‘Any investment into the game of golf is gigantic’: LIV Golf players react to $3 billion outside investment in PGA Tour

“What I can say is that any investment into the game of golf is gigantic, especially on their side,” said DeChambeau.

PLAYA DEL CARMEN, Mexico — The Strategic Sports Group’s $3 billion investment to partner with the PGA Tour to create a new for-profit entity was undoubtedly the golf news of the day.

Just seven months ago the Tour announced a framework agreement with the DP World Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund to create what we now know today as PGA Tour Enterprises. The Tour confirmed in a release on Wednesday that progress has been made in ongoing negotiations with the PIF on a potential future investment. That same release also stated that PGA Tour Enterprises allows for a co-investment from the PIF in the future, “subject to all necessary regulatory approvals.” In the original framework agreement, the PIF would’ve had the right of first refusal to any outside money if a deal was passed by the original deadline on Dec. 31, 2023 deadline.

A lot can change in seven months.

Given the PIF’s role as the financiers of LIV Golf, players were asked ahead of the 2024 season opener at Mayakoba’s El Camaleon Golf Course in Mexico about the new deal and their confidence level that the PIF would eventually join the PGA Tour Enterprises party, but even the always outspoken Bryson DeChambeau didn’t have much of any real substance to say.

“Look, I don’t know exactly how it’s all going to shake out, when it’s all said and done. I don’t know what it really means for the PIF’s position in it,” he said of the SSG investment. “What I can say is that any investment into the game of golf is gigantic, especially on their side.”

“You’re just going to see both entities continue to grow, and I hope at some point we’ll come back together. It needs to happen,” DeChambeau added. “I hope people can just put down their weapons and come to the table and figure it out because that’s what’s good for the game of golf and for fans in general. But like I said, any additional capital going into the game of golf is always positive. I’ve always said that.

“It may not be exactly what we all think it should be,” he continued, “but as time goes on, I think things will settle down in a positive way for both.”

“Yeah, that was really in the back of my mind, like really far back in my mind,” said LIV’s newest member Jon Rahm, who joked he was more worried about filling his roster for the 2024 season opener this week. “There’s a lot bigger people that are a lot smarter than me that are going to be worrying about that that actually have a say in it, and they should be thinking about it. I think we’re here to play golf, perform, and whatever comes, comes.”

DeChambeau is unsure whether the SSG news will push back or speed up the Tour’s discussions with the PIF, but did compliment Rory McIlroy for his recent comments on accepting the reality of Saudi Arabia’s investment in golf and that players who left for LIV shouldn’t be punished.

“I appreciate the sentiment that he is providing out to the public now. I think his words are from a much more neutral position as the likes of us over here at LIV have been since day one,” said DeChambeau, who was the last player to remove his name from the initial lawsuit against the PGA Tour. “I think it’s positive, what he’s saying now, and I appreciate that.”

“I’ve spoken to Rory a bit in the past week and back in December. That’s kind of along the lines of what he said to me. It’s not a surprise to hear him say that in the media,” added Tyrrell Hatton, who joined Rahm’s Legion XIII team. “Ultimately, I would like to still be able to play events on the other two tours. But we’ll see how all that works out.”

A three-time teammate of both McIlroy and Hatton in the Ryder Cup, Rahm echoed what Hatton had to say.

“I haven’t spoken to him a lot recently. But he might have had a change in thought process, as in maybe with some of the things he said in the past,” Rahm said. “I think he might be seeing that the landscape of golf is changing and at some point you need to evolve. So I think he might be seeing that, and everybody is entitled to their opinion, but it’s nice to have the support from a player the caliber of Rory, especially those Ryder Cup remarks he made early on. I think that’s an important statement for change to be said.”

While both sides of the professional golf aisle believe the game will be better when it’s united, they don’t seem to agree or even know how to get there. The SSG investment was a step forward for the Tour, and only time will tell if the PIF can get on equal footing.

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Caleb Surratt details journey leaving Tennessee, joining LIV Golf: ‘Conversations were a bit difficult’

“Myself more than anybody, just couldn’t be more excited for it.”

It wasn’t until three weeks ago it became official Caleb Surratt would join LIV Golf for the 2024 season.

The sophomore at Tennessee and reigning SEC individual champion had finished playing in the Jones Cup Invitational, which would be his final event as an amateur, though he didn’t know it then. He was spending time with his girlfriend when he received a call that would change his life.

He was joining LIV Golf and would be on the same team as Jon Rahm.

“It’s obviously been a whirlwind of events,” said Surratt, who was ranked 10th in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. “You go from moving out of your dorm room to competing with the best players in the world, and having two of them truly being your daily mentors on the golf course, it seemed like a big opportunity for me and my golf game, and of course everybody is going to be entitled to their opinion, but I have no doubt that this is what was best for me and my golf game and the future of my professional career.”

However, that doesn’t mean leaving Tennessee was easy for Surratt.

