2024 Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions prize money payouts for each LPGA player

Lydia Ko became the fifth LPGA player to cross the $17 million threshold in official career earnings.

Lydia Ko collected her 20th LPGA victory a short golf cart ride from her Lake Nona Golf & Country Club home at the LPGA Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions. Well, except for Sunday. The electricity went off after Ko’s mom used the blender that morning, so mom Tina had to pick her up in a car after her victory press conference. The golf cart was dead.

With the $225,000 winner’s check, Ko became the fifth player to cross the $17 million threshold ($17,167,692) in official career earnings. She remains fifth on the All-Time Official Money List, $832,308 behind LPGA Hall of  Famer Inbee Park.

Ko is also now one point away from the 27 required to make the LPGA Hall of Fame.

Pos. Name Score Money
1 Lydia Ko -14 $225,000
2 Alexa Pano -12 $165,659
3 Brooke Henderson -10 $120,174
T4 Cheyenne Knight -8 $76,337
T4 Ayaka Furue -8 $76,337
T4 Ally Ewing -8 $76,337
T7 Charley Hull -7 $48,070
T7 Rose Zhang -7 $48,070
T9 Marina Alex -6 $38,547
T9 Gemma Dryburgh -6 $38,547
11 Megan Khang -5 $34,011
T12 Leona Maguire -4 $28,932
T12 Hae Ran Ryu -4 $28,932
T12 Nanna Koerstz Madsen -4 $28,932
T12 Gaby Lopez -4 $28,932
T16 Andrea Lee -2 $24,216
T16 Nelly Korda -2 $24,216
18 Lilia Vu -1 $22,493
T19 Allisen Corpuz E $20,860
T19 Mone Inami E $20,860
T19 Ruoning Yin E $20,860
T22 Amy Yang 1 $18,344
T22 Ashleigh Buhai 1 $18,344
T22 Maja Stark 1 $18,344
T22 Nasa Hataoka 1 $18,344
26 Jennifer Kupcho 2 $16,689
T27 Paula Reto 3 $15,735
T27 Linn Grant 3 $15,735
29 Grace Kim 5 $14,784
T30 Elizabeth Szokol 7 $13,967
T30 In Gee Chun 7 $13,967
T32 Chanettee Wannasaen 8 $12,879
T32 Pajaree Anannarukarn 8 $12,879
34 Danielle Kang 16 $12,062
WD
Jodi Ewart Shadoff
$11,610

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After a year of tears, Lydia Ko collects 20th LPGA title at LPGA TOC, moves closer to Hall of Fame

The joke on Sunday was that Lydia Ko now owns more LPGA titles than years Alexa Pano has been alive.

ORLANDO, Fla. – The joke coming up the 18th on Sunday was that Lydia Ko now owns more LPGA titles (20) than years Alexa Pano has been alive (19). As a young Pano collected her second career top-10 finish with a runner-up showing at the 2024 Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions, Ko moved to within one point of qualifying for the LPGA Hall of Fame.

Inbee Park was the last player to qualify for what’s considered the toughest Hall of Fame in sports eight years ago. At age 27, Park was the youngest to ever enter the Hall of Fame.

With 26 points, Ko is now the closest active player. Laura Davies, who is already in the World Golf Hall of Fame, remains two points shy of the LPGA Hall and plays a limited schedule of four to five LPGA events each season.

Current World No. 1 Lilia Vu remembers watching a 15-year-old Ko win on the LPGA a dozen years ago and thinking, What is going on?

“I remember being like, she’s the same age as me,” said Vu, “and I’m just in high school.”

Vu, who is glad she went the college route at UCLA, remains amazed by Ko’s prowess inside the ropes.

“She can hit the green from anywhere,” said Vu. “I’ve seen her almost in impossible places, and she’ll hit it to 10 feet. I’m like, how did you do that?”

A closing 2-under 70 on another chilly day at Lake Nona Golf & Country Club gave Ko a 14-under total and a victory at her home club. She bought a home at Lake Nona toward the end of 2019, moving in just before Christmas.

