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Masters field after cut: Which golfers remain in contention? – Capital That Works

Masters field after cut: Which golfers remain in contention?

As the Masters heads into the weekend, the field at Augusta National takes a sizeable hit.

And with it goes the Green Jacket dreams for several golfers.

This year’s cut came in at 6 over, meaning any players who finished the first two days 7 over or worse are going home.

One player not going home: Tiger Woods, who established a new record by making the cut in his 24th consecutive tournament.

LIV Golf’s Bryson DeChambeau, 2022 Masters champ Scottie Scheffler and Max Homa lead the tournament at 6 under.

Here are the players still in contention for a Masters title.

Masters field after cut

Bryson DeChambeau (-6) – United States
Max Homa (-6) – United States
Scottie Scheffler (-6) – United States
Nicolai Højgaard (-4) – Denmark
Cameron Davis (-3) – Australia
Collin Morikawa (-3) – United States
Ludvig Åberg (-2) – Sweden
Byeong Hun An (-1) – Korea
Tommy Fleetwood (-1) – England
Ryan Fox (-1) – New Zealand
Matthieu Pavon (-1) – France
Cameron Smith (-1) – Australia
Danny Willett (-1) – England
Cameron Young (-1) – United States
Matt Fitzpatrick (E) – England
Lucas Glover (E) – United States
Kurt Kitayama (E) – United States
Patrick Reed (E) – United States
Xander Schauffele (E) – United States
Adam Schenk (E) – United States
Sepp Straka (E) – Austria
Eric Cole (+1) – United States
Tiger Woods (+1) – United States
Patrick Cantlay (+2) – United States
Corey Conners (+2) – Canada
Harris English (+2) – United States
Tyrrell Hatton (+2) – England
Brooks Koepka (+2) – United States
Taylor Moore (+2) – United States
Akshay Bhatia (+3) – United States
Shane Lowry (+3) – Ireland
Neal Shipley (+3) – United States
Erik van Rooyen (+3) – South Africa
Will Zalatoris (+3) – United States
Jason Day (+4) – Australia
Adam Hadwin (+4) – Canada
Min Woo Lee (+4) – Australia
Denny McCarthy (+4) – United States
Rory McIlroy (+4) – Northern Ireland
Phil Mickelson (+4) – United States
Joaquín Niemann (+4) – Chile
Vijay Singh (+4) – Fiji
Sahith Theegala (+4) – United States
Keegan Bradley (+5) – United States
Tony Finau (+5) – United States
Chris Kirk (+5) – United States
J.T. Poston (+5) – United States
Jon Rahm (+5) – Spain
Camilo Villegas (+5) – Colombia
Rickie Fowler (+6) – United States
Russell Henley (+6) – United States
Si Woo Kim (+6) – Korea
Tom Kim (+6) – Korea
Jake Knapp (+6) – United States
Luke List (+6) – United States
Hideki Matsuyama (+6) – Japan
Grayson Murray (+6) – United States
José María Olazábal (+6) – Spain
Thorbjørn Olesen (+6) – Denmark
Adam Scott (+6) – Australia

Who missed Masters cut?

Sam Burns – United States
Wyndham Clark – United States
Fred Couples – United States
Santiago de la Fuente – Mexico
Nick Dunlap – United States
Austin Eckroat – United States
Sergio García – Spain
Emiliano Grillo – Argentina
Stewart Hagestad – United States
Brian Harman – United States
Ryo Hisatsune – Japan
Lee Hodges – United States
Viktor Hovland – Norway
Sungjae Im – Korea
Stephan Jaeger, Germany
Dustin Johnson – United States
Zach Johnson – United States
Christo Lamprecht – South Africa
Peter Malnati – United States
Adrian Meronk – Poland
Justin Rose – England
Charl Schwartzel – South Africa
Jordan Spieth – United States
Jasper Stubbs – Australia
Nick Taylor – Canada
Justin Thomas – United States
Bubba Watson – United States
Mike Weir – Canada
Gary Woodland – United States

This post appeared first on USA TODAY