Did Nick Dunlap make the right move in turning pro? The answer has become pretty clear

He is now the first player in PGA Tour history to win in the same calendar year as an amateur and a pro.

It was a logical question at the time, one that a lot of people were asking.

Should Nick Dunlap, fresh off of winning The American Express tournament last January to become the first amateur in 33 years to win a PGA Tour event, remain an amateur?

It was too late to take the money for The American Express, so maybe Dunlap should return to the University of Alabama for more seasoning as a top college golfer. Maybe he should try to defend his U.S. Amateur title, too.

Dunlap and his team decided that it was best to turn pro, take advantage of the playing opportunities in majors and PGA Tour signature events and get his seasoning under fire. The results were not overwhelming at first, so the question was asked again and again. Should Nick Dunlap have stayed an amateur?

Sunday at the Barracuda Championship in Truckee, Dunlap had the final say in the debate. A huge Sunday under the modified Stableford scoring format pushed Dunlap to his second PGA Tour victory. He is now the first player in PGA Tour history to win in the same calendar year as an amateur and as a professional.

It is an astounding feat for Dunlap, still just 20, to have two PGA Tour victories so young. And it is a major boost for The American Express, who can now market their defending champion as more than just a one-hit wonder.

Sure, the critics might howl that the Barracuda Championship is an alternate event from the British Open, and that the best players in the world weren’t in Truckee to face Dunlap. But PGA Tour names such as Charley Hoffman, Patrick Rodgers and Taylor Pendrith were all in the top 10 of the Barracuda, and names such as Martin Laird, Michael Kim and J.J. Spaun were further down the leaderboard. Names like Brandt Snedeker, Bill Haas and Aaron Baddeley missed the cut.

2024 Barracuda Championship
Nick Dunlap reacts after making an eagle on the 15th hole during the final round of the 2024 Barracuda Championship at the Old Greenwood course at Tahoe Mountain Club. (Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images)

Winning the money

The victory also comes with less prize money than many PGA Tour events, but remember, Dunlap won no money at The American Express. The $720,000 first-place check at the Barracuda thus becomes the largest check of his career, putting him at $2 million for the year. And because the Barracuda is a dual-sanctioned event with the DP World Tour, Dunlap is now exempt on that tour through 2026, just as he is on the PGA Tour.

Beyond all of that, imagine the golfers who would jump off a building to have a PGA Tour win, any PGA Tour win, alternate event or not. And remember, when Dunlap won The American Express, names such as Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay were in the field.

Dunlap becomes the fifth golfer with multiple wins on the PGA Tour this year, joining Rory McIlroy, Scheffler, Schauffele and Robert MacIntyre.

Oh, and there is a great chance that Dunlap just played his way into the FedEx Cup playoffs, a pretty strong feat for a rookie. He’s 63rd in the standings now, and only the top 70 advance to the playoffs.

Anyone paying attention could see the results starting to come together for Dunlap. An 11th-place finish at The Memorial the week before the U.S. Open was a sign Dunlap’s game was gaining strength after a spring of missed cuts and finishes well out of the top 50. Then came a tie for 10th at the Rocket Mortgage event. Now comes his second victory, which some pros will say is more important than the first win, since it verifies a player and his game as more than a fluke.

After the Barracuda title, Dunlap credited a change in coaching to Josh Gregory and a change in his approach to the tour for better results.

“I’m traveling with a fishing pole now, so I’ve been trying to go fishing every evening and it’s just that little reset that helps me not focus on golf all day long,” Dunlap said. “I can kind of reset, have some fun, come back out with a new mindset the next day.”

Sunday at the Barracuda Championship, Dunlap reeled in his second big catch of the year. Maybe fans will see him reeling in more and more big fish, maybe even a repeat at The American Express in January.

Larry Bohannan is the golf writer for The Desert Sun. You can contact him at larry.bohannan@desertsun.com. Follow him on Facebook or on Twitter at @larry_bohannan. 

2024 Barracuda Championship prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player

It’s the fifth and final opposite-field event on the PGA Tour’s 2024 schedule.

It’s the fifth and final opposite-field event on the PGA Tour’s 2024 schedule.

