2023 LIV Golf Greenbrier prize money payouts for each player and team

DeChambeau banked $4 million for his five-shot victory.

Bryson DeChambeau went low Sunday at the LIV Golf Greenbrier event, posting a 12-under 58, the lowest score on the circuit.

Believe it not, DeChambeau started so hot that he started having thoughts of a 54.

“That was actually right after the first six out of seven,” he said of all the birdies he was collecting early at the Old White Course at the Greenbrier in White Sulfur Springs, West Virginia. “I was like, ”Okay, if I eagle one of the par 5s and I keep going at this pace, it could be dangerous.'”

DeChambeau banked $4 million for his five-shot victory. Mito Pereira got $2,125,000 for solo second.

Torque GC (Joaquin Niemann, Sebastian Munoz, Mito Pereira, David Puig) won the team title and split $3 million. Crushers GC (Bryson DeChambeau, Paul Casey, Charles Howell III, Anirban Lahiri) split $1.5 million for taking second place. Stinger GC (Louis Oosthuizen, Charl Schwartzel, Branden Grace, Dean Burmester) took third, good for $500,000.

Check out the 2023 LIV Golf Greenbrier prize money payouts for each player and team.

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Position Golfer Score Earnings
1 Bryson DeChambeau -23 $4,000,000
2 Mito Pereira -17 $2,125,000
T3 Richard Bland -16 $1,175,000
T3 Matthew Wolff -16 $1,175,000
T3 David Puig -16 $1,175,000
6 Harold Varner III -14 $800,000
T7 Brendan Steele -13 $596,000
T7 Branden Grace -13 $596,000
T7 Carlos Ortiz -13 $596,000
T7 Dean Burmester -13 $596,000
T7 Talor Gooch -13 $596,000
T12 Sebastián Muñoz -12 $300,333
T12 Sergio Garcia -12 $300,333
T12 Charles Howell III -12 $300,333
T12 Bernd Wiesberger -12 $300,333
T12 Cameron Tringale -12 $300,333
T12 Scott Vincent -12 $300,333
T18 Lee Westwood -10 $199,600
T18 James Piot -10 $199,600
T18 Anirban Lahiri -10 $199,600
T18 Laurie Canter -10 $199,600
T18 Abraham Ancer -10 $199,600
T23 Joaquin Niemann -9 $169,000
T23 Jason Kokrak -9 $199,600
T25 Louis Oosthuizen -8 $163,000
T25 Phil Mickelson -8 $163,000
T25 Eugenio Chacarra -8 $163,000
T25 Henrik Stenson -8 $163,000
T29 Graeme McDowell -7 $156,000
T29 Ian Poulter -7 $156,000
T29 Bubba Watson -7 $156,000
T32 Matt Jones -6 $149,000
T32 Marc Leishman -6 $149,000
T32 Dustin Johnson -6 $149,000
T32 Cameron Smith -6 $149,000
T36 Patrick Reed -5 $143,000
T36 Paul Casey -5 $143,000
T38 Peter Uihlein -3 $137,000
T38 Danny Lee -3 $137,000
T38 Brooks Koepka -3 $137,000
T38 Thomas Pieters -3 $137,000
42 Chase Koepka -2 $132,000
T43 Kevin Na -1 $129,000
T43 Martin Kaymer -1 $129,000
45 Pat Perez E $126,000
T46 Sihwan Kim 1 $123,000
T46 Jediah Morgan 1 $123,000

 

Bryson DeChambeau shoots 12-under 58, wins LIV Golf Greenbrier

Bryson DeChambeau has posted the lowest score in the history of the two-year-old LIV Golf League.

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Bryson DeChambeau has posted the lowest score in the history of the two-year-old LIV Golf League.

During Sunday’s final round of the LIV Golf Greenbrier at the Old White Course in White Sulfur Springs, West Virginia, DeChambeau posted a 12-under 58.

DeChambeau’s scorecard was simply one circle after another as he collected 13 birdies. He started on the first hole in the Sunday shotgun start and had six birdies on his first seven holes before a bogey at the eighth. He closed with four straight birdies on Nos. 15 through 18 to get to 23 under to win the event by five shots over Mito Pereira.

