Jon Rahm takes shot at Official World Golf Ranking after LIV Golf pulled points application

Players continue to fail to address the OWGR’s main reason for not granting LIV points in the first place.

Jon Rahm didn’t know LIV Golf was still trying to earn Official World Golf Ranking points before the league withdrew its application on Tuesday, but that didn’t stop the Spaniard from once again calling out the ranking system.

In fact, the two-time major champion doubled down on his previous criticism of the OWGR ahead of this week’s LIV event in Hong Kong.

“I didn’t think it was a good system back then, and if anything, the more time that goes on, the more it proves to be wrong,” said Rahm. “If anybody in this world, for example, doesn’t think (Joaquin Niemann) deserves to be in the top 10 or doesn’t know that he’s a top player in the world, I don’t know what game you’re watching. We can tell. I think anybody who watches golf can tell who the best players in the world are, and obviously I don’t think the ranking is reflective of that right now to its entirety.”

LIV Golf CEO and Commissioner Greg Norman informed players of the decision to withdraw the points application via a letter on Tuesday. The original application was sent in July of 2022 and the OWGR initially denied points last October.

“We have made significant efforts to fight for you and ensure your accomplishments are recognized within the existing ranking system,” Norman wrote. “Unfortunately, OWGR has shown little willingness to productively work with us.”

When it denied LIV points, the OWGR claimed the league – which features a mostly-closed field of 54 players playing 54-hole, shotgun start, no-cut events – wasn’t able to be compared to the other 24 tours under its world ranking wing. Also stated to be of concern were the qualifying and relegation methods employed by LIV Golf.

“We are not at war with them,” Peter Dawson, chairman of the OWGR board, said to the AP. “This decision not to make them eligible is not political. It is entirely technical. LIV players are self-evidently good enough to be ranked. They’re just not playing in a format where they can be ranked equitably with the other 24 tours and thousands of players trying to compete on them.”

LIV Golf was displeased, to say the least, with the OWGR news and released a lengthy statement condemning the ranking system by saying it had lost trust and clarity by not rewarding LIV player performances. The statement, however, failed to address the reasons given in the original AP report as to why the application for world ranking points was rejected. Bryson DeChambeau did the same on Wednesday.

He said if the OWGR wanted to right the system then LIV should’ve been granted points more than a year ago when they partnered with the developmental MENA Tour, which also features 54-hole events.

“The cut thing — there’s numerous things they brought up, and it’s like, we can solve for all that, just tell us what to do, and nothing has gone — anyway, it is what it is, and at this point we just need to figure out how to get all the governing bodies to come together and figure out what the best system is for the game of professional golf moving forward,” said DeChambeau, who failed to mention the closed shop or pathways to the league.

“I just think what’s right is in the best interest of the game, and we should focus on having the best players at the majors, and continuing to have that around the game of golf is only important to growing the game of golf and to make the game of golf continue to be as relevant as it is now and even more in the future,” said DeChambeau. “What I think about it is we need to find a collective way, all the governing bodies, everybody, come together, sit down and figure this out, because we need to do this for the fans.”

The one point we can all agree on is that the major championships are better when all the best players are competing. No player or fan would say otherwise. As LIV players drop in the OWGR and past champions lose their exemption status, the responsibility will fall on events like the Masters and PGA Championship to reward players like Joaquin Niemann, who have gone out of their way to try to qualify.

“But our job shouldn’t be to make the rules or impose the rules or enforce the rules,” Rahm added. “We’re here to entertain, and it’s the governing bodies’ job to be doing this and be adaptable to the changing environment.”

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Will Zalatoris on the Official World Golf Ranking’s viability: ‘It kind of is what it is’

“Once we get to the majors, it will be really fun to have us all back together.”

Will Zalatoris is slowly gaining his form back.

The 27-year-old made his return to the golf world in December at the Hero World Challenge after missing most of back year following back surgery. In his latest start at the Genesis Invitational, he finished T-2, and he has slowly been trending in the right direction in all four starts this year.

He has gone MC, T-34. T-13 and T-2. He heads into the Arnold Palmer Invitational with plenty of momentum to take on Bay Hill in Orlando, and the tournament means a bit more to him with his connections to The King.

“Even though I never got to meet (Arnold Palmer), the guy’s meant a lot to me personally and my career and led me to Wake Forest,” Zalatoris said. “And even though it’s been a lot of — the guy’s meant a lot to my career — I met my wife at Wake Forest. So it’s just kind of a fun week to come here and spend some time with Amy (Saunders) and the family.”

