2023 Senior Amateur season tees off in Tampa at Golfweek Senior Player of the Year Classic

The quest for Player of the Year honors commenced Monday at Tampa Palms Golf and Country Club in Florida.

The 2023 Golfweek senior amateur season is officially underway. 

The quest for Player of the Year honors commenced Monday at Tampa Palms Golf and Country Club in Tampa, Florida. But first, let’s take a moment to honor the four men who earned Player of the Year honors in 2022.

Senior division player of the year Rusty Strawn had a fantastic 2022. The Georgia native began his year with a win at the Florida Senior Azalea in March. Picking up another win at the Senior Trans-Miss, Strawn took down fellow Georgian Doug Hanzel in the U.S. Senior Amateur.

Not done yet, Strawn followed the USGA major victory with a win North of the border, winning the Canadian Senior Amateur a week later. Capping off his 2022 season with a winning captaincy at the Golfweek Senior Challenge Cup, Strawn ran away with Player of the Year in the senior division.

Super Senior Marc Fried, like Strawn, had a dominant 2022. Starting his season with three straight top-five finishes, Fried built momentum towards a winning effort at the U.S. Super Senior National Championship. Per AmateurGolf.com, Fried’s worst finish on the year was T-18 in 17 starts.

Pennsylvania native Don Donatoni nabbed Legend player of the year honors thanks in part to a win at the Super-Senior Amateur. Playing strongly throughout the year at Golfweek events, the 74 -year-old was able to secure the top spot at year’s end.

After a season that included a win at the Golfweek Senior National Invitational, John Blank earned the Super Legend player of the year honor.

With all four age division winners and 2022 Yancey Ford Award winner Joe Pavoni, all honored on Monday, the 2023 race for Player of the Year is officially underway.

Mike Finster leads the senior division through round 1. The Florida native carded the lone under-par score of the day with a 1 under 71. Georgia’s Danny Nelson lurks two shots back at 1 over while Rusty Strawn is in a two-way tie for third after posting an opening 74.

In the Super Senior division, it’s Marcus Beck holding a two-shot lead at 3 over. An even par front nine was marred by a lone double bogey on the par-5 15th. Mike Poe and Steve Humphrey matched each other with 77s to finish the day two back of Beck.

Arkansas’s Bev Hargraves impresses with an opening 4 over 76. With 36 holes left to play, Hargreaves will have to be weary as Don Donatoni trails by just one shot.

In the 75+ age bracket, Gene Bingman commands an early lead. The super legend carded an 8 over 80 to take a one shot lead over Gil Stenholm.

Round two of the Golfweek Senior Player of the Year Classic continues on Tuesday. For more information on how to play Golfweek events, click here.

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Joe Pavoni named Golfweek’s 2022 Yancey Ford Award winner

Few match the game-changing impact that 2022 recipient Joe Pavoni has made.

The Yancey Ford Award is awarded to those in senior amateur golf who have made a lasting impact on the game.

Few match the game-changing impact that 2022 recipient Joe Pavoni has made.

Growing up, Pavoni and his brother were introduced to the game by their father and spent most summers playing municipal courses in and around Chicago. Pavoni became good enough to earn a partial golf scholarship at Notre Dame, where he earned a degree in civil engineering. Upon graduation, Pavoni went on to run his own civil and environmental engineering company, leaving competitive golf behind.

It wasn’t until 2004 that Pavoni began playing national-level senior tournaments. Playing in the first-ever Golfweek senior event, Pavoni raised concerns about the yardages and setups. Almost immediately he was heading a three-man committee that would oversee yardages and course setups for every Golfweek senior event. 

Helping revolutionize how competitive senior amateur golf is played is deserving enough for the Yancey Ford Award, but Pavoni didn’t stop there.

He created his own senior tournament at Persimmon Ridge Golf Club, his home course, in Louisville, Kentucky. Pavoni was also an advisor tasked with helping create a points system to rank senior amateurs throughout the country and was instrumental in instituting four different age brackets in senior golf that are now widely used across the Society of Seniors, Golfweek events and countless other tours and events nationwide. Most recently, Pavoni was the tournament chairman for the Society of Seniors from 2015-2020.

Using his engineering background, Pavoni helped come up with yardage breakdowns and age breakdowns used regularly in elite senior events.

“What we tried to do was to adjust the yardages so players in different age brackets all hit the same clubs on their second or third shots,” Pavoni told Golfweek. “It’s not a perfect science, but you do the best you can.”

