After losing LIV Golf contract, Bernd Wiesberger reinstated to DP World Tour

LIV Golf reportedly paid the hefty fine to come back.

On Thursday, Bernd Wiesberger became one of the first golfers who has played for the LIV Golf League to be reinstated on the DP World Tour.

Wiesberger, an eight-time DP World Tour winner, joined the breakaway circuit in 2022 but lost his contract for 2024 after a poor season this year. He applied for membership back to the DP World Tour, and it was accepted.

“Wiesberger’s membership ceased, and he was removed from the Race to Dubai, after he failed to comply with the Tour’s minimum counting event regulation for the 2023 season, having played in only two counting tournaments – the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship and the Hero Dubai Desert Classic,” the statement said.

“He subsequently expressed his desire to play a full DP World Tour schedule in 2024 and has fulfilled all sanctions – both financial and tournament suspensions – that were imposed upon him for breaches of the Tour’s conflicting event regulation across 2022 and 2023.

“Consequently, his request for reinstatement has been granted by DP World Tour Chief Executive Keith Pelley, in accordance with the procedure set out in the Members’ Regulations.”

On X, the social media site formerly known as Twitter, Wiesberger said he never resigned his membership to the DP World Tour.

The Telegraph reported LIV Golf paid a 1.5 million Euro fine so Wiesberger, 38, could be fully reinstated, which will happen in January.

Wiesberger played for captain Martin Kaymer and Cleeks GC on LIV.

Watch: Wildly entertaining video shows Team Europe stars ‘out of context’

Team Europe continues to score points for taking a lighthearted approach to the Ryder Cup.

There’s plenty to get serious about with the Ryder Cup fast approaching, but Team Europe continues to score points for taking a lighthearted approach to the competition, which starts Friday at Whistling Straits.

A released animation called “Out of context,” which mashes up a number of audio clips, has been getting rave reviews and even some of the players have commented.

Funny moments include a “ripper” from Bernd Wiesberger and Jon Rahm dancing shirtless atop a table while his chums cheer him on.

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak asked Rahm if the hilarious depiction was an accurate portrayal of his actions after the team’s win in 2018.

RYDER CUP: Live updates | How to watch

“No, but that’s what they want me to do this year if that were to happen. I mean, it’s not what I did, I can tell you the environment is not too far from that, OK,” Rahm said. “Now, nobody was on tables, shirt off; I certainly wasn’t. But the environment is somewhat similar. Some people were going just as hard that night celebrating, which I don’t blame them. It’s a stressful long year.

“When you are in an environment with no judgment, you’re not scared of anybody posting on Instagram, you can let yourself go a little bit and be vulnerable, and that’s the fun part of things like that.”

This fun comes just a day or so after European captain Padraig Harrington showed his team a 2 minute, 33-second video titled, “We’re the 164,” that gave goosebumps to team members and was subsequently posted to social media.

The European side has played all its cards correctly in the lead-up to the event, as the first foursome of players to take to the first tee Wednesday morning at Whistling Straits – Sergio Garcia, Shane Lowry, Tyrrell Hatton and Jon Rahm – were sporting Cheesehead hats, the calling card for the state known as America’s Dairyland.

As the pro-USA crowd roared its approval, the eight Europeans tossed the Cheesehead hats to assembled fans.

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Lee Westwood, Bernd Wiesberger hang on to European Ryder Cup team spots

Lee Westwood earned a berth on his 11th Ryder Cup team while Bernd Wiesberger made his first team.

Bernd Wiesberger will make his Ryder Cup debut while 48-year-old Lee Westwood has earned his 11th appearance. Others such as Ian Poulter, Sergio Garcia, Shane Lowry and Justin Rose will have to rely on being in the good graces of European Captain Padraig Harrington.

With the completion of the BMW PGA Championship, the final qualifying event, nine players automatically qualified for Captain Padraig Harrington’s team and he’ll round out the group with three picks to be made at 2:30 p.m. ET on Sunday.

Wiesberger, a 35-year-old Austrian with seven career victories on the European Tour, finished T-20 at the BMW PGA Championship, which was enough to hang on to the final of four qualifying spots via the European point list.

