Golfers with the best odds to win the 2018 Masters

The Masters Tournament started in Augusta, Ga., in 1934, and the year's first major is set to be played from April 5-8 in 2018. Here are the top 20 favorites to win the green jacket, according to Sportsbook.ag, as of March 29, 2018.

1 of 20

Tiger Woods: 9/1

Timothy A. Clary / AFP / Getty Images

The biggest name in golf played well at the Valspar Championship in March, finishing just one shot back, and the pundits are excited. He has 79 PGA Tour wins for his career but last won a tournament in 2013. Woods hopes to claim his fifth green jacket and first since 2005.

2 of 20

Justin Thomas: 10/1

Erich Schlegel / USA Today Sports Images

The No. 2-ranked golfer in the world, Thomas won his first career major last year when he claimed the PGA Championship. Success at the Masters has been fleeting, finishing in 22nd place last year. The 24-year-old does already have eight PGA Tour wins in his career.

3 of 20

Rory McIlroy: 10/1

Orlando Ramirez / USA Today Sports Images

The seventh-ranked golfer in the world, McIlroy is still trying to win his first Masters after an epic collapse in 2011. A Masters win would complete a career grand slam for the 28-year-old, who has won one U.S. Open, one British Open and two PGA Championships in his career. He recently won the Arnold Palmer Invitational in mid-March, so there is even more reason to bet on him.

4 of 20

Dustin Johnson: 11/1

Erich Schlegel / USA Today Sports Images

Currently the top-ranked golfer in the world, Johnson has yet to win a Masters and has just one major to his credit, the 2016 U.S. Open. He does have a win earlier this year, claiming the Sentry Tournament of Champions in January.

5 of 20

Jordan Spieth: 14/1

Rob Schumacher / USA Today Sports Images

The 2015 winner of the Masters, Spieth is currently the fourth-ranked golfer in the world. The 24-year-old hasn't won a tournament on the tour since the British Open last July, however.

6 of 20

Bubba Watson: 15/1

Michael Madrid / USA Today Sports Images

Watson owns two major tournament titles: the 2012 and 2014 Masters Tournaments. He already has two PGA Tour wins in 2018, winning the Genesis Open and WGC-Dell Match Play.

7 of 20

Justin Rose: 16/1

Rob Schumacher / USA Today Sports Images

The fifth-ranked golfer in the world, Rose has finished second twice at the Masters, including last year. He has eight career wins on the tour, with his last win coming at the WGC-HSBC Champions Tournament in October.

8 of 20

Phil Mickelson: 18/1

Harry How / Getty Images

Lefty is a three-time winner at the Masters, winning in 2004, 2006 and 2010. His last major win was 2013, but the 47-year-old won his first tournament in nearly five years when he won the WGC-Mexico Championship in early March.

9 of 20

Jason Day: 20/1

Reinhold Matay / USA Today Sports Images

Day's best finish at the Masters was second place in 2011. The Aussie won his first tournament in nearly two years when he claimed the Farmers Insurance Open in late January.

10 of 20

Jon Rahm: 20/1

Erich Schlegel / USA Today Sports Images

One of the up-and-coming names in the sport, Rahm has never finished better than 23rd in a major but shows promise with two PGA Tour and two European Tour wins since the start of 2017. He finished tied for 27th at the Masters last year.

11 of 20

Rickie Fowler: 22/1

Allan Henry / USA Today Sports Images

Fowler was on fire in 2014, finishing in the top five in all four major tournaments, but he hasn't had consistency as a tournament winner on the tour. He has just four PGA Tour wins, with his last coming at the Honda Classic in early 2017.

12 of 20

Paul Casey: 25/1

Rob Schumacher / USA Today Sports Images

Casey threatened at the 2016 Masters, finishing tied for fourth place. He has only two PGA Tour wins in his career, but his most recent win came over Tiger Woods and Patrick Reed at the Valspar Championship in March.

13 of 20

Sergio Garcia: 28/1

Rob Schumacher / USA Today Sports Images

The defending winner of the green jacket, Garcia is currently the ninth-ranked golfer in the world. Of course, his Masters win was the last tournament that he won on the tour, but Garcia has 10 PGA Tour tournament wins to his name.

14 of 20

Hideki Matsuyama: 35/1

Orlando Ramirez / USA Today Sports Images

Matsuyama has a top six finish in every major tournament and peaked with a fifth-place finish in the 2015 Masters Tournament. He has five career PGA Tour wins, with his last coming in August at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational.

15 of 20

Alex Noren: 40/1

Erich Schlegel / USA Today Sports Images

Noren failed to make the cut in his first Masters last year, but he's been quickly rising in the world ranks, now at No. 14. He was a runner-up in this year's Farmers Insurance Open.

16 of 20

Henrik Stenson: 40/1

Reinhold Matay / USA Today Sports Images

Stenson has never finished better than 14th at Augusta, and his last win was the Open Championship in 2016. He ended 2017 as the ninth-ranked golfer in the world but has dropped six spots to 15 since then.

17 of 20

Patrick Reed: 40/1

Erich Schlegel / USA Today Sports Images

Reed hasn't won a tournament on the tour since 2016, but he enters the conversation as a candidate to win the green jacket after finishing second at Valspar in March. His best finish at Augusta was tied for 22nd in 2015.

18 of 20

Tommy Fleetwood: 40/1

Kyle Terada / USA Today Sports Images

The 27-year-old Fleetwood played his first Masters Tournament last year, failing to make the cut. However, he's really come along on the tour over the last year-plus with three PGA Tour wins and a fourth-place finish at the U.S. Open.

19 of 20

Matt Kuchar: 50/1

Jasen Vinlove / USA TODAY Sports Images

Kuchar has seven career PGA Tour wins to his name and finished tied for fifth at the Waste Management Phoenix Open this year. The 20th-ranked player in the world has yet to win at the Masters, though he finished tied for fourth in last year's tournament.

20 of 20

Louis Oosthuizen: 55/1

Kyle Terada / USA Today Sports Images

Oosthuizen has just one PGA Tour win to his credit, the 2010 Open Championship, but he's finished as high as second at Augusta, losing to Bubba Watson in a playoff. The South African is currently the 32nd-ranked golfer in the world.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Mavericks come from behind to down Thunder, take 2-1 series lead
Stars continue road dominance with Game 3 win over Avalanche
Watch: Paul Skenes wastes no time showing why Pirates drafted him No. 1 overall
Watch: Braves were one out away from first no-hitter in 30 years
Roman Wilson hopes to become Steelers' next 'great' WR
Chargers sign veteran edge-rusher
Justin Allgaier dominates at Darlington for first win of 2024
'Great mind': One-time NBA champion endorses candidate for Lakers HC job
Celtics respond with impressive road win vs. Cavaliers in Game 3
Hurricanes' power play finally comes through with season on the line
Watch: An outstanding first half by Donovan Mitchell keeps the Cavaliers alive in Game 3 vs. Celtics
Tigers lose veteran starting pitcher to injury
Watch: Minor league baseball game interrupted by turtle delay
Paul Skenes experiences the Pirates' incompetence in just one game
Rangers ace continues to be plagued by nerve irritation in thumb
Cowboys hint at timeline for extension talks with offensive star
Steelers first-round pick has already 'apologized' to new locker mate
Former Packers WR makes bold prediction about Jordan Love
Broncos release former Super Bowl champion WR
Nationals had 'substantive discussions' with former top prospect about extension

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.