Of course, the reasoning behind adjusting yardages for senior golfers is simple – Pavoni wants everyone to enjoy the game of golf for as long as possible.

“My dad taught this to me when I was 6, 7 years old: the best thing about the game is I can play it until I’m no longer around,” Pavoni said. “You can play it with your friends and enjoy yourself your whole lifetime. What other game can you do that with?”

The adage is something Pavoni has taken to heart. Not only does he play golf, he plays it well. Most recently, the 78-year-old took home a win at the Golfweek Senior Challenge Cup in the Super Legend division, shooting his age or better in two of the three rounds. With the win, Pavoni ended his winless streak after a couple of close calls leading up to the 2022 finale. 

As we turn the page to 2023, Pavoni’s legacy in the game continues to grow and now with the Yancey Ford Award, his legacy is cemented.

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Four champs crowned at 2022 Golfweek Senior Tournament of Champions

Four champs were crowned at 2022 Golfweek Senior Tournament of Champions.

Four winners were crowned at the Golfweek Senior Tournament of Champions on Friday.

The event, held at PGA National in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, lured some of the best senior amateur from around the country. 

However, 55 holes were needed to name a senior champ. Ken Kinkopf needed an extra hole to defeat Ryan Howison. Kinkopf had been near the top of the leaderboard all week long and enjoyed a share of the 36-hole lead heading into Friday’s final round.

Howison was two shots back to begin the day but made quick work to close the gap. Carding three early birdies, Howison not only negated Kinkopf’s lead, but took a one-stroke advantage as he headed to the back nine. Unable to muster any more birdies, Howison fell down the stretch, ruining his good work on the front nine with three bogeys, including the 18th, to finish even on the day and 5 over for the tournament.

In the clubhouse with a share of the lead, Howison would have to wait and see what Kinkopf and company could do.

Kinkopf struggled with the front nine on Friday. Making the turn at 1 over on the day, Kinkopf began the back nine with two more bogeys to go from 2 over on the week to 5 over.

Rallying with a birdie on the par-4 15th, Kinkopf held the solo lead until he carded a bogey on the 18th to fall into a playoff with Howison. The pair set back out onto the par-4 18th, where Kinkopf was able to claim the win with a par.

In the super legends division, Steve Humphrey put the finishing touches on a blowout. The Florida native not only won his age division but posted a tournament low with a 54-hole score of 4-under 212.

Humphrey took home the super legends title by a whopping 14 shots. Stacking up against the rest of the field, Humphrey’s 212 would have been good for a nine-shot victory in the 55-60 year old age group.

Don Donatoni pieced together rounds of 74, 78 and 75 (227) for a five-shot victory in the legends division. Super legend Frank Polizzi broke 80 twice to sneak away with a three-shot victory in the 75+ age division.

Want to play some of the best golf courses around the world? Want to make friends along the way? Check out the 2023 Golfweek senior amateur golf schedule to see when and where you can join the best.

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Day 2 of the Golfweek Senior Desert Showdown makes way for dramatic final round

Chilly temperatures and gusty winds kept scoring to a minimum during the second round of the Golfweek Senior Desert Showdown.

Chilly temperatures and gusty winds kept scoring to a minimum during the second round of the Golfweek Senior Desert Showdown. Taking place at the University of Arizona’s home course – the Sawailo Course at Casino Del Sol — Tucson wasn’t the desert paradise most expect when wintering there.

The lone exception to the lack of scoring was Super Senior Robin Rubrecht. The Indiana native was not phased a bit by the adverse desert conditions en route to carding a second-round 7-under 65. Bogey free on the day, Rubrecht catapulted himself into the lead and now holds a five-shot advantage as he heads into the final round. Not only that, but Rubrecht’s score is the lowest of the tournament so far.

Jim Starnes was the only other super senior to come in under par and is 1 under for the tournament.

In the Senior Division, plenty of movement was seen on the leaderboard. First-round leader Terry Cook slid all the way down to a tie for 12th following a second-round 83. Unable to replicate his first-round success, Cook looks to backdoor himself back into the top 10.

Atop the senior leaderboard is the duo of Mike Lohner and David Nelson. Lohner was able to ride the waves to card an even-par 72 to remain at 1 under for the tournament. For Nelson, he was able to move up the leaderboard despite going backward.

Nelson was 1 under for the tournament until he carded a double bogey on his last hole to slide into a tie for first alongside Lohner. The pair will have plenty of competition hot on their heels with four players within two shots of the lead. Another five players lurk within five strokes.