Now the seventh woman on the LPGA to reach 20 wins before age 27, Ko joins a list that includes Hall of Famers Nancy Lopez, Karrie Webb, Se Ri Pak, Mickey Wright, Lorena Ochoa and Kathy Whitworth.

Ko earned $225,000 for the win to become the fifth LPGA golfer to go over the $17 million mark in career earnings.

There have been times when a lost Ko wondered if she’d ever win again. She’s now cautious about getting too far ahead of herself.

“I won my first event last year (on the LET) and kind of went sideways very quickly,” Ko said of not getting “too cocky.”

And by that, the humble Ko simples means not to let the early success get to her head. To make sure she’s still doing practice swings in her room, along with all the other little things that got her to this point.

2024 Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions
Lydia Ko of New Zealand plays her shot from the 18th tee during the final round of the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions at Lake Nona Golf & Country Club on January 21, 2024 in Orlando, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)

While Ko experienced an unprecedented amount of early success on the LPGA, winning twice as an amateur before she even joined the tour, her career has had a shocking number of peaks and valleys. After ending a three-year victory drought in 2021 in dominating fashion in Hawaii, Ko won three times in 2022 and earned Player of the Year and Vare Trophy honors. She looked poised to sprint into the Hall.

The 2023 season, however, took a sharp turn south after an opening victory on the Ladies European Tour in Saudi Arabia. It got so bad, that Ko had to press toward the end of the year just to try to qualify for the CME Group Tour Championship, which she’d won the previous year. Ko ended up not qualifying and instead flew in new swing coach Si Woo Kim to Orlando. Kim had taken a look at Ko’s swing during the Asian swing in South Korea.

Soon after, she teamed up with Aussie Jason Day to win the inaugural Grant Thornton Invitational and headed into a short offseason with a more positive frame of mind.

Inbee Park, who is currently on maternity leave, leads the tour among active players with 21 titles. Both Davies and Cristie Kerr have 20. Former No. 1s Yani Tseng, who has been battling injury and off the tour since 2021, and Jin Young Ko each have 15 victories.

Ko’s said her low point last season came in Arkansas at a Staybridge Suites when she found herself crying to her husband about her inability to string two rounds together. The tears flowed often last year. Even her mom said something about how much she cried.

“I think last year I was chasing the Hall of Fame,” said Ko. “I felt like I could have – with the way I was playing in 2022 – I could back it up with another great year. Look where it put me.”

After winning at Nona, Ko thought she’d cry tears of joy. Interestingly, nothing came out.

“I don’t even know what that means,” she said with a smile.

The faucet finally turned off, and a mature, introspective Ko is left to march on toward her destiny, with each triumph feeling that much sweeter.

Jeff McNeil, aka the ‘Flying Squirrel’, wins Hilton Grand Vacations TOC celebrity division

McNeil earned the nickname the “Flying Squirrel” for the way he dove after balls in the outfield.

ORLANDO, Fla. – Golf was Plan A for Jeff McNeil, a two-time Major League Baseball All-Star who teed it up in his first Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions celebrity event this week. That is, until he had a bad second round in the 2009 U.S. Junior at Trump National in Bedminster, New Jersey, won by Jordan Spieth. Several weeks later McNeil was back on the baseball field, playing his first year of high school ball as a senior, ultimately landing a scholarship to Long Beach State.

The shift in plans worked out well for McNeil, a second baseman for the New York Mets. The man nicknamed the “Flying Squirrel” for the way he dove after balls in the outfield now gets the best of both worlds, hoisting a trophy on, of all things, National Squirrel Appreciation Day.

“I didn’t get to play a lot of golf this offseason,” said McNeil, “so tried to do the best I could and ended up working out.”

For a while, it looked like McNeil might have to work a little harder for the victory after the leaderboard had him tied with Mark Mulder at 138 points in the Modified Stableford format.

McNeil hit a pair of approach shots to within 5 feet on the last two holes thinking he needed to make birdie but missed both putts.

It turns out, however, that Mulder’s scorer put him down for a birdie on the seventh hole when he actually made double-bogey. Mulder said he tried to correct the scoring error on the golf course.

