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Yesterday — 3 February 2026Main stream

Here’s the prize money payout for each golfer at the 2026 WM Phoenix Open

Scottie Scheffler. Brooks Koepka. Two of the men who have made the most headlines this year on the PGA Tour are playing this week in the WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale in Arizona. They’ll be part of the 123-player field playing for $9.6 million with the winner taking home $1.728 million.

Scheffler, of course, is the World No. 1 and he walked away with The American Express trophy two weeks ago in his first, and only, start this season. It’s scarry to think what he could do this year, following a year in which he won two major championships. He won his first PGA Tour title at the Phoenix Open in 2022 and the win in Palm Springs was his 20th, giving him a lifetime PGA Tour exemption. Not that he needs it.

Koepka, of course, is freshly back from LIV Golf after the PGA Tour created a new program for him to return. He made the cut last week at the Farmers Insurance Open, his most important goal, but struggled on the weekend, mostly with the putter, and tied for 56th place.

RELATED: LIV Golf to receive World Ranking points

There are only four top-10 players competing, with Xander Schauffele (6), J.J. Spaun (7) and Ben Griffin (8) following Scheffler. There are 10 of the top 20.

Joel Dahmen and Sahith Theegala earned sponsor exemptions this week. Dahmen asked for his by writing on a shirt, making organizers think back to his celebration a few years back when he ripped off his shirt and went bonkers. Theegala stumbled last year because of injury and is working his way back into the fold. He tied for seventh place last week at Torrey Pines.

The defending champion is Belgium’s Thomas Detry, who is not in the field this year because he left the PGA Tour for LIV Golf.

Here’s the rundown of what each player will earn who makes the cut. Check back here Sunday after play is complete for updates.

WIN: $1.728 million

2: $1.0464 million

3: $662,400

4: $470,400

5: $393,600

6: $348,000

7: $324,000

8: $300,000

9: $280,800

10: $261,600

11: $242,200

12: $223,200

13: $204,000

14: $184,800

15: $175,200

16: $165,600

17: $156,000

18: $146,400

19: $136,800

20: $127,200

21: $117,600

22: $108,000

23: $100,320

24: $92,640

25: $84,960

26: $77,280

27: $74,400

28: $71,520

29: $68,640

30: $65,760

31: $62,880

32: $60,000

33: $57,120

34: $54,720

35: $52,320

36: $49,920

37: $47,520

38: $45,600

39: $43,680

40: $41,760

41: $39,840

42: $37,920

43: $36,000

44: $34,080

45: $32,160

46: $30,240

47: $28,320

48: $26,784

49: $25,440

50: $24,627

51: $24,096

52: $23,520

53: $23,136

54: $22,752

55: $22,560

56: $22,368

57: $22,176

58: $21,984

59: $21,792

60: $21,600

61: $21,408

62: $21,216

63: $21,024

64: $20,832

65: $20,640

66: $20,448

67: $20,256

68: $20,064

69: $19,872

70: $19,680

71: $19,488

72: $19,296

73: $19,104

74: $18,912

75: $18,720

76: $18,528

77: $18,336

78: $18,144

79: $17,952

80: $17,760

Before yesterdayMain stream

Justin Rose proves he's an ageless wonder in record-setting win at Torrey Pines

SAN DIEGO — After crushing both the Farmers Insurance Open field and the Torrey Pines Golf Courses in a record-breaking victory, Justin Rose was savoring the moment on Sunday evening when he mentioned himself being in the company of Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods and Scottie Scheffler. Whoa. That put him in danger of producing hellish backlash from the cellar dwellers in the social media realm.

Then again, we challenge them to fault the premise.

At 45 years old, with now 13 PGA Tour victories, an Olympic gold medal and a bunch of special moments in the Ryder Cup, Rose has learned a thing or a hundred about managing his game and emotions around a golf course, and few times was that more evident than over these last four days, early in the Englishman’s 28th year as a pro.

