Peter Uihlein says he’s ‘freer, happier’ since joining LIV Golf Series. And much, much richer

“This is the first time in my entire career I’ve had a guaranteed place to play.”

DORAL, Fla. — Peter Uihlein had been grinding for more than a decade on the PGA Tour when he decided to reach out to Greg Norman. Though winless, Uihlein made a very comfortable living. But for an ultra-competitive professional athlete, frustration had set in.

“In reality is I wish I played better,” Uihlein said about the past four years. “I’m not denying that.”

Then came the conversation with the face of LIV Golf.

Uihlein, who has lived in Jupiter, Florida, for about a decade, says pursuing LIV Golf was not an easy decision and it was not just about the money. LIV offered an opportunity to break a mold — “I’ve always kind of done things differently” — and rejuvenate his career.

“Golf got stale for a lot of these guys and they’re able to let loose and enjoy the team and the atmosphere,” said Chelsea Uihlein, Peter’s wife.

Uihlein, 33, made just more than $4 million on the PGA Tour after turning pro in 2011. That was in 126 tournaments.

Since joining LIV, he has played in seven 54-hole events entering this week’s season-finale at Trump National Doral and earned more than $11.3 million, $7.3 million in prize money plus a $4 million bonus for finishing third in the season-long individual points standings.

“I didn’t get the $100 million or whatever the rumors you hear, the $50 million,” Uihlein said about his two-year contract. “So I knew that I needed to play well to make that kind of money. I’ve been fortunate to be able to do that.”

But the decision was not an easy one to make. Uihlein understood the reaction to attaching his name to a league that is financed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, a country with atrocious human rights violations.

Americans ‘do a lot of business with Saudi Arabia’

“There’s criticism to it, which is fine, everyone’s entitled to their own opinion,” he said. “The reality is we, as Americans, do a lot of business with Saudi Arabia.”

Peter warned Chelsea there would be backlash. But criticism is part of the gig. When Uihlein joined LIV, he was No. 311 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

“If you asked social media, I’ve been a terrible player,” he said.

Still, it all has been worth it, for many reasons.

“He just wasn’t seeing his full potential on the PGA Tour. It was really difficult, it was really risky. but I think it was the right decision,” Chelsea said Friday as Peter prepared for his head-to-head match with James Piot, which Uihlein won 5 and 3.

The season could not have been scripted any better for Uihlein. His game is the best it’s been in years and he cherished the team aspect. Especially his team.

Uihlein plays for Smash, which is captained by Brooks Koepka. Uihlein has known Koepka for about 16 years and when he moved to Jupiter, the two shared a house. Uihlein, who plays out of Medalist, was born in Massachusetts and went to high school in Bradenton.

When Koepka defected to LIV and was anointed a team captain, he surrounded himself with familiarity selecting Uihlein and his brother, Chase, along with Jason Kokrak.

“Known him for years … and obviously got closer and closer,” Koepka said of Uihlein. “It’s good to see him playing well and returning to capabilities that I know that he can do.”

Uihlein spearheaded Smash’s victory Friday over Niblicks on the Blue Monster, allowing them to advance to Saturday’s semifinals.

Koepka’s team advances, but Brooks loses

Smash won two of the three head-to-head matches, with the lone loss coming when Brooks Koepka who was easily handled by Harold Varner III, 4 and 3.

Eight teams remain in LIV’s season-finale with the champion being crowned Sunday. Each of the remaining teams are guaranteed of splitting at least $3 million. The winning team receives $16 million.

“I love it,” Uihlein said about the team events. “There’s interaction but you’re out doing your own thing. You’re out competing, you’re out trying to beat that person.”

Uihlein and Brooks Koepka were tied for the individual lead entering the 54th hole at the LIV Saudi Arabia event this month. At stake was the $4 million first place individual prize. After hitting their tee shots, Kokrak and Chase Koepka were being shuttled to scoring when Brooks called them over. He asked where the team stood.

