Leona Maguire eagles final hole to capture London Aramco event at Centurion Club

This was no ordinary finish. 

Leona Maguire got off to a fast start at this week’s Ladies European Tour’s Aramco Team Series London event, and she needed a strong finish to close out a victory at the Centurion Club.

Maguire shot a 66 in the opening round and then slid home with rounds of 72 on Thursday and 73 on Friday to capture the individual title at the event, finishing the 54-hole tournament at 8 under. Maria Hernandez was a stroke behind Maguire and the trio of Alison Lee, Lauren Walsh and Georgia Hall tied for third at 6 under.

But this was no ordinary finish.

Walsh, who hails from Ireland but played collegiately at Wake Forest, shot a 65 to take the lead for a stretch, then Hernandez made birdie on the par-5 18th hole to take the lead at 7 under.

Sitting at 6 under at the time, Maguire made the shot of the tournament, knocking her hybrid onto the fringe just left of the hole and watching as the ball rolled up onto the green, giving her an opportunity to drop a putt for the victory.

With the pressure on, Maguire hit the putt to edge Hernandez, the win marking her first on the LET to go with a pair of victories on the LPGA. Her last win came more than a year ago at the 2023 Meijer LPGA Classic.

LIV Golf kicks Phil Mickelson’s biographer, Alan Shipnuck, out of news conference

Maybe Phil Mickelson has had enough of Alan Shipnuck or Greg Norman wanted to make a point.

Maybe Phil Mickelson has had enough of Alan Shipnuck or Greg Norman wanted to make a point.

Either way, one of the strangest days in recent golf history ended at the Centurion Golf Club near London on Thursday evening with Shipnuck, the author of “Phil: The Rip-Roaring (and Unauthorized!) Biography of Golf’s Most Colorful Superstar,” being removed from what’s known as the flash interview area at the LIV Golf Invitational Series inaugural event.

Shipnuck, a partner for The Fire Pit Collective, traveled to the United Kingdom for the event and followed Mickelson during his opening round. Afterward, Mickelson spoke to members of the press, as is customary.

However, Shipnuck was not allowed to join.

He wrote on Twitter:

Well, a couple of neckless security dudes just physically removed me from Phil Mickelson’s press conference, saying they were acting on orders from their boss, whom they refused to name. (Greg Norman? MBS? Al Capone?) Never a dull moment up in here.

Golfweek reached out to Shipnuck, who replied in a text message: “I was credentialed and I was standing in the flash area at the start of Phil’s presser when they came for me.”

Not allowing a credentialed press member to attend a player’s press conference is unheard of on other golf tours, but things got stranger in the moments afterward.

Shipnuck sent text messages to LIV Golf’s commissioner, Greg Norman, to point out the incident, and Norman replied that he had not heard about it. Shipnuck did not know when he sent the message that Norman had seen the whole thing.

In an email to Golfweek, Shipnuck said: “I have no ill will toward Phil. I just wanted to ask him one boring golf question, which is my job. Either he is being way too sensitive or the LIV folks are being too overprotective but, either way, they are overreacting.”

This incident comes two days after Associated Press reporter Rob Harris was cut off, removed from the LIV media center and reprimanded by LIV officials for not being “polite.” Harris was allowed back into the media center about 10 minutes later, according to ESPN.

“The security guards were inappropriately aggressive and physical, considering I was just standing there trying to make sense of the bizarre reasons they were citing for wanting to remove me,” Shipnuck said.

The second round of the LIV Golf London event is Friday at 9:30 a.m. ET time. LIV Golf does not have a TV deal but is streaming the tournament on its YouTube channel.

“This whole situation is messy and ridiculous,” Shipnuck said to Golfweek. “If I have another boring golf question for Phil I’ll ask it because I did fly 6,000 miles to be here and I’m not inclined to be silenced by Greg Norman and his goons.

“Or maybe I’ll just focus on Chantananuwat Ratchanon. … he seems like a nice kid.”

Golfweek’s Steve DiMeglio contributed to this article.

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Charl Schwartzel shoots 65, leads first-ever LIV Golf Invitational Series event in London

Just a few hours after being suspended by the PGA Tour, Charl Schwartzel took the lead in the inaugural LIV Golf.

