• 1976:
Roger Maltbie won the inaugural Memorial Tournament, defeating
Hale Irwin in a four-hole aggregate playoff. On the third extra hole Maltbie's errant approach shot appeared headed for the gallery when it hit a post, causing the ball to bounce onto the green, where both parred to remain tied; Maltbie then birdied the 18th hole to win the playoff. • 1977: Poor weather resulted in a Monday finish for the tournament; host Jack Nicklaus won by two shots over
Hubert Green. • 1980:
David Graham birdied the 72nd hole to edge
Tom Watson by one shot; Watson was bidding to become the first Memorial champion to defend his title. • 1984: Jack Nicklaus defeated
Andy Bean in a sudden-death playoff to become the first two-time Memorial winner. • 1991:
Kenny Perry won for the first time on the PGA Tour, defeating Irwin on the first hole of a sudden-death playoff. • 1993:
Paul Azinger birdied the 72nd hole by holing out from a bunker to finish one shot ahead of
Corey Pavin. • 1994:
Tom Lehman shot a tournament record 268 (-20) for 72 holes on his way to a five-shot victory over
Greg Norman. • 2000:
Tiger Woods became the first Memorial winner to successfully defend his title, finishing five shots clear of
Ernie Els. • 2001: Woods won for a third consecutive year, seven shots ahead of runners-up Paul Azinger and
Sergio García. • 2005:
Bart Bryant saved par from a hazard on the 72nd hole to win by one shot over
Fred Couples. • 2007:
K. J. Choi shot a final round 65 to win by one shot over
Ryan Moore. • 2012: Woods birdied three of the last four holes, including a chip in on the 16th hole, to turn a two-shot deficit into a two-shot victory. The win was Woods' 73rd PGA Tour victory, which tied Jack Nicklaus for second most PGA Tour wins. • 2013: Defending champion Woods posted a third round back nine score of 44, the worst in his career. He finished 20 shots behind winner
Matt Kuchar. • 2014:
Hideki Matsuyama won in a playoff against
Kevin Na; he was the first Japanese PGA Tour winner since 2008. • 2015: In the third round,
Tiger Woods shot an 85, the worst round of his professional career. Three-time winner
Kenny Perry played his last PGA Tour event. • 2016:
William McGirt won for the first time on the PGA Tour after 165 starts. • 2020:
Jon Rahm's win elevated him to the world number one ranking for the first time in his career. • 2021: Defending champion Rahm held a six-stroke lead after 54 holes, but was forced to withdraw after testing positive for
COVID-19. • 2024:
Scottie Scheffler wins the Memorial, becoming the first since
Tom Watson in
1980 to win five PGA Tour events in a season prior to the
U.S. Open. ==Course layout==