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The Memorial Tournament tee marker at Muirfield Village Golf Club in the rain
CADDIE Course Preview · The Memorial 2026 · June 4–7 · Dublin, OH

Muirfield Village Golf Club

PAR 72 · ~7,569 YARDS · $20M SIGNATURE EVENT · 36-HOLE CUT · STROKE PLAY

Muirfield Village is not a bomber's paradise. Where the modern Tour rewards width and speed, Jack Nicklaus built the opposite — a tight, tree-framed, position-first examination where the second shot is everything. Narrow corridors. Club-catching rough. Small bentgrass greens that shrink the margin on every approach. Over a recent decade the winner's average SG: Approach rank is 6.4 — against a Tour-wide winner average of 13.4 — and 14 of the last 16 champions ranked inside the top 10 in approach for the week. That is the most concentrated ball-striking signal in golf. And unlike most Signature events, there's still a 36-hole cut. This is what a major tune-up is supposed to feel like.

01Course Architecture

What makes Muirfield Village different

Position over power, every hole
A second-shot golf course, by design

Jack Nicklaus modeled Muirfield Village on Augusta National in his home state of Ohio, and he built the holes to get harder the closer you get to the green. The design rewards a fader who can control trajectory and shape. Position beats power here — this is an iron player's examination from the first tee.

Narrow corridors, club-catching rough

The fairway corridors sit well below the Tour-average width, and the rough is the kind that grabs the hosel and takes the long iron out of your hands. Missing the fairway doesn't just cost distance — it removes your ability to attack small targets, which is the whole game this week.

Small bentgrass greens

The greens average roughly 5,000 square feet — about 83% of the Tour average — on firm bentgrass. Misses get scrambled, not stuffed, which is why around-the-green skill is unusually predictive at Muirfield relative to a typical Tour stop.

The 2021 toughening

After a 20-under runaway exposed the course as too soft, Nicklaus lengthened it by 150+ yards — most of it on the par-5s — and brought back firmness and rough. Winning scores fell back into single digits and the low teens under par; the 2025 field averaged 73.41, more than a stroke over par. Exactly the test he wanted: every club in the bag, no week off.

The par-5s are the scoring engine

Four par-5s (5, 7, 11, 15) are the only place to consistently make up ground. The long par-4s — 2, 6, 10, 17, 18 — are where cards bleed. The winner feasts on the fives and survives the long fours.

June in Ohio + a real cut

Columbus in June swings between heat, storms, and soft-then-firm conditions. Rain softens the greens and opens scoring; wind on these small targets does the opposite. And unlike most Signature events, there's still a 36-hole cut — survival matters, which shapes CADDIE's cash logic.

7,569 yds
Course length
Among the longest on Tour
Par 72
10 par-4s · 4 par-5s · 4 par-3s
Four scoring par-5s
~5,000 sq ft
Avg green size
≈83% of Tour average
6.4
Avg winner SG: APP rank, 10 yrs
vs 13.4 Tour-wide
14 of 16
Recent winners top-10 SG: APP
The defining signal
$20M
Signature purse
36-hole cut in play
02What the Data Says

The SG hierarchy at Muirfield Village

Few courses produce a cleaner statistical fingerprint. The separator isn't off the tee — it's the iron in your hand on the second shot. Among Muirfield's top finishers, approach play out-gains off-the-tee by roughly 3.5x, versus about 2.5x at a typical Tour stop. CADDIE tilts hard into that reality.

SG: Approach
Dominant — the single most predictive skill on Tour. 14 of the last 16 winners ranked top-10 for the week.
SG: Off the Tee (Accuracy)
Critical — finding the short grass matters more than distance. The rough removes your ability to control the approach.
SG: Around the Green
Elevated — small bentgrass greens and penal surrounds mean misses get scrambled. ATG runs well above the Tour-average course.
SG: Tee-to-Green
Ceiling metric — every contender is strongly positive here. Ball-striking is both the floor and the ceiling at Muirfield.
SG: Putting (Bentgrass)
A bonus, not a requirement. In Scheffler's 2024 win, multiple top-10 finishers actually out-putted him and still lost on ball-striking.
The stat that defines this course: SG: Approach

Scottie Scheffler's 2024 win was a clinic — he led the field in SG: Tee-to-Green at +3.20, built almost entirely on +3.24 SG: Approach. That's the Muirfield template in a single line, and he went one better in 2025, winning by three more shots. The irons are the win condition; everything else is the supporting cast.

The stat that matters more here than most places: scrambling

The greens are small and the surrounds are penal, so a high share of approaches miss — and what a player does from the rough and bunkers around the green separates the field more than it does almost anywhere else. Elite ball-strikers who can also scramble carry a real edge.

