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

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

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It pays to play well on the LIV Golf League, just ask Cameron Smith.

The 29-year-old won for the third time since he joined the Greg Norman-led and Saudi Arabia-backed circuit at the 2023 LIV Golf Bedminster event at Trump National in New Jersey on Sunday. For his efforts, Smith will take home the top prize of $4 million and has now made $13,684,667 so far this season just as an individual.

Anirban Lahiri finished runner-up but a whopping seven shots back at 5 under. He will take home $2.25 million. Abraham Ancer, Patrick Reed and Dean Burmester each finished T-3 at 4 under and earned $1.1 million a piece.

Check out how much money each player and team earned at LIV Golf’s 11th event of its 2023 season.

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Individual prize money

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Cameron Smith -12 $4,000,000
2 Anirban Lahiri -5 $2,250,000
T3 Patrick Reed -4 $1,100,000
T3 Dean Burmester -4 $1,100,000
T3 Abraham Ancer -4 $1,100,000
6 Branden Grace -3 $700,000
T7 Joaquin Niemann -2 $570,000
T7 Marc Leishman -2 $570,000
T9 Charles Howell III -1 $437,500
T9 Phil Mickelson -1 $437,500
T11 Richard Bland E $331,428.57
T11 Graeme McDowell E $331,428.57
T11 Kevin Na E $331,428.57
T11 Dustin Johnson E $331,428.57
T11 Brendan Steele E $331,428.57
T11 Carlos Ortiz E $331,428.57
T11 Talor Gooch E $331,428.57
T18 Bryson DeChambeau 1 $240,000
T18 Charl Schwartzel 1 $240,000
T18 Jason Kokrak 1 $240,000
T18 Cameron Tringale 1 $240,000
T18 Harold Varner III 1 $240,000
T18 Bubba Watson 1 $240,000
T18 Mito Pereira 1 $240,000
T25 James Piot 2 $202,500
T25 Thomas Pieters 2 $202,500
T27 Bernd Wiesberger 3 $190,000
T27 Jediah Morgan 3 $190,000
T27 David Puig 3 $190,000
T30 Matt Jones 4 $176,000
T30 Sergio Garcia 4 $175,000
T30 Paul Casey 4 $175,000
T33 Louis Oosthuizen 5 $155,500
T33 Peter Uihlein 5 $155,500
T33 Sihwan Kim 5 $155,500
T33 Laurie Canter 5 $155,500
T33 Henrik Stenson 5 $155,500
T38 Sebastián Munoz 7 $141,250
T38 Ian Poulter 7 $141,250
T38 Brooks Koepka 7 $141,250
T38 Scott Vincent 7 $141,250
42 Matthew Wolff 8 $135,000
T43 Eugenio Chacarra 10 $131,250
T43 Pat Perez 10 $131,250
45 Chase Koepka 14 $127,500
46 Danny Lee 15 $125,000
47 Martin Kaymer 17 $122,500
48 Lee Westwood 20 $120,000

Team prize money

Position Team Score Earnings
1 Ripper GC -20 $3,000,000
T-2 Crushers GC -9 $1,000,000
T-2 Stinger GC -9 $1,000,000

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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Aussie Sweep: Cameron Smith, Ripper GC claim wins at LIV Golf Bedminster

The win is Smith’s second of the season and third of his LIV Golf career.

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The Aussies took over New Jersey this week as Cameron Smith and his Ripper GC swept LIV Golf Bedminster.

The 29-year-old won Sunday for the third time since joining the upstart circuit after claiming the event at Trump National Bedminster at 12 under, seven shots clear of runner-up Anirban Lahiri. Abraham Ancer, Patrick Reed and Dean Burmester finished T-3 at 4 under. Smith has five top-five finishes in 11 starts this LIV season and hasn’t finished worse than T-26 in the 48-player field events.

Smith led his all-Australian Ripper GC to its first team victory of the season at 20 under, a whopping 11 shots clear of runners-up Crushers GC and Stinger GC at 9 under. Bubba Watson’s RangeGoats GC finished fourth at 8 under.

Next up for the shotgun-start circuit is LIV Golf Chicago at Rich Harvest Farms in Illinois, Sept. 22-24, followed by LIV Golf Jeddah in Saudi Arabia, Oct. 13-15, and the LIV Golf Team Championship at Trump National Doral near Miami, Oct. 20-22.