The points change dropped Mulder into a share of third and brought Lake Nona resident Annika Sorenstam into second. McNeil finished alone at the top at 138 after carding a 1-over 73 on a frigid day in central Florida, relieved to not have to go back to the 18th tee.

“I think I’ve been in one playoff in my life,” he said. “I think in junior golf when I was like 17. Ended up losing, so that’s the only memory I have from that.

“Definitely didn’t want to go to a playoff.”

Sorenstam got off to a flying start and lead the field early in the week but went home frustrated that she couldn’t keep the momentum going. The LPGA Hall of Famer said she’s unsure of what the rest of her competitive schedule will look like this year.

“I was super excited after Round 1,” said Sorenstam. “I felt like I hit some good shots. It was like old times. It was fun, had a good time.

“Then the last three rounds I’ve been struggling quite a bit and don’t feel so excited as I did after number one. But you know what? I got to take the positives out of it. I thought I really scrambled well. Some of the shots I hit were really crazy. Made some incredible up and downs. … I know I’m super close.”

Lydia Ko, determined to bounce back from dismal 2023, tied for lead after 36 holes in LPGA opener

A win this week would provide a much-needed bounce-back for the former world No. 1.

A little more than a month ago, Lydia Ko teamed with Jason Day to win the inaugural Grant Thornton Invitational, a new mixed team event for LPGA and PGA Tour players.

But a win this week would be a much bigger deal for Ko.

The 2022 champion of the CME Group Tour Championship didn’t qualify in 2023 and therefore couldn’t defend her title in the season-ender, putting a cap on a most disappointing season, her 10th on the LPGA.

But it appears that GTI win sparked something in her game.

Ko has opened 69-67 at her home course at Lake Nona Golf & Country Club in the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions and will head to the weekend tied for the lead with Ayaka Furue, who shot 65-71.

“I think Grant Thornton helped a lot,” she said Friday afternoon. “We did a lot of good work the week before with my coach flying over and spending some time here at Lake Nona. I think even though you do good work, at the end of the day you got to pull it off and make that work when you’re playing and playing competitive rounds.

“Even though it was a unique format at Grant Thornton, I think it just was really beneficial week for me to kind of be in positions where I was uncomfortable and still be able to commit to my shots.”

So far this week she has eight birdies and eagle and just two bogeys. She had eight straight pars before a closing birdie in Friday’s round even as the weather turned a bit sour.

Ko, who is committed to a more aggressive schedule this season, has the comforts of home right around the corner as she seeks her 20th career victory but admits she has to make sure she’s not too comfortable.

“I have forgotten to set my alarm once and I turned up to the golf course later than I normally do because I was so used to being at home, sleeping in my own bed, so I’m trying to not make that mistake this year.”

The tournament also features a celebrity division, made up of pro golfers, former pro athletes from baseball, basketball and hockey as well as actors and comedians. Tied atop that leaderboard is Annika Sorenstam and former NHL standout Jeremy Roenick. They each have 75 points using the Modified Stableford scoring system.

2023 Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions
Annika Sorenstam acknowledges the crowd on the 18th green during the second round of the 2023 Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions at Lake Nona Golf & Country Club in Orlando. (Photo: Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)

“The weather in the end got a little iffy,” Sorenstam said. “I would say today was a good scramble day. Really scrambled out there. Didn’t hit as many good shots as yesterday. Just didn’t give up. Kept on fighting. Missed few more greens. Had to do some more chipping today. Just hung in there.”

Roenick sounded more than pleased with his round.

“I played well today. I think I shot 69 or 70 today, which was amazing. Didn’t make any mistakes. Just kept it on board,” he said.

Back on the main leaderboard, Gemma Dryburgh and Gaby Lopez are tied for third after 36 holes. Tied for fifth is defending tournament champ Brooke Henderson and Alexa Pano, in her second year on the LPGA.

“I was kind of a mess when I first started as a rookie last year, and I feel a lot more comfortable and got a good hang on things,” she said. “I worked really hard this off-season to be ready for this. I think this is the fun part. This is getting to see it all come to fruition.”

Other notables in the field of 35 include: Nelly Korda (4 under, T-7), Rose Zhang (4 under, T-7), world No. 1 Lilia Vu (2 under, T-16) and Danielle Kang (T-31, 3 over).

