Brooks Koepka withdraws from PGA Tour’s Travelers Championship amid reports of LIV Golf involvement

Koepka withdrew amid reports of his involvement with LIV Golf.

Brooks Koepka accused media members of putting a black cloud over the U.S. Open by talking about the LIV Golf Invitational Series, and just a week later he did the same to the PGA Tour’s Travelers Championship.

Amid reports of his involvement with the Saudi-backed, Greg Norman-led breakaway LIV Golf series, the PGA Tour announced late Monday night that Koepka had withdrawn from this week’s Tour stop at TPC River Highlands.

Previous reports suggested that Koepka would make his debut on the new circuit at its second event next week at Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club in Portland, Oregon. The four-time major champion joins the likes of Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau, Patrick Reed, Phil Mickelson, and Abraham Ancer as the big names to jump from the PGA Tour.

Koepka’s younger brother, Chase, has already committed to playing for LIV Golf and tied for 33rd a few weeks ago at the debut event in London, walking away with a check for $150,000.

Golfweek’s Riley Hamel contributed to this report.

[vertical-gallery id=778275068]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Lynch: A standout U.S. Open steels us for turbulent days ahead

The 2022 U.S. Open might be recalled as one of the last majors of “before times.”

BROOKLINE, Mass. — Given the times, there could have been no more fitting venue for the 122nd U.S. Open than The Country Club, one of American golf’s five foundational pillars, associated in perpetuity with a man who did actually grow the game despite never competing for a nickel, and all during these waning weeks of golf as we’ve known it. Appropriate too that the championship was held 10 miles from the site of the Boston Tea Party, when aggrieved merchants rose against an imperial power, though Samuel Adams didn’t require guarantees from a foreign power before signing on to his rebellion.

This Open deserves to be remembered for all the right reasons: the transcendent performance of Matt Fitzpatrick, the magnificent old architecture holding its own against modern power, the enthusiasm of fans in a sports town that had been too long deprived of a major. That’s what it will be remembered for, in time. But it might also be recalled as one of the last majors of “before times,” when the structure of the professional game still resembled what it had been for a half-century or so.

The coming days and weeks threaten a radical upheaval in golf as more players opt for money and comfort over morals and competition, as the PGA and DP World tours scramble to align schedules, purses and priorities to retain the most elite talent, and as the major championships mull their power and how it might be best deployed, if at all. Careers and legacies were shaped at The Country Club. The shape of golf going forward will be molded in nondescript conference rooms and lawyers’ offices, beginning Tuesday morning 96 miles southwest of Brookline in Hartford, Connecticut.

More than 100 players will attend a meeting at which the PGA Tour will share more details on its plans to ring-fence assets (commercial and human) from the Saudis’ fragrant embrace. It won’t be marketed as such—there’ll be talk of upgrading products, growing opportunities, and the like—but that’s what it is. Among the audience will be some Benedict Arnolds who have already chosen to ply their trade for royalty. At 2 p.m. ET, the Tour’s board will be gaveled in to debate and potentially ratify changes that commissioner Jay Monahan hopes will begin guiding his organization out of a perilous situation.

Monahan’s team is still working on and closely guarding the specifics to be presented Tuesday. Likely included is increased cooperation with the DP World Tour (though shy of a merger) and details on three highly lucrative, limited-field tournaments that will eventually anchor a new-look Fall (which Fall, is TBD). The events will be staged in Europe, the Middle East and Asia with purses to rival the LIV Golf riches. One is likely to be held in the Emirates, a development sure to have whatabouters hurdling furniture to tweet claims that it mirrors LIV Golf’s relationship with the Saudi regime. It doesn’t. The Emirates are no one’s idea of democratic beacons, but there’s a difference between working in a country and working for a country, though that’s assuredly a nuance too complex for some.

The PGA Tour isn’t the only party to this conflict we’ll hear from. LIV Golf is expected to announce more player defections ahead of its second event, scheduled for July 1-3 in Portland, Oregon. And higher pitch whining should be expected from players who’ve already bolted, who after years of being lauded now feel unfairly maligned for laundering a butcher’s bloodied bonesaw. Graeme McDowell got a head start on that, bemoaning a “smear campaign” by critics, whose ranks include Jamal Khashoggi’s widow, September 11 families, Amnesty International and many players he once shared a locker room with.