Among those looking to chase down the lead is Golfweek’s No. 2 ranked Kevin VandenBerg.

VandenBerg is looking to chase down not only Lohner and Nelson, but Rusty Strawn. Strawn is not in the field this week but is ranked No. 1 in the Golfweek Player of the Year rankings. With Strawn idle, VandenBerg can make a dent in the 1,930-point difference between him and Strawn.

In the Legends division, New York’s John Hamilton holds a two-stroke lead over Texas’ Bruce Meyer. In the Super Legends division, it looks as though it will come down to Oklahoma’s Craig Collins and California’s Steve Wilson. Both tied at 3 over, the pair of 75+-year-olds have matched each other shot for shot all week long. Should one of them slip, Chicago’s Gil Stenholm is hanging in the fight at 6 over par.

In total four champions will be crowned tomorrow as we inch closer to the end of the Golfweek Player of the Year race. If you want to put your hat in the ring for next year’s race, check out the 2023 schedule here.

Attorney for LIV Golf’s Patrick Reed files $250M defamation lawsuit against ‘jackals’ Fox Sports, AP, Shane Ryan

Golfweek confirmed with the Middle District Court of Florida’s Jacksonville Division that the suit was filed this week.

Just over a month after Patrick Reed’s attorneys refiled a $750 million defamation lawsuit — adding Golf Channel’s Damon Hack, Shane Bacon, as well as Golfweek, columnist Eamon Lynch and its parent company, Gannett — a new $250 million suit has been filed against a number of other prominent golf media members and organizations.

According to a release from Reed’s attorney, Larry Klayman, the new suit includes author Shane Ryan, Hachette, the New York Post and Fox Sports, as well as Associated Press golf writer Doug Ferguson and the organization for whom he works. Golfweek confirmed with the Middle District Court of Florida’s Jacksonville Division that the suit was filed this week.

Ryan has written two books that are cited in the release: “Slaying the Tiger: A Year Inside the Ropes on the New PGA Tour,” and “The Cup They Couldn’t Lose: America, The Ryder Cup, and The Long Road to Whistling Straits.” Click the links to purchase either of these books.

The release said this of Ryan:

One of the earliest and perhaps the most hateful and unhinged of the defendants to defame, falsely injure and tortiously interfere with Mr. Reed, his family, and his colleagues is Shane Ryan, who wrote a book, “Slaying the Tiger: A Year Inside the Ropes on the New PGA Tour,” and in his newly released book, “The Cup They Couldn’t Lose: America, The Ryder Cup, and The Long Road to Whistling Straits,” compounds and republishes the alleged false and very damaging attacks.

In the Complaint, Shane Ryan is alleged to be pathologically obsessed with harming Mr. Reed and his family and colleagues, and given his well-known incestuous relationship with those on the PGA Tour, his latest book is part and parcel to the deluge of defamatory statements that have been published not just by the Defendants in this case, but also regurgitated with actual malice by Brandel Chamblee, Damon Hack, Shane Bacon and Eamon Lynch, commentators on NBC’s Golf Channel, which according to PGA Commissioner Jay Monahan is the PGA Tour’s partner. Chamblee, and the others are Defendants in a related suit styled Reed v. Chamblee, also filed in federal court in Jacksonville, Florida. See Reed vs. Chamblee, et. al, Civil Action No. – 3:22-cv-01059 (M.D. Fl.).

The original suit was seeking in excess of $750 million in damages. In civil cases, plaintiffs have to prove whether a defendant is liable, not whether a defendant is guilty. The suit was filed by Klayman, a Florida-based attorney who has been on the losing end of a number of defamation lawsuits, including one in which Arizona politician “Sheriff Joe” Arpaio sued several national media outlets, alleging they defamed him and impacted his attempt to win a U.S. Senate seat.

“My client, his family and colleagues have been made the whipping boy of cheap and dishonest journalists in the golf media, like Shane Ryan, who feed at the trough of the PGA Tour, a tour that historically mistreated Mr. Reed. Indeed, my client’s move to LIV Golf was primarily due to this mistreatment, where adequate security was not even provided at PGA Tour events, where hostile fans vilified and threatened Mr. Reed, his wife, caddie, and coach, thanks to the rank defamation and other alleged illegal acts of Defendants in these two recently filed lawsuits,” Klayman said in the release.

