Keep that cardº Geoff Ogilvy: Ran off five consecutive birdies during a 31 on the back nine. He finished with a 67. He, Adam Scott and Jason Day were all trying to become the first Australian to win a Masters.

Toss that cardRory McIlroy: McIlroy's 80 was the highest final round by a 54-hole leader since Ken Venturi in 1956.

On the course with ...Tiger Woods: When Woods knocked in an eagle putt on the par-5 eighth to reach 10 under and tie for the lead, there was no mistaking whom the roar from the gallery was for. Over the next few minutes, more cheers could be heard from all corners of Augusta each time Woods' score was posted on a leaderboard. He still had the back nine to play, and momentum was on his side. Not for long, though. Which shot would he like to have back? "Oh, we can't do that," Woods said. "We do that every week and we would go crazy, wouldn't we?"

Well played, DonaldAfter dumping his tee shot into the pond at No. 12, Luke Donald made four birdies over the last six holes. His tee shot on 18 landed on the edge of a bunker, leaving him a lie only a stork could love. Hitting off one leg, he hit a ball that came out perfectly only to hit the flag and carom back off the green. But Donald chipped in from the fairway.

One-puttSouth Africans have won two of the past three majors.

Two-puttThis is the first time the United States has not held a major title or the Ryder Cup.

Masters momentThe green jacket ceremony wasn't so much a celebration as a chance for everyone to catch their breath. Charl Schwartzel becomes the fourth consecutive first-time major champion, following Martin Kaymer (PGA Championship), countryman Louis Oosthuizen (British Open) and Graeme McDowell (U.S. Open).

The last word"There were so many numbers going up and down. It must have looked great on TV. It was exciting stuff, it really was."

--Jason Day, who broke Fuzzy Zoeller's record for the lowest four-day total by a Masters rookie after shooting a 68 in the final round.

NEWS SERVICES