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Tiger Woods Masters Props – Odds on Finishing Position, 1st Round Birdies Made and More

Michael Harrison

by Michael Harrison in Golf

Updated Apr 6, 2022 · 8:20 AM PDT

Woods swinging
Tiger Woods tees off on the seventh hole during a practice round for the Masters golf tournament on Monday, April 4, 2022, in Augusta, Ga. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)
  • The 86th edition of the Masters tees off Thursday, April 7th
  • Tiger Woods appears on track to play his first official tournament since the 2020 Masters
  • Plenty of prop bets for Tiger’s 2022 Masters week

Absolute mayhem is about to engulf Augusta National, with Tiger Woods all but set to tee it up in an official tournament for the first time since the 2020 Masters. He arrived on the premises last week to take part in some practice to ramp up his efforts to tee it up this week. He’s played some holes and walked the course to test his leg and back and declared that as of this point, he intends to compete on Thursday.

Currently sporting 2022 Masters odds of +4000 to win a record-tying sixth green jacket, that doesn’t mean the public hasn’t been backing him in droves. Wherever Tiger goes, he garners a ton of excitement and interest, which is reflected on how much he’s been wagered on at the 86th Masters as he’s drawing a whopping 15% of the Masters handle to win outright.

Should he put the tee peg into the ground for the first round, there are plenty of prop bets for how he’ll fare, including his finishing position, the amount of birdies, plus many more. These props below are not available for wagering, but have been assembled for informational and entertainment purproses.

Tiger Woods 2022 Masters Props

First Round Birdies Made Odds
Under 3.5 -130
Over 3.5 +180
First Round Bogeys Made Odds
Over 3.5 -140
Under 3.5 +110
To Finish Top 5 (including ties) Odds
No -800
Yes +750
To Finish Top 10 (including ties) Odds
No -375
Yes +360
To Finish Top 20 (including ties) Odds
No -150
Yes +145
To play in the final group on Sunday Odds
No -8000
Yes +2200
Finishing Position Odds
Over 35.5 -130
Under 35.5 +110
To find water on 12th hole Odds
No -650
Yes +400
To make hole in one during any round Odds
No -3000
Yes +2800
What will happen first? Odds
Tiger to make birdie -115
Tiger to make bogey -105

One thing you could guarantee, is that if Tiger makes it to Sunday – he’ll be out there in red.

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Tiger Likely to Show Considerable Rust

Despite Tiger’s incredible confidence that his game could hold up against the world’s best over 72 holes, it would stand to reason that he’ll struggle at times out of the gate. With the line set at 3.5 bogeys, there’s a great chance he hits the over on that, particularly if the weather is a bit cooler which he’s admitted does not help his body.

In the last time he teed it up in a competitive event, Tiger produced the first bogey-free opening round of his career at the Masters. With him not having live reps in nearly a year and a half, it’s likely he has a few missteps. Keep in mind, even though he won in 2019, he bogeyed the fifth hole all four days, and the 11th and 15th holes have been lengthened.

Tiger Won’t Make Same Mistake on Hole 12 Again

In 2020, Tiger Woods made the worst score of his career on a single hole when he stepped to the 12th tee on Sunday. He rinsed three balls in the water en route to a miserable 10. That was the only hole he’s ever taken double digit strokes on in his career. Memories of that disaster will surely be on his mind this go around, and arguably the greatest golfer ever likely doesn’t make that error again.

The 12th hasn’t typically been a hole that has posed a litany of problems for him in the past, apart from the latest instance, as he’s often played to the middle of the green to avoid going into the drink.

Tiger Can Grind Out a Top 20

Doubt Tiger Woods at your peril – he’s come back time and time again in the face of adversity to do things that are simply spell-bending. However, expecting him to jump onto such an incredibly hilly and grueling course having not played in a year and a half to defeat 90 other golfers is realistically unlikely.

It isn’t out of the realm of possibility that he can get by on his guile and course history to scrape together a top-20, which pays out +145. In the 21 times he’s teed it up at Augusta National as a professional, just four have resulted in Woods finishing outside the Top 20  (with no missed cuts).

The last time he competed at the Masters in 2020, he had that aforementioned septuple-bogey 10 at the 12th. Even if he registered a double bogey, El Tigre still would’ve found himself posting a top-20 finish. Asking him to achieve a top-5 or 10 is probably too tall a task, but a top-20 is a possibility.

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