Masters 2018: Our 8 favorite Masters pairings

After furiously pressing the “refresh” button on your computer’s keyboard for the last few hours, your hard work finally paid off when the 2018 Masters pairings were revealed just after 12:30 p.m. ET on Tuesday. For a Masters with its smallest field in two decades, it feels like just about every pairing has its own layer of interest, but a few stand out among them. Here are eight of the more intriguing groupings to watch on Thursday and Friday at Augusta National.

All times ET

World Golf Championships-Dell Match Play - Round Three
Gregory Shamus

10:09 a.m.: Hideki Matsuyama, Patton Kizzire, Paul Casey

Nobody started the season hotter than Kizzire, who picked up his first two career PGA Tour victories at the OHL Classic at Mayakoba last fall and the Sony Open in Hawaii in January. Both times, Kizzire showed some grittiness down the stretch, specifically on the greens, holing key putts to come out on top. The Auburn University alum ranks 20th on tour in strokes gained/putting, part of his game that will surely be tested on Augusta’s tricky greens. But it is Kizzire’s first-career Masters start, and only his fourth appearance in a major championship. It will be intriguing to see how the rising star handles this type of arena.

Casey, however, has been here plenty of times before, as he makes his 12th start in the Masters and his 56th in a major championship. His track record at the Masters is as good as anyone’s, including five top-10s, four of those T-6 or better and three coming in his last three appearances at Augusta. After finally breaking through and ending a long PGA Tour win drought at the Valspar just a few weeks ago, perhaps an even bigger breakthrough is on tap this week as the 40-year-old Englishman continues to search for his first major.

Then there’s Matsuyama, who, at age 26, already has five tour victories, including three in 2017. Most believe Matsuyama’s best is yet to come, and if his past history at the Masters is any indication, Augusta National could be the spot for his maiden major win. In six Masters appearances, Matsuyama has finished T-11 or better three times. If he’s at full health, the World No. 6 can beat anyone.

The Masters - Preview Day 2
Andrew Redington

10:42 a.m.: Tiger Woods, Marc Leishman, Tommy Fleetwood

With Tiger having stolen the spotlight from essentially everyone at Augusta, several of the better players in the world arrive here with little fanfare. Two among them are Marc Leishman and Tommy Fleetwood, who both show up near the top of the leader board seemingly every time they tee it up. But their under-the-radar days will be no more come Thursday and Friday when they will find themselves paired with a certain four-time green jacket winner …

Meanwhile, what’s left to say about Tiger that hasn’t been said? He’s playing well, he’s healthy, he’s smiling and he looks like a completely new man. Hell, he’s even buried the hatchet with Phil Mickelson. Let’s just hand him the green jacket now. OK, so Woods winning the Masters for a fifth time is hardly a lock, even if Vegas likes his chances. The key will be driving the golf ball well, something he hasn’t done during this comeback, or in any of his most recent comebacks for that matter. If he can conjure up some magic this week, this group will be a LOUD one to watch on Thursday and Friday.

The Honda Classic - Round Two
Sam Greenwood

10:53 a.m.: Sergio Garcia, Justin Thomas, Doc Redman (a)

The amateurs who qualify for the Masters always provide a level of intrigue, and that’s certainly the case with Doc Redman in 2018. After finishing 62nd out of 64 in the U.S. Amateur’s stroke-play qualifying, the Clemson undergrad put on an incredible performance in match play, eventually winning an epic championship tilt over Doug Ghim on the 37th hole. Winning the low amateur this week would be another underdog story of sorts for Redman, as he ranks 34th in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, well behind fellow 2018 Masters amateur participants Joaquin Niemann (No. 1) and Ghim (No. 4).

Before Tiger’s promising return, it was once again going to be Thomas’ year after the reigning PGA champion ripped off two wins before March and then nearly another in heroic fashion at the WGC-Mexico Championship. Thomas looked in fine form again the the WGC-Match Play before eventually running out of gas and falling to Bubba Watson in the semifinals. While it’s just his third Masters appearance, it’s safe to say Thomas has shown enough in the last year to make him a popular pick this week, with a win allowing him also to become No. 1 on the World Ranking.

As is the case with the aforementioned Fleetwood and Leishman, is feels like Garcia is quietly lurking in the shadows as he preps to defend his title. If the Spaniard were to go on to win, he’d become just the fourth player in the tournament’s history to win back-to-back, joining the elite company of Jack Nicklaus, Nick Faldo and Tiger Woods. No easy task, but with a T-7 at the WGC-Mexico and a solo fourth at the Valspar already this season, Garcia’s game appears to be in a good spot.

The Barclays - Round One
Hunter Martin

11:04 a.m.: Bubba Watson, Henrik Stenson, Jason Day

Of our eight favorites, this is the only group that features three major champions, and all three have put together a fine few months leading into Augusta. Stenson is the only of the trio that has yet to win in 2017-’18, although he’s certainly come close, finishing T-2 at the WGC-HSBC Champions back in October, solo fourth at Bay Hill and a quiet T-6 last week in Houston. He’s never finished in the top-10 at the Masters, but in 12 tries he’s finished in the top 25 six times. As we saw at the 2016 Open Championship, if the Iceman gets the putter rolling, he’s got as good of a chance as anybody in the field.

