FAQ: What do we know about the PGA Tour, DP World Tour and PIF (LIV Golf) merger?

The ramifications of the development are still unraveling. What do we know now?

In a surprise announcement Tuesday morning that came after a year of bitter fracturing in men’s professional golf, the PGA Tour and the Saudi-backed LIV Golf tour announced an agreement to merge their business operations.

The ramifications of the development are still unraveling, as a 4 p.m. ET meeting has been scheduled for PGA Tour players, many of whom reported being entirely unaware of the agreement.

Both the PGA Tour and LIV Golf, along with the DP World Tour, announced the move in a joint statement published Tuesday. The merger aims to create “a new, collectively owned, for-profit entity to ensure that all stakeholders benefit from a model that delivers maximum excitement and competition among the game’s best players.”

The terms of the agreement are not fully finalized and are scheduled to be completed in the coming months.

“After two years of disruption and distraction, this is a historic day for the game we all know and love,” PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan said Tuesday in a statement.

“Going forward, fans can be confident that we will, collectively, deliver on the promise we’ve always made — to promote competition of the best in professional golf and that we are committed to securing and driving the game’s future.”

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PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan, PIF Governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan sit down with CNBC to discuss shocking new merger

Al-Rumayyan said the PIF is committed to investing “whatever it takes” to ensure success during a CNBC interview.

PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan and PIF Governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan sat down for a joint interview on CNBC Tuesday morning to discuss the merger news that rocked the golf world.

After years of turmoil between LIV Golf and the PGA Tour, the two entities, along with the DP World Tour, have announced a new yet-to-be-named entity that would combine PIF’s golf-related commercial businesses and rights (including LIV Golf) with the commercial businesses and rights of the PGA Tour and DP World Tour into a collectively owned, for-profit enterprise. Monahan called it a historic day.

“There’s been a lot of tension in our sport over the last couple of years,” Monahan told CNBC, “but what we’re talking about today is coming together to unify the game of golf and to do so under one umbrella.”

Conversations began in London over golf and lunch, said Al-Rumayyan, who noted that had the two Tours met two or three years ago for those same discussions, the impact on the game would have been lesser.

“Because it would be something small,” he continued. “But the way we’re doing our partnership, it’s going to be really big, in many senses.”

PGA Tour Inc. will remain in place as a 501(c)(6) tax-exempt organization and retains oversight over its tour. During the interview, Monahan offered more insight into the breakdown and Al-Rumayyan confirmed that PIF is prepared to invest billions.

“The c6 still stays in place and out of the c6 we’ll continue to operate our tours,” said Monahan. “We’ll put our player retirement plans and assets there. So that stays in place. One of the things that’s important to both of us is every single week we’re playing tournaments, we’re making a huge impact on the communities where we’re invited guests. That continues.

“At the c6 level – you take the assets of the PGA Tour, the PIF assets, and LIV and the Asian Tour and the DP World Tour, take all of those commercial assets and drop them down into that for-profit LLC … we’re going to go through an evaluation of all of the businesses and the PIF will invest … there will be additional investment and growth initiatives. That’s what’s really exciting here.”

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Al-Rumayyan said the PIF is committed to investing “whatever it takes” to ensure success, later noting that they wouldn’t be doing this if they didn’t think it would be profitable.

“If you look at the size of golf, monetary-wise, it’s about $100 billion today,” said Al-Rumayyan. “And I think the growth, it’s there. I think working together we can have a faster growth rate than it was for the past 10 or 20 years.”

Monahan said that with more people playing the game outside the U.S., and with more off-course participants than on-course, he looks at the combined audience in this country of 48 percent under the age of 35 and sees massive potential.

“Reaching a younger demographic at a time when the sport has never been more popular, and doing so by coming together to collaborate at this point in time,” he said, “that’s where we see the commonality and purpose. And that’s where we see this huge opportunity.”

Any pending litigation between LIV and PGA Tour is dissolved with this new partnership. When asked how he thought the public might react to such a complete reversal, Monahan said it’s less about what people think now and more about how they respond 10 years from now.

“This is an opportunity we’ve never had before and to have this capital at this point in time with the strength of this game,” he said, “there’s just there’s so much opportunity and it’s an opportunity we have not been able to activate, but we will now, and we’re going to do it in a highly disciplined, rigorous way.”

The PGA Tour commissioner also dismissed concerns that a global golf entity would raise questions from anti-trust regulators.

“Every single player in men’s professional golf is going to have more opportunity and more growth,” Monahan said. “As we look to contribute to the women’s game, I would expect the same and as an industry, we’re going to grow our industry. This is all a positive on that front.”

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It’s a PGA Tour-LIV Golf showdown, this time between Abraham Ancer and Cameron Young at PIF Saudi International

It’s a two-horse race.