All of this will take place amid the prevailing miasma of rumor and innuendo about who’s jumping and for how much, who’s double-dealing and why, and on whose turf the chief executive of the DP World Tour lays his flaxen head at night. As ever, it will be difficult to discern business from bluster.

In most respects, it has been a very traditional U.S. Open: 156 competitors arrived at a celebrated course in varying states of optimism, all but one of them were ground down to the nubbin, and not one of those contending Sunday afternoon spared a thought or word for the number on the check (it was $3,150,000, enough to impress everyone bar Greg Norman, but then he never cashed a dollar check for finishing first in a major).

This Boston tee party showcased much of what has bound players and fans alike to this game: competition with meaning, championships with stature, and yes, money. But never in the reverse order of importance. In 25 days, we’ll do it again, as golf’s oldest major championship is contested over its oldest course. Given the times, that kind of permanence is something to be grateful for.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Charles Barkley on PGA Tour players taking LIV Golf money: ‘If somebody gave me $200 million I’d kill a relative’

Tell us how you really feel, Chuck.

Charles Barkley isn’t afraid to speak his mind. It’s one of the many reasons that after a Hall of Fame basketball career he’s one of the most popular sports analysts in the business.

During an appearance on the Pat McAfee Show on Friday, the 11-time All-Star and current analyst for TNT dished on the LIV Golf and PGA Tour controversy and supported players who took the money to join the Greg Norman led series that is funded by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.

“I want all the LIV guys on top of the leaderboard,” Barkley said of what he wants to see at this week’s U.S. Open. “I want to see the PGA Tour shaking in their damn boots. Listen, I’m not a religious dude but I want chaos this weekend at the U.S. Open.”

“I don’t judge other people. Listen, if somebody gave me $200 million I’d kill a relative,” Barkley joked before doubling down. “I’m serious. They’re saying Phil Mickelson got $200 million, Dustin Johnson got $150 million, for $150 million I’d kill a relative, even one I like.”

Unfortunately for Barkley, the players who joined the LIV series have largely struggled at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts, outside of Dustin Johnson and a few others. Barkley’s good friend Mickelson shot 78-73 to finish 11 over after 36 holes.

[listicle id=778255263]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Lynch: Rory McIlroy takes lead at U.S. Open, brushes off ‘conscience’ role: ‘I’m just being myself’

Rory McIlroy is both thoughtful in his reasoning and eloquent in his rejection when it comes to LIV Golf.

BROOKLINE, Mass. — The armchair analysts’ canon holds that the less intellectually inquisitive a player, the more successful he will be, that incuriosity (or, less generously, obtuseness) limits potential distractions. Dustin Johnson is often presented as exhibit ‘A’ for this specious argument, but there are ample examples of elite golfers who disprove the theory. One of them was atop the leaderboard after his first round at the 122nd U.S. Open.

For more than two years, and particularly in the last few weeks, Rory McIlroy has been anointed the conscience of the PGA Tour, a player who is both thoughtful in his reasoning and eloquent in his rejection when it comes to the Saudi-funded LIV Golf series. Other prominent players have stood with him in that—Justin Thomas, Jon Rahm, Will Zalatoris, to name but three—but it’s McIlroy who has largely become the apostolic leader of the resistance.

The incessant noise around LIV Golf—the sole topic of discussion at The Country Club this week, and every other week on Tour—has proven a distraction for many of those who have recently consummated their relationship with the Saudis, or who are still furtively flirting in the shadows. Dustin Johnson hasn’t been in contention (outside the Bonesaw circuit) since winning the Masters 19 months ago. Louis Oosthuizen has been in the doldrums since last summer, and will soon return to St. Andrews to mark 12 years since the only occasion on which he beat an elite field. Bryson DeChambeau is battling a balky body and balkier form. Those realities might not be unrelated to why the Saudi cash-out has appeal, of course.

