Augusta  (United States) (AFP) - World number one Jason Day and two-time major  runner-up Dustin Johnson couldn't make their Masters breakthroughs, but  both departed Augusta National with confidence their green jacket time  will come. The  two played alongside each other in the third-to-last pairing during the  final round of the 80th Masters on Sunday, but neither was able to  mount a serious charge at the title won by England's Danny Willett after  defending champion Jordan Spieth's quadruple-bogey nightmare at the  par-3 12th.
"I'm  sure he's killing himself for it. But we all do it to ourselves," Day  said. "Hopefully he just learns from it and gets better and comes back  stronger." Spieth's  disaster left him level second with England's Lee Westwood and meant  Australia's Day would keep the top ranking despite sharing 10th on  one-over par 289.
"I  just didn't feel quite comfortable with my swing," Day said. It's hard  to get anything going from there once you do that. My short game was  still going well, especially the putting. So I just need to tidy up the  long game a little bit."
Johnson shared fourth on one-under 287, but was proud of the way he fought back after a double bogey at the fifth.
The  31-year-old American birdied three of the next four holes and birdies  at the par-5 13th and 15th had him within reach of Willett before a  double bogey at 17 ended his hopes for his first major title.
"I'm  doing all the right things," Johnson said. "I hit it in all the right  spots. I hit some great shots. I'm definitely pleased with the way I  played."
And  both men are excited for next year's Masters, world number eight  Johnson -- the highest-ranked player without a major title --  anticipating better days after settling for his 11th top-10 major  showing without a victory.
"I  feel like I'm getting better each year, so I'm looking forward to it,"  Johnson said. "I feel great. I think my game is exactly where it needs  to be. I feel like I'm playing really solid. I feel like I've got  control of my game."
Day,  a Masters runner-up, in his 2011 debut, won his first major title at  last year's PGA Championship but yearns for a green jacket and was not  happy his last-day 73 matched the worst final round of any top-20  finisher.
"I've just got to try to focus on what I need to do for next year," Day said.
"I've  just got to keep myself working hard. Although it was a disappointing  week from tee to green, it wasn't that bad. Hopefully the hard work will  pay off. But I'll look at what I did wrong this week and try and  improve that in future tournaments here. I've got to keep fighting and  keep trying to win as many as I can."
 
 
 
 
 
 
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