Asian Tour now seen as threat due to big investment, says Westwood
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[February 02, 2022] (Reuters)
- The Asian golf Tour is now seen as a
threat by its PGA and European counterparts following a lucrative
partnership with a company backed by Saudi Arabia's Public
Investment Fund (PIF), former world number one Lee Westwood said on
Wednesday.
The Asian Tour is set for a major overhaul this season with the
introduction of 10 new marquee events in Thailand, South Korea,
Vietnam, China, Singapore, Hong Kong, the Middle East and London.
The 10 events, known as the International Series, are sanctioned by
the Asian Tour and backed by LIV Golf Investments, with prize money
of $1.5-2 million on offer for each tournament. The Asian Tour said
on Tuesday that LIV Golf Investments had increased its backing from
$200 to $300 million.
"The players of the other tours see the Asian Tour as a threat now,
don't they, because of the huge investment. It's kind of like a game
of poker really where the European Tour and the PGA Tour have had
the biggest hand," Briton Westwood told reporters ahead of the Saudi
International.
The tournament in Jeddah, which starts on Thursday, is sponsored by
the PIF.
"Now there's somebody else come to the table with more chips, so
everybody is on their guard and very defensive... nobody can deny
that. There wouldn't have been all this trouble with releases and
things like that if that wasn't the case," Westwood said.
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England's Lee Westwood in action during the final round Action
Images via Reuters/Paul Childs
The Jeddah event boasts a strong field including
Americans Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson and Bryson DeChambeau,
Spain's Sergio Garcia and Briton Tommy Fleetwood.
"I can see why they feel threatened, (but) the PGA Tour and the
European Tour have gone into areas I suppose in the Asian Tour's
path over the years and never had problems playing tournaments all
over Asia and the Middle East, which I think has probably cost Asia
as well," said the 48-year-old Westwood, who has won more than 40
tournaments across five continents during his long career.
"Now that the Asian Tour has this backing, it appears to me like
they're just doing what the PGA Tour and the European Tour have been
doing the last 25 years."
(Reporting by Dhruv Munjal in Bengaluru, Editing by Ed Osmond)
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