Nelson Mail

Golf’s jaw-dropping pay disparity

- OLIVIA CALDWELL

Golf’s pay disparity is so vast that some male caddies earn as much as the world’s best women golfers.

A recent study reveals top male players earn four times the amount of their female counterpar­ts, with some male caddies earning more than most female golfers.

The United Kingdom study, published on website Noob Norm, found that on average male golfers in the PGA earn US $1121 per shot, while females on the LPGA Tour earn US $274.

However the difference between the average pay levels was not the most startling figure.

Top PGA earner for 2018 Justin Thomas raked in US $1,766,500.00, while the LPGA’s Sung Hyun Park reeled in US $233,5883.

The study found that top male caddies were also above many of the LPGA players with Rory McIlroy’s caddy JP Fitzgerald and Dustin Johnson’s brother, Austin Johnson, earning more on tour in 2017 than all but the top four LPGA players.

Kiwi caddy, Steve Williams reportedly earned just over US$8 million on the bag of Tiger Woods alone, well above the pay rate for any female golfer.

According to Golf Digest, a caddy can earn US $1300 to US $1800 per week as a base salary on the PGA Tour and then a minimum 5 per cent pay cheque if the PGA player makes the cut, 7 per cent for a top ten finish and 10 per cent for the win. So if a top-five finish pays $377,000, the caddie’s take for the week, including base and an 8-percent bonus, is approachin­g US $32K.

Ranked 59 on the PGA list top Kiwi male golfer Danny Lee earned $287,286 in 2018 on the PGA tour, while New Zealand’s leading female golfer Lydia Ko, ranked 13 on the LPGA earned US $1,177,450.

Lee’s female equivalent at 59 on the LPGA list Sandra Gal was on US $318, 529.

The study also found that male golfers rated 41 and above on the PGA rankings are paid more than any female golfer on the LPGA Tour.

The most obvious reason for the pay gap was the revenue driven by sponsorshi­p and broadcast deals in the men’s game versus womens.

The study shows statistics around the capabiliti­es of men versus women on the fairways does not equal the enormous pay gap off it.

In fact, statistics show top female golfers often beat men for fairways hit and greens in regulation - two of the games most important statistics.

The men do take less putts than women and the male/female scorecards are often not that much different according to the study.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Sung Hyun Park of South Korea is the highest paid woman on the LPGA.
GETTY IMAGES Sung Hyun Park of South Korea is the highest paid woman on the LPGA.

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