European points list

  • Jon Rahm
  • Tommy Fleetwood
  • Tyrrell Hatton
  • Bernd Wiesberger

Westwood, 48, closed with 77 and finished T-71 at the BMW PGA, but Lowry made a costly double bogey at 15 that dropped him to a final-round 71 and T-17 finish. That wasn’t enough to improve his position.

World Points

  • Rory McIlroy
  • Matthew Fitzpatrick
  • Paul Casey
  • Viktor Hovland
  • Lee Westwood

The process, which began at the BMW PGA Championship in September 2019, was suspended after the conclusion of 2020 Commercial Bank Qatar Masters in March 2020 as a result of the global pandemic. Upon the Tour’s resumption in July 2020, and due to the fractured nature of the season, Ryder Cup point for the European Team were frozen for the remainder of the year.

To recognize the in-form European players around the world, the adjusted qualification process featured a new weighting as the season progressed as requested by Harrington and approved by the Tour’s tournament committee. All points earned between Jan. 1 and May 9 were multiplied by 1.5; all points thereafter were multiplied by two.

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Masters: In front of his ‘American family,’ Austria’s Bernd Wiesberger shoots 66

Bernd Wiesberger, winner of seven European Tour events in seven different countries, birdied four of his first five holes on Friday.

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Bernd Wiesberger striped a drive at 17 into another fairway at Augusta National Golf Club and Mike Bushcott turned to his pal Roy Greenberg, smiled widely and said, “He’s shifted into another gear.”

They would know best. Bushcott and Greenberg aren’t your typical patrons; they are founding members of the Bernd Wiesberger fan club.

“We’re small, but we’re proud,” Bushcott said.

They had plenty to cheer about on Friday as Wiesberger, winner of seven European Tour events in seven different countries, birdied four of his first five holes and posted a 6-under 66 in the second round of the 85th Masters. He is three shots back of clubhouse leader Justin Rose.

Greenberg wore a black backpack with “Bernd Wiesberger” in white lettering a dead giveaway of his allegiance. He and Wiesberger met through his watch sponsorship while Bushcott had a friend in Dubai who told him Wiesberger was looking for a place to relax ahead of the Masters three years ago. Could the 35-year-old Austrian stay at his place at Kiawah Island in South Carolina? Why not.

“He’s a gentleman, very well educated, and has a sneaky sense of humor,” Greenberg said of Wiesberger.

Masters: Leaderboard | Photos | TV, streaming info

“When he stayed at my house the first time, he went to the store and filled my house with groceries. He’s always doing stuff like that,” Bushcott said.

From there a friendship has blossomed.

Wiesberger was able to catch the last direct flight to Austria when the 2020 Players Championship was canceled and professional golf came to a halt for the global pandemic. When he returned to the U.S. in July to play a four-tournament stretch capped by the PGA Championship, he quarantined for 14 days in Kiawah with “Bushie.” (He’ll be staying there for the PGA Championship in May as well.)

Due to the current travel restrictions, Wiesberger’s family is unable to attend the Masters and so Wiesberger is sharing a house with his caddie Jamie Lane, Bushcott and Greenberg.

“We’re his American family,” Bushcott said.

Augusta National has been a happy hunting ground for Wiesberger, who has never missed the cut in his six appearances in the Masters. He opened with 74 on a day when “some of the flags were really tough to get to, if not impossible,” he said, and including a bogey at 15 when he memorably putted off the green and into the water on his downhill 51-foot eagle putt.

“I guess it’s got to happen to all of us eventually, and it was my moment yesterday,” he said. “Yeah, I just got a little bit too excited on the putt to have a chance for eagle. It got a little low, and it went…”

For a swim.

Wiesberger made bogey but righted the ship with a birdie at 17 and then got off to a torrid start on Friday. He curled in an 18-foot birdie at 8 for his fifth birdie on the first nine and canned a 28-foot birdie at 10. He offset his lone bogey of the day at No. 12 with an 8-foot birdie putt at No. 15.

