2024 women’s major championship venues including St. Andrews

The best women golfers in the world will take on the Old Course next year.

The 2024 LPGA schedule was released Thursday morning and there are plenty of tournaments to look forward to.

There will be 33 official events with a record total prize fund of $118 million. In 2023, there were three events with a purse of $3 million or more. In 2024, there will be 10.

The first two events — Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions (Jan. 18-21), LPGA Drive On Championship (Jan. 25-28) — will be in Florida before a three-week stretch overseas.

The new Boston event — FM Global Championship (Aug. 29-Sept. 1) — will be the final tournament before the Solheim Cup.

However, let’s get to what the people really care about — the majors.

Here’s everything you need to know for the five major championships next year.

Staff picks: Who will win their first major championship in 2024?

Don’t be surprised if a handful of rising stars command the spotlight in 2024.

Four of the five major champions on the women’s side in 2023 were first-time winners. As for the men? Two of four.

As the golf world moves on from 2023 and looks ahead to 2024, we got to thinking, who is most likely to add a major championship to their resume for the first time in the new year? Several writers on Golfweek‘s staff have made their picks, some surprising, some not so much.

Men’s 2024 major venues: Augusta National Golf Club (Masters), Valhalla Golf Club (PGA Championship), Pinehurst No. 2 (U.S. Open) and Royal Troon (Open Championship).

Women’s 2024 major venues: The Club at Carlton Woods (Chevron Championship), Lancaster Country Club (U.S. Women’s Open), Sahalee Country Club (KPMG Women’s PGA Championship), Evian Resort Golf Club (Amundi Evian Championship), The Old Course at St. Andrews (AIG Women’s Open).

2023 Amundi Evian Championship prize money payouts for each LPGA player

It pays to play well in LPGA majors.

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It pays to play well on the LPGA, especially at the major championships. Just ask this week’s winner, Celine Boutier.

The 29-year-old Frenchwoman claimed her first major title on Sunday at the 2023 Amundi Evian Championship at the Evian Resort Golf Club in Evian-les-Bains, France. The Duke product shot rounds of 66-69-67-68 to finish at 14 under, six shots clear of runner-up at defending champion Brooke Henderson.

For her efforts, Boutier will take home a cool $1 million, with Henderson earning $585,967. Nasa Hataoka, A Lim Kim, Yuka Saso, Celine Borge and Gaby Lopez each finished T-3 at 7 under and earned $283,278.

Check out the prize money payouts for each LPGA player at the 2023 Amundi Evian Championship at the Evian Resort.

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2023 Amundi Evian Championship prize money

