How to Watch: The Memorial at Muirfield Village Golf Club

Here’s how you can watch Tiger Woods and the rest of the stellar field at the Memorial this week from the comfort of your home or office.

The Memorial Tournament is the second of consecutive PGA Tour events at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio.

The Memorial was pushed back from its original dates on the calendar (June 4-7) due to the ongoing global coronavirus pandemic.

Tournament organizers were planning on fans attending. It was to be the first event during the Tour’s restart to have fans but tournament organizers later decided not to proceed with spectators. Then on Monday, the Tour announced all remaining events this season will be held without fans.


The PGA Tour events Tiger Woods has won more than anyone else


Here’s how you can watch the Memorial this week from the comfort of your home or office.

Wednesday, July 15

Golf Channel on fuboTV (watch for free) and streaming on Twitter: Nationwide Challenge nine-hole skins match (Jon Rahm and Tony Finau vs. Ian Poulter and Graeme McDowell), 2-4 p.m.

Thursday, July 16

Twitter: 7-8:25 a.m.
PGA Tour Live on NBC Sports Gold (featured groups): 7 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
SiriusXM Audio: 12-6:30 p.m.
Golf Channel on fuboTV (watch for free): 2:30-6:30 p.m.

Friday, July 17

Twitter: 7-8:25 a.m.
PGA Tour Live on NBC Sports Gold (featured groups): 7 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
SiriusXM Audio: 12-6:30 p.m.
Golf Channel on fuboTV (watch for free): 2:30-6:30 p.m.

Saturday, July 18

PGA Tour Live: 8:40 a.m.-6 p.m.
Twitter:
8:40-10:05 a.m.
Golf Channel on fuboTV (watch for free): 12:30-3 p.m.
SiriusXM Audio: 1-6 p.m.
CBS: 3-6 p.m.
PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ (featured holes): 3-6 p.m.

Sunday, July 19

PGA Tour Live: 8:40 a.m.-7 p.m.
Twitter:
8:40-10:05 a.m.
Golf Channel on fuboTV (watch for free): 1-3:30 p.m.
SiriusXM Audio: 2-7 p.m.
CBS: 3:30-7 p.m.
PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ (featured holes): 3:30-7 p.m.

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Tiger Woods grouped with Rory McIlroy, Brooks Koepka first two rounds of the Memorial

Tiger’s back and the Memorial slotted him in a marquee group for the first two days.

Tiger’s back. And the Memorial slotted him in a marquee group for the first two days.

Woods will play the first and second rounds with World No. 1 Rory McIlroy and No. 6 Brooks Koepka at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio. Woods is ranked 14th, one spot behind Collin Morikawa who made a jump up in the ranking fresh off his second career PGA Tour win at the Workday Charity Open on Sunday.

Woods, McIlroy and Koepka form one of four featured groupings for the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide.

The other featured groups are:

  • Phil Mickelson, Justin Rose and Shane Lowry
  • Bryson DeChambeau, Collin Morikawa and Patrick Cantlay
  • Justin Thomas, Xander Schauffele and Dustin Johnson

The Memorial is the sixth event on the PGA Tour’s restart and marks the first time since 1957 that back-to-back Tour events will be held at the same course.

Complete first and second round tee times are expected to be released at 5 p.m. ET Tuesday.

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Memorial’s challenge: Keep an already quiet sport from being silenced by having no spectators

The Memorial faces a similar challenge as the Workday Charity Open: Keep an already quiet sport from being silenced by having no spectators.

The PGA Tour’s Workday Charity Open that ended on Sunday at Muirfield Village Golf Club was live (good) but not alive (bad), lacking the energy and jump usually associated with a firecracker finish to a sporting event.

Now it is on to the Memorial Tournament, which this week faces a similar challenge: keep an already quiet sport in need of all the electricity it can get from being silenced by having no spectators.

Say this for the Workday event, a one-and-done tournament at Muirfield Village to fill a hole on the PGA Tour schedule: It did its job and then some.

For the 75 or so tournament organizers, volunteers and media fortunate enough to watch the final 40 or so minutes, it was quite the show as 23-year-old Collin Morikawa won a three-hole playoff duel with Justin Thomas.

Morikawa likely will become a familiar name on leaderboards for tournaments to come, but Thomas was equally entertaining, mostly because his game was mercurial down the stretch. At times he looked deserving of his standing as one of the world’s top-five golfers. But at critical moments he also looked like a guy trying to keep his manure together.


