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Golf Monthly
Golf Monthly
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Alex Narey

10 Best Players To Have Never Won The Masters (And 8 That Still Could)

Greg Norman, Tom Kite, Rory McIlroy, Ernie Els and a Masters flag.

No golf tournament throws up the thrills and spills quite like The Masters at Augusta National, and over the years the heartbreak of defeat, those near-misses and late collapses, have proved just as memorable as the epic winning moments.

No other Major delivers the same roster of near-misses for players who have failed to register a win at the famed Georgia course, which has built a reputation to keep on punishing and haunting those who have failed before.

In the modern era, no players have suffered Augusta heartbreak to the extent of the ten below – and while one or two still have a chance of slipping on that Green Jacket, the rest have been consigned to the pile of second best despite seemingly having all the tools required for Masters success...

Best players never to win The Masters

Tom Kite

Red alert: Tom Kite has arguably the greatest record at Augusta of any player not to win The Masters (Image credit: Getty Images)

It is one of life’s great mysteries how Tom Kite did not win the Masters. Twelve top-10 finishes over a 15-year span is some going, and between 1979 and 1984, his worst return was a tie for sixth place.

Kite’s consistency – especially with his iron play and expert green-reading, made him the perfect fit for Augusta National.

In 1997, at the age of 47, he famously finished second to Tiger Woods and while he was a distant second some 12 shots back, it was testament to his longevity that his score would have seen him win 34 of the previous 60 Masters. Kite goes down as one of the greatest golfers to win one Major.

Greg Norman

(Image credit: Getty Images)

For a man who spent over 330 weeks ranked as the world’s best player, and who recorded nine top-10s as well as three second places, Greg Norman’s Masters career did not live up to expectations.

He let a chance go in 1986 with a horrible pushed approach to 18 and then a year later suffered at the hands of Larry Mize’s miraculous chip in a playoff.

But nothing haunts him like giving away that six-shot lead to Nick Faldo in 1996, with an 11-shot Sunday swing condemning him to arguably the worst collapse in Major history.

David Duval

David Duval made four top-10 finishes from 1998 to 2001 (Image credit: Getty Images)

It is perhaps just a savage dose of bad luck that David Duval’s best golf at Augusta came when Tiger Woods was playing golf at a level never seen before.

But during the height of his powers and before his game deserted him, he was one of a small handful of players (one of whom is also on this list) who had the skills to challenge Woods.

From 1998 to 2001, he finished T2-T6-T3-2. His propensity to attack even the tightest of pins meant he was always a threat on the leaderboard, although it was a strategy that would sometimes see him come unstuck with a flurry of birdies followed by the occasional big number.

Johnny Miller

(Image credit: Getty Images)

If the Official World Golf Ranking had been around in the early to mid 1970s, it is possible that Johnny Miller would have ruled supreme, despite Jack Nicklaus being in his pomp.

Nobody had the skills to dismantle a golf course like Miller; his final-round 63 at a brutal Oakmont to win the 1973 US Open was testament to that. But amid all the brilliance, there were a number of missed opportunities and notably they came at the Masters where he had the potential to blow hot and cold.

In 1971, Miller led with four holes to play, only to bogey at 16 and 18; then in 1975, weekend rounds of 65 and 66 would not be enough to surpass Nicklaus, and again in 1981, a closing 68 left him two shots adrift of Tom Watson.

Many players have come closer and have shown more consistency at Augusta, but for sheer talent, Miller ranks as one of the true greats to never win here.

Lee Trevino

(Image credit: Getty Images)

There were never any near-misses for Lee Trevino at Augusta, but for a golfer who had such a great short game – and who would win six Majors during a glittering career including two Opens, Two US Opens and two PGA Championships – it is baffling how poor his record is.

Quite simply, ‘Supermex’ hated the place, and would famously once 'pray' the Masters committee would never invite him back. Two top 10s from 20 appearances sum it up, but more revealing was the fact that during the prime of his career Trevino famously boycotted the tournament three times – in 1970, 71 and 74 (a decision he said he hugely regretted).

Trevino's shot shape, a fade, meant Augusta perhaps didn't suit his eye, but most of his demons appeared to be psychological. There were always complaints: from the way his caddie was treated to the lack of tickets he would receive for his entourage.

But it was perhaps his uneasy relationship with chairman Clifford Roberts that did most of the damage. “We locked horns the first time we met,” Trevino once said. “I took a disliking to the man and he took a disliking to me.”

Ernie Els

Ernie Els missed out on a playoff at the 2004 Masters after Phil Mickelson holed from 18 feet to win on the 72nd hole (Image credit: Getty Images)

Before his infamous putting woes began to cripple his game, Ernie Els was a constant feature on leaderboards at the Masters and it seemed inevitable that he would win a Green Jacket.

Admittedly, his best days at Augusta came when Tiger Woods was ruling supreme but such was his consistency that from 2000 to 2004 his worst return was tied for sixth.

