Just how far have LIV Golf players fallen in the Official World Golf Ranking?

We took a look at how each player on a LIV roster’s ranking has fallen since they joined the Saudi-backed league.

One of the biggest questions facing LIV Golf in 2023 was its status with the Official World Golf Ranking.

A player’s OWGR standing is key for access to the four major championships, and LIV Golf events currently do not receive OWGR points. The circuit applied in July of 2022 and is awaiting word as part of an application process that can take up to, and even more than, a year.

In December, the OWGR announced a Mexican golf tour with 54-hole events will start to receive OWGR points in 2023 after a 16-month process, and the tour’s inclusion of a 36-hole cut and open qualifying were noted in the release. While LIV events are still 54-holes without a cut, the league will implement a promotion and (somewhat) relegation element to fill out its teams for 2024, meaning a few spots will be available via qualifying.

Formats and criteria aside, LIV believes its events deserve points after the formation of its “strategic alliance” with the developmental MENA Tour in an attempt to force the OWGR’s hand.

Since they joined the upstart league led by Greg Norman and financed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, LIV players have been plummeting in the ranking, putting their major championship futures in jeopardy.

Here’s a look at the 48 players on a team roster in 2023 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 5 -3
Dustin Johnson 15 62 -47
Joaquin Niemann 19 26 -7
Brooks Koepka 19 102 -83
Abraham Ancer 22 30 -8
Louis Oosthuizen 21 100 -79
Paul Casey 31 94 -63
Bryson DeChambeau 31 131 -100
Kevin Na 34 84 -50
Talor Gooch 35 49 -14
Thomas Pieters 35 42 -7
Jason Kokrak 36 74 -38
Patrick Reed 39 65 -26
Harold Varner III 46 51 -5
Mito Pereira 50 50 0
Cameron Tringale 55 86 -31
Sergio Garcia 57 144 -87
Dean Burmester 59 71 -12
Marc Leishman 62 95 -33
Richard Bland 67 107 -40
Matt Jones 69 129 -60
Phil Mickelson 72 352 -280
Scott Vincent 91 117 -26
Matthew Wolff 77 181 -104
Lee Westwood 78 267 -189
Bubba Watson 86 201 -115
Sam Horsfield 74 134 -60
Anirban Lahiri 92 99 -7
Ian Poulter 92 150 -58
Bernd Wiesberger 94 149 -55
Sebastian Munoz 98 106 -8
Brendan Steele 122 119 +3
Branden Grace 123 221 -98
Charl Schwartzel 126 197 -71
Carlos Ortiz 119 270 -151
Sihwan Kim 139 238 -99
Pat Perez 170 239 -69
Henrik Stenson 173 175 -2
Charles Howell 169 318 -149
Martin Kaymer 215 625 -410
Jediah Morgan 239 368 -129
Danny Lee 267 268 -1
Peter Uihlein 327 411 -84
Graeme McDowell 374 399 -25
Chase Koepka 1562 1331 +231
James Piot 1751 1155 +596
David Puig 1751 1057 +694
Eugenio Chacarra 1904 1732 +172

Of the 48 players on a roster this season, all but six have dropped in the ranking. After making their first LIV starts in Mexico last month, Mito Pereira’s ranking has yet to move, while fellow newcomer Brendan Steele rose three places. Further down the rankings, a trio of players in their second year of professional golf – Eugenio Chacarra (No. 1,732), James Piot (No. 1,155) and David Puig (No. 1,057) – have all risen more than 100 spots due to a small sample size of tournaments and a handful of starts on the Asian Tour. Chase Koepka struggled through his pro career pre-LIV, and has seen his ranking rise 231 spots but still finds himself No. 1,331.

Martin Kaymer has struggled with injuries over the last year and has seen the largest drop of 410 spots on the rankings and now sits No. 625. Phil Mickelson, the face of LIV Golf, has fallen 280 spots and is now No. 352.

Only six players are still inside the top 50: Cameron Smith (No. 5), Joaquin Niemann (No. 26), Abraham Ancer (No. 30), Thomas Pieters (No. 42), Talor Gooch (No. 49) and Mito Pereira (No. 50).

