How did LIV Golf end up in Tulsa? College ties and a golf-crazed state are to thank

Cedar Ridge has a history of high-level golf.

BROKEN ARROW, Okla. — Talor Gooch and Charles Howell III were having a conversation during LIV Golf Bangkok last fall, discussing the future of the league.

LIV Golf’s plans weren’t secret. The league planned to expand its schedule beyond the eight events it held in its inaugural season, but nothing was set in stone yet.

The two former Oklahoma State golfers wanted to bring a professional event to Oklahoma, preferably somewhere in the Oklahoma City or Tulsa area. That prompted Howell to reach out to a few courses in the state.

“I relied heavily on Talor, who’s from here, who knows the golf courses in the areas better than I do, and that kind of started our conversation and started the conversation with LIV and those that help with the scheduling,” Howell said.

More LIV Tulsa: See what’s in the merchandise tent

Cedar Ridge Country Club, which sits in Broken Arrow, a southern suburb of Tulsa, is the site of this week’s LIV Golf event, the sixth of the season and a week before the PGA Championship in Western New York. However, it wasn’t the only course that LIV reached out to in Oklahoma.

LIV Golf reached out to Oak Tree National in Edmond, site of the 1988 PGA Championship, as well as Gaillardia Country Club in Oklahoma City. LIV Golf and Gaillardia, which has hosted PGA Tour Champions events, nearly had a deal in place before it fell through, leaving the door open for Cedar Ridge.

There were also a pair of courses LIV talked to in the Tulsa area, but it was Howell’s conversation with Billy Lowry, the president at Cedar Ridge, that propelled the conversation forward.

Cedar Ridge has a history of high-level golf. It hosted the 1983 U.S. Women’s Open, an LPGA event from 2004-08, and was a subsite for the 2009 U.S. Amateur, which was played mainly at Southern Hills Country Club, a mere 10 minutes from Cedar Ridge and the site of the 2022 PGA Championship.

“I knew it would work well. I know (fans) like their golf here,” Howell said. “You couldn’t write a better script with Talor winning the previous two events and coming back into his home state.”

Gooch is the first back-to-back winner on LIV, winning events in Adelaide and Singapore before an off week. Now, he’s back in Oklahoma, but there are plenty more golfers who have ties to the Sooner State.

Of LIV Golf’s 48 players, six played collegiately in Oklahoma: Howell, Gooch, Matthew Wolff, Peter Uihlein and Eugenio Chacarra played at Oklahoma State, and Abraham Ancer all played for Oklahoma. That’s one-eighth of the LIV field having a connection to Oklahoma.

“I think it’s such a great crowd for golf,” Ancer said. “We’re going to hear a lot of people supporting me and — well, I’m surrounded this week. I think we’ve got five or six Pokes out here this week, but I’m going to try my best to beat them.”

Added Chacarra: “I think the state of Oklahoma deserves good fields, good tournaments, and there’s going to be a lot of people.”

Come this week, Cameron Smith, Brooks Koepka, Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson and others will get another taste of Oklahoma golf, this time at Cedar Ridge when LIV Golf Tulsa gets underway Friday. For some, it’s a final tune-up before heading to Oak Hill next week.

LIV wanted to sign a two-year deal with Cedar Ridge, but the club only approved a one-year contract. The club and its membership have discussed building a new clubhouse with a hefty price tag, but the interest to host LIV Golf in Oklahoma remains even after this year.

LIV is expecting nearly 10,000 fans during the event, though forecasted rainy weather could hamper those numbers. Nevertheless, Oklahoma is a state with plenty of golf tradition, and Cedar Ridge will add to it this week by hosting LIV Golf.

“It’s all worked out really well for us,” Howell said. “I hope everybody has a wonderful week here. I think the fan support will be good, and hopefully, we can come back.”

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=]

2023 LIV Golf Mayakoba prize money payouts for each player and team

Charles Howell III took home $4 million for the individual win and led his Crushers GC to the $3 million team title.

