You’ll be shocked to see LIV Golf’s top money earners compared to their earnings on the PGA Tour

LIV distributed $255 million in prize money with 52 players earning more than $1 million.

Pat Perez is unapologetic for joining LIV Golf and cashing in after more than two decades on the PGA Tour. Though no one feels sorry for a man who won nearly $29 million in prize money in 21 years on the tour, Perez wanted what everyone wants: Less work; more money.

He found it with LIV.

“I just couldn’t be happier,” he said Sunday at the conclusion of LIV’s inaugural season. “It’s unbelievable.”

Perez is part of the Dustin Johnson’s 4 Aces, which won LIV’s team championship at Trump National Doral on Sunday. The title pushed Perez’s season earnings above $8 million.

LIV, financed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, distributed $255 million in prize money in 2022, including $30 million in bonuses. In all, 52 golfers earned more than $1 million.

Here are the top 10 on LIV’s money list for its inaugural year and how this year compares to their time on the PGA Tour.

LIV Golf: Former college star Eugenio Lopez-Chacarra banks mega-winner’s check in fifth pro start

“What LIV is doing is something unbelievable.”

After four starts on the LIV Golf Tour, Eugenio Lopez-Chacarra of Spain might have been second-guessing his decision to forego his final year of eligibility at Oklahoma State and turn pro.

The 22-year-old former All-American at Oklahoma State had finished no better than 24th in his first four starts against fields of just 48 players. That was before he built a five-stroke lead at Stonehill Golf Club in Bangkok, Thailand, and closed in 69 to win his first professional tournament in his fifth start at the LIV Golf Invitational-Bangkok. He also sparked Sergio Garcia, Abraham Ancer and Carlos Diaz to their first team title.

“If there were any doubts about making the decision to turn pro when you did, have you now put those in the past?” Chacarra was asked. “Is it easy to say it was a good move?”

“A hundred percent yes,” Chacarra said. “It wasn’t easy, but I feel this was the best for me and for my future, and what LIV is doing is something unbelievable. The PGA Tour University doesn’t give you much; it can just give you six events, and then if you don’t play good – one of my best friends Austin Eckroat was playing Monday qualifying all year, and getting the opportunity to play with Sergio, one of my heroes, and then Abraham and Carlos for a couple years here and learning with the best players.”

For the record, it should be noted that Eckroat was one of four alumni from the first class of PGA Tour University to earn his 2022-23 Tour card by finishing third in the Korn Ferry Tour Finals. As a rookie, Eckroat received $500,000 to offset his expenses.

Chacarra, however, received a generous signing bonus as part of a reported three-year deal with LIV. He won’t have to worry about any of the usual financial concerns of 22-year-old dropouts after banking $4 million for the individual title, finishing at 19-under par, three strokes ahead of Patrick Reed, and four ahead of Richard Bland, Paul Casey and Sihwan Kim. Chacarra earned another $750,000 for the team victory.

“We gelled great,” said team captain Sergio Garcia. “Eugenio played amazing, and both Abraham and Carlos also played solid. When you have three out of four scores counting, that is massive. That’s why we won, and that’s why we won quite comfortably.”

Chacarra chipped in at 15, calling it “the best shot of my life,” then withstood a 90-minute weather delay with three holes to go, and sealed the deal when play resumed with a birdie at 17.

How did Chacarra find his game after a sluggish start to his pro career?

“I went back to see what I was doing in college because I was working so good and I didn’t do as good the first four weeks as a pro, and it was just try to have fun and then play to not make bogeys,” he explained. “Kind of play smart on the course, and that’s what I’ve started doing this week.”

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Reports: Matthew Wolff, Carlos Ortiz and Eugenio Chacarra round out final spots in Liv Golf event in Portland

LIV Golf reportedly has continued its signing spree with three new names for this week’s Portland event.

LIV Golf reportedly has continued its signing spree over the weekend with Matthew Wolff, Carlos Ortiz and Eugenio Chacarra expected to join the upstart circuit for its event this week at Pumpkin Ridge in Portland.

LIV Golf previously announced 45 players for its 48-man field at the second of a scheduled eight events in the series.