The LIV Golf League returns to action this week in Marana, Arizona, at the Gallery Golf Club with LIV Golf Tucson, the circuit’s first event in the United States this season.

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‘I think my motivation now is as strong as ever’: Adam Scott opens up on his goals, issues with the OWGR and LIV Golf at the Olympics

At 42, Adam Scott feels his childhood dreams are even more attainable now.

Adam Scott has been around professional golf for a while now. It’s part of the reason he recently joined the PGA Tour’s $60 million career earnings club.

“I think it speaks to probably more longevity. If I try to find positives in stuff about myself these days, longevity, I’ve been out here a long time,” Scott said on Tuesday ahead of his 10th career start at the Sony Open in Hawaii. “Generally played at a high level, so it adds up.”

The Australian never had a career money goal in mind when he turned professional back in 2000. In fact, his goals were pretty simple: win majors and make it to world No. 1.

“After a few years on Tour, like maybe many others if we’re all being honest, felt like they were going to be unattainable because (Tiger Woods) was so dominant at No. 1 and he was winning about two majors a year,” Scott explained. “If I’m honest, my golf in the majors wasn’t even close to looking threatening, so it was an interesting first 10 years of my career, I think, because I’m not sure that for whatever reason I kind of — I didn’t give up, but it seemed a little bit unattainable.”

At 42, Scott feels those dreams are even more attainable now.

“This year I’m playing the schedule I want to play,” he said. “I feel like I don’t have to chase anything and I can prioritize everything I need to do to win big events and put myself in a position where I want to be kind of fulfilling those dreams as a kid.

I think my motivation now is as strong as ever.”

With 14 PGA Tour and 11 DP World Tour victories, Scott has won from Augusta, Georgia, to his native Australia. From Qatar to Scotland. Florida to California. Like golf’s Johnny Cash, he’s been everywhere (though Scott would be the Man in Tan, rather than black.) That longevity has given Scott a perspective that few players can provide. Luckily for fans, the 2013 Masters champion isn’t afraid to speak his mind.

During Tuesday’s press conference he talked about Official World Golf Ranking points and his disagreements with the new format, saying the board “tried to do the right thing and go very objective, just purely based off strength of field, but we’re seeing top players don’t see the strength of field weighted the same as the numbers do.”

He spoke about “the best evening of the year” at the Masters Champions Dinner, where Fred Couples “does a great job needling some of the older players into telling stories.” Scott even started what appeared to be a great story about “Bernhard Langer getting sat down” by former Augusta National chairman Billy Payne one night.

“I can’t remember the details now, but that was the gist of it, ‘You can sit down.’” Scott remembered with a smile.

“(Hideki Matsuyama’s) was a great dinner. He rehearsed his speech and spoke English, and I think the room really appreciated that a lot. Even though it was three minutes or something, probably felt like an hour for him,” said Scott. “But I think the room really appreciated that and showed how much it meant to him to be a part of that club. So that was memorable and it was recent as well. It was memorable for me.”

And like most meetings with the press these days, he was asked about LIV Golf and its place in professional golf. More specifically, Scott was asked about his fellow Aussie and world No. 3 Cam Smith, who made the move to LIV last year and now runs the risk of failing to qualify for the Australian Olympic team in 2024 if his world ranking tanks due to LIV events not receiving OWGR points.

“I think it would be unfortunate; however, again, like everyone said, they’ve made their decisions and some of those decisions — well, that decision may come with some sacrifice in the short or long-term,” explained Scott. “In the short term, it was sacrificing the ability to have world ranking points. If they didn’t know that, then they’re realizing that’s the case at the moment. So I think it would be unfortunate, yes, for Australia and their team.

“But, you know, it’s not — Cam also made these decisions as did (Marc Leishman) and Matt Jones and any other Aussie who has gone on there,” he continued. “There may be some sacrifice. Seems like they’re OK with living with that mostly, at least the Aussies seem that way.”

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LIV Golf questions that need answers in 2023

The first event of 2023 is just eight weeks away, and some questions need answers.

“Golf but louder” is one of a few slogans and catchphrases for LIV Golf, but lately the upstart circuit has been pretty quiet.

