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		‘Jack’s tournament’ at Muirfield tees off with $20M purse
 
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			 [June 01, 2023]  
			Jack Nicklaus won more major titles than any player in the 
			history of golf. The current crop of elite players on the PGA Tour 
			knows him as not just a legendary golfer but also the elder 
			statesman of the sport. 
 The Memorial Tournament, also known as "Jack's tournament," will tee 
			off Thursday at Muirfield Village Golf Club, the course founded and 
			designed by Nicklaus in Dublin, Ohio.
 
 "It's one of the iconic events on the PGA Tour," Northern Ireland's 
			Rory McIlroy said. "I haven't won it yet. I would love to be able to 
			put my name on the trophy and walk up that hill and get that 
			handshake from Jack."
 
 Multiple generations of golfers grew up looking up to the 18-time 
			major winner, now 83, as a role model. Some recent winners of the 
			Memorial, like Patrick Cantlay (2019, 2021) and Spaniard Jon Rahm 
			(2020), got to speak with Nicklaus early on in their careers when 
			they won the Jack Nicklaus Award, recognizing the top players in 
			college golf.
 
 "He's a very kind man," Cantlay said. "He is always open to sharing 
			advice if you ask him. He's always been very approachable. He's been 
			great to me over the years."
 
 In keeping with tradition, the field at Jack's tournament has 
			invited several young up-and-comers who don't otherwise have PGA 
			Tour status. This year's field will include Sam Bennett, the 2022 
			U.S. Amateur champion who tied for 16th at the Masters in April, and 
			Chris Gotterup, who was last year's Division I Jack Nicklaus Award 
			recipient.
 
 The Memorial also is the latest designated event on the tour's 
			schedule, so a $20 million purse is on offer and seven of the top 
			eight players in the Official World Golf Ranking are in the field. 
			World No. 6 Max Homa is taking the week off to attend his sister's 
			wedding.
 
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			 World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler has top-five finishes 
			in three straight events, including a T2 at the PGA Championship and 
			a T3 at last week's Charles Schwab Challenge. He has made 17 
			consecutive cuts and hasn't finished worse than T12 since October.
 The big names coming to Muirfield Village also include Rahm, McIlroy, 
			Cantlay, Xander Schauffele, Norway's Viktor Hovland and Jordan 
			Spieth. Schauffele leads the PGA Tour with 25 straight made cuts.
 
 The defending champion is Billy Horschel, who fired a third-round 65 
			last year before finishing at 13-under-par 275, four clear of Aaron 
			Wise in second.
 
 But Horschel hasn't loved his play of late, with his results 
			including four missed cuts over his past eight starts.
 
			 "The season's been pretty bad, pretty abysmal, to tell you the 
			truth," Horschel said. "I haven't driven the ball very well. It's 
			always been my strength. The iron play hasn't been great. ... But 
			I'm starting to see some life, starting to see some more quality 
			golf shots. My bad golf shorts aren't nearly as bad anymore. So, 
			yeah, it's getting closer, it's still not where I want it to be, but 
			there's life in the game finally."
 --Field Level Media
 
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