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

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

Another win, another $4 million for Bryson DeChambeau on the LIV Golf League.

DeChambeau won seven weeks ago at the LIV Golf Greenbrier event. On Sunday near Chicago, he did it again, posting a final-round 63 at Rich Harvest Farms. He’s now at $13 million for the season on LIV.

DeChambeau  has 12 professional wins: PGA Tour (8), DP World Tour (2), LIV Golf (2) and Korn Ferry Tour (1).

In the team competition, DeChambeau’s Crushers team, which also has Anirban Lahiri, Charles Howell III and Paul Casey, split $3 million. The Fireballs (Sergio Garcia, Abraham Ancer, Eugenio Chacarra, Carlos Ortiz) shared in the $1.5 million second-place team prize. The 4 Aces (Dustin Johnson, Peter Uihlein, Pat Perez, Patrick Reed) will divvy up $500,000.

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Finish Golfer Score Money
1 Bryson DeChambeau -13 $4,000,000
T2 Marc Leishman -12 $1,812,500
T2 Anirban Lahiri -12 $1,812,500
4 Sebastian Munoz -11 $1,050,000
T5 Peter Uihlein -10 $768,750
T5 Henrik Stenson -10 $768,750
T5 Talor Gooch -10 $768,750
T5 Abraham Ancer -10 $768,750
T9 Richard Bland -9 $570,000
T9 Dustin Johnson -9 $570,000
T11 Brendan Steele -8 $450,000
T11 Carlos Ortiz -8 $450,000
T11 Thomas Pieters -8 $450,000
T14 Sergio Garcia -7 $248,000
T14 Sam Horsfield -7 $248,000
T14 Eugenio Chacarra -7 $248,000
T14 Scott Vincent -7 $248,000
T18 Charles Howell III -6 $194,667
T18 Joaquin Niemann -6 $194,667
T18 Charl Schwartzel -6 $194,667
T18 Patrick Reed -6 $194,667
T18 Dean Burmester -6 $194,667
T18 Louis Oosthuizen -6 $194,667
T24 Bubba Watson -5 $165,000
T24 Jason Kokrak -5 $165,000
T24 Brooks Koepka -5 $165,000
T24 Ian Poulter -5 $165,000
28 Matt Jones -4 $160,000
T29 Harold Vaner III -3 $156,000
T29 Pat Perez -3 $156,000
T29 Branden Grace -3 $156,000
T32 Paul Casey -2 $148,000
T32 Kevin Na -2 $148,000
T32 Mito Pereira -2 $148,000
T32 Graeme McDowell -2 $148,000
T32 David Puig -2 $148,000
T37 Bernd Wiesberger E $139,000
T37 Jediah Morgan E $139,000
T37 Cameron Smith E $139,000
T37 Cameron Tringale E $139,000
T41 James Piot 1 $132,000
T41 Martin Kaymer 1 $132,000
T41 Lee Westwood 1 $132,000
44 Matthew Wolff 2 $128,000
45 Phil Mickelson 5 $126,000
46 Sihwan Kim 6 $124,000
47 Chase Koepka 7 $122,000
48 Danny Lee 8 $120,000

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Bryson DeChambeau shoots a Sunday 63, rallies to capture LIV Golf Chicago event

DeChambeau has two LIV wins in 2023, tied with Cam Smith, one one back of Talor Gooch.

Sebastian Munoz led by three shots after 36 holes at Rich Harvest Farms but couldn’t hold on to the lead, shooting 2 over in Sunday’s final round.

Meanwhile, Bryson DeChambeau went on a charge, posting nine birdies and just a single bogey to shoot an 8-under 63 to win for the second time on the LIV Golf League this season. DeChambeau finished 13 under and won by a shot over Marc Leishman and Anirban Lahiri.

Lahiri had a chance to force a playoff but missed a putt on the 18th hole.

“To be honest with you, I was actually sad,” said DeChambeau. “I really wanted him to make that so we could go battle it off in a playoff and finish it off the right way. That was the first emotion that I had.”

In August, DeChambeau won the LIV Golf Greenbrier event after he closed with a final-round 58. He joins Cam Smith with two wins in 2023. Talor Gooch leads the circuit with three wins.