The only people seemingly inspired to play better golf under the specter of LIV Golf have been its opponents. Thomas won the PGA Championship last month in a playoff with Zalatoris. Last weekend, McIlroy won the RBC Canadian Open and delivered le mot juste on the 18th green by noting that the victory—his 21st on the PGA Tour—moved him ahead of “someone else” on the all-time wins list, a phrasing that further illustrated how unspeakable Greg Norman has become.

The Saudi shenanigans surely didn’t enter the heads of Thomas or Zalatoris when they were competing at Southern Hills and it’s not impacting McIlroy at The Country Club. After his opening round 67, the Northern Irishman was asked if the kerfuffle outside the ropes gave him added incentive to make a statement inside. “Not really,” he said. “It’s been eight years since I won a major, and I just want to get my hands on one again.”

There’s a charming simplicity in McIlroy’s answer: a golfer focused only on trying to win a championship that will define his enduring legacy, not a man consumed with figuring out when to bolt for a rival tour, for how much, and at what cost to his reputation. Even those who aren’t planning to decamp to the deplorables can’t escape the grinding of the rumor mill.

“I heard you’re going,” a friend remarked to a top-10 player earlier this week.

“I’m not going anywhere,” he replied, shocked that his name was out there.

McIlroy’s performance Thursday, and that last week in Toronto, illustrated the difference between a simple mind and an uncluttered one. His game is in sublime shape, his family is stable, his professional pathway is clear, his goals are unchanged, his lawyers aren’t burning the midnight oil, and his conscience isn’t for sale. There are plenty of others in the locker room who’d be lucky to check a couple of those boxes.

His opening 67 marked the second consecutive fast start at a major for McIlroy, and continues to buck a trend that was becoming a burden. Too often he has found himself fighting off the back foot in majors. At the last two Masters, he opened over par with 73 and 76. At last year’s PGA Championship it was 75. There was a time when that habit was evident too at the U.S. Open, traditionally the most demanding of the big four: 80 at Shinnecock Hills in ’18, 78 at Erin Hills the year prior, 77 at Oakmont in ’16. But Thursday of ’22 was the fourth-straight Open that McIlroy has started with an under-par score, and he admitted it makes a huge difference to his mindset.

“You feel like you’re right in the tournament from the start of the week, which is nice,” he said. “I’m going into tomorrow with the mindset of let’s keep it going, rather than where is the cut line or whatever. If you don’t get off to a great start those thoughts start to creep in—okay, what do I need to just be here for the weekend? It’s certainly a different mindset when you get off to a good start, and yeah, I’ve just got to keep it going.”

After his round, McIlroy was asked how it felt to be placed on a lofty pedestal—not for his accomplishments but as the conscience of a sport facing a hostile takeover by sportswashers. He brushed it off. “I’m just being me. I’m living my life. I’m doing what I think is right and trying to play the best golf that I possibly can,” he said. “I wasn’t asked to be put here. I wasn’t trying to be in this position. I’m just being me.”

And for one day at least, being himself was better than being anyone else in the only place it matters in golf: on the leaderboard at a major championship.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Andy Ogletree failed to break 75 this week and made $120K: Here’s a full breakdown of the LIV Golf London payouts

The LIV Golf Series opener in London has wrapped and we have a complete list of payouts each player in the field earned this week.

It’s been a busy few days for the LIV Golf Series.

The breakaway league officially got underway this week in London at the Centurion Club. While the first event seemed like a success, the biggest news from the week may have been the additions they made to their roster.

Bryson DeChambeau, the 2020 U.S. Open champion, will be making the move to the Saudi-backed, Greg Norman-led league in a few weeks in Portland. Patrick Reed, the 2018 Masters champion, is making the change as well.

The big draw for LIV Golf is the sizable paychecks they deal out at the end of the week. Here is a complete breakdown of how much each player made in London.

Charl Schwartzel is 18 holes away from being first LIV Golf Invitational Series winner and a $4 million first-place prize

Charl Schwartzel expanded his 18-hole at the LIV Golf Series opener and enters the final round with a three-shot advantage.

