Report: Phil Mickelson, other LIV Golf players interviewed for Justice Department’s PGA Tour investigation

The timeline for the investigation remains unclear, but players have been interviewed.

Phil Mickelson is one of a handful of players who have been interviewed with regard to the United States Department of Justice’s antitrust investigation of the PGA Tour.

According to a New York Times report, Mickelson and fellow LIV Golf League players Bryson DeChambeau and Sergio Garcia have all been interviewed. The Justice Department reportedly met with PGA Tour lawyers earlier this week in Washington, D.C., but the timeline for the review remains unclear.

Last July news broke that the Department of Justice was investigating whether the Tour engaged in anticompetitive behavior against Greg Norman-led and Saudi Arabia-funded LIV Golf. The upstart circuit has long been criticized as another way for the Saudi government to sportswash its human rights record via its Public Investment Fund.

The DOJ has also looked into the Official World Golf Ranking and the close relationships between PGA Tour leaders and those who operate the Masters, U.S. Open and PGA Championship, which is being held this week at Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, New York.

From the Times report, “investigators have shown interest in the possibility that the Tour’s punitive approach threatened the integrity of golf’s labor market, which now includes a LIV faction that vocally argues that players are independent contractors who should be free to compete on tours as they choose.”

The Tour is currently being sued by LIV Golf for antitrust claims and has countersued both the PIF and its governor, Yasir Al-Rumayyan.

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Tiger Woods agrees with R&A decision to not invite Greg Norman to 150th Open Championship for his involvement with LIV Golf

It’s all very puzzling to Woods.

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland – Tiger Woods wouldn’t have invited Greg Norman to the 150th playing of the Open Championship at St. Andrews.

The 15-time major champion and three-time Champion Golfer of the Year agreed with the R&A’s decision to reach out to Norman, who is heading the Saudi Arabia-backed rival league called LIV Golf, to tell him his presence at the Celebration on Champions on Monday and the Champions’ Dinner on Tuesday was not welcomed. Norman did not journey to this seaside village.

“Greg has done some things that I don’t think (are) in the best interest of our game, and we’re coming back to probably the most historic and traditional place in our sport,” Woods said Tuesday after a practice round. “I believe it’s the right thing.

“I know what the PGA Tour stands for and what we have done and what the Tour has given us, the ability to chase after our careers and to earn what we get and the trophies we have been able to play for and the history that has been a part of this game. I know Greg tried to do this back in the early ’90s. It didn’t work then, and he’s trying to make it work now.

“I still don’t see how that’s in the best interests of the game.”

LIV Golf has disrupted the golf world order just two events into its existence. With exorbitant signing bonuses – some as high as $200 million – and $25 million purses, LIV Golf has lured away some big names and players from the PGA Tour – Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka, Sergio Garcia and many others.

LIV Golf will contest eight tournaments this year featuring team play, 54 holes, no cuts and shotgun starts.

PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan indefinitely banned players who jumped ship to LIV Golf from the Tour. This has led the Justice Department to investigate the PGA Tour for anti-competitive behavior and possible conspiracy to rig the Official World Golf Rankings against LIV Golf in its dealings with the league.

“About the players who have chosen to go to LIV, I disagree with it,” Woods said. “I think that what they’ve done is they’ve turned their back on what has allowed them to get to this position. Some players have never got a chance to even experience it. They’ve gone right from the amateur ranks right into that organization and never really got a chance to play out here and what it feels like to play a Tour schedule or to play in some big events.

“And who knows what’s going to happen in the near future with world ranking points, the criteria for entering major championships. Some of these players may not ever get a chance to play in major championships. That is a possibility.”

It’s all very puzzling to Woods.

“I just don’t understand it. I understand what Jack (Nicklaus) and Arnold (Palmer) did because playing professional golf at a Tour level versus a club pro is different, and I understand that transition and that move and the recognition that a touring pro versus a club pro is,” he said. “But what these players are doing for guaranteed money, what is the incentive to practice? What is the incentive to go out there and earn it in the dirt? You’re just getting paid a lot of money upfront and playing a few events and playing 54 holes. They’re playing blaring music and have all these atmospheres that are different.

“I can understand 54 holes is almost like a mandate when you get to the (PGA Champions) Tour. The guys are a little bit older and a little more banged up. But when you’re at this young age and some of these kids – they really are kids who have gone from amateur golf into that organization – 72-hole tests are part of it,” Woods said. “I just don’t see how that move is positive in the long term for a lot of these players.”

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Report: U.S. Justice Department investigating PGA Tour for antitrust violations against Saudi-backed LIV Golf

“We went through this in 1994, and we are confident in a similar outcome.”

The PGA Tour and LIV Golf are in a heavyweight title fight for the future of professional golf, and the Justice Department is watching closely ringside.

In a Monday report from Wall Street Journal, the PGA Tour confirmed the Department of Justice is investigating whether the Tour engaged in anticompetitive behavior against the Greg Norman-led and Saudi Arabia-funded LIV Golf Invitational Series. The DOJ declined comment while a spokesman for the Tour was confident, according to the Journal.

The upstart circuit has long been criticized as another way for the Saudi government to sportswash its human rights record. The series of events – eight this year and 14 next year – offer alternatives to the Tour, such as 54-hole, no-cut tournaments that offer mega-million signing bonuses and exorbitant prize funds, including $120,000 to last place.

More from the report:

Players’ agents have received inquiries from the DOJ’s antitrust division involving both the PGA Tour’s bylaws governing players’ participation in other golf events, and the PGA Tour’s actions in recent months relating to LIV Golf, according to a person familiar with those inquiries.

Such an investigation would ordinarily include the subject being instructed to freeze all relevant communications, both internal and with third parties.