After an eight-event debut season in 2022, the Greg Norman-led and Saudi Arabia-backed series will transition to a 14-event league in 2023 while keeping its signature format of 54-hole, no-cut events that feature team and individual competitions as well as daily shotgun starts.

With just two months between now and the first event on the schedule – Feb. 24-26 at El Camaleón Golf Course in Mexico for LIV Golf Mayakoba – there are still a few key questions that LIV needs to answer heading into its second year.

A golf tour with 54-hole events will start to receive OWGR points in January, but it’s not LIV Golf

“We are very proud that after almost 5 years of work, the Mexican Professional Golf Tour becomes part of the OWGR.”

The Official World Golf Ranking has announced that a tour will start to receive points in 2023, but it’s not LIV Golf.

The OWGR will begin to include the Gira de Golf Professional de Mexicana after the first week of January following a 16-month application process. The tour was founded in 2017.

“This is a significant milestone for golf and OWGR is deeply encouraged by the achievement and the continued efforts in the advancement of the sport of golf in Mexico,” said chairman Peter Dawson via a release. “We look forward to watching the progress of Gira de Golf Professional de Mexicana as it continues to play a key role in the development of players from the region.”

Tournaments on the Gira de Golf Professional de Mexicana schedule are contested over 54 holes with a 36-hole cut. The tour is accessible via open qualifying school and features a no-cut, season-ending championship. The OWGR release commended the tour for its efforts in providing pathways for players, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, when Gira de Golf hosted tournaments in conjunction with the PGA Tour Latinoamérica.

Fans may wonder what this move means for LIV Golf, the upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and supported by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. LIV applied for OWGR points in July of 2022 and a decision has yet to be made. The circuit attempted to undermine the lengthy process with its “strategic alliance” with the developmental MENA Tour, which led to the OWGR announcement that LIV events – which feature a team and individual competition over 54 holes with no cut and daily shotgun starts –  would not receive points in 2022. The 16-month process would point to a November 2023 decision for LIV, but the more pertinent information in Wednesday’s OWGR announcement centers on Gira de Golf’s 36-hole cuts and open qualifying school.

From the release: “As such, the Gira de Golf Professional de Mexicana is in keeping with long-standing OWGR Eligibility and Format Criteria providing inclusion for professional tours at the development level with available Ranking Points commensurate with the format and anticipated fields.”

“We are very proud that after almost 5 years of work, the Mexican Professional Golf Tour becomes part of the OWGR,” said Gira de Golf commissioner José Miguel Bejos. “It is one of the most important achievements that Mexican professional golf has had in recent years and we will continue with the commitment to promote golf in our country.”

The tour returns to action Jan. 27-29, 2023.

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Why is the Official World Golf Ranking so important to LIV Golf? And how do pros qualify for majors?

Maintaining a high spot on the OWGR allows golfers who have never won a major to earn exemptions into future majors.

When stars like Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson and Bryson DeChambeau joined LIV Golf, many focused on the nine-figure contracts these major champions reportedly signed, and their suspensions from the PGA Tour. Then Brooks Koepka signed with LIV, followed by Bubba Watson, Joaquin Niemann and the 2022 Players Championship and British Open winner, Cameron Smith.

But starting in September, the conversation shifted to the value of something that money can’t buy, at least not yet — Official World Golf Ranking points. In a statement on Sept. 21, LIV Golf commissioner Greg Norman stated that not only should LIV Golf competitors start getting OWGR points for their performances, but they should also retroactively get points for LIV events they had already played.

In the following weeks, Patrick Reed, Graeme McDowell and other LIV golfers questioned the legitimacy of the rankings if LIV players continued to be denied points for LIV events.

The rankings are crucial to LIV Series golfers for reasons that go beyond pride. Maintaining a high spot on the OWGR allows golfers who have never won a major championship to earn exemptions into future majors, and while each championship uses slightly different criteria to create its field, they each reward golfers with a high rank at specific times with an exemption into their tournament.

As of now, the governing bodies of golf’s four major championships — Augusta National Golf Club, the PGA of America, the United States Golf Association and the R&A — have not announced any changes to qualifying criteria for 2023. If nothing changes, the exemption lists below will be how professional golfers get into the field of next season’s Masters Tournament, PGA Championship, U.S. Open and British Open, along with the ways that professional golfers who compete on the LIV Series have already earned spots.

