Phil Mickelson releases statement concerning Saudi Arabia, admits to mistakes and will take time away

Mickelson said he needs “some time away to prioritize the ones I love most and work on being the man I want to be.”

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. – Just five minutes before a player meeting began at the Honda Classic, Phil Mickelson addressed unflattering comments about the PGA Tour and others associated with the proposed Saudi Arabia-backed, Greg Norman-led Super Golf League that would siphon off some of the game’s biggest stars and rival the PGA Tour.

In a statement issued by Mickelson, the World Golf Hall of Fame member and six-time major champion also took issue with the person that reported the comments – Alan Shipnuck of the Firepit Collective and author of the soon-to-be-released “Phil: The Rip-Roaring (and Unauthorized!) Biography of Golf’s Most Colorful Superstar.” And in the nearly 550-word release, Mickelson said he was going to take time off and “work on being the man I want to be.”

“Although it doesn’t look this way now given my recent comments, my actions throughout this process have always been with the best interest of golf, my peers, sponsors, and fans,” Mickelson wrote. “There is the problem of off-record comments being shared out of context and without my consent, but the bigger issue is that I used words I sincerely regret that do not reflect my true feelings or intentions. It was reckless, I offended people, and I am deeply sorry for my choice of words. I’m beyond disappointed and will make every effort to self-reflect and learn from this.”

Mickelson told Shipnuck that he was one of the architects behind the proposed Saudi Arabia league and said he hoped to use the league that is guaranteeing exorbitant amounts of money as leverage against the PGA Tour.

“They’re scary mother——s to get involved with,” Mickelson said of the repressive regime of Saudi Arabia. “We know they killed (Washington Post reporter and US resident Jamal) Khashoggi and have a horrible record on human rights. They execute people over there for being gay.

“Knowing all of this, why would I even consider it? Because this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to reshape how the PGA Tour operates. They’ve been able to get by with manipulative, coercive, strong-arm tactics because we, the players, had no recourse. As nice a guy as (PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan) comes across as, unless you have leverage, he won’t do what’s right.

“And the Saudi money has finally given us that leverage.”

Earlier this year, Mickelson told Golf Digest that the PGA Tour’s “greed” was “beyond obnoxious.”

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Despite nine of the top 12 players in the world publicaly stating they are staying with the Tour – Dustin Johnson and Bryson DeChambeau joined the growing chorus last week – Mickelson said change needs to come to professional golf.

“Golf desperately needs change, and real change is always preceded by disruption,” Mickelson said. “I have always known that criticism would come with exploring anything new. I still chose to put myself at the forefront of this to inspire change, taking the hits publicly to do the work behind the scenes.

“My experience with LIV Golf Investments has been very positive. I apologize for anything I said that was taken out of context. The specific people I have worked with are visionaries and have only been supportive.

“More importantly they passionately love golf and share my drive to make the game better. They have a clear plan to create an updated and positive experience for everyone including players, sponsors, networks, and fans.”

But it seems Mickelson was stung by criticism aimed his way, including pointed comments from Rory McIlroy and Billy Horschel.

“I don’t want to kick someone while he’s down, obviously, but I thought they were naive, selfish, egotistical, ignorant,” McIlroy said after the final round of last week’s Genesis Invitational. “A lot of words to describe that interaction he had with Shipnuck. It was just very surprising and disappointing, sad. I’m sure he’s sitting at home sort of rethinking his position and where he goes from here.”

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Mickelson went with a statement.

“I have made a lot of mistakes in my life and many have been shared with the public,” Mickelson said. “My intent was never to hurt anyone and I’m so sorry to the people I have negatively impacted. This has always been about supporting the players and the game and I appreciate all the people who have given me the benefit of the doubt.

“Despite my belief that some changes have already been made within the overall discourse, I know I need to be accountable. For the past 31 years I have lived a very public life and I have strived to live up to my own expectations, be the role model the fans deserve, and be someone that inspires others. I’ve worked to compete at the highest level, be available to media, represent my sponsors with integrity, engage with volunteers and sign every autograph for my incredible fans.

“I have experienced many successful and rewarding moments that I will always cherish, but I have often failed myself and others too.  The past 10 years I have felt the pressure and stress slowly affecting me at a deeper level.  I know I have not been my best and desperately need some time away to prioritize the ones I love most and work on being the man I want to be.”

