2016 Recap & Results

Memorial Tournament Winner - William McGirt

Dates

May 30 - June 5

Purse

$8,500,000

Par

36-36=72

Yardage

7,265

William McGirt Wins the 2016 Memorial Tournament


DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - William McGirt thought he hit it big when he won the Cabarrus Classic and pocketed $16,000, the second-largest prize on the Tar Heel Tour.

That was in 2007, and it felt like a lifetime ago compared with the perks from winning the Memorial on Sunday.

The victory was worth $1.53 million and a three-year exemption for a guy who once dreamed of simply having a PGA Tour card.

Waiting to congratulate him was tournament host Jack Nicklaus, who raved about the bunker shot on the 18th hole that kept McGirt in the playoff at Muirfield Village, and the flop shot from behind the 18th green that led to a 6-foot putt and his first PGA Tour victory in his 165th try.

U.S. Open qualifying? Take the day off.

McGirt moves up to No. 43 in the world and was assured a spot in his first national championship.

"It will all sink in at some point," McGirt said.

This was a long time coming.

McGirt couldn't count all the mini-tours he played and the self-doubts he ignored, including a four-month stretch in which he only saw his wife for four days. But on Sunday against the strongest field of the year for a regular PGA Tour event, McGirt made his first victory one to remember.

He played the final 22 holes at Muirfield Village without a bogey. His final par in regulation was the most important, a two-putt from 65 feet for a 1-under 71 that allowed him to join Jon Curran (70) in a playoff at 15-under 273.

McGirt won the way Nicklaus said he captured so many of his 73 times on the PGA Tour.

"I won half of my golf tournaments watching everyone else self-destruct," Nicklaus said. "And that's the way you win. I saw him coming down the stretch. I saw Jon coming down the stretch. The two of them played great. I felt that either one of them could have won."

Dustin Johnson dropped three shots in four holes to start the back nine, and a fourth bogey on the 16th ended it for him. Matt Kuchar was tied for the lead when he returned from a 90-minute rain delay and promptly hit the lip of a fairway bunker and made double bogey. He never recovered. Emiliano Grillo had a share of the lead until starting the back nine with four straight bogeys. Gary Woodland couldn't get up-and-down behind the 17th green and made bogey.

Curran, who knows Nicklaus from being a member at his Bear's Club in south Florida, looked like a winner when he hit 7-iron out of a fairway bunker on the 17th hole to 7 feet for birdie to join McGirt at 15 under. McGirt was battling his swing and trying to hang on. He saved par from a bunker on the 17th. He had the long two-putt for par on the 18th hole. And he was in trouble on the 18th in a playoff, facing a deep bunker shot to a back pin.

He expertly used the slope behind the hole and watched his shot roll back to a few feet to stay alive.

"That was a long bunker shot," Nicklaus said.

"I don't want to hit it again," McGirt replied.

Playing the 18th for the third time, Curran misjudged the strong wind at his back and went into the gallery above the green, and his pitch ran down the slope well past the hole, leading to bogey. McGirt also went long and played a perfect flop shot to 6 feet for the winner.

"Surprisingly, I felt no nerves standing over that putt and poured it right in the middle," McGirt said.

Johnson finished alone in third - his fifth finish in the top 5 this season - while Rory McIlroy (68) tied for fourth with Kuchar (73), Woodland (73) and J.B. Holmes (69).

Jason Day, a Muirfield Village member and No. 1 in the world, got to within two shots of the lead until he tumbled to a 74 and tied for 27th, matching his best result at the Memorial. Jordan Spieth shot 73 and finished 12 shots behind in a tie for 57th.

McGirt became the third straight Memorial champion to become a first-time PGA Tour winner, and it was the third straight playoff at Muirfield Village.

In his 12 years as a pro, he has played only one major, the 2012 PGA Championship. That was meaningful, even though he missed the cut, because he was coming off a close call at the Canadian Open in which he didn't look at the leaderboard the final round. He ran into Tiger Woods, told him what he did, and he said Woods told him he was foolish for not looking. McGirt didn't make that mistake twice.

And when it was over, his name was at the top.

The U.S. Open is now on his schedule. So is the PGA Championship at the end of July, and the Masters next April.

"I wondered for years if I would ever get to the PGA Tour," McGirt said. "And then once you get out here, OK, you've played 160 events. Are you ever going to win? But I think you have to get your nose bloodied some to learn how to handle it, and I definitely had my nose bloodied a few times."

