
Elite field for host Jack Nicklaus' 50th edition of the Memorial
The Memorial Tournament is a bit younger than some other PGA Tour stops, but it's produced plenty of elite champions, from Tom Watson and Greg Norman to Tiger Woods and Scottie Scheffler – and tournament host Jack Nicklaus himself.
A collection of the best golfers in the world will help Nicklaus celebrate the 50th edition of the Memorial this week at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio.
The $20 million signature event is back on Nicklaus' preferred week of the golfing calendar, directly following Memorial Day Weekend. After Friday's second round, the 72-man field will be cut down to the top 50 and ties (plus anyone within 10 shots of the lead), one of only three signature events to have a cut.
The most notable name not in Ohio this week is Rory McIlroy, as the Northern Irishman preferred to play next week's RBC Canadian Open as his U.S. Open tune-up. That aside, the prestige of "Jack's tournament" is a big draw for the world's best.
"I remember watching this tournament growing up in Norway, and I didn't watch that many tournaments on TV," said Viktor Hovland, who won in 2023. "But I knew that, OK, this week is the Memorial Tournament and a list of great champions have won this event, including watching Tiger win multiple times when I was younger and, obviously, just seeing everyone shake Mr. Nicklaus' hand after winning on the 18th green.
"Like, it's pretty special. It's just such a unique golf course, such a cool place."
As with many PGA Tour events this year, the defending champion is Scottie Scheffler. The World No. 1 scooped up a one-shot win over Collin Morikawa amid his torrid 2024 season.
"People ask, I feel like a lot, 'What's it like defending this week?' I'm like, 'Well, what does that do for me? Nothing,'" Scheffler said. "I have some experience on the golf course that can be helpful, but at the end of the day, you start even par, and I want to be in contention on Sunday, and you definitely don't show up too high or too low."
Other past champions in the field include Patrick Cantlay (2019, 2021), Hideki Matsuyama of Japan (2014) and Englishman Justin Rose (2010). Matt Kuchar (2013 champion) was given a sponsor exemption along with Rickie Fowler and Jordan Spieth.
They will take on a par-72, 7,569-yard course that has limited the winning score to single digits under par for the past two years, and three of the past five.
With the third major of the year on the horizon, players like Xander Schauffele are trying to round their game into peak form. Schauffele has yet to finish top-five this season after capturing two majors last year.
"You have to play really well. If you're playing really well, I think U.S. Opens are a tricky task because it can make you feel like you're not playing well and that's where that mental part comes in," Schauffele said.
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New Straits Times
9 hours ago
- New Straits Times
No.1 Scheffler sizzling with three wins heading into US Open
OAKMONT, United States: Top-ranked Scottie Scheffler enters next week's US Open with three victories in four starts, including a third career major title, and will be the man to beat at Oakmont. The 28-year-old American won last month's PGA Championship at Quail Hollow after capturing Masters green jackets in 2022 and 2024 and has three top-seven finishes in his past four US Open starts. "Scottie is obviously the best there is right now," US rival Rickie Fowler said. "He's someone that obviously has proven he's in very much control of his game." Scheffler defended his title last week at the PGA Memorial tournament, his ninth win in a row when leading after 54 holes, and won the Byron Nelson last month by matching the lowest 72-hole stroke total in PGA Tour history. After winning nine times last year, including Paris Olympic gold, and bouncing back from a right hand injury that sidelined him for a month at the start of this season, Scheffler has found his most dominant form. He won by eight strokes at the Byron Nelson, five shots at the PGA for his largest major win margin and four at the Memorial. "Look at the record he has had the last few years. It's unbelievable," said 18-time major winner Jack Nicklaus, the Memorial host. "He'll compete to what he has to do. He doesn't want to brag about what he does but he has the ability to bring his level to whatever level it needs to be. That's what good players do. And he's not a good player. He's a great player." American Ben Griffin, who has won twice in the past two months and finished second at Memorial, was a junior rival of Scheffler. "He definitely wasn't as dominant as he is now," Griffin said. "He has just really perfected his craft and really loves the grind and is always trying to get better, so that's what separates him so much from a lot of guys is he has just put in so many hours of being pretty much a robot." Such relentless form, Scheffler said, comes from being patient and smart when playing with the lead. "I try and bring the same level of intensity to Thursday as you do Sunday," Scheffler said. "So