Day two at Centurion Club is finished at the LIV Golf Series opener just outside of London. The Saudi-backed, Greg Norman-led league will crown its first winner Saturday. They’ll also hand over $4 million to whoever it is that comes out on top of this three-day, 54-hole tournament. Everyone in the field is guaranteed a payday in this no-cut contest.

Charl Schwartzel woke up with the lead and will go to bed Friday night with an advantage heading into Saturday’s final round thanks to a second-round 4-under 66. Hennie Du Plessis is solo second, three shots back. Peter Uihlein climbed the leaderboard during the second round thanks to a 4-under 66 effort. Uihlein is solo third and five back of Schwartzel.

Oliver Bekker is 3 under for the week and in solo fourth. Scott Vincent, Phacara Khongwatmai, Sam Horsfield, and Dustin Johnson are tied at 2 under and in fifth.

Phil Mickelson, one of the tour’s headliners, shot a 5-over 75 on Friday is tied for 26th along with Kevin Na, Matt Jones, Martin Kaymer and James Piot, among others.

The league is spearheaded by Greg Norman and backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, one of the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds.

[vertical-gallery id=778275924]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Report: Rocket Mortgage ends deal with Bryson DeChambeau over LIV Golf

DeChambeau won the Rocket Mortgage Classic in 2020.

Rocket Mortgage, headquartered in Detroit and the title sponsor of the PGA Tour event at the Detroit Golf Club, has ended its relationship with Bryson DeChambeau, who plans to play in the new Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf Invitational Series.

According to ESPN, Rocket Mortgage spokesperson Robert Emerson said the move is effective immediately.

The PGA Tour announced Thursday the 17 golfers playing in this week’s inaugural LIV event in London have been indefinitely suspended. DeChambeau is not in that number but is scheduled to play in the LIV event in the first weekend in July in Oregon, his agent told Golfweek on Wednesday.

The fourth annual Rocket Mortgage Classic, which DeChambeau won in 2020 and became a pitchman for the company soon after, is scheduled for the final weekend in July.

On Wednesday, the Golf Association of Michigan sent emails out to people announcing tickets were available for the Rocket Mortgage Classic, with DeChambeau as the cover person for the promotion.

The Public Investment Fund (PIF), the sovereign wealth investment fund of Saudi Arabia and one of the largest in the world, has backed and is financing LIV Golf Investments, the parent company of LIV Golf. As the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, Mohammed bin Salman is the head of the PIF. According to a declassified U.S. intelligence report released in February 2021, Salman approved an operation “to capture or kill” Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi inside a Saudi consulate in Istanbul, Turkey on Oct. 2, 2018.

2022 Memorial Tournament
Bryson DeChambeau plays his shot from the ninth tee during the first round of the 2022 Memorial Tournament. (Photo: Aaron Doster-USA TODAY Sports)

The Saudi government is accused of other human rights violations and has invested in Western athletic opportunities in an apparent attempt to improve its image, a practice known as “sportswashing.”

Players like Phil Mickelson and Dustin Johnson have reportedly agreed to nine-figure deals to play in the LIV events — aside from the prize money available — which far exceeds what players make on the PGA Tour. Reigning U.S. Amateur champion and former Michigan State golfer James Piot is also signed up for the new circuit.

It’s not clear how much DeChambeau has been offered.

Reports have surfaced that Rickie Fowler, whose relationship with Rocket Mortgage dates back further than DeChambeau’s, is considering a jump to the LIV tour.

USA TODAY Sports reporter Lorenzo Reyes contributed to this report. Contact Kirkland Crawford: kcrawford@freepress.com. Follow him on Twitter @HiKirkHere.

Once again, Rory McIlroy, Justin Thomas nailed their responses to LIV Golf Series news

Rory McIlroy, Justin Thomas and Scottie Scheffler all shared their thoughts on LIV Golf.

Since its inception, Rory McIlroy and Justin Thomas have wanted no part of the Saudi-backed LIV Golf Series headed by Greg Norman.

The LIV Golf opener is this week in London at the Centurion Club and news has been pouring out from across the pond including Dustin Johnson resigning his PGA Tour membership. Another headline has been Phil Mickelson’s return to the sport and his first time meeting the media since being away.

