Kevin Roy odds to win the 2023 World Wide Technology Championship

Kevin Roy odds to win the 2023 World Wide Technology Championship

Kevin Roy odds to win the 2023 World Wide Technology Championship

At El Cardonal at Diamante from November 2-4, Kevin Roy will be among the golfers participating in the World Wide Technology Championship.

Looking to put some money on Roy in this week’s tournament? Here are some ways to get in on the betting action.

World Wide Technology Championship details and info

  • Date: November 2-4, 2023
  • Course: El Cardonal at Diamante
  • Location: Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
  • Previous Winner: Russell Henley

How to watch the World Wide Technology Championship

  • Thursday: Golf Channel
  • Friday: Golf Channel
  • Saturday: Golf Channel
  • Sunday: Golf Channel

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Roy odds to win the World Wide Technology Championship

The current odds on Roy to win the World Wide Technology Championship are +30000. If you decided to bet $10 on Roy, you’d end up with $3010.00 if he won.

PGA odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated Tuesday at 9:00 PM ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub.

Roy odds to finish in the top 5 at the World Wide Technology Championship

The current odds on Roy to finish top-five at the World Wide Technology Championship are +5500. If you elected to bet $10 on Roy, you’d wind up with $560.00 were he to finish that high up the leaderboard.

Roy odds to finish in the top 10 at the World Wide Technology Championship

Odds for the World Wide Technology Championship are available, and Roy is listed at +2000 to finish in the top 10. That means wagering $10 on Roy would give you $210.00.

Other betting markets for Roy at the World Wide Technology Championship

Other popular golf bets include choosing whether a player makes the cut or not, and who will lead at the end of the first round of a tournament. More common golf wagers include one-on-one matchups and 3-ball matchups (when three players are grouped together and teeing off at the same time). It’s easy — just choose who will finish carding the best score in that round.

Roy recent performances

Roy has taken part in 27 tournaments this season, with no top-10 finishes.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/rIdyn6h
'I don’t see any way': Davis Love III says PGA Tour deal with Saudi Arabia's PIF unlikely to hit deadline

'I don’t see any way': Davis Love III says PGA Tour deal with Saudi Arabia's PIF unlikely to hit deadline

'I don’t see any way': Davis Love III says PGA Tour deal with Saudi Arabia's PIF unlikely to hit deadline

With the self-imposed December 31 deadline looming for the PGA Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, PGA Tour veteran Davis Love III has confirmed the leader in the clubhouse for the worst-kept secret in golf – the deal isn’t getting done any time soon.

“The only thing I do know is nothing is going to happen really fast,” Love said during an interview on Friday in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, where he was meeting on a golf course project.

Asked if he thought a deal beyond the framework agreement, which was announced on June 6, would be consummated by the end of the year, he said, “I don’t see any way.”

But Love isn’t discouraged. He said that the Tour has returned its focus to determining what is best for the players and he likes their options.

“It’s forced us to take a look at what has been going on for 53 years and think about what the next 50 years will look like,” he said. “How do we set up our company to be ready for the future?”

It’s also given him a fresh perspective on the players who jumped ship and accepted lucrative guaranteed money offers to join the upstart LIV Tour.

“I told some of them this in the very beginning. I’m not against you as a person, I’m against what’s happening and I think you’re making a bad business decision,” Love said. “Jay tried to explain it to these guys, you are signing with our competitor and giving our competitor leverage that is going to hurt our ability to make decisions and hurt our financial position. You don’t really understand that it is not just playing in this golf tournament versus that one.

“I’m still against the fact that this is a hostile takeover. These guys signed with a company that is trying to take us over. If a bunch of guys left Pepsi and went over to Coke and tried to take over Pepsi would you ever let them come back to Pepsi? I don’t think so. It may not be a perfect comparison but they sued us to make us change our rules so they could get what they wanted.”

