Report: A tech CEO/golf nut is living the high life (even sponsoring the Dubai Desert Classic) while his employees go without pay

The CEO played in the JP McManus Pro-Am and has a membership at the Vaquero Golf Club.

The Dubai Desert Classic has become one of the more high-profile events on the DP World Tour, using a strategy of luring top professional golfers through lucrative guaranteed appearance fees.

The website for the event — which was won in 2022 by Viktor Hovland — lists Slync.io as the current corporate naming sponsor. The San Francisco-based logistics technology company took over after Omega’s 12-year run with the event concluded in 2021.

Slync.io is a firm that, according to its releases, combines industry expertise, software solutions and digital platforms to solve challenges in global logistics.

But while the CEO of the upstart firm has been enjoying the good life — complete with an appearance in the recent JP McManus Pro-Am and a membership at the expensive Vaquero Golf Club near Dallas — the almost 100 employees of the company have had long gaps without paychecks, according to a shocking story on Forbes.com.

From the story:

Over the past 18 months, while his company was running out of money and struggling to raise funding or attract new customers, Kirchner had bought a private jet valued at $15 million, joined an exclusive Texas country club, purchased luxury cars, invested in a European tech startup and attempted to buy the English football team Derby County.

Chris Kirchner plays his tee shot at the 10th hole during Day Two of the JP McManus Pro-Am at Adare Manor on July 05, 2022, in Limerick, Ireland. (Photo by Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images)

According to Forbes, Kirchner had been selling TVs for Best Buy just a few years ago, but his rocket-like rise to a perceived perch atop the tech world allowed for a newfound lifestyle that included the membership at Vaquero, which is ranked as one of the best private courses in Texas, according to Golfweek’s Best’s state-by-state list.

The initiation at the club, which includes a Tom Fazio-designed course, is $175,000 with annual dues over $15,000, according to one report.

Slync also became aligned with pro golfers, and the Dallas Stars of the National Hockey League.

From the Forbes piece:

With the Goldman-led cash infusion, Kirchner sought to parlay his love of golf—and sport more broadly—into a business focus of Slync. Even though there seemed to be little correlation between a logistics tech company and the PGA, Slync began sponsoring professional players like Justin Rose and Albane Valenzuela. The company signed a multimillion-dollar sponsorship agreement with the NHL ice hockey team Dallas Stars. Kirchner told employees the sponsorships were part of the company’s new go-to-market strategy. “Execs don’t buy software from websites,” one employee recalled Kirchner telling him. “They buy it based on relationships and experiences.” (Rose, Valanzuela and the Dallas Stars did not respond to a request for comment.)

During the summer of 2021, he hosted a group of employees at the Vaquero, where he bragged about playing golf with Saudi princes and flying to exotic places on his private jet, according to an employee who was there. “The lifestyle that he was living just didn’t seem real,” says one former employee.

According to the piece, Slync is paying $40 million over five years to become the chief sponsor of the Dubai Desert Classic and while Kirchner is allegedly in the process of selling off his jet and other assets, the tournament sponsorship appears to be cemented. As part of the sponsorship, Slync will receive TV commercials and an executive retreat.

Kirchner told GulfNews.com prior to last year’s event that the deal to sponsor the Dubai Desert Classic came together quickly.

“We got into golf recently with our first player endorsements and I enjoy the game personally on an amateur level and wanted to get into the game on a sponsorship level and be part of the community,” Kirchner said in January. “That was step one, and then — through some casual conversations about previous sponsors pulling out and if the Dubai Desert Classic would be something of interest to us or even worth a conversation. It really only became more concrete around the Masters in April last year, when we discovered this would become a Rolex Series event — one of the elite events on the DP World Tour.”

The rest of the story is linked here.

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Photos: Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy, Bill Murray, more at 2022 JP McManus Pro-Am at Adare Manor in Limerick, Ireland

The JP McManus Pro-Am is a two-day, 36-hole charitable event which has raised more than $145 million.

The JP McManus Pro-Am is a two-day, 36-hole charitable event which has raised more than $145 million in its previous five stagings.

Adare Manor in Limerick, Ireland, site of the 2027 Ryder Cup, is the setting for the pro-am which features some of the game’s top stares, men and women, as well as leaders of industry, musicians, actors and comedians.

Tiger Woods is there, his first public golf action since the third round of the PGA Championship. Rory McIlroy is there as well. Musician Niall Horan and actor/comedian Bill Murray are in the field. PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan and DP World Tour Commissioner Keith Pelley are also participating.

The event will be streamed from 9 a.m.-2:30 ET on Peacock on Monday and Tuesday, with coverage replayed at 7 p.m.-12:30 a.m. both days on Golf Channel.

Check out some photos from the event.

Photos: Adare Manor ready for JP McManus Pro-Am in Ireland, with Tiger Woods in the field

Check out the photos of Adare Manor, where Tiger Woods tees off Monday and Tuesday.

With all the talk of who might be playing where and on which tour lately, it will be like good old times to watch Tiger Woods – remember him? – tee off in the lap of Irish luxury Monday and Tuesday in the JP McManus Pro-Am.

The charitable pro-am, which has raised more than $145 million in its previous five stagings, will showcase Adare Manor, site of the 2027 Ryder Cup over a parkland-style course that doesn’t play like an Irish links but that does focus on extreme levels of lavishness.

Woods, who hasn’t put his game on display since the PGA Championship in May, joins an entry list that is a mix of players from around the world, including LIV Golf signees as well as PGA Tour entrants. Bryson DeChambeau, recent U.S. Open winner Matt Fitzpatrick, Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka, Rory McIlroy, Collin Morikawa, John Rahm, 2022 Masters winner Scottie Scheffler and 2022 PGA Championship winner Justin Thomas are listed in the field that includes 11 of the top 12 in the Official World Golf Ranking. The tournament also will host a slate of celebrities that includes Bill Murray and Mark Wahlberg.

The event will be streamed from 9 a.m.-2:30 ET on Peacock on Monday and Tuesday, with coverage reshown at 7 p.m.-12:30 a.m. both days on Golf Channel.

Founded in 1990 at Limerick Golf Club, the JP McManus Pro-Am was started to raise money for charities in the mid-west region of Ireland. Roger Chapman won that first playing of the event. The then-European Tour got involved for the second playing in 1995, and Paul Broadhurst and Richard Bozall shared the trophy. The event continued to grow, and Woods won the third playing in 2000.

Tiger Woods plays a shot on the 18th hole during the first round of The JP McManus Pro-Am at Adare Manor on July 5, 2010 in Limerick, Ireland. (Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

In 2005 the event was moved to Adare Manor, with Irishman Padraig Harrington earning the trophy. In 2010, Darren Clarke won at Adare Manor. The sixth playing of the event had been scheduled for 2020, but COVID restrictions pushed it back to this year.

Adare Manor was built in the early 1800s and changed hands numerous times over the past two centuries, with Irish businessman JP McManus purchasing the giant house, the 840-acre grounds and amenities in 2014. He has invested heavily in turning the property into one of the most lush and luxurious resorts in the country.

The Golf Course at Adare Manor was built by Robert Trent Jones Sr. in 1995, and as part of the resort’s overall redevelopment the course was renovated by Tom Fazio to reopen in 2018. It ranks No. 35 on Golfweek’s Best list of top modern courses in Great Britain and Ireland, and it was the site of the Irish Open in 2007 and ’08. It originally was slated to host the Ryder Cup in 2026, but COVID pushed each following Ryder Cup back a year.

Check out the photos below to get an idea of the scope of Adare Manor.