first 36 doesn't mean it's over. You can get it done.' Last week in Chicago, Rahm, the 2023 Masters champion, lost a three-man tiebreaker playoff to Stinger GC's Dean Burmester, and he didn't win a single tournament this LIV Golf season. But the Spanish golfer didn't place any worse than 11th either and had eight top five finishes to win the points battle between the two for a second year in a row. 'It's always been in my DNA to fight as hard as one can until the end of the tournament,' Rahm said. 'I think I've said it many times, 32nd is better than 33rd. I think with that mentality, I've been able to have a lot of really good Sundays and put myself in position and keep adding points. Slow and steady, I guess in this case won the race.' Rahm accumulated 226.16 points, while Niemann tallied 223.68. The 2.48-point margin of victory this year was closer than last season's 235.17-219.20 individual standings difference, which also sealed the title for Rahm over Niemann. Niemann tied for fourth overall on Sunday with Torque GC's Carlos Ortiz, Stinger GC's Branden Grace and Fireballs GC's David Puig at 17 under. Torque GC won the tournament with a league record 64-under. Legion XIII was second at 54 under. 'I could have played better today, this week or probably last week. I could have played a little bit better, but John just proved himself, how good he is and how good he is in these moments,' Niemann said. 'Just like he did last week.' Niemann won five tournaments this season, but his 17th placement in Chicago and Rahm's epic push on Sunday kept the race going until the end. 'It may never be replicated. You need a lot of coincidences to go along with the type of year Joaquin has with five wins. He's played incredible golf. One could argue he was probably the more deserving guy to win this,' Rahm said. 'But we have the point system that we have. I don't know how I managed to pull through and get it done. Extremely proud of that.' Rahm achieved the feat by turning in a pair of 30s, including a back nine run that began with an eagle on 13 followed by a bogey on 14. Four birdies erased the mistake, and he nearly dropped another eagle on 15 as his approach shot rolled to the lip of the cup. A fist pump after his second shot on 18 setup a birdie putt and echoed his dominance through regulation. Munoz converted two birdie putts on 17 and 18 to tie Rahm at 22 under at the end of regulation by finishing the round 6 under 65. In the playoff, Rahm struck the flag stick on 18 on his second shot, but he could only par after missing his birdie putt attempt. Munoz sank a birdie putt on 18, again, after suffering a double-bogey on the same hole during Saturday's round. A pair of tee shots that sailed into the gallery lingered for Munoz momentarily. 'Honestly. I kind of beat myself up a little bit for that tee shot yesterday,' Munoz said. 'I was kind of mad at myself, but there was a lot of support around me.' After carding a 12 under 59 on Friday, the league's third sub-60 round in history, and tying 4Aces GC's Dustin Johnson for the lead on Saturday, Munoz shot seven birdies to keep pace. The win was Munoz's first this season in LIV Golf and first since winning the Sanderson Farms Championship on the PGA Tour in 2019.

Winless Jon Rahm Steals Joaquin Niemann's Thunder, Runs Away with LIV Season Title
Winless Jon Rahm Steals Joaquin Niemann's Thunder, Runs Away with LIV Season Title

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Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Jon Rahm didn't need to win in Indianapolis to be crowned LIV Golf individual champion for the second consecutive year. All he needed was to finish solo second to steal the moment from Joaquin Niemann, despite the Chilean's five titles this year. Rahm fired a final-round 60 at The Club at Chatham Hills to finish his round as clubhouse leader. However, Sebastian Muñoz birdied his final two holes to tie the Spaniard in the very last minute and force a playoff. Jon Rahm of Legion XIII reacts on the 18th green on day one of LIV Golf Indianapolis at The Club at Chatham Hills on August 15, 2025 in Westfield, Indiana. Jon Rahm of Legion XIII reacts on the 18th green on day one of LIV Golf Indianapolis at The Club at Chatham Hills on August 15, 2025 in Westfield, ended up winning his first LIV Golf tournament and banking the $4 million paycheck. However, the bigger prize went to Rahm, who collected the $18 million bonus reserved for the season's individual champion. The two-time major champion was able to edge Niemann by just over one point in the race for the individual title. Rahm's consistency weighed heavily on him, as he finished in the top 10 in 12 of the season's 13 tournaments, including four second-place finishes and three other top-five finishes. The Chilean, on the other hand, won five tournaments but didn't achieve any other top-10 finishes. Nevertheless, a five-time winner losing the season-long race to an opponent who hasn't won a single event is something extremely improbable to see on any other major golf tour. Niemann's Torque GC won the team title in Indianapolis, their first of the season. The season standings are overwhelmingly led by Rahm's Legion XIII, but the team title will be decided at the Team Championship, which will be played in Michigan next week. Jon Rahm. Your 2025 LIV Golf Individual Champion! — FOX Sports: Golf (@GolfonFOX) August 17, 2025 The LIV season will end there, but Rahm's golf season probably won't. The Spaniard hopes to be selected by Luke Donald for the Ryder Cup in September, so he will probably make some starts on the DP World Tour before the selections are announced. His most likely options appear to be the European Masters, the Irish Open, and the BMW PGA Championship. It's unlikely he'll be seen at the French Open, as it's played just the week before the Ryder Cup. After the biannual event, Rahm could play a few more events in Europe, especially those that visit his home country. However, his schedule has not yet been announced. More Golf: Scottie Scheffler Points Out 'Dumb' Tendency of Some Fans at Golf Events