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LIV Golf players dish on if they even want to return to the PGA Tour

Phil Mickelson said “not a single” LIV Golf player wanted to return to the PGA Tour and his colleagues backed him up.

As the powers that be continue to iron out details for the proposed framework agreement that aims to unite professional golf, one of the biggest questions is what must happen for players who left for LIV Golf to return to the PGA Tour and DP World Tour.

Phil Mickelson didn’t mince words when he recently claimed “not a single player” who joined LIV Golf wanted to play on the PGA Tour. Are there some events players have fond memories of and wish they could play? Absolutely. But a full PGA Tour schedule, or even an abbreviated one, doesn’t sound appealing to the vast majority of those who made the leap to the 48-player, 12-team league.

We asked a handful of players what they thought ahead of this week’s LIV Golf Bedminster event at Trump National in New Jersey, and the answers were very similar.

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Photos: 2023 LIV Golf Bedminster at Trump National

Check out the best photos of the week from Trump National Bedminster.

LIV Golf is back in the suburbs of New Jersey this week at Trump National Bedminster, and while the team battle is close, one player has separated from the pack on the individual leaderboard.

Stinger GC have tied Ripper GC at 11 under on the team side, while early leader and Ripper GC captain Cameron Smith has extended his lead to four with 18 holes to play. The 29-year-old Aussie fired a 5-under 66 on Friday and added a 4-under 67 to sit at 9 under for the event, with Dean Burmester (68) and Phil Mickelson (67) T-2 at 5 under.

Former President Donald Trump was once again on hand for the festivities this week and played the Thursday pro-am with Smith and Patrick Reed.

Check out the best photos of the week from 2023 LIV Golf Bedminster at Trump National.

LIV Golf’s Bryson DeChambeau gushes over new driver, pleads case for Ryder Cup

“I feel like I’m just a brute. I just, boom, right down the fairway, wedge it on the green,” said DeChambeau.

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BEDMINSTER, N.J. — While hosting a clinic for Hope Through Education on the driving range of Trump National Bedminster ahead of this week’s LIV Golf event, Bryson DeChambeau quipped during a Q&A session that he doesn’t need to practice as much thanks to his new driver from Krank Golf.

You know, the same one he took the wrapping off last Wednesday on the range and used to shoot a 58 four days later and win LIV Golf Greenbrier. DeChambeau was coy when asked about it before the event in West Virginia, where he shot 61-58 on the weekend, but did note how it’s won a bunch of World Long Drive championships and if you “hit on the toe, hit on the heel, everything comes back down the middle of the fairway.”

DeChambeau was then asked if there’s an argument that clubs are becoming too forgiving – teammate Anirban Lahiri joked “We could be here for a half hour now” – and the bulked-up bomber went on to explain how he didn’t have the right equipment for five years.

“I think we’re in a place now in time where (equipment) contracts aren’t necessarily as important as the purse you’re playing for,” said DeChambeau. “I really think the best equipment is going to start showing itself over the course of time because of that.”

“So in regards to the forgiveness, you can say that,” he continued, “but it’s just if you get the right physics going, you can get some special stuff happening in clubs.”

The science of golf and over-analyzing the mechanics of the golf swing has taken up quite a bit of valuable real estate inside DeChambeau’s head, but the 29-year-old feels like his mental game is better now more than ever, thanks to equipment.

“I feel like I’m just a brute. I just, boom, right down the fairway, wedge it on the green,” he said, comparing his current approach to the game to his 2015 U.S. Amateur victory at Olympia Fields where he won the 36-hole final, 7 and 6. “It’s just more of a determined, focused mentality that I have with this new equipment. It’s really the equipment, to be honest.”

“Everyone says it’s in between the ears, and sometimes you find a club that just makes you feel like, ‘Oh, man, I’m king of the jungle, I can do whatever I want,'” Lahiri said in agreement. “It’s very similar with Bryson. He talked about how his mental game is the best it’s been, because he trusts himself more, because he knows his equipment supports him.”

Remember this? DeChambeau said driver ‘sucks,’ angering his club makers

But will the new stick make it to Italy for the Ryder Cup? The former two-time member of Team USA with a 2-3-1 record (1-1-0 in Sunday singles) certainly has a case as a captain’s pick for the American side looking to win on foreign soil for the first time since 1993.