‘Today’ host Dylan Dreyer returns to LPGA’s TOC, where Annika leads celebs and Rose Zhang talks losing her favorite putter

Here’s what you need to know from the opening round in Lake Nona.

ORLANDO, Fla. — The LPGA’s 75th season kicked off Thursday with the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions, where champions from the past two seasons played alongside celebrities in a fusion of talent and fun.

The 35-player field at this year’s TOC includes 12 first-time participants, including World No. 1 Lilia Vu. Japan’s Ayaka Furue holds a two-stroke lead in the LPGA division after a record day, while LPGA Hall of Famer Annika Sorenstam leads the celebrities on her home course, Lake Nona Golf and Country Club.

After a shorter than usual offseason for most of the field, here are five takeaways from the LPGA kickoff:

As LPGA opens 2024 season, Rose Zhang is back at Stanford juggling two worlds

“Just a little bit of adjustments here and there, which kind of I guess throws off your offseason schedule.”

ORLANDO, Fla. — Rose Zhang is back at Stanford. Well, technically she’s in Florida this week for the LPGA season-opening Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions – to the dismay of her professors.

Zhang stayed up past midnight Tuesday doing schoolwork, making that 7:30 a.m. pro-am a quick turnaround. She told the media Wednesday afternoon that she’s carrying a full course load with classes in journalism, political science and media psych.

A self-described people pleaser, the 20-year-old pro said she’s starting to learn the crucial life skill of saying no, which judging by the sound of her to-do list is becoming increasingly essential.

“Coming into this event it was a little bit of a hustle to kind of get things in order,” she said. “I have new clubs in the bag. I’m trying to figure out my putter situation. Health-wise been a lot happening, too. So just a little bit of adjustments here and there, which kind of I guess throws off your offseason schedule.

“I also moved, so I’ve been moving three different places. Moving from Irvine to Vegas, Vegas to Stanford. And I also finished week one of school. … It’s been fun.”

2023 Mizuho Americas Open
Rose Zhang holds up the trophy after winning the 2023 Mizuho Americas Open at Liberty National in Jersey City, New Jersey. (Photo: Adam Hunger/Associated Press)

Zhang won her first LPGA event as a professional, the Mizuho Americas Open, one week after clinching her second NCAA title. The victory qualified her for the TOC, which will be her only start this month. She’ll take off the spring Asian swing (four events) and return to action at the Fir Hills Seri Pak Championship at Palos Verdes Golf Club. She plans to graduate with a degree in communications after five years at Stanford in 2026.

“Stanford has a requirement of 180 units,” she explained. “I finished around 90-ish units. I’m just going to keep doing the 20 units per winter quarter. Maybe take a couple online classes if I’m allowed to in other quarters.”

This week Zhang has all new Callaway clubs, including the Epic Forged Star irons. She’d played with Apex irons since age 13 and made the switch in an effort to gain more distance control.

“Even though I was hitting really well with the Apex irons, there were some cases where my ball was too hot coming off the face,” she said. “It’s been generating a couple different noises that I would probably not appreciate as much on the golf course.”

As for her health, Zhang said she began working with a nutritionist after she felt her body wasn’t processing food as well after the stress of global travel. She’d feel bloated after a plate of vegetables.

She cut out soy, gluten and dairy to clear out her system and will reintroduce those foods in time.

“These are not, in my opinion, like crazy health concerns,” she said. “It’s more so how am I able to optimize my performance in-season and traveling everywhere with the time differences and time zones, what would make me perform well.”

While Zhang calls her winter quarter at Stanford a simpler time, she’s constantly surrounded by overachievers and can’t help but find inspiration at every turn. Everyone she knows is grinding, and she feels the need to do the same, though she’s not a results-driven person.

“I’m not someone who wants a certain ranking by the end of the year,” she said, “or I want to win this event by the end of the year.”

The flashy carrots like qualifying for the Paris Olympics and Solheim Cup will take care of themselves, she figures. Besides, Zhang considers her time at Stanford an incredible opportunity rather than a detractor from her full-time job.

