How much are The Masters 2023 tickets? Cheapest tickets for PGA …
The 2023 Masters Tournament begins Thursday, April 6 (4/6/2023) at the Augusta National Golf Club in Georgia. Tickets to the exclusive golf major are unavailable through the official application process, fans who want to attend can still find tickets online.
Fans can buy tickets to the 2023 Masters Tournament at resellers like StubHub, VividSeats, SeatGeek and MEGASeats. If you’re traveling for the tournament, get the best deals on flights from Expedia, and find discounted hotels with Hotels.com.
Tickets to The Masters are prohibitively expensive, with 1-day passes well into the thousands of dollars.
For example, at the time of publishing, StubHub’s cheapest ticket for Thursday’s competition alone was £2,736, and just 30 tickets remained.
Ticket prices are subject to change and availability, but don’t expect a bargain, even on the tournament’s cheapest day, Sunday. First party tickets for The Masters — those sold directly by the tournament as opposed to a reseller — require and advanced application process to even get ahold of. That process is closed for the current tournament.
The Masters Tournament begins competition on Thursday, with rounds of play through Sunday, April 9.
It will be broadcast on ESPN and CBS, and can be streamed live on fuboTV (free trial).
You can bet on the PGA Tour from your phone in New York State, and we’ve compiled some of the best introductory offers to help navigate your first bets from BetMGM FanDuel, DraftKings, PointsBet, Caesars and BetRivers.
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More PGA Tour coverage from The Associated Press
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — It started with a letter that Martha Burk figured would never see the light of day.
When she mentioned the all-male membership at Augusta National, the National Council of Women’s Organization didn’t even vote on whether to take action.
“It was a very casual conversation at the end of a board meeting,” Burk said in a recent interview. “I had found out about this club and said I was thinking about writing a letter. Everyone said, ‘Fine, write the letter.’ I never expected my letter to go anywhere. I thought in a few years I might have followed up with a phone call.”
There was no need.
Hootie Johnson, the chairman of Augusta National, wrote a three-sentence reply to her that club matters were private.
The next day he issued a scathing, 932-word statement to the media that defended the rights of a private club and said a woman joining Augusta National would be on the club’s timetable and “not at the point of a bayonet.”
So began the biggest controversy in Masters history.
It culminated 20 years ago with a rally during the third round. Burk, wearing a bulletproof vest under a green golf shirt, spoke to about 40 supporters in a lot a half-mile away from Magnolia Lane because authorities denied her permission to protest across from the club.
And then it all went away, or so it seemed. Television sponsors returned in 2005, after the Masters had cut them loose to keep them out of the fray.
It wasn’t until nine years after the protest that Augusta National announced former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and South Carolina financier Darla Moore had accepted invitations to join.
“We did not succeed in our goal to get the club open to women at the time,” Burk said. “They waited a long enough time that we wouldn’t get credit.
But had we not done that, I think there still would not be women members.”
During the course of this battle, Burk was invited to be part of a Golf World magazine cover.
The headline was “Year of the Women.” She was among five women on the cover as the top newsmakers of the year, and had no way of knowing then that one of them — Suzy Whaley — would go on to become the first female president at the PGA of America.