Lynch: Phil Mickelson, Greg Norman getting a cool reception at a major they’re not even attending

Woods not only dismissed Norman’s Saudi venture, he reminded his fellow players who set the bar.

Thirteen years after he last competed in one, major championships are still proving a reliable source of disappointment for Greg Norman. At last month’s Masters, Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley clearly signaled his support for golf’s existing world order, thereby tacitly rejecting Norman’s Saudi-funded effort to carve off the top of the professional game. On Tuesday at the PGA Championship, the Great White Pilot Fish was served even less nourishment.

In a sport where numbers are decisive, words matter a great deal these days. Norman’s LIV Golf outfit is busy parsing paragraphs for any hint of collusion between golf’s bodies and the PGA Tour, eager to float an anti-trust claim that they’re conspiring to exclude a competitor from the marketplace (never mind that the “competitor” isn’t held to the same profit and loss accountability as other tours). It’s not necessarily collusion if people or organizations reach the same conclusion, of course. Say, for example, agreeing that governments which dismember their critics are suboptimal business partners.

Norman won’t find any evidence of collusion between the PGA of America and the PGA Tour at Southern Hills, but nor will he find any daylight between them either. “We are big supporters of the ecosystem as it stands,” said Seth Waugh, the PGA of America’s CEO.

In a previous life—one he must occasionally miss, particularly on days when his officers are telling him how best to run a business—Waugh ran Deutsche Bank Americas. He understands risk and recognizes a bad bet. Especially a painfully obvious one.

“We do think that for a lot of reasons bringing outside money into the game is going to change it forever, if that, in fact, happens,” he said. “The Tour is owned by the players, and that means everything ultimately flows back to the players, and as soon as you put any money into it, it’s going to create a need for return, a need for exit, and a lot of things that change the dynamics of it, which we don’t think is necessarily good for the ecosystem.”

Waugh was the first industry leader outside of the PGA Tour to publicly stiff-arm the Saudis, which he did at last year’s PGA Championship by pointing out that all money is not the same. It’s to his credit that while others have waffled on this attempt to hijack golf to sportswash Saudi human rights abuses, Waugh has not wavered. Any players hoping for a sign that their imminent embrace of the Crown Prince’s minions will not impact their ability to compete in majors—or in the Ryder Cup, which also falls under Waugh’s remit—found no comfort in his comments today.

Waugh speaks with the insouciant calm of a man who managed real crises, not the type manufactured by Norman and his exiled acolyte, Phil Mickelson, who was in contact with Waugh prior to deciding against defending his title. The PGA of America chief was asked if those discussions added stress to the staging of a major. “It was a lot more stressful for him than us,” he replied. “He was trying to decide, I think, what he wanted to do, and we were waiting for him to figure that out. Did it add some uncertainty? Yeah, sure. But it didn’t add a huge amount of stress.”

Had Mickelson opted to play at Southern Hills, he would likely have received a rapturous reception from fans, who are typically forgiving of foibles in their icons. But Tuesday showed that, in the locker room at least, he would have been about as welcome as a fart in a spacesuit.

Asked about the absence of the man to whom he finished second a year ago, Brooks Koepka was curt: “Not here. There’s not really much else I can say.”

Justin Thomas was no more inclined to pay tribute to the lost. “I don’t really have an opinion. I never wish bad on anybody. It’s just I’m here to try to win a golf tournament and try to win the PGA Championship,” he said. “It’s going to be an unbelievable venue and a great week regardless.”

The most expansive remarks on Mickelson came from a usually circumspect source: Tiger Woods.

“Phil has said some things that I think a lot of us who are committed to the Tour and committed to the legacy of the Tour have pushed back against, and he’s taken some personal time, and we all understand that,” Woods said, before going on to characterize Mickelson’s comments as “polarizing.”

“There’s a legacy to that. I’ve been playing out here for a couple of decades, and I think there’s a legacy to it,” he continued.

For inattentive listeners who may have missed his point, Woods drove it home again. “I understand different viewpoints, but I believe in legacies. I believe in major championships. I believe in big events, comparisons to historical figures of the past,” he said. “There’s plenty of money out here. The Tour is growing. But it’s just like any other sport. You have to go out there and earn it. You’ve got to go out there and play for it. It’s not guaranteed upfront.”

