Today in sports history: April 10
In 2005, Tiger Woods won his fourth Masters with a spectacular finish of birdies and bogeys. See more sports moments from this date in history:
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1949: Sam Snead wins the Masters
1949 — Sam Snead sinks a 20-foot putt on the 18th green to win the Masters, beating Lloyd Mangrum and Johnny Bulla by three strokes.
1956: Montreal Canadiens win the Stanley Cup
1956 — The Montreal Canadiens beat the Detroit Red Wings 3-1 to win the Stanley Cup in five games.
1961: South Africa’s Gary Player is first foreign player to win Masters
1961 — South Africa’s Gary Player becomes the first foreign player to win the Masters, edging Arnold Palmer and Charley Coe by one stroke.
1988: Sandy Lyle first British player to win Masters
1988 — Scotland’s Sandy Lyle sinks a 12-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole for a one-shot victory in the Masters, becoming the first British player to win the tournament and getting the green jacket from Larry Mize, left, the previous year's winner.
1990: L.A. Kings' three hat tricks a first in NHL playoff history
1990 — Dave Taylor, Tomas Sandstrom and Tony Granato score three goals apiece as the Los Angeles Kings pound the Calgary Flames 12-4, marking the first time in NHL playoff history that three hat tricks are recorded in one game.
1994: Jose Maria Olazabal's Masters win is 6th in 7 years by non-American
1994 — Jose Maria Olazabal wins the Masters by two strokes over Tom Lehman. It’s the sixth time in seven years a non-American has prevailed.
2003: Jean-Sebastien Giguere sets NHL record with 63 saves in his playoff debut
2003 — Anaheim’s Jean-Sebastien Giguere sets an NHL record for saves in a playoff debut with 63 in the Mighty Ducks’ 2-1 triple-overtime win over Detroit.
2005: Tiger Woods wins his 4th Masters with spectacular finish
2005 — Tiger Woods wins the Masters with a spectacular finish of birdies and bogeys. Woods turns back a surprising challenge Chris DiMarco with a 15-foot birdie putt on the first extra hole to capture his fourth green jacket.
2010: Bruins score 3 short-handed goals in 64 seconds on same penalty
2010 — The Boston Bruins clinch a playoff berth after scoring three short-handed goals in 64 seconds on the same penalty during a 4-2 victory over the Carolina Hurricanes. It’s the first time in NHL history that a team accomplishes the feat as Daniel Paille, Blake Wheeler and Steve Begin score the goals in the second period to make it 3-0.
2016: Danny Willett wins Masters after stunning collapse by Jordan Spieth
2016 — Danny Willett wins the Masters after a stunning collapse by Jordan Spieth. Willett shoots a closing 67 for a 5-under 283 total is assured his first major title when Spieth bogies the 17th hole. Spieth, nine holes away from another wire-to-wire victory, throws it away with a collapse around Amen Corner that is shocking even by Augusta National standards. Spieth was five shots ahead on the 10th tee and three shots behind when he walked to the 13th tee.