The PGA Tour events Tiger Woods has won more than anyone else


It was riveting theater. Unfortunately the theater felt like it was located off-Broadway without spectators — as has been the case in the five tournaments since the PGA Tour returned from a coronavirus hiatus, and as it will be for the Memorial and at least the next four events on the schedule.

Thomas lamented the lack of buzz because of the lack of fans following him and Morikawa over the final hour of play. “Just in terms of the ups and downs and the shotmaking,” he said.

Blame COVID-19, not the safety protocols you may or may not agree with, for stiff-arming the fans. Keep your eye on the ball. The virus is the bad guy here.

Having no fans was disappointing enough, but the combination of no fans and no live coverage when it mattered was a double whammy.

For many TV viewers — at least those who follow social media — the fantastic finish was something of a letdown, given that Morikawa had won the playoff before CBS came on at 3 p.m. to show the final round in tape delay.

Originally slated to tee off in early afternoon, the lead group instead went off at 9 a.m. because of the threat of inclement weather.

Tiger Woods
Fans photograph Tiger Woods at the 2019 Memorial golf tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club. Photo by Joe Maiorana/USA TODAY Sports

Those tech-savvy enough to navigate the world of apps and live streaming were able to track the leaders in real time, but otherwise the most amazing moment of the day — Morikawa making a 24-foot putt at No. 18 to extend the playoff after Thomas had just buried a 51-foot gagger for birdie — was more than three hours old by the time CBS showed it on tape. On Twitter, three hours is three years.

Ratings are up

That said, the live vs. replay broadcast dilemma is not worth fuming over. It is a contractual issue with the networks that is not changing anytime soon.

Unfortunately, the fan ban only makes televised golf more vanilla. Golf on TV with no spectators is not a deal-breaker for many viewers — ratings are up since the tour resumed play at the Colonial on June 11 — but that may be a short-term outlook based on the lack of available live sports.

Given a choice between golf and lawn-mower racing, even viewers not interested in golf likely find the game more appealing than the alternatives.

As for this week, the Memorial always was going to be the well-dressed big brother to the Workday event, which will be played in California in future iterations.

But little bro cleaned up better than most expected, thanks to a star-filled field and Sunday’s final grouping of Thomas, Morikawa and 22-year-old Viktor Hovland, who like Morikawa is a star in the making. It’s a nice selling point when your leaders get billed as the future of golf.

All of which puts some pressure on the Memorial to bring the goods. Having Tiger Woods helps, as does a star-studded field featuring nine of the top 10 and 17 of the top 20 players in the world.

You want celebrity golf gold? The Memorial not only includes Workday holdovers including Thomas, Jon Rahm, Brooks Koepka (and Morikawa and Hovland) but also adds world No. 1-ranked Rory McIlroy, No. 4 Dustin Johnson, No. 5 Webb Simpson and No. 7 Bryson DeChambeau, who is both polarizing and interesting.

(Memo to the tour: please place DeChambeau and Koepka in the same group on Thursday and Friday; fireworks need not wait until the final round.)

So this week’s field has more star power than last week’s. But how will it play out?

What the Memorial does not need is to have William McGirt, Carl Pettersson and David Lingmerth — all former Memorial winners, but still — battling down the stretch on Sunday. Fans have suffered enough.

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Jon Rahm, Tony Finau to face Ian Poulter, Graeme McDowell in Memorial skins match

Jon Rahm will team up with Tony Finau to take on Ian Poulter and Graeme McDowell in a nine-hole skins game at the Memorial on Wednesday.

Jon Rahm will team up with Tony Finau to take on Ian Poulter and Graeme McDowell in a nine-hole skins game at the Memorial on Wednesday, with the match being shown live on Golf Channel.

The Nationwide Challenge nine-hole skins match benefiting Nationwide Children’s Hospital will be played on the back nine at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio. Golf Channels’ live coverage will start at 2 p.m. ET.

The match will be carried by GOLFTV internationally.

Fans can make online donations to Nationwide Children’s Hospital by texting “HELPKIDS” to 41-411 during the match.

The stakes

Skins will be worth $10,000 to $50,000 per hole with a total of $150,000 for the match.

There will be skills challenges on holes 14, 16 and 17 worth another $150,000.

There will be a hole-in-one challenge on the 12th hole that will give the golfers a chance to add $1 million through the Play Yellow campaign, a golf industry initiative to benefit Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals. That program was launched in March of 2019 with the support of Jack and Barbara Nicklaus.

