Masters TV Schedule 2012: Golfers Who Won't Continue Their Current Pace
We've already seen some shocking scores at the Masters over the first two days, but as some guy somewhere said, you ain't seen nothin' yet.
Here's a look at the golfers who won't keep up their current pace, whether it be good or bad.
Sergio Garcia
Garcia has been fantastic so far in Augusta, as his four-under 68 on Friday has him just one stroke off the lead. In fact, if it weren't for a bogey on 18, he would be sitting in the lead right now.
But we've seen this before from Garcia.
He constantly teases us and acts like he's going to a win a Major, but comes up just short on Sunday. He's finished in the Top 5 in every major, yet still hasn't won one.
It wouldn't be at all surprising to see him have a good third round and jump into the lead only to blow it on Sunday.
Throw in his struggles coming into this week (33rd at Arnold Palmer Invitational, 60th at Cadillac Championship), and it's hard to imagine Garcia—no matter how good he is—staying where he is on the leaderboard.
Luke Donald
Let us not forget, Luke Donald is the No. 1 ranked golfer in the world. Ahead of Rory McIlroy, ahead of Tiger Woods, ahead of everyone.
That's why it was so shocking to see Donald, for a while, looking like he might not make the cut.
Nonetheless, he put together a solid back nine on Friday and at least had some momentum on his side. At one point, he was 10 strokes behind the leader, so a tournament win seems out the question, but he has the talent to crack the Top 15.
Tiger Woods
The former best golfer in the world was bad on Friday. Like, really bad. Like, Happy-Gilmore-before-he-met-Chubbs bad.
Woods just looked out of sync on almost every shot and ended his day with five straight bogeys without a birdie. He finished three over and sits in 40th place.
Still though, this is exactly what Woods have been doing to us these last few months.
He'll put together a terrible round and everyone will go back to the "Has Tiger lost it?" debate. Then, the next day when everyone is done paying attention to him, he'll put up a ridiculous 62 like he did at the Honda Classic.
Tiger most likely won't win this tournament. However, he's going to turn some heads in the process of losing, something only Tiger can do.
TV Schedule
Live TV coverage of Tournament play from 3:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. ET on Saturday, April 7 and from 2:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. Sunday, April 8, 2012.

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