Masters Tee Times And Pairings Announced With Key Absentees
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The Masters has always been a place where tradition quietly dictates the rhythm of the week, and this year’s opening rounds offer a clear example of that balance between legacy and emergence. Rory McIlroy, returning as the defending champion, will step onto the first tee Thursday morning not just alongside an established contender in Cameron Young, but with 18-year-old amateur Mason Howell, a name that, until recently, barely registered outside elite amateur circles.

A Masters Debut Built on Dominance

A Masters Debut Built on Dominance
© Michael Madrid Imagn Images

Howell’s inclusion is not accidental or ceremonial beyond the tournament’s customs. His 7&6 dismantling of Jackson Herrington in the 2025 U.S. Amateur final at The Olympic Club was decisive, controlled, and notably one-sided for a championship match. At 6-foot-4 and still months away from beginning his collegiate career at Georgia, Howell arrives at Augusta National carrying both the weight of expectation and the unfamiliarity of competing on golf’s most scrutinized stage.

The pairing itself reflects Augusta’s long-standing structure: the reigning Masters champion grouped with the U.S. Amateur winner. But the dynamics within that trio are less predictable. McIlroy enters with the burden of defending a title that has historically resisted repeat winners, while Young continues his pursuit of a first major victory, a chase that has lingered despite consistent contention.

Clusters of Contenders Crowd the Tee Sheet

Elsewhere, the tee sheet reveals clusters of experience and volatility. The 10:07 a.m. Thursday group featuring Bryson DeChambeau, Xander Schauffele, and Matt Fitzpatrick places three major champions together early, compressing proven pedigree into a single window. Later in the day, Scottie Scheffler, Robert MacIntyre, and Gary Woodland form a grouping that mixes current dominance with streaky resurgence potential.

Jordan Spieth, Justin Rose, and Brooks Koepka follow shortly after Jon Rahm’s group, creating a dense late-afternoon stretch where multiple past champions and contenders overlap. These sequences are less about spectacle and more about competitive pressure, rounds where leaderboard movement can accelerate quickly.

A Field Without Familiar Anchors

Off the course, the absence of both Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson removes a familiar layer of continuity. It marks the first Masters since 1994 without either name in the field, a statistical detail that carries more weight given the tournament’s preference for stability. Augusta National keeps its field tight, 91 players this year, consistent with a tradition dating back decades, and yet the composition feels altered.

As play begins Thursday morning with honorary starters Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player, and Tom Watson, the contrast becomes sharper. The opening shots will be struck by figures whose careers define the tournament’s past, followed minutes later by players attempting to define its present. In between stands someone like Mason Howell, stepping into that space without precedent, paired directly with the defending champion, and expected to keep pace.