Nelly Korda is third to surpass $4 million in single season on LPGA, can bank $4 million more at CME

Lorena Ochoa’s amazing 2007 season is still the high-water mark for LPGA money.

Two years ago, Lydia Ko came close to breaking Lorena Ochoa’s 2007 mark for most money earned in an LPGA season.

Ochoa’s amazing record, now 17 years old, set a bar that’s been difficult to break, even with a surge in prize money. She earned $4,364,994 in 2007, and Ko in 2022 finished just $591 away from breaking the mark.

This year, thanks to seven victories and three other top-10 finishes, Nelly Korda is at $4,164,430 with one event left. She’s now the third golfer in LPGA history to surpass the $4 million mark.

With a $4 million first-place prize up for grabs at the season-ending CME Group Tour Championship, Korda has a chance to nearly double her 2024 earnings while simultaneously shattering the single-season money mark.

LPGA season-by-season money leaders

Year Player Money
1950 Babe Zaharias $14,800
1951 Babe Zaharias $15,087
1952 Betsy Rawls $14,505
1953 Louise Suggs $19,816
1954 Patty Berg $16,011
1955 Patty Berg $16,492
1956 Marlene Hagge $20,235
1957 Patty Berg $16,272
1958 Beverly Hanson $12,639
1959 Betsy Rawls $26,774
1960 Louise Suggs $16,892
1961 Mickey Wright $22,236
1962 Mickey Wright $21,641
1963 Mickey Wright $31,269
1964 Mickey Wright $29,800
1965 Kathy Whitworth $28,658
1966 Kathy Whitworth $33,517
1967 Kathy Whitworth $32,937
1968 Kathy Whitworth $48,379
1969 Carol Mann $49,152
1970 Kathy Whitworth $30,235
1971 Kathy Whitworth $41,181
1972 Kathy Whitworth $65,063
1973 Kathy Whitworth $82,864
1974 JoAnne Carner $87,094
1975 Sandra Palmer $76,374
1976 Judy Rankin $150,737
1977 Judy Rankin $122,890
1978 Nancy Lopez $189,814
1979 Nancy Lopez $197,489
1980 Beth Daniel $231,000
1981 Beth Daniel $206,998
1982 JoAnne Carner $310,400
1983 JoAnne Carner $291,404
1984 Betsy King $266,771
1985 Nancy Lopez $416,472
1986 Pat Bradley $492,021
1987 Ayako Okamoto $466,034
1988 Sherri Turner $350,851
1989 Betsy King $654,132
1990 Beth Daniel $863,578
1991 Pat Bradley $763,118
1992 Dottie Mochrie (Pepper) $693,335
1993 Betsy King $595,992
1994 Laura Davies $687,201
1995 Annika Sorenstam $666,533
1996 Karrie Webb $1,002,000
1997 Annika Sorenstam $1,236,789
1998 Annika Sorenstam $1,092,748
1999 Karrie Webb $1,591,959
2000 Karrie Webb $1,876,853
2001 Annika Sorenstam $2,105,868
2002 Annika Sorenstam $2,863,904
2003 Annika Sorenstam $2,029,506
2004 Annika Sorenstam $2,544,707
2005 Annika Sorenstam $2,588,240
2006 Lorena Ochoa $2,592,872
2007 Lorena Ochoa $4,364,994
2008 Lorena Ochoa $2,763,193
2009 Jiyai Shin $1,807,334
2010 Na Yeon Choi $1,871,165
2011 Yani Tseng $2,921,713
2012 Inbee Park $2,287,080
2013 Inbee Park $2,456,619
2014 Stacy Lewis $2,539,039
2015 Lydia Ko $2,800,802
2016 Ariya Jutanugarn $2,550,947
2017 Sung Hyun Park $2,335,883
2018 Ariya Jutanugarn $2,743,949
2019 Jin Young Ko $2,773,894
2020 Jin Young Ko $1,667,925
2021 Jin Young Ko $3,502,161
2022 Lydia Ko $4,364,403
2023 Lilia Vu $3,502,303

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Nichols: At what feels like a tipping point for the LPGA, a closer look at the rocky tenure of commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan

Rarely is the LPGA at the forefront of anything, including the current surge in women’s sports.

BELLEAIR, Fla. – In October 2021, Caitlin Clark sent a direct message to the LPGA’s Twitter account asking for one of its cotton-candy logoed hoodies designed by Michelle Wie West.

“Think you could hook me up w the best sweatshirt ever made?!!!” Clark asked. “Huge fan.”

Tour officials didn’t actually see the message until Clark made her debut in an LPGA pro-am, and they scrambled to present her with the hoodie Wednesday morning on the first tee at Pelican Golf Club.

In creating the WNBA-like hoodie, which raised awareness for the tour and money for charity, Wie West said “We’re often hidden; we’re often left out; we’re often not covered.”

That it took three years for the tour to even notice Clark’s request is a terribly on-brand whiff.

