2024 Corales Puntacana Championship prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player

Horschel goes over the $36 million mark in career earnings in his 333rd starts. 

It wasn’t a big-money signature event like this week’s RBC Heritage was but, there was still $4 million on the line at the 2024 Corales Puntacana Championship, with $720,000 going to the winner.

And the winner was Billy Horschel, who now has eight wins in his PGA Tour career. The second opposite-field event also had 300 FedEx Cup points on the line for the victor.

Horschel goes over the $36 million mark in career earnings in his 333rd start.

Wesley Bryan pocketed $436,00 for his solo second. Kevin Tway banked $276,000 for his solo third.

See the complete prize money payouts at the 2024 Corales Puntacana Championship in the Dominican Republic.

Pos Player Score Earnings
1 Billy Horschel -23 $720,000
2 Wesley Bryan -21 $436,000
3 Kevin Tway -19 $276,000
T4 Charley Hoffman -18 $180,000
T4 Justin Lower -18 $180,000
T6 Chan Kim -16 $135,000
T6 Parker Coody -16 $135,000
T6 Alex Smalley -16 $135,000
T9 Peter Kuest -15 $113,000
T9 Greyson Sigg -15 $113,000
T11 Matti Schmid -14 $93,000
T11 Trace Crowe -14 $93,000
T11 Taylor Pendrith -14 $93,000
T14 Ben Griffin -13 $71,000
T14 Michael Kim -13 $71,000
T14 Rafael Campos -13 $71,000
T14 Nico Echavarria -13 $71,000
T18 Jorge Campillo -12 $53,000
T18 Davis Thompson -12 $53,000
T18 Pierceson Coody -12 $53,000
T18 Sean O’Hair -12 $53,000
T18 Bill Haas -12 $53,000
T23 Vince Whaley -11 $31,600
T23 Alex Fitzpatrick -11 $31,600
T23 Patton Kizzire -11 $31,600
T23 Callum Tarren -11 $31,600
T23 Adrien Dumont de Chassart -11 $31,600
T23 Jimmy Stanger -11 $31,600
T23 Patrick Fishburn -11 $31,600
T23 Jacob Bridgeman -11 $31,600
T23 Jhonattan Vegas -11 $31,600
T23 Alex Noren -11 $31,600
T33 Rico Hoey -10 $22,800
T33 Chez Reavie -10 $22,800
T33 Harrison Endycott -10 $22,800
T36 S.H. Kim -9 $19,450
T36 Lanto Griffin -9 $19,450
T36 Mark Hubbard -9 $19,450
T36 Henrik Norlander -9 $19,450
T40 Sam Stevens -8 $16,600
T40 Max Greyserman -8 $16,600
T40 K.H. Lee -8 $16,600
T43 Doug Ghim -7 $12,680
T43 Adam Long -7 $12,680
T43 Victor Perez -7 $12,680
T43 Matt NeSmith -7 $12,680
T43 Sam Ryder -7 $12,680
T43 William McGirt -7 $12,680
T43 Harry Higgs -7 $12,680
T50 Daniel Berger -6 $9,848
T50 Austin Smotherman -6 $9,848
T50 Zecheng Dou -6 $9,848
T50 Jimmy Walker -6 $9,848
T50 Chad Ramey -6 $9,848
T55 Ryan Palmer -5 $9,280
T55 Wilson Furr -5 $9,280
T55 Tyson Alexander -5 $9,280
T55 Ben Martin -5 $9,280
T59 Richy Werenski -4 $8,960
T59 Scott Piercy -4 $8,960
T59 Robert Streb -4 $8,960
T59 Brandon Wu -4 $8,960
T63 James Hahn -3 $8,720
T63 Tom Whitney -3 $8,720
65 Brandon Berry -2 $8,600
66 Scott Gutschewski -1 $8,520
T67 Ryan Armour E $8,360
T67 Joel Dahmen E $8,360
T67 Troy Merritt E $8,360
70 Erik Compton 3 $8,200

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Billy Horschel returns to winner’s circle after claiming 2024 Corales Puntacana Championship

Horschel wins for the eighth time in his PGA Tour career.

