We Finally Have Expanded Masters TV Coverage
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We Finally Have Expanded Masters TV Coverage

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We Finally Have Expanded Masters TV Coverage

There are not too many legitimate complaints when it comes to the Masters and Augusta National. The tournament is outstanding in all facets—especially when it comes to the in-person experience for patrons.

One of the few (and perhaps only) glaring issues with the tournament in recent years has been the lackluster offering of its TV coverage. Thankfully, that is changing for 2025.

A little background here to set the scene: throughout most of its history, the Masters used to only show the back nine. It wasn’t until the 1997 tournament when TV viewers even saw a few holes on the front side. It took until 2002 (!) for full 18-hole coverage.

Historically, a part of the Masters TV philosophy has been exclusivity. They didn’t want you to sit around and watch 12 hours on TV because that, in the minds of the tournament hosts, took away from the mythical nature the event.

As time went on and technology evolved, that philosophy has become obsolete. Still, the Masters has held onto parts of that philosophy. Throughout the past two decades, Saturday TV coverage only started at 3 p.m. ET and Sunday coverage began at 2 p.m. ET. There was no other way to watch a main feed of the broadcast prior to that.

Sure, the Masters app and website are world-class pieces of technology. I could never debate you on that. And only having four minutes of commercials per hour is pure bliss. But not having traditional TV coverage until that late in the day on the weekend? While other majors are basically all-day TV affairs?

It was certainly a huge miss for the Masters. It was one of the only ways they have been behind the times, which I always found strange given how progressive they have been in the past decade or so.

This is the tournament that started the Augusta National Women’s Amateur; let Dude Perfect kick around soccer balls through Amen Corner; allowed EA Sports create a perfect rendering of the course for its video game; and came up with a way for every shot to be watched on the website/app. You’re telling me the green jackets were still maintaining a mystique of exclusivity by limiting TV coverage despite becoming wildly accessible everywhere else? It didn’t make sense.

Mercifully, the Masters has addressed this problem to a reasonable degree.

We now have an hour added to the Saturday broadcast, so that will start at 2 p.m. ET. More importantly, you can watch two additional hours of both the Saturday and Sunday broadcasts on Paramount+ from noon until 2 p.m.

That brings the total “main feed” coverage to 23 hours. About 25 years ago, we didn’t even get 11 hours of TV coverage. Progress!

Look, is this a perfect solution? No. Personally, I would like the Masters TV coverage to start on CBS at noon ET so we don’t all have to subscribe to Paramount+ (although the app does offer a week-long free trial, so you can always just do that and then cancel after the Masters is over).

It’s slimy that all of these networks are pushing streaming services on us by holding exclusive sporting events hostage (I’m looking at you, NBC and Peacock). I’m pretty sure I’m accidentally subscribing to a dozen services now. If someone did a technology audit for me, I’m afraid of how much money I’m throwing away with services I barely use.

It’s also disappointing that Thursday and Friday TV coverage only starts at 3 p.m. ET. Hopefully, we get some time added to that in the future.

However, this is substantial progress for Masters viewers. We’re getting the most TV coverage we’ve ever seen, and the extra hour on Saturday is critical so we see all the leaders tee off.

This tournament has the smallest field of any major (by a wide margin), so we don’t really need to see a lot of morning golf on the weekends. Anyone who remotely matters will be in that 2-7 p.m. window.

Also, did I mention the app and website? We still get streams for Amen Corner, Featured Groups, Holes 4, 5 and 6, Holes 15 and 16, On the Range, etc.

Ultimately, I think Masters TV coverage will continue expanding over time. This isn’t the end of the expansion.

For now, let’s be thankful there is more golf on TV seven months from now when we’re glued to the 2025 Masters.

Top Photo Caption: The Masters is adding more TV coverage to the weekend. (GETTY IMAGES/Ben Jared)

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Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 10 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife, Anja, and dog, Hogan.

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

 
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





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      MagnetarCo

      2 years ago

      Traditional TV coverage is dying a slow death, the online coverage is excellent and should continue to be expanded. The other majors could learn from the Masters online coverage, as the other three have a terrible online experience.

      Reply

      Mike

      2 years ago

      Informative article, thanks. But even if the Masters comes on ADT 2:00, I generally don’t turn it on until the last two or three groups are teeing off. There’s only so much time I can spend in front of a TV. Plus, with the recent changes made to 13 and 15, the back nine is less exciting anyway. It used to be fun to watch eagles being made.

      Reply

      Robert

      2 years ago

      Thursday and Friday rouds via the Masters App is pure heaven. Most everyone is at work anyway and have multiple monitors or devices to watch it on. Im fortunate to have a 50” TV ih my office and watch on that and one of my computer screens.

      Reply

      Victor

      2 years ago

      If only the masters focused on golf shots and not the golfers reactions to their shots, we would see much more golf. Instead, we tune in to see reactions. Only to be followed by players walking to their next shot.
      With all the shot tracker technology and drone cameras,
      The Masters focuses on what a player feels about his own shot. This is not good for any broadcast.

      Reply

      Eric

      2 years ago

      As long as they expand the Sunday main broadcast window I’m happy. I only watch on the Masters website for the first 3 rounds anyways.

      Reply

      Jake

      2 years ago

      Yay… another crappy streaming App to sign up for…

      Reply

      Derek

      2 years ago

      Watch the final round broadcasts from the 80s available on youtube. Front 9 coverage began in 1984, not 1997

      Reply

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