Memorial Park Rewards the Aggressive—But Only If You Can Handle the Pressure
Jimmy Caldwell’s Take on This Week’s Texas Children’s Houston Open
I’ve walked Memorial Park enough times to know that it whispers a simple truth: grip it and rip it gets you in the game, but precision and touch wins it. After 35 years covering this tour, I can tell you that’s a specific skill set, and not every player who can bomb a driver 320 yards possesses the temperament to execute when the margin for error shrinks to inches.
The setup ESPN’s Pamela Maldonado describes this week is exactly right, and here’s what strikes me about it: this isn’t a course that punishes boldness. That’s rare in professional golf, where architects have spent the last two decades building layouts that essentially say "hit it straight or suffer." Memorial Park says something different. It says, "Bring it on. We dare you." That creates opportunity, but it also creates carnage—and knowing the difference between the two separates the winners from the also-rans.
"Off the tee gives players the advantage but it doesn’t win it for them. The real test starts on the second shot; targets are small, greens are tricky and getting the ball close is harder than it looks."
That’s the crux of it. In my years caddying for Tom Lehman, I learned that driving distance without iron precision is just a highlight reel waiting to happen. You can stripe it 330 yards into a fairway and still walk away with a bogey if your approach is careless. Memorial Park amplifies that lesson.
Why Min Woo Lee Looks Like the Play
What I appreciate about the analytical framework here is that it doesn’t chase chasing hot hands or recent vibes. Min Woo Lee’s profile is built on repeatability, and that matters enormously in a 72-hole event. Being second in strokes gained off the tee and second from tee to green isn’t luck—that’s a player whose entire game is calibrated for a specific test.
"Lee isn’t priced as the favorite by accident. His profile is exactly what this course rewards, and more importantly, it’s repeatable."
I’ve covered enough PGA Tour events to know that consistency beats explosiveness over four rounds. Lee’s T12 at Riviera, where he lost six strokes on approach, should have been a disaster. Instead, he recovered because his short game and scoring ability kept him in the conversation. That’s a floor, not just a ceiling. In my experience, that’s what separates a top-10 finisher from a weekend miss.
Brooks Koepka’s Resurgence Has Real Substance
Here’s where I push back slightly on the broader narrative around Koepka. Yes, his results have been spotty. But I’ve watched enough swing sequences and enough scoring patterns to know when a player’s underlying mechanics are clicking versus when he’s just getting lucky with putts. The analysis nails it:
"You can’t fake ballstriking, and Koepka’s current form shows that part of his game is clicking, which has helped push him to three straight top-20 finishes."
The three straight top-20 finishes aren’t an accident. They’re evidence of a player whose ball-striking—that unglamorous foundation of professional golf—is returning to form. Add in his familiarity with how Memorial Park should be played, and you’ve got a player with insider knowledge that casual observers might overlook. That’s the kind of edge that shows up in decision-making under pressure.
The Keith Mitchell Opportunity
This is where the pricing gets interesting. Mitchell at +165 for a top-20 finish represents one of those inefficiencies that sharp bettors hunt for. He’s got a driver that’s top-15 in the field, and his tee-to-green metrics have shown positive variance at courses like Torrey Pines—a legitimate comp for what Memorial Park demands.
The volatility around his short game is real, but for a top-20 wager, that’s largely irrelevant. He doesn’t need to win it. He needs to stay in the tournament and hit enough fairways to create scoring opportunities. At +165, you’re getting paid a fair price for a player whose tee-to-green game is genuinely undervalued by the market.
The Daily Fantasy Wrinkle
The DFS recommendations here are smart because they acknowledge something fundamental about course fit: you don’t need to pay full price for a proven winner if a younger player with a similar skill set is available at a discount. Nicolai Højgaard at $9,200 fits that mold perfectly. He brings the aggressive profile without the proven track record premium.
Conversely, fading Chris Gotterup at $9,800 makes sense because his floor is genuinely uncertain. You’re paying for a ceiling without the consistency to guarantee floor production—exactly backwards for most lineup constructions.
What This Week Really Tells Us
After three and a half decades covering this tour, I’ve learned that courses like Memorial Park reveal something essential about a player’s game: Can you handle freedom? Not every player excels when the setup says "you have options." Some need the constraints of precision golf. The ones who thrive here—who can be aggressive without being reckless—often carry that confidence into the majors and elevated events later in the season.
This week, watch how the leaders handle themselves at even par through 36 holes. The ones who attack without panic, who make aggressive pars look easy, are the ones worth remembering when the real tournaments arrive.