With those words, Woods not only dismissed Norman’s Saudi venture as a cash-out for the washed-up, he reminded his fellow players who set the bar against which they are judged, and who did so much to burnish that legacy of the PGA Tour and the majors.

Later, Woods was invited to offer some soft sympathy for the predicament in which Mickelson has put himself, and asked whether he had felt compelled to contact his old colleague, Woods demurred. “I don’t know what he’s going through. But I know the comments he made about the Tour and the way that it should be run. I just have a very different opinion on that,” he said. “And so no, I have not reached out to him.”

For a quarter-century, conventional wisdom has held that golf fans are either Tiger people or Phil people, and that never the twain shall meet. That feels truer than ever in most corners of the golf world these days, and outside of Norman and his Saudi benefactors, the Phil people are getting harder and harder to find.

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‘It’s going to shape the future of professional golf one way or another’: Rory McIlroy gives latest take on Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf Invitational

“I’m just so sick of talking about it,” Rory McIlroy said Tuesday at the PGA Championship.

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TULSA, Okla. – Back in February following the final round of the Genesis Invitational north of Los Angeles, Rory McIlroy gave his take on the upstart Saudi Arabia-backed golf league that was trying to lure some of the game’s biggest stars with outrageous sums of money.

“It’s dead in the water in my opinion,” McIlroy said.

Well, the league led by Greg “The Great White Shark” Norman is still afloat. The inaugural tournament of the LIV Golf Invitational Series will be played June 9-11 at London’s Centurion Club, the first of eight events featuring a total of $255 million in prize money. The tournaments feature individual and team play, 54-hole no-cut events and shotgun starts.

“I might have been a little presumptuous at that point,” McIlroy said about his February remarks. The four-time major winner and two-time PGA Champion met with the media Tuesday at the 104th PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club. “It seems like it’s still going. Greg [Norman] and everyone behind it are very determined. I think we’re just going to have to see how it plays out. Guys are going to make decisions.

“Honestly it’s going to shape the future of professional golf one way or another, so I think we’re just going to have to see how it all shakes out.”

Southern Hills: Yardage book | ESPN+ streaming | How to watch info

The rival league wasn’t shaking out well back in February, as many of the games top players pledged their allegiance to the PGA Tour’s flag, including McIlroy, Tiger Woods, Jordan Spieth, Collin Morikawa, Justin Thomas, Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka and Jon Rahm.

Still, nearly 75-80 players requested releases from the PGA Tour to be allowed to play in the London tournament. The PGA Tour denied all of them. If players who were denied a release still decide to play in London – which features a $20 million purse, with $4 million to the winner – they could face disciplinary action, including suspension or banishment from the PGA Tour.

The second event of the series will be held July 1-3 in Oregon. The PGA Tour does not grant releases to any tournament held domestically that is opposite of PGA Tour event. So expect more noise to erupt – perhaps threats of lawsuits – when the series reaches Oregon.

“Honestly I’m rooting for it all to be over. I’m just so sick of talking about it,” McIlroy said. “I’ve made my decision, and I know where I want to play, and I’m not standing in anyone’s way, and I’m not saying that they shouldn’t go over there and play if that’s what they feel is right for them, then 100 percent they should go and do it.

“I’m certainly not wanting to stand in anyone’s way, but I think the sooner it all happens and the sooner everything shakes out, I think we can all just go back to not talking about it and doing what we want to do.”

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Jack Nicklaus turned down more than $100 million to be face of Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf

“I said, ‘Guys, I have to stay with the PGA Tour. I helped start the PGA Tour.’”

Greg Norman has long been leading the charge for the Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf Investments and its new series of events slated to begin in June outside London, but the two-time Open champion wasn’t the only person who was made an offer.

According to a Fire Pit Collective story published on Monday morning, 18-time major champion Jack Nicklaus turned down not just one, but two offers to lead the new golf entity that has caused a stir in professional golf over the last year.

“I was offered something in excess of $100 million by the Saudis, to do the job probably similar to the one that Greg (Norman) is doing,” said Nicklaus. “I turned it down. Once verbally, once in writing. I said, ‘Guys, I have to stay with the PGA Tour. I helped start the PGA Tour.’”

More: Norman details severity of Mickelson’s comments

Nicklaus was a 73-time winner on Tour, only trailing Sam Snead and Tiger Woods, who both have 82 victories.