But what should the future look like for the Tour? Love said that is the hot topic inside the halls of PGA Tour headquarters and with the policy board. As the longest-serving tenured member of the PGA Tour policy board and one of the Tour’s elder statesmen, Love has been called back into duty as a member of a small “ad hoc” governance committee to make sure that is top of mind.

“I’ve been drug back into the board conversations and I’m learning more and more. It’s so much deeper than should (LIV) be getting world ranking points. There’s a whole lot I don’t know but I do know there is nothing going on right now besides where do we want to go?” he said. “We might have screwed up the last three years, now how do we set up the PGA Tour for the future? Is there a different model? We’re independent contractors, maybe we’re not independent contractors? The lawsuits are dropped; now what do we want to do, what does (the PIF) want to do? Do they really want to keep blowing that much money on LIV? Probably not.”

Love suggested that the reason a deal may not be reached before the deadline is due to the Saudi’s unwillingness to negotiate.

“It’s just like the lawsuit: we’re never going to go to trial if they don’t ever do discovery. Our staff and players did discovery. They refused.

“We made an offer,” Love continued, referring to the Tour, “and if you don’t ever communicate, we can’t make another offer. It’s bizarre what’s going on. It’s a long way from anything. The sharks are circling. Now everyone wants to invest in the PGA Tour.”

It’s been reported that as many as 10 different investors have emerged as potential options for the Tour — although one company, Endeavor, reportedly said it already has been rejected — either to dilute the PIF’s ownership stake, which could make a deal more palatable to the U.S. Department of Justice and in the court of public opinion, or possibly as an alternative to Saudi money. Love said it will take time to weigh those options too.

“We don’t need money, that’s the beautiful thing,” he said. “One very smart business person said, ‘You may think you’re in a mess but I buy distressed companies and try to fix them to make money. Your company isn’t in trouble, you make a lot of money. It’s perfectly fine the way it is. All you’re trying to do is make it better. You’re in a great position.’”

Love went on to point out that it isn’t just the Saudi fund he is concerned about partnering with, but rather extends to any of the investment funds looking to pump money into the Tour.

“If it was Warren Buffett instead of PIF, do we really want Warren Buffett to control the PGA Tour just because he gave us a whole bunch of money? Shouldn’t the players control the PGA Tour and the staff that the board approved?” he mused.

Love is delighted that Tiger Woods has joined the Tour’s policy board to add another voice and said the first matter of business should be to shore up Tour governance and start rebuilding trust with key constituencies.

“How do we restructure the board – we need a new independent director – that has to happen first,” Love said. “Then we can go decide if there’s a deal somewhere.”

When asked why he thought Woods wanted to become involved in the business of the Tour at this critical juncture, Love said, “One is his injury and not playing right now but also helping a bunch of players get more involved, he loves that…Maybe he sees it as a responsibility and maybe he sees it as an opportunity, I don’t know. I’m just glad he’s doing it.”

Even as the clock ticks to make a deal with PIF, Love is looking big picture and thinking about the long term.

“I think it is going to be incredible for our business,” he said. “The only thing I do know is nothing is going to happen really fast.”

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/F8Hwphc
Early look: Previewing what players, fans should expect from the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst

Early look: Previewing what players, fans should expect from the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst

Early look: Previewing what players, fans should expect from the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst

PINEHURST, N.C. — They say there’s never a bad day at Pinehurst, especially if you’re walking around course No. 2, the famed masterpiece of renowned architect Donald Ross.

The gem in the sandhills of North Carolina will play host to its fourth U.S. Open next summer (1999, 2005, 2014), and the folks at the United States Golf Association recently held an early preview for its flagship championship.

“We are comfortable that Pinehurst will provide the test of golf that has always provided,” said course setup lead Jeff Hall. “If Martin Kaymer hadn’t entered in 2014 we’d have had a really competitive championship, but he played brilliantly.”

“We’re not trying to play defense with the players,” he added. “This golf course, when it’s firm and fast, you can have some scary wedge shots. Even if it was shorter, there’s still some pretty scary wedge shots here.”