Jon Rahm unloads on ‘laughable’ Official World Golf Ranking, but it has nothing to do with LIV Golf

“I understand what they were trying to do when they changed some things, but I think like I said, they missed the mark.”

Jon Rahm’s press conference ahead of the DP World Tour Championship in Dubai started with the Spaniard receiving honorary life membership on the tour and ended with him unloading on the “laughable” Official World Golf Ranking.

The 28-year-old has become one of the best quotes in golf over the last few years and is known to speak his mind. Wednesday was no different.

“I’m going to be as blunt as I can. I think the OWGR right now is laughable. Laughable. Laughable,” said Rahm. “The fact that the (PGA Tour’s RSM Classic) doesn’t have any of the top 20 in the world has more points than this event where we have seven of the top 20 is laughable. The fact that Wentworth had less points than Napa, having players in the top 10 in the world is laughable.”

The OWGR website projects this week’s winner of the RSM Classic in Sea Island, Georgia, will receive 38.38 points. The DP World Tour Championship winner is projected to receive 21.82.

“I understand what they are trying to do with the depth of field but having the best players in the world automatically makes the tournament better. I don’t care what their system says,” he continued. “I think they have made a mistake. I think some aspects of it might be beneficial but I think they have devalued the value of the better players.

“Depth of field doesn’t mean better tournament. I could go on and on. I think they have missed the mark on that stance quite a bit.”

During his press conference on Tuesday, Rory McIlroy bluntly explained the points discrepancy between this week’s PGA and DP World tour events.

“Yeah, so when you look at two different fields, you’ve got a 50-man field (in Dubai) versus a 144-man field (in Georgia). So just in terms of how the strengths of field is calculated, they have 90 more players to contribute to their strength of field,” said McIlroy. “So the reason that this has got 21 points and the RSM has got 39 is the person that wins the RSM has to beat 139 other guys. You only have to beat 49 other guys here. It’s a much fairer system.”

McIlroy’s Ryder Cup teammate begs to differ.

“But would you rather win a tournament when you have the No. 1 player in the world there or because you have the 30th or 6th there?” asked Rahm. “I think it’s more valuable if you’re beating the best players in the world. I think a lot of people would agree and I think it should reflect that.”

Rahm, who boasts seven wins on the PGA Tour and eight on the DP World Tour, freely admitted the math for point calculations is above his pay grade and he doesn’t know the precise way to fix the ranking.

“I understand what they were trying to do when they changed some things,” said Rahm, “but I think like I said, they missed the mark.”

Rahm is far from the first player to be critical of the OWGR this year, but the majority of the criticism has come from across the professional golf aisle. LIV Golf, the upstart series led by Greg Norman and backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, has been fighting for points since its inception earlier this summer. None of LIV’s first eight events earned OWGR points after the circuit applied for accreditation in July. The circuit formed a strategic alliance with the developmental MENA Tour to try and force its way to receiving points, but was unsuccessful. LIV players like Patrick ReedGraeme McDowell, and Bryson DeChambeau have all called out the ranking system.

“I think a lot of people are against (LIV) having world ranking points. I’m not necessarily against it but there should be adjustments,” Rahm explained. “If your requirement is to have world ranking points as 72 holes and a cut, maybe you don’t award them 100 percent of the points since they are not fulfilling all of the requirements.”

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New complaints in Florida court sue Official World Golf Ranking for allegedly colluding with PGA Tour, DP World Tour, Golf Channel

The complaint further alleges monopolization, attempted monopolization and other unfair trade practices.

Attorney Larry Klayman announced the filing of a Second Amended Class Action Complaint in Palm Beach County’s 15th Judicial Circuit on Monday which alleges antitrust conspiracy to restrain trade and harm golf fans in the state of Florida, as well as “eliminate LIV Golf in its infancy.”

Named in the court filing are the PGA Tour, the DP World Tour Golf Channel and the Official World Golf Ranking (OWGR).

The OWGR is alleged to be part of a conspiracy to restrain trade in violation of Florida’s antitrust laws because its board contains “the conflicted leadership of the PGA Tour and DP World Tour.” PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan and DP World Tour chief executive Keith Pelley are both on the OWGR board.

