
Victory at the FedEx St. Jude Championship has had a significant impact on Justin Rose’s career. With this title, he returned to the PGA Tour winner’s circle for the first time in more than two years, returned to the top 10 of the world rankings after more than five years, and guaranteed his tour card for the next two seasons.
However, his inclusion on an exclusive PGA Tour list stands out. Rose is only the eighth player in tour history to bank more than $70 million in career earnings. His title in Memphis raised his total to $73.2 million, ranking him sixth on the all-time list.
This ranking is led by the legendary Tiger Woods, with $121 million in career earnings. Rory McIlroy is the only other player to have surpassed the $100 million mark ($107.1 million). Next in order are Phil Mickelson ($96.7 million), Scottie Scheffler ($92.2 million), Dustin Johnson ($75.7 million), Rose, Jim Furyk ($71.5 million), and Vijay Singh ($71.3 million).
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Rose has surpassed not only Furyk and Singh, but also several other illustrious names, both legendary players and younger stars. These include Adam Scott ($69.7 million), Justin Thomas ($69.3 million), and Jordan Spieth ($65.9 million).
Thomas could become the ninth member of the $70 million club this week with a strong finish at the BMW Championship. Scott, who missed the playoffs, will have to wait a bit longer, although he should complete this feat in a few starts, likely during the FedEx Cup Fall.
The 2025 season is already Rose’s best in terms of earnings, with $8.2 million, thanks not only to his victory at the FedEx St. Jude Championship, but also to his second-place finish at the Masters and his three other top-10 finishes, two of them at signature events.
Now he’ll have two more unbeatable opportunities to continue adding to this total, as he will compete in the BMW Championship, which has a $20 million purse to be distributed among a 50-player field, and in the TOUR Championship, in which only 30 players will compete for a $40 million purse.
His previous best season, from a financial standpoint, was 2017-2018, in which he won two tournaments, finished second three times, and collected $8.1 million. He also won the FedEx Cup title that year.
Rose had been out of the winner’s circle since the 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, while he last ranked in the top 10 in the world rankings at the 2020 Genesis Invitational (he started there as world No. 10).
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