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Jon Rahm poses with the Masters trophy during the green jacket ceremony, after winning the Masters tournament on Sunday, April 9.
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Rahm celebrates his win on the 18th green.
Mike Segar/Reuters
Patrick Cantlay hits his putt on the 15th green during the final round on Sunday.
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Mickelson reacts on the 18th green during the final round.
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Viktor Hovland putts on the fifth green during the final round.
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Brooks Koepka plays his shot from the eighth tee during the continuation of the weather-delayed third round on Sunday.
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The scoreboard is changed after Tiger Woods withdrew from competition on Sunday.
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Sam Bennett watches his putt on the 12th green during the third round on Sunday.
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Patrick Cantlay tees up during the third round Sunday.
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Tiger Woods walks the 18th green during the second round on Saturday, April 8.
David J. Phillip/AP
A spectator watches play on the 12th hole in the rain on Saturday.
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Fred Couples waves to patrons after finishing his second round on Saturday. Couples made history as the oldest player to make the cut at the Masters.
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Groundskeepers remove standing water on green during the continuation of the weather-delayed second round on Saturday.
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Patrick Cantlay plays a shot from a bunker on the 18th hole on Saturday.
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A security guard moves people away from trees that blew over on the 17th hole of the Augusta National Golf Club on Friday. No injuries were reported.
Mike Segar/Reuters
Brooks Koepka tees off on the 10th hole Friday. He is 12 under par heading into the weekend.
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Jason Day and William Kane, caddie for Gordon Sargent, read the first green on Friday.
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Woods tees off on the eighth hole Friday.
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Amateur Sam Bennett plays a shot on the second hole Friday. He shot 68s on both Thursday and Friday.
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Jon Rahm plays out from the bunker on the second hole Friday.
David J. Phillip/AP
Billy Horschel reacts to a shot on the second hole Friday.
Mike Blake/Reuters
Viktor Hovland chips onto the 10th green Thursday. The Norwegian shot a 7-under 65 and shared the first-round lead with Koepka and Rahm.
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Patrick Reed's caddie, Kessler Karain, helps Reed line up a putt on the 13th hole Thursday.
Matt Slocum/AP
Woods grimaces on the fourth tee Thursday. The five-time Masters champion said his surgically repaired right leg felt sore Thursday and that the pain is "constant."
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Phil Mickelson hits a shot on the second hole Thursday.
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Adam Scott plays a bunker shot on the second hole Thursday.
Mike Blake/Reuters
Pins adorn a spectator's hat on Thursday.
Matt Slocum/AP
Defending Masters champion Scottie Scheffler hits his tee shot on the seventh hole Thursday.
David J. Phillip/AP
Sergio Garcia fishes his ball out of the creek on No. 13.
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A worker updates one of the leaderboards Thursday at Augusta National.
Rob Schumacher/USA Today Network
Koepka hits his tee shot on the 14th hole Thursday.
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Hideki Matsuyama, who won the tournament two years ago, looks over a putt on the second hole.
Patrick Smith/Getty Images
Rahm and his caddie, Adam Hayes, are seen on the third green Thursday.
Mark Baker/AP
Golf legend Jack Nicklaus hits a ceremonial tee shot before the start of the first round. He was joined by Gary Player and Tom Watson.
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Rory McIlroy signs autographs after competing in the traditional par 3 contest that is held the day before the start of the tournament.
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Min Woo Lee walks to the 15th green during a practice round Wednesday.
CNN  — 

No golfer on record has ever double bogeyed the first hole of The Masters and gone on to don the green jacket.

But Jon Rahm is a man on a mission to rewrite history at Augusta National.

After four-putting the opening hole, the Spaniard roared back to shoot seven-under 65 on Thursday and join Viktor Hovland and Brooks Koepka at the summit of the first-round leaderboard.

Seven birdies and an eagle at the eighth hole saw Rahm card the lowest 18-hole score in Masters history among players to have opened with a double bogey or worse, a start 554 golfers had suffered previously, according to ESPN Stats and Info.

Patrick Smith/Getty Images
Rahm overcame a nightmare start.

The world No. 3, chasing his second major title after victory at the US Open in 2021, hit every single fairway in what he dubbed a top-three major round of his career.

