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Golf: Stenson, Jacobson, Sterne, Points join Masters field

Swedes Henrik Stenson and Fredrik Jacobson and South Africa's Richard Sterne received official invitations to next week's Masters golf tournament on Monday. The players qualified for the year's first major championship at Augusta National Golf Club by being among the top 50 in this week's world rankings. American D.A. Points booked his second trip to the Masters with a victory on Sunday at the PGA Houston Open. Stenson rose from 53rd to 42nd by sharing second at Houston. Jacobson is ranked 47th this week, two spots ahead of Sterne.

Golf: Stenson in but Siem comes up short in Masters bid

Henrik Stenson's share of second place at the Houston Open was enough to secure his eighth straight Masters berth on Sunday, but a European tour title left Marcel Siem missing out on Augusta. Germany's Siem captured the European Tour's Hassan II Trophy in Morocco on Sunday and had moved to 49th in the projected world rankings list after his third Race to Dubai victory -- just inside the top-50 needed to claim a spot in the first major championship of the year. Siem's dream of playing at Augusta National was undone however thanks to the results later in Texas.

Golf: Stenson in but Siem comes up short in Masters bid

Sweden's Henrik Stenson will qualify to play in his eighth consecutive Masters after firing a six-under par 66 on Sunday at the Houston Open, but Germany's Marcel Siem will miss out on Augusta. Siem captured the European Tour's Hassan 11 Trophy in Morocco on Sunday and had moved to 49th in the projected world rankings list after his third Race to Dubai victory.

INTERVIEW-Golf-Stenson out to perfect transatlantic juggling act

By Tony Jimenez Jan 22 (Reuters) - Henrik Stenson is slowly returning to the sort of form that took him to fourth in the world in 2009 and believes he will compete regularly with golf's elite again as long as he can successfully juggle his membership of two tours. The 36-year-old Swede has a hectic time honouring his commitment to the European Tour and the U.S. Tour where he secured a five-year exemption thanks to his victory at the 2009 Players Championship in Florida, the event dubbed golf's 'fifth major'.
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