Kevin Tway hasn’t won since the 2018 Safeway Open. Wesley Bryan’s last win was the 2017 RBC Heritage. For Charley Hoffman, it’s been since the 2016 Valero Texas Open.

They’re all going to have to keep waiting, however, after Billy Horschel pulled away late to claim the 2024 Corales Puntacana Championship, the second opposite-field tournament of the season.

Horschel closed with a bogey-free 9-under 63, his scorecard featuring an eagle and seven birdies, including four in a row on Nos. 2 through 5. He finished a couple holes ahead of the final groups, but didn’t have to wait long to see his four-day total of 23-under 265 prove to be more than enough for his eighth career win.

It’s been less than two years since his last victory, the 2022 Memorial, and he does have a pair of top-10s in 2024, but he failed to qualify for the FedEx Cup Playoffs last season and has seen his world ranking plunge to 84th. He was one of two FedEx Cup champions in the field in the Dominican Republic.

MORE: Corales Puntacana Championship scores

“It’s all over the place right now, to tell you the truth,” Horschel said after his win when asked about his emotions. “Thinking back to where I was almost a year ago and to where I am now, I’ve seen the signs. Obviously the game’s been in a really good spot all year, the stats have shown it. I’ve finally gotten some results over the past month.”

Missing out on the Masters and then this week’s signature event meant Horschel had to accept the trip to the Dominican.

“Listen, I mean, I haven’t been in an opposite field event for a long time,” he said. “Sometimes you’ve got to take your medicine because of where you’ve been in the game. And I was happy that I came down here, I played really well and I came out with a victory.

“And it’s been a great week. Puntacana Resort’s been unbelievable, the golf course has been unbelievable, the staff, everyone involved has been awesome. I’ve enjoyed my time here. It’s just nice to finish that off with a victory.”

Wesley Bryan, bidding to become the second sponsor exemption to win this season, shot a final-round 68 and finished 21 under to nab solo second. Tway was solo third at 19 under. Hoffman and Justin Lower tied for fourth at 18 under.

The Corales Golf Course is a par 72 that measures 7,670 yards, making it one of the longest courses on the PGA Tour in 2024. The Tom Fazio-design opened in 2010. Wind is almost always an issue and the layout boasts six oceanside holes. The closing three-hole stretch is called the “Devil’s Elbow.”

Horschel earned $725,000 for the win.

YouTube star Wesley Bryan is rocking a mustache, has a new putter and, oh, is winning this week

The changes in Wesley Bryan’s life seem never-ending these days. But it’s all working out just fine.

The changes in Wesley Bryan’s life seem never-ending these days. Sure, the co-star of the Bryan Bros Golf YouTube channel is still creating crazy content, like when he and brother George recently tried to break 50 from the front tees at Aiken Golf Club, just a half-hour east of Augusta National.

But Bryan and his wife Elizabeth just welcomed a third baby girl into the world eight weeks ago, he’s dropped a new putter in his bag and he’s sporting a new facial hair look.

How is all this change affecting his golf game?

Just wonderfully, thanks.

Bryan followed up a 63 in the opening round of the Corales Puntacana Championship with a second-round 66 on Friday, one that included him going 4 under on the day’s final three holes to get to 15 under at the event’s midpoint.

The week in the Dominican Republic started with a new L.A.B. putter that has Bryan leading the field in putting through two days at Puntacana Resort and Club.

“This is week one with the L.A.B. in the bag. It cooperated, it’s going to stay in there for the forever future at this point, that’s what it feels like,” Bryan said. “I just saw a lot of people that are switching to it and I was like, man, I’ve got to at least give it a try.

“To be fair, it’s a little bit polarizing on the internet and a lot of people love it or hate it, whatever. Art, science, whatever it is, I just wanted to try it.”