2023 U.S. Women's Open
Michelle Wie West of the United States plays her shot from the 18th tee during the second round of the 78th U.S. Women’s Open at Pebble Beach Golf Links on July 07, 2023 in Pebble Beach, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

Few in the game can relate to the path Zhang has chosen better than Michelle Wie West, who began her career at Stanford while playing full-time on the LPGA, winning twice on tour while earning her degree in communications.

“I felt like I had a double persona, a double life,” said Wie West last summer at her final U.S. Women’s Open at Pebble Beach. “I was one thing out here – I had to act way more maturely than I really was out here because I was playing with older women – and when I went to school, I was kind of my old goofy self.

“So it really helps, I think, to kind of separate it and treat this as work and then you go back, and that’s your life.”

Refreshed Lydia Ko facing grueling 2024 schedule in quest to reach LPGA Hall of Fame

Ko is playing a heavier schedule than recent years, one that rivals her rookie season.

ORLANDO, Fla. – The LPGA season-opener is a bona fide home game for a number of LPGA stars, including Lydia Ko, who drove her own golf cart in the pro-am Wednesday at the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions.

The former No. 1 understandably chose her honeymoon over this event last season, but is back at Lake Nona Golf & Country Club, where she’s been practicing the past two months. Ko and her husband also spend time in the San Francisco Bay Area, where she plays out of The Olympic Club and Lake Merced.

The 35-player field at this year’s TOC includes 12 first-time participants, including World No. 1 Lilia Vu. Last week, Ko played a practice round with fellow Nona members Leona Maguire and Nasa Hataoka, who are also in the field. Players who have won in the past two seasons on the LPGA are eligible.

While the pros compete for a $1.5 million purse on Jan. 18-21, celebrity contestants will play for $500,000 in a Modified Stableford format. Another famed Lake Nona resident, LPGA Hall of Famer Annika Sorenstam, will compete in the celebrity division along with NBC’s Dylan Dreyer, U.S. Soccer Hall of Famer Landon Donovan, eight-time NBA All-Star Vince Carter, country music star Chris Lane and World Series Champion John Smoltz, a two-time champion at the TOC.

Sorenstam, a 10-time major winner who lives off the 16th tee at Nona, retired from the LPGA in 2008 but made a return to the competitive scene after turning 50.

“I’ve been so close,” said Sorenstam of winning the celebrity division on home turf. “(Husband) Mike (McGee) has all the stats of all the events I played in. I’ve been knocking on the door, but haven’t really been able to put four great rounds together. That’s what I would love to do.”

While Sorenstam’s legacy in the game is firmly cemented, Ko still has a chance to earn her way into arguably the toughest Hall of Fame in all of sports. Now two points shy of the 27 required to qualify for the LPGA Hall, Ko would get there with two regular-season wins or one major championship victory. This year she’s playing a heavier schedule than recent years, one that rivals her rookie season, in an effort to leave nothing on the table.

“I said if I win twice early in the year, like I might not play the 25 and might be a little bit less,” she said. “I want to give myself as many opportunities as I can, and I think being in the Hall of Fame was not really a big goal of mine, but 2022, it was like a gift of a year that like in one year I got five points.

“I was like, ‘Wow, how did that happen?’ Now I’m at the front door. Whether it happens or not, that’s secondary. I don’t want the regret of thinking I left something behind.”

2023 Grant Thornton Invitational
Lydia Ko of New Zealand and Jason Day of Australia celebrate with the trophy after winning the 2023 Grant Thornton Invitational at Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Florida. (Photo: Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images)

The 26-year-old said at the start of her LPGA career that she wouldn’t play on the tour past the age of 30. The two-time Olympic medalist (silver in Rio and bronze in Tokyo) said the fairy-tale ending would be to win gold in Paris to collect them all. It’s unlikely, she said, that she’ll still be competing when the Summer Games come to Los Angeles in 2028.

“I joke sometimes that I’m not an athlete but an Olympian,” Ko said laughing. “I’m super excited for Paris.”