In the season-long race for the Individual Champion, there’s only three golfers now who can claim that title: Gooch, Smith and DeChambeau. Smith currently leads that race with Gooch second and DeChambeau third. Smith and Gooch have mathematically clinched a spot in the top three. DeChambeau still has a shot at winning that title but could also get bumped out of the top three. Five golfers have a chance to finish in third (but they’re too far back to win the season title): Patrick Reed, Brooks Koepka, Brendan Grace, Dustin Johnson and Mito Pereira.

Koepka finished 24th in the 48-man field. He’s the lone LIV golfer headed to Rome for the Ryder Cup next week. In fact, he’s the only one of the 24 golfers on either Ryder Cup team to compete this week (Euro vice captain Edoardo Molinari did tie for 28th at the DP World Tour’s French Open).

LIV Golf Chicago was the 12th of 14 events on the 2023 schedule. LIV Golf Jeddah in Saudi Arabia is up next, Oct. 13-15. The season finale is the LIV Golf Team Championship at Doral, Oct. 20-22.

Photos: 2023 LIV Golf Chicago at Rich Harvest Farms

The Saudi-backed circuit returns after over a month off.

The LIV Golf League returns this week to Chicago for its 12th event of the season. The Saudi-backed circuit has been off for a bit, with its last event coming over a month ago at Trump Bedminster in New Jersey — Cameron Smith claimed the individual title by seven shots while his team, Ripper GC, won the team competition.

With just the Chicago and Jeddah stops before the Team Championship in Miami, 4Aces GC leads the team point standings with Torque GC in second and Stinger GC in third. On the individual side, Smith leads the way followed by Talor Gooch and Patrick Reed.

Here are some of the best images from the week in Chicago.

Brooks Koepka, Sam Burns debut mullets just in time for 2023 Ryder Cup

Koepka and Burns are ready for Rome.

If you needed another reminder that time is a flat circle, the mullet has made an incredible comeback over the last year or so.

Cameron Smith has been rocking one for a few years now, and another LIV Golf member has joined him in the club.

Brooks Koepka, who is set to represent the United States at next week’s Ryder Cup in Rome at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club from Sept. 29-Oct. 1, debuted his new look in Chicago at Rich Harvest Farms on Friday at LIV’s 12th event of its season.

Koepka will be the lone LIV player at this year’s Ryder Cup, earning one of Zach Johnson’s captain’s picks thanks to a T-2 finish at the Masters, a fifth major championship win at the PGA Championship and a T-17 performance at the U.S. Open.

Sam Burns, another captain’s pick from ZJ, will also be rocking a mullet in Rome.

As Koepka said, freedom flow.

New dad Brooks Koepka readies for Ryder Cup at LIV Golf Chicago

As the only LIV golfer on the U.S. squad, Koepka says he’s “just happy to be on the team.”

With the PGA Tour enjoying a rare off week on the schedule, 11 of the 12 members of the U.S. Ryder Cup team are likely practicing at home for next week’s clash with Team Europe in Rome. But not Brooks Koepka, who will be dusting off any potential rust at Rich Harvest Farms, site of the 2023 LIV Golf Chicago event, the 12th of a 14-event schedule this season.

Koepka was the only LIV golfer picked to play in the 2023 Ryder Cup. He held the sixth and final automatic qualifying spot for the American squad until the final point-counting event at the BMW Championship, which left U.S. Captain Zach Johnson with the unenviable task of deciding if he wanted to include a LIV player on his team.

Koepka slipped to seventh based on a lack of point-gathering opportunities but his PGA Championship win and tie for second at the Masters were enough to convince Johnson that he was worthy of selection to the 12-man squad.

“I’m a pick this year, a little different. Would have liked to make it on my own but it was close,” Koepka said Wednesday during a pre-tournament press conference. “Just happy to be on the team. We went over to Rome a few, what was it, maybe a week and a half ago now. Good trip. Most of the guys were there. Got to see the golf course. It’s pretty difficult, but it will be interesting to see how they set it up.”