It’s a two-horse race, and Abraham Ancer has a slight edge coming around the final corner.

Ancer and Cameron Young have pulled away from the field at the PIF Saudi International at Royal Greens Golf and Country Club in Saudi Arabia, with Ancer sitting at 17 under and Young at 15 under, five shots clear of a trio tied for third place. Ancer, who has led after every round, shot 6-under 64 in the third round while Young shot his third consecutive 5-under 65.

Matthew Wolff, Sadom Kaewkanjana and Lucas Herbert are tied for third at 10 under in the Asian Tour event.

Last week, it was Rory McIlroy and Patrick Reed battling it out in Dubai. Now, it’s Ancer and Young, the PGA Tour’s 2022 Rookie of the Year, at the venue where LIV Golf’s championship event will be come November.

“Yeah, another very solid round. Happy with no dropped shots,” Ancer said. “That’s always my goal. On a golf course like this where it’s blowing pretty good, I’m really, really happy.

“Not really focused on what everybody else is doing. Just trying to play the same game I’ve been playing the past three days.”

Wolff had the round of the day, shooting 7-under 63 to vault up the leaderboard. However, Young is Ancer’s closest pursuer, and he’s looking forward to Sunday.

“Yeah, I think I’ve played really solidly,” Young said. “Obviously Abe’s playing some really nice golf. So I think tomorrow will be fun.”

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As LIV golfers like Cameron Smith and Phil Mickelson miss cut, this 15-year-old is T-6 at PIF Saudi International chasing Abraham Ancer

A 15-year-old made the cut while Cameron Smith didn’t.

Golf is a strange game.

At the PIF Saudi International, an Asian Tour event that’s littered with LIV Golf players and a couple from the PGA Tour, it’s a 15-year-old who’s stealing the show near the top of the leaderboard.

Ratchanon Chantananuwat, from Thailand and ranked 16th in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, is 7 under and four shots off the lead heading to the weekend at Royal Greens Golf and Country Club in Saudi Arabia. Abraham Ancer paces the field for the second straight day, and Cameron Young, the PGA Tour’s Rookie of the Year for 2021-22, is a shot behind.

“I think one of the reasons I played really well today was — the past two days was I had no expectations,” Chantananuwat said, “and not looking at the leaderboard, and ironically as soon as I started looking at the leaderboard on 8 and when the cameras came, that’s when I started not being as sharp. I think I’m just going to try and shut myself off tomorrow, Sunday, as well, keep my head down.”

2023 PIF Saudi International
Ratchanon Chantananuwat of Thailand tees off from the 5th hole during Day Two of the PIF Saudi International at Royal Greens Golf & Country Club on February 03, 2023 in Al Murooj, Saudi Arabia. (Photo by Tom Dulat/Getty Images)

Meanwhile, Cameron Smith (2 over), ranked third in the Official World Golf Ranking, is heading home after missing the cut (even), along with other LIV golfers Phil Mickelson (1 over), Bryson DeChambeau (7 over) and Bubba Watson (2 over).

However, Marc Leishman and Louis Oosthuizen are in a tie for third at 8 under, along with Sadom Kaewkanjana, chasing Ancer, who shot 66 on Friday after opening with a 7-under 63.

Young has fired consecutive 5-under 65s to begin.

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Phil Mickelson is back on Twitter, and he thinks LIV golfers would dominate PGA Tour players in a Ryder Cup format match

PGA Tour vs. LIV Golf? With Tiger and Phil as captains?

Phil Mickelson is back on Twitter, and he’s bringing the hot takes.

In recent weeks, the six-time major champion has been more vocal on Twitter, interacting with fans and others over a variety of topics. On Thursday, following the opening round of the PIF Saudi International at Royal Greens Golf and Country Club in Saudi Arabia where Mickelson shot even par, he responded to former NFL star Danny Woodhead about an interesting topic.

Woodhead quoted a tweet that said if there was a Ryder Cup-style event between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf with Tiger Woods and Phil as captains, it would be the most watched golf event in history. Woodhead agreed, saying he was here for it.

Plenty of fans would be interested in that, too. Even Mickelson thinks it would be great.

But he doesn’t think it would be much of a competition.

So, what say you: Who would win in a Ryder Cup-style match between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf?

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LIV Golf (and one PGA Tour player) dominate early leaderboard at PIF Saudi International

Of the 37 players under par after the first day of play, 24 play for LIV Golf and three are on the PGA Tour.

It’s a LIV Golf party in the Kingdom this week, and a few PGA Tour players have been invited.

After the opening 18 holes of the 2023 PIF Saudi International at Royal Greens Golf and Country Club in King Abdullah Economic City, Abraham Ancer finds himself at the top of the leaderboard at 7 under, one shot clear of LIV’s latest reported player, Sebastian Munoz.