Despite a handful of players requesting releases to play in the first LIV Golf event, last week Golfweek broke the news that the Tour had denied releases for the likes of Robert Garrigus, Lee Westwood and Phil Mickelson and the rest who made requests.

Tuesday, May 17, is the deadline by which players must request waivers to compete in the second Saudi event, scheduled for July 1-3 at Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club in Portland, Oregon.

PGA Tour policy does not permit releases to be granted for events played against its own schedule in North America, so no applications for that tournament were expected to be granted.

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Brennan: Greg Norman’s comments show he’s become despicable epitome of unabashed greed

If we as a society have any sense of collective outrage left in us, Norman as a pitchman should be finished. Done. Gone.

A long time ago, Greg Norman was a very good golfer with a flashy nickname who was best known for losing major tournaments in the worst way possible.

Today, he is something else entirely: the despicable epitome of unabashed greed, a man apparently with neither soul nor conscience who just uttered one of the most reprehensible sentences ever heard in the world of sports.

As he fielded questions about the 2018 murder and dismemberment of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi on Wednesday at a media day for his Saudi-backed LIV Golf’s inaugural event in London next month, Norman said this:

“Look, we’ve all made mistakes and you just want to learn from those mistakes and how you can correct them going forward.”

That’s the quote, word for word, according to The Times of London. “We’ve all made mistakes,” Norman, 67, said about the country and the man — his business partner — who ordered the kidnapping and assassination of another human being.

Human rights organizations and intelligence services have said that Saudi crown prince Mohammed bin Salman sanctioned the killing of Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2, 2018. Bin Salman is chairman of the Saudi government’s Public Investment Fund. That fund is bankrolling Norman’s LIV Golf.

If we as a society have any sense of collective outrage left in us, Norman as a pitchman, figurehead and aging public figure should be finished. Done. Gone.

His golf tour funded by Saudi blood money should join him. Finished. Done. Gone.

Dec 11, 2020; Naples, FL, USA; Greg Norman greets players on the first hole during the QBE Shootout at the Tiburon Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Chris Tilley-USA TODAY NETWORK

Any golfer who still talks about playing in tournaments on the Saudi series — to date, that’s the likes of Phil Mickelson, Sergio Garcia and Lee Westwood — should be ostracized and punished for their selfishness and arrogance. Any sponsor still hanging onto those players should cut them loose. Finished. Done. Gone. Why not? This is that bad. The golfers know better, yet they cannot stop themselves from wanting to take money from the worst among us.

The Saudi squad of Mickelson, Garcia and Westwood has sought releases from the PGA Tour to play in LIV Golf events. This week, the Tour denied its members permission to play in the London tournament, Golfweek’s Eamon Lynch reported.

Mickelson hasn’t played competitively since his Norman-esque comments in February trying to explain why a guy like him would want to join a tour like the one being run by the Saudis.

“They’re scary (expletive) to get involved with,” Mickelson said, according to author Alan Shipnuck. “We know they killed Khashoggi and have a horrible record on human rights. They execute people over there for being gay. Knowing all of this, why would I even consider it? Because this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to reshape how the PGA Tour operates.”

It was terrible when he said it, but paired with Norman’s comment, it looks even worse now. My goodness, how history will judge these people. Mickelson apologized and disappeared, but his quote speaks for itself in all its cravenness: “A once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”

These multi-millionaires want to be freed from the Tour that has made them so rich so they can get richer being associated with this: On March 12, Saudi Arabia put 81 men to death in a mass execution.

Norman was asked about that by journalists Wednesday in London and answered by saying he didn’t want to be bothered thinking about it.

“I got a lot of messages but quite honestly I look forward,” he said. “I don’t look back. I don’t look into the politics of things. I’m not going to get into the quagmire of whatever else happens in someone else’s world. I heard about it and just kept moving on.”

For decades, Norman was called “The Shark” because of his blond hair, rugged profile, aggressive play and Australian roots. It always seemed like the perfect nickname. And it still is. Just remove “the” and replace it with “a.”

A shark, through and through.

Christine Brennan writes columns on national and international sports issues for USA Today. She’s also a commentator for ABC News, PBS NewsHour and National Public Radio, and the best-selling author of seven books. Click here to see more of her recent work.