Charles Howell III earned $42,025,458 during a PGA Tour career that spanned more than 20 years and 609 starts.

After just a handful of LIV Golf events, he’s already a sixth of the way there.

The 43-year-old won the 2023 LIV Golf season opener at Mayakoba’s El Camaleon Golf Course on Mexico’s Riviera Maya on Sunday at 16 under to earn the top prize of $4 million. Howell earned $2,991,000 over six starts last year and now has earned just under $7 million on the upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and financially backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.

Runner-up Peter Uihlein (12 under) will take home $2.125 million, with Branden Grace (10 under) earning $1.5 million in third. Even fourth-place Paul Casey (7 under) cleared $1.05 million for his efforts.

[affiliatewidget_wineclub title=”Join the Golfweek Wine Club” description=”Get exclusive access to rare, limited-availability wines that are hand-picked by top sommeliers, then shipped directly to your doorstep.” url=”https://wineclub.golfweek.com/” button_text=”JOIN TODAY!”]

Check out the prize money payouts for each team and player at LIV Golf Mayakoba.

LIV Golf Mayakoba individual prize money

Place Player Score Earnings
1 Charles Howell III -16 $4 million
2 Peter Uihlein -12 $2.125 million
3 Branden Grace -10 $1.5 million
4 Paul Casey -7 $1.05 million
T5 Brendan Steele -6 $887,500
T5 Cameron Smith -6 $887,500
T7 Pat Perez -5 $610,000
T7 Carlos Ortiz -5 $610,000
T7 Sebastian Munoz -5 $610,000
T7 Matthew Wolff -5 $610,000
T11 Graeme McDowell -4 $405,000
T11 Ian Poulter -4 $405,000
T11 Talor Gooch -4 $405,000
T11 Joaquin Niemann -4 $405,000
T15 Marc Leishman -3 $237,000
T15 Abraham Ancer -3 $237,000
T15 Mito Pereira -3 $237,000
T15 Scott Vincent -3 $237,000
19 Jason Kokrak -2 $220,000
T20 Kevin Na -1 $184,000
T20 Cameron Tringale -1 $184,000
T20 Dean Burmester -1 $184,000
T23 Sergio Garcia E $167,000
T23 Henrik Stenson E $167,000
T23 Matt Jones E $167,000
T23 Bryson DeChambeau E $167,000
T27 Phil Mickelson 1 $158,000
T27 Richard Bland 1 $158,000
T27 Brooks Koepka 1 $158,000
T27 Harold Varner III 1 $158,000
T27 Eugenio Chacarra 1 $158,000
T32 Anirban Lahiri 2 $151,000
T32 Thomas Pieters 2 $151,000
34 Danny Lee 3 $148,000
T35 Charl Schwartzel 4 $144,000
T35 Dustin Johnson 4 $144,000
T35 James Piot 4 $144,000
T38 Patrick Reed 5 $139,000
T38 David Puig 5 $139,000
40 Bubba Watson 6 $136,000
T41 Lee Westwood 8 $133,000
T41 Louis Oosthuizen 8 $133,000
43 Jediah Morgan 10 $130,000
T44 Bernd Wiesberger 11 $127,000
T44 Sam Horsfield 11 $127,000
46 Laurie Canter 12 $124,000
47 Chase Koepka 15 $122,000
48 Sihwan Kim 23 $120,000

LIV Golf Mayakoba team prize money

Place Team Score Earnings
1 Crushers GC -26 $3 million
2 4 Aces GC -17 $1.5 million
3 Torque GC -13 $500,000

LIV owns a 75 percent stake in each franchise and provided teams with an undisclosed amount of operating capital for the year. The teams are expected to largely run on their own dime this season, with team prize earnings going directly towards its day-to-day costs.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=451198867]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01f5k5vfbhv59szck1 image=]

Charles Howell III cruises to win at LIV Golf League season opener in Mayakoba

Howell made six LIV starts in 2022 and earned $2.9 million. After the win he’ll take home $4 million.

