1994 Recap & Results

Memorial Tournament Winner - Tom Lehman

Dates

May 19 - 22

Purse

$1,500,000

Par

36-36=72

Yardage

7,104

Tom Lehman Wins the 1994 Memorial Tournament


"Bobby Jones once used these words to describe me early in my career," said Memorial Tournament host Jack Nicklaus at the 1994 closing ceremonies. "But let me tell you, Tom Lehman played a game this week with which I am not familiar." Nicklaus' words capped off a history-book week at Muirfield Village Golf Club.

It began with sunny skies and moderate temperatures that would only become warmer as the course dried to firm and perfect conditions for the entire week. Legendary female golfer Mickey Wright was inducted as the '94 Honoree, and defending champion Paul Azinger, undergoing cancer treatments, made his first tournament appearance to stir an emotional capacity crowd at the 18th hole ceremony. And a burly Minnesotan, winless on the PGA TOUR and reeling from a Masters runner-up finish a month earlier, would streak across a tough Muirfield course with quadruple 67's to stun galleries and set a new tournament record.

"This is one of the greatest moments of my life," said Lehman who used to sneak over to Muirfield and watch the pros play when he was in town for Big 10 college matches between his Golden Gophers and the Buckeyes. "I knew I could win on TOUR; I just had to stay cool. There were times out there when the crowd was cheering and standing, and tears would well up in my eyes." With a flu-stunted appetite and only two apples and a banana as fuel for the final two rounds, Lehman overpow-ered the field with an uncatchable performance.

But chasing Lehman and going in for the kill was Greg Norman who charged the Sunday lead with his own dra-matics and final round 64. Lehman never succumbed to the pressure and clinched his first TOUR win with a five-stroke victory over The Shark and a Memorial record 268.

Also chasing the run-away Lehman into the final round, Ohio State grad John Cook mounted an attack that would fall short of Lehman's untouchable record pace. His final-round 71 wasn't enough for the aggressive and flawless game of Lehman. Early in the week, Mark Brooks grabbed the first round lead with a near-record pace to close out the day with an eight-under par 64 which included a 31 on the front side. Tied behind him in second place were Cook and Lehman who finished with duplicate 67's. "I thought about the record, maybe around hole 12," admitted Brooks. "But on this course, you don't think about things like that too long. The course is too tough and there's too much tournament left."

Dry and sunny conditions continued into the second round where the fairways were firmer and the greens faster. That was just the recipe for Lehman, the man who finished second and third at the '94 and '93 Masters on Augusta's hard and fast grounds. Three birdies and an eagle fueled Lehman to his second 67 and a two stroke lead over hometown hero Cook.

Cook, a member at Muirfield Village Golf Club, matched the 67 and orches-trated his second bogey-free round. "I didn't think a bogey-less round was possible here," said Cook who didn't see a bogey until his 46th hole of the tournament. "Augusta and Muirfield have similar conditions in hard fairways and slick greens," described Lehman. "I learned a lot at Augusta that's helped me at Muirfield."

Paired in the final round on Saturday, Lehman and Cook were set to duel in ideal dry and warm course condition. Lehman, however, had a bout the night before with nausea and a stomach flu, and didn't know if he could maintain his two stroke lead. Amid Columbus fans whistling the Ohio State fight song, Cook felt certain he was poised to knock his opponent out of the lead. The lead changed hands repeatedly throughout the day, but neither man fell behind by more than one or two shots going into the final hole. Ending the 18-hole duel with a punishing blow, Lehman sent a 16-foot putt for a trip circling the hole's rim before it leaned in for a birdie.

Cook let a rare bogey fall, and Lehman's lead was increased to four strokes heading into the final day. But Lehman's record pace shut out the field on his way to becoming the l9th Memorial Tournament winner. "If there's one thing I learned at the Masters, it's that I can handle the pressure," said Lehman. "I knew I'm ready to win physically, emotionally, spiritually - you name it. I knew I could do it."

Another footnote to golf history was written by 1989 Memorial winner Bob Tway who recorded two aces - a feat which has never been accomplished on the PGA TOUR. Charging to an early first round lead, Tway notched his first hole-in-one via a seven iron on the 8th hole that sailed 187 yards to the hole. Although he slipped back in the field by Saturday, Tway repeated golf's rare feat in the third round when he sent his l55-yard nine iron shot to the bottom of the cup on hole 12. The dramatics of double aces in one tournament brought Tway's career hole-in-one total to 16.

