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Proud partner of the SoCal PGA, Pacific Northwest PGA, Colorado PGA, Georgia State Golf Association, Genesis Invitational, Hero World Challenge, Wyndham Championship, and other premier golf organizations

Winners, Losers & Payouts from the 2026 American Express 

When Scottie Scheffler showed up in the desert for the 2026 American Express Championship, the rest of the field—which was the best field in the history of the event—realized beating Scottie may be too big of a challenge to take on. If he played his best, they were playing for second place. You could see the fear in their eyes. Scottie was there, healthy, and ready to roar.

By Sunday afternoon at PGA WEST Stadium Course, Scheffler had done what he so often does — calmly separated himself from a very strong field who were playing very good golf. His closing 6-under 66 gave him a four-shot victory at 27-under par. In short, Scottie did what Scottie does – lift a big trophy with the cameras zoomed in and bank loads of cash.  

The thing about Scheffler is that he rarely looks like he’s trying to dominate. He doesn’t strut. He doesn’t hunt camera angles. He just keeps hitting fairways, flagging irons, and cashing checks. This win earned him roughly $1.66 million, pushing his PGA Tour career earnings past $100 million — a club so exclusive it currently includes Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy, and now… Scottie, who somehow still looks like he could help you move a couch on Monday.

Chasing him at 23-under par were Jason Day, Ryan Gerard, Matt McCarty, and Andrew Putnam — a group that perfectly illustrates how deep the Tour is right now, and how little that matters when someone is operating on Scheffler’s frequency.

Jason Day probably enjoyed Sunday the most. The former world No. 1 and major champion rolled in an 8-under 64, reminding everyone that muscle memory is a beautiful thing. Day’s runner-up finish earned him just over $600,000, adding to a career haul north of $60 million. IMHO, he’s a few wins away from establishing a Hall of Fame-worthy résumé by any reasonable standard.

Unfortunately for Day — and everyone else — Scottie Scheffler has made “reasonable standards” obsolete. Day played spectacular golf on Sunday. Scheffler simply played Scottie golf all week. One is a reminder of how great the past was; the other is a reminder that the present is being monopolized.

Ryan Gerard represented the future — and probably checked his bank app several times on the flight home. His share of a second-place finish is a massive step forward for a player still early in his PGA Tour career. What’s crazy is that he has already ascended to 24th position in the OWGR. Gerard’s game is polished and ready for bigger stages.

Still, the difference between Gerard and Scheffler is the same difference between a rising stock and a blue-chip company that prints dividends. Gerard is building momentum. Scheffler is already underwriting the entire market.

Matt McCarty’s week was quietly impressive, which somehow feels like the highest compliment in modern professional golf. Nothing flashy, nothing forced — just solid, repeatable scoring. His tie for second confirmed that his PGA TOUR success isn’t a fluke and that his Korn Ferry dominance two years ago, and his victory on the PGA TOUR last season, is lining up nicely with the lefty big-time power.

But while McCarty is proving he belongs, Scheffler is proving he owns the place. McCarty earned a career-boosting paycheck. Scheffler earned enough to buy a very nice house and still have money left over for alignment sticks.

Andrew Putnam rounded out the group of runner-ups as the seasoned professional who knows how to survive on Tour. He’s carved out a career approaching $20 million in earnings through precision, patience, and a short game that refuses to panic. His week in La Quinta was excellent and entirely deserving of a runner-up finish. Putnam is a bona fide tour journeyman. One that has carved out a great career for he and has family.

Back to the Big Tex: It’s not that others can’t shoot low — clearly, they can. It’s that Scheffler does it without drama, without volatility, and without giving anyone the courtesy of hope for very long. While others chase hot rounds, Scheffler stacks good decisions like compound interest.

By the time the American Express wrapped up, five players had played well enough to win most PGA TOUR events. But one player made it look routine because, for him, it was. Right now, Scottie Scheffler isn’t just the best golfer in the field. He’s the measuring stick, and his stick isn’t just sizing up his current competitors; it’s being laid down right next to the best that have ever played the game.

Winners & Losers from Sunday at PGA WEST:

Winner: Jason Day. The handsome Malbon man leapt up the leaderboard with a closing round, 8-under, 64 on the Stadium Course. He can mostly coast the rest of the year assured of playing in the biggest tourneys in golf.