Rarely is the LPGA at the forefront of anything, including the current surge in women’s sports.

https://www.instagram.com/p/DCU2BVrRHGu/

Yes, purses on the LPGA are at an all-time high. Major championship prize funds alone have more than doubled since 2021 to nearly $48 million. Total prize money in 2024 topped $125 million, up more than 80 percent since 2021.

It might be tempting to underline those numbers and deem LPGA commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan’s tenure thus far a success. The sport, after all, seems to center around money these days.

Except that’s not the whole story. Far from it, in fact.

Coming off the dreadfully public transportation disaster at the Solheim Cup, which quickly escalated into a crisis-management catastrophe, it’s appropriate on the eve of the LPGA’s season-ender to dig a little deeper and attempt to answer a simple question: After more than three years at the helm, how is she doing?

First, it was always going to be hard to replace Mike Whan, a master communicator. The current USGA CEO, Whan announced his decision to step down as LPGA commissioner in January 2021 after a successful 11-year stint. Hired in May 2021 as the tour’s ninth commissioner, Marcoux Samaan didn’t actually get to work in her new role until August, and the first thing on her 100-day agenda was to listen and learn.

The former Princeton athletic director got off to a painfully slow start.

Failure to breakthrough to the mainstream

At the 2023 CME Group Tour Championship, Marcoux Samaan called this a period of transformational growth for women’s golf. And yet, there’s little evidence that the LPGA has broken through into the mainstream at a time when female athletes are experiencing an unprecedented amount of exposure.

Even when World No. 1 Nelly Korda got off to an historic start to the 2024 season, her fame didn’t exactly explode. Domestically, the tour still lacks a bona fide household name.

There are bright spots, to be sure. Such as next week’s $4 million winner’s check, the largest prize in women’s sports history. Marcoux Samaan and CME Group Chairman and CEO Terry Duffy endured a rocky time two years ago when a long list of LPGA players no-showed an important dinner. An embarrassed Duffy blamed leadership, telling Golfweek he was “exceptionally disappointed.”

One year later, however, Duffy signed a contract extension and poured more money into the season-ending event. Duffy and the tour worked it out, but the black eye said much about Marcoux Samaan’s ability to relate to the game’s power players.

Players appreciate the focus on missed-cut money, free hotels and an increased health insurance stipend. But there’s a common refrain among many in and around the tour that they can’t articulate Marcoux Samaan’s overall vision. And when it comes to big-picture issues – such as the tour’s Gender Policy or its dealings with Golf Saudi and the potential of an LET merger – the tour lacks transparency and is slow to act.

Nelly Korda and Caitlin Clark at The Annika
Annika Sorenstam talks with Mollie Marcoux Samaan, commissioner of the LPGA, during a pro-am ahead of the 2024 The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican in Belleair, Florida. (Douglas P. DeFelice/Getty Images)

When there weren’t enough buses on Friday morning to transport fans at the Solheim Cup, resulting in wait times of more than two hours, the tour’s communication with the public and media was virtually non-existent for most of the day. It wasn’t until late Friday evening that the tour publicly addressed the issue with a plan (that was quickly deleted and replaced with a scaled-down statement). The commissioner didn’t take questions until the following morning.

What started out as a bus shortage turned into a crisis of leadership.

Promise of growth not being achieved

It’s not that the LPGA is struggling to stay afloat – which has been the case in the past – it’s that the tour’s not experiencing the transformational growth Marcoux Samaan preached.

The departure of Cognizant, a Fortune 100 company that was bullish on the LPGA from the start – signaled a red flag. The hope was that Cognizant’s leadership would sing the LPGA’s praises to other blue-chip companies and lead to organic growth.

Instead, they’re out after title-sponsoring four editions of the event, leaving the tour scrambling to back its own Founders Cup as the LPGA celebrates 75 years.

In addition, stops that have been on tour for decades in Portland and Toledo have been on life support now for several seasons. For reference, the inaugural Portland Ladies Classic dates back to 1972. The Toledo stop began in 1984.

As the LPGA looks to add to the number of events it owns and operates, it has become increasingly clear that the tour lacks the resources needed to make what it currently runs – such as the Solheim Cup and Founders Cup – a success. The tour has invested heavily in boosting its staff in recent years.

A demanding job that requires strong relationships

There’s no question that leading the LPGA is one of the most difficult and demanding jobs in sports. There’s no time to relax. It’s a constant turnover of sponsors, staff and talent. Just as one win goes up on the board, a fire breaks out somewhere else.

It takes help to be successful at this job, which requires strong relationships. And that’s probably where Marcoux Samaan, whose contract expires in the summer of 2026, currently struggles the most. She hasn’t won over enough key people in the event business, the player body, the press or inside her own headquarters. There’s a profound lack of confidence and inspiration among those in her charge.

How much opportunity is being left on the table?

It’s a question that can’t be escaped.