Bryan’s consecutive low rounds have him in a good position to claim his second PGA Tour title as Justin Lower continued his run of solid play and is a stroke behind Bryan at 14 under, but the field drops off from there. Coincidentally, Bryan’s first win came back in 2017 at the RBC Heritage, where the top players are playing this week without him.

But he’s shown no signs of holding a grudge. In fact, he and his burgeoning family seem to be living the life at the beachside resort. Bryan said his crew spent plenty of time at the pool on Thursday and the group was planning to hit the nearby lagoon on Friday.

“I don’t know how life gets any better than that, honestly,” he said.

As for his new look, Bryan said the new mustache came by circumstance, but it’s potentially a look he could stick with. Especially if he continues to play like he has thus far this week. Bryan missed the cut in his only other PGA Tour start this year in Puerto Rico and missed the cut in 11 of  19 starts last season.

“It started with a beard to start the week and my wife, she doesn’t like when I have a beard, so I said I would shave it off,” he said. “I brought a really bad razor blade down here and a trimmer and anything so I tackled the cheeks a few days ago and it was brutal, and I went for the chin yesterday. Now unfortunately I think the stache is here to stay for the rest of the week.

“Sorry, Elizabeth … but I feel like until we shoot over par or whatever, then we’ll shave it off, but right now it’s here to stay. Shout out, Carson Young.”

Matt Wallace wins 2023 Corales Puntacana Championship for first PGA Tour win

The win is Wallace’s first on the PGA Tour.

Last week Matt Wallace made some headlines after a spat with his caddie. This week he’s back in the headlines once again, but as a PGA Tour winner.

The 32-year-old Englishman shot a 6-under 66 in Sunday’s final round to claim the 2023 Corales Puntacana Championship at 19 under for his first win on Tour in his 80th start. Wallace has won four times on the DP World Tour, most recently in 2018 at the Made in Denmark.

Nicolai Hojgaard needed a birdie on the 18th hole to force a playoff but came up short with par to finish solo second at 18 under. Tyler Duncan and Sam Stevens finished T-3 at 17 under, with Austin Eckroat rounding out the top five at 16 under.

“Self talk was very good today, been working really hard since the Players on it,” said Wallace, who has made light of his history as an Angry Golfer. “I realized at the Players out of the 145 shots I hit to miss the cut by one, two of those I spoke to myself well. Two shots for the whole week, so that’s not good enough. That’s not going to get the job done.”

You know what does get the job done? Four rounds under par – 67-66-70-66 – as well as four birdies over his last six holes on Sunday.

“Very happy down those last few holes,” said Wallace. “I knew I could do it and I played great all week, just came out on top.”

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Nicolai Hojgaard, Sam Stevens lead 2023 Corales Puntacana Championship heading into the final round

Catch up on the action from the Corales Puntacana Championship.

While four of the best players in the world are set to battle it out Sunday at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play, Nicolai Hojgaard and Sam Stevens are leading the 2023 Corales Puntacana Championship at Puntacana Resort and Club in the Dominican Republic at 14 under.

Hojgaard signed for a third-round bogey-free 6-under 66 on Saturday while Stevens followed up his Friday 65 with a 4-under 68 on Day 3. Stevens missed a short putt at the last that would’ve given him the outright lead.

Thomas Detry, Wyndham Clark, Tyler Duncan and Matt Wallace are tied for third and one shot behind the leaders. Wallace tied for seventh last week at the Valspar Championship.

Corales: Leaderboard

Martin Trainer, Austin Eckroat and Ricky Barnes sit at 12 under, two back, while Brice Grant rounds out the top 10 at 10 under, four back.

For Hojgaard, who turned 22 two weeks ago, a victory would make him eligible for PGA Tour membership, while Stevens is vying to become the second rookie to win this season.

The 54-hole leader/co-leader has won three of the last five events at the Corales Puntacana Championship.

