Patrick Cantlay at +3600 Brings The Memorial Tournament Focus

Patrick Cantlay at +3600 Brings The Memorial Tournament Focus

Patrick Cantlay is in the field at the memorial tournament, and he is priced at +3600 at Muirfield Village Golf Club. He arrives with multiple Memorial Tournament wins on his record, while Scottie Scheffler returns as the defending champion after last year’s title defense.

The setup is demanding again at the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday in Dublin, Ohio. Muirfield Village plays as a par-70 course at 7,569 yards, with rough around 4 inches and greens averaging about 5,000 square feet, so tee-to-green work is the clearest path to contention.

Cantlay’s Memorial record

Cantlay’s case starts with results at this event. He has won the Memorial Tournament multiple times, and that history is the main reason he is still being discussed as a betting option despite a recent run that has not been spotless.

The finishes leading into this week show both ceiling and drift. He was T7 at the Valspar Championship, T12 at the Masters, T8 at RBC Heritage and T10 at the Truist Championship, but he also went T32 at THE PLAYERS Championship and T35 at the PGA Championship.

Scheffler and Muirfield Village

Scheffler remains the standard at this event for a simple reason: he handled the course better than anyone else did last year. He was second in the field on approach when he won the tournament last season, and he was first on approach when he won it in 2024.

That approach profile lines up with the way Muirfield Village is being described this week. Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green will be very important, and the focus on Strokes Gained: Approach points directly toward players who can keep the ball in position and control long iron shots into small targets.

Jack Nicklaus course demands

“You don’t fake your way around Muirfield Village.” The line fits the test in front of the field, especially on a parkland-style layout where accuracy off the tee and elite iron play can separate the contenders from the rest.

For Cantlay, that is the opening. For everyone else, the margin is thin enough that a couple of loose drives or missed approaches can quickly turn a solid week into a chase. At a venue tied to Jack Nicklaus and built to reward precision, the players who find fairways and hit their numbers should set the pace from the start.

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