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STORY BY AKSH GUPTA

Left-handed players have produced some of Augusta’s most memorable moments.
Every year at Augusta, something unusual keeps happening.
A tiny group of players continues to win far more often than they should.
They are not the longest hitters. Not always the best putters. Not even the most consistent.
They are left-handed.

Left-handed champions have repeatedly shaped Masters history.
Since 2003, left-handed players have won The Masters six times. That includes wins from Mike Weir, three from Phil Mickelson, and two from Bubba Watson. In that same period, left-handed players have won only four times combined across the other three majors.
That raises a simple question.
Does Augusta National quietly favor left-handed golfers?
The theory sounds logical. Many of Augusta’s most important holes shape right to left. That naturally suits a left-handed fade. Holes 2, 5 and 9 on the front nine move in that direction. On the back nine, holes 10 and 13 do the same. Even par threes like 12 and 16 visually fit a left-handed shot pattern.
On paper, it looks like an advantage.
But the data tells a more complicated story.
Left-handed players make up a very small portion of the Masters field. Since 2015, only 4.6 percent of rounds at Augusta have been played by left-handers. Even fewer of them arrive as elite contenders. Less than 3.5 percent of left-handed entrants were ranked inside the world top 50 during that period.
Despite that, they keep producing memorable moments. That alone keeps the theory alive.
But when overall scoring is compared, right-handed players actually average slightly better scores. Fairway percentages are almost identical. Strokes gained off the tee is nearly equal. Approach play is also very close.
So the overall advantage does not exist.
The real story appears when you zoom into specific holes.

Hole 13 at Augusta National. The biggest statistical advantage for left-handed players.
The biggest statistical edge for left-handers comes at the 13th hole. The iconic par 5 dogleg left has produced some of the most famous Masters shots ever. Since 2015, left-handed players have hit the 13th fairway 82 percent of the time. That is 11.4 percent higher than the field average. That advantage turns directly into scoring. Birdie or better happens 11.5 percent more often for left-handers here.
This is not theory. This is measurable.
Hole 10 also shows a clear advantage. Left-handed players hit the green about 6% more often than right-handers. On the par 3 12th, lefties make birdie 4% more often and average 0.13 strokes lower.
These are not huge gaps. But at Augusta, small edges decide tournaments.

The 16th hole flips the advantage. Right-handed fades often play safer over water.
The surprise is that some right-to-left holes do not help left-handers at all.
The par 5 second hole looks perfect for a left-handed fade. Yet left-handers make birdie or eagle about 10% less frequently than right-handers. That is the largest negative difference for lefties on the course.
The 5th hole also works against them. Greens in regulation are 4.1% lower for left-handers compared to right-handed players.
Then comes the 16th. Here the advantage flips completely. Right-handed players hit the green about 75 percent of the time. Left-handers are 11 percent lower. The typical right-handed fade allows a safer play over water, while left-handers often attack more aggressively.
Augusta rewards one shape. Then punishes it on the very next hole.
Not overall.
The numbers show no meaningful scoring advantage across the tournament. But Augusta does ask different questions depending on which side of the ball you play from.
Left-handers gain small but important advantages on specific holes. Most notably the 10th, 12th and especially the 13th. These moments often come late in the round. That is why the impact feels bigger than it actually is.
Augusta does not favor left-handed players.
But in key moments, it becomes more comfortable to be one.
And at The Masters, comfort is everything.
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