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This PGA Tour pro’s driver head flew off after hitting a tee shot at Corales Puntacana Championship

The best part? Duncan went on to make a birdie.

Although many of the world’s best players are in Texas for the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play at Austin Country Club, an opposite-field event is also underway in the Dominican Republic.

During the second round of the Corales Puntacana Championship at Puntacana Resort and Club, Tyler Duncan stepped up to his tee shot on the par-4 15th. As soon as he made contact with the golf ball, his driver head flew off the shaft, leaving him holding a headless big stick.

The best part? He’d go on to birdie the hole.

Duncan signed for a second-round 7-under 65 and was tied for fourth.

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This PGA Tour pro is off to another strong start at the Corales Puntacana Championship, where he won in 2018

Brice Garnett views this week more like a vacation rather than a golf tournament. 

Brice Garnett views this week more like a vacation rather than a golf tournament.

How could he not at Puntacana Resort & Club? There’s food everywhere surrounding the resort. There’s beautiful views at the Corales Golf Course. And it’s a trip to the Dominican Republic, where Garnett has his only PGA Tour win back in 2018.

“Yeah, it’s just so easy. I feel like it’s an easy week,” Garnett said. “It’s kind of how I approach the weeks outside the (U.S.). I’ve had quite a bit of success really playing island golf.”

After an opening 6-under 66 in gusty conditions, it’s hard to argue against his case. Garnett tied for the lead with Ben Martin and one shot in front of Matt Wallace after the opening round at the Corales Puntacana Championship, this week’s opposite-field event.

A month ago at the Honda Classic, Garnett was in contention before a closing 77 at PGA National. A week later, he once again shot 77 in the final round at the Puerto Rico Open.

“Just waiting and patiently hoping that we can get all four days together here before long,” he said. “So just kind of keeping our nose down and keep on grinding. We know it will all come together eventually.”

Martin joined Garnett with a bogey-free performance. Martin also has one PGA Tour win, coming at the 2014 Shriners Hospitals for Children Open.

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This PGA Tour journeyman says he’s down 40-plus pounds and ready to roll at the Corales Puntacana Championship

“All the hard work I’ve put in the last five months will give me results. I don’t know when, but I know they will.”

Rafael Campos hasn’t played much on the PGA Tour over the past two seasons. However, with many of the game’s best players in Austin, Texas, for the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play, Campos got a spot in the opposite-field event, the Corales Puntacana Championship in the Dominican Republic.

On Tuesday, Campos opened up about recent changes he has made to his team and how he prepares himself now compared to just a few months ago.

“Yeah, I’ve lost approximately 40, 45 pounds in the last five months or so,” he said when meeting with the media at the Puntacana Resort and Club. “Came about just because last year was a really bad year, inconsistent year, injuries were really bad the middle of the year. I’ve battled with this and through this for the last four years and I just had enough, to tell you the truth, I really did.”

Rafael Campos of Puerto Rico plays his shot from the 14th tee during the first round of the Puerto Rico Open at Grand Reserve Country Club on February 25, 2021 in Rio Grande, Puerto Rico. (Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images)

“I’m just really upset sometimes when I think about it that I waited so long to make this type of change. Five months ago I set up a great team — everything, nutritionist, chiropractor, trainer, manager. Just put a brand new team together, start from zero and we’re doing a great job.”

Although he’s frustrated he waited so long to make the changes, Campos understands the results will come with perseverance.

“I can’t say how grateful I am for the team that I’ve put together,” he said. “And we’re nonstop working, to tell you the truth, and it feels great. I did it just to avoid injuries. The positive is we’re losing weight, we’re learning how to eat. It’s a lot easier than what people think, to tell the truth. I basically eat everything I want right now, I just have to make sure that I snack a lot throughout the day.