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‘We’ve all made mistakes’: Greg Norman downplays the killing of journalist while promoting Saudi-backed golf league

“They’re not my bosses. We’re independent. I do not answer to Saudi Arabia.”

Two-time major champion Greg Norman said the new Saudi-backed golf league that he’s CEO of is not attempting to “sportswash” Saudi Arabia’s human rights abuse.

Norman – chief executive of the LIV Golf Invitational, funded primarily by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund – appeared to downplay the 2018 killing of Saudi Arabian journalist Jamal Khashoggi during a media day on Wednesday. The LIV Golf Invitational is scheduled to have its inaugural event next month at Centurion Golf Club outside of London.

“Everybody has owned up to it, right?” Norman said, according to London-based newspaper The Times. “It has been spoken about, from what I’ve read, going on what you guys reported. Take ownership, no matter what it is. Look, we’ve all made mistakes and you just want to learn from those mistakes and how you can correct them going forward.”

Norman, 67, shared similar comments during an interview with Sky Sports when asked about Khashoggi and other human rights abuses by the Saudi Arabian government, including the mass execution of 81 people in March.

“It’s reprehensible what happened with Khashoggi. Own up to it, talk about it,” he said. “I’m not going to get into politics, I don’t know what the Saudi government does. I don’t want to get into that. Every country has a cross to bear.”

Norman, who won the British Open in 1986 and 1993, said LIV golf is non-political and is not associated with Saudi Arabian crown prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud.

“They’re not my bosses. We’re independent. I do not answer to Saudi Arabia. I do not answer to MBS (Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud),” he said. “I answer to my board of directors, and MBS is not on that. Simple as that.”

Norman, however, said Saudi Arabia is undergoing “a cultural change” through golf.

“The generation of kids that I see today on the driving range, they don’t want that stigma going on into generations and their kids,” he said. “They want to change that culture and they are changing it. And you know how they’re doing it? Golf.”

Norman’s comments come after the PGA Tour denied its members permission to play in the Saudi-funded golf tournament in London next month. The denials were sent to players who had sought permission late Tuesday afternoon.

It had been expected that the PGA Tour would grant waivers for the LIV Golf Invitational event near London because of a precedent allowing players limited releases for overseas events. (All members are required to seek a conflicting event release to compete in non-Tour events.)

However, it is thought the decision is based on a belief that the event in the U.K. is effectively part of a rival series. LIV Golf announced a schedule of eight tournaments with plans for more to come.

The first LIV Golf Invitational is scheduled for June 9-11 at Centurion Golf Club outside of London, with a 48-man field competing for a $20 million purse over 54 holes. The winner gets $4 million — to date the richest prize in golf — and last place gets $120,000.

The Associated Press and Golfweek’s Eamon Lynch contributed to this report.

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Greg Norman’s LIV Golf Invitational Series announces new events for 2023-2025

Ten events are scheduled for 2023, with more to come in 2024 and 2025.

The first year of the LIV Golf Invitational Series – the Greg Norman-led and Saudi Arabia-backed entity that plans to rival the PGA Tour – will feature an eight-event schedule in 2022 with plenty more to allegedly come in the next year years.

On Monday afternoon LIV Golf announced its 2023-2025 schedule, with 10 events planned for next year and 14 events slated for 2024 and 2025 in the Asia Pacific, the Middle East, Europe and North America. Official dates and locations were not announced.

“We have a long-term vision and we’re here to stay,” said Norman, the CEO and commissioner of LIV Golf, via a release. “We’re going to grow the game, give more opportunities to players, and create a more entertaining product for fans.  We believe in adding new experiences and energy to golf, and that includes building out our future schedule in more global markets. We’re creating an entertaining product that will increase golf participation and attract new fans across a broader global footprint. We realize it won’t happen overnight, and we’re excited for the opportunities LIV Golf will add to the game as we continue to grow.”

According to the release, “Schedules will never compete with the Majors, international team events or heritage events so players will always be able to make their own choices about where to play.”

The new series was announced in March and will feature 54-hole, shotgun start tournaments with $255 million in prize purses. The first event for 2022 is slated for June 9–11 at the Centurion Golf Club in London.

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Rejected! Greg Norman’s written request for special exemption into 150th British Open denied

Past champions are only exempt into the championship until age 60.