In three starts at the API, Zalatoris’ best finish is a T-10 in 2021, his debut at the event.

As far as finding his form, Zalatoris said he thinks his body is ahead of schedule, and he’s slowly seeing his speed come back.

But the most interesting thing he said Tuesday in his pre-tournament press conference was in regard to the Official World Golf Ranking. Zalatoris was asked about the competition on the PGA Tour this season since the average ranking of winners (not including Nick Dunlap) is 73.

“Yeah, the competition is obviously very stiff, there’s no question about it,” Zalatoris said. “We’ve had quite a few first-time winners on Tour this year. You’ve got some tenured guys that are contending week in, week out. The official World Golf Ranking is what it is right now.”

And quickly, a follow-up was asked after Zalatoris’ answer regarding the OWGR. How viable is the ranking system, which Tuesday made further headlines after LIV Golf withdrew its application for points.

“You know, it kind of is what it is,” Zalatoris said. “You see what Joaquin (Niemann)’s done this year, and he’s 73rd in the world. I’m not a guy who is on the policy board or involved with those rankings, but the guy’s played some really good golf. I think, you know, having to get a special exemption from Augusta, you know, it’s just, there’s some really good players, and there’s some guys that have gone around the world and played really good golf and I think that’s something that, once we get to the majors, it will be really fun to have us all back together. But, I know that that’s kind of the utopian goal for all of us right now is to have the best players in the world play week in, week out.”

In the discourse between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf, plenty of conversation has revolved around world ranking points. Only four LIV players are ranked in the top 50, with three of those having won majors in the past two years. Niemann, who has won two of the first three LIV events of the year, is in two of the four majors (Masters and PGA Championship) in 2024 thanks to special exemptions and a third (Open Championship) thanks to a win on the DP World Tour.

However, Zalatoris wants the best players to play together every week again, even if he believes most of them still play for the PGA Tour.

“We’ll see what happens going forward,” Zalatoris said. “I don’t have the fix for it. I know some guys have voiced their opinions on it. I like staying out of that stuff. Right now, it’s in an interesting position, I’ll leave it at that.”

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How far have LIV Golf players fallen in the Official World Golf Ranking since they joined?

Now that LIV has given up on OWGR points, here’s how far players have fallen in the ranking since they joined.

The LIV Golf and Official World Golf Ranking saga is over. On Tuesday, LIV Golf CEO and Commissioner Greg Norman told players the league had withdrawn its application for OWGR points, ending a nearly two-year fight for accreditation.

The upstart circuit backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund initially applied for points in July of 2022 but was denied last October due to the inability to accurately compare LIV events – which features a mostly-closed field of 54 players playing 54-hole, shotgun start, no-cut events – to other tournaments on the 24 tours under the world ranking wing. Concerns about LIV’s qualifying and relegation methods were also noted in the decision.

LIV players have been plummeting in the ranking since they joined the league, putting their major championship futures in jeopardy. Here’s a look at the 56 players who have competed so far in 2024 and how their OWGR has fallen since they joined LIV Golf.

