2024 Masters Day 2 Facts, Stats and Numbers We Noticed

The second day of the 2024 Masters in the books. Here are the numbers that mattered most.
Apr 12, 2024; Augusta, Georgia, USA; Bryson DeChambeau reacts after hitting out of the gallery on
Apr 12, 2024; Augusta, Georgia, USA; Bryson DeChambeau reacts after hitting out of the gallery on / Adam Cairns, Adam Cairns / USA TODAY

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Thirty-six holes are history at the 88th Masters after a windswept Friday which saw the completion of the first round and the second. Here are some of the notable numbers.

60 – Players making the 54-hole cut, which fell at 6 over.

24 – The record of consecutive Masters cuts for Tiger Woods, breaking a tie with Gary Player and Fred Couples.

0 – Bogeys for Scottie Scheffler over his first 22 holes.

3 – Bogeys for Scheffler over his last 14 holes.

73.43 – Round 1 scoring average.

75.08 – Round 2 scoring average.

26 – Number of players in the 89-man field who shot better in Round 2 than Round 1.

372 – Yards on Bryson DeChambeau’s tee shot on the par-4 17th, leaving him 87 yards to the hole. He made a par.

11 – Birdies by DeChambeau, Nicolai Hojgaard and Cameron Young, tops in the field.

9 – Jordan Spieth’s score on the par-5 15th Friday morning in Round 1, he shot 79 and went on to miss the cut.

2 – Triple bogeys or worse by the field in Round 1.

1 – Triple bogeys by the entire field on the 15th in 2023.

47 – Brian Harman’s second nine score in his first round, he finished Friday morning with three double bogeys and a triple bogey in six holes.

67 – Max Homa’s opening-round score, his lowest in a major.

61 – Vijay Singh’s age; the 2000 Masters champion is 4 over and playing the weekend for the first time since 2018.

2 – Eagles on par-4s by Patrick Cantlay, the fourth time in history a player has had two par-4 eagles in one Masters. (Brandt Jobe was the last, in 2006.)


Published |Modified
John Schwarb
JOHN SCHWARB

John Schwarb is a senior editor for Sports Illustrated covering golf. Prior to joining SI in March 2022, he worked for ESPN.com, PGATour.com, Tampa Bay Times and Indianapolis Motor Speedway. He is the author of The Little 500: The Story of the World's Greatest College Weekend. A member of the Golf Writers Association of America, Schwarb has a bachelor's in journalism from Indiana University.