Sam Burns at the Masters 2026: Why the LSU Tiger’s Putting Superpower Makes Him a Sneaky Augusta Threat
Augusta, GA – Thursday morning can’t get here fast enough. The azaleas are popping, the pimento cheese is being slathered on white bread, and the roars are about to start echoing through the pines. We’re locked in for the 90th Masters Tournament, and while all the chatter is about the big bombers and the past champions, I’ve got my eye on a different cat. A Shreveport native who just might have the one weapon you need to survive the back nine on Sunday: the quiet assassin, Sam Burns.
I’ve been watching this guy since his LSU days, and let me tell you, the kid has grown up. He walked those fairways as an amateur at the U.S. Open back in 2016, turned pro in ’17, and has been grinding his way into the conversation ever since. But this year? This year feels different. Sure, he’s got five PGA Tour wins under his belt—including that gritty playoff win over Scottie Scheffler at Colonial in ’22—but the major has always been the elephant in the room. He’s knocked on the door, like that T9 at Pinehurst, but he hasn’t kicked it down yet. I think that changes this week.
The Hottest Flatstick on the Planet
Let’s talk about the real MVP of Augusta National: the putter. You can bomb it 320 yards all day, but if you can’t read those lightning-fast slopes on 12, 16, and 18, you’re toast. That’s where Sam Burns separates himself from the pack. We’re talking about the best putter on the planet right now. I’m not just blowing smoke—look at the 2025 stats. He ranked No. 1 in Strokes Gained: Putting. Nobody was better inside 10 feet. Nobody.
That’s a superpower when you’re staring down a five-footer for par on a Sunday with a Green Jacket on the line. Burns put it simply: he tries to keep it easy and just “start the ball on line consistently.” But the secret sauce? Acceptance. He knows the greens here are imperfect. He knows the grain, the spike marks, the pressure. He just lets it go. For a guy who missed the cut here in ’22 and ’24, that mental reset is huge. He said earlier this week that the prep just gets easier now. He knows the “do’s and do nots” around here. Experience matters.
- Strokes Gained: Putting (2025): Ranked 1st on Tour
- Putting Inside 10 Feet: Ranked 1st
- One-Putt % (10-15 ft): Ranked 1st
- Best Major Finish: T-9 (2024 U.S. Open)
The “Big Three” of the Bayou and a Tee Time with a Champ
While Sam is carrying the flag for Louisiana, it’s a busy time for the name “Sam Burns” across the map. Up north, the comedy circuit is buzzing with The Big Three - Sam Burns, Ben Stager, and Nathan Hare, who are currently killing it on stage. They just packed the house in Hamilton, and they’re bringing that high-energy 7PM show to Halifax soon. Talk about a versatile name—from the fairways of Augusta to the footlights of Canada, it’s a good week to be named Sam.
But back to the golf. If you want to know where the juice is on Thursday, set your alarm. Burns is teeing off in Round 1 at 8:19 AM CT (that’s 9:19 local in Georgia). And he’s not doing it alone. He’s grouped with Cameron Smith and Jake Knapp. Are you kidding me? That’s a box-office group. Cam Smith, the mullet-haired Open Champion who knows how to get it done in the majors, right there with Burns. If Sam hangs with Smithy for two days, he’s going to absorb that championship swagger.
Watching Burns hit the high draw on the practice range yesterday, one thing was clear: that swing holds up. He’s not just a putter—he’s got a complete game. He was T-19 at the PGA last year and T-42 at the Masters in ’25. He’s trending. He’s 29 years old, right in that sweet spot where the recklessness of youth meets the wisdom of a seasoned vet.
Everyone is looking at Scheffler, Rahm, and McIlroy. And yeah, they’re the headline acts. But when the pressure cranks up on Sunday afternoon and Amen Corner starts biting, I want the guy who leads the Tour in putting. I want the guy from LSU who has nothing to prove and everything to win. Don’t sleep on Sam Burns. This is his time to slip into that Green Jacket.