1986 – THE MASTERS OF ALL MASTERS: Jack Nicklaus holes a birdie putt on the 17th hole on his way to becoming the oldest winner in the tournament’s history. (Getty Images)
1995 – WINNING IT FOR HIS TEACHER: An emotional Ben Crenshaw realizes his accomplishment while being congratulated by his caddie. Crenshaw dedicated the win to his late, longtime instructor, Harvey Penick. (Getty Images)
1997 – THE BEGINNING OF A NEW ERA: Tiger Woods wins his first Masters in record-setting fashion. Woods won by 12 shots, while breaking the four-day scoring record at 18 under par. (Getty Images)
1987 – THE STORY OF TWO CAREERS: Larry Mize holes a 45-yard pitch shot on the 11th hole to defeat Greg Norman during sudden-death for the win. (Getty Images)
2004 – FINALLY ONE FOR PHIL: Phil Mickelson goes airborne after sinking his birdie putt on the 18th to win his first Masters, and first major championship. (Getty Images)
2005 – ‘IN YOUR LIFE, HAVE YOU EVER SEEN ANYTHING LIKE THAT???!!!': Tiger Woods dramatically chips in for birdie on the 16th hole en route to a playoff win against Chris DiMarco – his fourth Masters title. (Getty Images)
1996 – THE FALL OF NORMAN: Nick Faldo won the 1996 Masters in tactician style. But the tournament is more remembered for the final-round collapse – a 78 – from 54-hole leader, Greg Norman, who began Sunday with a six-shot lead. (Getty Images)
1992 – A COOL YEAR FOR COUPLES: Fred Couples won his first and only green jacket after famously saving par on the 12th hole after a tee shot that – unlike most of his competitors’ that week – stayed up on the steep watery bank short of the green, instead of trickling back into the water. (Getty Images)
2001 – ‘THE TIGER SLAM': With his two-stroke victory over David Duval, Tiger Woods completed what was coined, ‘The Tiger Slam’. Starting with his 15-stroke victory at the U.S. Open the previous summer, Woods won the British Open and the PGA Championship in the months following, then won his fourth consecutive major championship at Augusta the next April to mark one of the most dominant runs in the history of the game. (Getty Images)
1989 – THE SHORT MISS: Needing to hole a 2-footer to beat Nick Faldo on the first hole of sudden-death, Scott Hoch missed, allowing Faldo to hole a 30-foot birdie putt on the next hole – Augusta’s par-4 11th – for his first of three Masters titles. Hoch would go on to win 11 times during his career on the PGA Tour, but he never hoisted a major championship trophy. (Getty Images)