Just a few hours after being suspended by the PGA Tour, Charl Schwartzel shot a 5-under 65 and holds the overnight lead in the inaugural LIV Golf Invitational Series tournament.

Centurion Golf Club near London is hosting the first-ever LIV event. The course is playing as a par 70 for the three-day, 54-hole, no-cut tournament. Schwartzel started his day on the third hole as the LIV circuit uses a shotgun start for its tournaments.

The 2011 Masters champion was among 17 golfers suspended by the PGA Tour on Thursday morning, not long after the first tee shots were struck. Of those 17, 10, including Schwartzel, had already resigned their PGA Tour membership.

In solo second is another South African, Hennie Du Plessis, who is at 4 under. He has five top-five finishes on the DP World Tour this season but has yet to win there.

Scott Vincent and Phachara Khongwatmai are tied for third at 3 under. Branden Grace and Justin Harding are tied for fifth at 2 under. Two of the LIV Golf circuit’s headliners, Dustin Johnson and Phil Mickelson, are among four golfers tied for seventh at 1 under, along with Sam Horsfeld and Laurie Canter.

The winner this week in London will receive $4 million. Everyone in the 48-man field will earn a payday by the end of the final round Saturday.

The league is spearheaded by Greg Norman and backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, one of the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds.

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LIV Golf: Phil Mickelson’s blacked-out Masters logo among the things Golf Twitter was talking about during the first event in London

Well, the LIV Golf Invitational Series is off and running. Here’s some of what Golf Twitter had to say about it.

Well, the LIV Golf Invitational Series is off and running.

Centurion Golf Club is hosting the inaugural event, a three-day, shotgun start, 54-hole, no-cut money grab where the winner will earn $4 million and everyone in the 48-man field gets paid.

There is no TV partner for the new circuit so LIV Golf created its own YouTube channel and streamed the action there.

Among its efforts to be different, the feed has a vertical leaderboard down the left side of the screen with bright colors and team logos.

Opinions have been flying fast and furious over the launch of the Saudi-backed LIV Golf league. Here’s a look at some of them.

Photos: LIV Golf International Series at Centurion Golf Club in London

The inaugural LIV Golf International Series golf tournament is at Centurion Golf Club in London.

The inaugural LIV Golf International Series golf tournament is at Centurion Golf Club in London.

The three-day, 54-hole, no-cut, big money event is June 9-11, with Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson, Sergio Garcia, Ian Poulter and others headlining the field.

Signage at the event had phrases like “Welcome to the Future” and “Golf But Louder”.

There is no TV deal for the league so fans had to watch a live stream on the LIV Golf’s YouTube channel to catch the action.

But it didn’t take long after the new breakaway league started before PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan sent a memo suspended those golfers who chose to play in the new league.

Check out some photos of the new breakaway league.

Controversial LIV Golf Invitational Series is here. What you should know.

The LIV Golf Invitational Series is already disrupting the dynamics in professional men’s golf.

The Saudi-backed LIV Golf Invitational Series will make its debut this weekend in London.

The league announced a field of 48 players, including Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson and Louis Oosthuizen.

The league is already disrupting the dynamics in professional men’s golf and could continue to do so as its season continues. Yet, hanging above the shifting balance of power in the business of golf are the questions of ethics and morals facing players and executives who have joined the league, in light of multiple accusations against the Saudi Arabian government of alleged human rights violations.

Here is everything you need to know about LIV Golf.

Why is LIV Golf so controversial?

The Public Investment Fund (PIF), the sovereign wealth investment fund of Saudi Arabia and one of the largest in the world, has backed and is financing LIV Golf Investments, the parent company of LIV Golf. As the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, Mohammed bin Salman is the head of the PIF. According to a declassified U.S. intelligence report released in February 2021, Salman approved an operation “to capture or kill” Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi inside a Saudi consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2, 2018.

The Saudi government is accused of other human rights violations and has invested in Western athletic opportunities in an apparent attempt to improve its image, a practice known as “sportswashing.”

What will be the format?

There will be seven regular season events in different cities on three continents — London, Portland (Oregon), Bedminster (New Jersey), Boston, Chicago, Bangkok, Jeddah. The season will culminate in a team championship in Florida at the Trump National Doral Miami course.