“Mr. Reed, on behalf of himself, his family, and colleagues, simply will not take it anymore and he is fighting back in the courts to not just redeem his rightful reputation for honesty and superior golf achievements and successes, but also to protect his loved ones from the likes of Shane Ryan, Doug Ferguson and the rest of the jackals who make their sorry and pathetic living spreading lies and false information about him. These types of journalists, publishers and networks give the good ones a bad name, by publishing and broadcasting false information to the masses for their own financial gain to generate readers, viewership, clicks, and for no other reason than to use Mr. Reed callously and cruelly as a tool to make money, no matter how harmful it has been or will be to his career, his family, colleagues and his life.

“Let it be known that anyone who emulates Shane Ryan and the other defendants in these two lawsuits, in order to make a cheap profit and harm Mr. Reed, his family, and colleagues, will be held accountable under the letter of the law.”

The original suit, which named Brandel Chamblee and Golf Channel, said the group had “conspired as joint tortfeasors for and with the PGA Tour, it’s (sic) executives and it’s Commissioner Jay Monahan, to engage in a pattern and practice of defaming Mr. Reed, misreporting information with falsity and/or reckless disregard for the truth … purposely omitting pertinent key material facts to mislead the public, and actively targeting Mr. Reed since he was 23 years old to destroy his reputation, create hate, and a hostile work environment for him … ”

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2022 Golfweek Senior Desert Showdown kicks off year-end rush for Player of the Year points

The Sewailo Course at Casino Del Sol in Tucson, Arizona, plays host to some of the best senior amateur golfers in the world beginning November 2nd.

The Sewailo Course at beautiful Casino Del Sol in Tucson, Arizona, plays host to some of the best senior amateur golfers in the world beginning November 2nd. The 2022 Golfweek Senior Desert Showdown tees off on Wednesday with players beginning to make their final pushes for their chance at Golfweek Player of the Year honors.

With just three events remaining for this year’s POY title, the race is tight between No. 1 Rusty Strawn and No. 2 Kevin VandenBerg. With Strawn not in the field in Tucson, VandenBerg can take a bite out of the 1,930 points that separate the two men.

As the only player within nearly 4,000 points of Strawn, VandenBerg is mathematically the only challenger that can overtake Golfweek’s No. 1 as the season ticks down. Nonetheless, players inside the top 10 are all jockeying for strong finishes to gain momentum heading into the 2023 POY race.

No. 7 ranked Steve Maddalena is the next highest-ranked player in the field this week. A first-place finish this week would catapult him all the way to the No. 4 spot thanks to the 1,200 POY points that come with a win.

While it won’t put him close enough to challenge Strawn, Maddalena would most certainly use the late-season push as a building block for next season.

The field also includes Craig Larson, who went wire-to-wire in his victory back in late September.

In all, four different age divisions will duke it out over 54 holes in the desert. Four new champions will be crowned with winners being invited to the year-end Golfweek Tournament of Champions.

If you want to play elite golf courses across the country against some of the best senior amateurs in the world, check out Golfweek’s events schedule. There’s still time to register for the three remaining events that round out the calendar year. The Golfweek Player of the Year Classic in January kicks off the 2023 race for Player of the Year honors. We hope you join us!

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From farm to tee box: Get to know 2022 Golfweek Challenge Cup Captain Craig Hurlbert

Hurlbert’s incredible 2020 season was capped off by being named Golfweek’s Player of the Year.

Craig Hurlbert spent his summers with his grandfather on his farm in northeast Montana. It was there that he not only was taught the game of golf, but life lessons that have propelled him to the highest places in both business and amateur golf.

Hurlbert’s grandfather, Carl, immigrated from Denmark in 1923. His grandmother, Marie, came over with her family in the early 1900s. They were processed at Ellis Island like so many other European immigrants during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Married in 1930, the couple settled in Montana and in 1940 began what has now become Wheat Wind Farms.

Fast forward 36 years and a 13-year-old Craig picked up a golf club for the first time with his Bapa. The two would play in a league twice a week at Big Muddy Golf Club when Craig helped on the farm in the summer. 

Now defunct, Big Muddy was a nine-hole sand-green golf course where they hayed the fairways twice a year. This is where Hulbert and his grandfather fell in love with the game of golf.

“He wasn’t a great player,” Hulbert told Golfweek. “But there’s nobody that loved the game more than he did…He had such a happy spirit on the golf course. He made it super fun. It wasn’t something that I dreaded to do.”

As he grew older, Hurlbert got better at the game back home in Billings “on real golf courses” where he truly honed his craft. 

