Adam Hadwin on top, Scottie
Scheffler one back at Memorial
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[June 07, 2024]
Adam Hadwin of Canada racked up eight birdies and secured the
first-round lead at the Memorial Tournament on Thursday at Muirfield
Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio.
In a stacked field of 73 players at the $20 million signature event,
Hadwin posted a 6-under 66 and leads World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler
by one shot.
Xander Schauffele shot a bogey-free, 4-under 68 for his first
competitive round since winning the PGA Championship last month. He
is tied for third with Collin Morikawa, Sweden's Ludvig Aberg and
Canada's Corey Conners.
Hadwin started his round with a downhill, 29-foot birdie putt at the
first hole and added a 35 1/2-footer at the par-5 fifth. Those were
two of his four birdies on the front nine before a bogey at No. 8.
His four birdies on the back nine were much shorter, none longer
than 5 feet, and he stood at 7 under before bogeying his last.
"I feel pretty comfortable right now over the golf ball with kind of
the entire game," Hadwin said. "I never felt rushed, I never felt
like the -- as I kept making birdies, like I was getting ahead of
myself or anything like that. Very comfortable. So I feel in a lot
better position to kind of handle any sort of adversity that may
come or when it comes, I think, because I feel like it will come
around this place."
Hadwin, 36, is a top-60 player in the world but has just one PGA
Tour win to his name, which came back in 2017.
"It's only Thursday, a lot of golf left," Hadwin said. "... I took
advantage of maybe a little bit softer Muirfield Village with the
rain overnight and we've got three more rounds to go, and I've been
torn apart by this place before, so I know how quickly it can sneak
up on you. So just keep doing what I did really well today."
Scheffler played the front nine in 1-under 35 before picking up
birdies at Nos. 11, 13, 15 and 18. He nearly holed out for eagle at
the final hole, his approach back-spinning to 18 inches from the
cup.
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"Going out this morning, a little softer greens, a
little softer fairways and was able to put up a good score,"
Scheffler said. "It felt like I hit a lot of quality shots today, it
felt like my ball-striking was really good and I was able to hole a
few putts as well."
Schauffele did not feel his game was sharp in his first round back
from a few weeks off.
"If I didn't make some of the putts I needed to today, it would have
been like a 2-over probably or worse," said Schauffele, who holed a
32-foot birdie at No. 4 and a nearly 20-footer at No. 7. "So, again,
really happy I was able to see the -- I saw the lines sort of
quickly, even from the get-go."
Morikawa, who has placed fourth in his last two starts (the PGA
Championship and the Charles Schwab Challenge), was enjoying a
strong round until his only bogey came at the last hole to knock him
out of a tie at 5 under. His highlight was a hole-out for eagle at
the par-4 second from 133 yards.
"We decided to hit sand wedge just so I could hit it as hard as I
could and I was never going over the green," Morikawa said. "Before
the ball's landing I think (caddie Jonathan Jakovac) was talking
about it going in, and thankfully it did, and it was nice."
Defending Memorial champion Viktor Hovland of Norway is one of five
players tied at 3-under 69, and Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland is
part of a group at 2-under 70.
--Field Level Media
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