The stat that does NOT predict outcomes: raw driving distance

Distance helps everywhere, but at Muirfield it's down the priority list. The fairways are tight and the rough is penal enough that bombing it into trouble costs more than it gains. Recent winners have ranged widely in distance rank — what they share is accuracy and elite irons. Don't pay up for length alone this week.

03Hole-by-Hole Analysis

Where scores are made and destroyed

Muirfield Village plays as a par 72 around 7,569 yards — four par-5s, four par-3s, ten par-4s. The par-5s (5, 7, 11, 15) are the scoring engine; the long par-4s are where rounds unravel. The closing stretch — three of the highest bogey-rate holes on the course — decides the tournament. Yardages below are the 2026 championship setup.

BIRDIE OPPORTUNITY
PRECISION REQUIRED
DANGER ZONE
MANAGEMENT HOLE
SIGNATURE HOLE
HOLE 1 · PAR 4 · 490 YDSMANAGEMENT HOLE
Downhill, downwind opener
Long on the card but it plays downhill and usually downwind, so it gives yardage back. A fair start — but at 490 there's no gift either. Find the fairway, take par or better and settle in.
HOLE 2 · PAR 4 · 459 YDSDANGER ZONE
The course's second-hardest hole
Statistically the second-toughest hole at the Memorial. A creek and trees pinch the tee shot and the approach climbs to a raised green — challenging the creek opens the best angle, but pars are hard-won. Bogey here is common; par is a genuine win.
HOLE 3 · PAR 4 · 392 YDSBIRDIE OPPORTUNITY
Short par-4 wedge
The shortest two-shotter on the front. A controlled tee shot leaves a wedge into a small green. A legitimate birdie window — missing it against the field is ground lost early.
HOLE 4 · PAR 3 · 210 YDSPRECISION REQUIRED
Long-iron par-3
Mid-to-long iron into a well-bunkered green. Par is a quality result. This is a hole where you take your three and walk.
HOLE 5 · PAR 5 · 547 YDSBIRDIE OPPORTUNITY
First par-5 scoring chance
Reachable in two for most of the field and the first real chance to make up ground. The green repels anything not flighted in cleanly — eagle is on the table, but so is a card-killer for the greedy.
HOLE 6 · PAR 4 · 455 YDSPRECISION REQUIRED
Driver hole, tighter line
One of the tee shots where players pull driver. The corridor tightens and position is everything — a fairway miss here turns a mid-iron approach into a scramble for par.
HOLE 7 · PAR 5 · 582 YDSBIRDIE OPPORTUNITY
Long par-5, water in play
Plays as a three-shot hole for much of the field, with water short of the green and three greenside bunkers. The layup zone matters as much as the tee shot. A birdie hole — but one that bites the greedy.
HOLE 8 · PAR 3 · 200 YDSPRECISION REQUIRED
Mid-iron par-3
Another medium-length one-shotter demanding a precise, well-flighted iron. Bunkers punish the miss. Par is the expected output for contenders.
HOLE 9 · PAR 4 · 417 YDSBIRDIE OPPORTUNITY
Front-nine closer, gettable
The shortest par-4 finish to the front. A good drive leaves a short iron and a birdie look heading to the turn — momentum into the harder back nine.
HOLE 10 · PAR 4 · 472 YDSDANGER ZONE
Brutal start to the back
A long, hard par-4 that opens the inward nine. Scheffler made double here in his 2025 win — the highest-bogey-rate stretch of the course starts now. Par and exhale.
HOLE 11 · PAR 5 · 588 YDSBIRDIE OPPORTUNITY
Reachable par-5
Long but reachable in two. After the test at 10, this is the reset — a scoring hole where contenders claw back what the long par-4s take away.
HOLE 12 · PAR 3 · 180 YDSBIRDIE OPPORTUNITY
Shortest par-3
Short iron into the smallest target on the property. Bunkers frame it, but it's the most gettable one-shotter on the course. A birdie chance the field expects to take.
HOLE 13 · PAR 4 · 455 YDSPRECISION REQUIRED
Long two-shotter
A long par-4 demanding a quality approach into a small green. Position off the tee dictates whether you can attack. Par here is a quiet, valuable result.
HOLE 14 · PAR 4 · 360 YDSSIGNATURE HOLE
The signature short par-4
Jack Nicklaus' favorite drama on the course. A creek crosses the fairway around 270 yards out and guards the right of a small, bunkered green. The wise play lays back to a full wedge; the bold one flirts with the water. Birdies and big numbers both live here.
HOLE 15 · PAR 5 · 561 YDSBIRDIE OPPORTUNITY
The easiest hole — and the last par-5
Rated the easiest hole at the Memorial and the final par-5 before the closing gauntlet. Reachable in two, with a creek working up the left and across the front of the raised green. A birdie here builds the cushion you need for 16–18.
HOLE 16 · PAR 3 · 218 YDSDANGER ZONE
Long par-3 over water
A long one-shotter to a green guarded by water short and right — miss right and you're wet. One of the highest bogey-rate holes on the course, and the start of the closing stretch. Par is a small victory.
HOLE 17 · PAR 4 · 503 YDSDANGER ZONE
500-yard penultimate par-4
A 500-plus-yard par-4 with the tournament tightening — a long iron or more into a guarded green under pressure. The 16–17 sequence is where back-nine leads quietly evaporate.
HOLE 18 · PAR 4 · 484 YDSSIGNATURE HOLE
The uphill closer
A classic Nicklaus finish — a challenging tee shot and a difficult uphill approach into a well-guarded green that protects par. Leads are defended or surrendered here. This is the hole the tournament is decided on.
Must-make birdie holes
#3, #5, #7, #9, #11, #14 and #15 — the four par-5s plus the short par-4s. Players who go to work on these holes for the week set the pace at Muirfield.
Bogey avoidance — where weeks end
#2 (the course's second-hardest hole), #10 (brutal back-nine opener), #16 (long par-3 over water), #17 (the 500-yard penultimate) and #18(the uphill closer). All five of Scheffler's bogeys in his 2025 win came on par-4s — four of them on the back nine. The back nine is where the tournament sorts itself out.
04Winner Profile