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‘Idiotic, complete lies:’ Billy Horschel unloads on Phil Mickelson following comments on Saudi Arabia-backed league

“I’ll put it this way. They were a little bit idiotic,” Horschel said of Mickelson’s comments.

Somewhere, one has to think Phil Mickelson’s ears are burning.

A day after Rory McIlroy blistered Mickelson for comments the World Golf Hall of Fame member made concerning the proposed Saudi Arabia-backed, Greg Norman-led Super Golf League, six-time PGA Tour winner and 2014 FedEx Cup champion Billy Horschel weighed in.

“Idiotic.”

“Complete lies.”

“False.”

Those were some of the words Horschel had for Mickelson, who just nine months ago started riding a wave of adoration after becoming the oldest winner of a major championship at the PGA. In speaking with Matt Adams on the Fairways of Life golf show Monday, Horschel, who is member of the Tour’s Player Advisory Council, also said Mickelson’s reputation and legacy have been tarnished and his Ryder Cup captaincy could be in question.

“I’ll put it this way. They were a little bit idiotic,” Horschel said of Mickelson’s contentions told to Alan Shipnuck of the Firepit Collective and author of the soon-to-be-released book, “Phil: The Rip-Roaring (and Unauthorized!) Biography of Golf’s Most Colorful Superstar.” Mickelson told Shipnuck that he was one of the architects behind the proposed Saudi Arabia league and said he hoped to use the league that is guaranteeing exorbitant amounts of money as leverage against the PGA Tour. This despite saying of the regime in Saudi Arabia, which has been harshly criticized for its human rights record, “They’re scary motherf—–s to get involved with,” he said to Shipnuck. “I’m not sure I even want (the SGL) to succeed, but just the idea of it is allowing us to get things done with the (PGA) Tour.”

Earlier this year, Mickelson told Golf Digest that the PGA Tour’s “greed” was “beyond obnoxious.”

“Some of the statements (Mickelson) made are lies or false. I don’t know where he got his information from,” Horschel said. “It’s unbelievable that he would say certain things because he understands how the PGA Tour works. For him to say certain things about obnoxious greed and the PGA Tour is sitting on $20 billion and some other things, are complete lies.

“I may not see all the numbers that a Player Director might see in board meetings, but I see enough to understand the money is being used correctly. And it’s being used how the PGA Tour says it is.

“It’s tough because Phil has been a great ambassador to the game of golf and I honestly feel he’s hurting his reputation and tarnishing his legacy a little bit.”

As for the Ryder Cup, it has been long rumored that Mickelson, who has played in 12 editions of the biennial tussle between the U.S. and Europe and served as a vice captain in the Americans’ rout in 2021, would be the captain in 2025 at Bethpage Black in New York.

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Horschel, who has never played in a Ryder Cup, said that is in jeopardy.

“That’s a decision for the PGA of America and the former captains. I would say at this point in time, if that decision had to be made, if the Ryder Cup was next year for Bethpage, it would be hard-pressed for me to see him actually get that spot,” Horschel said. “I would think they would sort of say we just can’t go down that route. But we’re three years away from that. Things can be corrected; people can admit wrong and do things the right way going forward.

“Hopefully, if that’s what he wants to be, a Ryder Cup captain, there is some way for him to sort of fix anything that sort of has hurt him.”

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Bryson DeChambeau commits to PGA Tour, another massive blow to Saudi Arabia-backed Super Golf League

“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.”

Sunday was a rough day to be a rival golf tour.

Just hours after Dustin Johnson released a statement through the PGA Tour stating he is fully committed to the PGA Tour, Bryson DeChambeau followed suit with a message from his own Twitter account.

“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. As of now, I am focused on getting myself healthy and competing again soon. I appreciate all the support.”

Lynch: Phil Mickelson’s mouth has brought him — and his greedy Saudi scheme — to the brink of ruin

Johnson, DeChambeau and Phil Mickelson have been rumored to be a few of the top players who would join a potential Saudi Arabia-back Super Golf League that would pay enormous amounts of guaranteed money in order to siphon off some of the game’s biggest names and be a direct rival with the PGA Tour.