# Name R1 R2 R3 R4 Total Purse
1 William McGirt 70 68 64 71 273 $1,530,000
2 Jon Curran 68 67 68 70 273 $918,000
3 Dustin Johnson 64 71 68 71 274 $578,000
4 Rory McIlroy 71 66 70 68 275 $334,688
5 J.B. Holmes 71 68 67 69 275 $334,688
6 Gary Woodland 68 65 69 73 275 $334,688
7 Matt Kuchar 66 66 70 73 275 $334,688
8 Patrick Reed 68 71 69 68 276 $246,500
9 Keegan Bradley 68 69 70 69 276 $246,500
10 Kevin Streelman 67 68 69 72 276 $246,500
11 Marc Leishman 69 71 69 68 277 $158,667
12 Tony Finau 70 69 70 68 277 $158,667
13 Charl Schwartzel 68 69 72 68 277 $158,667
14 Byeong Hun An 71 70 69 67 277 $158,667
15 Roberto Castro 70 70 71 66 277 $158,667
16 John Senden 69 70 68 70 277 $158,667
17 Webb Simpson 69 70 66 72 277 $158,667
18 Emiliano Grillo 67 66 70 74 277 $158,667
19 Adam Hadwin 70 66 67 74 277 $158,667
20 Smylie Kaufman 71 67 71 69 278 $88,643
21 Kyle Reifers 71 67 71 69 278 $88,643
22 Brendan Steele 65 67 75 71 278 $88,643
23 Matt Jones 71 68 68 71 278 $88,643
24 Phil Mickelson 68 69 69 72 278 $88,643
25 Robert Streb 68 73 64 73 278 $88,643
26 Soren Kjeldsen 71 69 64 74 278 $88,643
27 David Lingmerth 68 73 68 70 279 $59,075
28 David Hearn 66 73 72 68 279 $59,075
29 John Huh 69 69 67 74 279 $59,075
30 Jason Day 66 71 68 74 279 $59,075
31 Scott Brown 69 67 69 74 279 $59,075
32 Zac Blair 69 67 68 75 279 $59,075
33 Jason Dufner 68 70 70 72 280 $45,900
34 Geoff Ogilvy 68 69 70 73 280 $45,900
35 Lucas Glover 70 67 73 70 280 $45,900
36 Brian Harman 68 70 69 73 280 $45,900
37 Russell Henley 68 70 69 73 280 $45,900
38 Ben Martin 69 71 69 72 281 $34,000
39 Daniel Summerhays 72 67 70 72 281 $34,000
40 Ryan Ruffels 67 71 70 73 281 $34,000
41 Bryson DeChambeau 72 67 69 73 281 $34,000
42 Patton Kizzire 73 67 70 71 281 $34,000
43 Bud Cauley 69 73 66 73 281 $34,000
44 George McNeill 71 71 69 70 281 $34,000
45 Hudson Swafford 66 71 69 75 281 $34,000
46 Jonas Blixt 71 69 69 73 282 $25,500
47 Hiroshi Iwata 75 67 70 70 282 $25,500
48 Jason Gore 72 67 71 73 283 $21,930
49 Kevin Chappell 71 70 70 72 283 $21,930
50 Ryan Moore 70 67 70 76 283 $21,930
51 Charles Howell III 72 70 72 69 283 $21,930
52 Danny Lee 66 75 68 75 284 $19,822
53 Jamie Lovemark 69 72 70 73 284 $19,822
54 Jim Furyk 69 70 72 73 284 $19,822
55 K.J. Choi 68 69 69 78 284 $19,822
56 Rafa Cabrera Bello 69 73 71 71 284 $19,822
57 Alex Cejka 70 72 68 75 285 $18,955
58 Harold Varner III 68 67 71 79 285 $18,955
59 Spencer Levin 73 69 70 73 285 $18,955
60 Jordan Spieth 70 68 74 73 285 $18,955
61 Jason Bohn 67 71 71 77 286 $18,360
62 Anirban Lahiri 70 72 69 75 286 $18,360
63 Rod Pampling 72 70 73 71 286 $18,360
64 Russell Knox 73 69 70 75 287 $18,020
65 Camilo Villegas 69 72 72 75 288 $17,765
66 Bubba Watson 72 70 74 72 288 $17,765
67 Daniel Berger 69 73 76 71 289 $17,510
68 Luke Donald 67 73 78 72 290 $17,340
69 Ken Duke 72 70 72 77 291 $16,915
70 Scott Piercy 70 71 75 75 291 $16,915
71 Freddie Jacobson 72 68 77 74 291 $16,915
72 Brian Stuard 69 72 77 73 291 $16,915
73 George Coetzee 71 69 77 75 292 $16,490
74 Kevin Na 71 71 74 77 293 $16,235
Si Woo Kim 71 69 80 73 293 $16,235

Leaders

First Round:
Dustin Johnson 64 (-8)
Brendan Steele 65 (-7)
Hudson Swafford 66 (-6)
Danny Lee 66 (-6)
Matt Kuchar 66 (-6)
Jason Day 66 (-6)
David Hearn 66 (-6)

Second Round
Brendan Steele 65-67-132 (-12)
Matt Kuchar 66-66-132 (-12)
Emiliano Grillo 67-66-133 (-11)
Gary Woodland 68-65-133 (-11)
Harold Varner III 68-67-135 (-9)
Jon Curran 68-67-135 (-9)
Kevin Streelman 67-68-135 (-9)
Dustin Johnson 64-71-135 (-9)

Third Round
William McGirt 70-68-64-202 (-14)
Gary Woodland 68-65-69-202 (-14)
Matt Kuchar 66-66-70-202 (-14)
Adam Hadwin 70-66-67-203 (-13)
Dustin Johnson 64-71-68-203 (-13)
Jon Curran 68-67-68-203 (-13)
Emiliano Grillo 67-66-70-203 (-13)

Notes

Cut Notes:

75 players at 2-under 142 from a field of 120 professionals. This marks the lowest cut in Memorial Tournament history. The pr

Weather:

Thursday: Mostly cloudy skies with a high of 82. Wind W at 6-12 mph. Friday: Partly cloudy skies with a high of 82. Wind N/NW at 8-12 mph. Saturday: Cloudy skies and periods of light rain with a high in the mid-70s. Wind S/SE at 6-12 mph. Play was suspended at 5:02 p.m. due to lightning in the area with eight players left on the course. Play resumed at 7:15 p.m. and the third round was completed at 8:04 p.m. Sunday: Mostly cloudy, with a high of 79 degrees. Wind W/SW 15-25 mph. Due to inclement weather, the final round was suspended for 1 hour, 27 minutes, from 2:14 p.m. until 3:41 p.m.

Back to Past Results