Each event will be a 54-hole, three-round, no-cut competition. The league will incorporate shotgun starts to expedite play. A 48-person field has been announced and players will be split into four-person teams.

The team championship will be a four-day, four-round event in which the teams will be seeded in a knock-out playoff bracket.

What are the prize payouts?

Each regular-season event is scheduled to feature a total purse of $25 million, with $20 million going toward individual prizes and the remainder going toward the team competition. The first-place prize for individual players will reportedly be $4 million and the team that places first will earn $3 million.

Over the course of the season, the player who is crowned champion will take home $18 million, while second place will collect $8 million and third will earn $4 million. Players who compete in a minimum of four events will be eligible for these awards.

During the team championship at the end of the season, each of the 12 teams will receive a cut of the $50 million purse. The first-place team will win $16 million.

When will LIV Golf hold its inaugural event?

The inaugural LIV Golf Invitational Series tournament will take place June 9-11 at the Centurion Club, which is about 25 miles northwest of London.

Who will play in the inaugural event?

The LIV Golf league announced its captains for the 12 teams that will compete in the inaugural event in London. Each team has its own name and logo.

  • Captain, team name
  • Dustin Johnson, 4 Aces
  • Graeme McDowell, Niblicks
  • Ian Poulter, Majesticks
  • Kevin Na, Iron Heads
  • Louis Oosthuizen, Stinger
  • Martin Kaymer, Cleeks
  • Peter Uihlein, Crushers
  • Phil Mickelson, Hy Flyers
  • Sergio Garcia, Fire Balls
  • Sihwan Kim, Smash
  • Talor Gooch, Torque
  • Wade Ormsby, Punch

Other notable players on the roster include Lee Westwood, Charl Schwartzel, Sam Horsfield, Andy Ogletree and Branden Grace.

Have any players turned down LIV Golf?

Tiger Woods recently reaffirmed his commitment to the PGA Tour. LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman said in an interview with the Washington Post that Woods turned down a “mind-blowingly enormous” offer from LIV Golf that was “about high nine digits.” Rory McIlroy has also declined.

Eighteen-time major champion Jack Nicklaus turned down two offers “in excess of $100 million” for the chance to be the face of the league.

What has been the reaction to those who joined?

Though several prominent PGA Tour players have resigned their membership to join LIV Golf, those have faced harsh criticism. For its part, the PGA Tour has threatened serious penalties for those PGA Tour members who play in the LIV Golf Series events. Some players, like Dustin Johnson, have resigned their membership with the PGA Tour to join LIV golf. Others, like Phil Mickelson, have said they intend to play in major championships.

With the U.S. Open set to take place June 16-19, the weekend following the inaugural LIV Golf Invitational, the U.S. Golf Association released a statement Tuesday saying it would not penalize any player invited to the U.S. Open who had played in the LIV Golf Invitational in London.

How are teams chosen?

The captains of the teams were selected by LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman and the league’s tournament committee. Each team-appointed captain will select three players for their team’s open slots in a snake draft format. The exception to that is that five of the non-captain players are not eligible to be drafted because they “have pre agreed” to play together on certain teams.

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11 things about Phil Mickelson’s first press conference since joining Saudi-backed LIV Golf Series

Phil Mickelson talks “sportswashing”, the PGA Tour, Ryder Cup, and did he really get $200 million to join?

Phil Mickelson made his first public comments since joining the Saudi-backed LIV Golf International Series.

While he sat on a stage alongside his fellow teammates of “Team Hi-Flyer” that he picked the night before during a player draft, Mickelson answered every one of the 26 questions during their group presser.

Mickelson has been in self-imposed hiding since February when his controversial statements on the PGA Tour and Saudi Golf League were published on the Fire Pit Collective.

Here are 11 things Mickelson addressed during his news conference  Wednesday ahead of LIV Golf’s debut event near London at the Centurion Golf Club.

Phil’s take on “sportswashing”

“I said earlier, I don’t condone human rights violations. I don’t know how I can be anymore clear. I understand your question, but again, I love this game of golf. I’ve seen the good that it’s done and I see the opportunity for LIV Golf to do a lot of good for the game throughout the world and I’m excited to be part of this opportunity.”

Pressed further, he added, “Nobody here condones human rights violations, and nobody here is trying to make up for anything.”