MORE Justin Rose's win was special to the caddie who missed his last victory at Torrey Pines

Rose shot 62-65-68-70 and his 23-under 265 total surpassed the previous record held by Woods (1999) and George Burns (1987)—both reaching the mark when Torrey Pines was a pushover compared to the brute the South Course became ahead of the 2008 U.S. Open.

The seven-stroke margin of victory over three players is the largest since Woods won by eight in 2008, and Rose is the first player to win San Diego’s tour event by being the sole leader after every round since Tommy Bolt did it in 1955—13 years before the event moved to Torrey Pines.

Now the oldest player to win the tournament—in the last year that it’s being sponsored by Farmers Insurance—Rose carved up Torrey Pines the same way he did when he won here in 2019 with a 21-under total, while occupying the No. 1 spot in the Official World Golf Ranking. He led the field in greens in regulation with nearly 82 percent hit, was second in strokes gained/approach, gaining 7.25 on the field, and was 10th in SG/putting (3.53).

It was a masterful display of shotmaking and strategy, which brought him to his own comparisons to some of the greats.

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Orlando Ramirez

“What a week from start to finish,” said Rose. “I just got really disciplined this week. Obviously, I was playing well, but I just thought the way I managed my game, the way I thought about things, the way I was patient at the right time, the way I was able to absorb a little bit of the odd mistake by holing the right two-putt at the right time.

“There was a lot of mental maturity from the strategic golf point of view out there, which I think you look at the best players in history—Jack, Tiger, I’m going to say Scottie Scheffler now as well. That’s the sort of thing they do week in and week out, and I feel like that’s something that I did really, really well this week.”

Of course, much is being made about Rose’s age, and the win moves him to No. 3 in the world and makes him the second-oldest (a few months behind Vijay Singh) to ever reach the top three. Not that Rose, who began his pro career at 17, thinks much about it.

“I take pride out of it—that I’m doing something that’s not easy to do,” he said. “But I don’t wake up in the morning believe that narrative, either.”

Sahith Theegala, who is 28 and finished nine shots behind the winner on Sunday, has gotten to know Rose more now that they play on the same TGL team, and he marvels at the lengths he has gone to take care of himself and not let his game slide.

“What he's doing at 45 is unbelievable,” Theegala said. “Just to be able to gain the ball speed he has, to be able to keep the competitive fire that he has, the discipline while also being a great family man. … He kind of does it all. He's very, very impressive.”

Theegala opined that Rose hasn’t received nearly the attention he should. “Somehow, I feel like he's flown under the radar for 20-plus years," he said. "No. 1 in the world, major champ, gold medalist, whatever. You name it, you feel like he's done it. So to be playing potentially some of the best golf of his life now.

“I know he wants to win majors really bad. I wouldn't be surprised if he snags one this year at all, especially after last year.”

Of course, if there is a smudge on Rose’s career, it’s that he’s won only a single major while finishing solo or joint second five times. He tied for second in the 2024 Open Championship, and there was the devastating loss just last April, when Rose did about all he could to win his first Masters, only to lose a playoff to Rory McIlroy.

Those are sources of tremendous motivation for him.

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Orlando Ramirez

“I think that maybe I would say I've had some rounds last year—whether it be Sunday at Augusta or … Saturday of the Ryder Cup, [or] some of the golf this week, to be honest,” Rose said. “I think those days or those weeks or those rounds are definitely showing me that the gas is still in the tank. Obviously, accessing it is the job now or is the trick. … But at least knowing it’s there kind of builds a lot of confidence.”

This was the week that saw the return of Brooks Koepka to the PGA Tour from LIV Golf (he ultimately finished T-56) and the news that Patrick Reed was leaving the Saudi-backed circuit with plans to regain his card for next year’s tour season.

In the early days of LIV’s formation in 2022, Rose was among the players approached about joining the league—with a sizeable signing bonus on the table, no doubt. But he turned them down, as he said on Sunday, because “I kind of always felt like my childhood self wouldn't feel very good about making that decision and kind of giving up” on the dreams of winning majors and meaningful tour titles. Safe to say, he has no regrets.