After a 2022 season that saw her win four times and earn the LPGA Rolex Player of the Year award, Ko struggled mightily with her ball-striking in 2023. In many ways, it felt like a lost season until she came to the final event – the Grant Thornton Invitational, a resurrected mixed-team tournament between the LPGA and PGA Tour that hadn’t happened since 1999.

Ko hit the ball so poorly during the Tuesday practice round with partner Jason Day in Naples, Florida, last December that she felt embarrassed. By Friday, however, something clicked, and she and Day ended the year with an unofficial victory and broad smiles.

The chase continues.

“I want to put my 100 percent in it, whether it’s my practice or scheduling. If it happens, that’s great,” she said of her big-picture goals. “If it doesn’t happen, just not meant to be.

“I think that has just been the mindset I’ve tried to take on from this year onwards.”

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Lilia Vu, Nelly Korda and Lydia Ko headline LPGA Tournament of Champions, which once again has many top players sitting out

Here’s a look at which top players are in the field for this year’s TOC and which ones are sitting out.

The LPGA season kicks off next week with the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions, and World No. 1 Lilia Vu headlines the field. It marks the first time that Vu has been eligible for the field given that she won her first career title last February at the Honda LPGA Thailand and went on to win three more times, including two majors.

The season-opener takes place Jan. 18-21 at Lake Nona Golf and Country Club in Orlando, Florida. LPGA winners from the past two seasons are invited to compete for a $1.5 million purse while a field of celebrities vie for $500,000.

Once again, Lake Nona resident Annika Sorenstam will compete in the celebrity field along with NBC’s Dylan Dreyer, U.S. Soccer Hall of Famer Landon Donovan, eight-time NBA All-Star Vince Carter, country music star Chris Lane and World Series Champion John Smoltz.

While Vu and No. 2 Ruoning Yin begin their 2024 seasons next week, six players inside the top 10 of the Rolex Rankings are skipping the first event. For many international players, the lure of a longer offseason outweighs the perks of the TOC.

While there are two events in Florida to start the season in 2024, with the LPGA Drive On event in Bradenton the following week, the tour then has three weeks off before beginning the spring Asian swing in Thailand.

Here’s a look at which top players are in the field for this year’s TOC and which ones are sitting out:

Jodi Ewart Shadoff and her TV sports anchor husband Adam finally get a home game at LPGA Tournament of Champions

Shadoff won for the first time in her 246th start last year to qualify for the Tournament of Champions field.

The first time Jodi Ewart Shadoff met her husband Adam was during her sophomore year at the University of New Mexico. Adam, a local TV reporter, interviewed Jodi after that first round in Albuquerque, and as the young Englishwoman kept playing well, they kept talking.

That conference victory eventually led to a date that led to a lifetime of conversations. But after college, the next time Adam found himself working a tournament with Jodi in the field was last week’s Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions in Orlando. Adam, a sports anchor and reporter at FOX 35 Orlando, came out to media late last year at Lake Nona Golf and Country Club.

Jodi, who won for the first time in her 246th start last year at the Mediheal Championship to qualify for the TOC field, was part of the pre-tournament interview panel. At the end of the session, a colleague in the room asked, “Nothing from you Adam? You’re not going to ask a question?”

Adam looked to his wife and jokingly asked, “Who’s the best sports anchor in Orlando?”

“She said ‘Get out of here,’ ” said Adam, smiling, “and she walked away. It was funny.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/CY6juXhs6_j/?hl=en

The Shadoffs, who recently celebrated their 10th wedding anniversary, live less than 25 minutes from Lake Nona. Jodi, who plays out of the Ritz in town, isn’t a member at Lake Nona, which was the case for several in the field, but this was as close to a home game that she could hope for. In fact, when Shadoff finally broke through with her first victory last year in California, the TOC was one of the first things that came to mind.

“It’s pretty pure,” said Shadoff of Nona. “It’s probably one of the best courses we get to play all year, in my opinion.”

In the second round, she played alongside Brian Urlacher, a fellow Lobo and NFL Hall of Famer. It was the first time the two former UNM standouts had met.

“It was funny,” said Jodi, “walking down one of the early holes he goes, ‘Did you go to UNM? I’m like, yeah. He’s like, so did I. I’m like, yeah, I know. You were like the legend.’