The Muirfield Village winner profile

What this course actually selects for
Elite, in-form iron play — non-negotiable

14 of the last 16 winners ranked top-10 in SG: Approach for the week. Scheffler's 2024 win was built on +3.24 SG: Approach. This is the first filter and the last — a target who isn't a strong recent approach player is a structural fade regardless of name.

Accuracy off the tee over raw distance

Finding the fairway preserves the ability to attack small greens. The rough is penal enough that distance-without-control is a net liability. Recent champions have ranged widely in driving-distance rank; what they share is accuracy and irons.

A reliable short game

Small bentgrass greens guarantee frequent misses, so the winner scrambles. Around-the-green play is more predictive here than at almost any other venue — elite ball-strikers who also get up and down carry a double edge.

Par-5 conversion

Four par-5s are the scoring engine. Players who go to work on 5, 7, 11, and 15 — and don't give it back on the long par-4s — set the pace. Averaging par on the fives doesn't win at this field depth.

Back-nine composure + a cut-aware floor

The closing stretch carries some of the highest bogey rates on the course. The winner protects on 16–18 rather than forcing it. And with a 36-hole cut in a Signature field, even contenders need a clean ball-striking floor to be there on the weekend. Comps: prior Memorial form and other Nicklaus / second-shot tests.

05DFS & Betting Framework

How to filter your targets this week

Run every player through this framework. The more boxes they check, the stronger the play. CADDIE's highest-confidence DraftKings targets clear all five filters.

01SG: Approach — top 20 in recent form

The primary filter at Muirfield, full stop. Prioritize iron play above every other category — 14 of the last 16 winners were top-10 in SG: Approach for the week. Every serious CADDIE target this week clears this filter first.

A big name without recent approach form is a fade here. The course rewards irons, not reputation.
02Driving accuracy over distance — fairways found, no chronic spray

Finding the short grass preserves approach control; the rough takes it away. Weight accuracy and shape control over raw length. The winner is long enough — but straight first.

Don't pay up for pure distance. Bombers who spray driver are double-bogey risks in this rough.
03Around-the-green / scrambling — top tier

Small bentgrass greens force frequent misses, and the surrounds are penal. Scrambling separates the field here more than at the average course, so prioritize proven up-and-down ability alongside the irons.

Poor scramblers who rely on stuffing every approach get exposed the moment the greens repel them.
04Course & comp history — weight prior Memorials and Nicklaus tests

Muirfield form repeats because the skill it demands repeats. Lean on prior Memorial finishes and results on other Nicklaus designs and second-shot venues as primary historical filters.

One poor Memorial isn't disqualifying — but a pattern of missed cuts here is a real, repeatable signal.
05Cut-safe floor — for DraftKings cash

With a 36-hole cut in play, cash builds need ball-strikers with a high floor, not boom-or-bust profiles riding a hot putter. Prioritize the players whose recent baseline survives a cold day on the greens.

A player whose results swing on putting variance is a GPP-only profile this week — not a cash anchor.
Coming Wednesday
Weather-adjusted projections with Kevin Roth's read, DraftKings Cash and GPP lineups, salary-relief value plays, and the full betting card — outright, top-10s, top-20s, and a parlay — drop Wednesday via CADDIE. Every pick is built on the framework above.
CADDIE · Arcline Analytics
Course-Adjusted DFS Intelligence Engine