LIV Golf OWGR movement

Player OWGR before first LIV event Current OWGR Change in ranking
Cameron Smith 2 50 -48
Jon Rahm 3 3 0
Dustin Johnson 15 266 -251
Tyrrell Hatton 16 17 -1
Joaquin Niemann 19 76 -57
Brooks Koepka 19 30 -11
Louis Oosthuizen 21 103 -82
Abraham Ancer 22 173 -151
Paul Casey 31 755 -724
Bryson DeChambeau 31 182 -151
Kevin Na 34 972 -938
Talor Gooch 35 476 -441
Thomas Pieters 35 307 -272
Jason Kokrak 36 702 -666
Patrick Reed 39 105 -66
Adrian Meronk 42 51 -9
Harold Varner III 46 385 -339
Mito Pereira 50 145 -95
Cameron Tringale 55 677 -622
Sergio Garcia 57 645 -588
Dean Burmester 59 99 -40
Marc Leishman 62 418 -356
Richard Bland 67 456 -389
Matt Jones 69 424 -355
Phil Mickelson 72 147 -75
Sam Horsfield 74 710 -636
Matthew Wolff 77 782 -705
Lee Westwood 78 905 -827
Lucas Herbert 82 87 -5
Bubba Watson 86 1,612 -1,526
Scott Vincent 91 416 -325
Anirban Lahiri 92 350 -258
Ian Poulter 92 464 -372
Hudson Swafford 95 1,539 -1,444
Sebastian Munoz 98 457 -359
Carlos Ortiz 119 239 -120
Laurie Canter 119 199 -80
Brendan Steele 122 509 -387
Branden Grace 123 683 -560
Charl Schwartzel 126 344 -218
Charles Howell 169 1,180 -1,011
Pat Perez 170 1,192 -1,022
Henrik Stenson 173 278 -105
Martin Kaymer 215 3,363 -3,148
Wade Ormsby 265 582 -317
Danny Lee 267 672 -405
Kalle Samooja 313 343 -30
Peter Uihlein 327 503 -176
Graeme McDowell 374 697 -323
Kieran Vincent 412 399 13
Jinichiro Kozuma 501 540 -39
Andy Ogletree 1371 195 1,176
David Puig 1751 133 1,618
Caleb Surratt 1903 1,939 -36
Eugenio Chacarra 1,904 427 1,477
Anthony Kim N/A N/A N/A

Of the 56 players to tee it up so far this season, all but six have dropped in the ranking. Jon Rahm, who joined the league this year, has yet to move from No. 3. Anthony Kim, who made his long-awaited return to pro golf last week at LIV Golf Jeddah, isn’t listed in the ranking. Eugenio Chacarra, David Puig and Andy Ogletree have seen their ranking jump more than 1,000 places due to their performances on other tours and the fact they’ve been professionals for less than three years. Kieran Vincent has seen minimal movement in his ranking after he played his way into the league via the Asian Tour (which receives OWGR points) last season.

Martin Kaymer has struggled with injuries over the last few years and been dealt the largest drop of of 3,148 places since he joined as the 215th ranked played back in the summer of 2022.

Only four players are within the top 50: Jon Rahm (3), Tyrrell Hatton (17), Brooks Koepka (30) and Cameron Smith (50).

LIV makes its first appearance in Hong Kong this week, March 8-10, at Hong Kong Golf Club in Sheung Shui.

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LIV Golf withdraws application for Official World Golf Ranking points

LIV originally applied for points in July of 2022 and was denied points in October of 2023.

Last October, after more than a year of deliberation, the Official World Golf Ranking rejected LIV Golf’s application for world ranking points. On Tuesday, the league formally withdrew its application, which was originally sent in July of 2022.

“We have made significant efforts to fight for you and ensure your accomplishments are recognized within the existing ranking system,” LIV Golf CEO and commissioner Greg Norman wrote in a letter to players ahead of this week’s event in Hong Kong. “Unfortunately, OWGR has shown little willingness to productively work with us.”

When it denied LIV points, the OWGR claimed the league – which features a mostly-closed field of 54 players playing 54-hole, shotgun start, no-cut events – wasn’t able to be compared to the other 24 tours under its world ranking wing. Also stated to be of concern were the qualifying and relegation methods employed by LIV Golf.

“We are not at war with them,” Peter Dawson, chairman of the OWGR board, said to the AP. “This decision not to make them eligible is not political. It is entirely technical. LIV players are self-evidently good enough to be ranked. They’re just not playing in a format where they can be ranked equitably with the other 24 tours and thousands of players trying to compete on them.”

Commissioner Greg Norman and LIV Golf players have questioned the world ranking system from the jump and have been critical of the board members who may have conflicting interests when it comes to the upstart circuit backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. However, PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan and others all reportedly recused themselves from the LIV decision to avoid any such conflict.

From the AP:

The committee that rejected LIV’s application comprised leaders from Augusta National, the PGA of America, the U.S. Golf Association and The R&A, which run the four majors. The majors use the OWGR as part of their qualifying criteria.

The pathways to LIV Golf are few and far between, but the league did implement a promotions event last year which saw three players gain status. The leading player on the Asian Tour’s International Series Order of Merit also earns a LIV spot for the following season.

LIV makes its first appearance in Hong Kong this week, March 8-10, at Hong Kong Golf Club in Sheung Shui.

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LIV Golf players flock to Asian Tour event in search of world ranking points

The 2024 Masters is less than two months away, and the race for the OWGR top 50 is on.

