1983 Recap & Results

Memorial Tournament Winner - Hale Irwin

Dates

May 26 - 29

Purse

$450,000

Par

36-36=72

Yardage

7,116

Hale Irwin Wins the 1983 Memorial Tournament


"Poetic justice," someone decided. In 1976, the first Memorial Tournament, Hale Irwin lost a four hole payoff to Roger Maltbie, who averted possible elimination with a now-famous "carom shot" off a gallery rope stake on the third overtime hole.

Now, seven years later, the 37-year-old Irwin had survived another taxing finish to capture the title. "Ever since the (1976) loss, I've wanted to win this tournament," he said afterward. But, as he waited in the scorer's tent while Ben Crenshaw and David Graham attempted to match his 281 total - and failed by a stroke, he insisted he hadn't allowed any reruns of ancient history.

"If you conjure up thoughts of so long ago, that become a negative influence," he noted," and I didn't want that." But he did confess "I was thinking playoff." Or maybe that should be HOPING playoff. As Irwin holed out on No. 18 (69 final round) for his 7-under-par Crenshaw was embarking on No. 17 at 7-under. Crenshaw missed the green and two putted for bogey to drop to 6-under. Needing birdie to tie he hit a fine shot to No. 18 to within 18 feet, but his potential tying putt slipped by and one Irwin challenger disappeared.

Meanwhile, on No. 16, Graham had overshot the green and into deep grass above right, with a bunker intervening. After using 5-and 6-irons on the 204-yard hole in previous rounds, Graham ruefully recounted "for some reason, I got up there today and pulled out a 4-iron and hit it 15 yards too far." Arriving at his ball, he decided "I had no shot," slashed it into the trap, exploded out 18 feet strong and two-putted for double bogey and 6-under. He parred No. 17 and like Crenshaw, needed birdie on the unyielding No. 18 -and again like Crenshaw, missed a tying putt from 25 feet.

Irwin was relieved and surprised. "It would have been naive to think that David would double-bogey and Ben would bogey to allow the events that happened to happen," he suggested. "You never wish a guy to make double bogey, but that was very nice of David to do that."

That he got a little help from his friends did not detract from Irwin's achievement. He EARNED the title: being the first player in eight Memorials to play all four rounds under par (71-71-70-69): coming within one of Graham's tournament record 280 total; and finishing with a 3-under-par 69 to 71 for Crenshaw and 74 for Graham. Irwin entered the final round 4-under-par, four back of Graham and in a six-way tie for sixth place. He made birdie putts of 15 and 18 feet on Nos. 7 and 8 to move within a stroke of Graham and one ahead of Crenshaw.

"I was feeling good," he said later, "because I was playing very well and they were falling back. That's when I felt like I had a chance to win. As Irwin stood on No. 12 tee, the sirens blew, signalling what would be the day's second long rain delay. "After that, I never had the same feeling" he con-tended. "I felt like I was hanging on the last seven holes." The former U.S Open champion did a pretty good job of holding on. Crenshaw had tied Graham with a birdie at No. 12 and Irwin joined them at 7 under on the treacherous No. 14, wafting a 5 iron to within five feet and sinking it for birdie. Crenshaw fell back with a bogey at No. 14 and up ahead, Irwin was finishing out a bogey on No. 15. Graham drilled a 10-footer on No.14 for birdie and a two stroke lead - and looked like he might be the first two-time Memorial champion. Irwin heated up the hectic stretch struggle with a 25-foot chip-in from the fringe at No. 16, reducing Graham's edge to a single stroke.

"It went in like a putt," Hale reported. Crenshaw matched the deuce on No. 16 moments later to also edge within one. And so the stage was set for the dramatic finish. Considering what happened to Graham, No. 16 accounted for a three-stroke swing. Actually more than that, because David had a bogey there in the third round.

Assessing his 15th PGA TOUR title, worth $72,000, Irwin, who is acknowledged as one of the most consistent of pros, said, "We (TOUR pros) all very much point for the Memorial Tournament. If you don't then you're not appreciative of what a golf tournament should be. It has always been my desire to win it."

