Photos: Celine Boutier through the years

View photos of Celine Boutier throughout her career.

Celine Boutier has won at every level.

With double-digit professional wins under her belt, Boutier built upon a successful amateur career that featured wins at the 2012 European Ladies Amateur Championship and the 2015 British Ladies Championship.

During her collegiate career at Duke, the Frenchwoman won four events as an individual and helped her team win the NCAA national championship in 2014. That same year, Boutier was awarded the Women’s Golf Coaches Association Player of the Year.

Turning pro upon graduating from Duke in 2016, Boutier earned her LPGA through the now-Epson Tour following a two-win season in 2017.

As an LPGA rookie in 2018, Boutier earned more than $300,000, making 16 of 25 cuts and finishing 61st on the money list. In 2019, she earned her first LPGA Tour victory at the ISPS Handa Vic Open.

With a handful of wins on both the LPGA and Ladies European Tour, Boutier continues to gain form. After beating Georgia Hall in a playoff at the LPGA Drive On Championship in March of 2023 and with top-10 finishes in four of the five women’s majors, Boutier looks to be a player in major championships in this season and beyond.

Stacy Lewis notches top 10 at LPGA Drive On, says being playing captain is possible but still far off

Lewis closed with a 5-under 67 at Superstition Mountain to vault into a share of seventh.

Stacy Lewis’s fine play at the LPGA Drive On Championship isn’t enough yet, she said, to start a serious conversation about being a playing captain at the Solheim Cup in Spain.

Lewis closed with a 5-under 67 at Superstition Mountain to vault into a share of seventh. Her only wish was that the tour was headed next to Mission Hills Country Club, a favorite stop and site of her first major victory. But with the Chevron Championship headed to Texas next month, Lewis and the tour will move on to Palos Verdes Golf Club for the DIO Implant LA Open, where the 13-time winner hopes her good momentum continues.

“I wouldn’t say it’s not possible,” she said of playing and captaining at the Solheim Cup in Spain. “I think it’s possible, but I hope there are 12 playing better than me, and our team is going to be in a really good spot if that’s the case.”

Lewis started feeling better about her putting toward the end of last season. After the Asian swing, she took advantage of a couple weeks off to put new shafts in her irons and is pleased with her ball-striking.

“The combination of getting some new irons, longer irons getting up in the air, easier to hit, and things working on with my golf swing starting to come together,” she said of what’s clicking.

Stacy Lewis holds the trophy the closing ceremony of 2015 Solheim Cup in Germany. (Photo: Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)

Lewis wears multiple hats every week she’s on tour, trying to get to know the rookies who might be on her team in September as well as she can.

“Just the time you can be around them,” she said, “seeing them in player dining, talking to them warming up, just that a little bit of interaction goes a long way with them feeling more comfortable for that week so everything is not so new, right?

“Solheim Cup is a crazy week, and if you throw a brand new face in front of them telling them what to do, that’s really hard. So just trying to be around them as much as I can and be there when they have questions and just making sure they’re always thinking about it.”

Potential Solheim Cup rookie Lilia Vu, already a winner this season, finished T-7 and hasn’t placed outside the top 15 this season.

Lucy Li, another player Lewis has her eye one, made her debut as a LPGA member this week and struggled mightily, shooting 76-76 to miss the cut.

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Prize money payouts for each LPGA player at 2023 LPGA Drive On Championship

Celine Boutier’s career total has increased to $4,143,690. 

Celine Boutier collected her third LPGA trophy at the Drive On Championship in a playoff against Solheim Cup partner Georgia Hall. The Frenchwoman earned $262,500 for her efforts, bringing her career total to $4,143,690. 

With the win, 29-year-old Boutier becomes the winningest French player in LPGA history, passing major winner Patricia Meunier-Lebouc and Anne-Marie Palli.

The Drive On featured a purse of $1,750,000.

The cut number for official LPGA events changed to top 65 and ties for the 2023 season. The Drive On was the first full-field event of the season. A total of 76 players made the cut. Previously, the top 70 players and ties made the cut.