Patrick Cantlay pleased with ‘rehearsal’ for Memorial title defense after Sunday 65

Patrick Cantlay warmed up for his title defense next week with a final-round 65 at Muirfield Village, one of his favorite courses on the PGA Tour.

If there were any questions whether Patrick Cantlay was ready for his title defense at the Memorial next week, he answered them on Sunday, shooting a 7-under 65 at Muirfield Village Golf Club during the final round of the Workday Charity Open.

“It actually felt like I gave some back coming in,” Cantlay said. “But I played really well, so I’m happy about getting a good feel on the golf course. The greens were a little quicker, felt a little like a first round of the Memorial out there today, so it was a nice rehearsal for next week.”

A year ago, Cantlay fired a final-round 64 to erase a four-stroke deficit and win his second PGA Tour title. How much did it mean to Cantlay, a former Jack Nicklaus National Player of the Year award winner, to win at the house that Jack built? In response to a congratulatory text from John Cook, one of his mentors growing up at Viriginia Country Club in Long Beach, California, wrote, “If I never win a major, I’ll always have this win.”


Updates | By the rankingsPhotos | Leaderboard


“He loves the golf course,” said Cantlay’s instructor Jamie Mulligan recently. “Reminds him of Augusta. It’s a demanding golf course and the complete player is going to be rewarded. Usually when he wins, I get mist in my eyes. This time I just laughed like Mozart. He looked so in control.”

Through the first three rounds at Muirfield Village, Cantlay was stymied by the slower green speeds and found himself relegated to the first tee time off No. 1 at 7 a.m. But he channeled some of the Sunday magic of a year ago. Cantlay started 5 under through his first five holes, including a 13-foot eagle at the fifth. A bogey at the eighth only temporarily slowed his momentum.

Cantlay made birdie at 9 to go out in 31 and tacked on three more birdies coming home. A bogey at the last wrapped up a round of 65 and a 72-hole aggregate of 11-under 277. Not a bad week for Cantlay, who is making just his second start since the Tour resumption.“It was really good prep work,” he said.

But Cantlay isn’t one to get to worked up over a back-door top-10 finish.

“Wins,” he told Golfweek recently. “That’s how we’re measured.”

But it does give him confidence heading into his title defense at The Memorial. No less than Jack Nicklaus wouldn’t be surprised if he was shaking Cantlay’s hand at the back of the 18th green a week from Sunday.

“He’s wound up real tight,” Nicklaus said of Cantlay. “I’m trying to get him to relax a little bit. I had two or three talks with him during the tournament last year, got him to enjoy a little bit. Even got a couple smiles out of him during the round. He’s a good kid, though. Good player, too.”

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Muirfield Village to play shorter, have slower greens for Workday Charity Open

Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio, will host back-to-back PGA Tour events this week and next. First up is the Workday Charity Open, followed by the Memorial. But the course will play differently for each tournament. According to a memo sent to players, Workday will feature a variety of tee boxes that are expected to make the course shorter. The rough will be 3½ inches tall and the green surfaces will run about 11 on the Stimpmeter. The Memorial will have higher rough and green speeds are planned to increase to 13-13½ on the Stimpmeter. And while there’s no official word yet, Tiger Woods is expected by many to play the Memorial.

Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio, will host back-to-back PGA Tour events this week and next. First up is the Workday Charity Open, followed by the Memorial. But the course will play differently for each tournament. According to a memo sent to players, Workday will feature a variety of tee boxes that are expected to make the course shorter. The rough will be 3½ inches tall and the green surfaces will run about 11 on the Stimpmeter. The Memorial will have higher rough and green speeds are planned to increase to 13-13½ on the Stimpmeter. And while there’s no official word yet, Tiger Woods is expected by many to play the Memorial.

Muirfield Village to play shorter, have slower greens for Workday Charity Open

Due to consecutive weeks of play, measures will be taken at Muirfield Village Golf Club to limit wear and tear on the course.

Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio, will be a busy place the next two weeks.

The PGA Tour is staging back-to-back tournaments at the same venue for the first time in 44 years and the golf course will play different for each event.

First up, it’s the Workday Charity Open, a tournament added on the fly to the PGA Tour schedule.

It’s a replacement event for the John Deere Classic in Illinois, which was canceled due to COVID restrictions. The Workday is the first of consecutive weeks of play at Muirfield Village – the Dublin Double, if you will.

After Workday, the club will host the Memorial, Jack Nicklaus’ annual bash that attracts scores of the game’s best players. Tiger Woods is expected by many in golf’s circles to resume play in the Memorial, which he has won a record five times.

But the golf course will be intriguing to watch, too.

Due to consecutive weeks of play, measures will be taken to limit wear and tear on the course.

According to a memo sent to players, Workday will feature a variety of tee boxes that are expected to make the course shorter while protecting tee areas normally used for the Memorial.

Rough will be 3½ inches tall and the green surfaces will run about 11 on the Stimpmeter.

The Memorial will have higher rough and green speeds are planned to increase to 13-13½ on the Stimpmeter.

The Workday will be played July 9-12 and the Memorial will follow July 16-19. The Memorial was originally scheduled to host fans but that plan has been scrapped, so neither event will have spectators on site.

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Memorial Tournament can have fans, but will they come?

How will Memorial organizers deal with dozens of safety protocols that will test how badly fans want to show up to watch golf in person?

Muirfield Village is about to find out if its bunkers are made of quicksand.

The private golf club in Dublin got the go-ahead Friday to allow a limited number of fans to attend the Memorial Tournament on July 16-19, becoming the first PGA Tour event to be played with spectators since the coronavirus pandemic shut down most American sports, in mid-March.

A maximum of about 8,000 spectators will be permitted on the 18-hole course at any one time, according to a draft prepared by tournament organizers.

Getting clearance from the state of Ohio was essential, but also the easy part. Next up: navigating dozens of safety protocols that will test how badly fans want to show up to watch professional golf in person, and how long they remain on site.

Wearing masks for hours on end in potential 90-degree heat? Mandatory temperature readings before entering the course? Social distancing on the hillside around the 18th green? We are about to find out how well that works, as the Memorial becomes a guinea pig for golf and many outdoor sporting events.

Tournament director Dan Sullivan welcomes the opportunity to show how his event can provide leadership in becoming the first tour event with spectators since the first round of the Players Championship on March 12.

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“The Memorial is looking forward to … (becoming) an example of how public gathering events can be developed and implemented with approved and accepted protocols in place,” the tournament said in a release Friday, hours after Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine announced a lifting of restrictions on specific large-group events, including the Memorial.

Sullivan said on Saturday that the tournament would begin announcing ticket plans in the next two weeks.

DeWine’s latest phasing out of restraints related to the COVID-19 pandemic takes effect in two weeks and also includes casinos, racinos, amusement parks, water parks and outdoor theaters, once they submit an activation plan. The overall ban on 11 or more remains in place, absent state approval.

A week before the Memorial, on July 9-12, Muirfield Village will host a new, one-time-only PGA Tour event that will be held without fans. The tour has not revealed the name of that tournament, but it will be sponsored by the software company Workday.

The new event will allow Memorial organizers to “test run” safety practices on tour players and members of the competition committee, including daily temperature checks and COVID-19 testing upon arrival and once during the week. Golfers at both events have the option of competing with or without masks.

Getting a head start on implementing safety measures on players, volunteers and staff is a big deal, but the bigger deal comes when fans show up for the Memorial.

The Memorial’s action plan, which undoubtedly will be massaged once Sullivan sees how the tour handles safety protocols at the five tournaments preceding the Memorial — all to be played without spectators — is impressive in its attention to detail. Its draft includes:

• Daily attendance reduced by one-half to one-third of normal. The Memorial typically does not release crowd figures, but the 8,000 estimate represents about 20% of maximum capacity.

• Each hole will include designated sitting or standing corrals, through which a predetermined number of spectators will be permitted. Each corral will be marked with a maximum number of fans and will be monitored.

• Nonsurgical masks will be required upon entry for all attendees, with exempted exceptions recognized. Temperature readings will be conducted at all entrances and to all those on the property through handheld units and thermal temperature readers.

• There will be no on-site bleachers.

• Players will be advised to not interact with fans.

• All general public shuttle transport will be eliminated.

• Media will be limited to 25% of typical attendance, and there will be a 50% reduction in CBS and the Golf Channel’s on-site crew.

It remains to be seen how placing restrictions on spectators will impact both interest in attending and attitude toward what transpires on the course. No one knows for certain, but Memorial organizers believe they will be as prepared as possible.

Rob Oller is a columnist for the Columbus Dispatch, part of the USA Today Network. Email him at roller@dispatch.com and follow him on Twitter: @rollerCD

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Tricking up new Columbus Workday event would benefit Memorial

The PGA Tour needs to put microphones on players and caddies during the Workday event, a one-and-done event that will be held July 9-12.

Muirfield Village Golf Course is preparing to host back-to-back PGA Tour events in July — a rescheduled Memorial Tournament with fans one week after a new, one-time event without.

