
Masters Tournament 2015: Mobile Updates for Friday Leaderboard Scores
The 2015 Masters leaderboard has shaken up as you've downed your morning coffee and settled into your day, with Day 2 of play already beginning for many of the top names.
But fear not, you can grab the latest mobile leaderboard below if you aren't catching action on the Masters live stream or on ESPN starting at 3 p.m. ET. Take a look below to see if Jordan Spieth is holding on to his three-stroke lead from Day 1.
2015 Masters Leaderboard
Tee times: Masters.com
Day 2 Golfers to Watch
Jordan Spieth: 9:57 a.m. ET

Nobody has ever won the Masters on the tournament's opening day, but Spieth put himself in quite the position.
After one round of play, the 21-year-old led the field by three strokes. But even more impressive is that his first-round 64 finished just one stroke off the course's all-time record.
Greats have played the Augusta course upward of 40 times in Masters play, but on his second go-around, Spieth is flirting with history. However, it will take even more history to go from here to winning the green jacket, as per Longhorn Network:
With a 9:57 a.m. ET tee time on Friday, viewers will get an early look at Spieth's game to see if he's closer to keeping up his ridiculous pace or bound for a falling. The rest of the field's chances of victory depend on it.
Tiger Woods: 10:30 a.m. ET

Tiger Woods isn't back to his old form following a two-month layoff, and few expected him to be. But it's impossible to deny that he's showing signs of his old self.
While Woods wasn't able to hit hardly anything well off the tee in his opening round, a spectacular short game saved him from flirting with the cut line. He had four bogeys, but without some magnificent chips, a few would have been doubles.
He admitted his short game was a big reason why he stepped away, and it's paid off, per Brian Wacker of PGATour.com.
“It’s my strength again,” Woods said of his short game. “That’s why I’ve busted my butt. That’s why I took time off. That’s why I hit thousands and thousands of shots to make sure that it’s back to being my strength.”
Even though he showed some signs of formidability on Thursday, Woods still entered the second round nine strokes off of Spieth's lead. It will take a strong round for Tiger to not only immerse himself back into the competition, but to simply avoid the cut.
Charley Hoffman: 10:52 a.m. ET

Even Spieth will have a hard time saying his Thursday matched up to Charley Hoffman's.
The 38-year-old didn't come in as one of the big favorites like Spieth, but that has all changed following his opening-round 67. Entering the second round, it's becoming more apparent how he was able to finish 11th in each of the last two tournaments before the Masters.
Hoffman's career in majors hasn't been pretty. He's been cut from half of them, per Golf Central, but he has a chance to turn it all around this weekend:
Playing in the only duo of Friday's tee times and still being somewhat overlooked due to Spieth and others, Hoffman will be able to continue flying under the radar heading into the weekend. But if his score keeps up and he continues to threaten the lead, he won't be overlooked on Saturday and Sunday.

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