when you're coming out here late on Sunday, nothing really changes for me because I try to bring that intensity to the first tee on Thursday." Fellow shotmakers remain most impressed at just how well Scheffler can control his golf ball when it matters most. "The way that he can control his distances with different trajectories, different shapes, I think that's pretty impressive," Austrian Sepp Straka said of Scheffler. "With his iron shots, that's probably the most impressive thing. But it's a long list of things that makes him impressive. That's why he's as good as he is." Three-time major winner Jordan Spieth, says Scheffler's trademark consistency comes from what he can do with the face of his club. "His consistency is ridiculous," Spieth said. "And then that just leads to his distance control being phenomenal. It's elite consistency because his tempo and club face control yields these kind of results." — AFP


The Star
17 hours ago
- The Star
Scheffler in dazzling form
PEOPLE have long spoken about the men's US Open championship as being the most challenging test in golf. Coming from the very best that have played this game, there's nothing to suggest that that is not the case. At the 125th staging of the US Open at Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pennsylvania, starting Thursday, we can expect more of the same as the leading names in the sport battle it out for the season's third major. As things stand, American Scottie Scheffler, the world No. 1 and champion at the 2025 PGA Championship last month, arrives in Oakmont as the favourite, and the player everyone will be out to thwart. Northern Ireland's Rory McIlroy, winner of the Masters in April, will be keen to add another major to his collection of five titles, including the US Open he won in 2011 at Congressional Country Club in Bethesda, Maryland. Bryson DeChambeau, the defending champion of this title, will be plotting to capture a third US Open crown, following his successes at Winged Foot Golf Club in New York in 2020 and at Pinehurst No. 2 in North Carolina last year. Xander Schauffele, winner of two of the majors last season – the PGA Championship and the British Open – is also expected to be in the mix at Oakmont. The world No. 3 can be as consistent as they come, and at Oakmont, the winner will need to be just that. Halfway to the career Grand Slam, Schauffele would dearly love to add the third quarter to the equation. So too will Brooks Koepka be out to make it three US Open titles o go along with his three PGA Championships. The LIV star attraction often appears to bring his best game to the big occasions, and he's bent on showing that again this week. Jon Rahm of Spain, another of the multiple major winners and also from the LIV stable, will be aiming for a second US Open title following his exploits in 2021 at Torrey Pines Golf Course in San Diego, California. Among the other notables who could throw their names into the hat on the back nine on Sunday is Collin Morikawa, a player with precision accuracy – a trait that should prove crucial around Oakmont. Scheffler has been the outstanding player over the past three and a half seasons or so, and having him tipped as the leading candidate this week comes as no surprise. The tall Texan has won three of his last four tournaments on the PGA Tour, including his third major last month. He is in dazzling form, and he looks like a solid bet for next Sunday. Such has been his dominance in the men's game that he is now often being spoken of in the same breath as Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods. Indeed, no player has been more rampant and successful than Scheffler in the men's game since Woods' reign. The purists point Scheffler's putting and inconsistent slow starts are areas of his game that he might need to polish up on – and if he did, he would possibly become unplayable, they say. That being the case, Mark Leishman has trashed the talk that LIV players cannot, and will not, win major championships. The Australian, a winner of six US PGA titles before he moved to LIV Golf in 2022, is in the US Open at Oakmont having come through a qualifier. Not in the majors over the last three years, Leishman took aim at comments by commentator Brandel Chamblee, who said Rahm and DeChambeau 'fell out of contention at last month's PGA Championship because of LIV's format and a lack of competition'. The former world No. 12 said: 'I would disagree with that. I think the way our schedule is set up actually lends itself to being able to prepare very well for the majors. 'We're playing against great fields every single week on tough golf courses. 'Yes, it's 54 holes, but it puts a bit of pressure on that first round to get off to a good start because they are a little bit more of a sprint,' he added. 'We're still playing a lot of golf away from tournaments, enjoying golf more, and I think when you are enjoying your golf and it's not so much of a grind, that lends itself to better play.' One would have to say that if Scheffler fell out of the reckoning for some reason, then the title is up for grabs by anyone else in the field.