The most dramatic stroke was his final one on his final hole, a long putt to break 60 by two shots.

The Old White course played as a par-70 and measured 7,255 yards Sunday.

After his round, he was asked on the CW telecast about whether he thought U.S. Ryder Cup captain Zach Johnson would soon be giving him a call.

“I’ve got some equipment that’s performing quite nicely, with the driver and that’s a deadly combination with my putting. Cleary I putted well, drove it well, wedged it well. You couldn’t have written it up any better than this,” he said. “But if I do get a call, that’d be awesome. If not, I’ll be rooting them on over in Rome.”

Phil Mickelson congratulated DeChambeau on social media but also took a chance to give him some friendly ribbing: “Incredible round by Bryson. 58. What a weekend and win for him. He stole my jump though. Not cool. Proud of his resolve after Cameron and I gave him a thumping Wednesday.”

DeChambeau won $4 million for the victory, his first LIV title. The Torque GC team of Pereira, David Puig, Joaquin Niemann and Sebastian Munoz won the team title.

LIV Golf Bedminster is next week.

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5 sleeper picks for the 2023 Open Championship at Royal Liverpool

Can someone shock the golf world this week at Hoylake?

The world of golf has returned to Hoylake for the 2023 Open Championship at Royal Liverpool. Nine years ago, Rory McIlroy outlasted Rickie Fowler and Sergio Garcia on his way to becoming the 2014 Champion Golfer of the Year at this very venue.

McIlroy, who won the Genesis Scottish Open last week, was chased down by Cam Smith last season at St. Andrews and eventually finished third.

Smith was admittedly emotional when he returned the Claret Jug this week, but he sounds extremely motivated to get it back.

Although some of the top players in the world are playing their best golf at the moment, that doesn’t mean Sunday will be without a Cinderella story.

Open Championship 2023: Leaderboard, scores, news, tee times, more

Here are five sleeper picks for the 2023 Open at Royal Liverpool.

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There are 16 LIV golfers at 2023 British Open. Is this the last time we care?

Perhaps the 2023 Open will be the final time there will be a clear distinction between two sets of competitors.

Perhaps the 2023 Open Championship at Royal Liverpool will be the final time there will be a clear distinction between two sets of competitors: those who are in the LIV Golf League and those who are not.

There will be 16 members of LIV Golf in the field this week when the Open begins on Thursday. That’s nearly one-quarter of the entire LIV Golf membership and barring any withdrawals, will tie for the second-most LIV players in one of the four major championships this year.

There were 18 LIV players who qualified for the Masters but two withdrew, Kevin Na and Louis Oosthuizen. The PGA Championship had 17 LIV players and the U.S. Open had 15.

Leading the LIV pack will be four past champions, defending champion Cameron Smith, Phil Mickelson, Louis Oosthuizen and Henrik Stenson.

Friday update: To read about the LIV golfers who made the cut at Royal Liverpool, click here.

By the time the 2024 Masters hits the calendar, it’s hopeful that the tentative peace and pending agreement between the PGA Tour and the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund (which bankrolls LIV) will have been finalized and its players allowed back on the PGA Tour and the DP World Tour.

Open Championship 2023: Leaderboard, scores, news, tee times, more

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Until then, LIV players are still barred from playing on the PGA Tour and DP World Tour and have only been able to play on the same course with them in the majors.

Here are the LIV players who qualified for the Open Championship:

Bryson DeChambeau’s former caddie back on bag at LIV Golf London

The band is back together this week.

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Two years ago this week, Tim Tucker quit working for his boss, Bryson DeChambeau, the night before the 2021 Rocket Mortgage Classic, a tournament where DeChambeau was the defending champion.

However, the tandem is back together this week.

Tucker is back on the bag for DeChambeau at this week’s LIV Golf event in London at Centurion Club, DeChambeau’s agent, Brett Falkoff, confirmed to Golfweek. Tucker caddied for DeChambeau in all eight of his PGA Tour victories and was on the bag for Kurt Kitayama’s first Tour win this spring at the 2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational.