“I would say, sniffing and knocking on the door of a couple majors since those decisions were made and those [other] moments … it did validate the decision,” Rose said. “The way things are in the world of golf right now, I feel like it's good to see people wanting to kind of play where it motivates them to be their best.”

Walk up 18 at Torrey was special for Justin Rose, whose caddie was in the hospital when he won 2019 Farmers

SAN DIEGO — There was a celebration before the celebration during Justin Rose’s triumphant walk up the 18th hole at Torrey Pines on Sunday in his seven-shot victory in the Farmers Insurance Open.

As the CBS cameras followed Rose and his caddie, Mark “Fooch” Fulcher, the two exchanged laughs and a message into the camera for the golfer’s one-time caddie, Gareth Lord. It was Lord who was on Rose’s bag in 2019 when the Englishman won his first title at Torrey Pines. At the time, Fulcher watched the proceedings from a hospital bed, having undergone mitral valve surgery on his heart that January.

“I think we were just trying to have a little bit of banter and make light of the fact, ‘Hey, Lordie, I hope you're watching now because now it's Fooch's turn to be walking down the 18th with me here at Torrey,’” Rose said in the winner’s news conference.

As Rose fashioned a historic victory in which he set the 36-, 54 and 72-hole scoring records, ultimately finishing at 23 under, he said he never brought up the past with Fulcher—until the end.

After recovering from the surgery, Fulcher returned to loop for Rose at the 2019 Masters, but soon after announced that he’d be taking a leave. Rose won twice in the interim before he and Fulcher reunited at the 2023 Ryder Cup, and together they won the 2025 FedEx St. Jude Championship in the playoffs. Among the victories for which Fulcher has been on Rose’s bag are his 2013 U.S. Open win and gold medal performance in the 2016 Summer Olympics.

“I think that win,” Rose said of the 2019 Farmers, “was always a tough one for Fooch—not fighting for his life, but he was in a pretty bad way in the hospital and seeing us kind of cruise to victory and, you know, hugging Lordie on the 18th green.

“Nearly had to have another procedure after that, I think,” Rose added with a chuckle.

“It was in my head all [this] week, 'wouldn't be it nice to win with Fooch here.' It was totally unsaid until across the water on 18. I was, like, that was fun to enjoy that with him.”

Freezing temps lead LPGA to cancel final round of season opening event

The start of the LPGA season had so much potential, but atypical freezing weather in Florida on Sunday saw tournament officials make the decision to cancel the final round of the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions in Orlando.

Nelly Korda shot a third-round 64 and was in the lead by three shots, but eight players did not finish the third round Saturday at Lake Nona Golf and Country Club when chilly temps and dangerous winds quickly came into the area. On Sunday, lows were in the mid-20s with winds whipping up to 15 miles per hour.

The start of the final round kept getting pushed back until officials believed the conditions could be played in a proper environment, but eventually, with it only just barely breaking 40 degrees, it was clear the final round could not be completed Sunday. The forecast for Monday calls for more temps in the 20s.

“Based on conversations between the rules officials, tournament staff, partners and the grounds team, the decision has been made to reduce the 2026 Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions to a 54-hole event,” a statement from the LPGA said.

“The weather and temperature for tomorrow is forecasted to be the same as this morning which will likely create similar conditions and prevent us from completing 72 holes.”

The eight players who have not finished will complete their rounds and the leader at the time will be declared the champion. Amy Yang, Youmin Hwang and Lydia Ko are among those chasing Korda, although Yang is three back with two holes remaining, Hwang is five back and Ko is five back with three holes remaining.

Not everyone was pleased with the decision despite the freezing temps. Annika Sorenstam, who played nine holes as part of the celebrity competition on Sunday, told Golfweek that she believed the course are definitely playable.