Loser: Blades Brown. It doesn’t seem fair to call the 18-year-old Brown a loser after finishing up T-18 on Sunday. But he did post a 2-over 74 on Sunday on a benign golf course, playing in the final group with world #1. It was surely a good learning experience, one that will pay off down the road, the next time he is in contention.

Loser: Matty Fitzpatrick. Fitzpatrick’s final round 74 dropped him 43 spots on the leaderboard, by far the biggest drop of the day. Maybe he needs to spend less time playing SIM golf and more time playing outdoors.

Winner: Harry Hall. The Englishman jumped 37 spots on the board, the biggest jump on Sunday, finishing up T-24. Always looking dapper with a Hogan-style hat, he slayed PGA West, posting a 7-under 65 – the 2nd best round of the day, only behind Jason Day’s 64.

Winner: Sahith Theegala. After a miserable ’25 run on tour, he has now started off ’26 with two strong finishes, including a Top 10 finish this past weekend. His game is trending upward, which it needed to if he wanted to maintain his star standing in the game.

American Express 2026 prize money payouts

Pos.PlayerScoreEarnings
1Scottie Scheffler-27$1,656,000
T2Jason Day-23$489,100
T2Ryan Gerard-23$489,100
T2Andrew Putnam-23$489,100
T2Matt McCarty-23$489,100
T6Sam Stevens-22$255,500
T6Tom Hoge-22$255,500
T6Si Woo Kim-22$255,500
T9Sahith Theegala-21$191,625
T9Russell Henley-21$191,625
T9Haotong Li-21$191,625
T9Austin Smotherman-21$191,625
T13David Ford-20$134,685
T13Zach Bauchou-20$134,685
T13Patrick Cantlay-20$134,685
T13Jacob Bridgeman-20$134,685
T13Wyndham Clark-20$134,685
T18Blades Brown-19$93,318
T18Will Zalatoris-19$93,318
T18S.H. Kim-19$93,318
T18Karl Vilips-19$93,318
T18Pierceson Coody-19$93,318
T18Rickie Fowler-19$93,318
T24Harry Hall-18$64,605
T24Adam Scott-18$64,605
T24Ben Griffin-18$64,605
T27Billy Horschel-17$46,039
T27Max McGreevy-17$46,039
T27Max Homa-17$46,039
T27Jordan Smith-17$46,039
T27Matthieu Pavon-17$46,039
T27Sam Ryder-17$46,039
T27Johnny Keefer-17$46,039
T27Harris English-17$46,039
T27Nick Taylor-17$46,039
T27Sam Burns-17$46,039
T27Eric Cole-17$46,039
T38Tom Kim-16$31,755
T38Christiaan Bezuidenhout-16$31,755
T38Robert MacIntyre-16$31,755
T38Joel Dahmen-16$31,755
T38Min Woo Lee-16$31,755
T38J.T. Poston-16$31,755
T44Ricky Castillo-15$20,800
T44Carson Young-15$20,800
T44Patrick Rodgers-15$20,800
T44Rafael Campos-15$20,800
T44Matt Kuchar-15$20,800
T44Alex Smalley-15$20,800
T44Keith Mitchell-15$20,800
T44Dylan Wu-15$20,800
T44A.J. Ewart-15$20,800
T44Rasmus Hojgaard-15$20,800
T44David Lipsky-15$20,800
T44Ryo Hisatsune-15$20,800
T56Denny McCarthy-14$16,571
T56Michael Brennan-14$16,571
T56Taylor Moore-14$16,571
T56John Parry-14$16,571
T56Daniel Berger-14$16,571
T56Davis Riley-14$16,571
T56Max Greyserman-14$16,571
T63Mac Meissner-13$15,622
T63Davis Chatfield-13$15,622
T63Chandler Phillips-13$15,622
T63Chad Ramey-13$15,622
T63Séamus Power-13$15,622
T63Matt Fitzpatrick-13$15,622
69Adrien Dumont de Chassart-12$15,111
T70Zach Johnson-10$14,892
T70Adrien Saddier-10$14,892
72Gary Woodland-9$14,673
73Zecheng Dou-6$14,527



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