The court filing alleges that consumers “have seen the quality of the product that they are paying for at PGA Tour events be diluted and destroyed by a deterioration of the talent level at PGA Tour events due to the exclusion of many of the top players in the world who have signed to LIV Golf.”

The court filing also claims tickets for the Players Championship in 2023 are 34 percent higher than in 2022, “and some packages for the Arnold Palmer Invitational in Orlando, Florida are at least ten percent higher in 2023 than in 2022” and later refers to the increases as “supracompetitive prices.”

The complaint further alleges monopolization, attempted monopolization, group boycotts and other unfair trade practices. The first amended class action complaint to name the OWGR was filed on Nov. 4. The second amended complaint was e-filed Nov. 11. Golfweek confirmed with the 15th Judicial Circuit the second complaint is still pending at the time of this post’s publication. Offices were closed on Nov. 9th and 10th due to Hurricane Nicole and also on Nov. 11th for Veterans Day.

The second amended action “seeks actual and compensatory damages, in an amount to be determined” by a jury.

“Consumers, that is Florida golf fans including me, have as much right as anyone to benefit from a free market, which would allow all golf leagues and independent contractor players to fairly compete,” said Klayman via a release. “But the Defendants have illegally worked hard to prevent this, as the PGA Tour and its co-conspirator Defendants will not tolerate honest and fair competition, as it will challenge their trillion dollar plus monopoly to totally dominate the golf world.”

While representing LIV Golf’s Patrick Reed, Klayman refiled a $750 million defamation lawsuit in late September to add Golf Channel’s Damon Hack, Shane Bacon, as well as Golfweek columnist Eamon Lynch and its parent company, Gannett. Earlier this month, Klayman filed a new $250 million suit against a number of other prominent golf media members and organizations, including author Shane Ryan, Hachette, the New York Post and Fox Sports, as well as Associated Press golf writer Doug Ferguson and the organization for whom he works.

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Graeme McDowell on LIV Golf not earning OWGR points: ‘The word ‘Official’ has to go away’ from rankings

“The word ‘Official’ has to go away from OWGR if they don’t take care of the players out here.”

Graeme McDowell didn’t mince words when he addressed LIV Golf’s ongoing quest to earn Official World Golf Ranking points.

“We all agree and I think most people in the world of golf would agree that the field out here is to a certain strength now where it’s impossible to ignore the talent that’s out here,” said McDowell ahead of LIV’s final regular season event this week at Royal Greens Country Club in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

“The word ‘Official’ has to go away from OWGR if they don’t take care of the players out here.”

McDowell’s argument centered around Dustin Johnson, who wrapped up LIV’s season-long individual championship last week in Bangkok to claim the $18 million bonus prize on top of the $12 million he made over the previous six events thanks to five top-10 finishes and a win in Boston (not to mention four straight team victories worth an additional $750,000 per event).

“If (Johnson’s) world ranking is inaccurate, then the whole system is inaccurate,” said McDowell.

“We’re going to get world ranking points. Just right now it’s another way,” added Johnson. “If we wait too long, all of our rankings are going to drop so much, it’s not going to matter. We are hoping (the OWGR) do the right thing, and all of us hope to hear in the next week or so and this will all go away.”

Don’t hold your breath.

The OWGR announced LIV wouldn’t receive points for its Bangkok or Jeddah events after the upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund formed a “strategic alliance” with the developmental MENA Tour in an attempt to force the OWGR to grant points. The MENA Tour was granted OWGR points in 2016, five years after it was founded in 2011.

McDowell and Johnson were joined by Harold Varner III for their pre-event press conference in the Kingdom – the trio is the three past winners of the Saudi International event held at Royal Greens – and the 32-year-old who’s known for honestly speaking his mind had a different take on LIV’s struggle to earn points.

“For me, I think we knew what we were getting into. I think it’s easy to sit here and say what could happen, what should happen. But obviously, for me, I knew what was going to happen. Like, it wasn’t going to be easy,” he explained. “I think the people at LIV did an unbelievable job … because I don’t know about the check marks. Honestly, I could care less. I knew exactly what was going to happen. I knew what could happen in my career and I accept that.