Johnson’s statement was similar to that of DeChambeau’s: “Over the past several months, there has been a great deal of speculation about an alternative tour; much of which seems to have included me and my future in professional golf,” Johnson’s statement said. “I feel it is now time to put such speculation to rest. I am fully committed to the PGA Tour. I am grateful for the opportunity to play the best tour in the world and for all it has provided me and my family.”

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Mickelson has been dominating the headlines in recent weeks, especially after Mickelson told the Firepit Collective’s Alan Shipnuck that he was one of the architects behind the proposed league and explained how he hoped to use the rival league as leverage over the Tour despite the Saudis being “scary motherf—–s.

The PGA Tour has responded by increasing official prize money to $427 million, upping the FedEx Cup bonus money to $75 million, and creating additional programs that will dole out millions more. All told, the PGA Tour will pay out more than $838 million in comprehensive earnings to players this season.

Golfweek’s Steve DiMeglio contributed to this article.

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Dustin Johnson is ‘fully committed to the PGA Tour’ despite Saudi Arabia-backed Super Golf League rumors

Johnson went on to thank the leadership and sponsors, “who make the PGA Tour golf’s premier tour.”

Dustin Johnson isn’t leaving the PGA Tour.

The world No. 6 and two-time major champion released a statement Sunday through the PGA Tour stating he is fully committed to the PGA Tour. For nearly a year, Johnson, who counts 24 PGA Tour titles on his resume, has been rumored to be one of the top players who would join a potential Saudi Arabia-back Super Golf League that would pay enormous amounts of  guaranteed money, siphon off some of the game’s biggest names and be a direct rival with the PGA Tour.

Speculation of Johnson joining the league has been fueled in part by his playing in the Saudi International the past four years; he won in 2019 and 2021.

“Over the past several months, there has been a great deal of speculation about an alternative tour; much of which seems to have included me and my future in professional golf,” Johnson said. “I feel it is now time to put such speculation to rest. I am fully committed to the PGA Tour. I am grateful for the opportunity to play the best tour in the world and for all it has provided me and my family.”

Lynch: Phil Mickelson’s mouth has brought him — and his greedy Saudi scheme — to the brink of ruin

Talk of the league has dominated the conversation at the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club this week. Johnson, who has 10 top-10s at Riv, including victory in 2017, missed the cut on Friday.

Comments by World Golf Hall of Fame member and reigning PGA champion Phil Mickelson ignited the talk. In a report by Alan Shipnuck of the Firepit Collective and the author of the soon-to-be-released book, “Phil: The Rip-Roaring (and Unauthorized!) Biography of Golf’s Most Colorful Superstar,” Mickelson told Shipnuck that he was one of the architects behind the proposed league and explained how he hoped to use it as leverage over the Tour despite the Saudis being “scary motherf—–s.

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The PGA Tour has responded by increasing official prize money to $427 million, upping the FedEx Cup bonus money to $75 million, and creating additional programs that will dole out millions more. All told, the PGA Tour will pay out more than $838 million in comprehensive earnings to players this season.

Naturally, players at Riviera were asked about the league. Jon Rahm, Rory McIlroy, Collin Morikawa, Justin Thomas, Brooks Koepka and Viktor Hovland all said their allegiance is to the PGA Tour.

Johnson weighed in on Sunday.

While there will always be areas where our Tour can improve and evolve, I am thankful for our leadership and the many sponsors who make the PGA Tour golf’s premier tour,” he said.

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Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy and the players who have supported the PGA Tour over the Saudi Arabia-backed Super Golf League

A good number of the top players have been outspoken against rival golf leagues.

Over the last year rumors have continued to spread about rival golf leagues that may challenge the PGA Tour and change the professional golf landscape as we know it.

Despite the $135 million offer reports and non-disclosure agreements, no players have officially committed to leave the Tour just yet. But on the other hand, players like Tiger Woods, an 82-time winner on Tour, and three-time winner and rising star Max Homa, have been outspoken in their support of the PGA Tour.

So if you’re wondering who may be running for the greener pastures of guaranteed paydays, it’s safe to assume it won’t be one of these Tour players.

Chubb Classic: Saudi Arabia-backed Super Golf League has PGA Tour Champions players talking

“I don’t think they’re knocking on anyone’s door out here,” said Jim Furyk.

The topic won’t go away.