But the money still spends. There was a $4 million purse and a $720,000 first-place prize on the line at the Old Greenwood course at Tahoe Mountain Club at the 2024 Barracuda Championship.

The lone Modified Stableford scoring system event of the season rewards aggressive play and Nick Dunlap, who had seven birdies and an eagle Sunday, was the most rewarded this week.

Dunlap won for the second time on the PGA Tour this season after scoring 19 points in the final round for a four-day total of 49 points.

Here’s the complete look at the money won at the 2024 Barracuda Championship.

Pos. Player Score Earnings
1 Nick Dunlap 49 $720,000
2 Vince Whaley 47 $436,000
3 Patrick Fishburn 46 $276,000
4 Mac Meissner 44 $196,000
T5 Taylor Pendrith 43 $154,500
T5 Patrick Rodgers 43 $154,500
7 Hayden Buckley 41 $135,000
T8 Patton Kizzire 40 $117,000
T8 Charley Hoffman 40 $117,000
T8 Rico Hoey 40 $117,000
T11 Henrik Norlander 39 $97,000
T11 Justin Suh 39 $97,000
T13 Lukas Nemecz 38 $76,000
T13 Jayden Schaper 38 $76,000
T13 Chad Ramey 38 $76,000
T13 Max Greyserman 38 $76,000
T17 Mark Hubbard 37 $59,000
T17 Mitchell Schow 37 $59,000
T17 Kevin Chappell 37 $59,000
T17 S.H. Kim 37 $59,000
T21 Andrew Putnam 36 $45,267
T21 Martin Laird 36 $45,267
T21 Paul Waring 36 $45,267
T24 Jake Knapp 35 $33,400
T24 Chesson Hadley 35 $33,400
T24 S.Y. Noh 35 $33,400
T24 Michael Kim 35 $33,400
T24 Marcus Armitage 35 $33,400
T29 Sam Stevens 34 $26,800
T29 Adrien Saddier 34 $26,800
T29 J.J. Spaun 34 $26,800
T29 Chan Kim 34 $26,800
T33 MJ Daffue 33 $21,800
T33 Todd Clements 33 $21,800
T33 Alex Smalley 33 $21,800
T33 Sean O’Hair 33 $21,800
T33 Casey Jarvis 33 $21,800
T38 Nate Lashley 32 $18,600
T38 Sam Ryder 32 $18,600
T40 Neal Shipley 31 $16,600
T40 Lanto Griffin 31 $16,600
T40 Ben Silverman 31 $16,600
T40 Ian Gilligan (a) 31 $0
T44 Maximilian Kieffer 30 $13,400
T44 Joseph Bramlett 30 $13,400
T44 Chez Reavie 30 $13,400
T44 Oliver Wilson 30 $13,400
T44 Maximilian Rottluff 30 $13,400
49 Will Gordon 29 $11,160
T50 Ben Taylor 28 $10,440
T50 Cameron Champ 28 $10,440
52 Robby Shelton 27 $10,040
T53 Alejandro Tosti 25 $9,640
T53 Hurly Long 25 $9,640
T53 Chase Hanna 25 $9,640
56 Ryan Brehm 24 $9,400
T57 Matti Schmid 23 $9,240
T57 Sam Bairstow 23 $9,240
T57 Santiago Tarrio 23 $9,240
60 Espen Kofstad 22 $9,080
T61 Michael Thorbjornsen 21 $8,960
T61 Scott Piercy 21 $8,960
63 Nick Watney 18 $8,840
64 Scott Gutschewski 16 $8,760
65 Peter Malnati 14 $8,680

Nick Dunlap, still just 20, wins 2024 Barracuda Championship for second PGA Tour title

This time, Dunlap gets to cash the winner’s check.

Nick Dunlap has won again on the PGA Tour but this time, he gets to cash the winner’s check.

Dunlap scored 19 points in Sunday’s final round of the Barracuda Championship, the fifth and final opposite-field event on the PGA Tour’s 2024 schedule and also the lone event that uses the Modified Stableford scoring system.

Dunlaps’s day matched the highest single-day scoring mark of the week at the Old Greenwood course at Tahoe Mountain Club. His Sunday scorecard featured seven birdies (worth two points) and an eagle (worth five) and would’ve added up to a 62 it it were a stroke-play event.

