Shane Lowry and Padraig Harrington are both in action at the Honda Classic in Florida this week.
The tournament kicks off just before midday Irish time on Thursday, with Lowry teeing off at 12.34pm before Harrington gets his round under way later in the day at 5.18pm.
There's over €7.9million up for grabs at the tournament, with the winner taking home more than €1.4million, while the runner-up will pocket some €864,000.
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Lowry was unlucky to not make it to a play-off in last year's Honda Classic after he was caught in a sudden downpour on the 72nd hole and was unable to birdie the par five as Austria’s Sepp Straka had done in the group ahead to take the lead.
The former Open champion felt being caught up in the driving rain was “as bad a break as I’ve got in a while”, but went on to have a successful season which included victory in the BMW PGA Championship and a tie for third in the Masters.
“Last year’s runner-up finish was obviously very disappointing,” Lowry told a pre-tournament press conference ahead of the tournament.
“I had a two-shot lead with five to play. I didn’t feel like I did much wrong the last five holes out here, which is tough to do because it’s obviously a very tough stretch of golf and I got beat by Sepp in the end.
“It was disappointing at the time, but I remember it kind of kickstarted a nice consistent run of golf for me and I played well going into the Masters then and stuff like that. It gave me a lot of confidence for the year ahead.”
Asked about the 18th hole in last year’s final round, Lowry added: “It was one of those where I stand on the tee and torrential rain starts and I already see Sepp sort of 330 yards down the middle of the fairway.
“Yes, if it didn’t rain, the probability was I might have made birdie and got into a play-off, but it wasn’t a God-given right to win.
“Yes it was a bad break, but they’re the breaks you get in golf. I was hoping it was going to repay me back at some stage during the year. I had a decent year last year, so yeah, whatever.”
Here's a full breakdown of prize money for this year's tournament:
Position | Prize Money |
---|---|
1st | $1,512,000 |
2nd | $915,600 |
3rd | $579,600 |
4th | $411,600 |
5th | $344,400 |
6th | $304,500 |
7th | $283,500 |
8th | $262,500 |
9th | $245,700 |
10th | $228,900 |
11th | $212,100 |
12th | $195,300 |
13th | $178,500 |
14th | $161,700 |
15th | $153,300 |
16th | $144,900 |
17th | $136,500 |
18th | $128,100 |
19th | $119,700 |
20th | $111,300 |
21st | $102,900 |
22nd | $94,500 |
23rd | $87,780 |
24th | $81,060 |
25th | $74,340 |
26th | $67,620 |
27th | $65,100 |
28th | $62,580 |
29th | $60,060 |
30th | $57,540 |
31st | $55,020 |
32nd | $52,500 |
33rd | $49,980 |
34th | $47,880 |
35th | $45,780 |
36th | $43,680 |
37th | $41,580 |
38th | $39,900 |
39th | $38,220 |
40th | $36,540 |
41st | $34,860 |
42nd | $33,180 |
43rd | $31,500 |
44th | $29,820 |
45th | $28,140 |
46th | $26,460 |
47th | $24,780 |
48th | $23,436 |
49th | $22,260 |
50th | $21,588 |
51st | $21,084 |
52nd | $20,580 |
53rd | $20,244 |
54th | $19,908 |
55th | $19,740 |
56th | $19,572 |
57th | $19,404 |
58th | $19,236 |
59th | $19,068 |
60th | $18,900 |
61st | $18,732 |
62nd | $18,564 |
63rd | $18,396 |
64th | $18,228 |
65th | $18,060 |
66th | $17,892 |
67th | $17,724 |
68th | $17,556 |
69th | $17,388 |
70th | $17,220 |
71st | $17,052 |
72nd | $16,884 |
73rd | $16,716 |
74th | $16,548 |
75th | $16,380 |
76th | $16,212 |
77th | $16,044 |
78th | $15,876 |
79th | $15,708 |
80th | $15,540 |
81st | $15,372 |
82nd | $15,204 |
83rd | $15,036 |
84th | $14,868 |
85th | $14,700 |
86th | $14,532 |
87th | $14,364 |
88th | $14,196 |
89th | $14,028 |
90th | $13,860 |
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