The Masters moves to its final round on Sunday. Justin Rose and Sergio Garcia ended Saturday’s third round tied for the lead at 6 strokes under par for the tournament, just ahead of a star-studded rest of the leaderboard. Jordan Spieth and Rickie Fowler, the Nos. 6 and 8 players in the world, will tee off right before them on Sunday.
Masters 2017: TV schedule and coverage for final round
CBS has the Sunday broadcast from Augusta.


It’ll be a dramatic day of golf at Augusta National Golf Club. That’s always the case on Sunday at the Masters, and nothing the players could’ve done this year would’ve changed it. But it seems primed to be an especially interesting day because of the way the 54-hole leaderboard stacks up. We’re probably in for a lot of suspense.
The top of the leaderboard is full of players with different backstories who all happen to be playing top-flight golf this weekend. Rose and Garcia have enjoyed similarly long career arcs among the best players in the world, and both have been close to winning a lot of majors. But Garcia hasn’t won a single one yet, and Rose has “just” a 2013 U.S. Open title to his major championship name. They’ll have a great competition.
Spieth and Fowler are two of the greatest players in the world, and both happen to be 20-something Americans in the top 10 in the World Golf Ranking. They’re faces of the sport throughout the United States, at the forefront of the generation of players who will carry the torch here in a post-Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson era. (Not that Mickelson’s gone yet, of course. He’s still relevant in this tournament.)
There are a handful of veteran journeymen in contention, like William McGirt and Charley Hoffman. There are young guns on the verge of what seems like decade-long runs at the top of the sport, like Belgian Thomas Pieters and Spaniard Jon Rahm. There are some of the best players in the world, some guys you’d never expect to be competing, and a whole lot of players who you could classify somewhere in the middle.
CBS has the live television broadcast of the final round. That begins at 2 p.m. ET, an hour earlier than the TV starts for the first three rounds, and runs through the green jacket ceremony that follows the competition. There is also an array of streaming options on the Masters’ official website. Here’s the full list of coverage choices. All times are Eastern:
TV:
2-7 p.m.: Live final-round coverage - CBS
Streaming at Masters.com:
10:15 a.m.-7 p.m.: Featured groups
11 a.m.-1 p.m.: Masters on the Range
11:45 a.m.-6 p.m.: Amen Corner
12:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m.: Holes No. 15 and 16
3 p.m.-7 p.m.: TV broadcast


