From fairways and tricky greens to new grass and hospitality venues, here’s what players and fans should expect to see when they step on the property for the 2024 U.S. Open, June 13-16, at Pinehurst No. 2.

No. 2 will look and play as it was designed

When Pinehurst worked with Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw to restore the course in 2010 and 2011, the team removed 35 acres of Bermuda rough and replaced it with nearly 250,000 wire grass plants so the course would look and play the way Ross originally intended. To get it as close as possible, images from 1948-1962 were used.

Pinehurst No. 2

Pinehurst No. 2 in North Carolina (Courtesy of Pinehurst Resort)

No. 2 is a unique test of golf for a U.S. Open due to its sandy areas in lieu of ankle-deep rough. If players miss the short green grass, they’ll have to deal with the elements. Fairway widths are 34-45 yards at No. 2, which differs from, say, Winged Foot or The Country Club where 24-32 yards is the norm. The diabolical turtleback putting greens make fairway placement all the more important.

“Thinking back to 2014, this was a really difficult U.S. Open to play,” said former Tour pro and current USGA Senior Director of Player Relations Scott Langley. “I say that as a guy who finished in 63rd place, wasn’t as difficult for Martin Kaymer. The thing that’s difficult about Pinehurst No. 2 is the putting greens and surrounds. The greens are very difficult to hit, so you’re often faced with a variety of shots around the greens to recover.”

When you think of a missed green at a U.S. Open, tall, lush rough comes to mind. At Pinehurst, you can play any number of clubs to get up and down to save par. Bump-and-run with an iron. A perfectly nipped wedge. Maybe a hybrid instead of a putter. The course allows for a certain level of creativity that most championship venues lack. It introduces uncertainty for players, which is when things get interesting.

“It provides a mental challenge as much as a physical one,” added Langley. “No matter what club you end up choosing or what shot you decide to play, you always have a little bit of doubt in your mind if it’s the right one because of the presence of so many options.”

As if golf wasn’t hard enough already. But that’s why it’s the U.S. Open, known as the toughest test in golf.

Key corner of the course

If you’ve been to No. 2, you’ll know the area on the front nine that features No. 3 green, No. 4 tee, No. 5 green and No. 6 tee. Come next summer, the section of the course will be a fan-favorite to watch a lot of golf, especially if No. 3 is drivable.

The short par-4 3rd hole is gettable no matter where the tee is, but the challenge increases with the sloping fairway of the par-4 4th. Players will get a breather with the par-5 5th before they’re faced with arguably the toughest test of the front nine, the tricky par-3 6th hole.

Pinehurst No. 2

The fifth hole on Pinehurst No. 2. (Photo: Tracy Wilcox/Golfweek)

In 2014, Martin Kaymer played No. 3 and No. 5 at 6 under par and finished the championship at 9 under. He drove the green on No. 3 on both days the tee was up and two-putted for birdie. He played No. 5 at 4 under thanks to a pair of birdies and an eagle.

“You could hear some roars in this part of the world,” Hall predicted.

When it comes to set up and yardage tee to green, the course will be very similar to what fans and players saw in 2014. The real difference is the surface of the putting greens. The 2014 championship and all the previous championships (as far as the USGA knows) were played on bentgrass. The 2024 championship will be played on Bermuda grass.

The change from Creeping Bentgrass to Ultradwarf Bermuda grass provides a different perspective for the tournament crew when preparing for a U.S. Open.

“It gives us a lot more flexibility because the temperatures are ramping up, nighttime, daytime, sunlight, everything that works against the cool season grasses that time of year are in our favor for the Ultradwarf Bermuda grass,” said Pinehurst superintendent John Jeffreys.

“It allows us more options for managing firmness,” added Darin Bevard, Senior Director of Championship Agronomy. “I just hope that Mother Nature cooperates in June that we’re having this conversation about firmness and not about fixing wash outs and bunkers. We really hope for a firm and fast U.S. Open come June.”