DeChambeau’s caddie, Greg Bodine, is attending to a personal matter this week, which is why Tucker and DeChambeau are back together. No Laying Up first reported the pair joining up in London.

Bodine plans to return to DeChambeau’s bag at the Open Championship in two weeks at Royal Liverpool in Hoylake, and Tucker will caddie for Kitayama next week in the Genesis Scottish Open.

Early in DeChambeau’s career, he went through a slew of caddies, including a previous break with Tucker, before making him his steady bagman in 2018.

DeChambeau hasn’t won in 14 LIV events, his best finish coming last week at LIV Golf Andalucia where he placed second. The 2020 U.S. Open champion last won at the 2021 Arnold Palmer Invitational.

This year, he placed T-4 at the PGA Championship and T-20 at the U.S. Open while missing the cut at the Masters.

Bryson DeChambeau continues trend of LIV Golf players contending at majors at 2023 U.S. Open

Another men’s major championship, another LIV Golf player near the top of the leaderboard.

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LOS ANGELES – Another men’s major championship, another LIV Golf player near the top of the leaderboard.

At the Masters it was Brooks Koepka, Phil Mickelson and Patrick Reed leading the charge for the upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and financially backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. Koepka then won the PGA Championship, with Bryson DeChambeau just a few shots back. At this week’s 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club, DeChambeau is back in the mix once again.

The 2020 U.S. Open winner shot a 3-under 67 in the opening round at the exclusive club in Beverly Hills and walked off the course T-3 behind Rickie Fowler and Xander Schauffele, who each made major championship history with their efforts of 8-under 62.

“Pretty much how I thought it would play,” said DeChambeau of Thursday morning’s fair conditions. “The greens were definitely receptive, which was nice. I think they’re going to get a lot firmer. Obviously tomorrow afternoon is going to be firm. This afternoon is going to be firm, and the wind is picking up, so it’s not going to be too easy. Hopefully the wind isn’t present tomorrow. That’ll be a huge advantage for us in the early wave.”

U.S. OpenLeaderboard, tee times, hole-by-hole

“But you had to get after it today. If you didn’t, you’re going to be behind the 8-ball,” he continued. “Lucky enough to shoot a good score today.”

The former bulked-up bomber is still no small fry but has slimmed down since he brought Winged Foot to its knees in 2020. Before his opening round, DeChambeau spent a considerable amount of time on the range Wednesday mashing drivers and working to replicate a swing feel he used to have.

“I’ve been hitting more golf balls than I would like to ever. It’s just, again, I’m trying to figure out what I did in 2018 that made it so repeatable, and I’m very close to figuring it out,” said DeChambeau. “Just going to a take a little bit more time, little bit more grinding, a little more thought. Got to come up with something unique that allows me to be super stable through impact like I was.”

Starting his round on the back, DeChambeau was even par through his opening nine holes before he caught fire on his second nine. He sandwiched two birdies around a bad bogey on the par-4 second hole and added two more on Nos. 6 and 10, a drivable par 4 and two-shot par 5, respectively.

“Yeah, certainly there’s the idea of laying up and having a nice wedge in there, but if you miss your wedge you’re in the stuff,” DeChambeau said of the risk-reward to go for the green on No. 6. “I think personally just being in the stuff right off the tee and chipping it up there hopefully close on the green and giving yourself a 20-footer for birdie, worst case scenario, is the best thing you can do every day. I’ve been going for it, and hopefully it pays off.”

DeChambeau fancies himself a big-brain thinker, and noted how every course has its own unique strategy that you can apply. He was able to exploit Winged Foot with his distance, which is still an advantage here at LACC, but the course requires more than just a long ball.

“This golf course you’ve got to be a great putter. You’ve got to have great iron play into the greens. You’ve got to be disciplined. It teases you wanting to go for certain shots in certain places, and you’ve got to be a great driver of the ball,” he said. “Everybody thinks the fairways are wide. No, no, no. If you pull it or push it it’s rolling out of the fairway. That’s how firm and fast they are and how much slope there is. You can say they’re wide fairways but realistically they’re like 25-yard fairways at best in some areas.”

