Ben Crenshaw won his second Masters championship, one stroke ahead of runner-up Davis Love III.
It was an emotional victory for Crenshaw as it came just days after the death of his mentor, Harvey Penick.
Crenshaw and Tom Kite attended the funeral in Texas on Wednesday and did not return to Augusta until that night, on the eve of the first round.
[4] A 19-year-old college freshman at Stanford, he tied for 41st place and was the leading amateur, the only one to make the cut.
[7] Seve Ballesteros (9), Gay Brewer, Billy Casper, Charles Coody, Fred Couples (10,12,13), Ben Crenshaw (9,13), Nick Faldo (3,11,12), Raymond Floyd (9), Doug Ford, Bernhard Langer, Sandy Lyle, Larry Mize (9), Jack Nicklaus, José María Olazábal (11,12,13), Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Craig Stadler, Tom Watson (9,10), Ian Woosnam, Fuzzy Zoeller (13) Ernie Els (9,13), Hale Irwin (9,12,13), Lee Janzen (12), Tom Kite (9,13), Payne Stewart Ian Baker-Finch (9), Greg Norman (9,10,11,13), Nick Price (4,12,13) Paul Azinger, John Daly (12), Wayne Grady Trip Kuehne (a), Tiger Woods (a) Lee S. James (a) Guy Yamamoto (a) Tim Jackson (a) Chip Beck, Brad Faxon (13), David Edwards (10), Dan Forsman, Bill Glasson (13), Jay Haas (13), John Huston (13), Tom Lehman (12,13), Jim McGovern (10), Mark O'Meara (12), Corey Pavin (11,12,13), Loren Roberts (10,12,13), Lanny Wadkins John Cook (11), Clark Dennis, Scott Hoch (13), Steve Lowery (12,13), Jeff Maggert (13), Colin Montgomerie, Frank Nobilo, Jeff Sluman, Curtis Strange, Duffy Waldorf Steve Elkington (12), Phil Mickelson (12,13) Mark Brooks, Bob Estes (13), Rick Fehr (13), David Frost (13), Mike Heinen, Brian Henninger, Peter Jacobsen, Neal Lancaster, Bruce Lietzke (13), Davis Love III, Mark McCumber (13), John Morse, Kenny Perry (13), Dicky Pride, Vijay Singh, Mike Springer (13), Mike Sullivan Brad Bryant, Mark Calcavecchia, Hal Sutton David Gilford, Miguel Ángel Jiménez, Mark McNulty, Tsuneyuki Nakajima, Masashi Ozaki Thursday, April 6, 1995 Source:[8] Friday, April 7, 1995 Amateurs: Woods (E), Jackson (+11), Kuehne (+11), James (+13), Yamamoto (+17) Saturday, April 8, 1995 Sunday, April 9, 1995 Sources:[9][10] Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par Source:[11]