DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) — The rewards for winning the Memorial turned out to be more than Matt Kuchar imagined.
Along with a crystal trophy, a seven-figure check, a career-best world ranking or even that coveted handshake with tournament host Jack Nicklaus behind the 18th green at Muirfield Village, Kuchar received an education from golf's greatest champion.
And that could prove timely with the U.S. Open only a week away.
Winning a major championship not only is next on Kuchar's career checklist, it's about the only thing left. He took care of one goal Sunday with his two-shot win at the Memorial because it gave him his first multiple-win season. He previously won the Match Play Championship in February for his first World Golf Championship title. Tiger Woods is the only other player with more than one win on the PGA Tour. It's tough out there.
As for the majors?
Kuchar finally gave himself a serious look — contending is best defined as having a chance to win in the final hour — at the Masters a year ago. It gave him confidence that he could handle the pressure. His philosophy is the more chances he gets, the more comfortable he feels in that situation. And the more comfortable he feels, the better his chances of winning. Otherwise, he tries to look at golf in the most simplistic terms to avoid undue pressure.
And that's when Nicklaus stepped in.
Even though Nicklaus won the first of his 18 professional majors at age 22 in his rookie season on the PGA Tour, he had a chance to win the 1960 U.S. Open as an amateur at Cherry Hills. That's where Ben Hogan so famously said that Nicklaus could have won by 10 shots if he had known what he was doing.