What also presumably helped his chances of wearing the red, white and blue once again was the pending merger of the PGA Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. The PGA of America runs the U.S. Ryder Cup side of things but the forthcoming merger made the presence of LIV golfers on the team more palatable. But more than anything, Koepka proved during the course of the year that he’s healthy again and a healthy Koepka is a dangerous Koepka, especially at the biggest events. The bigger the stage, the better Koepka has performed throughout his career and the Ryder Cup certainly qualifies as one of the biggest stages.

“I mean, look, I think it’s one of the top six, seven, biggest sporting events you can have. So I like it when there’s a little bit more eyeballs, a little bit more pressure,” he said.

And playing team golf on LIV is not the same as what it’ll be at Marco Simone Golf & Country Club.

“It’s obviously different with the whole team thing. Sometimes you don’t play every match so you are just cheerleading from the side, which can be quite fun as well,” he said. “I’ve enjoyed it. It’s been great and I’m looking forward to it.”

Koepka is also learning the ropes of fatherhood. He finished tied for 38th in the LIV’s 48-man field at the last event, just after he and wife Jena welcomed their son into the world. He says being a dad “definitely” has changed him.

In what ways?

“You start to see him, and it’s more about like the hard work, about the stuff that goes on behind the scenes that no one sees. … I don’t want to him to have any example of somebody being lazy, just dragging their butt. It’s, if you put the hard work in, you will get the results eventually, doesn’t matter what you do,” Koepka said. “I think trying to set a good example. I know he’s 2 months old and has no clue about that now but it becomes a hell of a lot easier when you get older. I just want him to see what hard work is.”

Full breakdown of LIV Golf Invitational Bangkok prize money payouts

It was a big payday for first-time winner Eugenio Lopez-Chacarra.

It was a big payday for first-time winner Eugenio Lopez-Chacarra.

In his fifth start on the upstart LIV Golf Series, the former Oklahoma State standout found the winner’s circle in Bangkok and pocketed $4 million along the way. He also bagged another $750,000 for being a member of the winning team, the Fireballs, who also have Sergio Garcia, Abraham Ancer and Carlos Ortiz.

Lopez-Chacarra finished at 19 under. Three shots back was Patrick Reed. There was a three-way tie for third at 18 under by Richard Bland, Paul Casey and Sihwan Kim.

Brendan Grace withdrew from the event and still banked $120,000.

Check out the full prize money payouts for each player at LIV Golf Invitational-Bangkok.

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Eugenio Lopez-Chacarra -19 $4,000,000
2 Patrick Reed -16 $2,125,000
T3 Paul Casey -15 $1,175,000
T3 Richard Bland -15 $1,175,000
T3 Sihwan Kim -15 $1,175,000
T6 Harold Varner III -14 $737,500
T6 James Piot -14 $737,500
T8 Brooks Koepka -13 $602,500
T8 Charles Howell III -13 $602,500
T10 Abraham Ancer -11 $477,500
T10 Laurie Canter -11 $477,500
T10 Ian Poulter -11 $477,500
T10 Mark Leishman -11 $477,500
14 Bryson DeChambeau -10 $270,000
T15 Matt Jones -9 $233,600
T15 Dustin Johnson -9 $233,600
T15 Phil Mickelson -9 $233,600
T15 Carlos Ortiz -9 $233,600
T15 Lee Westwood -9 $233,600
T20 Joaquin Niemann -8 $174,286
T20 Sergio Garcia -8 $174,286
T20 Sadom Kaewkanjana -8 $174,286
T20 Peter Uihlein -8 $174,286
T20 Talor Gooch -8 $174,286
T20 Jediah Morgan -8 $174,286
T20 Kevin Na -8 $174,286
T27 Charl Schwartzel -7 $157,000
T27 Phachara Khongwatmai -7 $157,000
T27 Shaun Norris -7 $157,000
T27 Jason Kokrak -7 $157,000
T27 Turk Pettit -7 $157,000
T27 Wade Ormsby -7 $157,000
T33 Chase Koepka -6 $144,000
T33 Sam Horsfield -6 $144,000
T33 Bernd Wiesberger 6 $144,000
T33 Henrik Stenson -6 $144,000
T33 Martin Kaymer -6 $144,000
T33 Hudson Swafford -6 $144,000
T33 Cameron Tringale -6 $144,000
40 Pat Perez -5 $136,000
T41 Anirban Lahiri -4 $131,000
T41 Cameron Smith -4 $131,000
T41 Graeme McDowell -4 $131,000
T41 Matthew Wolff -4 $131,000
T45 Louis Oosthuizen E $125,000
T45 Scott Vincent E $125,000
47 Hideto Tanihara +1 $122,000
WD Branden Grace $120,000