Why did he sign with LIV Golf?

“I’ve really enjoyed my time on the PGA Tour. I’ve had some incredible experiences, some great memories. I have a lot of strong opinions on things that should and could be a lot better. One of the mistakes I made is voicing those publicly. So, I will really make an effort to keep those conversations behind closed doors going forward. I think that’s the way to be the most efficient and get the most out of it.”

2022 LIV Golf London
Phil Mickelson adjusts his sunglasses during a press conference ahead of the 2022 LIV Golf Invitational Series event at The Centurion Club north of London. (Photo by Adrian Dennis/AFP via Getty Images)

What exactly he is apologizing for?

“I understand that many people have very strong opinions and may disagree with my decision, and I can empathize with that. But at this time, this is an opportunity that gives me a chance to have the most balance in my life going forward and I think will do a lot of good for the game.”

Is he banned from PGA Tour?

“I choose not to speak publicly on PGA Tour issues at this time.”

Will he play in 2022 U.S. Open?

“I will play next week at the U.S. Open. I’m looking forward to it.”

Why he won’t resign PGA Tour membership

“It’s because I earned it. I believe all players should have the right to play whenever or wherever they want, which is consistent with being an independent contractor. As a lifetime member, I’m not required to play 15 events. I don’t have to play any; I can play one. So, I don’t feel the reason to give that up.”

Future role in the Ryder Cup?

“Just like the PGA Tour, the Ryder Cup has provided so many relationships, friendships that have lasted a career and I’m hopeful to be part of the Ryder Cup going forward.”

Why not defend at PGA Championship?

“It was made clear to me through extensive conversations that I was able to play if I wanted to. I wasn’t ready to play and compete. I hadn’t practiced. I had played a couple rounds but I wasn’t sharp. I didn’t feel like I was ready. But it was made clear that I had the option to and I just chose not to. Just like the Masters. I certainly enjoyed watching it. I missed being there, but I didn’t have a desire to be there.”

2022 LIV Golf London
Phil Mickelson smiles during a pro-am ahead of the 2022 LIV Golf Invitational Series golf tournament at The Centurion Club north of London. (Photo: Adrian Dennis/AFP via Getty Images)

About that four-month absence

“I’ve had an awesome time. I had a four-month break from the game that I have not had from the game in over three decades. I have had an opportunity to spend time with my wife, Amy, a bunch and travel to parts of the world and spend time at a place we have in Montana skiing and hike in Sedona [Arizona], what a beautiful place that is, and it’s given me time to continue some of the work and therapy on some of the areas that I’m deficient in my life and given me time to reflect on what I want to do going forward and what’s best for me and what’s best for the people I care most about.

“This is an opportunity that allows me to have a balance where I can still be more present and be more engaged with the people I really care about and that’s why when I think about being part of LIV Golf I feel so good about it.”

Is LIV Golf all about the money?

“I don’t necessarily agree with your premise, but I think that the opportunity that it provides me to play, compete, bring the sport throughout the world, play less, and have a better balance in life on and off the golf course. I know that it gives me a lot of positives personally and professionally, and I believe it does the same for everyone else in the field.”

Did he actually get a $200 million sign-on fee?

“I feel like contract agreements should be private. But it doesn’t seem to be that way.”

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Lynch: Dustin Johnson was presented a test of character by the Saudis. Unsurprisingly, he failed it.

Dustin Johnson’s willingness to act as the whale for the Saudi sportswashing effort is unsurprising.

The only conventional business principle evident in LIV Golf isn’t one of those antiquated notions like return on investment, quality of product or accountability of leadership. It’s the ‘whale’ strategy, the art of securing one high-profile client, at whatever cost, to lend a patina of marketing credibility to an enterprise and distract from the reality that every other client is a sardine by comparison.

Dustin Johnson’s willingness to act as the whale for the Saudi sportswashing effort is unsurprising. As it became apparent that the field being assembled for the inaugural LIV Golf tournament would boast all the star power of an episode of Hollywood Squares, it was no less obvious that an enormous wire transfer would be made to save Saudi blushes. Johnson merely waited until his value was maximized. He is LIV’s great blue whale, but they might yet fill the unassigned spot in next week’s event with at least a pygmy whale. A Brinks truck may already be backing up to Rickie Fowler’s front door in Florida.