Being a former two-time Champion Golfer of the Year doesn’t go as far as it used to, at least not for Greg Norman.

The winner of the 1986 and 1993 British Opens, Norman had his written request for a special exemption into the 150th Open at St. Andrews denied by the R&A, according to Australian Golf Digest, who spoke with him on Wednesday.

“I’m disappointed with their decision, particularly given it is the 150th Open,” Norman said. “I have been a staunch proponent of the R&A since 1977 and a proud Champion Golfer of the Year – twice.”

Past champions are only exempt into the championship, which dates to 1860, until age 60, or have won the championship in the previous 10 years to be exempt from qualifying. Norman, who last played in the Open in 2009 at Turnberry, reportedly had filled out his application to play in the tournament last month and requested a special exemption.

“I think I can still get in,” Norman said at the time. “It’s the 150th. I’m a past Open champion. I love St. Andrews. If there’s a moment in time that I would consider going back and teeing off one last time, maybe this is it. I’m filling out my entry form now, I think I’m going. I think I can still get in.”

Australia’s Greg Norman hugs the Claret Jug after winning the British Open Golf Championship, Sunday, July 18, 1993 at Royal St. Georges golf club, Sandwich, England. Norman came back, beating old nemesis Nick Faldo with a record score and acquiring his second British Open golf championship.

The R&A quickly rebuffed the idea, and apparently weren’t swayed by Norman’s written request – no truth to the rumor it began, “Surely, you jest.”

“We have replied to him,’’ a spokesman for the R&A said. “There is no change to our position.’’

Norman, 67, could still sign up for qualifying, but he implied that a past champion should receive special treatment. There is, indeed, some precedent for special exemptions. The R&A granted one in 2015 to five-time winner Tom Watson to make a fond farewell at St. Andrews. Mark Calcavecchia, the 1989 Open champ who is 61, received an exemption this year after what should have been his final British Open was canceled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and he was sidelined with an injury last year.

The 150th Open is set to begin on July 14.

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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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‘Guys had money in their pockets’: Greg Norman says Phil Mickelson’s comments made players leave Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf Invitational series

Norman also said two former world No. 1s have registered for LIV Golf’s first event in London.

In an interview with ESPN, Greg Norman unearthed new details about his Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf Invitational series, as well as the damaging effects of Phil Mickelson’s controversial comments.

The two-time major champion and CEO of LIV Golf Investments said his 14-event upstart league was ready to go back in February, the same week Alan Shipnuck published Mickelson’s “scary motherf—ers” quote in a story for the Fire Pit Collective.

“Quite honestly, we were ready to launch on the Tuesday or Wednesday of Genesis,” Norman told ESPN. “We had enough players in our strength of field, or minimal viable product, ready to come on board. And when all of that happened, everybody got the jitters, and the PGA Tour threatened people with lifetime bans and stuff like that.”

“There’s no question (Mickelson’s comments) hurt,” Norman said. “It hurt a lot of aspects. It hurt the PGA Tour. It hurt us. It hurt the game of golf. It hurt Phil. So yeah, across all fronts. It wasn’t just specifically to us. But it definitely created negative momentum against us.”


Lynch: Three major championships will be cheapened in this season of Saudi sportswashing


Norman told ESPN at least 15 of the world’s top 50 players had committed to LIV Golf a week after SI.com’s Bob Harig reported that 15 of the world’s top 100 players had registered for the first event at Centurion Golf Club in London, June 9-11.

“To this day, we still have players under contract and signed,” Norman said of the players committed to the eight-event series. “The ones who wanted to get out because of the pressure of the PGA Tour gave back their money and got out. Guys had money in their pockets.”

More than 200 players registered for the first event, according to Norman, including two previous world No. 1s. Mickelson’s agent confirmed his client was one of lot to register, saying last week that Mickelson had also registered for the PGA Championship – where he’s the defending champion – and the U.S. Open.

“He’s always going to have an open door,” Norman said of Mickelson. “It’s going to be his decision, his decision only. He’s got a few things he has to work out himself, obviously, with the PGA Tour and where he wants to go with them and how he wants to go with them. I can’t read Phil’s mind because I haven’t spoken with him. From our perspective, I’m always going to be consistent in that I respect Phil. I respect what he’s done for the game of golf, and he’s always going to have an open door to any golf tournament he wants to go play as far as I’m concerned.”

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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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