Ian Poulter's miraculous run of birdies saves LIV future... and relegates Henrik Stenson
Ian Poulter's miraculous run of birdies saves LIV future... and relegates Henrik Stenson

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Ian Poulter's miraculous run of birdies saves LIV future... and relegates Henrik Stenson

Ian Poulter produced an incredible four-birdie finish in Indianapolis on Sunday night to save himself from expulsion from LIV Golf – but consign team-mate Henrik Stenson to relegation. The Saudi-funded breakaway league has been accused of lacking drama and of being devoid of jeopardy for the multi-millionaire stars it has signed since its inception in 2022. But these charges certainly could not be levelled on an astonishing afternoon at Chatham Hills. Granted, Poulter's most famous comeback will always be the quintet of birdies with which the Englishman closed at the 2012 Ryder Cup to inspire the 'Miracle of Medinah' – when Europe rose from the sporting dead to overhaul Team USA – but in terms of significance Stenson might believe this to be a harrowing rival. The Swede, a close friend and long-time neighbour of Poulter's in Orlando, seemed secure as the last individual event of the LIV campaign entered its concluding hour. 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Any hopes among those languishing in the standings that LIV would be as lax in applying its relegation rules were left disappointed by a recent missive from the executive that spelt out the urgency of the situation. Relegation means relegation this year and there will be no leeway. So Poulter, Stenson and co were acutely aware of what was on the line. Lee Westwood, the other Majesticks co-captain, was also under threat, but he shot a gutsy 66 to escape the chop. Unless Stenson can either top the Asian Tour's International Series – which has six tournaments left in 2025, or come through the LIV Golf promotions tournament in December, where only the winner in a 100-golfer plus shoot-out will win a LIV place – then the Majesticks will need a new fourth man. If circumstances demand, an intriguing return to the DP World Tour is possible for Stenson. He resigned his membership two years ago after he was part of a group of rebel players who lost an appeal against the Tour – with a London hearing adjudicating that Wentworth HQ was within its rights to issue fines and suspension – but he is only required to pay the outstanding fines to reclaim playing privileges on the circuit where he established himself. At the other end of the standings, Jon Rahm pocketed the near £14m bonus for topping the order of merit – despite not having won an event all year. Joaquin Niemann lifted five titles in 2025, but due to the Spaniard's consistency – he finished in the top 10 in 12 of the 13 tournaments – the Chilean had to settle for second place. It is a farcical scenario in certain respects, but there can be no doubting Rahm's quality in Indianapolis. He made 10 birdies and an eagle, together with the single bogey to record an 11-under 60. That was good enough to take him into a play-off with Sebastian Munoz, the Mexican who fired a 59 in Friday's first round. But Munoz prevailed to demote Rahm to his second runner-up spot in a row and his third of the season. And there was that lucrative consolation awaiting. 'I feel slightly bittersweet,' Rahm said. 'Like I know I'm supposed to be happy, but it just doesn't feel great to finish the year losing two play-offs. Joaquin has won five times, has played incredible golf, and one could argue he was probably the more deserving guy to win this. 'But we have the points system that we have, and somehow, I don't know how, I managed to pull through and get it done.' Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

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