Charles Howell III arrived in Mexico with his family a few days early before the start of this week’s 2023 LIV Golf League season opener.

After his week on the Riviera Maya he may want to buy some property.

The 43-year-old cruised to victory Sunday at LIV Golf Mayakoba at El Camaleon Golf Course after a bogey-free, 8-under 63 in the final round, four shots ahead of Peter Uihlein in second at 12 under. Branden Grace finished third at 10 under.

On the team side, Bryson DeChambeau’s Crushers GC took the win at 26 under, nine shots clear of last year’s champion 4 Aces GC, captained by Dustin Johnson. Joaquin Niemann’s Torque GC struggled on Sunday but still managed to finish on the podium in third at 13 under. The Crushers earned $3 million, while the Aces will take home $1.5 million and Torque $500,000.

[afflinkbutton text=”Book your trip to Mayakoba today” link=”https://www.golfbreaks.com/en-us/vacations/cancun/el-camaleon-golf-course-at-mayakoba/?cid=999740052&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=golfweek&utm_campaign=pgat_tournament_courses_q3_22_gw”]

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=451198867]

We occasionally recommend interesting products, services, and gaming opportunities. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01f5k5vfbhv59szck1 image=]

Talor Gooch, Peter Uihlein tied for lead at LIV Golf Mayakoba after second day

The season-opening LIV Golf League event is up for grabs.

There’s a congregation of Oklahoma State Cowboys at the top of the LIV Golf leaderboard in Mayakoba.

Talor Gooch and Peter Uihlein are tied for the lead after the second round, sitting at 9-under 133. Gooch’s day included five birdies and no blemishes on his scorecard, and Uihlein had seven birdies, but he bogeyed two of his final three holes in the season-opening event for LIV Golf in Mexico.

Uihlein replaced Gooch on the 4Aces this season, with the latter going to play for the RangeGoats, and now they’ll be in the final group come Sunday.

Fellow former Cowboy Charles Howell III is third at 8 under. Meanwhile, Matthew Wolff, who won the NCAA individual national title for Oklahoma State in 2019 and the team title in 2018, is T-6 at 5 under.

LIV Mayakoba: Photos

Paul Casey, who led after the opening round, is T-4 at 6 under after signing for an even-par 71.

In the team competition, Bryson DeChambeau’s Crushers are at 14 under with Dustin Johnson’s 4Aces two shots behind.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=]

‘Nice to be out there playing golf’: After losing his Ryder Cup captaincy, Henrik Stenson tied for lead with Patrick Reed at LIV Golf Bedminster

“It was actually really fun,” added fellow LIV rookie Charles Howell III.

BEDMINSTER, N.J. — Henrik Stenson could get used to this whole LIV Golf thing.

In his debut with the upstart series led by Greg Norman and backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, the 46-year-old Swede sits tied for first with Patrick Reed after the pair each shot opening rounds of 7-under 64 at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster. After a hectic couple weeks where the five-time member of Team Europe lost his Ryder Cup captaincy for the 2023 matches in Italy, Stenson is happy to be back to business on the course.

“It’s nice to be out there playing golf, and yeah, of course it’s been a busy couple of weeks and not the most fun, but we keep our head down and focus on the golf,” Stenson said after the first round on Friday. ” Just very pleased to have the ability to go out there and do that and play such a solid round. It’s the best I’ve played all year, and yeah, I’ll take a lot of credit from that.”

Stenson’s first impressions for the series lived up to the expectations he had set coming in to the week, adding with a smile, “If I continue to shoot 7-under it’s going to be a good one.”

OPINION: Stenson is another dishonest LIV player, but Europe knew he was a risky Ryder Cup gamble

Fellow rookie Charles Howell III couldn’t help but agree.