New Straits Times
3 days ago
- New Straits Times
Thorbjorn Olesen, Cristobal Del Solar tied for Canadian Open lead
Denmark's Thorbjorn Olesen and PGA Tour rookie Cristobal Del Solar of Chile each posted a 9-under-par 61 to share the first-round lead at the RBC Canadian Open on Thursday in Caledon, Ontario. Olesen and Del Solar took full advantage of TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley in the venue's PGA Tour debut. They own a one-shot lead over Cameron Champ; Jake Knapp is alone in fourth at 7-under 63. Del Solar birdied 10 of his first 16 holes to pass Olesen for the outright lead and threaten a score of 59. However, he failed to get up and down from the bunker at the par-4 17th hole and took his only bogey of the day. He missed a 15-foot putt for birdie for the outright lead at No. 18. "I just want to go and execute each shot," Del Solar said. "I think everyone kind of sometimes gets ahead of itself – ahead of themselves and thinking of the result or whatever. You just want to go out and just hit the golf shots ... It's very simple to say it, but obviously it's hard doing it." Del Solar's claim to fame is a round of 57 he shot on the Korn Ferry Tour in February 2024. It was the lowest round ever recorded in a PGA Tour-sanctioned tournament. But he said that wasn't on his mind as he came down the stretch Thursday. "Honestly not very much. I was just trying to hit good shots," Del Solar said. "I was just trying to stay in the present and have fun." Olesen, meanwhile, has eight wins on the DP World Tour but is seeking his first title in the United States. He made a 33-foot eagle putt at No. 18, his ninth hole of the day, and it propelled him into a five-birdie front nine. "My putting was exceptional today," Olesen said. "Don't think I missed any putts really out there. I definitely holed some long ones as well. It was nice to see everything go in." Champ, who hasn't won on tour since 2021 and dropped to No. 420 in the world rankings, is pleased to be back in contention thanks to his bogey-free round. "I have no expectations this week, the rest of the year," said Champ, who got into the field when Sahith Theegala withdrew because of an injury. "I'm just trying to play my game and stay within myself. I know, if I can do that, most of the time it ends up decently well. It's easier for me – whenever I kind of get in my head or start overthinking or doing things, it kind of gets a little sideways. So today I was very proud of myself for that." Shane Lowry of Ireland went out in 5-under 30 on his way to a round of 64. He is tied for fifth with Rasmus Hojgaard of Denmark and Trey Mullinax. The low Canadian for the day was Taylor Pendrith (65), who set the clubhouse lead in the morning wave before several players passed him by. Defending champion Robert MacIntyre of Scotland is among the several golfers knotted with him in eighth place at 5 under. Two-time Canadian champion Rory McIlroy is in danger of missing the cut after shooting a 1-over 71, which he ended with consecutive bogeys at Nos. 8 and 9. The Northern Irishman is playing for the first time since a T47 finish at the PGA Championship. "I actually felt like I played OK," said McIlroy, tied for 119th. .".. It was my first outing with a new driver, and I felt like that went pretty well. I hit some drives that I liked and that I liked to see, so that was encouraging. "Hit some good iron shots. Missed a couple of greens and didn't get them up and down, especially those last couple holes. Overall, I'm actually pretty happy with how I played. Obviously, need to go a little bit lower tomorrow and over the weekend to have a chance."