2024 Lotte Championship prize money payouts for every LPGA player in Hawaii

Kim has won $1,099,359 this season and $3,138,132 in her LPGA career.

A Lim Kim crossed the $1 million mark in earnings this season after her victory at the Lotte Championship in Hawaii. The 29-year-old South Korean earned $450,000 for her two-stroke triumph over Russian rookie Nataliya Guseva.

Kim has won $1,099,359 this season and $3,138,132 in her LPGA career. The 2020 U.S. Women’s Open champion waited 1,426 days between titles. She becomes the third South Korean player to win on tour this season, joining Amy Yang (KPMG Women’s PGA Championship) and Haeran Ryu (FM Championship).

Kim has three titles on the KLPGA.

Here’s a look at the prize money payouts for each player at the 2024 Lotte Championship from a purse of $3 million.

2024 Lotte Championship prize money payouts

Position Player Score Earnings
1 A Lim Kim -18 $450,000
2 Nataliya Guseva -16 $282,977
3 Auston Kim -15 $205,279
4 Nasa Hataoka -14 $158,799
T5 Yuri Yoshida -13 $116,916
T5 Ryann O’Toole -13 $116,916
7 Jin Young Ko -12 $87,535
8 Lindy Duncan -11 $76,690
T9 Hyo Joo Kim -10 $65,845
T9 Angel Yin -10 $65,845
T11 Gurleen Kaur -9 $52,713
T11 Ruixin Liu -9 $52,713
T11 Bianca Pagdanganan -9 $52,713
T11 Grace Kim -9 $52,713
T15 Somi Lee -8 $42,553
T15 Azahara Munoz -8 $42,553
T15 Jodi Ewart Shadoff -8 $42,553
T18 Brooke M. Henderson -7 $37,648
T18 Sofia Garcia -7 $37,648
T20 Arpichaya Yubol -6 $32,561
T20 Gaby Lopez -6 $32,561
T20 Pauline Roussin-Bouchard -6 $32,561
T20 Ayaka Furue -6 $32,561
T20 Perrine Delacour -6 $32,561
T20 Jeongeun Lee5 -6 $32,561
T26 Erika Hara -5 $26,881
T26 Angela Stanford -5 $26,881
T26 So Young Lee -5 $26,881
T26 Pavarisa Yoktuan -5 $26,881
T30 Paula Reto -4 $22,464
T30 Liqi Zeng -4 $22,464
T30 Emily Kristine Pedersen -4 $22,464
T30 Amanda Doherty -4 $22,464
T30 Pernilla Lindberg -4 $22,464
T35 Mao Saigo -3 $17,293
T35 Aline Krauter -3 $17,293
T35 Yan Liu -3 $17,293
T35 Gina Kim -3 $17,293
T35 Robyn Choi -3 $17,293
T35 Kristen Gillman -3 $17,293
T35 Youmin Hwang -3 $17,293
T35 Ashleigh Buhai -3 $17,293
T43 Annie Park -2 $12,491
T43 Caroline Masson -2 $12,491
T43 Muni He -2 $12,491
T43 Sophia Schubert -2 $12,491
T43 Yuna Nishimura -2 $12,491
T43 Stephanie Kyriacou -2 $12,491
T43 Jasmine Suwannapura -2 $12,491
T43 Yue Ren -2 $12,491
T51 Yu-Sang Hou -1 $10,226
T51 Hye-Jin Choi -1 $10,226
T51 Sophia Popov -1 $10,226
T54 Yu Jin Sung E $8,831
T54 Elizabeth Szokol E $8,831
T54 Xiaowen Yin E $8,831
T54 Olivia Cowan E $8,831
T54 Frida Kinhult E $8,831
T54 Savannah Grewal E $8,831
T60 Kiira Riihijarvi 1 $7,670
T60 Polly Mack 1 $7,670
62 Georgia Hall 2 $7,435
63 Malia Nam 4 $7,282
T64 Morgane Metraux 6 $7,049
T64 Clariss Guce 6 $7,049

 

Major champion A Lim Kim edges Russian rookie to claim second LPGA title at Lotte Championship

The 29-year-old Kim posted three top-10 finishes this season in 25 starts before breaking through on Oahu.

South Korea’s A Lim Kim, a major champion, clinched her first LPGA title as a tour member at the Lotte Championship. The 2020 U.S. Women’s Open winner narrowly edged Russia’s Nataliya Guseva by two strokes in her 100th start since claiming a major title. The victory vaults Kim into field for the CME Group Tour Championship.

“Everything is getting better,” said a smiling Kim, who felt comfortable in Hawaii. The player who goes by the nickname “Queen” was a good sport with the traditional hula dance, too.

The 29-year-old Kim posted three top-10 finishes this season in 25 starts before breaking through on Oahu. She closed with a 4-under 68 for an 18-under total and managed to hang on despite Guseva’s tenacious play. The first Russian to earn an LPGA card shot 34 on the back nine to card a closing 69.

“I really did my best out there,” said Guseva, “I never gave up.”

After playing five weeks in a row, Guseva will take of next week before heading to Naples, Florida, for the final event of the season.