Outside the ropes

The course is a masterpiece inside the ropes, but the USGA believes the same to be true outside the ropes. The resort is an ideal venue logistically, and the staff has a proven plan for what works and what doesn’t.

In order to improve on past successes, the USGA is keying in on two aspects: getting fans closer to the action and elevating the overall fan experience. The answer is different product offerings from the gallery ticket all the way up to the most premium hospitality stand.

A grandstand left of the 18 green with the clubhouse in the background has been a staple for U.S. Opens at Pinehurst. Next year, the grandstand will be integrated with a premium hospitality experience called the 1895 Club, the highest-end experience on-site. The club comes with valet parking, shuttles, and the best food and beverage offerings with the 18th green as entertainment.

“That’s certainly going to be something we’re excited about and something that’s going to feel and look very different,” said Leighton Schwob, the USGA’s Senior Director of Operations.

Pinehurst is going through a full renovation of the lower floor of the resort building, which is where a lot of player facilities will be. A tunnel from the locker room up to the first tee for players is also being built and should be completed by the end of the year. The resort’s driving range will be more of a fan area next summer, as the USGA anticipates more than 250,000 fans will be in attendance for the week.

The course will shut down near Memorial Day, but facilities will be built beginning in March. So don’t fret, there’s still plenty of time to go play before the pros.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/F8Hwphc
Best golf beanies for fall and winter

Best golf beanies for fall and winter

Best golf beanies for fall and winter

Cool temperatures are spreading across the country and golfers need to make sure they have the right gear in their closets for their next rounds.

The one item that may go overlooked by amateurs is headgear. It’s time to put away those baseball caps and instead go for a beanie.

In this list, we’ve combed the internet for some of the best beanies from brands like ’47, TravisMathew, Nike, Adidas and more.

If you want to check out some of our other fall and winter gear, these are worth a look: Best golf jackets for fall and winter, best golf hoodies and best golf sweaters.

Check back later this week for the first installment in Golfweek’s Holiday Gift Guide series.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/F8Hwphc
Player suspended by PGA Tour for gambling explains his side of the story, how he got caught

Player suspended by PGA Tour for gambling explains his side of the story, how he got caught

Player suspended by PGA Tour for gambling explains his side of the story, how he got caught

Back in May, Jake Staiano got a text from someone at the PGA Tour saying he was involved in an integrity violation, but he didn’t think anything of it and figured his dad or caddie might’ve triggered a rogue warning.

During the week of the Korn Ferry Tour’s event at TPC Colorado in July, Staiano was approached by someone hired by the Tour to investigate the issue. A month later he spoke with the investigator for nearly an hour to confirm the four bets he placed, totaling $116.20.

After the first KFT playoff event in Boise, a rep from the Tour reached out to Staiano to let him know a decision was imminent. The penalties range from a slap on the wrist to losing your ability to compete in any Tour event, and Staiano thought he’d get the former. A week later he got an email from PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan saying he was suspended for three months for violating the PGA Tour’s “Integrity Program,” which clearly lays out that any golfer with professional status cannot bet on golf.

Wanting to get his side of the story out there, Staiano joined everyone’s favorite Monday qualifier Ryan French on his Any Given Monday podcast to discuss what happened and where he goes from here.

 

Staiano admitted he’d taken the course for the integrity program three times but made no excuses when owning up to his error.

“I understand the principles, I understand you can’t bet. They laid it out perfectly,” Staiano said. “I didn’t deny gambling.”

Staiano placed a $25 bet on Bryson DeChambeau to make a birdie on a par 5 in a PGA Tour event in 2021, then put three other bets on DeChambeau’s match against Brooks Koepka in November of 2021 because he didn’t view the made-for-TV exhibition as a professional golf event.