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Celine Boutier -14 $1,000,000
2 Brooke Henderson -8 $585,967
T3 Nasa Hataoka -7 $283,278
T3 A Lim Kim -7 $283,278
T3 Yuka Saso -7 $283,278
T3 Celine Borge -7 $283,278
T3 Gaby Lopez -7 $283,278
8 Gemma Dryburgh -6 $158,805
T9 Atthaya Thitikul -5 $122,100
T9 Rose Zhang -5 $122,100
T9 Su Ji Kim -5 $122,100
T9 Megan Khang -5 $122,100
T9 Nelly Korda -5 $122,100
T14 Jennifer Kupcho -4 $95,922
T14 Esther Henseleit -4 $95,922
T16 Morgane Metraux -3 $81,808
T16 Linn Grant -3 $81,808
T16 Stephanie Kyriacou -3 $81,808
T16 Minjee Lee -3 $81,808
T20 Min-Ji Park -2 $65,045
T20 Eun Hee Ji -2 $65,045
T20 Hyo Joo Kim -2 $65,045
T20 Alison Lee -2 $65,045
T20 Anna Nordqvist -2 $65,045
T20 Ashleigh Buhai -2 $65,045
T20 Angel Yin -2 $65,045
T20 Jin Young Ko -2 $65,045
T28 Johanna Gustavsson -1 $47,560
T28 Sarah Schmelzel -1 $47,560
T28 Jodi Ewart Shadoff -1 $47,560
T28 Wei-Ling Hsu -1 $47,560
T28 Ariya Jutanugarn -1 $47,560
T28 Moriya Jutanugarn -1 $47,560
T28 Sarah Kemp -1 $47,560
T28 Ryann O’Toole -1 $47,560
T36 Wichanee Meechai E $35,610
T36 Ayaka Furue E $35,610
T36 Georgia Hall E $35,610
T36 Amy Yang E $35,610
T36 Peiyun Chien E $35,610
T36 In Gee Chun E $35,610
T42 Linnea Strom 1 $27,910
T42 Albane Valenzuela 1 $27,910
T42 Aditi Ashok 1 $27,910
T42 Hae Ran Ryu 1 $27,910
T42 Leona Maguire 1 $27,910
T42 Lilia Vu 1 $27,910
T48 Daniela Darquea 2 $22,649
T48 Patty Tavatanakit 2 $22,649
T48 Miyu Yamashita 2 $22,649
T48 Mi Hyang Lee 2 $22,649
T48 Hye-Jin Choi 2 $22,649
53 Minami Katsu 3 $20,530
T54 Allisen Corpuz 4 $18,607
T54 Elizabeth Szokol 4 $18,607
T54 Pauline Roussin 4 $18,607
T54 Jenny Shin 4 $18,607
T54 Ji Yai Shin 4 $18,607
T59 Hinako Shibuno 5 $16,363
T59 Angela Stanford 5 $16,363
T61 Sung Hyun Park 6 $14,758
T61 Cheyenne Knight 6 $14,758
T61 Karis Davidson 6 $14,758
T61 Min Lee 6 $14,758
T61 Lydia Ko 6 $14,758
T61 Stephanie Meadow 6 $14,758
T61 Yan Liu 6 $14,758
68 Paula Reto 7 $13,472
69 Pernilla Lindberg 8 $13,153
70 Emma Talley 15 $12,834

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After turning to old driver, Nelly Korda fires round-low 64 at 2023 Evian Championship

Korda is right back in the mix at Evian Resort.

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It hasn’t been pretty for Nelly Korda over her last few starts on the LPGA. She missed the cut at both the Cognizant Founders Cup and the KPMG Women’s PGA before tying for 64th at the U.S. Women’s Open.

Korda did, however, win the Ladies European Tour event in London two weeks ago.

That mojo didn’t fully carry over into this week’s Amundi Evian Championship, as the world No. 2 opened with rounds of 70-73 and was 1 over through 36 holes at Evian Resort Golf Club.

Korda went off early Saturday morning and had an old friend in the bag: a Titleist TSR1. She signed with TaylorMade in January and was using a Stealth 2.

She wasn’t asked about the change after her round, but she did say the low round was “relieving.”

“Honestly, relieving. It was super nice to see all the hard work kind of pay off today. Obviously still have 18 more holes, anything can happen, but I made a push today on moving day, which I’m really happy about,” Korda said.

The 25-year-old will begin Sunday’s final round five back of leader Celine Boutier. Korda tees off alongside Yuka Saso at 6:05 a.m. ET. Coverage on Golf Channel will run from 5:30-11 a.m. ET.

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Celine Boutier holds three-shot lead on home soil at 2023 Evian Championship

Can Boutier close the deal on Sunday with several big names chasing her down?

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Celine Boutier is the 15th-ranked player in the world, has won three times on the LPGA, has played in two Solheim Cups and represented France at the Olympics. But if she wins Sunday, she’ll elevate her career to the next level.

Boutier holds a three-shot lead after 54 holes of the 2023 Amundi Evian Championship at Evian Resort Golf Club in Evian-les-Bains, France.

The 29-year-old followed up her first two rounds (66-69) with a 4-under 67 on Saturday to solidify her spot atop the leaderboard at 11 under.

The Frenchwoman will have to hold off a slew of big-name players on Sunday if she wants to hoist her first major championship trophy on home soil.

The low round of the day belonged to Nelly Korda, who shot a bogey-free 7-under 64. She rocketed up the board on Day 3, now sitting at T-5 with Yuka Saso, five back of Boutier.