Nataliya Guseva plays her shot from the third tee during the final round of the LOTTE Championship presented by Hoakalei 2024 at Hoakalei Country Club on November 09, 2024 in Ewa Beach, Hawaii. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

Rookie Auston Kim finished a career-best third place to greatly improve her chances of qualifying for the CME Group Tour Championship. The top 60 players in the CME points race qualify for the season-ending event, which features a winner’s check of $4 million. Kim moved up to 64th.

“It’s been a long year, a lot of good lessons and tough moments,” said Kim, “but really proud of myself for bouncing back after the tough weeks and being able to play some really solid golf.”

For Angela Stanford, it was a walk to remember as the 46-year-old played her last round in her final season on the LPGA. The seven-time LPGA winner, who has played full time on tour for 24 years, finished with her head held high.

“I said going into today I wanted to be me,” said Stanford, who finished tied for 26th. “I wanted to play my game. I hit every green on the back nine. Throughout my career my iron play was what I relied on, so that kind of made me get teary-eyed, because it’s awesome to play the last nine holes and hit every green. Just kind of felt like me, so it was good.”

Modern LPGA players retire before age 40. There might not be another career like Angela Stanford’s

“For me, it was important to show people how thankful I’ve been.”

Angela Stanford decided she wanted to putt after lunch. She headed back to get her supplies. Headphones, ball markers, golf balls. Once she arrived on the putting green, she realized she didn’t have a putter.

“I’m like, I think it’s time,” she said from the shores of Oahu. “It’s a senior moment. It’s time to exit to the Senior Tour.”

This week’s Lotte Championship might be the last time Stanford tees it up in an LPGA event as a full-time professional. The 46-year-old decided earlier this year the 2024 season would be her last. She’d hoped to have good friend Kristy McPherson caddie for her at The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican next week, but she’s currently not in the field.

The field for the penultimate event is filled off the CME points list and Stanford currently ranks 147th on that list. To have a mathematical chance, she’ll need to finish 12th or better at Hoakalei Country Club.

It doesn’t feel all that long ago Stanford hoisted a trophy in Hawaii. A 31-year-old Stanford defeated a young Michelle Wie West in the phenom’s first tournament as an LPGA member at the 2009 SBS Open. It was Stanford’s third victory in seven starts, making her the hottest player on tour.

Riding to the airport later that night in a Chrysler Sebring convertible ­­– top down – with McPherson, Stanford tried to convey over the phone what it felt like to be on such a tear.

“She hasn’t won a card game all week,” McPherson joked in the background. “She ain’t that good.”

Angela Stanford poses with the trophy after winning the Volunteers of America Classic at the Old American Golf Club on December 6, 2020 in The Colony, Texas. (Photo by Chuck Burton/Getty Images)

It’s been quite the ride for this small-town Texan who wore blue on Sundays in honor of her blue-collar roots. That it might all come to an end this week feels somewhat fitting given her late mother Nan’s love of the island. It’s sad, of course, that Hawaii isn’t an easy place for friends to get to celebrate an LPGA career that dates to the 2001 season.

With so many players stepping away from the tour in 2024 – 11 so far – at relatively young ages, the almost 47-year-old Stanford put together a career that might never again be matched.

Stanford won seven times on the LPGA, including her first major title at the 2018 Evian Championship in France at age 40. Her most recent victory in 2020 came on Texas soil in front of her parents at the Volunteers of America Classic.

It’s safe to say no one will likely ever again have a major championship resume quite like Stanford’s, who played in an LPGA record 98 consecutive majors before the streak ended with this year’s U.S. Women’s Open. Only Jack Nicklaus has made more consecutive major starts with 146.

The 2024 Evian marked her final major championship appearance in her final season on the LPGA. She has made 103 major championship starts, 102 as a professional, showing a remarkable level of sustained excellence.

She’ll miss the competition. She’ll miss hearing her name on the first tee. She’ll miss the people and the sanctuary of a locker room.

“The locker room is one of my favorite places,” she said. “I think it’s a place for players to go to just be themselves. They don’t have to worry about who is in there except players.

“I’m going to miss that.”

2021 Solheim Cup
Assistant Captain Angela Stanford of Team United States looks on during a practice round ahead of the start of the 2021 Solheim Cup at Inverness Club in Toledo, Ohio. (Photo: Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

Of course, senior golf, though limited, has its perks. A victory at the U.S. Senior Women’s Open would put her back in the field at a U.S. Women’s Open. She’s also the most likely choice to be the next U.S. Solheim Cup captain. A second career in golf television might be around the corner.

There’s still much to look forward to, should this be her last start of 2024.

More than anything, she’s grateful.

“For me, it was important to show people how thankful I’ve been,” she said of the long goodbye, “and even this week, like just how grateful I’ve been for this career. … I needed to kind of get it out there and just let people know how much it’s meant to me. I wasn’t highly recruited. I wasn’t highly touted. I was kind of always overlooked and kind of always the underdog.

“But that didn’t mean that it didn’t matter … all this has mattered to me.”