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“Today I kept the mistakes off the card. The one blemish was a perfect iron shot just flew three yards too far,” he said.

His 66 was his lowest round in 22 trips at Augusta and first round in the 60s here. Playing in the morning wave meant his family wouldn’t have to stay up too late to watch on TV back in Austria, the way he did to see “the man in the red jumper,” as he had as a kid in 1997 to see Tiger Woods triumph.

“I’m looking forward to talk to them later and have a nice celebratorial glass of wine,” Wiesberger said.

When asked whether he would be drinking red or white, he turned to Bushcott and asked, “What will be drinking, Bushie?”

“Probably both,” he said.

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Bernd Wiesberger heads back to Austria, where civil unrest awaits in wake of coronavirus

Despite civil unrest in the area due to coronavirus, Bernd Wiesberger is heading home to Austria.

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PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Bernd Wiesberger was on edge long before the PGA Tour canceled the Players Championship and the next three events.

On Thursday, he woke up to disturbing videos that friends and family had sent him from his homeland of Austria, where concerns about the coronavirus had led to civil unrest.

“I’m getting videos from supermarkets being completely robbed basically from people panicking at home, and it’s not nice news you want to wake up to,” said Wiesberger, who shot 74 before the PGA Tour canceled The Players Championship. “It’s crazy news.”

When Wiesberger got word late Thursday night that the tournament had been canceled, his immediate thoughts were to get home as quickly as possible. Before he headed to TPC Sawgrass to clean out his locker on Friday, he secured a flight.

“I’m on the last flight back to Europe. The last Austrian Airlines flight back to Vienna departed this morning, it’s on the way, and the last is going back this afternoon,” he said. “I’d like to be on that one.”

Once home, golf will be secondary.

“It’s unprecedented times,” he said. “We all need to kind of stick together and do the right thing for everyone, for the elderly, to not have anyone affected that doesn’t need to be, and therefore I think it’s good we’re packing up today and going home to try and help out at home and help any elderly, my grandmother, my parents with any sort of grocery shopping so they don’t have to go out too much and just trying to get through this on our own or all together.

“It’s crazy times. I’m sure most of us probably haven’t experienced anything like that. Tough times, stick together, do the right things, stay healthy and just lay low for a while. But golf will return at some point, we don’t know when, but it’s not a priority right now.”

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Bernd Wiesberger on verge of making golf history in Dubai

Austrian golfers are not supposed to do what Bernd Wiesberger is doing as the 2019 European Tour season ends.

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – Let’s be honest, Bernd Wiesberger wouldn’t have topped most lists to end 2019 as European Tour No. 1. Austrian golfers just don’t do that.

This one can, and make history in the process.

The 34-year-old Vienna native is in pole position to end the season as winner of the Race to Dubai and lift the Harry Vardon Trophy. Wiesberger has a 722.8-point lead over Tommy Fleetwood at the top of the points list, with Jon Rahm, Shane Lowry and Matthew Fitzpatrick also in with a shout to end the year top of the European food chain.

Wiesberger can join greats such as Seve Ballesteros, Sandy Lyle, Bernhard Langer, Greg Norman, Ian Woosnam, Nick Faldo, Colin Montgomerie, Lee Westwood, Ernie Els, Padraig Harrington, Justin Rose, Rory McIlroy, Henrik Stenson, Fleetwood and Francesco Molinari with another four good days.

Again, Austrian golfers are not supposed to do this.

Wiesberger has already put his country on the map with seven European Tour wins, three this season. He’s already Austria’s most successful golfer. However, aside from himself and former Vanderbilt player Matthias Schwab, most golf fans would struggle to name five Austrian Tour pros on the fingers of one hand.

Before Wiesberger came along, Austrian success was limited to players like Martin Wiegele, whose only European Tour win came in the 2010 St Omer Open, a bottom of the food chain event.  Marcus Brier won twice in the noughties and now plays on the European Senior Tour.

That’s four of those five fingers with prizes to anyone who can name a fifth Austrian Tour pro without using a search engine.

