Masters week has arrived, which means the polite golf world tradition of whispering about course history, putting touch and wind on Amen Corner is back in full force. It also means the betting board is doing what it always does this time of year: cutting through the romance and telling you who the market actually believes can win the green jacket. As of Sunday night, Scottie Scheffler sits alone at the top, with Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau and Rory McIlroy right behind him and a crowded second tier forming just below.
Scheffler enters the week as the clear favorite at +490, and nobody else is especially close. That number still reflects strong respect for the world No. 1 even after some movement away from the shorter prices he held earlier, when he dipped to +400 and even +380 at his shortest point. The current number suggests two things at once: sportsbooks still see him as the man to beat, and bettors have not exactly been rushing to eat those cramped odds when the rest of the board offers more breathing room.
Behind him is Rahm at +910, which keeps the LIV Golf star firmly in the first real challenger spot. DeChambeau follows at +1075, and reigning Masters champion McIlroy is next at +1175. That foursome makes up the top shelf of the board, and it is not hard to see why. Scheffler gives you the shortest number because he has become golf’s most reliable weekly threat. Rahm and DeChambeau bring major-level firepower and enough pedigree to make sportsbooks nervous. McIlroy, meanwhile, arrives as the defending champion and still carries the kind of profile that keeps him near the top of every major market whether people fully trust him or not.
After those four, the board starts to widen but not by much. Ludvig Åberg is sitting at 17-1, and ESPN noted he has gained steam with bettors after a strong start to the season. Xander Schauffele follows at 18-1, still planted in the familiar space he seems to occupy at every major: respected, dangerous and close enough to the top that nobody would be shocked if he finally breaks through at Augusta.
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Then comes a pair at 23-1 in Tommy Fleetwood and Cameron Young. Fleetwood remains one of those names the market keeps treating as a serious major threat, even if the green jacket still feels like a leap until he actually finishes the job. Young, on the other hand, is one of the golfers ESPN specifically identified as drawing stronger betting interest. The market is clearly not scared off by the lack of a major title on his resume. It is giving him the same number as Fleetwood and placing him squarely inside the top 10 contenders.
Rounding out the top 10 are Matt Fitzpatrick at +2350 and Hideki Matsuyama at 27-1. Fitzpatrick is hanging just ahead of the next cluster, and Matsuyama’s place inside this group is no small detail considering Augusta history tends to matter more here than at most majors. Once you get past him, the board starts to move into golfers like Collin Morikawa at 31-1 and Robert MacIntyre at 34-1, which tells you the line between legitimate contender and hopeful outsider is already being drawn pretty clearly.
So the top 10 by odds, in order, are: Scheffler, Rahm, DeChambeau, McIlroy, Åberg, Schauffele, Fleetwood, Young, Fitzpatrick and Matsuyama. That is the group the market trusts most before the first tee shot. Some of them arrive with green-jacket credibility already established. Some are here because talent and current form keep forcing them onto the short board. Either way, these are the names sitting at the front of the line.
Scheffler is not just the favorite to win; he is also priced at -192 for a top-10 finish and -450 for a top-20, which gives a pretty blunt sense of how strongly the market views his floor this week. Rahm, DeChambeau and McIlroy are also all in negative territory for top-10 and top-20 markets, while Åberg and Schauffele are not far behind. That is another way of saying this is not just a win-market story. The board is telling you these names are expected to hang around deep into the weekend.
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The field, of course, will still produce the usual Masters chaos. It always does.
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