In what has become the annual final big test before the U.S. Open, The Memorial Tournament is set up for a strong Sunday finish at Jack’s place.

Muirfield Village has brought out some of the best this week while also punishing the slightest missteps. It’s one of the purest courses on the PGA Tour, and almost every big name in the game shows up each year in Columbus, Ohio to pay homage to Jack Nicklaus and play his pristine course.

After an eventful moving day on Saturday, we’re left with Daniel Summerhays on top by three shots. At this point, Summerhays could be considered a PGA Tour veteran with several appearances on leaderboards in recent years. But he does not have a win. Breaking through here would be an enormous step and career highlight and one that close week-to-week watchers of the Tour would cheer for.

For TV purposes, Summerhays may not be the most powerful of stars to be showcasing late on Sunday. But we’ve seen lesser names like William McGirt and David Lingmerth win here recently too, so it’s not just a track for the top of the world rankings.

As Jason Dufner showed on Saturday, however, a multishot lead can go away in a hurry here too. It’s hard to see Summerhays giving shots back the way Duf did in the third round (four in his first five holes), but the chasers are a loaded group of the game’s best who could certainly even this out by the back nine.

Bubba Watson, Matt Kuchar, Justin Thomas, Rickie Fowler, Jordan Spieth, and Dufner are all among a group within earshot of the lead. Spieth is the furthest back, needing to close a six-shot gap with a lot of star power in between. But he’s been striking the ball fantastically the last two weeks and could have a super low number in him to make it interesting.

The Memorial is one of the premier events on the PGA Tour. It’s not a major by any stretch, but the venue, purse size, field, and imprimatur of Jack make it more than your average week on Tour. CBS extends its coverage juuuuust a little bit, adding an extra half hour for the final round. Golf Channel will have its customary early-round coverage, and PGA Tour Live will be streaming throughout the day.

Here’s your media schedule for Sunday’s final round:

Sunday's final-round coverage

Television:

Noon to 2 p.m. -- Golf Channel

2:30 to 6 p.m. -- CBS

Online streams:

8:10 a.m. -- PGA Tour Live featured groups stream

Noon to 2 p.m. -- Golf Channel/NBC Sports LiveExtra simulcast stream

2 to 6 p.m. -- CBS Sports/PGA Tour Live simulcast stream

Radio:

1 to 6 p.m. -- PGA Tour Radio on Sirius-XM (Ch. 92/208 and streamed here)

TEE TIMES

Here’s the full tee sheet for Sunday’s final round (all times ET):