How will the PGA Tour handle the new Saudi Arabian-backed Super Golf League, which recently announced it plans to start this year and possibly have events in the United States.

Even the Tour players themselves are keeping it in the spotlight. Last week in Phoenix, Tour players Charley Hoffman made a post on Instagram after getting penalized and implied that penalties like the one he was called for — the ball on a dropped penalty shot rolled into a hazard — were among the reasons players were looking to jump to another league.

That just made all of the noise even louder in Phoenix than on No. 16. And it’s still reverberating.

At Riviera this week on the tour, multiple players have been asked about it. For example, Rory McIlroy and Jon Rahm have said they’re where they want to be, while Adam Scott left the door open. Tiger Woods spoke in favor of the PGA Tour.

At the Chubb Classic, the PGA Tour Champions event this week in Naples, the 50-and-over players aren’t in the marketplace the Super Golf League — which is led by CEO Greg Norman of LIV Golf Investments — would be looking at.

“I don’t think they’re knocking on anyone’s door out here,” said Jim Furyk, the tour’s Rookie of the Year last year, jokingly. “I haven’t had any contact.”

But if the chance to make millions, with no cut so basically appearance fees, and playing in 40-player fields were brought up while these guys were in their 30s, for example, well …

“$150 million is generational money,” Jerry Kelly said. “That’ll make you think.”

Not for him, though.

“This is the dream,” he said of playing on the PGA Tour and Champions. “I don’t think, I’m not saying this, I don’t know, but if I got $150 million to go play I just don’t know how much I’d feel in here (pointing to his chest) about playing. You see guys sign big contracts and have a hard time actually drumming up the adrenaline and playing.”

All of the negatives associated with Saudi Arabia, from its treatment of women to possible ties to the 9/11 terrorist attacks (many of the hijackers were Saudi citizens), create their own minefield that a golfer carrying a big bag of money would have to navigate.

They’re growing the game, some of them have said.

“That’s nonsense, just utter nonsense,” Tour players Paul Goydos said.

On the other hand, while Phil Mickelson also recently created a bit of a firestorm with comments bashing the PGA Tour and its “obnoxious greed” while playing in the Saudi International a couple of weeks ago, Goydos said he does have a point.

“It was inelegant the way that he said it,” Goydos said. “His media rights are worth $5 million. My media rights are worth nothing, literally nothing. If you look at what I contributed to the PGA Tour with my name and likeness, the fans I brought out, television ratings, and then you compare that to what I made, it’s astronomical.”

Said Rocco Mediate, speaking without specifically naming Mickelson: “You don’t need to badmouth where you made your money.”

Goydos then made quite the analogy.

“The obnoxious greed to me is not the PGA Tour, it’s the people like me who don’t bring anything to the table other than somebody to beat up,” he said. “I’m the Washington Generals in a sense. How good are the Harlem Globetrotters without the Washington Generals? They have to have somebody to beat. We don’t really bring any money in but you need somebody to beat.”

On the other hand, while Phil Mickelson also recently created a bit of a firestorm with comments bashing the PGA Tour and its “obnoxious greed” while playing in the Saudi International a couple of weeks ago, Goydos said he does have a point.

“It was inelegant the way that he said it,” Goydos said. “His media rights are worth $5 million. My media rights are worth nothing, literally nothing. If you look at what I contributed to the PGA Tour with my name and likeness, the fans I brought out, television ratings, and then you compare that to what I made, it’s astronomical.”

Said Rocco Mediate, speaking without specifically naming Mickelson: “You don’t need to badmouth where you made your money.”

Goydos then made quite the analogy.

“The obnoxious greed to me is not the PGA Tour, it’s the people like me who don’t bring anything to the table other than somebody to beat up,” he said. “I’m the Washington Generals in a sense. How good are the Harlem Globetrotters without the Washington Generals? They have to have somebody to beat. We don’t really bring any money in but you need somebody to beat.”

“As nice a guy as (PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan) comes across as, unless you have leverage, he won’t do what’s right.

“And the Saudi money has finally given us that leverage. I’m not sure I even want [the SGL] to succeed, but just the idea of it is allowing us to get things done with the [PGA] Tour.”

Mediate sees both sides of the argument, as far as the tour players who don’t want to play in the Saudi league, and the ones who are at least giving it consideration.

