Okay, so I got this question stuck in my head the other day: just how many pars did all the players make, combined, during the 2022 Masters? It sounds simple, but sometimes finding these specific stats takes a little digging.

My first instinct was just to hop online. I opened up my browser and typed in something like “total pars made 2022 Masters tournament”. You know how it is, sometimes you get lucky and the answer pops right up.
This time, it wasn’t quite that straightforward. I saw lots of results about Scottie Scheffler winning, scores for individual players, hole-by-hole breakdowns, but not the grand total I was looking for right away.
So, I had to refine my approach. I started looking for sites that specialize in golf stats or maybe official tournament recaps. I figured the official Masters site or maybe the PGA Tour site might have detailed stats archives. I clicked around a few likely looking spots.
Found a few pages with round summaries and player scorecards. That was closer. My thinking then was, okay, if I can’t find the total compiled number, maybe I can find the total number of holes played and subtract the birdies, eagles, bogeys, doubles, etc. But man, that sounded like a lot of work, adding up every player’s scorecard.
I kept searching, trying variations like “2022 Masters tournament aggregate stats” or “how many pars scored Masters 2022”. Finally, I stumbled across a few sports statistics sites and golf news articles that summarized the tournament in great detail. One of them had a breakdown of scoring averages and, bingo, tucked away in the analysis or a stats table was the number I was after.

It took a bit more clicking than I first thought, but I eventually confirmed the figure.
The Grand Total
After digging through those stats pages, here’s what I found:
- There were 4141 total pars recorded during the 2022 Masters.
It’s always interesting to see these kinds of numbers. Gives you a different perspective on the tournament beyond just who won. Took a few minutes, but got the answer in the end. Just a little bit of web searching persistence.