Rafael Campos of Puerto Rico hits his first shot on the 1st hole during the second round of the Puerto Rico Open at Grand Reserve Golf Club on March 03, 2023 in Rio Grande, Puerto Rico. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

“I just feel great, I really do. I think all these — all the hard work I’ve put in the last five months will give me results. I don’t know when, but I know they will. I’m just doing things right and I’m just pretty upset that I waited too long to make this type of change. But the way I feel right now is great and I can — my mental state is a lot better, healthier right now.”

Campos tied for 48th at the Puerto Rico Open earlier this month. At last season’s Puntacana Championship, he finished T-28.

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As he looks for a second title at Puntacana, Joel Dahmen jokes that Netflix didn’t even use the good stuff for ‘Full Swing’

Ask Dahmen how much of the popular Netflix series was staged and he answers as you’d assume he would.

Ask Joel Dahmen how much of the popular Netflix series “Full Swing” was staged and the self-effacing PGA Tour star answers exactly as you’d assume he would.

It’s all completely scripted,” Dahmen told Golfweek through a laugh. “None of it’s true.”

He’s joking, of course. For those who have yet to gorge on the eight-part series, Dahmen was a breakout star as the fourth installment provided a detailed look at the death of his mother, his battle with testicular cancer and his lack of belief in his own ability. Producer Chad Mumm knew what he had with Dahmen, proclaiming that the native of Clarkston, Washington, would see an uptick in popularity after the series dropped.

Mumm was right. Dahmen’s traffic on PGA Tour digital channels saw a 2,000% bump soon after. His caddie and best bud Geno Bonnalie also became a social media darling, with 800% more mentions on Twitter the week after the launch, according to Sports Business Journal.

But while all the notoriety has made Dahmen more recognizable to golf fans, he doesn’t seem to be letting the spotlight swallow him up.

“I think overall it was really good. I think they did a good job of telling our story,” Dahmen said. “We have a unique friendship, brotherhood, whatever you want to call it.

“But we gave them a lot of content that could have been very funny and they could have went another way with it.”

Michelob Ultra & Netflix “Full Swing” Premiere
Joel Dahmen and Geno Bonnali attend Michelob Ultra & Netflix “Full Swing” Premiere & Super Bowl After Party on February 11, 2023, in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Daniel Boczarski/Getty Images for Michelob ULTRA)

What kind of content?

Dahmen won’t reveal.

“We’re hoping we’ll be in for another season,” he said with another wry smile.

While his popularity is at an all-time high, Dahmen is hoping his results on the golf course can soon follow suit. He’s failed to crack the top 40 in a half-dozen starts this calendar year, missing a pair of cuts along the way, and although he reached the weekend at the Valspar Championship he shot over-par rounds on both Saturday and Sunday, falling into a tie for 61st place.

But this week’s Corales Puntacana Championship could be exactly what Dahmen needs to get out of the funk. He won the opposite-field event in 2021, marking his only victory on the PGA Tour and while most of the world’s top players are in Austin for the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play finale, Dahmen is one of the favorites to win in the Dominican Republic.

Either way, he’s still certain to have a good laugh along the way with Geno, who now attracts nearly as much attention as the player he caddies for.

“The popularity of it, we didn’t really don’t know what we were getting into,” Dahmen said. “We didn’t know we were going to kind of have our own episode of it. They gave us microphones, which is always dangerous. And then they put a camera on us and just kind of let us roll that.

“Just in the last couple weeks, it’s been a great response. Luckily I think we’re on the good side of that, there are some other episodes that maybe weren’t on the good side. So I think overall it has been great.

“And Geno’s signing autographs. He’s shaking hands. He’s kissing babies. You can’t take this guy anywhere anymore.”

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Lynch: From Tour winner to not knowing where the ball is going, a lonely search for answers

“I don’t know what I’m going to get from day to day.”

Fans invariably focus on the glamorous end of a leaderboard—triumphs, trophies—but stories are often no less compelling at the hardscrabble end of things, where blood vessels pop more often than flashbulbs. If there’s truth in the cliché that it’s lonely at the top, the bottom can be downright desolate.