After playing collegiately for a year at New Mexico State, Craig left collegiate golf to study finance and business at San Diego State. Soon after, he earned a Masters degree in corporate finance at Long Beach State. From there, Hurlbert launched himself into the business world.

This left a gap in his golf game. Hurlbert didn’t really play competitively until he started knocking the ball around with some elite senior amateurs at his home club, Carlton Woods, in Houston, Texas.

“I was right there with them.” he said. “I started saying to myself ‘jeez, maybe my game can stack up.’”

At the time, Hurlbert was in no man’s land. At 53, he was too old to hang with the mid-ams regularly and too young to play in most senior events. He used the time as an advantage. With about two years to reform his game into competitive shape, Hurlbert was ready to take on the senior amateur circuit.

Upon turning 55 in the summer of 2017, he dipped his toe in the water, playing just a few events. In 2018 and ’19 he played nearly 30 events combined. He was consistent throughout with eight top 10s, a quarterfinals trip to the Golfweek Senior Amater Matchplay and a runner-up finish at the 2019 Golfweek Tournament of Champions. Although successful, Hurlbert wasn’t satisfied. It was in November 2019 that he turned to his wife, Stephanie, for help.

Stephanie played professionally on the then-Symetra Tour for a handful of years and understands what it’s like to play under pressure against some of the best in the world. 

“I came home at the end of ‘19 and said ‘I’m not going to do this anymore if I can’t win,’” Craig recalls telling Stephanie. 

She replied with a simple question: What is happening to you under pressure? The question proved to find the flaws as Craig began to be fully honest with himself about his game when under the gun. He worked tirelessly on short putts and worked his driver from a draw to a fade. 

“I bet I hit a million five-foot putts between November 15th and January 1st,” Hulbert chuckled. “The draw turned into something I couldn’t control under pressure… So I just worked on hitting a baby fade. I literally wore out a driver I hit so many drivers.”

Already a premier ball striker with plenty of distance, Craig set out into the 2020 season with a refreshed mindset and hunger. Combine that with the lessons he learned as a teenager on the farm with his Bapa, Hurlbert was sure to break out.

Teeing it up at the Old Corkscrew Senior to begin his 2020 season, Hurlbert was able to reap what he sowed during the offseason. He not only won his first senior amateur title, but he did so in a playoff against the 2019 Golfweek Player of the Year, Ken Kinkopf.

Proving it wasn’t a fluke, Hurlbert followed the win up with another win the following week and a third-place finish after that. The start of a great season was supplemented with another win at the Golfweek Senior National Matchplay and the Society of Seniors Founders Cup. With just one finish outside the top 15, Hurlbert’s incredible 2020 season was capped off by being named Golfweek’s Player of the Year.

“It was a process of playing and learning what you didn’t do good enough,” he said. “I had to play in 18-20 events for two years to really understand what was going on inside of my body.”

After such an impressive year, Hurlbert took 2021 off to focus on his business ventures. On December 3, 2021, Local Bounti, a company that he co-founded in 2017 and is the CEO of, went public at the New York Stock Exchange.

The company is quite literally centered around his roots.

Local Bounti is an agricultural company that produces sustainable and non-GMO greens year round and is headquartered in Hamilton, Montana, just a few hours west of Billings where Hurlbert grew up.

With lessons that started on the banks of the Big Muddy River in Montana at a nine-hole sand-green golf course, Hurlbert has continued his grandfather’s American dream. 

Armed with his grandfather’s wisdom, a killer golf game and savvy business senses, Hurlbert looks to defend his team’s title at the 2022 Golfweek Senior Challenge Cup. He captained his team to a win over Gene Elliott’s squad in the 2021 Cup. Facing off against Rusty Strawn’s team this year, Hurlbert will be a playing captain as his team looks to repeat.

“Rusty (Strawn) is a dear friend,” said Hurlbert. “When we play in these tournaments, three, four, five of us all go out to dinner for the couple nights that we’re there… I’m really looking forward to the Cup this December and getting the guys back together.”

The 2022 Golfweek Challenge Cup will be played at Jacaranda Golf Club’s East Course in Plantation, Florida, December 14-16. Captains select players via blind draw to add to the drama of such a fun and competitive week.

Registration for the Challenge Cup is still open here.