“I’ve had a great time out here. So the world ranking thing, it’s just been a part of golf for so long, and now all of a sudden some feathers have been ruffled. It’s funny, though, I think. But it is what it is.”

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Defending Zozo champ Hideki Matsuyama pledges allegiance to PGA Tour, supports OWGR points for LIV Golf

“Yeah, I’m a member of the PGA Tour. Never been prouder, especially last week at the Presidents Cup,” said Matsuyama.

Hideki Matsuyama is back home in his native Japan to defend his title at the PGA Tour’s Zozo Championship. He won in storybook fashion a year ago, shooting a final-round 5-under 65 at Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club in Chiba to claim the title by five strokes.

The 2021 Masters champion will receive a hero’s welcome when he tees off in the first round, but when he met the media on Tuesday the questions focused on rumors that have persisted for months that he has received a lucrative offer to join LIV Golf, the upstart league backed by Saudi Arabi’s Public Investment Fund.

Right out of the box, Matsuyama was asked to confirm his allegiance to the PGA Tour.

“Yeah, I’m a member of the PGA Tour. Never been prouder, especially last week at the Presidents Cup,” he said through his American translator Bob Turner. “Yeah, I’m fully committed to the PGA Tour, I’m a member.”

Next question.

But the media wasn’t done peppering Matsuyama about LIV. After being questioned about the future of the Zozo event in the Tour’s schedule, Matsuyama was asked if LIV golfers should receive points for playing on the renegade circuit.

“Personally, I think they should be able to,” Matsuyama said, “however, there’s a procedure that they have to follow, too, with the ranking points.”

That was the last question before the press conference shifted to Japanese only, of which a transcript was not made available of his answers.

World Ranking points have emerged as a key battle ground that could impact the future of LIV and whether more PGA Tour pros will be willing to make the leap to LIV. Most of the LIV players, outside of recent British Open winner Cameron Smith who is exempt for five years into all the majors, will need to depend on remaining in the top 50 in the world to qualify for future majors such as the U.S. Open and PGA Championship. In an effort to back door its way into ranking points for its members, LIV Golf announced a strategic alliance with the Mena Tour.

Matsuyama wasn’t the only Tour pro asked whether he thought LIV golfers should earn world ranking points for competing in 54-hole, no-cut, limited field shotgun-start events.

“I don’t know all the different regulations and how difficult it is to get World Ranking points. I just think at the end of the day, if you want to get World Ranking points, you obviously have to follow the process. And I think they’re obviously making an effort to get those points, but I don’t think it’s right to give them an exemption to just get points overnight,” Viktor Hovland said. “They obviously have to follow the process, whatever the process might be. But at the same time, they have some really good players over there and if some of those players drops outside the top-100 in the world, that’s not good for the World Rankings, either.

“So I don’t really know what the right answer is, but you can’t just make up new rules as you go.”

Xander Schauffele fielded the same question and gave a perfectly good non-answer.

“I don’t really know. I haven’t really thought a whole lot about it, to be completely honest,” he said. “I think it’s something that’s to be expected. They’re starting up their own tour and to legitimize themselves, they need world ranking points.”

Need world rankings? Yes. Deserve them? That’s still to be determined.

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Lynch: Why Bryson DeChambeau and LIV’s other point-missers are protesting their equal treatment under the rules

Who could have imagined that a low-speed collision with a gallery rope would occasion a loss of critical faculty?

Who could have imagined that a low-speed collision with a gallery rope would occasion a loss of critical faculty? But then, that presumes Bryson DeChambeau had a firm grasp on logic or fact before he banjoed himself in front of tens of spectators at a recent LIV tournament in Chicago. If nothing else, the resulting viral video finally brought eyeballs to the LIV product, and perhaps some comfort to its CEO to see someone else suffer an embarrassing choke inside the ropes. 

The discombobulated DeChambeau didn’t seem to have all synapses firing at LIV’s latest event for guys who want to spend more time at home, this one held in Thailand, a dozen time zones from his bed in Texas. He was angered that the Official World Golf Ranking declined to award points to LIV’s Bangkok stop within 24 hours of the Saudi-funded enterprise announcing an alliance with the near-defunct MENA Tour, which is recognized by the OWGR but hasn’t actually staged a tournament in more than two years. 