Wolff, 23, claimed the individual 2019 NCAA Championship title as a sophomore at Oklahoma State, turned pro that June and won the PGA Tour’s 3M Open in just his third event. Playing as a sponsor’s exemption, Wolff canned a 25-foot eagle putt from the fringe on the final hole to edge Bryson DeChambeau and Collin Morikawa. Wolff further showed his potential by finishing fourth at the 2020 PGA Championship and shot 65 at Winged Foot in the third round of the U.S. Open later that year to assume the 54-hole lead. He finished second to DeChambeau and rose as high as No. 12 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

With his unorthodox swing and charismatic presence, he appeared to be on the verge of being the Tour’s next breakout star. However, Wolff struggled adjusting to Tour life and took two months off from golf last year, citing the need to address his mental health. Wolff has missed the cut in seven of his last 12 starts this season, without a single top-25 finish, and has plummeted to 77th in the world ranking. He shot 66 on Sunday at the Travelers Championship, where he made his PGA Tour professional debut in 2019, and finished T-55.

Wolff’s jump to LIV was first reported by The Telegraph of London. It has been rumored for weeks, most notably after his image was included in a LIV Golf sizzle reel promoting the fledgling circuit that is backed by Saudi Arabia’s PIF Investment Fund.

Sports Illustrated reported that Mexico’s Carlos Ortiz has decided to join LIV Golf, too. The 31-year-old Ortiz won the 2020 Houston Open. He is ranked No. 119 in the world. Last week, Mexico’s top-ranked player, Abe Ancer, also made the leap to LIV, giving the circuit a viable Latin American presence.

As noted on Golfweek on Saturday, Chacarra, the No. 2-ranked amateur in the world, was reported to have signed with LIV and planned to forgo his senior year at Oklahoma State and turn pro to compete in the 48-man field in Portland.  Writing in Spanish, he noted that he had “received an opportunity I could not turn down,” adding, “it is one of those trains that pass once in a lifetime.”

The No. 2-ranked amateur in the world, Eugenio Chacarra, is turning professional to play for LIV Golf

“I had already achieved everything as an amateur and now I will be able to gain experience as a professional.”

Eugenio Chacarra made a name for himself at Oklahoma State. During his junior year as a Cowboy, Chacarra earned first-team All-America status from both the GCAA and Golfweek.

He made three starts on the PGA Tour in 2022, most recently at the Wells Fargo Championship where he missed the cut. Now, it’s conceivable we may never see him on Tour again.

The 22-year-old from Spain has decided to turn pro and play in the LIV Golf Series.

“I had already achieved everything as an amateur and now I will be able to gain experience as a professional,” he told the Spanish sports newspaper MARCA.

On April 13, it was announced Chacarra forfeited his PGA Tour University status to return to school. Now he heads to the Saudi-backed, Greg Norman-led breakaway league.

He joins Brooks Koepka, Bryson DeChambeau, and Abraham Ancer as recent commits.

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Texas Tech’s Ludvig Aberg wins 2022 Ben Hogan Award

Aberg received the award at Colonial Country Club alongside fellow finalists Sam Bennett and Eugenio Chacarra.

Texas Tech’s Ludvig Aberg will compete for a national title later this week, but he’s already got some hardware for his stellar season.

The junior from Sweden won the 2022 Ben Hogan Award presented by PNC Bank, which annually honors the best men’s college golfer based on collegiate, amateur and professional events over the last 12 months. Aberg is the first-ever winner from Texas Tech and the third from the Big 12 Conference over the last five years, joining Viktor Hovland (Oklahoma State, 2019) and Doug Ghim (Texas, 2018). The award also earns Aberg an exemption into the PGA Tour’s 2023 Charles Schwab Challenge.

Aberg recently won the Big 12 Championship, tied for sixth at the NCAA New Haven Regional and will compete at the NCAA Championship this week at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Arizona. The Swede also has a runner up at the 2021 European Amateur under his belt, along with a T-30 at the DP World Tour’s Scandinavian Mixed and a 51st place finish at the PGA Tour 2021 Butterfield Bermuda Championship.

Aberg received the award at an event at Colonial Country Club alongside fellow finalists Sam Bennett  (Texas A&M) and Eugenio Chacarra (Oklahoma State).

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Players to watch: Predicting 10 first-time PGA Tour winners in 2022

Keep an eye on these PGA Tour veterans and incoming rookies in 2022.

After a nearly two-month holiday hiatus, the PGA Tour returns to action with the 2022 Sentry Tournament of Champions in Hawaii.

The last time we saw the boys in action, Talor Gooch earned his first-ever win on Tour at the RSM Classic in November. Three weeks prior Lucas Herbert did the same at the Butterfield Bermuda Championship. As the new year approaches, with the depth and level of talent on Tour at seemingly an all-time high these days, your friends at Golfweek got to thinking — who might be next to earn that first big Tour win?

From veterans to rising stars from the amateur ranks, here are 10 players who we predict will hoist a trophy for the first time in 2022.