Host Jack Nicklaus had predicted scores would be lower in 1983, because Muirfield's greens had been completely resurfaced (when disease hit the original greens) and were expected to be slower. He appeared to be right when Crenshaw and Lanny Wadkins carved their Muirfield best-evers, 67's to lead the first round. Andy Bean added a 67 in the second round, his Muirfield best ever. He had seven birdies in the first 11 holes to lead Crenshaw by 136-138. Graham, Wadkins and Peter Jacobsen were at 139 and Tom Watson projected himself into consideration with four birdies and an eagle in a 67 for 140.

Graham revealed he had been suffering from a case of "pink eye,'' but his game wasn't noticeably affected. He connected on five birdie putts in the last six holes in a 69 that netted a two-stroke edge over Bean and Hoch, 208-210, in the third round. Bean roared to 10-under and a two shot lead after nine holes, but finished with a 74, including a seven-hole stretch of four birdies and three bogeys. Hoch tied the tournament record of five consecutive birdies, starting at No. 5. Jim Thorpe closed with a 70 for fourth place at 283. Tom Weiskopf provided the final-day fireworks with a tournament record 65, seven under the card - despite a bogey on No. 18. In tying the front nine record of 31, he birdied Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5 and 8, with the longest putt 15 feet.

"It was pretty exciting," he attested. "I've never had nine birdies in a round before." Weiskopf finished at 288, two better than defending champion Ray Floyd, who apparently had lost the Muirfield combination. Watson also was among the 288's while Arnold Palmer authored the tournament's most spectacular turn-around: from a triple bogey on No. 2 in the first round to an eagle on No. 3.

Host Nicklaus never figured, after a first round 76, but still maintained, "I'd rather win here than any tournament I play." The new Muirfield greens, replaced in July of 1982, were very fast early in the tournament, but slacked off slightly. But players universally agreed with Crenshaw that they were "remarkably good for being only 10 months old." The Memorial purse was boosted by $50,000 to $450,000-plus prior to tee-off.