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Full breakdown of LIV Golf Chicago prize money payouts

Cameron Smith earned $4 million for his win.

Five players finished the LIV Golf Invitational Series stop near Chicago in last place, T-44 at 6 over and a whopping 19 shots behind winner Cameron Smith. For their efforts they’ll each take home $124,000.

That’s the selling point for the upstart series led by Greg Norman and supported by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund: 54-hole, no cut events that offer massive contracts and paydays.

Smith carried his form from the PGA Tour to LIV, finishing T-4 in his first start at LIV Golf Boston and winning this week at Rich Harvest Farms in Sugar Grove, Illinois, by two shots over Dustin Johnson and Peter Uihlein. Smith’s $4 million payday trumps his three previous wins last season on the PGA Tour, where he earned $1.476 million for winning the Sentry Tournament of Champions, $2.5 million for winning the British Open and $3.6 million for winning the Players Championship.

Check out the full prize money payouts for each player at LIV Golf Chicago.

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Cameron Smith -13 $4,000,000
T2 Peter Uihlein -10 $1,812,500
T2 Dustin Johnson -10 $1,812,500
T4 Sergio Garcia -8 $1,012,500
T4 Joaquin Niemann -8 $1,012,500
T6 Charl Schwartzel -7 $737,500
T6 Louis Oosthuizen -7 $737,500
T8 Phil Mickelson -6 $576,250
T8 Laurie Canter -6 $576,250
T8 Bryson DeChambeau -6 $576,250
T8 Chase Koepka -6 $576,250
T12 Lee Westwood -5 $332,500
T12 Cameron Tringale -5 $332,500
T12 Patrick Reed -5 $332,500
T12 Scott Vincent -5 $332,500
T16 Matt Jones -4 $236,000
T16 Matthew Wolff -4 $236,000
T18 Charles Howell III -3 $215,333
T18 Richard Bland -3 $215,333
T18 Branden Grace -3 $215,333
T21 Paul Casey -2 $170,000
T21 Brooks Koepka -2 $170,000
T21 Anirban Lahiri -2 $170,000
T21 Jason Kokrak -2 $170,000
T21 Harold Varner III -2 $170,000
T21 Eugenio Lopez-Chacarra -2 $170,000
T27 Abraham Ancer -1 $159,000
T27 Henrik Stenson -1 $159,000
T27 Ian Poulter -1 $159,000
T27 James Piot -1 $159,000
T31 Pat Perez E $152,000
T31 Carlos Ortiz E $152,000
T31 Phachara Khongwatmai E $152,000
34 Kevin Na 1 $148,000
T35 Bernd Wiesberger 3 $145,000
T35 Talor Gooch 3 $145,000
T37 Graeme McDowell 4 $137,000
T37 Wade Ormsby 4 $137,000
T37 Martin Kaymer 4 $137,000
T37 Sadom Kaewkanjana 4 $137,000
T37 Jediah Morgan 4 $137,000
T37 David Puig 4 $137,000
43 Sam Horsfield 5 $130,000
T44 Marc Leishman 6 $124,000
T44 Sihwan Kim 6 $124,000
T44 Shaun Norris 6 $124,000
T44 Hudson Swafford 6 $124,000
T44 Turk Pettit 6 $124,000

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Cameron Smith wins LIV Golf Chicago event; Dustin Johnson’s 4 Aces win fourth consecutive team title

Smith finished T-4 in his LIV Golf debut earlier this month in Boston.

Cameron Smith is feeling right at home on the 54 Tour.

