Ari Emanuel shared some interesting opinions on Saudi Arabia while discussing LIV Golf.
Ari Emanuel, the chief executive officer of Endeavor – the parent company of UFC as well as talent agencies IMG and WME – recently joined Freakonomics Radio and discussed how the company considered a $1 billion investment in LIV Golf.
According to Emanuel, Phil Mickelson and Bryson DeChambeau made an approach to talk about funding, and Endeavor held internal discussions for a proposed $1 billion investment in LIV Golf, which is now financed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.
Thanks to Endeavor’s ties throughout professional golf, as well as Emanuel’s relationship with PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan, the plans for the investment fell through.
“We’re all connected in golf,” Emanuel said. “And (the PGA Tour) said, ‘Please don’t do it.’ So we stopped. I’m friends with Jay. We have a lot of business with Jay. I don’t want to hurt Jay.”
“I said to Jay, ‘We’re pulling out. But you have got to figure out an economic solution here because … it’s going to force you,’” Emanuel continued. “And he did. To his credit, I think Jay did an incredible job.”
LIV Golf is currently wrapped up in an antitrust lawsuit against the PGA Tour, and the U.S. Department of Justice is also investigating the Tour for anticompetitive actions with regard to LIV.
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LIV Golf has long been criticized as a way for Saudi Arabia to sportswash its human rights record. The Kingdom has been accused of wide-ranging human rights abuses, including politically motivated killings, torture, forced disappearances and inhumane treatment of prisoners. Not to mention members of the royal family and Saudi government were accused of involvement in the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist and Washington Post columnist, at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in 2018.
Emanuel said he doesn’t have a moral stance on LIV being funded by the PIF and he isn’t concerned about sportswashing.
“I haven’t really thought about it. I have enough on my plate,” he said. “They’re doing what they’re doing.”
Emanuel said he once met with Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to discuss a deal and called him “as charming as could be.”
“He’s incredible,” Emanuel gushed. “He had this whole vision, bringing entertainment and movies back. And he wanted to spend $30 billion in entertainment. Well, I can do math, $30 billion, I mean, it’s money. And I thought his vision was incredible.”
Just seconds later Emanuel was quick to cover his comments by adding the following: “But let’s be very clear about something. I’m not defending what they did. You know, I’ve had a brother that’s been in two White Houses. Every country does bad things. They just don’t do it in an embassy.”
With the GIECO Nationals boys basketball tournament approaching, get a preview of the eight teams competing for the championship.
The GEICO Nationals boys basketball tournament is set for another star-studded showdown between some of the best teams in the nation. Between the eight teams competing, there are 71 players listed on 247Sports’ recruiting rankings, which averages out to the entire starting lineup, plus at least a few guys coming off the bench.
The eight teams who will compete are Paul VI (Va.), Link Academy (Mo.), IMG Academy (Fla.), Prolific Prep (Calif.), AZ Compass Prep (Ariz.), Long Island Lutheran (N.Y.), Sunrise Christian (Kan.) and Montverde (Fla.).
To get you up to speed before the prestigious tournament, here is a quick rundown of each team. The quarterfinals tip off on Thursday at noon.
The company self-admittedly “provides consultancy and agency services to accelerate the digital performance of the biggest names in sport” and has worked with everyone from the NBA and NFL to the Green Bay Packers and FC Barcelona. In 2021, Seven League became the digital arm for IMG Media and will now be integral to the game of golf due to the management company’s renewed and expanded long-standing partnership with the R&A.
“We are delighted to expand our partnership with IMG and to leverage their expertise on a deeper level as we continue to evolve as an organization,” said Martin Slumbers, Chief Executive of The R&A. “Enhancing our media and digital expertise, evolving our partnership program, ensuring our championships continue to be world-leading and diversifying our business are key to our long-term commercial success. Our purpose is to ensure that golf is thriving 50 years from now and this partnership will help us open up a whole new range of opportunities.”
The relationship between the R&A and IMG goes way back to the Mark McCormack era, and for 50-plus years IMG has viewed the R&A as one of its most prestigious clients. The two are now locked into an ambitious 10-year partnership that, starting this month, will see IMG provide digital services powered by Seven League, evolve the R&A’s production and content offerings as well as distribute international media rights.