Adam wasn’t working in the studio the day Jodi won the Mediheal. He thought about flying out for the final round to surprise Jodi.

“I thought, if I show up and she doesn’t win,” he said, “I’m going to feel like a huge jerk. So, in the end, I didn’t go.”

He only started to relax back home in the living room after she hit the green on No. 18 in regulation. The joy of that moment was felt coast-to-coast.

The couple recently took a trip to Jackson Hole, Wyoming, during Jodi’s brief offseason. The Englishwoman likes to get out in the snow at least once a year.

“I don’t ski because I can barely walk around without getting injured,” she said with a laugh.

Given how good things were going at the end of last season, Jodi didn’t want to “lose the feels” she had after her best year on tour and took off less than two weeks. She was soon back to work with her instructor, former PGA Tour winner Grant Waite, who said they mostly focused on ways to be more efficient.

“We spent quite a bit of time talking about flighting the ball a little bit more,” he said, “putting some curves on curves off, trajectory control, stuff like that. … Again, for her it’s not about reinventing the wheel, just making it turn a little bit better here and there.”

Short game was another area of focus. Jodi, one of the best ball-strikers on tour, finished last season ranked 3rd in greens hit in regulation, 60th in driving distance and 20th in driving accuracy. She was 88th in putts per green in regulation.

2022 LPGA Mediheal Championship
Jodi Ewart Shadoff reacts on the 18th green after winning the 2022 LPGA Mediheal Championship at The Saticoy Club in Somis, California. (Photo: Meg Oliphant/Getty Images)

While she prefers to focus on smaller goals, there’s no doubt that the 2023 Solheim Cup in Spain is on her mind.

“I would love to represent Europe for a fourth time,” she said, “and under Suzann (Pettersen), I think that would be a lot of fun.”

Adam covered the TOC several days early in the week but took the weekend off to walk around Lake Nona with his wife. Jodi finished tied for 18th in her TOC debut, and because an LPGA victory guarantees a start in that tournament for two years, she’ll be back.

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Prize money payouts for each LPGA player at 2023 Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions

Brooke Henderson now ranks 20th on the LPGA all-time career money list.

Brooke Henderson, the winningest golfer in Canadian history, notched her 13th LPGA victory at the season-opening Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions in Orlando. The 25-year-old now ranks 14th on the LPGA’s all-time wins list, tied with Jin Young Ko and Stacy Lewis.

With the $225,000 winner’s check at Lake Nona Golf and Country Club, Henderson’s official career earnings climb to $10,825,467. She now ranks 20th on the LPGA all-time career money list. She is one of 24 women to have surpassed the $10-million mark.

Here are the prize money payouts for each LPGA player at 2023 Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions:

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Brooke Henderson -16 $225,000
T2 Charley Hull -12 $152,898
T2 Maja Stark -12 $152,898
4 Nelly Korda -11 $99,457
5 Nasa Hataoka -9 $80,052
T6 Gaby Lopez -8 $56,117
T6 Yuka Saso -8 $56,117
T6 Paula Reto -8 $56,117
T9 Leona Maguire -6 $41,239
T9 Ashleigh Buhai -6 $41,239
11 Moriya Jutanugarn -5 $36,836
T12 Danielle Kang -4 $31,890
T12 Ryann O’Toole -4 $31,890
T12 Anna Nordqvist -4 $31,890
15 Wei Ling Hsu -3 $28,139
T16 Jennifer Kupcho -2 $25,907
T16 Gemma Dryburgh -2 $25,907
T18 Ayaka Furue -1 $23,158
T18 Jodi Ewart Shadoff -1 $23,158
T18 Pajaree Anannarukarn -1 $23,158
T21 Nanna Koerstz Madsen E $20,377
T21 Marina Alex E $20,377
T21 Lizette Salas E $20,377
T21 Matilda Castren E $20,377
25 Ally Ewing 1 $18,533
26 Celine Boutier 2 $17,855
27 Andrea Lee 3 $17,174
28 Patty Tavatanakit 14 $16,495
29 Ariya Jutanugarn 21 $15,816

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