Thursday, September 19, 2024

2024 John Deere Classic money: Here’s how much every player made 

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Davis Thompson was in control this weekend in the Quad Cities.

Brian Spurlock/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

As Davis Thompson caught fire Saturday afternoon and took the lead at the John Deere Classic by two heading into the final round, one big responsibility came into view.

He needed to uphold the tournament’s “Champion’s House” for a third straight year.

“It’s been fun staying with those guys this week,” Tompson said. “Hopefully maybe it [will be] three years in a row. That would be pretty cool. Seems like everybody is going to want to be staying in that house next year.”

The second-year pro is one of six players in the field staying in the same house this week. The same house has been home to the John Deere Classic’s champion the last two years with Sepp Straka and J.T. Poston.

Straka has his family with him this week so Thompson is actually staying in the same room he did a year ago when he earned his second PGA Tour title.

He’s joined by Poston, Greyson Sigg, Patton Kizzire, Denny McCarthy and Ben Kohles, basically the same group that originally booked the house two years ago, with Thompson subbing for Brendon Todd.

Last year the group played baseball and frisbee while back at the house together and Thompson said the vibes are pretty much the same this year.

“It’s pretty laid back,” Thompson said. “Been going, eating dinner every night and hanging out, watching TV. Been really laid back and all the guys in the house are great.”

If staying at the “Champions House” keeps resulting in wins, more and more are going to try and book their stay their each year.

With that, below you can check out the complete payout breakdown for this week’s John Deere Classic at TPC Deere Run. The total purse is $8 million.

How much every player made at the 2024 John Deere Classic

Winner: $1.44 million

2. $872,000

3. $552,000

4. $392,000

5. $328,000

6. $290,000

7. $270,000

8. $250,000

9. $234,000

10. $218,000

11. $202,000

12. $186,000

13. $170,000

14. $154,000

15. $146,000

16. $138,000

17. $130,000

18. $122,000

19. $114,000

20. $106,000

21. $98,000

22. $90,000

23. $83,600

24. $77,200

25. $70,800

26. $64,400

27. $62,000

28. $59,600

29. $57,200

30. $54,800

31. $52,400

32. $50,000

33. $47,600

34. $45,600

35. $43,600

36. $41,600

37. $39,600

38. $38,000

39. $36,400

40. $34,800

41. $33,200

42. $31,600

43. $30,000

44. $28,400

45. $26,800

46. $25,200

47. $23,600

48. $22,320

49. $21,200

50. $20,560

51. $20,080

52. $19,600

53. $19,280

54. $18,960

55. $18,800

56. $18,640

57. $18,480

58. $18,320

59. $18,160

60. $18,000

61. $17,840

62. $17,680

63. $17,520

64. $17,360

65. $17,200

66. $17,040

67. $16,880

68. $16,720

69. $16,560

70. $16,400

71. $16,240

72. $16,080

73. $15,920

74. $15,760

75. $15,600

76. $15,440

77. $15,280

78. $15,120

79. $14,960

80. $14,800

(a) = amateur, does not receive share

Jack Hirsh

Golf.com Editor

Jack Hirsh is an assistant editor at GOLF. A Pennsylvania native, Jack is a 2020 graduate of Penn State University, earning degrees in broadcast journalism and political science. He was captain of his high school golf team and recently returned to the program to serve as head coach. Jack also still *tries* to remain competitive in local amateurs. Before joining GOLF, Jack spent two years working at a TV station in Bend, Oregon, primarily as a Multimedia Journalist/reporter, but also producing, anchoring and even presenting the weather. He can be reached at jack.hirsh@golf.com.

 

 

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