
Masters Tournament 2014: Easy-to-View Mobile Updates for Day 4 Leaderboard
Sunday at the Masters is always special, but this year feels different—and it's a good different.
Heading into the final round at Augusta National, here's a quick rundown of some players who could realistically don the green jacket: a 20-year-old Masters rookie, a 29-year-old Masters rookie, a player with 63 major starts and no wins, a 50-year-old who smokes pre-round cigars and a guy who never took a golf lesson but won here in 2012.
It's an incredibly captivating field with very little separation (seven players are within three strokes of the two co-leaders), and the final 18 holes are probably something you won't want to miss.
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But if you must, here's a look at how to stay updated with the leaders:
Live Leaderboard
The player who has garnered the most buzz through the first three rounds is, of course, Jordan Spieth.
At 20 years old, the former Texas Longhorn has an opportunity to set a lot of history on Sunday, per ESPN's Justin Ray:
Spieth, in his first ever Masters, hasn't broken 70, but he has been unflinchingly consistent: 71, 70 and 70 again on Saturday to pull into a tie with Bubba Watson at the top of the leaderboard.
He will be in the final pairing with the 2012 champion, which he called a "dream come true," via Masters.com's Tom Spousta:
"It’s a dream come true, to be in the final group, to just kind of see what it’s like. I don’t think I’ve ever had a round where I’ve been nervous on every single swing, shot and putt. I’m sure that will happen tomorrow, but hopefully I can channel it positively and stay grounded, stay cool and see what happens.
"
Grantland's Shane Ryan put it simply:
The second-to-last pairing is quite similar.
Matt Kuchar doesn't have a green jacket like Watson, but he has two-straight top 10 finishes at Augusta, and Jonas Blixt isn't nearly as young as Spieth, but he is similarly competing in his first ever Masters.
While Watson and Spieth will get most of the attention, Kuchar and Blixt, each just one stroke back, are just as nearly compelling and recent history suggests they have a better chance of winning, per Ray:
It doesn't stop there, either.
Miguel Angel Jimenez and Rickie Fowler, who carded the two best rounds of the tournament on Saturday, are paired together. Lee Westwood and Jim Furyk, a couple of 40-somethings seeking their first Masters wins (Westwood his first major overall), are paired together. Adam Scott and Jason Day, the 1-2 punch of Australian pride, are paired together.
No Tiger, no problem. Sunday is going to be absolutely scintillating.


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