“I’ve accepted my punishment. It is what it is. Fair or not, people can argue that, but one of my biggest things is I want to make sure other guys understand exactly what happened so that they don’t make the same thing mistake,” Staiano said. “Because it could be career-altering. I’m treating it like it’s not, but you never know, I might never get a chance to get back to Q-School. I don’t want that to happen to other people because it sucks, it’s tough. It’s a tough situation, it’s something that I have to live with, but I feel like not only myself but other people can learn from what I did.”

For more on Staiano’s appeal, and how the Tour figured out he placed bets two years ago, listen to the full episode of Any Given Monday here.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/F8Hwphc
Lexi Thompson's recent turnaround of success might be due, in part, to new swing coach

Lexi Thompson's recent turnaround of success might be due, in part, to new swing coach

Lexi Thompson's recent turnaround of success might be due, in part, to new swing coach

Lexi Thompson hasn’t revealed much in recent interviews about what she’s been working on in her golf swing. But at least one part of the equation has been revealed: a new swing coach.

Tony Ruggiero posted a video of Thompson on the range last week at Old Palm Golf Club in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, hitting balls with a resistance band on her legs.

“Always working and getting better!” Ruggiero wrote. “Lexi has been doing some really nice work! Plus a few laughs were had! Btw that driver was smashed!”

The next day, Ruggiero posted videos of Thompson’s brother Curtis hitting balls.

Ruggiero’s former students include Lucas Glover and Robby Shelton. He and Thompson began working together over the summer, Golfweek has learned.

While Thompson, 28, still remains on the outside looking in when it comes to the season-ending CME Group Tour Championship, her ascent over the past two months has been promising.

Thompson’s scoring average her first nine events this year was 73.41. In her last three starts on the LPGA, she averaged 68.9. That’s a 4.51 drop.

Put another way, Thompson’s score in relation to par those first nine starts was a whopping 35 over. She’s been 27 under in her last three starts.

An 11-time winner on the LPGA, Thompson played a critical role on Stacy Lewis’ Solheim Cup team last month, hitting the event’s opening tee shot and anchoring Sunday singles. She amassed a 3-1-0 record in Spain when many questioned her even being on the team.

Earlier this month, Thompson became the seventh woman to compete on the PGA Tour, carding rounds of 73-69 to miss the cut at the Shriners Children’s Open in Las Vegas. Her 69 made her the second woman to break 70 in a PGA Tour event. Michelle Wie West twice shot 68 in the Sony Open.

Thompson returns to competition on the LPGA next week at The Annika Driven by Gainbridge at Pelican, where she has finished runner-up the past two years. Thompson is currently 88th on the CME points list. She needs to be in the top 60 and ties to advance to Naples, Florida.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/F8Hwphc
Six past winners highlight early commits for 2023 PNC Championship field

Six past winners highlight early commits for 2023 PNC Championship field

Six past winners highlight early commits for 2023 PNC Championship field

Six past champions have confirmed their entry for the 2023 PNC Championship, including defending champions Vijay and Qass Singh.

Vijay will be joined by colleagues John Daly (winner in 2021), Justin Thomas (2020), David Duval (2016), Stewart Cink (2013) and Bernhard Langer (2005, 2006, 2014, 2019) for the annual parent-child event at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club Orlando, Grande Lakes on Dec. 14-17.

“I can’t tell you what it meant to win last year with Qass after 16 attempts. This tournament is so special to us, and it is such an important week for our family every year,” said Vijay. “We love everything about the tournament, from playing amongst so many legends of the game, to getting to know their kids, to just spending quality time with my son as we enjoy this unique inside-the-ropes experience together. I have played in so many tournaments all around the world over the years, but it genuinely is hard to think of a week that I look forward to and enjoy more than the PNC Championship.”

This year’s event, the 12th with PNC Bank as the title sponsor, will be broadcast live on NBC, Golf Channel and Peacock. Last year the PNC Championship boasted a field with 73 major titles. The tournament features 20 players and their relatives competing in a two-day, 36-hole scramble for the Willie Park Trophy. To qualify, players must have won a major championship or the Players Championship, and their partner must not hold any status on a professional tour.