Position Player Score Earnings
T1 Celine Boutier -20* $262,500
T1 Georgia Hall -20 $160,458
3 Ayaka Furue -19 $116,401
4 Na Rin An -18 $90,045
T5 Jin Young Ko -17 $65,888
T5 Ally Ewing -17 $65,888
T7 Lilia Vu -16 $37,185
T7 Charley Hull -16 $37,185
T7 Hinako Shibuno -16 $37,185
T7 Moriya Jutanugarn -16 $37,185
T7 Stacy Lewis -16 $37,185
T7 Hae Ran Ryu -16 $37,185
T7 Maddie Szeryk -16 $37,185
T14 Cheyenne Knight -15 $26,267
T14 Celine Borge -15 $26,267
T16 Atthaya Thitikul -14 $21,159
T16 Amy Yang -14 $21,159
T16 Ariya Jutanugarn -14 $21,159
T16 Daniela Darquea -14 $21,159
T16 Emily Kristine Pedersen -14 $21,159
T16 Ruoning Yin -14 $21,159
T16 Annie Park -14 $21,159
T23 Leona Maguire -13 $15,022
T23 Yuka Saso -13 $15,022
T23 Allisen Corpuz -13 $15,022
T23 Sei Young Kim -13 $15,022
T23 Chella Choi -13 $15,022
T23 Ryann O’Toole -13 $15,022
T23 Jenny Shin -13 $15,022
T23 Lauren Coughlin -13 $15,022
T23 Pernilla Lindberg -13 $15,022
T23 Stephanie Meadow -13 $15,022
T23 Pavarisa Yoktuan -13 $15,022
T34 Jennifer Kupcho -12 $10,806
T34 Jodi Ewart Shadoff -12 $10,806
T34 Alison Lee -12 $10,806
T34 Mina Harigae -12 $10,806
T34 Jennifer Song -12 $10,806
T39 Megan Khang -11 $8,141
T39 Gaby Lopez -11 $8,141
T39 Marina Alex -11 $8,141
T39 Eun-Hee Ji -11 $8,141
T39 Patty Tavatanakit -11 $8,141
T39 Melissa Reid -11 $8,141
T39 Frida Kinhult -11 $8,141
T39 Xiaowen Yin -11 $8,141
T39 Azahara Munoz -11 $8,141
T48 Yae Eun Hong -10 $5,827
T48 In-gee Chun -10 $5,827
T48 Hannah Green -10 $5,827
T48 Nanna Koerstz Madsen -10 $5,827
T48 A Lim Kim -10 $5,827
T48 Matilda Castren -10 $5,827
T48 Perrine Delacour -10 $5,827
T48 Maude-Aimee Leblanc -10 $5,827
T48 Wei Ling Hsu -10 $5,827
T57 Nelly Korda -9 $4,586
T57 Lizette Salas -9 $4,586
T57 Chanettee Wannasaen -9 $4,586
T57 Alexa Pano -9 $4,586
T57 Dana Fall -9 $4,586
T62 Carlota Ciganda -8 $4,085
T62 Wichanee Meechai -8 $4,085
T62 Yealimi Noh -8 $4,085
T62 Caroline Inglis -8 $4,085
T66 Madelene Sagstrom -6 $3,822
T66 Gina Kim -6 $3,822
T68 Hye Jin Choi -5 $3,540
T68 Paula Reto -5 $3,540
T68 Pajaree Anannarukarn -5 $3,540
T68 Albane Valenzuela -5 $3,540
T68 Brittany Lincicome -5 $3,540
73 Bronte Law -4 $3,382
74 Minami Katsu -3 $3,338
75 Elizabeth Szokol -2 $3,298
76 Angel Yin -1 $3,256

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LPGA Drive On: Lucy Li, Alexa Pano have plenty of LPGA experience, but it’s a week of firsts for most of tour’s rookies

There are more than 20 rookies in the filed at Superstition Mountain in Arizona.

Lucy Li and Alexa Pano have competed in a combined 22 LPGA events before teeing it up this week for the first time as LPGA members at the 2023 Drive On Championship. Sandwiched in between them at a pre-tournament presser sat Ellinor Sudow, a Swedish player who didn’t even seriously consider the LPGA until she got to college. This week marks her first LPGA start.

Of the 31 LPGA rookies this season, 23 are in the field this week for the first full-field domestic tournament. Li, who earned her card by finishing in the top 10 on the Epson Tour last season, hasn’t teed it up in an LPGA event since last October. Both Sudow and Pano qualified through Q-Series.

In between practice, Li, 20, got cranking on her schoolwork at the University of Pennsylvania. She will soon declare a double major in data analytics and psychology. Both 18-year-old Pano and Li turned professional out of high school.

“I’m taking one course now and pretty much just started my junior year in college,” said Li, “so I got a lot of good work done.”

Pano, who gained fame when she appeared in the Netflix documentary “The Short Game,” tied for 32nd at the LET’s Aramco Saudi Ladies International in February and then recently played two events on the Epson Tour. Pano made her first start on the LPGA in 2018 at the Thornberry Creek LPGA Classic. She’s made the cut once in eight starts.

“It kind of feels like I’ve been working towards this for a really long time,” said Pano, “so been a very long time coming.”

While Pano and Li made headlines as pre-teens, Sudow took up golf rather late in life and never qualified for the Swedish National Team. After playing collegiately at UNC Charlotte and later Arizona for graduate work, Sudow signed up for qualifying school hoping to get Epson Tour status and wound up with an LPGA card.

“I was super stoked to be here yesterday,” said Sudow, “just coming down the range for the first time, see all the players and having Nelly (Korda) behind me and all that cool stuff.”

When asked about goals for the season, Pano talked about having an open mind and learning. Li echoed similar thoughts and talked about focusing on her process.

Sudow, however, didn’t hold back.

“I think we’re stupid if we don’t say we want to be Rookie of the Year and win a tournament,” said Sudow. “That’s why we’re here. We’re here to compete. That would be really cool to me. I usually set really lofty goals.

“I don’t know if they’re realistic, but that’s the dream and what we’re aiming for.”

Here are several LPGA rookies making their tour debut this week: