2023 The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican prize money payouts for each LPGA player

Lilia Vu earned $487,500 for her fourth win of the 2023 season.

BELLEAIR, Fla. — Lilia Vu crossed the $4 million mark in career earnings after collecting her fourth victory of 2023 at The Annika driven by Gainbridge. Vu earned $487,500 for her three-stroke triumph, bringing her season earnings to $3,252,303. The Annika featured one of the highest non-major purses of the season at $3.25 million.

Seventy-eight percent of Vu’s career earnings have been made this season. The two-time major winner now leads the LPGA money list with one event remaining. Next week’s CME Group Tour Championship boasts a purse of $7 million and a winner’s check of $2 million.

Check out how much money each LPGA player earned this week at The Annika:

Position Name Score Earnings
1 Lilia Vu -19 $487,500
T2 Alison Lee -16 $262,260
T2 Azahara Munoz -16 $262,260
4 Amy Yang -15 $170,594
T5 Stephanie Kyriacou -14 $124,827
T5 Emily Kristine Pedersen -14 $124,827
T7 Ariya Jutanugarn -13 $76,061
T7 Lexi Thompson -13 $76,061
T7 Ruoning Yin -13 $76,061
T7 Megan Khang -13 $76,061
T7 Minami Katsu -13 $76,061
T12 Hae Ran Ryu -12 $54,700
T12 Wei-Ling Hsu -12 $54,700
T12 Gaby Lopez -12 $54,700
T15 Linn Grant -11 $45,714
T15 Rachel Kuehn (a) -11 $0
T15 Amanda Doherty -11 $45,714
T15 Patty Tavatanakit -11 $45,714
T19 In Gee Chun -10 $39,029
T19 Bianca Pagdanganan -10 $39,029
T19 Brooke M. Henderson -10 $39,029
T19 Wichanee Meechai -10 $39,029
T23 Grace Kim -9 $34,952
T23 Sarah Schmelzel -9 $34,952
T25 Charley Hull -8 $30,042
T25 Allisen Corpuz -8 $30,042
T25 Cydney Clanton -8 $30,042
T25 Jasmine Suwannapura -8 $30,042
T25 Chanettee Wannasaen -8 $30,042
T25 Nelly Korda -8 $30,042
T31 Atthaya Thitikul -7 $23,205
T31 Jeongeun Lee5 -7 $23,205
T31 Pornanong Phatlum -7 $23,205
T31 Jin Young Ko -7 $23,205
T31 Ally Ewing -7 $23,205
T31 Lydia Ko -7 $23,205
T31 Lindy Duncan -7 $23,205
T38 Leona Maguire -6 $17,726
T38 Gabriela Ruffels -6 $17,726
T38 Jodi Ewart Shadoff -6 $17,726
T38 Dewi Weber -6 $17,726
T38 Matilda Castren -6 $17,726
T38 Gina Kim -6 $17,726
T44 Maria Fassi -5 $14,979
T44 Soo Bin Joo -5 $14,979
T46 Nicole Broch Estrup -4 $13,398
T46 Caroline Inglis -4 $13,398
T46 Georgia Hall -4 $13,398
T46 Louise Rydqvist (a) -4 $0
T46 Jaravee Boonchant -4 $13,398
T51 Pernilla Lindberg -3 $11,179
T51 Hye-Jin Choi -3 $11,179
T51 Yuna Nishimura -3 $11,179
T51 Carlota Ciganda -3 $11,179
T51 Jeongeun Lee6 -3 $11,179
T51 Muni He -3 $11,179
T57 Sarah Kemp -2 $9,653
T57 Ruixin Liu -2 $9,653
T57 Perrine Delacour -2 $9,653
60 Elizabeth Szokol -1 $8,987
T61 Polly Mack E $8,100
T61 Ashleigh Buhai E $8,100
T61 Olivia Cowan E $8,100
T61 Eun-Hee Ji E $8,100
T61 Hinako Shibuno E $8,100
T61 Aline Krauter E $8,100
T67 Gemma Dryburgh 1 $7,406
T67 Anna Nordqvist 1 $7,406
69 Frida Kinhult 5 $7,158
70 Min Lee 6 $6,989

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=1373]

5 things to know from The Annika, where scores are low and tensions are high

Catch up on the action here.

BELLEAIR, Florida – There’s really no other tournament on the LPGA schedule quite like this one. Everyone, it seems, has something to play for that’s bigger than this week. Whether it’s Player of the Year points, a chance to tee it up at CME for a $7 million purse or the fight to keep a tour card, there’s no shortage of storylines at the newly renamed Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican.

Lexi Thompson, for example, needs to finish in at least a share of third to have a chance to qualify for CME. She’s currently T-12. Patty Tavatanakit came into this week 61st on the CME points list. The top 60 and ties will play next week in Naples, Florida, at the CME Group Tour Championship. The major champ is currently T-4 and projected to jump to 50th.

Emily Kristine Pedersen came into the week 80th on the CME points list. The top 80 on tour have Category 1 status, which means they’ll get into the limited-field Asian events next spring. Pedersen didn’t come to Belleair just to hang on, however. The surprise Solheim Cup pick who delivered in Spain is enjoying her best week on tour with a three-stroke lead after rounds of 63-65-64.

Sunday at Pelican promises to be a shootout. Here are five things to know from a red-hot day:

Players at The Annika fighting to keep their LPGA cards for 2024

The penultimate event of the year on the LPGA is layered with interest.

The penultimate event of the year on the LPGA is layered with interest as some players fight for spots in the lucrative CME Group Tour Championship while others fight for their jobs.

There’s great emphasis on the 60th spot of the CME points list, the cutoff point for the season-ending event with the $7 million purse. What’s even more impactful for many players, however, is the 100th spot. The top 100 players on the points list maintain full cards for the 2024 season. The top 80 receive the best status available.

Midway leader Emily Kristine Pedersen holds a two-stroke lead at The Annika driven by Gainbridge after rounds of 63-65 put her at 12 under at Pelican Golf Club. Pedersen entered the week 80th on the CME list and is projected to move to 34th should she triumph for the first time on the LPGA. While winning will require a good bit of work, Pedersen is in fine shape to jump into the top 60.

2023 Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican
Emily Kristine Pedersen plays her shot from the third tee during the second round of the 2023 Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican at Pelican at Pelican Golf Club in Belleair, Florida. (Photo: Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)

The Dane had plenty of memorable moments at the Solheim Cup in Spain this year, including an ace, and carried that fire into the regular season.

“I think I haven’t really been good at cheering on myself in normal tournaments,” she said. “I’m kind of like getting annoyed about the bad things, but when the good things happen I take it for granted a little bit.

“So I have been trying to pat myself on the back a little bit more when I’m doing something good, and that’s definitely something I’m taken from the Solheim.”

Minami Katsu, who currently sits in second, also hopes to vault into the top 60. Currently 78th on the points list, she’s projected to move to No. 49 should she remain in that position.

Meanwhile, Muni He, who is rocketing up the board, is in a fight for full status. Players who finish 81st to 100th on the CME list fall into Category 11 on the LPGA priority list, which is used to fill fields. He started the week 113th and is tied for fourth after two days at The Annika. He is currently projected to move up to 92nd on the money list.

Those who fall between Nos. 101 to 125 on the list will be in Category 16 next season. Some players who finish outside the top 100 will go to Q-Series later this year to improve their status. The top 45 finishers from Q-Series fall in Categories 14 and 15 and are listed in the order they finish.

Here are five notables currently battling for full status:

Lydia Ko fell from No. 1 to outside the top 100 on the CME points list — what does it mean for next year?

Ko isn’t like most players ranked outside the top 100. She has options.

It’s hard to believe that just over one year ago, Lydia Ko was quite literally on top of the world. It was at this time last year that Ko enjoyed what she called a Cinderella story, sweeping the postseason awards in a comeback year that ended with a dreamy wedding ceremony in South Korea.

Now, Ko tees it up this week in the newly renamed Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican event looking to sneak into the top 100 on the LPGA priority list. The top 100 positions on the CME list are considered full cardholders. Ko currently sits at 101.

Ko, however, who opened with a 3-under 67 at Pelican on Thursday, isn’t like most players ranked outside the top 100. She has options.

More: 10 LPGA players to watch on the CME bubble, including Lexi Thompson and ’22 champ Lydia Ko

Should Ko finish outside the top 100 on the points list this season, she could play out of the winner’s category in 2024. Category 4 includes winners of the past two seasons as well as the current season. Ko won three times in 2022.

Another option Ko could use down the road is Category No. 2, which includes members in the top 20 on the Career Money List as of the end of the previous season. Players can compete under this category twice in their careers. (Ko currently ranks fifth on the career money list with $16,919,487.)

2022 CME Group Tour Championship
Lydia Ko poses for a photo with the Vare Trophy, the Rolex Player of the Year trophy and the CME Globe trophy after winning the CME Group Tour Championship at Tiburon Golf Club on November 20, 2022 in Naples, Florida. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

Although Ko has sounded at times this year like she might be winding down, the two-time Olympic medalist has her sights set on Paris next summer as well as the LPGA Hall of Fame. She’s currently two points shy of the 27 needed to qualify.

Ko currently has 228.571 CME points. Azahara Munoz occupies the 100th spot at 234.273. For Ko to qualify for the CME Group Tour Championship, which she won last season, she would have to finish 60th or higher on the list. Bianca Pagdanganan currently holds the 60th spot at 528.780. Ko would need at least a first (500 points) or second (320 points) at Pelican to have a chance.

Photos: Lydia Ko through the years

The top category on the LPGA priority list, which is used to fill tournament fields, is the top 80 on the CME points from the year prior. That’s as good as it gets. Category 1 is used to fill limited-field events at the start of the year like the HSBC Women’s World Championship in Singapore and the Honda LPGA Thailand. Ko entered the 2023 season No. 1 on the entire list.

Players who finish 81st to 100th on the CME list fall into Category 11.

Those who fall between Nos. 101 to 125 are in Category 16. These folks might want to consider going to Q-Series later this year to improve their status. The top 45 finishers from Q-Series fall in Categories 14 and 15 and are listed in the order they finish.

Those who finish 126-150 fall in No. 19 of 20 total categories. They’ll also be heading back to Q-Series and possibly the Epson Tour.

[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=352706966]

Patty Tavatanakit, one of several major champions not yet in CME field, opens with 63 at The Annika

Here’s a look at the CME bubble.

Time is running out for players like Patty Tavatanakit. The top 60 players and ties on the Race to CME Globe points list qualify for the season-ending championship, and this week’s Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican is the final event before the list is finalized.

Tavatanakit, who currently sits 61st on the points list, opened with a 7-under 63 on a picture-perfect day at Pelican Golf Club to hold a share of the lead with former No. 1 Jin Young Ko.

“I’ve been like preparing for this event,” said Tavanatakit, the 2021 ANA Inspiration winner. “Obviously I knew what I had to do. I’m pretty stressed, but at the same time, I feel like I did everything under my control. I did everything with no regrets.”

The CME Group Tour Championship at Tiburon Golf Club offers the largest non-major purse on the LPGA at $7 million. The CME winner receives $2 million.

There are a number of high-profile major winners currently on the outside looking in. Here’s a list of bubble players as well as some stars who need a big week:

Renewed Lexi Thompson needs another big week at The Annika to qualify for LPGA season-ender

Thompson has had her share of success at Pelican.

BELLEAIR, Fla. — Two weeks before the Solheim Cup, U.S. captain Stacy Lewis told Lexi Thompson at the LPGA stop in Cincinnati that she wasn’t going to play her in alternate shot. Thompson could’ve gotten mad, Lewis said, but instead used it as motivation.

When Thompson arrived in Spain, Lewis saw a different player. Armed with a new swing thought from instructor Tony Ruggiero, whom she started working with the month prior, Thompson’s ball-striking returned to form. Players kept coming up to Lewis to tell her that Lexi was back. And the advanced strokes-gained numbers that Lewis received were “off the charts.”

With only a handful of holes left in a Thursday practice round, Lewis asked Thompson and Megan Khang if they could play alternate shot together on Friday, something that hadn’t previously been discussed.

Later that night, Lewis told the team that Thompson was going to hit the first tee shot.

“I can’t tell you the words that were said,” said Lewis, “but everybody was fired up and ready to go.”

Suddenly Thompson, a 28-year-old player who had missed more cuts than she’d made this season, was the leading player on Team USA, and she delivered, with a 3-1-0 record.

2023 Solheim Cup
Lexi Thompson of Team USA plays her shot on the second hole during Day Three of The Solheim Cup at Finca Cortesin Golf Club on September 24, 2023 in Casares, Spain. (Photo by Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)

While Thompson is reluctant to share what she and Ruggiero work on exactly, the 11-time winner did credit his arrival on the scene with turning her season around.

“He texts me every day,” said Thompson, “asking how I’m doing, keeping in touch. That’s all I need. I just need somebody there to support me and really just there checking in on me. Even if I’m playing good every day, it’s still somebody asking.”

This week, Thompson tees it up in the newly renamed Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican, where she’s been runner-up to Nelly Korda the past two seasons. It’s her first start since that inspired run at making the cut on the PGA Tour.

Thompson said Pelican Golf Club, an exclusive club in Belleair, Florida, is in the best shape she’s ever seen it. She appreciates that she can play aggressively here and hit driver more than most tour shops. Her familiarity with Bermudagrass helps massively.

Ruggiero has worked with a number of male touring pros over the years. Former students include Lucas Glover and Robby Shelton. Thompson appreciates his straightforward approach.

“Tony will tell you how it is and that’s great for me,” she said. “That’s how I respond. We laugh together and it’s not super uptight.”

Lewis pored over statistics throughout the 2023 season and notes that Thompson’s putting has been strong all season but her ball-striking, particularly her driver is what’s held her back. That’s the opposite of Thompson’s traditional game.

Now, with her long game turned around, Thompson is once again playing with confidence, lifted not only by the Solheim Cup, but that second-round 69 last month at the Shriners Children’s Open.

Thompson averaged 301 yards off the tee over two rounds in Las Vegas and tied for 13th in driving accuracy against the men, hitting 20 of 28 fairways.

“You could see it coming,” said Lewis.

“I hope she can learn from that moment and stay aggressive with driver, even on some of those shorter golf courses.”

Over the last two years at Pelican, Thompson has one-putted 46 percent of the greens at this event and led the field in Strokes Gained: Putting. She gained 1.76 strokes per round on the greens in 2021 and 2022 combined.

This week, however, she’s playing for something more than a title.

Thompson currently ranks 88th on the CME points list. The top 60 and ties at the end of this week qualify for the season-ending CME Group Tour Championship, where Thompson is a past champion.

Bianca Pagdanganan currently ranks 60th on the points list at 528.780. Thompson is 223.88 points behind her. A third-place finish is worth 230 points and a second is worth 320.

Thompson’s trying not to think about it.

“If I focus on that,” she said, “it will just get me off track this week.”

Nelly Korda hires new putting coach, looks to three-peat at Pelican Golf Club

“Before I was kind of blind going to a putting green. I did it myself,” Korda said.

Nelly Korda comes to Annika Sorenstam’s namesake event on the LPGA hoping to do something the LPGA legend accomplished twice in her career: win an event three years in a row.

Korda’s last victory on the LPGA came last year at Pelican Golf Club, where she beat fellow Floridian Lexi Thompson by a stroke. Two years ago, Korda triumphed in a sudden-death playoff over Lydia Ko, 2020 champion Sei Young Kim and Thompson. Korda was not in the field in 2020 due to a back injury sustained at the KPMG Women’s PGA.

The penultimate event on the LPGA calendar was renamed The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican for 2023 and features a purse of $3,250,000. Sorenstam won the McDonald’s LPGA Championship from 2003 to 2005 and the Mizuno Classic from 2001 to 2005. Inbee Park was the last player to win three consecutive events at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship from 2013-15.

“To three-peat, obviously there is pressure that I want to perform,” said Korda, “but I try not to think about it.”

Korda was grinding on the practice green Tuesday with putting instructor Eric Dietrich. The pair first began working together around the Solheim Cup, and she has since switched her grip and her putter. Korda said she feels more organized after making the move to Dietrich.

“Felt like I just have a plan now, or I have tendencies that I know about that I can always go into a drill and kind of work on those tendencies,” said Korda.

“Where before I was kind of blind going to a putting green. I did it myself.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/Cx6egkBtY5h/?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA%3D%3D&img_index=1

Korda has switched from a left-hand low grip back to a conventional grip. She also began using a mallet putter for the first time in her career at the LPGA stop in South Korea last month.

“Honestly, I haven’t been putting bad,” she said. “I’ve been in contention a bunch this year. It’s just I want to improve. I want to improve in every part of my game, and I just thought this was a necessary change to that.”

Photos: Nelly Korda through the years

Korda has a 65.571 scoring average at Pelican through seven rounds. The grass, the weather, the fact that her family can drive to watch her compete all factor into her success here. The eight-time LPGA winner has eight top-10 finishes this season. She took a month off midseason to nurse a lower back injury.

“I talked about it a couple times like where the beginning of the year golf felt in a sense like I don’t want to take it for granted,” she said, “but it felt easy, top 10-ing, playing well, and being in contention.

“Then I got injured and just felt hard to get back into that flow. I somehow like had a hard time finding it, so that’s kind of why I brought Eric in. And with Jamie (Mulligan), we’re all working really hard on my entire game. Hopefully, we can continue improving, but it’s more about the consistency.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=451188780]

Annika Sorenstam set to host Tampa Bay area LPGA event beginning in 2023

The ANNIKA is coming to the LPGA.

Annika Sorenstam will return to the role of LPGA tournament host. The LPGA and Pelican Women’s Championship announced on Tuesday that the Tampa Bay area event will go by a new name in November 2023: The ANNIKA driven by Gainbridge at Pelican.

Gainbridge has served as title sponsor for LPGA events the past three seasons, including two at Boca Rio Golf Club in Boca Raton, Florida, and one at Sorenstam’s home course, Lake Nona Golf and Country Club in Orlando. Sorenstam returned to LPGA competition for the first time in 13 years at Lake Nona in 2021 and made the cut.

Gainbridge also served as sponsor for the LPGA’s Indy in Tech Championship from 2017-2019.

“It is an incredible honor to host one of the premier events on the LPGA Tour schedule at Pelican Golf Club, a world-class facility, alongside my good friends at Gainbridge,” said Sorenstam in a release. “Giving back to the game I love and mentoring the game’s next generation of players have always been at the forefront of everything we do. I’m excited to kick off this great new partnership and elevate this tournament to new heights on the LPGA Tour.”

In addition to college and junior events around the world, Sorenstam co-hosts the Volvo Car Scandinavian Mixed with Henrik Stenson on the LET and DP World Tour. In 2007 and 2008, she was involved in the LPGA’s Ginn Tribute hosted by Annika in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina.

Sorenstam won 72 times on the LPGA, including 10 majors and remains the LPGA’s all-time money leader with over $22 million. She returned to the major championship stage last summer when she won the U.S. Senior Women’s Open at Brooklawn Country Club in her debut.

Nelly Korda
Nelly Korda poses with the trophy after winning the Pelican Women’s Championship in a playoff at Pelican Golf Club on November 14, 2021 in Belleair, Florida. (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images)

This year’s Pelican Women’s Championship will feature a field of 120 players competing for a $2 million purse at Pelican Golf Club in Belleair, Florida. It will be the final full-field event of the season, leading into the CME Group Tour Championship in Naples, Florida. Nelly Korda won the second edition of the event last year in a playoff over Lexi Thompson, Lydia Ko and defending champion Sei Young Kim.

“The opportunity to create ‘The ANNIKA’ in partnership with Pelican Golf Club, allows Gainbridge to continue to support these world-class LPGA athletes while celebrating the legacy of the greatest woman golfer of the modern era,” said Dan Towriss, CEO and President of Group 1001, the parent organization of Gainbridge in a statement.

“Through the work of our sister company, PARITY, and other partnerships in the works, we will continue to highlight the contributions of Annika and other legends of women’s sports, both in and outside of the competitive arena.”

[vertical-gallery id=778069317]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]