Probably getting a bit heavy with the “under-the-radar” guys, but Day is another who seems to be getting overlooked. After looking like the former World No. 1 during the West Coast Swing (win at Torrey, T-2 at Pebble), he’s come back to earth, finishing T-22 at Bay Hill and getting bounced early at the WGC-Match Play. Day’s got a new set of irons in the bag this week, and his past history at Augusta (two top-threes, five top-25s) suggest he could emerge on Sunday and grab the second major we all thought he’d have by now.

Then there’s Watson, the horse for the course who has already won twice this season and looks like the Bubba that captured everyone’s imagination during his two wins prior wins at Augusta. A few equipment changes have certainly helped, but Watson also appears to be in a great frame of mind, which should scare his fellow competitors this week.

World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship - Round Three
Rob Carr

1:27 p.m.: Phil Mickelson, Rickie Fowler, Matt Kuchar

Like the Watson/Day/Stenson group, this one too has a few majors in it, but they all come from Mickelson. As for Fowler and Kuchar, despite being 10 years apart in age, they are both in a similar spot, searching for their first major that they’ve both had plenty of good chances at already. For Kuchar, there was no better chance than last year’s devastating second-place finish to Spieth at the Open Championship, one that will no doubt motivate Kuch to get it done sooner rather than later. Then there’s Fowler, who has come close, but never that close. His seven top-five finishes at majors is obviously impressive, but it’s starting to look like more as a negative than a positive on his resume. He “should” win one at some very soon, but the doubts are certainly beginning to creep in.

If Fowler can look to anyone who had to wait a long time for his first major, and received plenty of criticism because of it, it’s Mickelson, who didn’t get it done until he was 34, but then exploded for four more. Like fellow southpaw Bubba, Lefty has also won on tour prior to all three of his Masters victories, and his game looks as good as ever.

World Golf Championships-Cadillac Championship - Round Three
Chris Condon

1:38 p.m.: Adam Scott, Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm

By his standards, it’s been a lackluster few years for Scott following his epic 2013 Masters victory. He has quietly improved this season though, finishing inside the top 25 three times and making six of his seven cuts. As we’ve seen from past champions like Fred Couples and Angel Cabrera, Augusta has a way of bringing certain players back to life, so it’ll be fascinating to see how Scott fares this week.

Remember Rahm? The No. 3 player in the world is another that enters the week discreetly, having not finishing inside the top 10 in five starts since his victory in January at the CareerBuilder Challenge. But he did make all of those cuts, and still ranks second in strokes gained/off-the-tee, a stat that leads you to believe the rising star from Spain could absolutely contend at Augusta. After a disappointing, sometimes too-emotional season in last year’s majors, Rahm shows up this week with a little more experience under his belt.

Until he wins the green jacket, the career Grand Slam questions will follow McIlroy everywhere he goes, and one has to think he’s had enough of them. If he performs the way he did at Bay Hill, and the way he has at the Masters of late (four straight top 10s), there’s no reason McIlroy can’t get it done.

The Masters - Preview Day 2
Andrew Redington

1:49 p.m.: Jordan Spieth, Alex Noren, Louis Oosthuizen

While his only appearance was a missed cut a year ago, it’s hard to not think Noren is poised for a major breakthrough this week at Augusta. A nine-time European Tour winner, the 35-year-old Swede has still yet to earn his first PGA Tour victory, but he’s given himself multiple opportunities this season, finishing third or better three times.

Oosthuizen’s appearances in America are few and far between, but when he does come around, he shows up. This is especially true in majors, as the South African has finished T-2 or better five times in 37 major championship starts in his career. You can never count out Oosthuizen, who holds the grand slam of runner-ups in major championships.

Don’t look now, but Spieth may have righted the ship over the weekend at the Houston Open, finishing T-3 after posting a final-round 66 that he thought could have been a 64 or 63. It almost seems silly to say “watch out” for Spieth this week, but after going through some serious putting woes, he could definitely surprise some by figuring it all out at Augusta.

Genesis Open - Round One
Stan Badz

2 p.m.: Justin Rose, Dustin Johnson, Rafa Cabrera Bello

Cabrera Bello will understandably be overlooked in this group, but he shouldn’t be, because up until this past week, the Spaniard had been playing some of his best golf, making eight straight cuts and finishing in the top 10 three times. He’s also one of the more under-appreciated iron players on tour, ranking seventh in strokes gained/approach-the-green this season. He hasn’t performed outstanding in majors during his career, but there wouldn’t be a better week to start than at the Masters.

The entire world seems to be picking Rose this week, and for good reason, as the Englishman as finished in second two of the last three years at Augusta in addition to three other top-10 finishes. Rose has been a fine player his entire career, but has really saved his best golf for his late 30s, and needs to start capitalizing on that in the form of another major victory.

Last but not least, is the No. 1 player in the world, Johnson, who should be in quarantine for the next two days and away from all stairs and hardwood floors. If so, he’ll probably just lap the field in typical DJ-fashion, reminding everyone who the real best player on the planet is.


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