"I don't know why they're not playing," Sorenstam told Golfweek. "There's pitch marks. I mean, I hit some crispy shots today and the ball even stopped. I am surprised. It's difficult, it's cold but it's as fair as anything."

(Note: this report will be updated once the final eight players finish and a winner has been declared.)

Justin Rose can pull off a rare feat on Sunday at Torrey Pines that Tiger Woods never touched

SAN DIEGO — Joel Dahmen couldn’t believe what he just saw. Playing partner Justin Rose, a golfer enjoying an extended heater at Torrey Pines, had a lie on Saturday in the first cut of rough off the fairway on the South Course’s challenging seventh hole. The pin location was as tough as it comes, tucked into the upper right corner. Rose would later admit that he wasn’t firing at the flagstick, but his 9-iron faded toward it and the ball ended up five feet from the hole. The Englishman converting a third straight birdie.

Dahmen already had witnessed a bunch of striped drives and dart-like iron shots oer the morning, but he was dumbfounded by the play at 7.

“So he's got to hit it high over the tree out of the first cut,” Dahmen described, “so it could fly, come out dead—and he hits this thing to the moon, it comes down to four feet. You don't hit that shot in a practice round let alone when you have a six- or seven-shot lead on Saturday and you're hanging out.

“At that point, that was just kind of like, ‘OK, you win.’”

Clearly, Rose has ground even his closest challengers into submission going into Sunday's fina round. The World No. 10 has recorded 24 red numbers on holes, with one eagle, and in shooting a four-under-par 68 on Saturday, Rose forged a six-shot lead with a 54-hole tournament record total of 21-under 195.

Rose, seeking his second win at Torrey Pines and 13th tour victory overall, has an opportunity to win the tournament wire-to-wire, and in an almost unbelievable circumstance, he can pull off something Tiger Woods never did in his seven wins at Torrey. Rose would be the first to hold a solo lead in every round and win San Diego’s tour event since Tommy Bolt in 1955. Johnny Miller went wire-to-wire in 1982, but he was tied after the first round.

Woods is tied with three others in the tournament for the largest margin of victory of eight strokes. At three different times on Saturday, Rose created that gap, only to surrender two shots in that margin late on a two-shot swing with Dahmen at the par-3 16th.

Dahmen shot a 68 in the third round that he figured was the best he could do as a short hitter on the meaty South, and he gained no ground on Rose. A one-time tour winner who started this season with only conditional status, Dahmen is alone in second at 15 under, with Japan’s Ryo Hisatune (68) and South Korea’s Si Woo Kim (69) eight shots behind.

“My only hope is if he doesn't set his alarm or he somehow starts hitting in the rough on the back nine maybe,” Dahmen said. “I don't know. The way he's playing and what he's doing, I would be pleased with second place.”

Earlier this week—and he wasn’t citing Rose specifically at the time—Dahmen pointed out that the best players on the tour were getting younger and that there were only a handful of competitors left in their 40s. Rose is 45, but he’s maintained his strength through diligent fitness training and his competitive mind seems as sharp as ever.

“To still have the drive with the career that he's had is very impressive," Dahmen said. "He puts a lot of work into his body. His ability to still grind and practice and spend the time on it when he's got everything you could want is really impressive, honestly. It's almost inspiring for me, I'm seven years younger than him, I'm getting outdrove than 30 yards. I've got to get in a little better shape to hang out with Justin.”

The current state of Rose’s game and mental strength figures to come into play on Sunday as he tries to maintain a competitive edge with such a comfortable lead.

“There’s never going to be any complacency,” he said. “I think there's always enough respect for the game of golf in the back of your mind that you've got to do everything right tomorrow. You're going to come out, have to be focused, have to play well. Obviously somebody can always really shoot a great round and therefore you've got to get around this golf course in a pretty decent score.

“Yeah, that's the mentality. I kind of have to just control what I can control from the first hole tomorrow. But I've enjoyed playing the golf course this week. I want to continue to enjoy the week as a whole, and, yeah, it's another great round in good weather on an awesome golf course.”

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