LIV Golf loses bid to earn world ranking points in unanimous decision
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[October 11, 2023]
By Frank Pingue
(Reuters) -LIV Golf's bid to have its players earn ranking points
has been unanimously rejected by the Official World Golf Ranking (OWGR)
due to concerns about the Saudi Arabia-backed circuit's format.
OWGR Chairman Peter Dawson said in a letter sent on Tuesday to LIV
Golf's Chief Executive Greg Norman and Chief Operating Officer Gary
Davidson, that "at this time" LIV Golf will not be recognised as an
Eligible Golf Tour in the OWGR system.
LIV Golf, whose player roster includes major champions Phil
Mickelson, Brooks Koepka and Cameron Smith, said the OWGR's decision
means the organisation can no longer deliver on its objective to
rank the best players in the world.
"Professional golf is now without a true or global scoring and
ranking system," LIV Golf said in a statement. "There is no benefit
for fans or players from the lack of trust or clarity as long as the
best player performances are not recognized."
Dawson said the Board Committee felt LIV Golf's tournament format -
54-hole, no-cut events for 48 players - was an issue but added that
it was one that was capable of being managed through an "appropriate
mathematical formula."
The board did not make a determination what that adjustment might be
and will not do so while there are other "unresolved deficiencies"
which render performance comparisons with players competing in
existing OWGR Tour events extremely difficult.
The bigger concern, according to the letter, is the limited access
for players to join LIV Golf which, barring injury, features the
same 48 players all season.
The letter also revealed that LIV informed the OWGR in July that 14
players will be invited back next season regardless of their
performance, more than double the number that LIV officials
originally told the OWGR.
"Simply put, the Board Committee does not believe it is equitable to
thousands of players who strive every day to get starts in OWGR
Eligible Tournaments to have a tour operate in this mostly-closed
fashion," Dawson wrote.
RESUBMIT APPLICATION
Dawson also said the Committee remains concerned about the
implications of conducting individual and team competitions
simultaneously, and singled out actions and comments attributed to
Sebastian Munoz during an April tournament.
Brooks Koepka led Munoz by a shot on the final hole and both were
about 40 feet away for birdie. Koepka's putt settled just over four
feet from the cup before Munoz, needing a birdie to force a playoff
but whose team led Koepka's Smash unit by a stroke, lagged his putt
to just inside four feet and made par.
[to top of second column] |
Sep 24, 2023; Sugar Grove, Illinois, USA; Anirban Lahiri putts on
the 16th green during the final round of the LIV Golf Chicago golf
tournament at Rich Harvest Farms. Mandatory Credit: Jamie Sabau-USA
TODAY Sports/File Photo
"It's weird, because I knew we were one stroke
ahead on the team, so I couldn't go extra. I knew I couldn't be too
aggressive," Munoz said at the time. "He got the individual, we got
the team. I call it a tie."
LIV Golf applied for recognition in the rankings, which play a key
role in deciding entry into golf's four majors, in July 2022 and its
players have said excluding them "undermines the historical value"
of the ranking.
Critics say LIV Golf, bankrolled by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment
Fund, amounts to "sportswashing" by a nation trying to improve its
image amid criticism of its human rights record.
Dawson said OWGR invites LIV to resubmit its application should it
make any modifications that impact the areas of non-conformance.
"The decision to respectfully decline LIV's application at this time
it not meant to discourage your efforts to innovate in men's
professional golf and/or cause you to make changes you may not
believe to be in the best interests of your tour and events."
According to the OWGR website, the ranking points breakdown is
derived from each tournament's total field rating and points are
awarded to players who make the cut and complete an event, subject
to their finishing position in the tournament.
While golf's four majors have allowed qualified LIV Golf players to
compete, those who earned exemption into the blue-riband events due
to past results could one day be left out as they are not earning
world ranking points.
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto; Editing by Toby Davis and
Stephen Coates)
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