We’re less than two months away from the first men’s major championship of the year, and the race to qualify via the Official World Golf Ranking is heating up.

One way to play into the 2024 Masters field is to secure a spot inside the top 50 of the OWGR the week before the event at Augusta National, April 11-14. PGA Tour players have seven more events to earn points, while the DP World Tour has five events on its schedule before the Masters. LIV Golf players, however, are running out of time.

This week, 21 of the 54 current players in the league led by Greg Norman and backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund have entered the Asian Tour’s first International Series event of the year in Oman. The International Series consists of 10 events – funded by LIV Golf – that offer significantly less prize money than LIV events. So why play? Under the Asian Tour wing, International Series events dish out OWGR points.

LIV Golf hasn’t been granted OWGR points despite numerous attempts (remember the MENA Tour alliance?), which has caused its players to plummet in the rankings over the last two years. Patrick Reed is 100th, Bryson DeChambeau is 169th and Dustin Johnson is 238th, to name a few.

Of the 21 LIV players in the Oman field, just three are currently inside the top 100: Lucas Herbert (80), Joaquin Niemann (81) and Dean Burmester (95).

“I think I have a different mindset for this year,” said Niemann after he won LIV’s season opener in Mexico earlier this month. “It kind of hurt me a little bit not being in the majors and I think also helped me to get motivation to kind of earn my spot back into the majors.”

Both Niemann and Burmester played their way into the 2024 Open Championship at Royal Troon via their Open Qualifying Series wins at the end of 2023, but a trip down Magnolia Lane may be out of reach. LIV has three events in the next seven weeks leading up to the Masters – Jeddah (March 1-3), Hong Kong (March 8-10) and Miami (April 5-7) – which makes any sort of top-50 push for the Masters not necessarily impossible, but certainly improbable.

The U.S. Open and Open Championship feature top 60 and top 50 exemptions, respectively, and while the PGA Championship doesn’t explicitly grant exemptions based on the OWGR, special exemptions are often given to players inside the top 100 to those who aren’t qualified through a set category.

Long story short, this week’s event in Oman is just the start of what will be a busy year for LIV players not already qualified for the majors.

LIV players in International Series Oman field

Player Current OWGR Ranking
Lucas Herbert 80
Joaquin Niemann 81
Dean Burmester 95
Louis Oosthuizen 137
David Puig 141
Mito Pereira 154
Abraham Ancer 165
Anirban Lahiri 309
Charl Schwartzel 329
Matt Jones 395
Eugenio Chacarra 411
Scott Vincent 413
Kieran Vincent 422
Sebastian Munoz 428
Jinichiro Kozuma 522
Peter Uihlein 629
Danny Lee 643
Branden Grace 715
Matthew Wolff 1,113
Carlos Ortiz 1,286
Hudson Swafford 1,786

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Official World Golf Ranking updates will impact PGA Tour’s signature events in 2024

One of the updates will see a greater percentage of points to top finishers in events with less than 80 players.

The Official World Golf Ranking has been a major talking point in the professional game for the last two years as LIV Golf has fought for inclusion within the system. While the league with 54-hole and no-cut events still isn’t eligible for points, the OWGR announced two updates to the system on Thursday, and one of the amendments would impact a league such as LIV (as well as the PGA Tour).

Two months after the OWGR rejected LIV Golf’s application for points, the governing board announced a change that would include a new points distribution curve for fields of 80 players or less which would award a greater percentage of points to top finishers in those events. In addition, points will no longer be distributed to players finishing in the bottom 15 percent of events that do not have a cut. When it comes to match play events, players who lose their first-round match or lose all matches in a pool format will no longer earn points.

The update will have an impact on the PGA Tour’s eight signature events in 2024, where fields will range from roughly 70-80 players. The three player-hosted invitationals (Genesis Invitational, Arnold Palmer Invitational and the Memorial Tournament) will feature a 36-hole cut to the top 50 and ties and any player within 10 shots of the lead. The other five signature events – The Sentry, AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, RBC Heritage, Wells Fargo Championship and Travelers Championship – will not have a cut.

In short, top finishers in all eight events will earn more points, while the bottom 12 or so players in the five no-cut events (15 percent of 80) won’t earn points.

OPINION: The ranking points row exposes what powers LIV Golf beyond Saudi cash — naked entitlement

The second update introduces a new multi-win benefit that provides a 60 percent bonus to players who win for a second time within a 52-week period, while a 70 percent bonus will be awarded to players who win three or more times.