“We’ve really focused particularly in the last year or two in how our services need to evolve in order to cater for the changing landscape in media, the changing landscape in sport and how best to serve our most important clients,” said President of IMG Media, Adam Kelly, who has been with the company for 22 years. “Where we’ve expanded has been creating a solution that really looks at the whole business from the perspective of the fan, and how we engage with the audience, and how we develop and build value.”
For the first time, IMG has embedded a team – Seven League – to put dedicated staff within the R&A to work as a resource and provide bandwidth to “supercharge” the R&A’s strategy. The expanded partnership allows for IMG and Seven League to do what they do best, which will ensure the R&A gets to focus on what it does best.
“From an RNA perspective, as we expand and deepen the relationship with IMG, it allows us to leverage all of the expertise and the enhanced capability and ultimately drive commercial success and commercial performance,” added Neil Armit, Chief Commercial Officer of the R&A. “It’s our commercial performance and the revenues that are generated that are used to fund our investment back into the development of the sport.”
The R&A previously announced it was aiming to invest $200 million into golf over a 10-year period from 2017-2026. For Kelly, working not just with a property, but the sport itself makes the partnership all the more important.
“I think that’s what’s so interesting about the positioning for the R&A as an organization is that they have a responsibility to grow the game,” explained Kelly. “It’s not just like some others about a quick return on their investment or otherwise, it’s about building the game and building value for the sport itself.”
The emergence of LIV Golf, entertainment golf locations such as Topgolf and PopStroke and the booming number of online influencers are all examples that point to an everchanging golf landscape, one that Kelly views as ripe for new entrants.
“There’s always competition. I mean, this is an area that’s ripe for challenge, whether it be on the tournament side or player side, everybody in the sport is having to sprint in order to keep up with the pace of change,” he explained. “But I see that we’re in a golden age of sport. And in the battle for attention, that is the latest Netflix show versus the metaverse versus anything else, you’ve got to find an ability to cut through that noise. Live sport does that better than anything else. ”
So what can fans expect? Seven League has the capability to help enhance products like shot trackers or “live from the range” segments, as well as innovative new ones. The R&A is in active discussions in the virtual reality space and is looking into things like a VR Open, where users would play one of the courses on the Open Championship rota, and blending archival moments to give fans a chance to play a famous shot using VR.
With Endeavor Streaming also now in the mix, the direct-to-consumer concept will be an area of consideration going forward.
“I think it’s a longer term plan for us, where we certainly see the benefits of starting to enter into direct-to-consumer, but more of a global kind of free service, as opposed to an immediate pivot into a subscription or a pay-per-view model,” explained Armit, who noted how Endeavor provides extra value to light up dark and distressed markets with alternative options.
New gadgets and lofty plans for commercial growth aside, Armit was clear on one point: the R&A is most focused on ensuring it reinvests the money for the benefit of making golf more accessible, appealing and inclusive in the future.
“I can’t think of anything more exciting than to try and transform something that’s so long-standing, and yet has got so much potential to improve,” added Kelly. “A lot, a lot more to come here.”
Here’s a recap of how all of the top 25 teams in the country did in Week 4.
The top team in our Super 25 rankings was idle Friday night, as 5-0 Mater Dei (Calif.) had the week off. Meanwhile, No. 2 St. John Bosco (Calif.) cruised to a 65-point win and third-ranked St. Frances (Md.) held off Dutch Fork (S.C.) in the biggest game of the week, 26-7.
The next three teams on the list (Buford, Central and St. Thomas Aquinas) also came out on top, but No. 7 Bergen Catholic (N.J.) suffered their first loss of the 2022 season, as did our No. 17 team Grayson (Ga.).
Here’s a recap of how all of the top 25 teams in the country did in Week 4.
R.J. Nemer left his career as an estate tax attorney to found ICON Sports Management.
AKRON — In the four times R.J. Nemer has reinvented himself, his decision initially walked hand in hand with doubt.
“You’re like, ‘Am I in the right place? Was this the right thing? Is this the right pivot? Can I do this?’” Nemer said.
But when the former sports agent recently moved into the University of Akron College of Business dean’s suite, validation greeted him at the door.
On the wall outside hangs a plaque designating it “The Edward G. Elias Office of the Dean.”