Nasa Hataoka is alone in second at 8 under while Minjee Lee and Brooke Henderson are tied for third at 7 under.

Coverage of the final round will be available on Golf Channel from 5:30-11 a.m. ET Sunday.

Some big names missed the cut at the 2023 Amundi Evian Championship

There’s also a slew of big-name LPGA golfers who are done for the week at Evian Resort Golf Club

They’re heading to the weekend at the 2023 Amundi Evian Championship, with Celine Boutier leading on home soil after 36 holes.

Others making the cut include Brooke Henderson, Jin Young Ko, Minjee Lee, Rose Zhang, Lydia Ko and Nelly Korda (on her birthday).

Carlota Ciganta won’t play the weekend not because of a missed cut but because of a disqualification after Thursday’s first round. She officially was booted for signing an incorrect scorecard after being put on the clock for slow play.

There’s also a slew of big-name LPGA golfers who are already done for the week after missing the cut at Evian Resort Golf Club in Evians-Les-Bains, France, site of the fourth of five LPGA majors this year.

Amundi Evian Championship Friday 5 things: Celine Boutier eyes win on home soil

Boutier has posted rounds of 66 and 69 to get to 7 under for the championship.

Celine Boutier has three LPGA wins. A victory this week, though, would be her biggest by far.

After 36 holes at the 2023 Amundi Evian Championship in Evian-Les-Bains, France, the fourth of five LPGA majors in 2023, Boutier, a native of the host nation, holds a one-shot lead after hitting 10 of 13 fairways and 15 of 18 greens Friday.

Boutier has posted rounds of 66 and 69 to get to 7 under for the championship. She has 10 birdies and just three bogeys over the first two days.

She admitted to feeling the nerves of playing on home soil in a major.

“It’s definitely not easy. I feel like in the past I’ve definitely, you know, not handled it very well. I just feel like I put a lot of pressure on myself because I don’t want to disappoint anybody,” she said.”If I learned anything from the past, I really have to just focus on the job and on the course, on each shot. I feel like that’s really helped me really stay focused and not get ahead or think too much about the plans.”

Boutier is trying to treat this like any other tournament but there’s no avoiding things like doing news conferences twice, in two different languages.

“I feel like it’s a positive thing that the French media is talking about women’s golf and Evian,” she said. “I feel like anything I can do to bring more attention to the tournament and women’s golf, in general, is always a good thing.”

Heres some other things you should know about Friday’s second round.

Carlota Ciganda refuses slow-play penalty, gets DQ’d from LPGA’s Evian major

The DQ was for signing an incorrect scorecard.

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Carlota Ciganda, a two-time winner on the LPGA and a five-time member of the European Solheim Cup team, was disqualified after the first round of the 2023 Amundi Evian Championship, the fourth LPGA major of the season.

The official reason was for signing an incorrect scorecard, but the situation arose out of a slow-play penalty assessed on Ciganda’s final hole of the round. The Spaniard refused to acknowledge a two-shot penalty, signed her card without adding the two shots, then was DQ’d.

Ciganda was 3 over after her round, not counting the penalty strokes. The penalty would have pushed her score to 5-over 76, and she would have trailed first-round leader Paula Reto by 12 shots.

Ciganda was playing with fellow Arizona State alum Anna Nordqvist as well as Celine Herbin. Officially Group 14, the threesome started on the 10th hole Thursday at Evian Resort Golf Club in Evain-Les-Bains, France.

When they got to the seventh hole, their 16th hole of the day, they were notified by rules officials that they were out of position.

After failing to make up time, the group was put on the clock on the eighth hole, their 17th of the round. On the ninth hole, Ciganda took too long to play and was assessed a two-stroke penalty per the LPGA’s pace of play policy.

As was her right, she appealed to the advance and lead rules officials but was denied, meaning the two-stroke penalty would stick. She opted to sign her scorecard without accounting for those two strokes. Ciganda was told if she left the official recording area having turned in a signed incorrect scorecard, she would be disqualified. The LPGA said she left of her own accord, leading to the DQ.

