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Augusta National Golf Club

Expert picks: Who will win the 2019 Masters at Augusta National?

Golfweek Staff
Golfweek

Here are Golfweek's staff picks to win the 2019 Masters at Augusta National Golf Club:

Dustin Johnson

Big fan of DJ's consistency this season, with wins in Saudi Arabia and Mexico City and five top 10s in eight PGA Tour starts. There's no reason to think he can't get it done at Augusta. He's been T-10, T-4 and T-6 in his last three Masters appearances and just needs to get off to a better start - opening-round 73s in 2018 and 2016 put him behind the eight ball early. If he can shoot something in the 60s on Thursday, we love his chances to slip on the green jacket come Sunday.

Dan Kilbridge

Rory McIlroy

Rory McIlroy turns 30 in less than a month, so if he's going to complete the career Grand Slam in his 20s, now is the time. This will be his fifth attempt to become just the sixth man in history to do it. (He won the U.S. Open in 2011, the PGA in 2012 and the British Open and PGA in 2014.) This season, he has a win at The Players, part of a great run of top-six finishes in all six of his stroke-play events. Ignore the loss to Tiger in the WGC-Match Play. This is Rory's year.

Christine Brennan

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Rory McIlroy

Coming into this season's Masters, Rory McIlroy's career has followed a path like many heroes from classical literature. Having undertaken a quest, he has gone through trials and battles that have sharpened his skills and grown his self-belief. Now, at 29, he is returning to the place where his most humbling defeat took place, but Rory is ready to finally vanquish this foe, win at Augusta National and complete the career Grand Slam. McIlroy is the best driver of the golf ball in the world and one of the game's elite iron players. If those strengths don't betray him, he could go 12 under on the par 5s alone.

David Dusek

Rory McIlroy

What he's learned from a slew of top-10 finishes is that he doesn't need his very best to win here, and history shows that even average putting is enough when allied with premier ball striking. The work he has done with a performance coach to manage the mental side of the game - not just this week but over the long term - is another weapon that could prove crucial at Augusta National.

Eamon Lynch

Justin Rose

How many times can this tournament elude him? Despite being No. 2 in the world, Rose's name isn't on the tip of everyone's tongue this week. But recall his last five starts at Augusta: T-12/2/T-10/T-2/T-14. It's time for Rose to graduate from gracious runner-up to a green jacket.

Beth Ann Nichols

Jordan Spieth

He becomes Jordanesque when he drives down Magnolia Lane. Forget his recent form and check his Masters record - T-2/W/T-2/T-11/3. His imagination is greatly rewarded at Augusta National, his putter is money at Augusta National.

Steve DiMeglio

Tiger Woods

So what if his five 2019 starts have only produced a T-10 in Mexico City and a T-5 in the match play. He took his game up a notch in dusting off Rory McIlroy during that match play where it became apparent that the entire early season schedule was designed to prepare for this week. His surprisingly conservative approach going against the modern bomb-and-gouge approach was about Augusta, where risk-taking is overrated until Sunday. The 75 percent swing used so far was about not hurting himself and building to peak form this week. Remember, no one's asking anymore if he's got the swing figured out and there hasn't been a mention of chipping yips in years. Woods knows Augusta better than anyone in the field except maybe Phil Mickelson, and even at his lowest points finished in the top 20 here. Tiger Woods will win his fifth Masters this week.

Geoff Shackelford

 

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