“I walked in and saw that and suddenly it occurred to me this is where I’m meant to be,” Nemer said. “It’s about as full circle, it’s about as poetic as you can view a career journey.”
Akron-born Eddie Elias, a 1951 UA graduate who passed away in 1998, founded the Professional Bowlers Association. A lawyer, he also operated Eddie Elias Enterprises and represented athletes and entertainment celebrities. With a golf client list that included Tommy Bolt, Chi Chi Rodriguez, and Fuzzy Zoeller, Elias was Nemer’s idol. Nemer worked with Elias’s daughter, Rainy, at the agency after Elias suffered a stroke in 1995.
“He was who I wanted to be when I grew up. He was my inspiration for pursuing a sports agency,” Nemer said in a Jan. 29 phone interview.
When he saw the plaque, Nemer immediately took a picture and texted it to Rainy Elias Staniszewski.
“My hand was shaking a little bit as I was texting,” Nemer said. “It’s something that I will see every day and will look at as a reminder to take a minute, stay entrepreneurial, to keep with UA’s mission. It’s special. It’s overwhelming. It’s meaningful. It’s inspiring.”
Staniszewski got tears in her eyes when she saw the photo.
“I said, ‘No way. It’s not coincidence. That feeling of that connection is still alive,'” she said in a Jan. 29 phone interview from Palm Beach Gardens, Florida. “I was thinking about how truly happy my father would be to know this.
“My father loved the University of Akron with all his heart. I feel like knowing that R.J. is there as a dean, it makes me feel as if he’s carrying on Eddie’s spirit and keeping my father’s memory alive. It’s just so exciting. I felt very emotional, but warm feelings at the same time because I feel comfort in knowing that.”
With business administration and law degrees from UA, Nemer achieved his dream to follow in Elias’ footsteps. Nemer abandoned his career as an estate tax attorney in 1998 to found ICON Sports Management. In 2015, he sold ICON to William Morris Endeavor/IMG and headed its global golf brand out of its Cleveland office. In December 2019, he accepted a position as chief marketing officer for MAI Capital Management in Cleveland.
But eventually, Nemer wanted to teach. When a friend texted him about the UA opening, he took another leap and applied, knowing he was an unconventional candidate. He left MAI on Jan. 28 and started at UA on Monday hoping to put Elias’ favorite quote into action.
In his office, Nemer said Elias had a piece of paper under the glass top of his marble desk that read, “Genius is eternal patience,” words that came from Michelangelo.
“Nothing inscribed. Not gold-plated. Just a quote. I think about that quite often,” Nemer said. “I remember feeling that as I was starting my agency. I was the quintessential outsider in golf, which is very much a closed circle that heavily values pedigree. I didn’t grow up at the right country clubs, I didn’t play golf at the right schools. But I remained patient.
“Patience is not doing nothing. Patience is just nose to the grindstone, working as hard as you can, but being patient for the results and it paid off. I guess as I now look at this job in academia, I’m not part of the circles. I don’t have the pedigree to say I’ve published X amount of research papers. I know that I will need to work really hard, stay tenacious, listen twice as much as I talk, and be patient for the results to shine through.”
Starting this fall, UA will have an undergraduate major in sports business and another in sports analytics, both operating under the department of management in the College of Business. Nemer’s sports connections set him apart from the other three finalists, all associate deans from around the country.
As the search firm went through what Nemer said was “close to 100 applicants,” he encountered one issue. It needed a reference from a boss, and Nemer essentially had none for 20 years. At IMG, he reported to a Hollywood agent in Beverly Hills, California, who signed off on his quarterly financial reports.
So Nemer put his fate in the hands of a golfer he managed. He chose his second client, Matt Gogel, over others more well-known.
A former Nike Tour player, Gogel brought Nemer his first PGA Tour victory at the AT&T National Pro-Am in 2002. Now playing the PGA Tour Champions, which stops at Akron’s Firestone Country Club in July, Gogel gave Nemer part of his purse, an Omega Constellation watch.
“Nobody had ever given me anything that big, that expensive, that decadent in my life. That was a big deal,” Nemer said. “With a note and all he wrote was, ‘R.J., you are the real champion,’ which was really sweet but not really true.”