After finishing T-4 in his LIV Golf debut earlier this month in Boston, Smith won in his second start at LIV Golf Chicago on Sunday at Rich Harvest Farms in Sugar Grove, Illinois. The 29-year-old Aussie entered the final round with a three-shot lead and walked off the course with a three-shot win, with Peter Uihlein and Dustin Johnson T-2 at 10 under.

Ranked No. 3 in the world, Smith hasn’t lost his form since joining the Greg Norman-led upstart series that’s currently at odds with the PGA Tour. In 18 starts last year on Tour, Smith earned seven top-10 finishes, including a trio of wins at the Sentry Tournament of Champions, the Players Championship and Open Championship (his first major title).

Led by captain Dustin Johnson, the 4 Aces won the team title for the fourth consecutive event, this time at 24 under. Brooks Koepka and his Smash GC finished second at 22 under.

Backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, LIV Golf has been criticized as a way for the Kingdom to “sportswash” its human rights record. 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.

The series will take a two-week break before heading to Stonehill Golf Club in Bangkok, Thailand, Oct. 7-9, followed by Royal Greens Golf and Country Club in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, Oct. 14-16.

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World No. 3 Cameron Smith leads by two heading into Sunday at LIV Chicago

Cam Smith is searching for his first LIV win in just his second start.

Cameron Smith made his LIV Golf debut in Boston a few weeks ago, eventually tying for fourth. He’s 18 holes away from winning his first event on the Saudi-backed circuit just outside of Chicago at Rich Harvest Farms.

The Australian’s lone bogey of the day came at the par-5 11th but five birdies scattered throughout the rest of his card had him signing for a second-round 4-under 68 after opening the event with a 66. He’s 10 under and leads by two.

Smith’s last worldwide win came at the 150th Open Championship.

LIV Chicago: Leaderboard

Three shots behind him is Dustin Johnson, who stumbled to a 2-over 74 after firing a first-round 9-under 63 Friday. A bogey at No. 3 and a double at No. 4 put him behind the eight ball and he didn’t do enough down the stretch to make up for the lost strokes.

If Johnson comes from behind Sunday to win, he’ll be the first multiple-time winner on the LIV Golf Series.

Peter Uihlein is tied with Johnson at 7 under, while Laurie Canter and Charl Schwartzel are tied for fourth at 6 under.

If you’re attending the event in the Windy City on Sunday and want to give back, LIV is donating $1000 to charity for every fan who receives Smith’s mullet haircut.

On the team side, the 4 Aces GC leads Punch by one shot, with Smash GC lurking two shots back.

This story was corrected to reflect Cameron Smith’s lead.

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Dustin Johnson continues strong play, opens with 63 at LIV Golf Chicago

Dustin Johnson is on a hot streak.

It’s safe to say Dustin Johnson is playing good golf right now.

Coming off his win two weeks ago at LIV Golf Boston, his first worldwide victory since February 2021 where he hit a long eagle putt on the first playoff hole, Johnson is off to an excellent start at LIV Golf Chicago at Rich Harvest Farms. The par-72, 7,408-yard layout was no match for Johnson on Friday, who opened in 9-under 63 to take a three-shot advantage over Cam Smith, who shot 66.

“The course is great … it’s in perfect condition,” Johnson said. “I played really nicely, hit the ball really well. Hit it close to the hole a lot of times, all day long, so obviously put together a really nice score.”

Johnson went out in 6-under 30, including four straight circles on the card from Nos. 6-9. He missed a birdie putt on the par-5 18th hole that would’ve tied him with the lowest score (62) in any LIV event thus far.

“The game is in really good form,” he said. “It’s been solid day in and day out, so seeing a lot of the same shots and very consistent. That’s always what I’m looking for, just consistency in the flights and in what I’m trying to do, and obviously right now it’s going pretty well.”

Smith, who finished a shot out of a playoff and tied for fourth during his first event in Boston two weeks ago, continued his strong play, as well.

“This is my first time here. I love it,” Smith said. “I think the course is great. I think it played great today, firming up a little bit.”

Johnson’s 4 Aces, which have won the past three events in the team competition, again are in the driver’s seat at 11 under following the first round. Punch, which Smith captains, is in second at 10 under.

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