DeChambeau struggled early in the year at the Masters with a missed cut and also in LIV Golf events, with finishes of T-23, T-44, T-16, T-26 and T-19 in the first five 48-player field tournaments of the season. Over the last two months, he finished T-5 in Tulsa and T-9 in Washington, D.C., as well as T-4 at last month’s PGA Championship.

“If I have what I had at the PGA, I’ll be contending (this week) for sure.”

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‘Nobody is perfect’: Bryson DeChambeau torched after CNN interview by golf fans, a PGA Tour player and more

“Nobody is perfect, but we’re all trying to improve in life.”

On Tuesday night, LIV Golf’s Bryson DeChambeau appeared on CNN for a five minute and 20 second interview with Kaitlin Collins.

It led to plenty of golf fans and even a PGA Tour player torching DeChambeau on social media.

He has never been one to mince words about his thoughts or feelings when it comes to the sport. He has often thought outside of the box and has been willing to take risks or do unorthodox things.

However, in his CNN interview, sporting his LIV Golf Crushers team gear, DeChambeau defended Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan.

“There’s a lot more behind closed doors that’s been going on. What I can tell you is that H-E, Yasir, has always been a staunch supporter of golf globally, and wanting to grow the game,” DeChambeau said.

“H.E.” stands for “His Excellency.”

“I think this is the best thing that could ever happen to the game of golf,” DeChambeau said. “The fans are going to get what they want, the players are going to experience something a little different, a little new, but I truly believe the game of golf wins.

“I do feel bad for the PGA Tour players because they were told one thing and something else happened, and our side, we were told one thing and it’s come to fruition. It does stink a little bit from my perspective that the PGA Tour players are not necessarily winning. I hope they can find a way to make sure that they are valued in the same way that we are over at LIV. I think that’ll happen, it’s just going to take some time with the players pushing back a little bit and trying to figure out what gives them the best opportunity to be successful.”

Collins then asked DeChambeau about Saudi Arabia’s human rights record and he at first said the families of 9/11 victims wouldn’t be able to be paid back for what happened but added that it was 20 years ago and “we’re in a place now where it time to work together to make things better as a whole.”

Then Collins asked whether DeChambeau was uncomfortable considering the Saudis are accused of financing terrorism and killing Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

“I mean, look, it’s unfortunate what has happened but that is not something I can speak on because I’m a golfer,” DeChambeau said. “What I can say is that, what they’re trying to do, what they’re trying to work on, is be better allies, because we are allied with them. I’m not going to get into the politics of it, I’m not specialized in that. But what I can say is they’re trying to do good for the world and showcase themselves in a light that hasn’t been seen in a while. Nobody is perfect, but we’re all trying to improve in life.”

Golf Twitter then got a hold of the video and it had a field day.

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LIV Golf rallies around, revels in Brooks Koepka’s PGA Championship win ahead of Washington, D.C. event

Bryson DeChambeau said Koepka’s win “proves that we can play in major championships.”

STERLING, Va. — Moments after Brooks Koepka won his fifth career major championship Sunday, he was greeted and congratulated by perhaps the unlikeliest of foes: Bryson DeChambeau.

For years, the feud between the two men was one of the juiciest subplots in professional golf. But in recent months, it’s appeared that the tenor of their relationship has changed.

“Look, I’m going to give respect where respect is due,” DeChambeau said in a news conference Wednesday when asked why he walked back to the 18th green to congratulate Koepka.

“He has won five majors, and he played better than me that week. And what was sad is that really nobody was there to congratulate him after.”

At its core, DeChambeau said, the gesture was simply about respect, though there is some important context.

“He’s a LIV Golfer and I am, too,” he added. “And obviously that’s a part of it.”

As the Saudi-financed golf league hits the midway point of its second campaign this week with an event at Trump National Golf Club, Kopeka’s win at the PGA Championship has given everyone affiliated with Team LIV a chance to take a victory lap – even the two men who were once at the center of golf’s most public feud.