They’re delaying the inevitable. We’ve hit every mark in their criteria, so for us not to get points is kind of crazy … we have the top players in the world … we deserve to be getting world ranking points,” DeChambeau said, with an air of entitlement more befitting a Crown Prince than one of his play things. 

He would benefit from borrowing Pat Perez’s copy of Nietzsche’s Untimely Meditations, in which the philosopher wrote that “the historical audit brings so much to light which is false and absurd … that the condition of pious illusion falls to pieces.” Because DeChambeau’s self-righteous claim that LIV has met all of the OWGR criteria is entirely false and absurd. 

LIV’s existing structure falls short of many of the conventions long-established for tours to qualify for world ranking points. Let’s leave aside the first requirement — embracing inclusion and promoting non-discrimination, a formidable impediment for misogynistic bonesaw enthusiasts and their apologists. On rules around format, cuts and average field sizes over the course of a season, LIV is non-compliant. Nor are LIV events accessible via a legitimate qualification process, since entry is determined largely by Greg Norman’s use of MBS’s checkbook. Defenders will point to LIV’s proposed relegation system but that is meritless since some players are contractually exempt from being demoted, regardless of performance. 

Tours must be compliant with OWGR standards for a year before ranking points will be awarded, but LIV has shown no intent to become so. Instead, Norman has adopted a strategy popular with his puppeteers: insist that established rules don’t apply, allege that the application of said rules amounts to unfair and discriminatory treatment, and launch a bot-driven misinformation campaign to create a deceitful narrative of a conspiracy. 

The Official World Golf Ranking has never warranted much respect, although recent changes to how it is calculated — a shift supported by all member tours but now derided by LIV acolytes — provide a more accurate accounting of the world’s best players. (Critics of the changes are basically aggrieved that their home tours will no longer see tournaments with mediocre fields artificially inflated in value.)

For all of its shortcomings, the OWGR matters because rankings are one of the primary avenues by which golfers can access major championships for which they are not otherwise eligible. As long as LIV isn’t sanctioned by the OWGR, its players’ rankings will drop. DeChambeau was 28th when he signed with LIV and was suspended from PGA Tour events. He is now 48th. 

They’re going to just keep playing a waiting game where we’re going to keep dropping down in the rankings to where our points won’t ever matter,” DeChambeau railed in Bangkok. “That’s what they’re trying to accomplish and I hope that people can see right through that rather than believe the lies that they’ve been told. 

Thus a turkey pretends to make an unbiased argument against Thanksgiving. Still, it’s tempting to defer to DeChambeau’s experience when it comes to lies. After all, only six days elapsed between him saying that he wouldn’t be joining LIV — an interview in which he also touted his faith and desire to become a better person — and his, um, joining LIV. 

The OWGR review process for awarding a tour ranking points — after it complies with the aforementioned qualification rules — takes up to two years. LIV filed its application on July 6 and Norman began publicly demanding approval one week later. On September 18, LIV players sent a letter to the OWGR insisting the application be fast-tracked. And now this effort to buy access through the back door via the MENA Tour. The stench of desperation rising from Norman is palpable as he attempts to conjure a conspiracy from thin air in order to justify litigation. 

What DeChambeau and Norman think they’re entitled to is immaterial and the onus is upon the OWGR to stand firm against LIV’s artless intimidation and to follow its established protocols. LIV tournaments should receive ranking points when the tour is eligible, not because its CEO and players pitch a public tantrum as the consequences of their career decisions become apparent. If Norman sold his players a bill of goods—they couldn’t be suspended by the PGA Tour, they would continue to earn ranking points, they would be hailed as game-changing visionaries and not castigated as stooges for Saudi sportswashing—then that’s a problem for him and those who might privately feel hoodwinked. 

There are already too many traditional norms that the abhorrent Saudi regime considers itself exempted from, like not dismembering critics, imprisoning students for tweets, or commissioning mass executions. Surely it can at least be held to the requirements necessary to award ranking points for its damned golf tournaments. 

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