Justin Rose and Sergio Garcia hold a one-shot lead heading into the final day of the 2017 Masters, but there are plenty of contenders close behind.The pair are on six under with Rickie Fowler one shot back while Charley Hoffman, Ryan Moore and former champion Jordan Spieth sit on four under.Two other past winners are close behind, with Adam Scott and Charl Schwartzel on three and two under, respectively.Here are the tee times for Sunday's action, and read on for viewing details and predictions as to how the final day might play out.TV Info:CBS Sports (USA), Sky Sports (UK)Live Stream: CBSSports.com(USA), Masters.com (USA),Sky Go(UK)Here is a look at the leaderboard as it stands:Sergio Doesn't Quite Make ItIt's set to be a thrilling showdown on Sunday, particularly between the two final pairs.Fox Sports' Shane Bacon is having a tough time calling it:Indeed, all four are firmly in contention and rightly so after some outstanding play over the first three days.Itwould be especially fitting for Garcia to win the green jacket on what would be compatriot and two-time Masters winner Seve Ballesteros' 60th birthday.The Spaniard is making his74th attempt at winning a major and posted another solid round on Saturday, per the Masters:His consistency through the first three dayshe shot 71, 69 and 70 and is the only player to have scored under par in all three rounds thus farhas given him a share of the lead.However, his rivals have posted scores of four or five under in that time, while Hoffmanwho would be an outside bet given who he's up againstopened with a 65.Garcia is yet to produce a similarly explosive round, and unless he can save his best for last at Augusta, he might just fall short even with another solid score.Spieth Exorcises Augusta DemonsSpieth's record at Augusta is almost unthinkably goodhe's made three appearances at the Masters so far and finished in the top two each time, winning the green jacket in 2015.However, the back nine of last year's final day saw Spieth infamously collapse and lose from five shots in front, with a quadruple bogey at the 12th doing much of the damage.The American's capitulation would define the event and prompted fears it would haunt him at Augusta for years to come.Spieth made par on that hole in his opening roundin all three, in factbut then shot a calamitous nine on the par-five 15th, another quadruple bogey. As ESPN's Jason Sobel demonstrated, though, the 23-year-old has not let it affect him:He was10 shots off the pace after 18 holes and is now only two back. He put in his best round of this year's competition on Saturday and made some sumptuous shots including his second at the 13th, per the European Tour:Even if Spieth fails to win his second Masters this year, expect another strong round from him on Sunday to put to bed any lingering doubts left over from his 2016 collapse.
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