“Well, all the feedback I had got from multiple players, managers, etc., was just this, it was fun, the music playing, I really liked that,” said Howell, who sits T-6 and 3 under. “I play a lot of professional events, never played with that. It was actually really fun.

MORE: Stenson holds out hope for Ryder Cup

“It was relaxed, but the golf course is challenging and tough. It’s not exactly relaxing for us standing up here,” he quipped to the media, “but no, listen, it was wonderful. Once we started it was a golf tournament again on a hard golf course.”

Two other players made their debut this week in New Jersey, with Jason Kokrak T-10 at 2 under and Paul Casey a bit further back 1 over, T-31.

Phachara Khongwatmai is third at 5 under, followed by Dustin Johnson and Carlos Ortiz, who are T-4 at 4 under. On the team leaderboard, Johnson’s 4 Aces hold a slim, one-shot lead over Lee Westwood’s Majesticks at 11 under, with Kevin Na’s Iron Heads five shots back at 6 under.

[vertical-gallery id=778287094]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Charles Howell III avoids Saudi Arabia human rights abuses, explains why he joined LIV Golf after 22-year PGA Tour career

Howell’s idolization of Greg Norman made him destined for LIV Golf after a successful PGA Tour career.

This may come as a shock to most golf fans, but Charles Howell III was always destined to join LIV Golf.

Despite his “22 wonderful years on the PGA Tour” that spanned 608 events and earned the 43-year-old more than $42 million with just three wins, Howell was ready for a change. Plus he idolizes LIV’s leader.

“Greg Norman was my hero as a kid growing up. I mean, every year at the Masters and Augusta, I couldn’t wait to get out there and watch Greg Norman play,” said Howell, an Augusta, Georgia, native. “Man, he was an idol. I had a life-sized cardboard cutout of Greg in my room way back in his Spalding days. He was just the man.”

Howell is one of the latest players to take his talents to the upstart circuit backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund and will make his debut this week at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster. When asked about the human rights issues in the Kingdom in the pre-event press conference featuring fellow LIV rookies Jason Kokrak and Paul Casey, Howell admitted that while he’s never been to Saudi Arabia, he’s “excited to go.”

“Being a sports fan, I believe sports can be a force for good and change,” said Howell, invoking a frequently used talking point by players to deflect difficult questions from the media. “Example in Saudi Arabia, Lewis Hamilton, Formula 1 driver, speaks out on these issues. We’re speaking out on these issues right now and today. That’s the first step of change.”

Howell actually neglected to take that first step and didn’t say a single word about Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, gay people being subject to capital punishment or women’s rights, despite being explicitly asked to speak out on those very issues during the press conference.

Instead, he added, “I believe golf can, will be and is a force for change and good, and that’s why I’m sitting here.”

Speaking of Formula 1, the race in Saudi Arabia in March of this year was almost canceled after a missile strike hit Jeddah just 10 miles from the track. Drivers had a four-hour meeting the Friday before the race and discussed a boycott, but were ultimately continued on with the weekend’s events.

While Howell can’t wait to get to Saudi Arabia and travel more internationally with his family, Hamilton couldn’t wait to get out.

“I am so happy the weekend is done,” said Hamilton, a seven-time world champion in the sport who wore the Progress Pride flag on his helmet when he won the inaugural race in the Kingdom in 2021. “I am so happy that everyone is safe, I am just looking forward to getting out. I just want to go home.”

Lewis Hamilton
Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain and Mercedes GP prepares to drive during the F1 Grand Prix of Saudi Arabia at Jeddah Corniche Circuit on December 05, 2021, in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. (Photo by Lars Baron/Getty Images)

“Of course, I am relieved (to have got through the weekend),” added fellow driver Lando Norris. “It is a nervous place to be and you are going to have these nerves.”

