
The PGA Tour exits Florida and heads to southeast Texas for the 77th edition of the Houston Open.
Contested at Memorial Park Municipal Golf Course, the Houston event is the first of two stops in Texas ahead of the Masters.
World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, the overwhelming favorite, will headline, with Min Woo Lee defending his lone career PGA Tour title.
As we do each week, here’s a roundup of information and data points to prep you for the week in “H-Town.”
The Skinny

Texas Children’s Houston Open
Title Sponsor: Texas Children’s Hospital
PGA Tour Debut: 1946
Event Week: 11th (of 33)
Dates: Mar. 26-29, 2026
Where: Houston, Texas
Course: Memorial Park Municipal GC
Distance: Par 70, 7475 yards
Architect: John Bredemus (1936)
Reno: Tom Doak, Brooks Koepka (2019)
Field: 131 players, 36-hole cut
Purse: $9,500,000
Winning Share: $1,710,000
FedExCup: 500
Defending Champion: Min Woo Lee
How to Follow the Houston Open

TV: Thu-Fri: 4-7 p.m. ET (GOLF); Sat: 1-3:30 p.m. (GOLF), 3:30-6 p.m. (NBC); Sun: 1-2:30 p.m. (GOLF), 2:30-6 p.m. (NBC)
PGA TOUR LIVE: Thu-Fri: 8:15 a.m.-7 p.m. ET (ESPN+); Sat-Sun: 11 a.m.-6 p.m. (ESPN+)
RADIO: Thu-Fri: 1-7 p.m.; Sat-Sun: 1-6 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM)
EVENT LINKS: Website | Facebook | X | Instagram
PGA TOUR LINKS: Leaderboard | Facebook | Instagram | YouTube | X
Houston Open History

As one of the original four Texas stops on the PGA Tour, the Houston Open is one of the longest-running Tour events, with its inaugural tournament teeing off in 1946. It’s had star power from the very beginning with Byron Nelson winning by two over Ben Hogan in that first year, and South African legend Bobby Locke taking the title in its second edition.
Over the years, other champions have included Hall of Famers such as Cary Middlecoff, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Curtis Strange, Payne Stewart, Raymond Floyd, Vijah Singh, and Phil Mickelson.
Singh and Strange are the only three-time winners, with seven other players having won twice including Palmer and Middlecoff, among others.
From 2007 until 2020, the Houston Open was contested the week prior to The Masters, where it offered the last ticket (with a win) to get into the field at Augusta National. It was part of the fall portion of the schedule for only two editions before returning to its traditional spot on the schedule in late March/early April.

The tournament has always been contested in the Houston area but has bounced around between different venues with The Woodlands (1975-2002), and The Golf Club of Houston (2003-2019) being the mainstays in the modern era. In 2020, it moved to a renovated and restored Memorial Park Golf Course, which hosted the tournament for a dozen years, beginning in 1951.
Shell Oil Company, the title sponsor since 1992, ended its affiliation with the Tour following the 2017 edition. The tournament went without a corporate sponsor in 2018 and 2019. Little-known Vivint stepped in for the 2020 edition, with Hewlett Packard signing on for 2021 and Cadence Bank in 2022. In 2023, Texas Children’s Hospital signed a five-year deal to be the title sponsor through the 2028 edition.
History: Recent Winners
2025: Min Woo Lee (-20)
2024: Stephan Jaeger (-12)
2023: No Tournament
2022: Tony Finau (-16)
2021: Jason Kokrak (-10)
2020: Carlos Ortiz (-13)
2019: Lanto Griffin (-14)
2018: Ian Poulter (-19)
2017: Russell Henley (-20)
2016: Jim Herman (-15)
2015: J.B. Holmes (−16)
2014: Matt Jones (−15)
History: Records
Low Under-Par: -22 (Vijay Singh, 2002)
Low Score: 264 (Tony Finau, 2022)
The Course: Memorial Park GC

Memorial Park Golf Course, located in downtown Houston, is known as one of the very best municipal golf courses in the United States.
The course originally began as a 9-hole track with sand greens, built near the hospital at Camp Logan for use by convalescent soldiers (1912).
In 1935, following the closing of the hospital, golf course architect John Bredemus redesigned the course, making it an 18-holer. It opened in July of 1936 and, according to legend, Bredemus remarked that this was his “greatest golf course ever.”
It was the home of the Houston Open from 1951 to 1963, and through the years, it hosted the likes of Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Cary Middlecoff, and Jimmy Demaret.
In 1994, on behalf of Mayor Bob Lanier, a campaign began to restore the golf course. Great effort went to preserving its historical quality while allowing for proper maintenance for the future of the course. In 1995, the newly renovated 600-acre course opened with a lighted driving range, putting and chipping greens, and a beautiful new clubhouse facility.
Another renovation took place in late 2019: funded by the non-profit Astros Golf Foundation, the $18.5 million project has produced an even greater Memorial Park golf track.
Redesigned by world renowned architect, Tom Doak, the golf course now stretches to 7,292 yards and includes five par 5s (for amateurs).
“The course boasts strategic bunkering, and unique green contours with dramatic short-grass runoffs – making it a second-shot golf course,” according to the PGA Tour’s First Look.
Doak rose to the challenge by creating a municipal golf course that can be played by both tour professionals and the general public. Five-time major winner Brooks Koepka was the PGA Tour consultant on the project.
Houston Open Field

The field in Houston features just four players ranked in the world top 20: Scottie Scheffler (No. 1), Chris Gotterup (10), Ben Griffin (16), and Harris English (20).
Additional top-50 ranked players to watch include defending champ Min Woo Lee (No. 31), Shane Lowry (32), Sam Burns (33), Kurt Kitayama (35), Marco Penge (36), Nico Echavarria (38), Jason Day (41), Jake Knapp (42), Ryan Fox (45), and Nicolai Hojgaard (47).
Other marquee names expected to contend include Michael Thorbjornsen, Brooks Koepka, Rickie Fowler, Adam Scott, Sahith Theegala, Sungjae Im, Aaron Rai, and Tony Finau.

Wyndham Clark, Gary Woodland, Keith Mitchell, Mackenzie Hughes, Will Zalatoris, and 2025 champion Stephan Jaeger are some of the other familiar names in Houston.
Top-10 Betting Favorites
Pos-Player-Odds
1. Scottie Scheffler (3-1)
2. Chris Gotterup (18-1)
2. Min Woo Lee (18-1)
4. Jake Knapp (22-1)
5. Brooks Koepka (25-1)
5. Sam Burns (25-1)
7. Kurt Kitayama (30-1)
7. Marco Penge (30-1)
7. Michael Thorbjornsen (30-1)
7. Nicolai Hojgaard (30-1)
7. Rickie Fowler (30-1)
Full Field & Odds
Texas Children’s Houston Open | Memorial Park GC | Houston, TX | Mar. 26-29, 2026
Up Next On Tour

Following the Houston Open, the PGA Tour heads to San Antonio for the Valero Texas Open, the final event ahead of the 2026 Masters.
Apr 02-05 Valero Texas Open (San Antonio, TX)
Apr 09-11 Masters Tournament (Augusta, GA)
Apr 16-19 RBC Heritage (Hilton Head Island, SC)
Apr 23-26 Zurich Classic (Avondale, LA)
Credits: Getty Images, PGA Tour Media, Joel Cook




