After learning they had a five or six shot lead and guaranteed the $3 million first-place team prize money, Brooks and Uihlein returned to concentrating on beating each other.

The two went to a playoff, which Koepka won. Uihlein had to settle for the $2.125 million runner-up check.

Uihlein was asked what has changed with his game. He mentioned adjustments to his swing, working with Jason Baile at Jupiter Hills.

But then there was this:

“The other part of it is I’m happier,” he said. “That could play a little bit into it. I feel better. I feel freer, I feel happier. And then the reality is, this is the first time in my entire career I’ve had a guaranteed place to play for the next year or the following year. I’ve never had that in my career. I don’t know if that’s another reason but I’ve never experienced that.”

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Donald Trump to play in pro-am at LIV Golf 2022 season finale at Doral

The pro-am will not be open to the public.

When Donald Trump played in the pro-am leading up to the LIV Golf Series event on his course at Bedminster, New Jersey, his group was the only one with carts — most of them occupied by a large group of Secret Service that tailed the former president — he offered tips on how to play the course to Dustin Johnson and Bryson DeChambeau and several times he praised the course. Unprompted.

Expect the same Thursday with Trump scheduled to play in the pro-am the day before LIV’s final event of the season starts at Trump National Doral.

The pro-am is not open to the public.

Trump’s group will play 18 holes with two pros, one each on the front and back nine. He played with Johnson and DeChambeau at Bedminster in July and his group was 6 under, one stroke off the lead. The pros in Trump’s group at Doral will be determined Wednesday.

“It was an honor,” DeChambeau said following his nine holes with Trump in July. “I mean, anytime you get to play with a president, whether past or sitting, it’s just an honor, no matter who it is. Very lucky to have a relationship with him and he’s always been generous to me.”

Trump has aligned himself with LIV, the breakaway tour financed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, partly because of his disdain for the PGA Tour. Two of LIV’s eight events in its inaugural season will have been held on Trump properties and LIV’s schedule could include more Trump courses next season as it expands to 14 events.

In July, Trump told golfers on the PGA Tour to, “take the money now,” predicting the Tour would eventually merge with LIV Golf. Trump’s anger at professional golf stems from the PGA Tour moving its World Golf Championship event out of Doral and to Mexico in 2017 and the PGA of America moving the 2022 PGA Championship out of his club in Bedminster after the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection on the U.S. Capitol.

“All of those golfers that remain ‘loyal’ to the very disloyal PGA, in all of its different forms, will pay a big price when the inevitable MERGER with LIV comes, and you get nothing but a big ‘thank you’ from PGA officials who are making Millions of Dollars a year,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

Trump is an avid golfer who has played several rounds with Hall of Famers and legendary golfers at his courses in West Palm Beach and Jupiter. He is believed to have played more golf than any other president while in office. During his round at Bedminster he said, “there’s no other president that can hit it like I can,” according to DeChambeau.

“That’s the funny one he talks about all the time,” DeChambeau added. “You know, it’s true from what I’ve seen, what I’ve heard, obviously I haven’t played with other presidents, but he’s up there.”

DeChambeau was asked about Trump’s game.

“He’s actually a really good golfer,” he said. “He stripes it down the middle of the fairway and has good iron game and putts it pretty well.”

Hall of Famer Ernie Els, who lives in Jupiter, has played several times with Trump and was in Trump’s foursome in April when the former president made a hole-in-one at his course in West Palm Beach.

“He hits the ball better than I’ve seen any … I mean he’s 75 (now 76),” Els told the Palm Beach Post in April. “But he can really strike the ball. He makes good contact. He’s got a good swing.

“Like any amateur, you got to do the short game practice. I keep talking to him about his chipping. He’s a pretty good putter. Back in his day, he had to be a 4- or 5-handicap. Today, he’s probably a 10, 12.”

Trump was asked in July how many holes-in-one he’s had in his life.

“Seven. Seven, legitimately,” he said. “People say, ‘Oh wow,’ I legitimately have had seven.”

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