2023 LIV Golf Washington, D.C. prize money payouts for each player and team

It pays to play well on the Saudi-backed circuit.

Harold Varner III is a winner on the LIV Golf League.

The 32-year-old won for the first time since the 2022 PIF Saudi International at the 2023 LIV Golf Washington, D.C. event at Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Virginia, on Sunday. For his efforts, Varner will take home the top prize of $4 million, bringing his earnings on the year to $7,565,666.

Branden Grace finished a shot back from his second win on the Saudi Arabia-backed circuit and will take home $2.13 million, while Mito Pereira earned $1.5 million for his third-place finish.

Check out how much each player and team earned at LIV Golf’s seventh event of its 2023 season.

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LIV Golf DC individual prize money

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Harold Varner III -12 $4,000,000
2 Branden Grace -11 $2,250,000
3 Mito Pereira -10 $1,500,000
T4 Sebastian Munoz -8 $900,000
T4 Henrik Stenson -8 $900,000
T6 Louis Oosthuizen -7 $615,000
T6 Kevin Na -7 $615,000
T6 Andy Ogletree -7 $615,000
T9 Bryson DeChambeau -6 $425,000
T9 Cameron Tringale -6 $425,000
T9 Cameron Smith -6 $425,000
T12 David Puig -5 $350,000
T12 Carlos Ortiz -5 $350,000
T12 Brooks Koepka -5 $350,000
T15 Peter Uihlein -4 $295,000
T15 Dean Burmester -4 $295,000
T15 Talor Gooch -4 $295,000
T18 Graeme McDowell -3 $250,000
T18 Eugenio Chacarra -3 $250,000
T18 Laurie Canter -3 $250,000
T18 Pat Perez -3 $250,000
T18 Scott Vincent -3 $250,000
T23 Matt Jones -2 $205,000
T23 Richard Bland -2 $205,000
T23 Dustin Johnson -2 $205,000
T23 Brendan Steele -2 $205,000
T23 Martin Kaymer -2 $205,000
T23 Ian Poulter -2 $205,000
T29 Charl Schwartzel -1 $182,500
T29 Anirban Lahiri -1 $182,500
T31 Joaquin Niemann E $167,500
T31 Sergio Garcia E $167,500
T31 Charles Howell III E $167,500
T31 Bernd Wiesberger E $167,500
T35 Marc Leishman 1 $148,000
T35 Danny Lee 1 $148,000
T35 Lee Westwood 1 $148,000
T35 James Piot 1 $148,000
T35 Patrick Reed 1 $148,000
40 Bubba Watson 2 $140,000
41 Jediah Morgan 5 $137,500
T42 Chase Koepka 8 $133,750
T42 Abraham Ancer 8 $133,750
44 Phil Mickelson 9 $130,000
45 Sihwan Kim 14 $127,500

LIV Golf DC team prize money

Position Team Score Earnings
1 Torque GC -27 $3,000,000
2 Stinger GC -24 $1,500,000
3 RangeGoats GC -19 $500,000

LIV owns a 75 percent stake in each franchise and provided teams with an undisclosed amount of operating capital for the year. The teams are expected to largely run on their own dime this season, with team prize earnings going directly towards its day-to-day costs.

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Harold Varner III wins LIV Golf Washington D.C., Joaquin Niemann’s Torque GC earn second team victory

The win is the first for Varner and second for Niemann’s Torque GC.

When Harold Varner III left the PGA Tour for LIV Golf, he was refreshingly honest about his reasons for taking the guaranteed money from the Greg Norman-led and Saudi Arabia-backed circuit, noting how his family and most importantly his foundation would benefit from the “financial breakthrough.”

After 54 holes just outside the nation’s capital this weekend, the 32-year-old will have even more money to pass around.

Varner claimed his first win with LIV Golf at its seventh event of the 2023 season Sunday at LIV Golf Washington, D.C., at Trump National in the suburbs of Sterling, Virginia. The North Carolina native birdied his final hole to defeat Branden Grace by one shot and take home the top prize of $4 million.

Mito Pereira finished third at 10 under, with Sebastian Munoz and Henrik Stenson T-4 at 8 under. Andy Ogletree, playing as a substitute for Paul Casey on Crushers GC, finished T-6 at 7 under.

Joaquin Niemann’s Torque GC claimed its second team win this season at 27 under, three shots ahead of Grace’s Stinger GC and eight clear of Bubba Watson and Varner’s RangeGoats GC. Torque previously won LIV Golf Orlando.

Following his PGA Championship win, Brooks Koepka’s Smash GC finished as the only team above par, with Koepka T-12 at 5 under on the individual leaderboard.

The league returns to action June 30-July 2 at Valderrama in Spain.

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Photos: 2023 LIV Golf Washington, D.C. at Trump National

Check out the best shots of the week from Trump National.

After a week off for the PGA Championship, the LIV Golf League is back in action this week outside the nation’s capital.

The Greg Norman-led and Saudi Arabia-funded series is hosting its seventh event of the season at Trump National Washington D.C. in Sterling, Virginia, with its signature 54-hole, 12-team and shotgun-start format. The talk of the tournament will be Brooks Koepka, who claimed his fifth major championship at last week’s PGA at Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, New York.

LIV Golf has previously held events at the former president’s properties in Bedminster, New Jersey and Doral, Florida.

Mito Pereira, thanks to a second-round 5-under 67, is the outright leader at 9 under after 36 holes. Harold Varner III, who owned the 18-hole lead, shot an even-par round on Saturday and is in solo second at 8 under, one back of Pereira. Henrik Stenson and Kevin Na are tied for third at 7 under.

On the team side, Torque GC holds a three-shot lead over Stinger GC and RangeGoats GC.

Check out the best photos of the week from LIV Golf Washington D.C. and Trump National.

Here are 10 photos of Donald Trump playing in pro-am at LIV Golf Washington

Trump played alongside Patrick Reed and his son, Eric.

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The LIV Golf League is in the nation’s capital this week for its seventh event of the season.

LIV Golf DC is being played at Trump National Golf Club in Washington, D.C. Former President Donald Trump played in Thursday’s pro-am with his son Eric as well as Patrick Reed and Bob Koepka. Trump also played at LIV’s Miami event last season.

The opening round will tee off Friday at 1:15 p.m. ET, with the monster group of Dustin Johnson, Cam Smith and reigning PGA Championship winner Brooks Koepka going off No. 1 in the shotgun format.

Here are 10 photos of Trump playing his golf course on Thursday morning.

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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