“If you’re going to make a double or four-putt or anything, it might as well be the first hole,” Rahm told reporters.

“After that, I was focused on the fact that all the strokes were good, the reads were good, the roll was good. Obviously the speed was off on the first two putts, so once I kind of accepted that there was nothing really to look into, I just got to work and I had 17 holes to make up.”

03:42 - Source: CNN
Spain's Jon Rahm feeling confident ahead of the 2023 Masters

Hovland had surged into an early lead courtesy of a blistering start, draining an eagle on the second hole and making a birdie-birdie finish to the front nine to take a two-shot lead into the turn.

Having never previously broken 70 at Augusta National, the Norwegian shot a bogey-free round to card the lowest score in his major championship career. The 25-year-old’s previous best had come at the Open Championship last year, when his third round 66 had sent him into the final day locked in a fight at the top with Rory McIlroy.

His bid for a first major ultimately ran out of steam at St. Andrews, but Hovland believes he is in a better place nine months on.

“It was just one of those days where I didn’t quite have it,” Hovland told reporters.

“It wasn’t like a mental error. But I feel like my skill set is a lot better right now, and I think I would have wanted to play that Sunday again, this week, for example. That would have been a lot of fun.”

Andrew Redington/Getty Images
Hovland escapes a bunker on the 18th hole.

Koepka made it a three-way tie at the top with an excellent showing on his eighth Masters start. The 32-year-old is a four-time major winner but is yet to win a green jacket, with a runner-up finish in 2019 his best performance.

The LIV Golf star has been candid about frustrations with his form, struggles aggravated by multiple injuries, but is feeling back to full fitness at Augusta.

“It’s been a long time since everything’s felt normal,” Koepka told reporters.

“Being able to just comfortably read a putt, just little things like that. Being able to squat down normal, it’s been a huge, huge difference.”

Jae C. Hong/AP
Koepka tees off from the 12th hole.

Amateur hour

Cameron Young and Jason Day spearhead the chasing pack, two strokes behind the leading trio, while defending champion Scottie Scheffler sits within striking distance a further shot back.

Six golfers sit level with the world No. 1 at four under, but one name stands out among them all: Sam Bennett.

The 22-year-old amateur tore out of the blocks, following up a birdie at the opening hole with an eagle at the second. After a second birdie at the sixth, the American sunk 12 straight pars to become the only amateur in the last 30 years to record a bogey-free round at the major.

Christian Petersen/Getty Images
Bennett chips in for eagle on the second hole.

Bennett is living the dream, playing holes he’d only previously played on video games. But make no mistake, he’s not just in Augusta for the experience.

“It’s been incredible,” Bennett told reporters. “Dream come true to be able to tee it up at Augusta playing the Masters. I’m soaking it all in.

I feel like I’m prepared, got some good work in. It’s cool being an amateur. I’m going to have fun. I’m not here to treat it like a hit and giggle. I’m here to compete and test my game.”

Fellow amateur Matthew McClean – an optometrist from Northern Ireland – also made a fairytale start, temporarily leading the field after two birdies across his first four holes. However, double bogeys at the seventh and 17th respectively undid a bright start, as McClean carded five-over to end the day tied for 78th.

Woe for Woods and McIlroy

It was a rough start to McIlroy’s pursuit of the career grand slam, as the Northern Irishman shot an even-par 72 to return to the clubhouse tied for 37th.

McIlroy is an elusive green jacket away from becoming only the sixth player to win all four majors, but struggled for momentum during his opening round. Back-to-back birdies at the 15th and 16th holes looked to have primed McIlroy for a strong finish after a painful double bogey at the seventh, only for a third bogey of the day at the 17th to drop him back to even-par.

Ahead of the tournament, Tiger Woods said it would only be “a matter of time” before McIlroy won at Augusta. Woods’ five Masters wins put him second only to Jack Nicklaus, but any hopes of the 47-year-old matching the record this week look faint after he opened with a two-over 74.

Woods is tied for 54th heading into Friday’s second round, which will decide the 50 golfers and ties that make the cut for the weekend. The first golfers are set to tee off at 7:30 a.m. ET (12:30 p.m. BST), a time moved forward by 30 minutes due to expectations of bad weather.