ShopRite LPGA Classic 2024 prize money payouts for all the LPGA golfers at Seaview Bay Course

Strom won her first LPGA title in her 99th start.

Linnea Strom’s stunning final-round 60 secured her first LPGA title at the 2024 ShopRite LPGA Classic and a check for $262,500.

Just as valuable for Strom, however, is the 500 points that moved her from 103rd to top 25 in the Race to CME Globe standings. The top 100 players at season’s end secure their cards for the 2025 campaign while the top 60 qualify for the season-ending CME Group Tour Championship.

Strom, a 27-year-old Swede who lost her card after the 2021 season and went back to the Epson Tour, has now earned $322,499 this season and $1,415,093 in official career earnings.

With $1,750,000 million up for grabs, check out how much money each LPGA player earned this week at the 2024 ShopRite LPGA Classic:

Pos. Player Score Earnings
1 Linnea Strom -14 $262,500
T2 Ayaka Furue -13 $142,408
T2 Megan Khang -13 $142,408
4 Atthaya Thitikul -12 $92,633
5 Morgane Metraux -11 $74,559
T6 Marina Alex -10 $52,267
T6 Wei-Ling Hsu -10 $52,267
T6 Narin An -10 $52,267
T9 Lauren Coughlin -9 $36,903
T9 Albane Valenzuela -9 $36,903
T9 Jenny Shin -9 $36,903
T12 Ashleigh Buhai -8 $25,365
T12 Nanna Koerstz Madsen -8 $25,365
T12 Azahara Munoz -8 $25,365
T12 Jodi Ewart Shadoff -8 $25,365
T12 Maria Fassi -8 $25,365
T12 Yue Ren -8 $25,365
T12 Jin Young Ko -8 $25,365
T12 Jeongeun Lee6 -8 $25,365
T12 Stephanie Kyriacou -8 $25,365
T21 Yuna Nishimura -7 $18,301
T21 Lauren Hartlage -7 $18,301
T21 Hinako Shibuno -7 $18,301
T21 Arpichaya Yubol -7 $18,301
T21 Mao Saigo -7 $18,301
T21 Yealimi Noh -7 $18,301
T27 Hannah Green -6 $12,687
T27 Alexandra Forsterling -6 $12,687
T27 Minji Kang -6 $12,687
T27 Mina Harigae -6 $12,687
T27 Brooke M. Henderson -6 $12,687
T27 Pornanong Phatlum -6 $12,687
T27 Paula Reto -6 $12,687
T27 Dottie Ardina -6 $12,687
T27 Haeji Kang -6 $12,687
T27 Auston Kim -6 $12,687
T27 Lindsey Weaver-Wright -6 $12,687
T27 Yu Jin Sung -6 $12,687
T27 Ssu-Chia Cheng -6 $12,687
T40 Roberta Liti -5 $8,510
T40 Kaitlyn Papp Budde -5 $8,510
T40 Kristen Gillman -5 $8,510
T40 Jaravee Boonchant -5 $8,510
T40 Lizette Salas -5 $8,510
T40 Rachel Kuehn (a) -5 $0
T40 So Mi Lee -5 $8,510
T47 Jennifer Song -4 $7,004
T47 Cydney Clanton -4 $7,004
T47 Gianna Clemente (a) -4 $0
T47 Hyo Joon Jang -4 $7,004
T47 Perrine Delacour -4 $7,004
T52 Mary Liu -3 $5,693
T52 Angela Stanford -3 $5,693
T52 Ana Pelaez Trivino -3 $5,693
T52 Gaby Lopez -3 $5,693
T52 Isi Gabsa -3 $5,693
T52 Yan Liu -3 $5,693
T52 Dewi Weber -3 $5,693
T52 Alena Sharp -3 $5,693
T60 Aline Krauter -2 $4,700
T60 Muni He -2 $4,700
T60 Hira Naveed -2 $4,700
T63 Wichanee Meechai E $4,383
T63 Robyn Choi E $4,383
T65 Jin Hee Im 1 $4,203
T65 Eun-Hee Ji 1 $4,203
67 Hye-Jin Choi 2 $4,066

 

Karrie Webb returns to LPGA this week to gear up for British Open at St. Andrews

This, she feels, is her last chance to play the Old Course.

Karrie Webb returns to the LPGA this week for the first time in two years for one big reason: She wants another crack at the Old Course.

Webb, 49, is playing this week’s ShopRite LPGA Classic under the Hall of Fame/Career Wins category. A 41-time winner on the LPGA, Webb won the AIG Women’s British Open in 2002 and is exempt into the event until age 60. (She also won the Weetabix Women’s British Open in 1995 and 1997 before it was designated a major.)

This summer marks the first time the Women’s British has been contested at the Old Course since Stacy Lewis won in 2013. Lorena Ochoa won the first women’s professional event ever held on the Grand Old Lady in 2007.

“I just think St. Andrews and the Old Course is such a magical place,” said Webb. “I’ve never worked out how to play the Old Course well, but I just love everything … staying in the town, being there, even being on the golf course.”