Gogel was surprised to learn Nemer still has the watch.
“R.J. is a little bit of a renaissance person. He likes nice things. I’m thinking, ‘I think he’d like this more than I would,’” Gogel said Sunday in a phone interview from Kansas City. “It was not even a second thought. I didn’t know it would mean that much to him. I’m glad it does. He’s done a lot more for me than I’ve been able to do for him.”
Gogel said he was honored to give a recommendation for Nemer.
“R.J. is one of those refreshing people in a world where sometimes people can take an edge and be misleading,” Gogel said. “His organizational skills are top-notch. He doesn’t get flustered. His advice and the way that he handles sticky situations are a great asset for the university.
“I still have things where I go, ‘What would R.J.’s approach be here?’ because he’s so calm and calculated where I’m kind of knee jerk. His favorite words to me always were, ‘Calm down now, Matt, calm down.’ I might not even be riled up about anything. He just takes a very calm approach, and he’s a winner.”
After his first victory, Gogel recalled being offered a contract from a friend working for a global golf brand that was higher than the norm for a player at his level. He turned it down.
“I said, ‘I can’t sign that.’ He said, ‘Why not?’ and I said, ‘Because R.J. has already set me up with a couple other companies and they’re going to pay me a lot more.’ He about fell out of his chair,” Gogel said. “He said, ‘R.J.?’ He was a one-man show. I said, ‘I’ve been telling you for two years, this is the greatest person you’ll meet.’
“They got to know each other and became good friends. This person didn’t trust agents, always thought they were out to kind of get the biggest deal that they could. R.J. is just not like that. In a sharky business, he was not that type of person. He was upfront, he was honest.”
Gogel had a similar experience last year at an outdoor restaurant in California. He overheard a conversation between six husbands and wives and Nemer’s name came up.
“It was everything that I wish people could hear. He would never sell himself,” Gogel said of Nemer. “They glowed about in that business there’s never been a guy like R.J., as honest … and look what he’s able to do and now he’s turned around this company. That’s what we all want, to be a good person, and that’s what R.J. is.”
Gogel said in his recommendation that his brother-in-law attended Harvard Business School and cited what he told him was the most memorable part of his Ivy League studies.
“The thing that he found the most compelling was the guest speakers, whether it be Bill Clinton, all the way down to leaders of Fortune 500 companies. R.J. has those contacts,” Gogel said. “I’m thinking if I’m a student, I’d be the most excited about learning from the best, and R.J. can bring those types of people in who have experienced real-world businesses, from startups to running big companies. That’s just a tremendous asset Akron will have.”
Nemer said Ohio University has one of the top sports management programs in the country, but he wants UA to compete. When the program launches this fall, Nemer is eager to bring in speakers, which will include agents, corporate executive vice presidents with sports connections, team owners or business heads and ESPN personalities. He wants to set up UA students with internships, perhaps cultivated during meet-and-greet sessions.
“He’s just like my dad where he treats everyone alike,” she said. “He will be there and involved and talking to everybody and having an open-door policy. I can see him being so approachable.
“He can do anything. He’s such an entrepreneur, just like my father. He’s got the personality, he’s got the connections, he’s got the energy, and he wants this. When he wants something, he just goes after it.”
If doubt creeps in again as Nemer starts down another unfamiliar path, he can look at Elias’ plaque, which some would call a God wink.
“I read that book, the whole thing about no coincidences, and I’m a believer in it,” he said. “I think my life has been full of them, so I’ve been pretty lucky that way.”
Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney hit the recruiting trail Thursday. Swinney was spotted at IMG Academy (Bradenton, Fla.), as he had yet to make his “in-home visit” with Clemson’s IMG commits. He posed for a picture with former Clemson running back …
Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney hit the recruiting trail Thursday.
Swinney was spotted at IMG Academy (Bradenton, Fla.), as he had yet to make his “in-home visit” with Clemson’s IMG commits. He posed for a picture with former Clemson running back Terrence Flagler, who is now the running backs coach/offensive coordinator for the IMG post-graduate team.
Campbell joins four-star athlete Keon Sabb as the second IMG defender to decommit from Clemson, following the departure of Brent Venables to Oklahoma.