Past champions

1995 – Raymond Floyd and Raymond Floyd Jr. 

1996 – Raymond Floyd and Raymond Floyd Jr. 

1997 – Raymond Floyd and Raymond Floyd Jr. 

1998 – Bob Charles and David Charles 

1999 – Jack Nicklaus and Gary Nicklaus 

2000 – Raymond Floyd and Robert Floyd 

2001 – Raymond Floyd and Robert Floyd 

2002 – Craig Stadler and Kevin Stadler 

2003 – Hale Irwin and Steve Irwin 

2004 – Larry Nelson and Drew Nelson 

2005 – Bernhard Langer and Stefan Langer 

2006 – Bernhard Langer and Stefan Langer 

2007 – Larry Nelson and Josh Nelson 

2008 – Larry Nelson and Drew Nelson 

2012 – Davis Love III and Davis “Dru” Love IV 

2013 – Stewart Cink and Connor Cink 

2014 – Bernhard Langer and Jason Langer 

2015 – Lanny Wadkins and Tucker Wadkins  

2016 – David Duval and Nick Karavites 

2017 – Angel Cabrera and Angel Cabrera, Jr.  

2018 – Davis Love III and Davis “Dru” Love IV 

2019 – Bernhard Langer and Jason Langer 

2020 – Justin Thomas and Mike Thomas

2021 – John Daly and John Daly II

2022 – Vijay Singh and Qass Singh

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/9VNeRCW
Where to play golf around Phoenix and Scottsdale: Golfweek's Best 2023 public-access courses

Where to play golf around Phoenix and Scottsdale: Golfweek's Best 2023 public-access courses

Where to play golf around Phoenix and Scottsdale: Golfweek's Best 2023 public-access courses

Arizona is home to a great selection of desert golf courses, and most of those are centered around Phoenix and Scottsdale. But which are the best?

Thanks to Golfweek’s Best annual rankings of top public-access courses in each state, we can break out the highest-ranked layouts in the Phoenix and Scottsdale area. For the purpose of this exercise, we limited driving time to about an hour from Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport. (We used Google Maps for its drive times, keying in the courses on a mid-afternoon – take all drive times around the Valley of the Sun with a grain of salt, of course.)

There are other options not included here, courses that were beyond that hour limit. If you have a little more time for the drive, Wickenburg Ranch’s Big Wick course ranks No. 2 among all public-access courses in the state, but it’s about 90 minutes northwest of the airport. Similar story for several strong options in Tucson about two hours to the southeast.

A little background on how we do this: The hundreds of members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them on 10 criteria on a points basis of 1 through 10. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings are averaged to produce all our Golfweek’s Best course rankings.

The courses on this list allow public access in some fashion, be it standard daily green fees, through a resort or by staying at an affiliated hotel. If there’s a will, there’s a tee time – no membership required.

Keep scrolling to see how they stack up, and check out the accompanying map to get a handle on roughly where everything is located.

Phoenix golf map 2023

(Google Earth/Golfweek)

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/9VNeRCW

Prize money for each LPGA participant in Malaysia for the 2023 Maybank Championship

 Just ask Celine Boutier how much it pays to play well on the LPGA.


Maybank Championship - Final Round

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA - OCTOBER 29: Celine Boutier (R) of France is presented with the winner's cheque by Maybank chairman Tan Sri Dato' Sri Zamzamzairani Mohd Isa and Malaysian King Al-Sultan Abdullah after winning the Maybank Championship during the final round of the Maybank Championship at Kuala Lumpur Golf and Country Club on October 29, 2023 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (Photo by Yong Teck Lim/Getty Images)

The 29-year-old defeated Atthaya Thitikul in a long nine-hole playoff to win the 2023 Maybank Championship in Malaysia, her fourth victory of the season and sixth overall.