He was the best player on the Volunteers and a team leader. Last year, he became the first player in Tennessee history to earn first-team All-America honors. He was a member of the 2023 Walker Cup team and proven as one of the top amateurs in the world.

However, it wasn’t just Surratt who was making the decision.

“The conversations were a bit difficult,” he said. “I would say it was kind of tough to break the news because it’s a big change. I’m on a very highly competitive college golf team that I was the leader of, and to kind of have to step up and leave, it’s tough. One thing that I made very well a point was to not just break the news to them and say I’m leaving. It was more of including everybody that was close to me and on my team in my decision. It was a team decision. It was a group decision. It was not just Caleb Surratt saying what Caleb Surratt wants.”

When news dropped Tuesday of Surratt joining LIV Golf, Tennessee Golf’s social media accounts were one of the first to congratulate him on his move.

Surratt is not the first highly-ranked amateur to turn professional and join LIV Golf. David Puig and Eugenio Chacarra, the latter who won in LIV’s inaugural season, set the trail for top amateurs to join the breakaway circuit.

Come Friday, Surratt will tee it up at LIV Golf Mayakoba in Mexico on Rahm’s Legion XIII for his first professional start. Also on the team is Tyrrell Hatton, No. 16 in the world, and Kieran Vincent.

There have been plenty of changes in his life recently, but the foundations he built at Tennessee and before are guiding him in his newest chapter.

“I had all the support in the world from my teammates,” Surratt said. “I had all the support in the world from my coaches, and I think everybody sees how great of an opportunity this is, and myself more than anybody, just couldn’t be more excited for it.”

LIV Golf reports 3.2 million viewers for opening event in Mexico, a stark difference from early reports

More people watched LIV Golf’s opening event than previously thought, according to the circuit.

The Sports Business Journal shared the estimated LIV Golf Mayakoba and PGA Tour Honda Classic viewership from last weekend, and the early reports didn’t paint a pretty picture for the rival circuit.

On Friday morning, LIV Golf shared some new numbers that tell a different story.

Using iSpot, a TV ad measurement and analytics company, as well as CW and LIV Golf internal data, the upstart circuit financially supported by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund reported an audience of 3.2 million viewers across all linear and digital platforms for its season-opening event in Mexico. With its new TV deal, LIV airs in every U.S. market via CW affiliates and Nexstar stations and reported 1.6 million viewers on Saturday and 1.3 million viewers on Sunday.

LIV’s report also stated an average linear viewership domestically in the United States of more than 537,000, which it claims is more than the current season viewership average of the MLS (343,000), NHL (373,000) and the 2023 Australian Open men’s tennis final (439,000).

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It’s easy to make jokes about some of the programming on the CW, but LIV airing in every U.S. market was key for its development in 2023. If accurate, the reported numbers are another step forward, but let’s not forget this was LIV’s first event of the season, not to mention it compared its viewership to the season averages of three of the least-watched major sports in America.

That said, according to Nielsen, the CW’s weekend primetime national ratings were up 24 percent compared to the network’s weekend season-to-date average. With Friday’s opening round only available via live stream, LIV reported a 40 percent month-to-month increase in downloads of the CW app, as well as 350,000 views over its new app, LIV Golf Plus.

Long story short, more people reportedly watched the opening event than previously thought. Now LIV needs to keep them watching.

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Ratings for LIV Golf’s 2023 TV debut are in — and they aren’t pretty

“World’s Funniest Animals” outperformed LIV Golf Mayakoba.

LIV Golf League’s decision to debut its second season last week was no mistake. The Honda Classic on the PGA Tour was sandwiched between four designated events (WM Phoenix Open, Genesis Invitational, Arnold Palmer Invitational and Players Championship) comprised of the best players in the world.

Wanting no part of competing with either of those, LIV decided to go against the Honda Classic, hoping to capitalize on owning the stronger field between the two events.

It did not work.

LIV’s first event on The CW Network received 291K viewers on Sunday, according to Josh Carpenter of the Sports Business Journal.

The Honda Classic, on the other hand, reeled in 2.38 million.

The league financed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund has a long way to go.

For comparison, another CW program, “World’s Funniest Animals,” outperformed LIV Golf Mayakoba.

 

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2023 LIV Golf Mayakoba prize money payouts for each player and team

Charles Howell III took home $4 million for the individual win and led his Crushers GC to the $3 million team title.

Charles Howell III earned $42,025,458 during a PGA Tour career that spanned more than 20 years and 609 starts.

After just a handful of LIV Golf events, he’s already a sixth of the way there.

The 43-year-old won the 2023 LIV Golf season opener at Mayakoba’s El Camaleon Golf Course on Mexico’s Riviera Maya on Sunday at 16 under to earn the top prize of $4 million. Howell earned $2,991,000 over six starts last year and now has earned just under $7 million on the upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and financially backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.