Cameron Young – one of the few PGA Tour players granted a release to play in the Asian Tour event sponsored by the Public Investment Fund, the same financial backer for LIV Golf  – is T-3 at 5 under alongside LIV’s Sergio Garcia and Louis Oosthuizen. Other PGA Tour players in the field include Lucas Herbert (T-18) and Cameron Champ (T-30).

Of the 37 players under par after the first day of play, 24 play for LIV Golf.

The Saudi International was created in 2019 by the regime’s Public Investment Fund and offered lucrative appearance fees to attract PGA Tour stars like Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka, Phil Mickelson and Bryson DeChambeau, who all later jumped to LIV.

The tournament was originally a DP World Tour stop, but the European circuit is also now being sued by LIV, which invested more than $200 million in the Asian Tour last year.

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Dustin Johnson withdraws from PIF Saudi International with injury

Johnson, who has battled back injuries in the past, reportedly aggravated his back during a practice round.

Two-time major champion Dustin Johnson pulled out of the Asian Tour’s PIF Saudi International after tweaking his back.

Johnson, 38, was scheduled to play in the first round of the tournament at Royal Greens Golf and Country Club an hour north of Jeddah, but reportedly strained his back during a practice round, skipped the pro-am on Wednesday and was unable to try to win his third title at the event, having won there in 2019 and 2021.

“Two-time champion Dustin Johnson has unfortunately had to withdraw ahead of the first round of the PIF Saudi International powered by SoftBank Investment Advisers after tweaking his back,” read a short statement from Asian Tour.

Johnson has battled back injuries in the past, most famously when he withdrew shortly before the 2017 Masters as the favorite to win the Green Jacket. He left the PGA Tour last season and joined LIV Golf, where he won more than $35 million and captained the 4 Aces to the season-ending title. Johnson is expected to play next at LIV’s season-opening event at the Mayakoba Resort in Mexico, Feb. 24-26.

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Why did Bubba Watson join LIV Golf? His son who ‘never watched’ golf knew the team names

“To grow the game is not getting the 60- and 70-year-olds to play, it’s getting the young kids to play.”

Bubba Watson made his LIV Golf League debut in Boston last September, however, he’s yet to play in an event due to injury. He served as an on-course reporter and non-playing captain of his Niblicks GC team.

This week, the two-time Masters champion is in Saudi Arabia for the PIF Saudi International at Royal Greens Golf and Country Club.

During his pre-tournament press conference, Watson was asked about growing the game.

“How I signed up with LIV is my 10-year-old son was sitting in the bed with me, and we were watching golf on the TV, and he knew the Aces — everybody knows the Aces, they keep winning,” he said. “He knew the Aces, he knew the Stingers. He didn’t know individual names, he just knew the team names, and for a 10-year-old to never watch the game of golf but now watches it, now I knew that there was a product to be had. LIV has a niche, it has a reason.

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“My son is used to the Yankees. He’s used to the Dallas Cowboys, Kansas City Chiefs. He’s used to watching teams, and that’s the one thing that golf — high school golf has a team, college golf has a team, and then one of the biggest events in the world is the Ryder Cup, and it’s a team event. Now that professional golf has a team, we’re going to be able to get the below-60-year-olds watching Golf Channel to the 10-year-olds now wanting to watch.

“I think we’re on to something with LIV, and that’s why I want to be a part of it. When my 10-year-old never watches golf and now watches golf, and my eight-year-old daughter now understands the teams, she knows my new logo, she was a part of — my family was a part of making the new logo and the new team colors. That’s what we’re trying to do.

“To grow the game is not getting the 60- and 70-year-olds to play, it’s getting the young kids to play.”

LIV recently agreed on a broadcast deal with The CW, known for its younger demographic. The first event on the 2023 LIV Golf schedule is in Mexico at Mayakoba, Feb. 24-26.

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World No. 3 Cameron Smith to highlight field at 2023 PIF Saudi International

Past champs include Dustin Johnson, Graeme McDowell and Harold Varner, all part of LIV Golf.

World No. 3 Cameron Smith will highlight the field for the fifth playing of the PIF Saudi International next month in the Kingdom.

Smith is set to join defending champion Harold Varner III and the top-30 ranked players on the Asian Tour at Royal Greens Golf and Country Club in King Abdullah Economic City, Feb. 2-5, with more players to be confirmed in the coming weeks.

“It’s always good to play in a world-class field, I am looking forward to taking on some familiar faces and also competing with the best that the Asian Tour has to offer,” said Smith via a release. The event offers a $5 million purse and is sponsored by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund as well as SoftBank Investment Advisers, a growth equity firm.

Past champions of the Golf Saudi event include Dustin Johnson, Graeme McDowell and Varner, three players who have all joined LIV Golf.

The event will be the same week as the PGA Tour’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

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