# Name R1 R2 R3 R4 Total Purse
1 Hale Irwin 71 71 70 69 281 $72,000
2 Ben Crenshaw 67 71 73 71 282 $35,200
3 David Graham 72 67 69 74 282 $35,200
4 Jim Thorpe 74 69 70 70 283 $19,200
5 Andy Bean 69 67 74 74 284 $15,200
6 Scott Hoch 72 68 70 74 284 $15,200
7 Calvin Peete 72 71 69 73 285 $12,900
8 Jay Haas 72 68 73 72 285 $12,900
9 Lanny Wadkins 67 72 75 72 286 $10,000
10 Jim Nelford 69 72 73 72 286 $10,000
11 Jack Renner 73 68 71 74 286 $10,000
12 Bill Rogers 74 71 69 72 286 $10,000
13 Bob Murphy 78 71 69 68 286 $10,000
14 Hal Sutton 72 73 71 71 287 $7,200
15 Payne Stewart 70 74 71 72 287 $7,200
16 Frank Conner 73 69 73 72 287 $7,200
17 Tom Weiskopf 70 79 74 65 288 $5,060
18 Mike Sullivan 72 72 72 72 288 $5,060
19 Fuzzy Zoeller 72 73 70 73 288 $5,060
20 Tom Watson 73 67 72 76 288 $5,060
21 Curtis Strange 75 69 69 75 288 $5,060
22 Bobby Wadkins 74 73 70 71 288 $5,060
23 Gary Hallberg 70 71 77 70 288 $5,060
24 Peter Jacobsen 70 69 72 77 288 $5,060
25 Doug Tewell 76 71 70 72 289 $3,540
26 John Fought 70 72 70 77 289 $3,540
27 Mike Nicolette 72 75 69 73 289 $2,992
28 Don Pooley 75 72 72 71 290 $2,992
29 Rex Caldwell 72 76 70 72 290 $2,992
30 Ray Floyd 72 69 76 73 290 $2,992
31 Tim Norris 74 69 70 77 290 $2,992
32 Tom Kite 74 71 72 73 290 $2,992
33 Tommy Nakajima 74 71 70 76 291 $2,610
34 Lon Hinkle 76 71 75 69 291 $2,610
35 Jack Nicklaus 76 72 70 73 291 $2,610
36 Barry Jaeckel 74 72 71 74 291 $2,610
37 Denis Watson 79 68 71 74 292 $2,370
38 Keith Fergus 76 69 70 77 292 $2,370
39 Dan Halldorson 72 72 76 72 292 $2,370
40 Masahiro Kuramato 74 71 69 78 292 $2,370
41 Steve Melnyk 71 72 72 78 293 $2,108
42 Ron Streck 73 76 72 72 293 $2,108
43 Andy North 75 74 71 73 293 $2,108
44 Bobby Clampett 71 73 74 75 293 $2,108
45 Johnny Miller 71 73 76 73 293 $2,108
46 Gary Koch 69 79 74 71 293 $2,108
47 Mike Donald 71 69 77 77 294 $1,940
48 Mark Hayes 73 74 75 72 294 $1,940
49 Nick Price 75 72 74 73 294 $1,940
50 Dan Pohl 75 75 74 71 295 $1,880
51 Vance Heafner 70 79 74 72 295 $1,880
52 Lee Trevino 75 73 75 73 296 $1,800
53 Scott Simpson 71 77 73 75 296 $1,800
54 J.C. Snead 73 76 73 74 296 $1,800
55 David Edwards 76 71 76 73 296 $1,800
56 Ed Fiori 74 75 73 74 296 $1,800
57 Roger Maltbie 74 74 74 74 296 $1,800
58 John Cook 75 72 74 76 297 $1,707
59 Donnie Hammond 74 73 68 82 297 $1,707
60 Gil Morgan 72 75 75 75 297 $1,707
61 Mark Lye 77 72 76 72 297 $1,707
62 George Archer 71 76 74 77 298 $1,675
63 Tom Purtzer 75 71 77 75 298 $1,675
64 Hubert Green 79 71 75 74 299 $1,660
65 Chip Beck 71 76 73 80 300 $1,640
66 Al Geiberger 76 74 72 78 300 $1,640
67 Bob Gilder 77 72 79 72 300 $1,640
68 Brad Bryant 77 72 77 75 301 $1,620
69 Dave Stockton 72 76 76 79 303 $1,605
70 Gary Player 75 75 76 77 303 $1,605

Leaders

First Round
Ben Crenshaw and Lanny Wadkins shot five-under par 67s and led by two over Andy Bean, Jim Nelford and Gary Koch.

Second Round
Bean moved two strokes in front with his eight-under par 136. Crenshaw was at 138.

Third Round
David Graham now was in the lead at eight-under par 208. Bean and Scott Hoch tied at 210.

Notes

Cut Notes:

70 players at six-over par 150

Missed Cut:

Bill Britton (77-84-MC), George Burns (75-80-MC), Tze-Chung Chen (80-76-MC), Fred Couples (78-75-MC), Bruce Devlin (74-83-MC), Bob Eastwood (75-76-MC), Lou Graham (75-77-MC), Ken Green (77-76-MC), Morris Hatalsky (84-74-MC), Mike Holland (79-74-MC), Min Nan Hsieh (80-71 -MC), Tom Jenkins (75-76-MC), Lu Liang-Huan (70-84-MC), John Mahaffey (77-75-MC), Mike McCullough (75-78-MC), Mark McCumber (77-74-MC), Larry Mize (77-75-MC), Larry Nelson (74-77-MC), Arnold Palmer (73-81-MC), Mike Reid (83-77-MC), Jim Simons (75-76-MC), Ed Sneed (75-76-MC), Lu Chien Soon (77-77-MC), Craig Stadler (77-79-MC), Leonard Thompson (81-75-MC), Howard Twitty (75-81-MC), Tommy Valentine (78-77-MC), Akira Yabe (77-75-MC)

Weather:

Thursday-cool and breezy. Friday-clear. Saturday-mostly cloudy with a few light showers. Sunday-thunderstorms, play suspended at 9:30 a.m. and resumed at 11:10 a.m. Play suspended again at 2:47 p.m. and resumed at 4:45 for a total of 3 hours 38 minutes.

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