With six days remining until the early signing period, that leaves four-star cornerback Daylen Everette as the lone, remaining Clemson commit from IMG.
As The Clemson Insider previously reported, Clemson’s coaches are expected to be making their rounds on the recruiting trail in The Sunshine State on Thursday. TCI has confirmed that Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney and defensive …
TCI has confirmed that Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney and defensive coordinator/linebackers coach Brent Venables will be at Jesuit High School (Tampa, Fla.) to visit with three-star linebacker commit Wade Woodaz.
Woodaz (6-2, 205) verbally committed to Clemson on Thanksgiving Day, becoming the 14th prospect to offer their pledge to the Tigers in the 2022 recruiting class.
While in the state of Florida, Swinney and Venables are also expected to head to IMG Academy in Bradenton to visit with three commits in the 2022 class — four-star athlete Keon Sabb, four-star defensive end Jihaad Campbell and four-star cornerback Daylen Everette.
In addition to his visit(s) with Clemson commits, Swinney will be traveling back to The Palmetto State to make an in-home visit with wide receivers coach Tyler Grisham. The two will head to Irmo (S.C.) to visit with Dutch Fork four-star wide receiver Antonio Williams, his mother, Courtney, confirmed to TCI.
Williams (6-0, 180) was offered by Clemson prior to the team’s 48-27 win over Wake Forest and announced the offer he’d been waiting on surely thereafter.
As Clemson looks to add another receiver to its 2022 recruiting class, Williams appears to be the team’s current top target.
Time to get the latest Clemson apparel to show your Tiger pride. Order your officially licensed Clemson gear right here!
The Clemson Insider checked back in with the cousin of a Clemson legend. Just like his cousin before him, Winston Watkins, Jr. is making a name for himself down in Florida. Though he’s just a freshman in the Class of 2025, Watkins is already playing …
The Clemson Insider checked back in with the cousin of a Clemson legend.
Just like his cousin before him, Winston Watkins, Jr. is making a name for himself down in Florida. Though he’s just a freshman in the Class of 2025, Watkins is already playing for IMG Academy’s (Bradenton, Fla.) National Team.
Sammy Watkins’ season with the Baltimore Ravens is currently underway, but that hasn’t stopped him from giving some motivational advice to his younger cousin.
“He’s been telling me to stay focused, stay dedicated and keep getting good grades because if I don’t get good grades, I won’t be able to make it anywhere,” Watkins told TCI. “It’s hard work. You got to have hard work to make it. Some people don’t work at all that have a lot of talent…if you work hard, you can get anything you want in life.”
And Sammy would know.
Though he hasn’t heard from them since he camped at the Dabo Swinney Camp, Watkins understands the slow-played approach that Clemson takes to recruiting. He’s also been able to see it through the lens of his roommate and close friend, Carnell Tate, who is being recruited by Clemson and wide receivers coach Tyler Grisham.
First off, there are not many freshmen who can say they’re playing at the level Watkins is.
“It’s been pretty good,” he said. “I’m glad to be able to play with all these great players. It’s a blessing, honestly. A lot of kids can’t be in the position I’m in and do what I do. I feel like I’m at the best level of any high school level you can play on.
Before he arrived at IMG, Watkins received offers from Texas A&M, Florida State, Georgia Tech and Central Michigan. He picked up an offer from the University of Florida and has spoken with Penn State after he arrived in Bradenton.
While Watkins has some impressive Division I offers himself, he gets to play with some of the best players in the country every single day.
“Every day I’m going up against the best of the best,” Watkins said. “If I don’t have a dog fight with them, I ain’t getting better. Every day I get better with them.”
Iron sharpens iron.
“They teach me things that I don’t even really know, just from being a more mature, older person in life,” he said when asked what he’s learned from his teammates. “They teach me some things about the game, real life, all that, especially my roommate, Carnell. He teaches me a lot.”
As mentioned above, Tate’s recruitment has allowed Watkins to take a step back and learn from the 2023 four-star receiver, but also compete with him.
“It’s kind of like an inspiration for me because I look up to him,” Watkins said. “He does great things on the field and off the field. His grades look great. He’s like a great role model for me. He’s just shown me the right way to go.”
Time to get the latest Clemson apparel to show your Tiger pride. Order your officially licensed Clemson gear right here!