# Name R1 R2 R3 R4 Total Purse
1 Tom Lehman 67 67 67 67 268 $270,000
2 Greg Norman 70 69 70 64 273 $162,000
3 John Cook 67 69 69 71 276 $102,000
4 Donnie Hammond 69 69 70 69 277 $72,000
5 David Edwards 69 67 72 70 278 $60,000
6 Robert Gamez 77 69 66 67 279 $54,000
7 Ben Crenshaw 72 66 74 68 280 $48,375
8 Mark Brooks 64 75 70 71 280 $48,375
9 Brad Faxon 72 68 72 69 281 $42,000
10 Jeff Maggert 71 74 66 70 281 $42,000
11 David Frost 69 71 71 71 282 $34,500
12 Gary Hallberg 77 66 68 71 282 $34,500
13 Steve Lowery 71 70 69 72 282 $34,500
14 Curtis Strange 74 69 73 67 283 $25,500
15 Scott Hoch 71 73 71 68 283 $25,500
16 Hale Irwin 73 70 70 70 283 $25,500
17 Scott Simpson 68 72 72 71 283 $25,500
18 Chip Beck 72 70 70 71 283 $25,500
19 Jay Haas 72 70 74 68 284 $18,180
20 Bruce Lietzke 72 71 73 68 284 $18,180
21 Yoshinori Mizumaki 72 73 69 70 284 $18,180
22 Larry Mize 74 67 71 72 284 $18,180
23 Bob Estes 71 68 70 75 284 $18,180
24 Kenny Perry 71 73 71 70 285 $13,800
25 Kirk Triplett 72 71 69 73 285 $13,800
26 Mike Heinen 71 73 76 66 286 $11,325
27 Billy Andrade 74 71 73 68 286 $11,325
28 Loren Roberts 71 74 70 71 286 $11,325
29 John Huston 73 74 68 71 286 $11,325
30 David Duval 73 73 72 69 287 $9,315
31 Hajime Meshiai 73 74 71 69 287 $9,315
32 Corey Pavin 76 69 70 72 287 $9,315
33 Larry Nelson 72 74 69 72 287 $9,315
34 Lennie Clements 71 71 72 73 287 $9,315
35 Clark Dennis 72 74 73 69 288 $7,725
36 Jim Thorpe 70 75 72 71 288 $7,725
37 Tom Watson 77 69 70 72 288 $7,725
38 Jesper Parnevik 70 75 72 72 289 $6,150
39 Peter Jacobsen 72 75 70 72 289 $6,150
40 Bob Tway 71 77 69 72 289 $6,150
41 Fulton Allem 74 70 72 73 289 $6,150
42 Bob Lohr 74 74 68 73 289 $6,150
43 Steve Stricker 72 75 69 73 289 $6,150
44 Jim McGovern 72 69 74 74 289 $6,150
45 Ted Tryba 70 76 76 68 290 $4,392
46 Mike Springer 72 71 78 69 290 $4,392
47 Davis Love III 71 70 73 76 290 $4,392
48 Ernie Els 72 74 68 76 290 $4,392
49 Steve Elkington 69 72 72 77 290 $4,392
50 Ed Humenik 74 74 74 69 291 $3,652
51 Fred Funk 73 72 74 72 291 $3,652
52 Brian Henninger 74 69 72 76 291 $3,652
53 Billy Mayfair 69 71 72 79 291 $3,652
54 Mark O'Meara 75 69 74 74 292 $3,435
55 Rick Fehr 75 72 71 74 292 $3,435
56 Nolan Henke 72 71 73 76 292 $3,435
57 Mark Calcavecchia 74 74 68 76 292 $3,435
58 Bradley Hughes 74 73 74 72 293 $3,345
59 Wayne Levi 72 76 68 77 293 $3,345
60 Lee Janzen 72 75 75 72 294 $3,255
61 John Mahaffey 73 75 72 74 294 $3,255
62 Craig Stadler 71 73 73 77 294 $3,255
63 Wayne Grady 73 70 70 81 294 $3,255
64 Allen Doyle 75 72 75 73 295
65 Andy North 76 71 72 76 295 $3,165
66 Paul Goydos 74 72 71 78 295 $3,165
67 Doug Martin 72 75 75 74 296 $3,105
68 Keith Clearwater 73 73 72 78 296 $3,105
69 Mike Standly 76 72 74 75 297 $3,060
70 Joe Ozaki 72 76 75 75 298 $3,030
71 John Daly 74 74 73 78 299 $3,000
72 Bill Kratzert 73 74 78 75 300 $2,955
73 Andy Bean 76 71 70 83 300 $2,955
74 Dave Rummells 74 71 77 80 302 $2,910

Leaders

First Round
Mark Brooks, at eight-under par 64, led by three over Tom Lehman and John Cook.

Second Round
Lehman, at 10-under par 134, led by two over Cook and David Edwards.

Third Round
Lehman, at 15-under par 201, led by four over Cook.

Notes

Cut Notes:

A total of 74 players at (73 pros, one amateur) at four-over-par 148 or better.

Missed Cut:

Michael Allen (76-80-MC), Ian Baker-Finch (79-76-MC), Dave Barr (74-77-MC), Jay Don Blake (74-75-MC), Glen Day (75-74-MC), Jay Delsing (71-79-MC), Nick Faldo (76-74-MC), Keith Fergus (76-78-MC), Dan Forsman (72-78-MC), Carlos Franco (80-75-MC), Jim Gallagher, Jr. (77-78-MC), David Graham (81-77-MC), John Harris (70-80-MC), John Inman (78-74-MC), Tony Johnstone (74-78-MC), Greg Kraft (74-78-MC), Neal Lancaster (71-79-MC), Andrew Magee (79-75-MC), Roger Maltbie (75-77-MC), John Morse (78-72-MC), Jack Nicklaus (75-77-MC), Brett Ogle (74-79-MC), Seiki Okuda (78-75-MC), Craig Parry (77-78-MC), Steve Pate (76-75-MC), Tom Purtzer (74-75-MC), Iain Pyman (76-73-MC), Ted Schulz (74-78-MC), Joey Sindelar (75-76-MC), Vijay Singh (78-78-MC), Jeff Sluman (80-72-MC), Payne Stewart (78-74-MC), Hal Sutton (73-76-MC), Greg Twiggs (78-82-MC), Howard Twitty (78-78-MC), Bobby Wadkins (77-74-MC), Lanny Wadkins (77-73-MC), Grant Waite (77-75-MC), Fuzzy Zoeller (76-73-MC).

Weather:

Perfect for all four days

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