FedEx Cup earnings: How much each golfer in the 2022 Tour Championship has earned in his career
This year, golf revolves around only one item – money. That won’t change this week at the Tour Championship as the final FedEx Cup Playoffs event is set to reward all who qualify to play at the East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta. With only 29 men in the field after Will Zalatoris withdraw moneythe minimum amount a contestant will receive for his or her efforts this week is $510,000 as Zalatoris will be awarded the last place prize of $500,000.
Patrick Cantlay and Zalatoris each grossed $2.7 million for their wins in the two early-season events. Paying higher than the regular season, the winners’ share from Memphis and Wilmington is still nothing compared to Atlanta’s as it won’t even be clear on the top five paydays for the Tour Championship. Between the prize money and the FedEx Cup prize money, a total of $75 million will be at stake at the post-season finale.
While $15 million was the big money two weeks ago, $18 million would be the grand prize for the winner of the Tour Championship. To contextualize how much this is, it surpasses the total on-field earnings of Cameron Smith and Xander Schauffele in 2022, who have boasted six wins between them including the Players Championship. and Expand.
To provide more context, below we’ll break down what $18 million would mean for each Tour Championship participant as it’s certainly not the same for Rory McIlroy as it is for Sahith Theegala, for example. . Looking at their career earnings – excluding past FedEx Cup wins as they are classified as bonuses – the prize money becomes even more confusing.
How big will winning the Tour championship be?
Scottie Scheffler |
-ten |
21.6 million dollars |
83% |
Patrick Cantlay |
-8 |
$31.7 million |
57% |
Will Zalatoris |
-7 |
12.9 million dollars |
140% |
Xander Schauffele |
-6 |
30.5 million dollars |
59% |
Sam Burns |
-5 |
14.6 million dollars |
123% |
Cameron Smith |
-4 |
$27.0 million |
sixty seven% |
Rory McIlroy |
-4 |
$66.2 million |
27% |
Tony Finau |
-4 |
$31.5 million |
57% |
Sepp Straka |
-4 |
$7.9 million |
228% |
Sungjae Im |
-4 |
16.9 million dollars |
107% |
Jon Rahm |
-3 |
$35.0 million |
51% |
Scott Stallings |
-3 |
16.7 million dollars |
108% |
Justin Thomas |
-3 |
$50.9 million |
35% |
Cameron Young |
-3 |
6.5 million dollars |
277% |
Matt Fitzpatrick |
-3 |
14.1 million dollars |
128% |
Max Homa |
-2 |
12.8 million dollars |
141% |
Hideki Matsuyama |
-2 |
$40.2 million |
45% |
Jordan Spieth |
-2 |
$52.8 million |
34% |
Joaquin Niemann |
-2 |
14.6 million dollars |
123% |
Viktor Hovland |
-2 |
12.6 million dollars |
143% |
Collin Morikawa |
-first |
18.9 million dollars |
95% |
Billy Horschel |
-first |
$33.4 million |
54% |
Tom Hoge |
-first |
11.4 million dollars |
158% |
Corey Conners |
-first |
$13.0 million |
138% |
Brian Harman |
-first |
$23.7 million |
76% |
KH Lee |
E |
$8.3 million |
217% |
JT Poston |
E |
10.3 million dollars |
175% |
Sahith Theegala |
E |
$3.3 million |
545% |
Adam Scott |
E |
59.8 million dollars |
30% |
Aaron Wise |
E |
10.8 million dollars |
167% |
Do you look at that – it was a split even before Zalatoris had to retire with a back injury. Now only 14 players will double their on-court earnings with a Tour Championship win with Theegala multiplying his total by more than 5 times if he can get through the impossible. While Pepperdine’s product still has a long way to go in his career, a veteran like Stallings is an interesting case to consider.
A three-time PGA Tour champion, Stallings nearly claimed a fourth title last week at the BMW Championship before losing by one stroke to Cantlay. He will nearly double his career earnings in a week with a win at East Lake after more than a decade on the PGA Tour. The same is true of Morikawa, Im, Burns and Niemann even though they have only been on tour for a few years.
On the other end of the spectrum, I wouldn’t necessarily classify $18 million as a drop on the list, but McIlroy, Scott, Thomas, and Spieth all made the top 10 on the list of career leaders. earn money for the PGA Tour. That’s not to say the dollar numbers might not be on their minds, but they may not feel the heat as much as their peers.