
Masters Schedule 2015: Saturday Tee Times, TV Coverage, Live Stream, Predictions
It's moving day at the 2015 Masters, but Jordan Spieth may be the only one doing the moving.
Spieth set an Augusta National Golf Club course record with a score of 130 through his first 36 holes, putting him five strokes ahead of Charley Hoffman and at least seven strokes ahead of everyone else. After coming remarkably close to winning in his first attempt last year, he's showing no mercy on the field as he runs away with this one.
But thanks to a handful of blistering starts from others, Spieth hasn't completely run away from the field as some dangerous contenders lurk. Will he be able to pull even further in front, or will the gap close to set up a dramatic Sunday?
Take a look below to find out.
2015 Masters Day 3 Schedule
| Saturday, April 11 | 3 - 7 p.m. | CBS |
Live Stream: Above coverage at CBSSports.com. Masters Live provides live streams beginning at 11 a.m. ET.
Day 3 Tee Times
| 10:05 a.m. | Steve Stricker | |
| 10:15 a.m. | Lee Westwood | Anirban Lahiri |
| 10:25 a.m. | Matt Kuchar | Henrik Stenson |
| 10:35 a.m. | Sangmoon Bae | Cameron Tringale |
| 10:45 a.m. | Morgan Hoffmann | Jason Dufner |
| 10:55 a.m. | Darren Clarke | Ian Poulter |
| 11:05 a.m. | Rickie Fowler | Vijay Singh |
| 11:15 a.m. | Jamie Donaldson | Jimmy Walker |
| 11:25 a.m. | Thongchai Jaidee | John Senden |
| 11:35 a.m. | Brooks Koepka | Graeme McDowell |
| 11:55 a.m. | Chris Kirk | Hunter Mahan |
| 12:05 p.m. | Erik Compton | Bernd Wiesberger |
| 12:15 p.m. | Zach Johnson | Webb Simpson |
| 12:25 p.m. | Seung-yul Noh | Geoff Ogilvy |
| 12:35 p.m. | Ryan Palmer | Keegan Bradley |
| 12:45 p.m. | Bubba Watson | Rory McIlroy |
| 12:55 p.m. | Jonas Blixt | Patrick Reed |
| 1:05 p.m. | Danny Willett | Russell Henley |
| 1:15 p.m. | Tiger Woods | Sergio Garcia |
| 1:35 p.m. | Hideki Matsuyama | Charl Schwartzel |
| 1:45 p.m. | Jason Day | Adam Scott |
| 1:55 p.m. | Louis Oosthuizen | Mark O'Meara |
| 2:05 p.m. | Ryan Moore | Angel Cabrera |
| 2:15 p.m. | Kevin Streelman | Bill Haas |
| 2:25 p.m. | Ernie Els | Kevin Na |
| 2:35 p.m. | Paul Casey | Phil Mickelson |
| 2:45 p.m. | Justin Rose | Dustin Johnson |
| 2:55 p.m. | Jordan Spieth | Charley Hoffman |
Full list available at Masters.com
Saturday Predictions
Jordan Spieth Will Shoot Low 70s, Remain in Front

Let's call it the bold prediction of the day.
In reality, Spieth looks more likely to shoot another gaudy round in the 60s than he does to finish around par. He's birdieing practically every other hole and only parring the ones that he fails to hit his mark on. Few bogeys are in the mix—in fact, he's hit just one through two rounds.
Nobody has ever been crowned after just two rounds before, but you might be able to given who Spieth joined Friday, per ESPN Stats and Info:
It's easier said than done repeating rounds of 64 and 66 that have never been bested back-to-back to start any major ever, but Spieth may have a hard time doing anything close to it. He imagines the grounds crew will be hard at work toughening up the course, as he told PGA Tour's Mike McAllister:
Whether the course plays harder or not, the nerves will inevitably be tougher as Spieth embarks on the biggest two rounds of his career. Even for a cool customer such as him, those nerves are bound to have an impact along with the knowledge that he's way out in front.
On moving day, Spieth will be hoping to simply stay where he is.
Lefty Will Surge into Second Place

If it's a race for second place at the Masters, consider Phil Mickelson in pole position.
He's not second on the leaderboard entering Day 3, but he's right where he wants to be—other than that Spieth character, of course. Mickelson sits at six-under par following a second-round 68 and is hitting his stride right as moving day arrives.
Unfortunately, he's fighting for nothing more than a consolation prize at the moment, as per Golf Channel's Kelly Tilghman:
"Phil Mickelson is within one shot of being within 7 shots of Jordan Spieth. This could get good.
— Kelly Tilghman (@KellyTilghmanGC) April 10, 2015"
Reinvigorated by being in the mix entering Masters weekend, Mickelson will come out pressure-free with such a big deficit and play inspired golf. He's carded seven rounds below 70 on Masters Saturdays for his career, making moving day his time to shine.
When Mickelson's short game is on point and he's crushing it down the fairways, he can put up the scores needed to gain some ground on Spieth. At the very least, he'll emerge from a loaded crop of secondary contenders to join Spieth on Sunday's final pairing.

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