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2023 Golfweek Senior Amateur – March 30 – April 3, 2023

PERFECT WEATHER, AN IMPECCABLY MANICURED COURSE AND GREAT COMPETITION. WHAT A PLACE TO BE IN MARCH AND APRIL 2023 Just a short drive from the golf rich mecca of Palm Springs is Desert Willow Golf Resort featuring the Firecliff Course – ranked as one …

PERFECT WEATHER, AN IMPECCABLY MANICURED COURSE AND GREAT COMPETITION. WHAT A PLACE TO BE IN MARCH AND APRIL 2023

Just a short drive from the golf rich mecca of Palm Springs is Desert Willow Golf Resort featuring the Firecliff Course – ranked as one of the best courses you can play in California. Firecliff is framed by the picturesque Santa Rosa Mountains and features a perfect balance between grass landing areas, desert roughs and waste areas. This unique design offers a course that isn’t target golf, but embraces the desert-scape creating a very fair and playable golf course.

Craig Larson goes wire-to-wire at Golfweek Pacific Northwest Senior Championship

There was little doubt as to who was going to take the trophy this week.

The inaugural Golfweek Pacific Northwest Senior Championship had little doubt as to who was going to take the trophy home this week.

Making the five-hour trip to Wine Valley Golf Club in Walla Walla, Washington, Craig Larson kept the hardware in the Evergreen State.

The Lakeland, Washington, native separated himself from the rest of the senior field through the first 36 holes of the tournament. Building a five-stroke lead heading into Thursday’s final round, all Larson had to do was play the same brand of golf that got him there in the first place.

What changes consistent golf? Pressure.

Luckily for Larson, pressure was never really an issue. Yes, he was 4 over through 13 and finished the day there but his cushion kept his head well above water. A final round 77 isn’t the way you want to close out a championship, but hey, a win is a win is a win, right?

Cruising to a four shot wire-to-wire victory, Larson (2 over) shared the podium with Bradley Karns (6 over) and Doug Savageau (9 over).

In the Super Senior age bracket (ages 65-69), a much tighter contest needed extra holes to determine a winner.

Peter Jennings held a one shot lead over George Walker heading into Thursday’s action. Through the front nine Jennings’ lead was stretched to two thanks to a triple bogey by Walker on the par 4 9th.

With either man unable to push across a birdie, Walker scraped his way back into the fight with a back nine 2 over 38 to force a playoff after making up the halftime deficit.

Unfortunately for Walker, his valiant attempt ended up just short as he fell to Jennings on the second playoff hole. For Jennings, he walks away with 1,200 points towards the year-long race for the Golfweek Player of the Year rankings list and bragging rights over his fellow statesman.

Greg Mokler cruised to a nine-shot win in the Legend Division while Joe Barth enjoyed the same differential in the Super Legend Division. Barth also ties Larson for lowest score throughout the entire field. Despite playing in the 75+ age division, Barth matched Larson at 2 over on the week and going lower than his age every day.

If you are interested in competing, go to Golfweek Events.

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LIV Golf’s Patrick Reed refiles $750 million defamation lawsuit in Florida and includes Golfweek columnist, Golf Channel hosts

The lawsuit alleges conspiracy, defamation, injurious falsehood and tortious interference.

Patrick Reed’s attorneys refiled a $750 million defamation lawsuit on Thursday, adding Golf Channel’s Damon Hack, Shane Bacon and Eamon Lynch, as well as Golfweek and its parent company, Gannett. Lynch is also a Golfweek columnist.

The lawsuit, originally filed Aug. 16 in a federal court in Texas and now in Florida, alleges conspiracy, defamation, injurious falsehood and tortious interference and that the defenders have acted “in concert as joint tortfeasors.”

“The PGA Tour’s and its ‘partner’ the NBC’s Golf Channel’s mission is to destroy a top LIV Golf Tour player, his family, as well as all of the LIV Golf players, to further their agenda and alleged collaborative efforts to destroy the new LIV Golf Tour,” said Reed’s attorney, Larry Klayman, via a news release. “As alleged in the Complaint, these calculated malicious attacks have created hate, aided and abetted a hostile workplace environment, and have caused substantial financial and emotional damage and harm to Mr. Reed and his family.”

The refiled lawsuit looks similar to the original lawsuit and also cites new Golf Channel broadcasts where Hack and Bacon were claimed to be critical of Reed and his actions, as well as a column from Lynch.

In four starts on the Greg Norman-led and Saudi Arabia-funded LIV Golf Invitational Series, Reed, 32, has earned two top-five finishes and $5,958,500. A nine-time winner on the PGA Tour, Reed earned $37,070,706 over his 12 years on Tour.

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