Innovation and Technology
IBM brings AI to the Masters digital experience
Golf, Masters Tournament, Augusta National, IBM Consulting, Artificial Intelligence, Digital Experience, Sports Technology, Fan Engagement, Video Archive, AI Agents, Generative AI, App Development, Innovation, Streaming, Data Analytics

Each April, the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club draws golf fans from around the world. Most will never set foot on the course. For 30 years, IBM Consulting has worked alongside the Masters Digital team to build the app and website that serve those fans, with one goal: making the digital experience close enough to the real thing that remote viewers feel part of the competition.
How AI turns shot data into fan insight
The Masters app uses several artificial intelligence tools to give fans context they could not otherwise get from a broadcast. The My Group feature lets users follow every shot by their chosen players, and an AI system automatically surfaces notable moments from other parts of the field. Separate AI models produce short video recaps, titled "Round in 3 Minutes", within minutes of each player completing their round.
A feature called Hole Insights draws on ten years of historical shot data to generate probabilities and context for each moment of play. For a given position on the course, it might show that players have historically had a 12.5% chance of birdie from that spot. Both standard AI models and newer generative tools are used to produce these figures in real time, adding a statistical layer to every shot of the Tournament.
Searching 58 years of Masters history
This year the Masters introduced a search tool for its Vault, a digital archive containing 58 years of video footage. The new system uses a network of AI agents to let fans find footage using plain language rather than keyword filters. A user might type in a player's name and a year, or describe a memorable moment, and the tool retrieves the relevant clip. The aim is to make decades of history accessible to fans who may not know exactly what they are looking for.
Where the digital experience goes from here
The Masters has framed its digital work as part of a broader mission to grow the sport of golf globally. If the app and website can give a fan in a distant time zone the same sense of involvement as a patron at Augusta, the Tournament reaches further than its gates ever could. That logic points toward continued expansion of the AI features already in place, whether through richer historical context, more personalised player tracking, or faster highlight production.
The Vault search tool, still new, suggests a wider ambition around the archive. As more footage is catalogued and AI models become better at understanding context, the depth of what fans can retrieve will grow. For IBM Consulting, the challenge is the same as it has been for 30 years: building technology that serves the sport without getting in the way of it.
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João Guarda
João Guarda is an upcoming writer for Sportsabc and the Ztudium team: primarily focused on sports, João has been contributing to the team since February 2025. Despite specializing in sports, João has a wide range of knowledge from literature, art, history to politics and economics.
Born in Leiria, Portugal; João lived in Paris, France for a major part of his life, mastering both the English language as well as the French and Portuguese Language.
He is currently studying Communications at Lisbon University and desires to become a proficient actor in the field.