The final year of that run was inevitably his last dance at Augusta as his game began to slip away on the greens. After finishing his round on that Sunday, Els waited on the nearby practice putting green, preparing for what seemed a likely playoff with Phil Mickelson.

But as ‘Lefty’s’ 18-footer dropped for a winning birdie, Els was left standing in the rain contemplating another missed opportunity. He would never threaten again in the season's first Major.

"Not winning The Masters, that will forever be a sour taste in my mouth. It’s such an amazing event with so much prestige and it means so much, but the better player won that day," he told Golf Monthly.

Nick Price

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Nick Price would endure a tempestuous relationship with Augusta National. He recorded four top 10s from 20 visits – not a bad return but nothing to write home about for a player noted as being one of the best iron players the game has seen.

In 1986, he also set the Augusta National course record – a nine-under-par 63 that ten years later would be equalled by his friend Greg Norman – but that came two days after opening the tournament by carding a horrible 79.

Price won back-to-back Majors in 1994 and briefly held the world No1 spot, but he would never really shine to that level at Augusta, with the exception of that course record.

Hale Irwin

Hale Irwin won three US Opens, but there was no joy at Augusta (Image credit: Getty Images)

Hale Irwin is of the grittiest players in the history of the game – and his three US Open wins spanning 16 years are testament to that.

Irwin once admitted that he thrived on the challenge of playing tough golf courses, which goes some way to explaining his win at one of the most brutal Major set-ups at the 1974 US Open at Winged Foot.

But at Augusta, he could never get over the line despite five top 10s on the spin from 1974.

Colin Montgomerie

(Image credit: GETTY)

The Scottish star won eight European Order of Merits and is a Ryder Cup legend but famously never captured a Major title.

Monty came closest at Winged Foot in the 2005 US Open, where he double-bogeyed the 72nd hole, but surprisingly only managed one top-10 at Augusta National throughout his career.

His best result, from 15 Masters appearances, was a T8 in 1998 - and he missed six cuts including in five of his last six starts.

Lee Westwood

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Like Colin Montgomerie, former World No.1 Lee Westwood is also regarded as one of the best golfers never to win a Major, and he came close at Augusta multiple times.

Notably in 2010, when he held the 54-hole lead only to be overtaken by his final group playing partner Phil Mickelson on Sunday.

He ended 2nd that year and was T2nd again in 2016 when countryman Danny Willett triumphed.

Best golfers yet to win The Masters

Rory McIlroy

Cabin fever: Rory McIlroy blew a four-shot lead in 2011, shooting a final-round 80 that included a triple bogey on the 10th hole (Image credit: Getty Images)

In 2015, Rory McIlroy was hunting the final part of the jigsaw that was dubbed the ‘Rory Slam’ by winning all four Majors.

At that time, he was on top of his game – the reigning Open and PGA champion, and the dominant player in the world.

But despite finishing fourth that year and recording four more top 10s since, he has never really looked like threatening a win on a golf course that appears to be made for his game.

His most infamous outing at Augusta came in 2011, when he led for the first three days and held a four-shot lead going into the final round only to collapse with a dismal 80 on Sunday that included a triple bogey seven at the 10th and a four-putt double bogey at 12.

His best finish came in 2022, when he shot a closing 64 to end three strokes shy of Scottie Scheffler.

Brooks Koepka

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Five-time Major champion Brooks Koepka, like McIlroy, seems to be a Masters champion in waiting - but as this list shows there's never a guarantee of a Green Jacket.

Koepka has finished second twice at Augusta, most notably in 2023 when he lost his 54-hole lead to Jon Rahm. He bounced back extremely well in winning the PGA Championship the following month and will surely still feel like he has unfinished business in Georgia.

The LIV player was also T2nd in 2019 when Tiger Woods won, with Koepka double-bogeying the 12th during the final round after finding the water off the tee. In nine Masters appearances, he has two runners-up finishes and another two results inside the top 11.

Justin Rose

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Justin Rose first threatened in the final round at Augusta when he put himself within one shot of the lead in 2007 with two holes to play – before Zach Johnson tidied things up for his first Major win.

But he first raised eyebrows that he had the potential to challenge here in 2004 when he held the lead after the first and second rounds, only to slip away over the weekend.

Always a presence, his biggest chance came when he let a three-shot lead slip away on the back nine in 2017 during his epic battle with Sergio Garcia, losing after the first playoff hole.

Six top 10s from 19 outings is a very decent return – but is there a win still in the tank?

Cameron Smith

(Image credit: Getty Images)

With his incredible touch around the greens and deft putting stroke, Smith is another who feels like a Masters champion in waiting.

The Australian was T5th at Augusta in his very first start and has gone on to enjoy an incredible run of form at The Masters without getting over the line.

He was T2nd to Dustin Johnson in 2020, when the American shot the lowest ever Masters score of 268 (-20), and he has finished T10-T3-T34-T6 in the years since.

Ohter notable players yet to win The Masters

  • Bryson DeChambeau
  • Collin Morikawa
  • Xander Schauffele
  • Justin Thomas
  • Jason Day
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