His eagle came courtesy of a 55-foot bomb on the par-5 15th.

Dunlap vaulted up the leaderboard to finish with 49 points. He then had to play the waiting game to see if third-round leader Mac Meissner or anyone else could catch up. But no one could and Dunlap, who doesn’t turn 21 until December 23, collected a second piece of hardware this year.

Dunlap won the American Express in January to become the first amateur since Phil Mickelson in 1991 to win on Tour as an amateur. His amateur status, though, kept him from collecting the top prize of $1.512 million. Dunlap turned pro shortly after that and now has a second Tour win on his resume. His win this time around is good for $720,000.

He’s the first golfer in PGA Tour history win as both an amateur and a pro in the same season.

As he awaited the trophy ceremony, a camera captured a phone conversation Dunlap had with his mom, who insisted she’s not missing his next tournament.

Dunlap, who was No. 95 on the FedEx Cup points list heading into the Barracuda, has shot up to 63rd, which, if it holds, would put him into the FedEx Cup Playoffs in his rookie season. The top 70 make the field at the FedEx St. Jude Championship in Memphis.

Where’s the Beef? Andrew Johnston is chasing a comeback nearly 5,000 miles away from the site of ‘the best week of my golfing career’

“Is it OK if I call you ‘Beef?’ ” one asks. “I’d be offended if you didn’t.”

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TROON, Scotland – Eight years ago, the last time the British Open was held at Royal Troon, Andrew Johnston was the media darling of the championship.

“You want to pick me up?” Johnston joked to a reporter who asked about his weight during a media session that week.

Of the pizza he pounded after the first round, he said, “It wasn’t like a 20-inch, ‘Win a T-shirt if you finish it’ type of thing.”

Henrik Stenson may have won the Claret Jug but the jovial Johnston, known since childhood as Beef, won the hearts and minds of golf fans everywhere, finishing eighth after a final-round 68 and entered the top 100 in the Official World Golf Ranking for the first time at No. 89.

“The best week of my golfing career,” he said this week.

Reporter Nick Lozito, who interviewed Johnston before the tournament and wrote a piece worth your time on his Substack, shared that Johnston recently stumbled on an Instagram reel from that week at Troon. It showed his entrance under the first-tee grandstands to chants of “Beef! Beef! Beef!”

“That was an amazing experience,” Johnston told Lozito. “I’m still pretty speechless. Everywhere I’ve gone since, all over the world — America, all throughout Europe, Australia, South Africa — the fans and crowds have been amazing.”

This week, the 35-year-old Englishman is a continent and nearly 5,000 miles away from the 152nd Open and trying to resurrect his career. He’s playing his trade in Truckee, California, competing in a co-sanctioned event for the PGA Tour and DP World Tour at the Barracuda Championship. After spending one season on the PGA Tour in 2017-18, he failed to keep his card and then suffered a thumb injury that required multiple surgeries and sidelined him for most of 2021-22. That sent his world ranking plummeting to No. 1,932 late in 2023.

“I didn’t know if I’d ever play golf again,” Johnston said late last year. When he finally returned, he withdrew from a tournament in South Africa citing a back injury.

According to Lozito, Johnston played with childhood friend Jess McAvoy, who caddied for him earlier in his career, at North Middlesex, their home course in London, a few months later, and convinced him to leave his job and caddie for him once again.

Andrew Johnston is 13 under through 36 holes at the Albertsons Boise Open.
Englishman Andrew Johnston slaps hands with a fan at the Albertsons Boise Open. He earned his PGA Tour card through the Korn Ferry Tour Finals in 2017.

Johnston returned to the DP World Tour in June and missed his first two cuts. His play improved over the next two events, placing in the top 40 to jump nearly 800 spots in the world rankings, to 1,245, before heading to America. It’s a long way from those peak days of Beef Mania when the golf world couldn’t get enough of him.

Lozito concluded his piece by painting the picture of Johnston sitting in the shade before his Wednesday pro-am round, when his three amateur partners rushed to shake his hand.

“Is it OK if I call you ‘Beef?’ ” one asks.

Beef gives one of his infectious chuckles, Lozito noted.

“I’d be offended if you didn’t.”