Like the rest of his colleagues, Howell played up the excitement of the team event and downplayed the millions of dollars in guaranteed money as the reason for his decision to join LIV, going as far as saying, “No, money was not a factor.”

“I still love the game. I love the game more today than I did five years ago. Now that my son is playing competitive golf, I’m even more incentivized in the game,” said Howell. “This is something really new and exciting.

[listicle id=778276354]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

LIV Golf announces Jason Kokrak, Charles Howell III as new players alongside Henrik Stenson for Trump Bedminster event

Three new players are bound for LIV Golf.

More PGA Tour winners are taking their talents to LIV Golf.

Tuesday the series announced 45 of the 48 players who will tee it up at its upcoming event at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster on July 29-31, but three spots were left to be filled “in the coming days.” A day later the Greg Norman-led, Saudi Arabia-funded circuit announced Jason Kokrak and Charles Howell III would be making their debuts alongside Henrik Stenson, who broke the news himself earlier in the day after he was relieved of his captaincy of the European Ryder Cup team.

Kokrak, 37, is a three-time winner on Tour, all in the last two years. Howell, 43, also has three wins, most recently in 2018 and previously in 2007 and 2002. Stenson, meanwhile, boasts six PGA Tour and 11 DP World Tour wins over his career.

LIV Golf has long been criticized as a way for the Saudi government to “sportswash” its human rights record.

[listicle id=778276354]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

2022 John Deere Classic odds, field notes, best bets and picks

In a star-less field, who can take advantage of the opportunity?

Before the best players in the world head across the pond for a few weeks of links golf, a field of PGA Tour pros is in Silvis, Illinois, for the John Deere Classic.

Webb Simpson, who’s coming off a tie for 13th at the Travelers Championship, enters the week as the betting favorite at +1300. Adam Hadwin follows him at +1500 while Sahith Theegala, who suffered heartbreak once again, this time in Cromwell, Connecticut, sits at +2000.

Lucas Glover is the defending champion and enters with four straight made cuts, including a T-23 at the PGA Championship.

Let’s take a look at some names to target this week.

Golf course

TPC Deere Run | Par 71 | 7,289 yards

TPC Deere Run
A view of the second hole with the Rock River in the background at TPC Deere Run in Silvis, Illinois. Photo by Brian Spurlock/USA TODAY Sports

Key statistics

Birdies. Players need to make a lot of birdies if they want a shot at contending. The average winning score over the last five playings of the JDC is 21.4 under. So, let’s target players with great par 4 scoring averages and proximity to the hole.

Data Golf Information

Course Fit (compares golf courses based on the degree to which different golfer attributes — such as driving distance — to predict who performs well at each course – DataGolf): 1. The Summit Club, 2. East Lakes Golf Club, 3. Annandale GC

Percent chance to win (based on course history, fit, trending, etc.): 1. Charles Howell III (3.6 percent), 2. Adam Hadwin (3.4 percent), 3. Webb Simpson (3.3 percent)

Latest Twilight 9 episode

Like golf? How about two idiots talking PGA Tour, golf betting and everything in between? Oh, and a lot of laughs along the way. Listen to the Twilight 9 podcast!

LIV additions, Travelers recap, JDC preview:
Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Google Podcasts

Betting preview

WM Phoenix Open: Viktor Hovland’s double splash leads list of players who missed the cut

Hovland had not missed a cut in his previous five starts during this season.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — With the chaos that accompanies Saturday at the WM Phoenix Open, it’s often easy to make up lost ground. Just getting to the weekend puts a player in contention.

So while Sahith Theegala ran out to a lead during the second round at TPC Scottsdale and others like Patrick Cantlay kept humming along, there’s plenty of golf to be played at a tournament known for seeing wild swings in the third and final rounds.

Leading the list of those who missed the cut on Friday was World No. 3 Viktor Hovland, who looked like he might just squeeze in late Friday, but then he knocked two consecutive shots in the water. Hovland had not missed a cut in his previous five starts during this PGA season and already has a pair of victories — winning the World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba and the Hero World Challenge. He also captured the title at the DP World Tour’s Slync.io Dubai Desert Classic just two weeks ago.