As it does so, the chefs in the Tour kitchen should work up a creative concoction that takes advantage of the irony that a game associated with silence is best played with sound.

Few sports match golf in gamesmanship, comic needling and strategy discussion during actual competition. From Tiger Woods to Joe Hack, 18-hole conversations range from deep to self-deprecating to demeaning. Golf courses are the comedy clubs of sports.

Toss in the self-loathing and boo-hooing of bad breaks that are typical among tour players and you have the potential for TV gold.

Given that, the PGA Tour needs to put microphones on players and caddies during the Workday Invitational (Workday is the title sponsor, so let’s call it that until an official name is released), a one-and-done replacement event that will be held July 9-12 without fans at Muirfield Village. A week later, the Memorial will take place, and the tournament learned on Friday that fans will be allowed.

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But even bringing real-time banter to the televised-only Workday tournament may not be enough to distinguish it from the Memorial — to the detriment of both, considering either could get lost in the other’s shadow.

Memorial Tournament director Dan Sullivan has offered no details but assured that a clear distinction between the two events will be visible, if not necessarily audible.

″(The new event) will not diminish the Memorial presented by Nationwide,” Sullivan said, taking care to include the tournament’s title sponsor.

Here’s hoping Sullivan and the tour take as much care in giving the two events separate identities, or else millions of viewers might come to think of what takes place in Dublin as Tournament A and Tournament B.

That is blasphemy to Memorial organizers, but TV golf fans generally are not so discerning. After the four major championships, the World Golf Championship events, the Players Championship and even the FedEx Cup playoff events, most tournaments fall into the category of “others.”

True, some others are better than other others. Certainly, because of its association with host Jack Nicklaus and its above-average strength of field (i.e. recognizable players) and challenging course design, the Memorial’s reputation exceeds many tournaments. But is that enough to separate it from the pack if preceded by a less-established tournament played on the same course the week before? I’m not so sure.

It helps the Memorial that it will have fans, which makes it the first PGA Tour event with spectators since the coronavirus pandemic wiped out the last three rounds of the Players in March.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine’s office on Friday lifted restrictions on specific large-group gatherings, including the Memorial. Muirfield Village will admit a limited number of spectators, who must adhere to social-distancing guidelines.

Will the presence of fans help distinguish the two tournaments? Certainly, CBS will be able to present a “before-and-after” broadcast by comparing the same holes with and without spectators from one week to the next, and the on-course energy will improve.

But my sense is the tour needs to take things further by cooking up a format for the Workday event — say, some variation of a team event, perhaps grouping players into college rivalries or by state, and also adding tweaks like skins and longest drive or closest to the hole.

Gimmicky, sure, but this is a one-and-done event at Muirfield Village — a source said it is being used as a “test run” for a tour event sponsored by Workday to be hosted by NBA star Stephen Curry in 2021 in northern California — so forget how cheesy it looks. The goal should be to make it different enough to stand out.

But how different? That is where things gets tricky. Make Workday too entertaining and the Memorial might come off as comparatively bland, which is why the tour is taking a risk by presenting two events at the same venue on consecutive weeks.

It is a tightrope walk, so how to make sure the Memorial does not take the fall? Well, for one thing, the more exotic you make the Workday event, the better it makes the Memorial look in terms of “golf integrity.” That matters to golf purists, which tend to be the core fans.

So mic players for Workday and jazz up the format so it does not get lost in the shadow of its shared-course cousin. And by doing so you enhance the tradition and valued reputation of the Memorial.

Rob Oller is a columnist for the Columbus Dispatch, part of the USA Today Network.

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Fans will be allowed to attend PGA Tour’s Memorial Tournament in July

Jack Nicklaus’ Memorial Tournament is the first major sporting event to announce that fans will be allowed to attend.

The PGA Tour season is set to resume on June 11th with the first round of the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club in Texas, where the world’s best golfers will play on a quiet, empty course with no spectators in attendance. It won’t be long before fans will be allowed to attend PGA Tour events, though, after The Memorial Tournament announced Friday that it has received approval to host spectators during the event at Muirfield Village, which begins on July 16th.

Ohio Governor Mike DeWine said in a press conference on Friday that he had granted permission for the tournament to move ahead with spectators, after The Memorial had detailed a safety plan last month that will include tracking chips to monitor the movement and spacing of fans. It’s still unclear exactly how many fans will be allowed to attend, but if the event is a success, it could provide a blueprint for other sports moving forward during the coronavirus pandemic.

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