LIV captains play for laughs ahead of finale
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[October 27, 2022] By
Steve Keating
MIAMI (Reuters) - A $50-million purse may be serious money but there
was a laughter-filled start to the LIV Golf Series finale at Trump
National Doral Golf Club on Wednesday as the Saudi-backed venture
prepared to crown a first team champion.
While $50 million represents the sport's biggest ever pay day, fun,
not money, has been the reason most often given by players for
jumping from the established PGA Tour to the controversial rebel
circuit that brands itself as "Golf, But Louder".
LIV Golf has challenged the traditions of the sport, opting for a
rock-and-roll party vibe that offers a departure from classic golf
etiquette and promising, 'Good vibes, great eats and live music".
Play gets underway on Friday with 12 four-man teams hunting a
$16-million winner's prize but for the eight captains on the dais on
Wednesday, including major winners Phil Mickelson, Brooks Koepka,
Cameron Smith and Bubba Watson, landing a good jibe seemed more
important than money.
"You probably don't know this because you've never been number one
in the world," said four-time major winner Koepka to Mickelson.
"That's a beautiful green shirt. Do you have a green jacket?" shot
back three-times Masters champion Mickelson.
"I do not, but I will, though, don't worry," returned Koepka.
LIV Golf, bankrolled by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund,
reportedly paid out nearly $1 billion to lure some of golf's biggest
names, such as Mickelson, Dustin Johnson and Bryson DeChambeau, away
from the PGA Tour.
On top of his signing bonus, Johnson comes into this week having
already banked $13.6 million from seven events and Patrick Reed $8.2
million from six tournaments.
World number one Rory McIlroy, enjoyed the best year of his career
last season, winning $8.6 million from 16 PGA Tour stops.
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Brooks Koepka and Ian Poulter share a laugh during a press
conference before the LIV Golf series at Trump National Doral. John
David Mercer-USA TODAY Sports
Trying to replicate the excitement generated by
hugely popular team competitions such as the Ryder and Presidents
Cups, LIV Golf incorporated a team component into all eight events.
While innovative, the concept and an unfamiliar format has yet to
establish itself.
Mickelson, once an anchor of U.S. Ryder Cup squads, candidly
described the LIV team event as a fun competition.
"There's some elements of those team events that can apply, that
knowledge and experience can help, and there's some that simply
don't," said Mickelson, who captains the HyFlyers team and will take
on Punch GC captain Smith in Friday's quarter-finals.
"We don't have anybody sitting out, and we don't have the rich
history and probably the pressure that those other events have,
whereas this is really a fun event. Like we're having a blast."
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Miami; Editing by Clare Fallon)
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