While the victory was individually massive for Koepka, making him one of just 20 men to have won five majors or more, it has also become a rallying cry for LIV Golf. The league has long touted its team-centric, 54-hole format. But Koepka’s win, which was the first major title for a LIV golfer, underlined both the foxhole mentality that exists among its players and the tension between them and the rest of the golfing world.

“Look, (Koepka’s win) proves that we can play in major championships. Proves that the schedule is good enough for us to win major championships,” said DeChambeau, who finished in a tie for fourth at the PGA Championship.

“Yeah, it’s an individual sport, but there’s a team component to it now. And it’s really cool to see how (LIV golfers) are playing well not only for their teams and for themselves, but for an organization that deserves to be mentioned a lot more in a better light than what it is.”

Koepka said on Instagram in February that he and DeChambeau had “squashed” their proverbial beef, in large part because of their shared interest in LIV. “I actually talk to him quite frequently because of what’s going on here at LIV. Pretty much on an every-other-day basis,” Koepka said.

Their interaction Sunday served as the latest evidence of that, and the way LIV golfers have come to view one another’s success as a point of pride.

Koepka’s victory, which gave him a nice boost in the world ranking, has also reignited many of the LIV vs. PGA Tour debates that have been simmering in the sport. Should LIV golfers, like Koepka, be eligible to compete in the Ryder Cup later this year if they qualify? Should they earn world rankings points based on their performances in LIV events, like the one beginning Friday? And do their 54-hole events represent a step down in level of play or preparation?

“I gave up on that narrative about six months ago,” another LIV golfer, Cameron Smith, told reporters Sunday. “We’re still out there. We haven’t forgot how to play golf.”

Charles Howell III, a member of DeChambeau’s LIV team, said Wednesday that he believes LIV golfers are “still working as hard now or harder” than when they were on the PGA Tour, despite playing fewer holes per event. He views LIV’s lighter schedule as an advantage.

“I understand the majors historically have 72 holes, but there is nothing sacred about that number,” Howell said. “Fifty-four holes in a way can be a bit more pressure, in that it’s condensed and you can’t really afford to have a bad run of nine holes or so”

LIV Golf and its players have drawn widespread criticism over the past 18 months as the league – which is funded by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund – has used eight- and nine-figure contract offers to lure several marquee names away from the PGA Tour, creating a schism in the sport that has since spilled into federal court.

Saudi Arabia has been accused of wide-ranging human rights abuses, including politically motivated killings, torture, forced disappearances and inhumane treatment of prisoners. And members of the royal family and Saudi government were accused of involvement in the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist and Washington Post columnist.

LIV Golf has also drawn some ire in the political space for frequenting courses owned by former president Donald Trump; This weekend’s event at Trump National is the first of three tournaments that will be held at Trump properties this year.

DeChambeau, 29, is one of LIV’s most well-known players, alongside Dustin Johnson, Phil Mickelson, Patrick Reed and Koepka. When he teed off Saturday at the PGA Championship, he was greeted with loud boos, ostensibly in relation to his role with LIV.

He grinned Wednesday when asked about the boos, in the context of a larger question: All of the acrimony he’s received for joining LIV Golf, the questions about his ethics given the league’s ties to Saudi Arabia – has it been worth it?

“When you talk about ethics, that’s people’s perception. I completely disagree with it, but everybody has the right to their own opinion,” he said. “Was it worth it? Absolutely. This has been beyond my dreams, what I could have imagined this becoming. And it’s only getting better. I think over the course of time, like many have said, you’ll see what good and what positive impact we’re having.”

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How many LIV Golf players should we expect at the 2024 PGA Championship?

As it currently stands, five players are in the field for the 2024 PGA Championship at Valhalla.

Of the 156 golfers in the field for the 2023 PGA Championship last week, 18 played for the LIV Golf League. Eleven players made the weekend cut – including winner Brooks Koepka – and five went on to finish inside the top 20.

With Rochester, New York’s Oak Hill Country Club in the rearview and Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Kentucky, faintly on the horizon, how many LIV players should we expect to see at the 2024 PGA Championship? As it stands now, not many.