The cutline is the top 65 players plus those tied at the end of that group, and the number settled early at 2 under. Here’s a look at the biggest names who didn’t make it to the weekend.

Leaderboard | PGA Tour Live streaming on ESPN+ | Tee times, TV info

Mr. Consistency: Charles Howell III celebrates his 600th PGA Tour start at WM Phoenix Open

When asked if he’d get to 700 starts, Charles Howell III didn’t hesitate. “Yes, I’ll get there,” he said.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – Twenty-six years have passed since Charles Howell III made his PGA Tour debut as a 17-year-old amateur at the 1996 Buick Challenge at Callaway Gardens.

Paired with Hugh Royer III and Jim “Jumbo” Elliott, he bogeyed the first two holes en route to shooting 80 and missing the cut, but it turned out to be the beginning of a fruitful career. This week, Howell is making his 600th career Tour start, a milestone that was worthy of a ceremony on Wednesday morning, where he was given a silver tray by PGA Tour executive Andy Pazder.

“You’re the only person on that list who started off by shooting 80,” Pazder reminded him.

“Yes, I probably am,” said Howell, who turned pro in 2000 out of Oklahoma State, earning his card without ever needing to go to Qualifying School. “It could only get better from there.”

Howell, 42, joins an exclusive club to make 600 starts – he’s the 69th player in Tour history to have done so – and made 461 cuts, amassing 97 top-10 finishes, three victories and more than $40 million in earnings. (Somehow, Howell has managed to record only one top 10 in a major during his career.) As a testament to his consistency, he was one of only two players to earn more than $1 million for 20 straight seasons along with Phil Mickelson. Howell’s streak came to an end last season when he fell just shy with $947,154.

Tee times, TV info | PGA Tour Live streaming on ESPN+

“I can’t believe I got to 600, but I have gray hair to prove every one of those starts,” he said.

Howell notched his last victory at the 2018 RSM Classic. Once the hotshot star out of the Oklahoma State assembly line of tour pros, Howell recalled to PGA Tour.com how he decide to make the leap at the urging of instructor David Leadbetter.

“I was in my apartment in Stillwater, Oklahoma, toward the end of my junior year in college, and David Leadbetter said, ‘Are you ready to turn pro?’” Howell recalled. “And my heart stopped because I hadn’t even considered it. And David said, ‘Well, you’re a golfer, and golf has never been hotter and booming, and this is what you’re going to do. I think it’s time you turn pro and move on.’

“I still remember that phone call like it was yesterday.”

Howell is now a grizzled veteran who has seen the likes of Rickie Fowler and now Viktor Hovland and Matthew Wolff eclipse him as the latest Cowboy sensation.

“Viktor Hovland, he feels like a little brother to me,” Howell said. “We may have a degree between both of us. But I have just watched him come out and win right away and go to 3 in the world.”

Howell reflected on how much the brotherhood that exists among the players has meant to him.

“The other players have become really my life and family. You know, we are always out here, I want to beat this guy and beat that guy. And you do, but at the end of the day I look back and it’s been my life for 22 years,” he said.

Howell has made more starts than Jack Nicklaus (595), Curtis Strange (598) and Sam Snead (575), and is only 204 starts away from surpassing Mark Brooks (803) for the Tour’s all-time record. When Howell was asked if he’d get to 700 starts, he didn’t hesitate.

“Yes, I’ll get there,” he said. “The sad thing is that only puts me to what, 15 on the list?”

[listicle id=778234378]

[mm-video type=video id=01fvapje3j0x41nbxbvq playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01fvapje3j0x41nbxbvq/01fvapje3j0x41nbxbvq-e90e2b56fc108fe1323f5d2fefa58e92.jpg]