While attention was trained on the WGC Dell Technologies Match Play in Austin, the PGA Tour’s foot soldiers—the best of the rest—were at the Corales Puntacana Championship in the Dominican Republic. In Thursday’s first round, Parker McLachlin teed off early in a strong wind and was 2-over par through eight holes.

“I felt like I was hanging in,” he told me Saturday morning from the bleachers of a Scottsdale ballpark, where he was watching his 8-year-old son’s season-opener.

On his 9th hole, No. 18 on the course, McLachlin thought his tee shot cleared the inlet to reach dry land. Finding it in the hazard, he returned to the tee. A poor second effort was wet and a rules official went back down the fairway to fetch another ball from his caddie. His third attempt started right, found the rocks, and rolled into the water. The official set off again. McLachlin made four with his fourth ball and signed for 10 on the hole, 87 on the day.

“It’s humiliating, to be honest,” he said. “The group behind is walking up and you’re firing ball after ball into the water.” Warming up before the second round, the recurring plantar fasciitis in his right foot flared, making it impossible to push to his left side. He WD’d, but won’t cite it as an excuse: “I played crappy before my foot started hurting.”

McLachlin was once good enough to win on the PGA Tour, claiming a seven-shot victory in the Reno-Tahoe Open in 2008. At 42, the memory is increasingly distant—he’s made just 5 cuts in 31 starts dating back to 2018—but still enough to sustain a belief that he can be that good again. A week before he went to the Dominican Republic, he played in Mexico. “I hit it the best I’ve ever hit it in my life,” he said. “Five-under through 10 without blinking an eye.”

His voice trailed off.

“I don’t know what I’m going to get from day to day. My swing was never the prettiest, but I just knew I was going to get the ball in the hole,” he finally said. “To go from that to not really knowing where the ball is going to go, and having that anxiety, makes for stressful rounds of golf.”

Day to day, McLachlin is now more teacher than competitor, thanks to a reputation for short-game wizardry. (In the final round of his win, he hit only one green in regulation on the front nine but shot even par.) He works with players from the PGA and LPGA tours and is much in demand for clinics. He concedes that teaching has replaced some of the pleasure taken by scorecards. “I get a sense of joy out of helping people,” he said.

Helping himself is an altogether different challenge.

The first of his three starts this year was at the Sony Open in his childhood hometown of Honolulu. On the morning of the first round, McLachlin woke at 3 a.m.

“The only thing I could see in my head was bad shot after bad shot. For the next two hours until my alarm went off, all I’m seeing is train wreck after train wreck,” he said. “It’s a weird place to be given it’s something I used to be really good at, that I do in front of thousands of people and TV cameras.”

He eventually shot 71-70 to miss the cut. “It makes me consider filling a flask with tequila before the round,” he admitted with a wry laugh. “I need a way to turn my brain off.”

Even for the world’s best golfers, the line between ecstasy and despair is perilously thin. McLachlin mentioned a tweet by Max Homa to the effect that every Tour player is one good swing from thinking he can win the Masters and one bad swing from retiring. “It’s always been the golf swing for me,” he said. “I would have belief in myself, but as I started to get more technical the belief in impact went away.”

McLachlin flew home Friday, discouraged but as yet undefeated. “It’s good to talk about, just get it out so it doesn’t fester,” he said. “There have been professionals who’ve dealt with this and amateurs who want to enjoy the game more. It’s something we can all commiserate with.”

Asked when his next tournament will be, he said, “No idea.” As a past champion, McLachlin can expect a handful of Tour starts each season, but with a young family and a thriving teaching business, the desire to chase Monday qualifiers and mini-tours isn’t there.

“I’ll probably get into one event this summer. Maybe I can get one thing to click and I’ll be as confident as I’ve ever been,” he said, with genuine optimism. “I don’t think it’s that far away. It’s not there currently, but it’s not that far away. It’s what all of us feel at the highest level.”

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