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Let’s talk money. Fitting, right? Look at the headline above. Seems to be a hot topic, too.
Remember how this Pebble Beach Pro-Am week started? The PGA Tour and a gang named the Strategic Sports Group shook hands over a funding deal, and suddenly the Tour could clean everyone’s golf clubs with hundreds if they so chose. Over a billion bucks was in play.
That’s a lot of money. It’s a lot to think about. Players were asked about it. But maybe no one more interestingly than Collin Morikawa.
It started when he was asked what he’d think if the money in golf never budged over the next 10 years. And whether that would concern him.
“From the purses now or the purses that we had,” he asked.
“The purses now.”
“I mean, yeah,” he said, “if inflation goes up really high, I’ll be worried.”
“Say we see a two percent like the Fed wants.”
“Never happens.”
Then he went deep.
“I mean, look, we’re playing for a lot of money this week. I don’t know what the final purse is or what the winner makes, but there’s a lot of money up for grabs and you can make a very great living. I think so many — there’s a bunch of guys that made over $10 million on the course last year and a lot of guys that made over 5 million on the course. Like that’s a lot of money. The way sports are going right now, they’re on the uphill, they’re on the climb, right? Football’s obviously the biggest.
“I think at the end of the day if we keep getting more eyeballs on golf — and that’s the biggest hurdle that we have to accomplish: how do we get more eyeballs on golf — I would hope to expect that more money’s pushed into this. But at this point right now where we’re at, it’s a lot of money that we’re playing for and I’m very thankful to be doing that, but I also see that we need more people to be interested in golf. We need to make golf more intriguing to the viewers. How do we make broadcasting more approachable, how do we see more golf shots at the end of the day, right? I turn on golf on a Thursday if I play early, I turn it on and I see three golf shots and I question why. The reason why other sports are — people pay attention is because people see more, you can probably bet more.
“People like betting when you can watch it live, not watch it on ShotTracer.”
At the least, it’s something to snack on in the days and weeks ahead.
With that, here is a complete list of the 2024 Pebble Beach Pro-Am payouts for all 80 players. The total purse is $20 million.
How much every player made at the 2024 Pebble Beach Pro-Am
1. Wyndham Clark $3.6 million
2. Ludvig Aberg $2.16 million
3. Matthieu Pavon $1.36 million
T4. Mark Hubbard $877,500
Thomas Detry $877,500
T6. Jason Day $642,000
Tom Hoge $642,000
Justin Thomas $642,000
Scottie Scheffler $642,000
10. Sam Burns $535,000
T11. Justin Rose $455,000
Keegan Bradley $455,000
Patrick Cantlay $455,000
T14. Eric Cole $322,500
Si Woo Kim $322,500
Peter Malnati $322,500
Collin Morikawa $322,500
Beau Hossler $322,500
Emiliano Grillo $322,500
T20. Adam Scott $210,333
Christiaan Bezuidenhout $210,333
Erik van Rooyen $210,333
Cam Davis $210,333
Sahith Theegala $210,333
J.T. Poston $210,333
T26. Chris Kirk $143,800
Sepp Straka $143,800
Luke List $143,800
Alex Noren $143,800
Denny McCarthy $143,800
T31. Seamus Power $106,625
Tommy Fleetwood $106,625
S.H. Kim $106,625
Corey Conners $106,625
Byeong Hun An $106,625
Nicolai Hojgaard $106,625
Tom Kim $106,625
Sam Ryder $106,625
39. $84,000
40. $80,000
41. $76,000
42. $72,000
43. $68,000
44. $64,000
45. $60,000
46. $57,000
47. $54,000
48. $52,000
49. $50,000
50. $48,000
51. $47,000
52. $46,000
53. $45,000
54. $44,000
55. $43,000
56. $42,000
57. $41,000
58. $40,000
59. $39,500
60. $39,000
61. $38,500
62. $38,000
63. $37,500
64. $37,000
65. $36,500
66. $36,000
67. $35,500
68. $35,000
69. $34,750
70. $34,500
71. $34,250
72. $34,000
73. $33,750
74. $33,500
75. $33,250
76. $33,000
77. $32,750
78. $32,500
79. $32,250
80. $32,000