Australia will not block LIV players from competing at home
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[August 11, 2022] MELBOURNE
(Reuters) - Australian golfers who sign up with the Saudi-backed LIV
Series will still be welcome to play in home events, the country's
Tour boss said, amid reports British Open winner Cameron Smith has
already agreed to join the breakaway circuit.
The Australian Open and Australian PGA Championship, two of the
biggest tournaments on the PGA Tour of Australasia calendar, are
co-sanctioned by the DP World Tour, which moved to block some
players from its tournaments in June after they played a LIV event.
Australia, however, hopes its biggest names can return home to give
the local tour a boost after two difficult years disrupted by
COVID-19.
"The players coming home to play, as long as there is no conflicting
event they will be welcome to play," PGA of Australia CEO Gavin
Kirkman told reporters.
"The Australian players that come home from wherever they’re playing
at the moment, if they’re members of our organisation they’ll be
eligible to play and that’s been discussed with the other tours."
A number of low-profile Australian golfers have signed with LIV,
including world number 82 Matt Jones.
Australian Travis Smyth, ranked outside the top 400, shared in a
$1.5 million prize with three players for finishing second in the
team element at the LIV opener outside London in June.
Britain's Telegraph newspaper reported Australia's top player Smith,
the world number two, has signed a $100 million-plus deal to join
LIV in a major coup for the breakaway series.
LIV and Smith, who is competing at the FedExCup playoffs starting
later on Thursday in Memphis, have declined to comment on the
report.
Smith said after winning the British Open he was keen to return home
to Australia for a couple of events.
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Cameron Smith talks to media during a press conference after winning
the 150th Open Championship golf tournament at St. Andrews Old
Course. Mandatory Credit: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports/File Photo
LIV has said it will expand to Australia next year
and local golf media reported the series, spearheaded by CEO Greg
Norman, could have three events in the country in 2023.
That could bring plenty of big-name players to Australia, which has
often struggled to lure them to events due to the distance and
relatively modest prize money on offer.
Kirkman said his tour could not control how LIV operated in the
country and that it needed to look after its own business.
"Some people are going to love it and some people aren’t, but if it
comes to Australia we’ve got to be in a position where we stay
focused on our strategy," he said.
"Is it going to be good for the game? What I don’t want and what I
don’t like to hear about and read about at the moment is people
arguing what is good for the game and what is not.
"If (fans) get out and see some golf under a different format,
that’s up to them."
(Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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