That’s not to deride Austrian golf. After all, we’re not talking a strong golf nation. According to a recent 2018 KPMG participation report, there are just 160 courses in the entire country, and only 108,733 registered golfers.

“It would be a first, obviously,” Wiesberger said. “Unfortunately, we haven’t had an Austrian winner of the Race to Dubai or the overall ranking at any point. Personally, it would be obviously a huge achievement for me after growing up watching European Tour golf and watching legends like Seve, Olazábal, Colin Montgomerie who won so many times in a row at the time when I started getting into golf. It’s something that looked a long distance away, but obviously much closer now.

“I’m very, very lucky right now in Austria with not only myself playing well this year but also Matthias doing a great job, and almost catching a couple titles this year. Yes, good times for Austrian golf.”

Wiesberger will be worthy of the European number one title if he does go on to finish atop the Race to Dubai. A wrist injury caused him to miss the end of last season, yet he has three 2019 victories. He moved back to the top of the Race to Dubai when he won the Italian Open in October. He has led the title race ever since.

Rory McIlroy chasing five-win season, but not Race to Dubai title

Although Rory McIlroy didn’t win a major championship in 2019, he feels the year has been a success.

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – Rory McIlroy finds himself in uncharted territory on the eve of the $8 million DP World Tour Championship, Dubai. He doesn’t have a chance to win the European Tour’s Race to Dubai despite a stellar season.

The world No. 2 lies sixth in the European Tour pecking order, but can’t become the No. 1 player because he’s too far behind leader Bernd Wiesberger.

McIlroy is a three-time European Tour No. 1. His focus this week is on winning the DP World for the third time. He’s quite happy to take a back seat to players he magnanimously feels deserve to be the 2019 European No. 1.

“I’ve won it three times.” McIlroy said. “It’s a wonderful feeling to be able to do it. I haven’t played enough counting European Tour events to have a chance. You look at someone like a Bernd Wiesberger that’s played 25, 26, 27 times, whatever it is (28). Those are the guys that deserve to be up there with a chance to win.”

McIlroy has found himself short of tournaments needed to catch Wiesberger because he wasn’t a European Tour member at the start of this season. McIlroy only took up membership in May, meaning a second-place finish in the WGC–Mexico Championship, T-9 in the WGC–Dell Technologies Match Play and T-21 in the Masters didn’t count towards his points total.

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The four-time major champion has no regrets.

“This year has been a great learning year for me in terms of knowing what works,” McIlroy added. “I feel like I changed my schedule up a good bit this year, and it helped, not traveling quite as much at the start of the year. Basing myself in Florida, where I now live the majority of the time and not having to travel too far from there. That definitely helps for the first few months of the year feeling settled, not crossing too many time zones.”

McIlroy is a four-time winner this year. Although he didn’t get his hands on a major championship, he feels the year has been a success.

“I’ve had a wonderful season this season and I feel like I’ve figured out a few things that really helped me. It’s been a good formula this year, and I don’t see any reason to change anything going into next year.”

The 30-year-old has made one significant change this week. Regular caddie Harry Diamond isn’t on the bag since his wife just gave birth to their first child, a girl they named Georgia Iris. Rory has handed his clubs to former Irish rugby international Niall O’Connor, and that means being a bit more proactive.

“Obviously I’ll maybe take on a little bit more responsibility than I usually do and jot stuff down,” he said. “It feels a little bit like when Harry first came on the bag a couple years ago. I took on a little more responsibility writing stuff in my yardage book and pacing stuff out. I actually quite enjoy that part

“Niall knows what it feels like in the heat of the battle. Obviously he doesn’t have 18-stone (252-pound) men blasting at him as he has in the past, it’s a little bit different.

“He’s a pretty good golfer himself. He’s played a lot of amateur tournaments in Ireland, so he knows the game well, and he knows what it’s like, how it feels to be in the heat of battle and be under pressure.”

McIlroy has only had one season where he won five times. That was in 2012. A fourth DP World Tour Championship win would help him match that five-win season, a win that, under other circumstances, would probably have helped him become European Tour No. 1 for 2019.

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