“Based on extensive analysis following the changes implemented in August 2022, we recognized these two opportunities to further enhance the OWGR and to accurately evaluate performances of the world’s participating players on all eligible Tours,” said Official World Golf Ranking Chairman Peter Dawson via a release. “Adjustments to the Ranking are made after careful consideration, and we are confident that today’s updates will better position the OWGR for the future.”

The changes will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2024.

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Brian Harman zooms up OWGR and Golfweek/Sagarin rankings, Ryder Cup standings

A big win for Brian Harman means a big jump in all the rankings.

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A big win for Brian Harman means a big jump in all the rankings.

Now he’s in prime position to make captain Zach Johnson’s 2023 Ryder Cup team.

Harman, whose odds to win the British Open were 150-to-1, was ranked 26th in the Official World Golf Ranking heading into the 151st Open Championship at Royal Liverpool. After his first major championship victory, he checks in at No. 10 following Monday’s update.

In the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings, Harman was 44th a week ago, now he’s 34th.

In the FedEx Cup Playoffs standings, he’s up to No. 6.

The biggest number for him, however, may be the No. 3 next to his name in the latest Ryder Cup standings for Team USA.

Harman was 20th in the standings for the American squad but his British Open win vaulted him to third, behind Scottie Scheffler and Wyndham Clark and one ahead of Brooks Koepka. The top six guys on this list – Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay are Nos. 5 and 6 – earn automatic spots on the team. The next six (Nos. 7 through 12) will be captain’s picks.

In the aftermath of his win Sunday, Harman was asked about the Ryder Cup.

“I’m going to kick that can down the road a little bit. I’m going to enjoy this,” he said. “The next thing for me will be our [FedEx Cup] Playoffs, what I’ll be looking forward to.”

After 36 holes at Royal Liverpool, just after he shot a 6-under round to get to 10 under to take sole possession of the lead, Harman was asked: Do you see this week as your stage to make a case for the Ryder Cup team?

His reply last Friday night:

“I’ve spent I don’t know how many years chasing. … it always seems it’s right there at the end and I end up in between 13th and 18th on the list and I’m hoping for a pick. It would mean the world to me to play on the Ryder Cup team. I think I would do very well.”

At that time, Harman knew he was only halfway to the Claret Jug so he tried to then downplay the Ryder Cup chatter by adding: “But I’m not thinking about that at all.”

Now, it’s safe to say, he’s free to think about it all he wants, as his spot on the roster seems secure.

Tony Finau wins, climbs 5 spots in OWGR; Talor Gooch wins for second time in two weeks, drops a spot

Not all professional golf wins are equal.

Not all professional golf wins are equal.

Tony Finau won for the sixth time on the PGA Tour on Sunday, claiming the 2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta. He beat a mostly watered-down field, but he did fend off world No. 1 Jon Rahm, the defending champion who claimed solo second.

Meanwhile, halfway around the world, Talor Gooch won on the LIV Golf League for the second time in as many weeks.

On Monday, when the latest Official World Golf Ranking was updated, Finau had climbed five spots to No. 11, while Gooch dropped a spot to No. 60.

Golfers do not earn world ranking points in LIV Golf League events. The league’s application to receive OWGR points is under review.

Gooch ended 2022 ranked 40th. In 2023 he has two wins, and in all five of his starts he’s finished at least tied for 18th or better in the 48-man fields on LIV.

Since the start of 2023, Finau has 11 starts, 11 made cuts, one win, three top-10s and eight top-20s.

Gooch, who played the Masters last month and did get an invitation to the PGA Championship in three weeks, recently found out he is not exempt into the U.S. Open in June.

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Rickie Fowler is 59th in OWGR but has vaulted to 15th in Golfweek/Sagarin rankings

Fowler has made 12 of 13 cuts this season with nine top-25 finishes.

There’s been a lot of talk about Rickie Fowler the last several weeks, almost all of it about how his game has been turning around.

There’s no doubt it has. Fowler has made 12 of 13 cuts this season, the only missed cut coming last October by two strokes in Las Vegas at the Shriners Childrens Open.

Fowler has a runner-up finish at the Zozo, four top-10s and nine top 25s during this 2022-23, thanks in part to ranking eighth on Tour in Strokes Gained: Approach to Green. He’s also 13th overall in Strokes Gained: Total.