2013 Ricoh Women's British Open
Stacy Lewis putts for birdie on the 18th green during the final round of the 2013 Ricoh Women’s British Open at the Old Course at St. Andrews in Scotland. (Photo: Warren Little/Getty Images)

There’s a possibility that the women could return to the Old Course again before Webb reaches the end of her exemption, but she has no desire to tee it up with 20-year-olds when she’s 58 or 59.

This, she feels, is her last chance.

A seven-time major winner who will be eligible for the U.S. Senior Women’s Open next year, Webb last won on the LPGA in 2014 and claimed the ShopRite LPGA Classic the year prior.

The ShopRite Classic at Seaview Country Club in Galloway, New Jersey, is one of the longest-running events on tour and a favorite of Webb’s. While there are only two 54-hole events remaining on the LPGA schedule, Webb remembers there were nearly a dozen three-rounders when she came on tour in 1996.

“It is a bit of a throwback,” she said. “I think what this tournament does for charities in the local community is a huge thing, and it’s probably why it’s remained the three rounds.

“I would say any one of the girls that played in the U.S. Open last week would probably be really glad it’s three rounds this week because they get a bit of a breather before they have to tee it up.”

Last week’s winner Yuka Saso, now a two-time U.S. Women’s Open champion, is in the ShopRite field along with fellow Aussie Hannah Green, a two-time winner in 2024.

Green, currently No. 5 in the world, is slated to represent Australia in the 2024 Paris Olympics alongside Minjee Lee, who is currently 10th in the Rolex Rankings.

Webb will captain Australia’s golfers in Paris, replacing Ian-Baker Finch, who held the position for the Games in Rio de Janeiro in 2016 and again at Tokyo 2020.

Both players are past recipients of the Karrie Webb Scholarship and consider the LPGA and World Golf Hall of Famer a mentor. On Tuesday of ShopRite week, the Aussies in the field had dinner together. Webb said the Aussies on tour are as tight as they’ve ever been.

“I’m a wreck watching live scoring or watching the telecast these days,” she said. “I feel like their big sister I guess, but I know what my parents went through watching me in live scoring all these years.”

2019 KPMG Women's PGA Championship
Hannah Green is congratulated by Karrie Webb after winning the 2019 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship at Hazeltine National Golf Club. (Photo: David Cannon/Getty Images)

As for the rest of her summer playing schedule, Webb isn’t sure. While she’s never declared herself “retired,” being out on tour, she said, will never again be a regular thing. She just likes to get out and see what’s left in the tank.

“By the end of the week,” she said, smiling, “I’ll know why I don’t play regularly, probably.”

Ashleigh Buhai’s closing 65 at ShopRite clinches second LPGA title and fourth victory worldwide in less than a year

Ashleigh Buhai, 34, is the oldest player to win on the LPGA this season.

Ashleigh Buhai won for the fourth time worldwide in 10 months when she collected her second LPGA victory at the ShopRite LPGA Classic.

The 34-year-old, the oldest player to win on tour this season, played more than 200 tournaments on the LPGA before breaking through with her first title at the 2022 AIG Women’s British Open at Muirfield.

“I had the same feelings as Muirfield except I was able to hold it down the stretch a little bit,” said Buhai, “which was something that … only comes from experience.”

Buhai started off hot with four birdies in her first five holes, including a bomb from off the green on the fifth hole that she called a “hallelujah” putt.

“Those things need to happen for to you win, obviously,” she said.

Buhai birdied the 18th to post her second consecutive 65 and hold the clubhouse lead at 14 under at the Bay Course at Seaview in Galloway, New Jersey. She then waited to see if fellow major champion Hyo Joo Kim could match it. Kim’s eagle chip on the closing par 5 came dangerously close to sending the festivities into overtime. Kim had to instead settle for a tap-in birdie to finish one shot back.

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Overnight leader Dani Holmqvist, who hadn’t made a cut in five starts this season, birdied the last to finish tied for fourth and earn $81,847.

Chiara Noja, 17, tied for 12th in her first LPGA start. The LET winner heads soon to prom back home in Dubai. Noja earned $29,995 in only her second start on American soil.

The German-born player finished runner-up last week at the Belgian Ladies Open and has seven top-15 finishes so far on the LET this season. She’s currently fifth in the 2023 Race to Costa Del Sol rankings for LET Player of the Year.

Buhai, who won the Australian Women’s Open last December and the South African Women’s Open in March, becomes only the second South African with multiple LPGA wins, following Sally Little (15).

“Definitely the best golf I’ve played in my career,” said Buhai, who celebrated on the 18th with husband David, who caddies on tour for Jeongeun Lee6. “I think we have found a good balance. I’m on the older side on tour nowadays, one of the veterans.”

The former prodigy credited much of her success to her work with sports psychologist Duncan McCarthy.

“I really only have one thought with everything,” said Buhai. “I have one thought with the swing, one thought with the chipping, one thought with the putting, and I just tried and do that over and over.

“I know it sounds boring and I know he says, ‘I know this is getting boring,’ but this is what creates good results. So when I put it all together, this is what can happen.”