Major championships can change their qualification criteria at their discretion, which golf fans recently witnessed with the USGA-Talor Gooch debacle. For the sake of this exercise, we’re going to assume the PGA of America will use the same 13 qualification criteria (and special invitations) for 2024 as it did for 2023.

Here’s how it shakes out:

Former PGA champions

Phil Mickelson and Koepka have lifetime exemptions, so get used to seeing them.

Winners of the last five U.S. Opens

Bryson DeChambeau won the 2020 U.S Open, making him exempt to the PGA until 2025.

Winners of the last five Masters

Dustin Johnson also won in 2020, so he’s also exempt in the PGA until 2025.

Winners of the last five Open Championships

Cameron Smith is in until the 2027 PGA after his performance last summer at St. Andrews in the Open.

Winners of the last three Players Championships

Smith is also double-dipping with his Players win last spring.

Top 3 on the Official World Golf Ranking International Federation Ranking List

Sihwan Kim, perennially at the bottom of the LIV leaderboards, is currently third on this list via his Asian Tour status. LIV has invested $300 million in the Asian Tour and created its International Series, where a certain number of LIV players are required to compete. Don’t expect more than one player to qualify this way.

The current Senior PGA Champion

Richard Bland, Phil Mickelson and Lee Westwood are LIV’s only members of the 50-and-over club, and none will be in the field for this week’s KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship, May 24-28, at PGA Frisco in Texas.

The low 15 scorers and ties in the previous PGA Championship

Players could have qualified via this exemption, like club pro Michael Block, but the three who qualified inside the top 15 (Koepka, DeChambeau, Smith), are already qualified for 2024. Just missing out were Patrick Reed (T-18), Mito Pereira (T-18) and Harold Varner III (T-29)

The 20 low scorers in the last PGA Professional Championship

LIV players won’t compete in this event. Next.

The 70 leaders in PGA Championship points list

The list is based off official money earned on the PGA Tour since the previous PGA Championship. If you haven’t been following closely, a few lawsuits are ongoing that will keep this from happening.

Members of the most recent U.S. and European Ryder Cup Teams who are inside the top 100 of the OWGR one week before the PGA Championship

Because of the struggle to earn qualification points, LIV players are almost assuredly going to have to be captain’s picks if they have any shot at making the U.S. or European teams for the upcoming Ryder Cup later this fall in Italy. Future sure-fire captains such as Westwood, Sergio Garcia and Ian Poulter recently resigned their DP World Tour memberships, removing them from consideration to represent Team Europe.

Any tournament winner co-sponsored or approved by the PGA Tour since the previous PGA Championship

LIV’s antitrust lawsuit against the Tour and the Tour’s countersuit almost assuredly won’t be decided by next spring, so this criteria is also a wash.

Special invitations

That means using last year’s criteria and this year’s event, just five players – Koepka, DeChambeau, Smith, Johnson and Mickelson – are currently slated to make an appearance at Valhalla in 2024. The PGA Championship could create a category for LIV Golf players to qualify, but as it stands now, the only chance other players have to qualify is with a special invitation, by winning one of the next three majors or the Players, making a 2023 Ryder Cup team or via the International Federation Ranking List.

A player like who qualifies for next year’s PGA could take his talents from one of the tours to LIV Golf between now and next spring, similar to Thomas Pieters this year. That said, the rumor mill for defections to the Saudi Arabia-backed league has gone silent this season.

For now, we wait and see.

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How each LIV Golf player fared at the 2023 PGA Championship

Of the 16 players to tee it up, 11 made the weekend cut.

One of the big questions facing the players who took their talents to LIV Golf was how would the different schedule and competition level impact their preparation for major champions.

So far, so good.

Three LIV players finished in the top six at the Masters, and of the 16 players who competed at the 2023 PGA Championship, 11 made the weekend cut at Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, New York. Brooks Koepka even went on to win the thing, and he was joined by four other LIV players inside the top 20 on the leaderboard.

Check out how each of the LIV Golf League players fared this week at the 2023 PGA Championship.

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