Meanwhile, McIlroy, Thomas, and Scottie Scheffler held press conferences Wednesday in Toronto ahead of the RBC Canadian Open at St. George’s Golf and Country Club. They were asked about players leaving the PGA Tour for the breakaway league.

Twilight 9 podcast: LIV Golf discussion | Canadian Open preview

“It’s not something that I want to participate in. I certainly understand the guys that have went,” McIlroy said. “I understand what their goals and their ambitions are in their life. I’m not, certainly not knocking anyone for going. It’s their life, it’s their decision, they can live it the way they want to. But for me I want to play on the PGA Tour against the best players in the world.

“I’m happy playing on the PGA Tour and I have a nice schedule that I can pick for myself,” he added later. “I can spend a lot of time at home with my family if I want to, prioritize the majors, and yeah, there’s nothing about my schedule or my life or my earning or anything that I would change.”

Thomas had this to say: “I don’t dislike D.J. now. I don’t think he’s a bad dude. I’m not going to treat him any differently. It’s like he’s entitled to choose as he wishes. And I think that the day and age that we live in now, it’s just so negative that you see it in everything. Sport, politics, whatever it is, it’s like if you disagree with someone you just feel that you’re entitled to like hate them and talk bad about them and just bash their decision, when everybody’s entitled to their own opinion, you know what I mean?”

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

11 things about Phil Mickelson’s first press conference since joining Saudi-backed LIV Golf Series

Phil Mickelson talks “sportswashing”, the PGA Tour, Ryder Cup, and did he really get $200 million to join?

Phil Mickelson made his first public comments since joining the Saudi-backed LIV Golf International Series.

While he sat on a stage alongside his fellow teammates of “Team Hi-Flyer” that he picked the night before during a player draft, Mickelson answered every one of the 26 questions during their group presser.

Mickelson has been in self-imposed hiding since February when his controversial statements on the PGA Tour and Saudi Golf League were published on the Fire Pit Collective.

Here are 11 things Mickelson addressed during his news conference  Wednesday ahead of LIV Golf’s debut event near London at the Centurion Golf Club.

Phil’s take on “sportswashing”

“I said earlier, I don’t condone human rights violations. I don’t know how I can be anymore clear. I understand your question, but again, I love this game of golf. I’ve seen the good that it’s done and I see the opportunity for LIV Golf to do a lot of good for the game throughout the world and I’m excited to be part of this opportunity.”

Pressed further, he added, “Nobody here condones human rights violations, and nobody here is trying to make up for anything.”

Why did he sign with LIV Golf?

“I’ve really enjoyed my time on the PGA Tour. I’ve had some incredible experiences, some great memories. I have a lot of strong opinions on things that should and could be a lot better. One of the mistakes I made is voicing those publicly. So, I will really make an effort to keep those conversations behind closed doors going forward. I think that’s the way to be the most efficient and get the most out of it.”

2022 LIV Golf London
Phil Mickelson adjusts his sunglasses during a press conference ahead of the 2022 LIV Golf Invitational Series event at The Centurion Club north of London. (Photo by Adrian Dennis/AFP via Getty Images)

What exactly he is apologizing for?

“I understand that many people have very strong opinions and may disagree with my decision, and I can empathize with that. But at this time, this is an opportunity that gives me a chance to have the most balance in my life going forward and I think will do a lot of good for the game.”

Is he banned from PGA Tour?

“I choose not to speak publicly on PGA Tour issues at this time.”

Will he play in 2022 U.S. Open?

“I will play next week at the U.S. Open. I’m looking forward to it.”

Why he won’t resign PGA Tour membership

“It’s because I earned it. I believe all players should have the right to play whenever or wherever they want, which is consistent with being an independent contractor. As a lifetime member, I’m not required to play 15 events. I don’t have to play any; I can play one. So, I don’t feel the reason to give that up.”

Future role in the Ryder Cup?

“Just like the PGA Tour, the Ryder Cup has provided so many relationships, friendships that have lasted a career and I’m hopeful to be part of the Ryder Cup going forward.”

Why not defend at PGA Championship?