It’s not shocking that aging golfers chose easy cash that their clubs can no longer earn, but nor is it wholly excusable. LIV Golf is a reminder that for many people in this sport, the only metric that matters is personal enrichment. ’Twas always thus. There was an international sporting boycott of South Africa during the apartheid era but dozens of top golfers ignored it when a million-dollar bounty was dangled at Sun City. Commerce over conscience. Easy to see why the Crown Prince felt golf could be fertile ground for sportswashing his government’s atrocious record on human rights.

The field at the Centurion Club is comprised mostly of two constituencies: veterans whose better days are distant in the rear view, and the lower orders struggling to gain any traction. As the world No. 13, Johnson has the greatest claim to relevancy among the 42 names announced, but having not contended (outside Saudi Arabia) since his Masters win, even he is skiing down the powdery slope of late career. Johnson has simply chosen to hasten the journey to comfortable obsolescence that awaits most every elite athlete.

2022 Saudi International
Dustin Johnson mingles with fans by the 18th green during the 2022 Saudi International in Saudi Arabia. (Photo: Oisin Keniry/Getty Images)

The function of the whale is to both draw and deflect attention though, and Johnson’s inclusion ensured headlines did not focus on some others who made Greg Norman’s elite field, like world No. 1,349 Andy Ogletree, whose 12 career starts over two years in the paid ranks have produced eight missed cuts and a best-ever finish of tied 33rd. Ogletree is still ranked a couple hundred spots above fellow competitor Chase Koepka.

World ranking points—like broadcasts and anti-doping protocols—aren’t offered as part of the LIV Golf series. If they were, the strength of field would see the winner earn 24 points, less than half of what the average PGA Tour stop has awarded since 2018. Under the new ranking system that will debut later this year, the LIV champion would receive 20 percent fewer points than an average Korn Ferry Tour winner. The cash is designed to imply a gathering of the elite, but signing with the Saudis is really an acknowledgment by these golfers that they’re roadkill in the modern game, no matter how often Norman presents them as a quality buffet.

What the 42 martyrs for MBS share is an eagerness to grasp easy money, no matter how reprehensible the source or how nefarious its objective. Nor do they labor under any illusions about the caliber of people they’re doing business on behalf of. At the PGA Championship last month, the agent for a LIV-allied player—a man intimately familiar with the Saudis running the operation—approached and asked earnestly if I have a security detail after writing critically about his new partners. That he posed the question indicates his familiarity with the regime’s attitude to dissent, but that consciousness wasn’t so troubling as to impede commerce.

The reaction in the 48 hours since the LIV field was announced helps explain how a blatant sportswashing scheme has made it this far, and why so many players are comfortable committing to it. Slavish sycophants claim someone who has earned over $100 million on the PGA Tour is motivated solely by concern for his family’s future (thus DJ is recast as a model family man!). Keyboard commandos insist everyone has their price but won’t admit to it, unable to conceive that others might value human rights over money. Contrarians hint that criticism of LIV Golf is tantamount to carrying water for the PGA Tour, as though opposing golf being hijacked by a regime that beheads its critics isn’t a position one could arrive at without a bribe from Jay Monahan’s slush fund. Dullards declare any hostility toward Saudi ambitions is illegitimate if the regime is an ally of the country in which one lives, or has invested in any company with which one has ever come into contact.

The waters are endlessly muddied with ‘whataboutism’—the residue of phones that are smarter than their operators—and that provides sufficient cover for players to shrug and say it’s just a business decision. Which it is, for the combatants. They view this as a purely commercial dispute, not one in which a moral compass is required for guidance.

Other business decisions will be made in the coming days. By sponsors that face seeing their logos adorn the Crown Prince’s launderers. By the PGA and DP World tours, on what disciplinary action to impose on players who put a tee in the ground. By the USGA, on whether the sanctioned can compete in the U.S. Open one week after the LIV event. By the players, on how to respond to whatever punishment is meted out. After years of speculation in private, sides have finally been chosen in public. Everything else is now just theater, as the lawyers saddle up.

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Lee Westwood confirms he asked for release to play in Saudi-backed LIV Golf opener in London

Lee Westwood: “I have to do what’s right for me.”

