Hello, friends. Welcome to Masters Week, which is truly the pinnacle of the fantasy golf season. It’s a great week of competition with an elite field on the most well-known and iconic course in the world. Usually Augusta National does a great job of setting up plenty of drama throughout the week, and there are many different ways to get in on the action with fantasy golf plays this week. One exciting way to jump into the action is with DraftKings Pick6.
Below you’ll find some of my favorite picks on DraftKings Pick6. Pick6 is the newest product from DraftKings.
New users can Play $5, Get $50 in Pick6 Credits!
Updated on 4/27/25

If you’re looking for more edges in Pick6, check out our DFS Pick’em Simulation Tool, which you can access with an all-access membership.
DraftKings Pick6 Picks for the Masters
Collin Morikawa Better Finishing Position Than 13.5
There are two main ways to make Pick6 picks for the tournament. One is using the better or worse finishing position options. With this pick, I’m choosing Morikawa to finish either T13 or better for the tournament. We’ll have round-specific picks later in the week, but in this post, we’re looking at picks that run the length of the entire tournament.
Morikawa is a nice play here since he has finished in the top 10 each of the last three years at Augusta. He doesn’t have to win the event to deliver the win on this one. Another top-10 finish will work just fine. His best finish was a T3 last year, when he ended up seven shots back of Scottie Scheffler after a closing round of +2.
It makes sense that a well-rounded golfer who excels at creative shot-making and with his irons would have a strong track record at Augusta National. He hasn’t played a ton of tournaments this season but has finished in the top 20 in every single one, with runner-up finishes at the Sentry and the Arnold Palmer Invitational along with a top-10 at THE PLAYERS.
Over the last 12 rounds, Morikawa leads the field in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green and ranks fourth in Strokes Gained: Approach.
His well-documented winning drought full of near misses doesn’t need to be a reason to not select him in Pick6 with this comfortable finishing position line.
Sergio Garcia Worse Finishing Position Than 34.5
Sergio won the Masters in 2017 in one of the most memorable moments of his career. However, he has missed the cut in five of his six tournaments since that victory. The one exception was a T22 in 2022.
At 45 years old, he has had some strong recent form and will be playing in his 100th career major championship–an impressive feat by itself regardless of how he finishes this week. He does bring some momentum as well after winning the LIV event in Hong Kong and finishing third in the LIV event in Miami earlier this season.
With such a great field and playing four rounds compared to LIV’s three, I don’t think the veteran will crack the top 35, so I’ll take him to finish worse in this pick.
Updated on 4/27/25

Jhonattan Vegas Less Than 36.5 Holes Completed
The other way to make Pick6 picks for the tournament is to pick players to play more or less than 36.5 holes. Basically, the pick boils down to whether the player will make the cut or miss the cut. The Masters does have unique cut rules in that the top 50 and ties make the weekend instead of the top 65 and ties like a typical PGA TOUR event. However, the field is also smaller, with just 95 golfers in the mix, so making the cut is statistically a little more likely for any given player.
Some players only have one of the two options available (more or less), but they offer an extra boost to your winnings if you get it correct. For example, former Masters champion Fred Couples offers a 1.7x boost if he makes the cut (more than 36.5 holes), but selecting him to miss the cut isn’t an option.
For this pick, though, I’m going with an option that has both more and less on the board and taking Vegas to miss the cut, playing less than 36.5 holes.
Vegas will be playing in his fourth Masters this week but his first since 2018. He missed the cut in two of his three previous trips to Augusta, with a T38 in 2018 as his best result. He hasn’t qualified for the tournament for the last six years.
He’ll make his return this week without much current form after missing the cut at the Valspar and the Houston Open after rough first rounds of 78 and 76, respectively, at those two events. He did squeak through the cut at PGA National and TPC Sawgrass but finished outside the top 50. He has missed the cut in three of his seven events this season with zero finishes in the top 35.
While he is a recognizable name, he’s not a name I expect on the leaderboard this weekend.
Pictured: Collin Morikawa
Photo Credit: Getty Images