He even has a hole-in-one this season. It came during the final round of the WM Phoenix Open, the site of his fifth, and last, Tour victory in 2019.

He missed the 2023 Masters after not qualifying a third year in a row. The PGA Championship marked his only major appearance last season, but then he did just enough to earn the 125th and final spot for the FedEx Cup Playoffs.

At the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play, Fowler got the best of the No. 2-seeded Jon Rahm on the first day, winning 2 and 1.

It was after that match when Fowler discussed the slow rebuild of his game.

“We all go through work and changes to ultimately get better. We’re not trying to get worse or stay in the same spot,” he said. “There is always going to be setbacks.”

Fowler is in the field at the Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow Club, the site of his first PGA Tour win 11 years ago. He also has two T-4 finishes at the tournament.

In the latest OWGR, Fowler, who was 103rd at the end of 2021, is now ranked 59th.

But in the latest Golfweek/Sagarin rankings, he checks in at No. 15.

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How the rankings work

The “mission of the OWGR is to administer and publish, on a weekly basis, a transparent, credible, and accurate Ranking based on the relative performances of players participating in male Eligible Golf Tours worldwide.”

Here’s an explainer on the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings:

Jeff Sagarin’s rating system is based on a mathematical formula that uses a player’s won-lost-tied record against other players when they play on the same course on the same day, and the stroke differential between those players, then links all players to one another based on common opponents. The ratings give an indication of who is playing well over the past 52 weeks.

Both rankings have Jon Rahm first but there are several significant differences in where some golfers are ranked in the two systems.

For example, Matt Fitzpatrick is fifth in the OWGR but 24th in the GW/Sags. Cameron Smith of the LIV Golf League, is down one spot to No. 8 in the OWGR but checks in at No. 42 in the GW/Sags.

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Bryson DeChambeau bashes the OWGR while Phil Mickelson, other LIV Golf players offer alternative ideas for major qualifying

LIV Golf is using the OWGR for its 72-hole promotion event, where players ranked within the top 200 will be eligible.

Talor Gooch won LIV Golf Adelaide last week in Australia, and his Official World Golf Ranking dropped two spots from No. 57 to No. 59.

The upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and financially backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund applied for OWGR points back in July but is still waiting for an answer, which isn’t too shocking seeing as the process can take up to, or even more than, a year. The lack of OWGR points at LIV events hurts a player’s prospects of qualifying for major championships, and players are still salty about the situation.

“You should realize that the OWGR is not accurate, one,” said Bryson DeChambeau ahead of LIV Golf Singapore this week at Sentosa Golf Club. “Two, I think that they need to come to a resolution or it will become obsolete. It’s pretty much almost obsolete as of right now. But again, if the majors and everything continue to have that as their ranking system, then they are biting it quite heavily.”

LIV Golf is using the OWGR for its 72-hole promotion event, where players ranked within the top 200 will be eligible.

“I believe we’ve just got to focus on the tours and our league, and the top players; if that means the PGA Tour gets 60 to 75 guys from there to be in every major, great. And if that means ten to 15 of our guys, at the end of the year, whoever has the most points get in the majors, great,” said Bubba Watson. “Forget World Ranking points, just who is the best in your tour and our league and go from there. That’s how you do it. It’s simple math.”

Phil Mickelson, one of three LIV players to finish in the top six at the 2023 Masters after his T-2 finish alongside Brooks Koepka, agreed with Watson and thinks the majors will step up.

“It’s going to all iron itself out because if you’re one of the majors, if you’re the Masters, you’re not looking at we should keep these guys out,” Lefty explained. “You’re saying to yourself, ‘We want to have the best field, we want to have the best players, and these guys added a lot to the tournament this year at the Masters. How do we get them included?'”

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“We have to come up with a qualifying mechanism that is inclusive, and if the World Golf Ranking isn’t going to be inclusive, then they have to find another way,” he continued. “Maybe they take the top 5 or top 10 or winners of LIV, but they’re going to have to find a way to get the best LIV players in their field if they want to have the best field in golf and be really what major championship is about.”

Cameron Smith (8), Joaquin Niemann (26), Abraham Ancer (37), Brooks Koepka (39), Patrick Reed (46) and Thomas Pieters are the only LIV players currently inside the top 50 of the OWGR. Phil Mickelson and Dustin Johnson are Nos. 73 and 74.

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