The struggle was all too real for DeChambeau early this season, with finishes of T-23, T-44, T-16 and T-26 in LIV’s 48-player events. Over his last five starts on the Greg Norman-led and Saudi Arabia-funded circuit, DeChambeau has finished T-5, T-9, 2, T-11 and first, on top of his T-4 at the PGA Championship and T-20 at the U.S. Open.

“Look, I played in a couple Ryder Cups, and I would love to represent my country. There’s no doubt about that. I feel like I’m in a good place to be able to do that,” he said. “I feel like I’m a top 10 player for sure right now with the game that I’m playing, and if I do get picked, fantastic. If I don’t, I’ll still be watching on TV and rooting for Team USA because I respect and appreciate those players that are on the team representing our country more than a PGA Tour or LIV thing.”

With fellow LIV colleague Brooks Koepka seemingly assured a spot in the top-six automatic qualifiers, imagine the two former foes competing together after burying the hatchet in 2021.

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Full breakdown of Trump Bedminster’s LIV Golf Invitational Series prize money payout

Dustin Johnson’s 4 Aces are cleaning up at LIV events.

BEDMINSTER, N.J. — Jediah Morgan finished this week at 16 over, 27 shots behind winner Henrik Stenson at the LIV Golf Invitational Series event at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster, and for his efforts he’ll take home $120,000.

Welcome to golf’s new era.

Stenson won by two shots at 11 under and earned a whopping $4 million. Since turning pro in 1999, Stenson has eclipsed the $4 million mark just twice in his PGA Tour career. Dustin Johnson and his 4 Aces GC ran away with the team title by eight shots at 25 under, earning his teammates Patrick Reed, Talor Gooch and Pat Perez $750,000 each. The team also won in Portland last month.

Chief among LIV Golf’s selling points is the 54 hole format with team and individual champions, as well as the millions and millions of dollars up for grabs. Check out the full prize money payouts for each player in Bedminster.

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Henrik Stenson -11 $4,000,000
T2 Matthew Wolff -9 $1,812,500
T2 Dustin Johnson -9 $1,812,500
4 Carlos Ortiz -8 $1,050,000
5 Patrick Reed -7 $975,000
T6 Paul Casey -4 $648,000
T6 Sergio Garcia -4 $648,000
T6 Turk Pettit -4 $648,000
T6 Lee Westwood -4 $648,000
T6 Talor Gooch -4 $648,000
T11 Brooks Koepka -3 $495,000
T11 Martin Kaymer -3 $495,000
T13 Branden Grace -2 $293,333
T13 Ian Poulter -2 $293,333
T13 Phachara Khongwatmai -2 $293,333
16 Sam Horsfield -1 $240,000
T17 Chase Koepka E $229,000
T17 Charl Schwartzel E $229,000
T19 Matt Jones 1 $200,000
T19 Louis Oosthuizen 1 $200,000
T19 Justin Harding 1 $200,000
22 Travis Smyth 2 $172,000
T23 Shaun Norris 3 $168,000
T23 Eugenio Lopez-Chacarra 3 $168,000
T23 Peter Uihlein 3 $168,000
T26 Laurie Canter 4 $160,000
T26 James Piot 4 $160,000
T26 Jinichiro Kozuma 4 $160,000
T26 Jason Kokrak 4 $160,000
T26 Charles Howell III 4 $160,000
T31 Hudson Swafford 5 $151,000
T31 Pat Perez 5 $151,000
T31 Bernd Wiesberger 5 $151,000
T31 Bryson DeChambeau 5 $151,000
35 Phil Mickelson 6 $146,000
T36 Sadom Kaewkanjana 7 $141,000
T36 Graeme McDowell 7 $141,000
T36 Ryosuke Kinoshita 7 $141,000
T36 Kevin Na 7 $141,000
T40 Abraham Ancer 8 $135,000
T40 Richard Bland 8 $135,000
T42 David Puig 9 $131,000
T42 Scott Vincent 9 $131,000
T44 Hennie Du Plessis 10 $127,000
T44 Yuki Inamori 10 $127,000
46 Wade Ormsby 11 $124,000
47 Hideto Tanihara 12 $122,000
48 Jediah Morgan 16 $120,000

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Henrik Stenson holds off charging Matthew Wolff to win LIV Golf debut at Trump Bedminster

The LIV Golf Bedminster event came down to the wire on both the team and individual leaderboards.

