This Day in Masters History: April 6
Of the many Masters that ended on this date, the one in 1936 was only the third playing but it gave the tournament its first two-time winner with Horton Smith, who had won the first Masters in 1934. Smith was a shot ahead of Harry Cooper, with defending champion Gene Sarazen third. And on this date in 1978, John Schlee was a surprise first-round leader in the Masters with a 68, over a surprise second-place player Joe Inman, who had 69. But by the end, more familiar names Tom Watson, Hubert Green, Rod Funseth and the winner Gary Player were the top contenders. Player shot 64 to beat the other three by one shot.