Runner-up Peter Uihlein (12 under) will take home $2.125 million, with Branden Grace (10 under) earning $1.5 million in third. Even fourth-place Paul Casey (7 under) cleared $1.05 million for his efforts.

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Check out the prize money payouts for each team and player at LIV Golf Mayakoba.

LIV Golf Mayakoba individual prize money

Place Player Score Earnings
1 Charles Howell III -16 $4 million
2 Peter Uihlein -12 $2.125 million
3 Branden Grace -10 $1.5 million
4 Paul Casey -7 $1.05 million
T5 Brendan Steele -6 $887,500
T5 Cameron Smith -6 $887,500
T7 Pat Perez -5 $610,000
T7 Carlos Ortiz -5 $610,000
T7 Sebastian Munoz -5 $610,000
T7 Matthew Wolff -5 $610,000
T11 Graeme McDowell -4 $405,000
T11 Ian Poulter -4 $405,000
T11 Talor Gooch -4 $405,000
T11 Joaquin Niemann -4 $405,000
T15 Marc Leishman -3 $237,000
T15 Abraham Ancer -3 $237,000
T15 Mito Pereira -3 $237,000
T15 Scott Vincent -3 $237,000
19 Jason Kokrak -2 $220,000
T20 Kevin Na -1 $184,000
T20 Cameron Tringale -1 $184,000
T20 Dean Burmester -1 $184,000
T23 Sergio Garcia E $167,000
T23 Henrik Stenson E $167,000
T23 Matt Jones E $167,000
T23 Bryson DeChambeau E $167,000
T27 Phil Mickelson 1 $158,000
T27 Richard Bland 1 $158,000
T27 Brooks Koepka 1 $158,000
T27 Harold Varner III 1 $158,000
T27 Eugenio Chacarra 1 $158,000
T32 Anirban Lahiri 2 $151,000
T32 Thomas Pieters 2 $151,000
34 Danny Lee 3 $148,000
T35 Charl Schwartzel 4 $144,000
T35 Dustin Johnson 4 $144,000
T35 James Piot 4 $144,000
T38 Patrick Reed 5 $139,000
T38 David Puig 5 $139,000
40 Bubba Watson 6 $136,000
T41 Lee Westwood 8 $133,000
T41 Louis Oosthuizen 8 $133,000
43 Jediah Morgan 10 $130,000
T44 Bernd Wiesberger 11 $127,000
T44 Sam Horsfield 11 $127,000
46 Laurie Canter 12 $124,000
47 Chase Koepka 15 $122,000
48 Sihwan Kim 23 $120,000

LIV Golf Mayakoba team prize money

Place Team Score Earnings
1 Crushers GC -26 $3 million
2 4 Aces GC -17 $1.5 million
3 Torque GC -13 $500,000

LIV owns a 75 percent stake in each franchise and provided teams with an undisclosed amount of operating capital for the year. The teams are expected to largely run on their own dime this season, with team prize earnings going directly towards its day-to-day costs.

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Talor Gooch, Peter Uihlein tied for lead at LIV Golf Mayakoba after second day

The season-opening LIV Golf League event is up for grabs.

There’s a congregation of Oklahoma State Cowboys at the top of the LIV Golf leaderboard in Mayakoba.

Talor Gooch and Peter Uihlein are tied for the lead after the second round, sitting at 9-under 133. Gooch’s day included five birdies and no blemishes on his scorecard, and Uihlein had seven birdies, but he bogeyed two of his final three holes in the season-opening event for LIV Golf in Mexico.

Uihlein replaced Gooch on the 4Aces this season, with the latter going to play for the RangeGoats, and now they’ll be in the final group come Sunday.

Fellow former Cowboy Charles Howell III is third at 8 under. Meanwhile, Matthew Wolff, who won the NCAA individual national title for Oklahoma State in 2019 and the team title in 2018, is T-6 at 5 under.

LIV Mayakoba: Photos

Paul Casey, who led after the opening round, is T-4 at 6 under after signing for an even-par 71.

In the team competition, Bryson DeChambeau’s Crushers are at 14 under with Dustin Johnson’s 4Aces two shots behind.

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Jason Kokrak, Paul Casey share lead after day one of LIV Golf Mayakoba

Thomas Pieters, the newest member of LIV Golf, shot a 5-over 76.

LIV Golf League’s second season got underway Friday with the first round at Mayakoba in Mexico.

Smash GC’s Jason Kokrak fired an opening-round bogey-free 6-under 65 to earn himself the 18-hole co-lead. Crushers GC’s Paul Casey, the other player at 6 under, used eight birdies to also get to the top of the leaderboard.

Peter Uihlein, Carlos Ortiz and Talor Gooch all sit a 4 under, two shots back. Five players, including Dustin Johnson, are 3 under and three back. Cameron Smith is 2 under after day one while Phil Mickelson and Bryson DeChambeau opened with rounds of 1 over.

Thomas Pieters, the newest member of LIV Golf, shot a 5-over 76.

The shot of the day was delivered from Casey.

 

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