For her efforts, Boutier took home the top prize of $450,000, while Thitikul earned $275,072. Boutier has earned $2,730,340 on the season and leads the LPGA race to CME Globe with the CME Group Tour Championship (Nov. 16-19) at Tiburon Golf Club less than a month away.

Check out the prize money payouts for each professional player at the 2023 Maybank:

Check out the prize money payouts for each professional player at the 2023 Maybank Championship (Note: amateurs cannot make money at professional events).

PositionPlayerScoreEarnings
1Celine Boutier-21$450,000
2Atthaya Thitikul-21$275,072
T3Jasmine Suwannapura-19$176,954
T3Rose Zhang-19$176,954
5Peiyun Chien-18$124,246
T6Nelly Korda-17$87,097
T6Brooke M. Henderson-17$87,097
T6Gemma Dryburgh-17$87,097
9Megan Khang-16$67,018
10Gaby Lopez-15$60,993
T11Lydia Ko-14$54,591
T11Nasa Hataoka-14$54,591
T13Pajaree Anannarukarn-13$47,890
T13Chanettee Wannasaen-13$47,890
T15Allisen Corpuz-12$42,468
T15A Lim Kim-12$42,468
T17Ruoning Yin-11$37,450
T17Minami Katsu-11$37,450
T17Hannah Green-11$37,450
T20Maja Stark-10$29,986
T20Yuka Saso-10$29,986
T20Olivia Cowan-10$29,986
T20Cheyenne Knight-10$29,986
T20Stephanie Meadow-10$29,986
T20Jin Young Ko-10$29,986
T20Xiyu Lin-10$29,986
T20Emily Kristine Pedersen-10$29,986
T20Sei Young Kim-10$29,986
T29Alexa Pano-9$22,740
T29Hye-Jin Choi-9$22,740
T29Jodi Ewart Shadoff-9$22,740
T29Ayaka Furue-9$22,740
T29Gina Kim-9$22,740
T34Lauren Coughlin-8$18,900
T34Sarah Kemp-8$18,900
T34Grace Kim-8$18,900
T34Leona Maguire-8$18,900
T38Yuna Nishimura-7$16,641
T38Ariya Jutanugarn-7$16,641
T40Jennifer Kupcho-6$14,458
T40Perrine Delacour-6$14,458
T40Sarah Schmelzel-6$14,458
T40Madelene Sagstrom-6$14,458
T40Linn Grant-6$14,458
T45Hae Ran Ryu-5$12,575
T45Yu Liu-5$12,575
T47Dottie Ardina-4$11,024
T47Narin An-4$11,024
T47Ashleigh Buhai-4$11,024
T47Moriya Jutanugarn-4$11,024
T47Maria Fassi-4$11,024
T52Natasha Andrea Oon-3$9,638
T52Esther Henseleit-3$9,638
T52Mi Hyang Lee-3$9,638
T55Andrea Lee-2$8,885
T55Patty Tavatanakit-2$8,885
T57Jeneath Wong (a)-1$0
T57Amy Yang-1$8,434
59Stephanie KyriacouE$8,132
T60Hinako Shibuno1$7,581
T60Jenny Shin1$7,581
T60Albane Valenzuela1$7,581
T63Linnea Strom2$7,153
T63Aditi Ashok2$7,153
T65Eun-Hee Ji3$6,852
T65Ashley Lau3$6,852
T67Matilda Castren4$6,552
T67Danielle Kang4$6,552
T69Nanna Koerstz Madsen5$6,174
T69Ryann O’Toole5$6,174
T69Celine Borge5$6,174
72Yan Liu7$5,950
73Alyaa Abdulghany9$5,872
74Jing Xuen Ng (a)11$0
75Kelly Tan13$5,797
T76Amanda Tan15$5,688
T76Ida Ayu Melati15$5,688


Related: 

Round 4 Of The 2023 Maybank Championship Highlights: A Recap And Analysis

Sources: golfweek, gettyimages.com