Blindsided PGA Tour players want answers over merger with LIV Golf
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[June 07, 2023]
By Steve Keating
TORONTO (Reuters) -PGA Tour players were blindsided by news of a
merger with the rebel Saudi-backed LIV Golf on Tuesday that left
them, fans and politicians demanding answers.
A bitter feud that had divided the sport for almost two years ended
without warning when the PGA Tour, DP World Tour and LIV Golf
announced a shock agreement to merge and form one unified commercial
entity.
The bombshell announcement prompted golfers at the Canadian Open to
call a players' meeting on Tuesday to get details of a deal that
many only learned about on Twitter or a later email.
"I’m guessing the liv teams were struggling to get sponsors and PGA
tour couldn’t turn down the money. Win-win for both tours but it’s a
big lose for who defended the tour for last two years," tweeted
South Korean An Byeong-hun.
PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan described a closed door meeting on
Tuesday with players who had stayed loyal to the Tour as "intense"
and "heated."
"This is an awful lot to ask them to digest, and this is a
significant change for us in the direction that we were going down,"
he told reporters.
But he insisted that the players who rejected millions of dollars to
join the Saudi venture will see that they had made the right
financial decision.
"They're going to win," he said.
"They're going to continue to grow, and we're in a control position
on their behalf as we move forward in this structure."
Some players at the meeting called on Monahan to resign, PGA Tour
member Johnson Wagner told Golf Channel.
Rickie Fowler, Will Zalatoris and Hideki Matsuyama were all reported
to have been offered over $100 million to jump to LIV Golf until
Monahan pleaded with them to stick with the PGA Tour.
"I think one of the big things will be, moving forward, is how are
players re-integrated back into the system," said Canada's Adam
Hadwin. "If they are. We don't even know if they will be.
"I mean, so that being one of the big talking points throughout this
year and a half from the commissioner about how these guys will
never play on the PGA Tour again, it will be interesting."
Monahan said LIV golfers will be able to reapply for Tour membership
in 2024.
Almost exactly a year ago Monahan came to Canada declaring war with
LIV Golf, saying players jumping to the breakaway league would be
banned from the circuit.
Branding defectors like Hall of Fame golfer Phil Mickelson, former
world number one Dustin Johnson, reigning PGA Championship winner
Brooks Koepka as free-riders, Monahan declared golfers remaining
loyal would never have to apologise for being a member of the PGA
Tour.
"I recognize that people are going to call me a hypocrite," Monahan
said.
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Golf - The inaugural LIV Golf
Invitational - Centurion Club, Hemel Hempstead, St Albans, Britain -
June 11, 2022 Newcastle United director and chief executive of the
Saudi Golf Federation Majed Al Sorour, Newcastle United chairman and
Saudi Public Investment Fund governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan and Chief
executive of LIV Golf Investments Greg Norman after The inaugural
LIV Golf Invitational REUTERS/Paul Childs//File Photo
"Anytime I said anything, I said it with the
information that I had at that moment... I accept those criticisms.
But circumstances do change."
The LIV Golf series is bankrolled by the Saudi Arabia Public
Investment Fund and critics have accused it of being a sportwashing
enterprise for the country to attempt to improve its reputation in
the face of criticism of its human rights record.
The fans and politicians also questioned the reasons for the sudden
about-face.
"So weird. PGA officials were in my office just months ago talking
about how the Saudis' human rights crimes should disqualify them
from having a stake in a major American sport. I guess maybe their
concerns weren't really about human rights?" tweeted Democratic U.S.
Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut.
Golf fans took to social media, many blasting the PGA Tour for its
hypocrisy.
The 9/11 Families United group, which has protested at LIV Golf
events in the United States over Saudi Arabia's connection to the
attacks on the Twin Towers, issued a scathing statement accusing the
PGA Tour of using them when it suited their cause only to turn their
backs on them and aiding the Kingdom's sportwashing efforts.
Fifteen of the 19 hijackers involved in the 9/11 attacks that killed
nearly 3,000 people were from Saudi Arabia. A U.S. government
commission found no evidence that Saudi Arabia directly funded al
Qaeda.
"PGA commissioner Jay Monahan co-opted the 9/11 community last year
in the PGA's unequivocal agreement that the Saudi LIV project was
nothing more than sportswashing of Saudi Arabia's reputation," said
9/11 Families United Chair Terry Strada.
"But now the PGA and Monahan appear to have become just more paid
Saudi shills, taking billions of dollars to cleanse the Saudi
reputation..."
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto, Additional reporting by Rory
Carroll in Los Angeles. Editing by Toby Davis and Sonali Paul)
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