Golf quiz: how much do you know about the Masters?

0
Golf quiz: how much do you know about the Masters?

There will be no action at Augusta this week, but we can at least bring you 10 questions about golf’s most photogenic major

More quizzes: iconic photos, assists, managers and rants

The fourth hole at Augusta is now called Flowering Crabapple. What was its original name?

Five Oaks

The Palm

The Pine Barrens

Orange Blossom

How much does it cost to be a member at Augusta?

There is no fee, but membership is by invitation only

$1 per year, which is collected and put behind the bar for the club caddies at the end of the season.

Between $3,000 and $25,000 per year.

Over $100,000 per year.

Which of these is not a current member at Augusta?

Gary Player

Bill Gates

Condoleezza Rice

Warren Buffett

Who is missing from the top of the final scorecard at the 2000 Masters?

Tiger Woods

Mike Weir

Ernie Els

David Duval

Which hole is this?

The second: Pink Dogwood

The fifth: Magnolia

The 10th: Camellia

The 16th: Redbud

Complete the John Daly quote. “I’ve heard the winner of the Masters hosts the dinner. If I ever won it there would be no suits, no ties, and ________.”

Sombreros for everybody

McDonald’s

A casino in the corner

No jackets

What was Augusta National used for during the second world war?

It remained a golf course

A training camp for the US Army

Used to farm turkeys and cattle

A secret emergency bunker for the president

How many times in the last 10 years has the top three on the final leaderboard not featured a golfer from the US?

None

One

Two

Three

What is “The Crow’s Nest”?

A room above the clubhouse where Augusta National’s amateurs are invited to stay throughout the tournament.

A bunker on the seventh hole

The nickname of the club president’s office

An after-hours bar located half a mile up the road from the entrance, notoriously busy with players on Sunday night

Guan Tianlang became the youngest player to make the cut at the Masters in 2013. How old was he?

12

14

16

18

1 and above.

You’ve gone into the water, dropped a shot and then chipped into a bunker

2 and above.

You’ve gone into the water, dropped a shot and then chipped into a bunker

3 and above.

You’ve gone into the water, dropped a shot and then chipped into a bunker

4 and above.

You’ve gone into the water, dropped a shot and then chipped straight into a bunker

6 and above.

That’s the quiz equivalent of a birdie

5 and above.

That’a well earned par

7 and above.

That’s the quiz equivalent of an eagle

8 and above.

That’s the quiz equivalent of a hole in one.

9 and above.

That’s the quiz equivalent of a hole in one.

0 and above.

You’ve gone into the water, dropped a shot and then chipped into a bunker

10 and above.

That’s even better than a hole in one.

Continue reading…

Comments are closed.