The 2024 lottery process is open from June 1-20, and you can apply for practice rounds, tournaments rounds or both and for a certain number of tickets based on the day. Ticket prices will be announced when the lottery opens, but for 2023 it was $100 for practice rounds and $140 for tournament rounds.

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Mud Masters Ticket Download


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The annual ticket lottery for the Masters Tournament opened today, offering aspiring patrons a three-week window to apply for a chance at purchasing one of the most coveted single-day passes in the sports world.

To get this estimate, they worked through a number of independent, and unconfirmed, variables. Key to their math is the number of daily attendees (widely estimated to be about 40,000 for each of the four tournament days), the percentage of those who are already lifetime badge holders (possibly in the neighborhood of 45%), and the number of applicants who enter the ticket lottery in the 20-day window. That final component is probably the hardest to pin down, but Bookies.com offers a well-reasoned rationale for its guess in the neighborhood of 2 million.

With an estimated 22,000 available daily passes available and each ticket lottery winner having the option to buy two daily tournament tickets for $140 apiece, this comes out to 11,000 winners per day (among the projected 2 million hopefuls).

If the Bookies.com math is remotely accurate, the odds your name will get picked this year to buy tickets is around 1-in-200. That said, consider that oddsmakers were giving Phil Mickelson about a 1-in-280 shot at winning the Masters earlier this year and he ended up tying for second place behind Jon Rahm.

Members Presale notification came in the email this morning for the 2023 event and I've just logged into buy. Horribly rude shock. Floor table tickets that previously cost me $90 are now costing $246 !!!!!! That is insane !!!! I can't afford that for the two of us. I get that costs go up, but by 250% ??!?!? I guess its supply and demand and I'll check again tomorrow, but this is totally nuts.

You know, I'm not so sure I agree. There is obviously a market for tickets at those prices. Is the fact they get x% above face value really a criticism on them, or are the event organizers mispricing their tickets?

I will agree that the "systems" that go in and scoop up a whole bunch of tickets ahead of time and then charge exorbitant prices after effectively locking everyone else out need to be dealt with if they haven't already. But if people had the same opportunity to buy tickets initially, and it sells out quickly and still has people willing to pay any price, who is really the bad guy? And is it any different than if you or I had a pair of tickets and sold them for more because you could?

There is also risk involved. I once bought tickets for a group to a football game. I ended up eating 2/3s of the price of the last ticket because I trusted someone to buy it rather than get cash up front. Now, the amount didn't break me, but these guys can get stuck with tickets that they sell at a loss. It's not always pure profit in the three and four digit percentage range.

I will agree that the "systems" that go in and scoop up a whole bunch of tickets ahead of time and then charge exorbitant prices after effectively locking everyone else out need to be dealt with if they haven't already. But if people had the same opportunity to buy tickets initially, and it sells out quickly and still has people willing to pay any price, who is really the bad guy? And is it any different than if you or I had a pair of tickets and sold them for more because you could?

I'm not talking about the person that buys for an event and can't attend so they sell. I'm talking about businesses and people that scoop tickets with no intention of ever attending. They are simply a non-value add entity inserting themselves in the supply chain, artificially reducing supply and therefore driving up the ticket cost. They are Ticket Vermin.

I've simply had too many infuriating experiences trying to buy concert tickets on i.e. Ticketmaster only to be sold out quickly because of electronic and human bots working to scoop up the supply so they can be sold on reseller websites at multiples above face value. I always ask myself, how the heck do these ticket resellers have front row seats selling at 5-10x face value even BEFORE the tickets go on sale?

As for The Masters tickets specifically, they've done a lot to check back this process but it's still a significant activity for Ticket Vermin. If The Masters hosts intended their tickets to be sold at higher prices then they'd set that price for themselves, but that's not how the want their product to be sold. Same for their food/drink, they could charge normal high PGA Tournament prices but they don't.

Actually, I wouldn't assume that at all, I'm not sure that practice rounds are less crowded because...people aren't using tickets/its not a sellout. I'd lean more towards ANGC keeping the available numbers lower on practice round days to...among other things...make the experience more enjoyable? Keeps demand as high as possible, keeps the lottery getting bigger and bigger every year.

Couple facts I think we know for sure - one, we're just guessing on this because ANGC will never release specifics so we could be completely wrong and two, no matter how many tickets they make available, they could sell 10x that amount. ff782bc1db

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