The first event in the Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf Invitational series is about five weeks away and names, numbers and speculation continue to swirl.

Greg Norman, CEO of the breakaway league, told ESPN earlier this week that at least 15 of the world’s top-50 ranked players had committed to the tournament at Centurion Golf Club in London, June 9-11. SI.com’s Bob Harig had previously reported that 15 of the world’s top 100 players had registered.

Reports also stated that two of the golfers are former World No. 1s and we’ve learned Lee Westwood is one of them. In talking with Sky Sports on Wednesday, Westwood said he put a release in “with the PGA Tour and the European Tour.” The European Tour changed its name to the DP World Tour at the start of the current season.

When asked if putting in the release was something he had to “think long and hard about,” Westwood replied: “No. It’s an opportunity to play in a big tournament with some of the best players in the world, in England. I love playing in England in front of the home fans, so anytime there’s an opportunity to like that, I feel like I should take it.”

The opportunity also reportedly comes with the chance at big money.

“I’m an independent contractor. I work for myself. It’s a job and I have to do what’s right for me,” he said.

LIV Golf is planning on 54-hole events with $20 million purses, with the winner getting $4 million. There’s further money to be won, if all goes according to plan, with prizes for winning teams at these events. Appearance fees could also sweeten the pot.

During the Sky Sports interview, Westwood wasn’t asked about any of those specific numbers but he was asked if he had any issues with where the money is coming from.

“Well, we’ve played European Tour events in Saudi Arabia and I’ve had releases from the PGA Tour saying that I can go play in Saudi Arabia and it’s been no problem to them,” he said. “Formula 1 raced there. Newcastle’s owned by, partly by people from Saudi Arabia. There’s been fights there, boxing fights. I think there’s been snooker and darts there as well.

“Golf’s not the first sport to have links with Saudi Arabia but it seems to be coming under scrutiny than anywhere else. Whether you think that’s right or not is the individual’s opinion.

“Saudi Arabia knows they got issues. Lots of countries around the world has got issues. And I think they’re trying to improve. They’re trying to do it through sport, which a lot of countries do.”

Most of the names of those golfers who registered to play in the LIV Series have not been released. Phil Mickelson and Robert Garrigus are two who have been confirmed to have registered.

The second event for the LIV Golf series is scheduled for Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club in Portland, July 1-3. It’s set to be the first in the U.S. The deadline for PGA Tour members to apply for waivers to compete is May 17, however, PGA Tour rules do not allow releases for tournaments held in North America against its own schedule. The PGA Tour’s John Deere Classic is June 30 to July 3 in Silvis, Illinois.

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Report: 15 of world’s top 100 players are committed to first Saudi-backed LIV Golf event in London

Centurion Golf Club in London is scheduled to host the first LIV Golf event in June.

We don’t know their names yet but a report says 15 of the top 100 players in the world ranking have committed to play in the inaugural golf tournament in the upstart LIV Golf International Series.

Bob Harig of SI.com/The Morning Read wrote Monday morning about these commitments for the event scheduled for June at Centurion Golf Club in London, June 9-11.

“Due to player confidentiality agreements, the names of the players are not being released,” Harig’s report said. He also reported that 70 players have registered but some of them will be turned down, however, if the Saudi golf league sticks to its plans for 48-player fields.

Monday is the deadline for PGA Tour players to request release to play the tournament. Golfweek first reported one week ago that journeyman Robert Garrigus was the first to seek permission to play. Last Friday, Garrigus and teammate Tommy Gainey failed to make the cut in the Tour’s team event at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

Five weeks ago, Greg Norman, CEO of the fledgling tour, announced an eight-tournament schedule. The second event on the schedule would be the first in the U.S., at Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club in Portland, July 1-3.

Trump National Golf Club Bedminster in New Jersey, The International in Boston and Rich Harvest Farms west of Chicago are also scheduled to host tournaments in the U.S.

As Harig wrote:

The PGA Tour, per policy, does not grant releases for domestic tournaments. That event [in Portland] is being played opposite the Rocket Mortgage Classic, held in Detroit.

PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan has said any players joining the league would face banishment from the PGA Tour. Norman replied in a letter the PGA Tour cannot ban players. Litigation seems likely in the future.

Steve DiMeglio contributed to this article.

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