Best DraftKings Masters Lineup: Sample Builds for Different Contest Types
A contest-style guide to building the best DraftKings Masters lineup, with sample cash, single-entry, and large-field GPP builds. Includes a fast checklist for field updates and late news before lineup lock.

The best draftkings masters lineup depends on the contest you enter. A cash build is about getting six golfers through the cut. A big GPP build is about beating thousands of lineups, even if it means taking a few risks.
This post gives you three sample builds (cash, single-entry, and large-field GPP) plus a quick checklist to run right before lock at Augusta. If you also want the big-picture hub for odds, weather, and format stuff, start with PGA Tour Golf: Masters Betting Guide 2026.
One note before we start: these are lineup styles, not a copy and paste card. Swap players in and out, but keep the shape. The goal is simple: build for your payout, not your ego.
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What the Best DraftKings Masters Lineup Really Depends On
Lineup building is about fit, not just star power. The Masters is a four-round event, but half your roster can be gone after Friday if you miss the cut. That changes everything.
Your contest changes the rules. Cash games reward safety. Tournaments reward ceiling, birdie streaks, and a little chaos.
In cash, a popular golfer is your friend because you do not get buried if he plays well. In a GPP, that same chalk (the super popular play) can be a trap if he finishes 25th and half the field has him. That is why two lineups with the same top plays can still be built totally different.
So do not chase the perfect six names. Chase the right mix for your contest.
Read more: Who Will Win the Masters? A Data-Backed Prediction Framework
Cash Game Sample Build: Safe, Balanced, and Built for the Weekend
Verdict: This is the best build for head-to-heads, double-ups, and small 50/50s.
Best build shape
Aim for one upper-tier anchor (roughly $10K to $11.5K) who rarely posts a blow-up round. Then live in the mid-range: three guys in the $7.5K to $9.5K zone with steady form and strong cut odds. Finish with two value plays (around $6.5K to $7.5K) that can make the weekend without needing a career week.
Why it works
Cash is about avoiding dead roster spots, so six golfers making the cut beats two studs and four prayers almost every time. Cut equity matters more than being cute. You just need points on Saturday and Sunday.
What player types fit
Look for clean iron play, solid scrambling, and bogey avoidance. Think steady stars like a Scottie Scheffler-type anchor, plus mid-range golfers who pile up pars and birdies without nuking a round. With the 2026 masters players pool, there will be plenty of veterans who know this place and do not panic when the greens get fast.
Read more: Best DraftKings Masters Lineup: Sample Builds for Different Contest Types
What to avoid
Skip thin punts, surprise injury rumors, and guys who live on miracle putting weeks. Also be careful with golfers who are all driver and no control. Augusta can turn that into a quick double bogey party.
Takeaway: In cash, boring is beautiful. Build for six weekend golfers.
Single-Entry and Small-Field GPP Sample Build: Strong Core, One Smart Pivot
Verdict: This is the best middle ground for most players. You still want safety, but you also need enough upside to beat more than half the field.
For me, the best draftkings masters lineup in a single-entry contest has a strong core and one smart pivot, not five wild darts.
If you are stuck, build a normal lineup first. Then swap one golfer to a similar price point that you actually like. That is it. No need to get fancy.
Best build shape
Start with two golfers who can actually win (usually $9.5K+), then add two or three mid-range plays with real top-15 juice. Use one safer value piece who can make the cut and score. Your last spot is where you get a little different.
Why it works
Single-entry lobbies punish mistakes, but they also punish copy and paste lineups. You do not need to fade every popular golfer. You just need one or two spots where your lineup is not the same as everyone else's.
How to add leverage without getting weird
The easiest pivot is price and role. If the chalk mid-range guy is the safe click, pivot to the slightly riskier guy with more birdie pop. Leaving $200 to $500 in salary is also fine if it buys you a cleaner roster.
What to avoid
Do not force six contrarian plays. And do not use your pivot on someone who has no path to a top-10. Different is good, random is not.
Takeaway: In single-entry, stay solid, then get unique in one spot.
Read more: Masters Cut Line Betting: How to Think About Weekend Value
Large-Field GPP Sample Build: Ceiling Over Comfort
Verdict: This build is not trying to min-cash. It is trying to take first place.
In a huge GPP, a lineup that looks safe usually looks like 20,000 other lineups. You need ceiling, and you need a reason for why your different plays can beat the chalk.
Best build shape
Option A is stars and scrubs. Play two elite ceiling golfers (often $10K+) and then take three or four cheaper swings that can spike birdies. Option B is a high-upside balanced build. You skip the most obvious expensive name, load up on six top-20 types, and hope the chalk stud finishes 18th.
Why it works
You are building for a top-1% outcome. That means you can accept more missed cuts, because when you hit, you lap the field. Leaving $300 to $800 in salary is also totally fine here, and it helps you avoid the most common lineup combos.
Where leverage can come from
Leverage is not just picking a random longshot. It is picking a golfer with a real path to a top finish who is not going to be mega-owned. This is also where masters liv players and amateurs in the masters can be smart clicks when the talent is real and the ownership stays low.
Read more: Masters Full Field Odds: How to Spot Value Beyond the Favorites
What to avoid
Do not jam six longshots and call it a strategy. And do not get contrarian just to feel clever. Every weird pick should have one clear reason: form, fit, or upside.
Takeaway: In large-field GPPs, chase ceiling and uniqueness, but keep your picks explainable.
Last-Minute Checks Before You Lock Your Lineup
Quick check before lock. This takes 30 seconds. Even if you feel done.
- Ask: is the masters field set, or can we still get a surprise?
- Scan for masters withdrawals and late injury notes.
- Confirm your masters qualified players are active, not questionable.
- Make sure your build matches your contest: cut equity for cash, ceiling for GPPs.
- In huge fields, add at least one leverage piece so you are not duplicated.
- Remember the masters cut line: weekend golfers are where the points are.
Final DraftKings Masters Lineup Card
Cash card: One top anchor, three steady mid-range cut makers, two safe values. No punts. No drama.
Single-entry card: Two win-equity studs, a strong mid-range, one safe value, and one pivot that keeps you off the most popular build.
Large-field GPP card: Either stars and scrubs with birdie-hunters, or a balanced fade that bets against the chalk stud. Leave salary if it helps uniqueness.
Main reminder: the best draftkings masters lineup is the one that matches your contest, not the one with the biggest names.

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