In response to the challenges brought on by LIV golf, the Tour has increased its “strategic alliance” with the DP World Tour, enhanced prize funds for certain events and banned those who have played for the upstart circuit, which has hosted two events this summer with a third to come later this month at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster.

Critics have called into question the bans, as well as the policy of requiring players to request releases to play in tournaments opposite Tour events. Noted in the report, in 1994 the Federal Trade Commission looked into two Tour rules regarding golfers playing in non-PGA events without the commissioner’s permission and their appearance on televised golf programs, but stood down a year later.

“This was not unexpected,” said a PGA Tour spokesman to the Journal. “We went through this in 1994, and we are confident in a similar outcome.”

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Justice Department warns NCAA over transfer and name, image, likeness rules

At issue is the prospect of athletes being offered deals that college ADs say could be viewed as thinly veiled recruiting inducements.

The Justice Department’s antitrust division leader sent a letter to NCAA President Mark Emmert on Friday that expresses strong concerns about the association’s direction on rules regarding athletes’ ability to transfer and to make money from the use of their names, images and likenesses.

Proposed changes in both areas are scheduled to be on the agenda of Monday’s meeting of the Division I Council and Thursday’s meeting of the Division I Board of Directors.

But in the letter — a copy of which was obtained by USA TODAY Sports — Assistant Attorney General Makan Delrahim says one part of the NCAA’s prospective approach to regulating athletes’ involvement in name, image and likeness deals “may raise concerns under the antitrust laws.”

More generally addressing other rules that will remain in place, he wrote: “Ultimately, the antitrust laws demand that college athletes, like everyone else in our free market economy, benefit appropriately from competition.”

Delrahim took the additional step of addressing the NCAA’s desire for Congressional intervention now that six states have passed various name, image and likeness laws. The NCAA would like federal legislation requiring changes in the association’s name, image and likeness rules to include protection from legal challenges to the alterations it makes as a result.

“While the Division expresses no views on the need for any such legislation,” Delrahim wrote, “should Congress deem such legislative immunity necessary we would anticipate it will be the narrowest possible immunity and one that would contemplate a collective representation of college athletes’ rights as a condition of any such immunity.”

In an interview with USA TODAY Sports, Delrahim said that he wrote the letter to Emmert in connection with the upcoming NCAA meetings, as well as conversations between Justice Department officials and the NCAA that cover several years.

“Because we understand that the NCAA is considering changes to their rules,” Delrahim said, “we want them to benefit from the Antitrust Division’s views as part of our ongoing dialogue, so as to avoid any misunderstanding on what the law requires.”

Delrahim’s views on the NCAA are not new. He has expressed them in various forums as far back as 2018. He is an appointee who will be leaving the Justice Department just before the upcoming inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden. But his letter includes a closing reference to David Lawrence, a career official in the department who is chief of the Competition Policy and Advocacy Section. In the interview, Delrahim also expressed confidence in the likelihood of a continuity of approach to the NCAA by the Biden administration.

The transfer rule change would address the five remaining Division I sports in which athletes generally are prohibited from playing for one year if they change schools. Under the proposal, athletes in Bowl Subdivision football, men’s and women’s basketball, baseball and men’s ice hockey would no longer have to sit out the first time they change schools.

But the letter takes issue with other aspects of the transfer process that are set to remain in place, and Delrahim, referencing prior interactions between the department and the NCAA, wrote:

“Our expectation is that our engagement with the NCAA over its transfer rules will … result in the NCAA’s removal of unnecessary anticompetitive barriers that stand in the way of college athletes transferring between schools. Of course, the Division stands ready to enforce the antitrust laws if necessary.”

Athletes must notify their current school of their intention to transfer before contacting, or being contacted by, another school. And once athletes provide notice of their intent to transfer, NCAA rules allow schools to reduce or cancel their financial aid at the end of the ongoing academic term — or immediately if notice is given between academic terms.

“Thus,” Delrahim wrote, “college athletes must risk losing their current scholarship – not to mention alienating their coaches — in order even to explore the possibility of transferring to a new school.  The NCAA … should consider seriously whether these rules, taken together, unreasonably deter students from entering the transfer process and, as a result, leave college athletes without a competitive alternative to their current school.”

Delrahim’s letter uses equally strong language in addressing not only the NCAA’s proposed approach to name, image and likeness.

While the NCAA’s proposed changes would give athletes new and significant abilities to make money from their name, image and likeness (NIL) and other activities, they include various restrictions and would require athletes to disclose their name, image and likeness activities to what is described as “an independent third-party administrator.” While numerous details about this entity remain undefined, the NCAA’s required statement of rationale for rules change says the disclosure requirements will “ensure integrity of the recruiting process,” and “evaluate NIL activities for possible malfeasance.”

At issue is the prospect of athletes being offered deals that college athletics administrators say could be viewed as thinly veiled recruiting inducements.

Delrahim wrote: “Pursuing a goal of promoting amateurism does not insulate the NCAA’s rules from scrutiny under the antitrust laws. … The antitrust laws limit the NCAA’s ability to restrict competition among college athletes, coaches, and schools.  For example, if the NCAA adopted a rule that fixes the price at which students can license their NIL, e.g., based on what the NCAA determines to be a ‘fair’ market value, such a rule may raise concerns under the antitrust laws.”

In the interview, Delrahim expanded on this idea in the more specific context of the proposed third-party administrator.

“The devil will be in the details – who’s on that board and who they answer to. … because who appoints them and what their points of view are can be outcome-determinative,” he said. “While we applaud efforts to increase integrity in the process, we must be very careful to ensure that a board does not operate as a backdoor way to limit competition. You know, athletic directors’ and coaches’ salaries are not subjected to such a process. We want to ensure that the NCAA imposes only the narrowest form of competitive restriction that is necessary.”

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