“It was made clear to me through extensive conversations that I was able to play if I wanted to. I wasn’t ready to play and compete. I hadn’t practiced. I had played a couple rounds but I wasn’t sharp. I didn’t feel like I was ready. But it was made clear that I had the option to and I just chose not to. Just like the Masters. I certainly enjoyed watching it. I missed being there, but I didn’t have a desire to be there.”

2022 LIV Golf London
Phil Mickelson smiles during a pro-am ahead of the 2022 LIV Golf Invitational Series golf tournament at The Centurion Club north of London. (Photo: Adrian Dennis/AFP via Getty Images)

About that four-month absence

“I’ve had an awesome time. I had a four-month break from the game that I have not had from the game in over three decades. I have had an opportunity to spend time with my wife, Amy, a bunch and travel to parts of the world and spend time at a place we have in Montana skiing and hike in Sedona [Arizona], what a beautiful place that is, and it’s given me time to continue some of the work and therapy on some of the areas that I’m deficient in my life and given me time to reflect on what I want to do going forward and what’s best for me and what’s best for the people I care most about.

“This is an opportunity that allows me to have a balance where I can still be more present and be more engaged with the people I really care about and that’s why when I think about being part of LIV Golf I feel so good about it.”

Is LIV Golf all about the money?

“I don’t necessarily agree with your premise, but I think that the opportunity that it provides me to play, compete, bring the sport throughout the world, play less, and have a better balance in life on and off the golf course. I know that it gives me a lot of positives personally and professionally, and I believe it does the same for everyone else in the field.”

Did he actually get a $200 million sign-on fee?

“I feel like contract agreements should be private. But it doesn’t seem to be that way.”

[vertical-gallery id=778047768]

Bryson DeChambeau confirmed to join Saudi-backed LIV Golf Series, Patrick Reed reportedly expected to commit too

“As long as the best players in the world are playing the PGA Tour, so will I,” DeChambeau said in February.

LIV Golf reportedly is expected to announce that two more former major winners and top-ranked players are expected to join its ranks, perhaps as soon as its next event.

Bryson DeChambeau, the 2020 U.S. Open champion, has agreed to play in the next LIV Golf Series event in North Plains, Oregon, at Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club scheduled for July 1-3, his agent confirmed.

“Bryson has always been an innovator,” agent Brett Falkoff wrote in a text to Golfweek. “Having the opportunity to get in on the ground floor of something unique has always been intriguing to him. Professional golf as we know it is changing and it’s happening quickly.”

The John Deere Classic, where DeChambeau won his first PGA Tour title in 2017, is the PGA Tour event being held the same weekend as the LIV event in Oregon.

DeChambeau, No. 28 in the world, made his return to the Tour last week at The Memorial Tournament. He missed the cut, shooting 9 over through the first two rounds. He’s been dealing with multiple injuries, but wrist surgery had kept him sidelined since the Masters (where he also missed the cut).

On February 20, DeChambeau shot down the notion he was going to leave the PGA Tour for the Saudi-backed rival league spearheaded by Greg Norman.

“While there has been a lot of speculation surrounding my support for another tour, I want to make it very clear that as long as the best players in the world are playing the PGA Tour, so will I,” he said in a statement.

On Wednesday morning, Patrick Reed, who withdrew from the RBC Canadian Open on Tuesday, became the latest name reportedly in talks to join LIV. The 2018 Masters champion is expected to be added to the roster of LIV Golf Series players, according to the Telegraph.

Reed, in contrast to DeChambeau, has never come out in support of LIV Golf or dismissed the idea of ever making the move. It appears he’s made up his mind.

Reed is a nine-time winner on Tour and ranked No. 36 in the world. However, the last year has been tough for the 31-year-old. Since his solo 5th at last year’s Memorial Tournament, he’s finished inside the top 10 just twice in 26 official PGA Tour events.

This week, LIV’s opener is being played in London at the Centurion Club. Phil Mickelson made his return to the spotlight and Dustin Johnson had his first press conference since joining the league where he announced he has resigned his PGA Tour membership.

The Pumpkin Ridge event is the next on LIV Golf’s schedule, then a few weeks later, they’ll be in Bedminster, New Jersey, at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]