Leaderboardpublished at 17:16 British Summer Time 14 April 2019
-13 F Molinari (10)
-11 B Koepka (10), T Woods (10)
-10 P Cantlay (12), X Schauffele (12) T Finau (10)
-9 I Poulter (11)
Tiger Woods wins the Masters by one shot on -13 - his 15th major title
Woods claims first major title since 2008 and fifth Green Jacket
Woods punched the air with delight and hugged his family
Brooks Koepka, Dustin Johnson and Xander Schauffele tie for second on -12
Day, Simpson, Molinari & Finau -11; Poulter finishes -8
Jonathan Jurejko and Luke Reddy
-13 F Molinari (10)
-11 B Koepka (10), T Woods (10)
-10 P Cantlay (12), X Schauffele (12) T Finau (10)
-9 I Poulter (11)
Molinari -13, Woods -11, Finau -10 (10)
Putt, hole, repeat.
The mantra is a simple one for Francesco Molinari. The nerveless Italian converts his par putt and looks in his rear-view mirror to see Tiger Woods further behind.
Padraig Harrington
Three-time major winner
A lot of players would have been nervous and bumped it up the bank there. Francesco Molinari went for the tougher shot and played it stone dead.
Molinari -13, Woods -12, Finau -11 (9)
The pendulum is swinging wilder than on your nan's grandfather clock.
Woods can't put his approach close, leaving him with a lengthy par putt off the back fringe.
Molinari shows no fear with his chip on, flopping it up over the fringe and almost holing out.
Back to Woods... he misses the par putt and Molinari has a chance to restore his two-shot lead...
Padraig Harrington
Three-time major winner
Nobody is unhappy about hitting the 11th green in two and walking away with a four. It's a Sunday at the Masters.
It's not the same as the shots that you were playing Thursday to Saturday.
Poulter -10 (10)
Ian Poulter's position on the par-four 11th. That's the third-toughest hole on the course. He has to take his punishment and bunts one forward up the fairway. Needs to get up and down now.
Molinari -13, Woods -12, Finau -11 (9)
And don't expect to see Woods or Molinari make a birdie.
Woods pulls his tee shot into the trees, taking his medicine and knocking back on to the fairway.
But Molinari can't take advantage... his shoulders sag south after pulling his approach left into a treacherous valley.
Tony Finau, rather kindly, joins the Italian and shows him the way with a lob back towards the pin.
Par 4, 495 yards
Until 1935, this was the first hole on the course but there's been a switch around since then to add some jitters and excitement to the back nine - especially on Sunday.
Beautiful isn't it. What could go wrong on this picture postcard? Well traditionally it is the hardest hole on the course - playing steeply downhill and featuring a near 60-yard-long central bunker short of the green.
This was where it all started to unravel for Rory McIlroy in 2011 after a triple bogey seven. Don't mention the cabins that separate the main course from the par-three course!
And don't expect to see too many birdies here.
Schauffele -10 (11)
Here's an example of when television cameras don't quite do justice to distance. That's around 60ft and that's Xander Schauffele's ball going underground after a birdie putt. A monster. He's three back.
Only three pars in 11 holes for the American talent.
And here's how Tiger has heaped the pressure on Frankie...
Molinari -13, Woods -12, Finau -11 (9)
Let's have a look at Woods' CV... not bad, eh?
This week he's gone 70, 68 and 67.
But he's been round this track in 65 a couple of times, back in 1997 and again in 2005 - going on to win on both occasions.
We'd suggest a 30 on the back nine would do the trick today...
Molinari -13, Woods -12, Finau -11 (9)
On to the final nine then - this is where the Masters is really won or lost.
Leader Francesco Molinari is level at the turn, with his advantage dented by Tiger Woods carding a one-under 35 on the front nine.
We shouldn't be that surprised though, judging by this pre-final round stat. Francesco Molinari is deadly from 10 feet.
Allow Twitter content?
This article contains content provided by Twitter. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read Twitter’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.
Molinari -13, Woods -12, Finau -11 (9)
Could be a key shift. Molinari, without an increase of BPM, drops in his par putt from seven feet.
The Italian breaks out into a giggle as he leaves the ninth green, either his caddie has cracked a joke or he's just realised he's leading the Masters going into the back nine on Sunday...
Pretty much sums it up!
Poulter -10 (10) Koepka -11 (10)
Trees-sand-chip-par.
Brooks Koepka gets it safely through 10 despite dancing with the devil a couple of times.
Ian Poulter gets a 20ft birdie look but a look is all it is. Dribbles close and gets his par.
Ken Brown
BBC Sport commentator at Augusta National
That was an absolutely breathtaking putt from Tiger Woods. He had two tiers to come down and he rolled it to within inches. I thought it was going in!
Molinari -13, Woods -12, Finau -11 (8)
Woods is facing a downhill slope which only Olympic skiers would relish. Just the 70 feet to cover and two banks to descend.
Tell you what... he's judged this perfectly. Starting off way right, the ball arcs round beautifully and, after threatening to stop about 15 feet out, kickstarts again and finishes about 18 inches short.
Molinari, from 38 feet, races his past. This could be a key shift here...
Padraig Harrington
Three-time major winner at Augusta National
I know they talk about Francesco Molinari not being as long as anyone else off the tee but because he's so straight and able to gain strokes effectively he's as good as anyone in the game.
-13 F Molinari (8)
-12 T Woods (8)
-11 B Koepka (9), T Finau (8)
-10 P Cantlay (11), I Poulter (9)