BEDMINSTER, N.J. — Henrik Stenson said the last few weeks haven’t been much fun, which may be the undersell of the century seeing as the five-time member of Team Europe lost his Ryder Cup captaincy for the 2023 matches after joining the LIV Golf Invitational Series.

The 46-year-old Swede was somehow able to block the outside noise and focus in his debut for the upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, taking home the individual title by two shots at 11 under. Stenson last won at the 2019 Hero World Challenge, Tiger Woods’ unofficial event in the Bahamas. His last PGA Tour victory came at the 2017 Wyndham Championship. The victory netted Stenson a cool $4 million.

“Yeah, it has been a bit of a roller coaster, no question. You’ve all seen that, and we talked about it earlier in the week,” said Stenson. “Now it’s about looking forward, for me at least, and yeah, I’m super proud with the focus I managed to have this week and to get my game in – I’ve been working pretty hard to get the game back in shape, and it’s certainly going in the right direction as we know now.”

Stenson was tied for the lead at Trump National Golf Club after the first round, held the solo lead after Saturday’s second round and did just enough to win Sunday, shooting a 2-under 69 for the second consecutive day. A charging Matthew Wolff tied Stenson and Patrick Reed for the low round of the week with a final-round, 7-under 64 to finish T-2 with Dustin Johnson. Carlos Ortiz finished fourth at 8 under, with Reed rounding out the top five at 7 under.

“I think there might have been a little bit of extra motivation in there this week. When we as players have that, I think we can bring out the good stuff. Yeah, I certainly did that this week,” Stenson explained. “I guess that’s been a bit of a theme over the course of my career, I think, when I really want something I manage to dig a little bit deeper, and a lot of times we manage to make it happen.”

Johnson’s 4 Aces have stacked the LIV Golf deck and won for a second consecutive event, claiming the team competition by eight shots over Lee Westwood’s Majesticks. The 4 Aces will split $3 million ($750,000 each) for their efforts, with the Majesticks earning $1.5 million ($375,000 each). Sergio Garcia’s Fireballs finished third and will split $500,000 ($125,000 each).

“Today we knew we needed to play some good golf to finish if we wanted to win this tournament as a team, and also we were both right in the mix trying to chase down Henrik,” Johnson said of his and Reed’s pursuit. “If we wanted to put a little pressure on him, we had to make some birdies and play good coming home, coming down the stretch.”

LIV Golf has long been criticized as a way for the Kingdom to sportswash its human rights record with guaranteed money and multi-million dollar deals. 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 the month of August off before its fourth event Labor Day Weekend, Sept. 2-4, at The International near Boston.

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Why is there a DeLorean time machine styled from ‘Back to the Future’ at LIV Golf’s event at Trump Bedminster?

There’s some unique history at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster.

BEDMINSTER, N.J. — When you talk through the fan village at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster for this week’s LIV Golf event, you see everything from various food trucks and golf activities to a merchandise tent and … a DeLorean time machine?

A car styled after the DeLorean DMC-12 made famous by the “Back to the Future” movie franchise might appear to be out of place, but it’s actually right at home. The DeLorean has a unique tie to the course that’s playing host to the Greg Norman-led and Saudi Arabia-funded series, seeing as the property used to be the home of the vehicle’s namesake.

Before he was President of the United States, Donald Trump bought the 500-plus acre former estate of automaker John Z. DeLorean in 2002, which at the time was a golf course construction project on the verge of collapse. Trump kept the same plans for the golf course and was purely the money man to lift the project back on its feet, paying $35 million for the property.

“Those people had a great vision but didn’t quite have the funding,” he said at the time.

More from NewJerseyHills.com:

DeLorean and his former wife, model/actress Cristina Ferrare, bought the property in 1981, just as the former General Motors wunderkind was launching the manufacture of his distinctive stainless steel sports car with gull-wing doors.

As history now knows, the DeLorean Motor Company failed, and DeLorean was charged with cocaine trafficking in an attempt to raise money for his car company.

Although DeLorean was eventually acquitted, the ordeal cost him his marriage and his financial stability. For years before the bankruptcy, he battled with creditors to avoid foreclosure on the estate.