An LPGA spokesperson told Golfweek: “Rule 3.3b(3) states that if a returned score is lower than the actual score, the player is disqualified from the competition. The exception to this Rule does not apply because Ciganda was aware of the penalty strokes received and upheld before signing her scorecard and leaving the recording area.”

Ciganda tied for 12th in her most recent event, the Dana Open, following a tie for 20th at the U.S. Women’s Open and a tie for third at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship. She ranks 14th on this year’s money list with $876,447, and she is No. 31 in the Rolex Women’s World Rankings. She won both her LPGA titles in 2016.

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Busy leaderboard highlights what we learned Thursday at 2023 Amundi Evian Championship

A handful of big names stumbled out the gate in France on Thursday.

The first round of the fourth women’s major championship of the year didn’t disappoint Thursday as some of the world’s best got off to hot starts at the 2023 Amundi Evian Championship.

A total of 49 players made their way around the Evian Resort’s Championship course under par in the opening round in Evian-les-Bains, France, and it’s Paula Reto leading the way at 7 under. Four players are tied for second at 5 under, with another nine all locked at T-6 at 4 under.

From the players who stepped up to the big names who stumbled, here’s what we learned from the first round of the 2023 Amundi Evian Championship.

After losing luggage, Alison Lee admits being near top of Amundi Evian leaderboard is ‘nerve-wracking’

While Lee made the trip overseas without issue, her luggage did not.

You might assume that after an opening-round 66 at the 2023 Amundi Evian Championship, American Alison Lee would have seen a drop in her blood pressure and far fewer butterflies.

Nothing could be further from the truth.

After briefly sitting atop the leaderboard at the women’s fourth major tournament of the year, the 28-year-old UCLA product — who won the inaugural ANNIKA Award in 2014, given to the nation’s top collegiate female golfer — said early tournament success doesn’t typically settle her nerves.

“You would think if I have a good round, whether it’s the first day, second day, all three days, going into the final round, it puts me in a better state of mind,” Lee said. “But honestly, sometimes it doesn’t, and especially a course like this, when it’s a little difficult off the tee it just takes a lot of positive self-talk. I’m trying the best I can to stay confident and in the moment. A lot of the time if you see your name at the top of the leaderboard it is a little bit more nerve-wracking and a little bit more anxiety and adrenaline running through the veins.

“So just trying my best to stay calm and not worry about that too much. Like I said, I’ve been putting great. Just trying to focus on making birdies and not making too many mistakes.”

Lee didn’t make many mistakes on Thursday in overcast, but scorable conditions in Evian-les-Bains, France, especially on a front nine that saw her post five birdies en route to a 31. She added birdies on Nos. 15 and 18 to take the clubhouse lead, before Paula Reto later followed with a 64.

And although she admitted the course is “visually intimidating” to her, Lee put herself in good position through much of the day, which has been a common theme for her this season. The difference on Thursday was that her putter, which has often failed her during her ninth LPGA season, came through when she needed it to.

Lee made a change to her team prior to the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, adding a putting coach. The move didn’t pay dividends that week as Lee withdrew from the event after an opening-round 77, citing back problems.

But she’s rebounded with a solid T-15 showing at the Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational and had the flat stick producing on Thursday.

“It’s honestly been a lot of mental. I really believe deep down I’ve always been a really good putter, and just for some reason this year I just haven’t felt comfortable over the ball,” Lee said. “I actually was speaking to my swing coach and he was so frustrated with me because he was looking at my stats and I want to say thanks to the KPMG Insights, I was ranked like 15th for strokes gained from approach to tee; my putting was pretty bad, so that’s obviously what my game was lacking.

“We’ve been working a lot on not so much my stroke, more so like mental, speed, and more feel, stuff like that. I think it’s really helped.”

Not everything about the trip to France has gone smoothly, however. While Lee made the trip overseas without issue, her luggage did not. She said via Twitter that her suitcase had been stuck for 40 hours in Detroit and she planned on focusing her attention on a travel partner before getting some rest.

“I’m going to go track my suitcase and make sure everything is there. Maybe take a little nap. I slept through the night last night so I might not have to do that,” Lee said. “But I’m going to send Delta a pretty nasty email.”

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