According to NJ.com, DeLorean’s mansion was renovated as the clubhouse, with the garage as the golf shop. There’s a helipad just off the 15th fairway, a pool, cottages for guests – not to mention Trump’s private residence – as well as a handful of goats for tax purposes.

The 36-hole golf club was designed by Tom Fazio and Tom Fazio II and opened in 2004. Trump’s daughter, Ivanka, and Jared Kushner were married here in 2009. The property was approved in 2015 to also have a plot for a family cemetery, and Trump’s ex-wife, Ivana, reportedly was buried there after her recent death.

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‘Haters are gonna hate’: Graeme McDowell slows down angry Twitter fingers as confidence in LIV Golf grows

“I’m not disciplined enough to stay off my social media,” McDowell said of his responses to LIV’s online backlash.

BEDMINSTER, N.J. — You know those signs in warehouses that say, It’s been (X-number) of days since last accident/mistake? Graeme McDowell needs one of those for his Twitter outbursts.

It’s been nine days since the 43-year-old clapped back at someone throwing shade his way on the social media platform — where he said he’d give a heckler 10 shots a side on their home course — which may be a record given his recent history on the platform the last few months since joining the LIV Golf Invitational Series.

The Northern Irishman just can’t help himself sometimes.

“Yeah, it still bothers me because I’m not disciplined enough to stay off my social media,” McDowell said of the backlash he and his colleagues have faced for joining the Greg Norman-led and Saudi Arabia-funded series. “Haters are gonna hate. Keyboard warriors are always going to be there and that is what it is. I’m not used to it. And like I said, I haven’t done a good job staying away from it.”

McDowell praised his wife, Kristin, for being his rock over the last few months. She reads every article written about LIV and her husband, but she doesn’t always pass that info along, which he says is for the best.

“I care more about what (the media) think than I care about what the Twitter world thinks, because I know they’re a bunch of idiots,” McDowell explained. “But I know the people writing up on me are a bunch of smart people at times, so that stuff hurts more. But again, it’s only opinion sometimes. It’s not facts. It’s just opinion.”

“It’s been hard. It’s been a hard couple months, but I really believed in London I was in the right place,” McDowell said despite the shellacking he and others have taken for joining the controversial series backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. “That opinion has only strengthened now the last six weeks.”

The 2010 U.S. Open champion said his confidence in LIV grew at the first event in London because of the staging and the way LIV took care of the players. That confidence is only growing the more players that join the series.

“We’re kind of brothers in arms, if you like, because of the negativity that’s come out against us all,” said McDowell. “Everyone’s experienced that in their own way and it brings us all closer together.”

“But I’m getting better. I’m coming through,” he said of his newfound outlook on the situation. “I’m very happy where I am. I think this tour is only going to go from strength to strength.”

But we can still expect him to put some haters in their place from time to time, right?

“No, I’m done.”

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Phil Mickelson explains video with gorillas that took social media by storm ahead of LIV Golf Bedminster

Mickelson and wife, Amy, recently visited Rwanda before visiting Tanzania.

BEDMINSTER, N.J. — If you didn’t see the Phil Mickelson and gorillas video, where have you been?

The clip came from a LIV Golf video announcing their latest addition to the broadcast, fan-favorite analyst David Feherty, who made his debut at this week’s event at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster. After the first round on Friday, a frustrated Mickelson spoke with the media about his recent struggles with his game, saying, “I don’t feel lost. I don’t feel like I’m hitting terrible shots, but I’m just not scoring.”

The 52-year-old also dished on the viral video that took social media by storm. Eight months ago Mickelson and his wife, Amy, planned a trip for her 50th birthday, which was the end of May. They ended up spending a few days in Rwanda before visiting Tanzania.

“It looked like it was a preserve, but one day out of a month the gorillas come out of a jungle. There’s like a wall there and they come out of the jungle and eat some of the eucalyptus trees for the salt and the stem, and we were lucky enough to see them on that day because we had a much better view of the entire family,” explained Mickelson. “Amy is all excited because a little baby gorilla came up to her and kind of bumped into her. She seems to have that effect on all animals. They all come to her. But it was a really special trip for us.”

That led Henrik Stenson, who joined Mickelson, Charles Howell III and Patrick Reed for the interview, to ask the important question: Did the gorilla bring a birthday present for her?

“They sang happy birthday for her,” Mickelson said with a smile.

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