“There’s a huge amount of money,” Mediate said. “There’s only 40 (players) and it’s a zillion dollars.”

That part of it has Mediate at least hoping the tours can find a way to work together, although there is at least some speculation that the Saudi tour will make an announcement during The Players Championship, the PGA Tour’s crown jewel, next month.

“I think it would be great if it could work together,” said Mediate, while adding he’s not sure if that’s possible. “They could just say ‘Just go ahead and play (the Saudi league), but just tell us you’re still going to hang with us.'”

Goydos hopes the players and the PGA Tour can work something out, and he sees some of the new initiatives as ways that could do that.

“They’re slowly doing certain things,” he said. “They’re going to start their own series of events and try to get more players in the top players’ hands.”

Peter Jacobsen and the golfers who played in the PGA Tour’s AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, which went up against the Saudi International (which isn’t the same thing as the proposed Super Golf League), did get sort of a preview though. Many top players, including Bryson DeChambeau and Dustin Johnson, skipped Pebble.

“Players earn the right to get releases from tournaments,” Jacobsen said diplomatically. “They have to play a certain number to acquire a certain number (of releases) and they’re well within their rights to request the releases.

“It’s up to the commissioner at his discretion to decide if it’s going to weaken the field that week. Everybody has a right to do that. I’m just disheartened that a lot of the players don’t grasp the fact that the AT&T (a major sponsor on the tour, period, not just for the Pebble event) is so important to our PGA Tour, our lifeblood.”

The number and quality of golfers who played in the Saudi International also opened another opportunity by being there.

“I think obviously having 21 players playing that event overseas, that was a good opportunity for the organizers of that tour to close the door, have some talks, try to woo more players into signing with them,” Furyk said. “… My thoughts on that are really that I would be in full support of the PGA Tour and what we’re trying to accomplish. Hopefully the players — I don’t know how many of them there are, but I think there has to be more than one I would hope; it’s hard to run a tour with just one — players that are involved hopefully can sit down with (PGA Tour commissioner) Jay (Monahan) and get things hashed out and move forward in a positive light.”

David Duval was a little more succinct.

“I think you would be an absolute fool to go play on that tour,” he said. “Simple enough.”

If only it were that simple.

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‘I’m so sick of it:’ Rory McIlroy gives another blistering take on potential Saudi Arabia-backed golf league

Rory McIlroy: “You’ve got the top players in the world are saying no, so that has to tell you something.”

I’m so sick of it.

That’s Rory McIlroy’s take on talking, hearing and being asked about the proposed Super Golf League, which is backed by Saudi Arabia’s sovereign fund and would rival the PGA Tour. The noise has ramped up on the Greg Norman-led league that would pay exorbitant guaranteed money and potentially siphon off some of the game’s biggest names.

A few players and others have chimed in on what they have heard, but to date, there has not been one player who has said he would jump to a rival league. And there have been reports that PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan will ban any player from the Tour if he joins the Super Golf League.

McIlroy, 32, has repeatedly said he would not join the league and at times has been pointed with his remarks about the proposed circuit. But McIlroy’s voice carries weight and carries far, and his take will continue to be sought.

Genesis Invitational 2022
Rory McIlroy speaks at a news conference at the 2022 Genesis Invitational at the Riviera Country Club. (Photo: Robyn Beck/AFP)

“Not so Super League,” McIlroy said when a question about the league was being asked Wednesday during his news conference ahead of the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club north of Los Angeles.

“Oh, I’m so sick of it.”

But he sucked it up and answered follow-up questions.

Tee times, TV info | ESPN+ PGA Tour Live streaming info

“I guess I’m intrigued who would (join). Certainly for the younger guys, like it just seems a massive risk,” McIlroy said. “I can maybe make sense of it for the guys that are getting to the latter stages of their career, for sure. I don’t think that’s what a rival golf league is really; that’s not what they’re going to want, is it?

“They don’t want some sort of league that’s like a pre‑Champions tour. I don’t know. I understand the financial part of it for guys that are later on in their career. But you look at the people that have already said no. (Jon) Rahm, No. 1 in the world, Collin Morikawa, myself. Like, you’ve got the top players in the world are saying no, so that has to tell you something.”

Add Tiger Woods, Brooks Koepka and Justin Thomas to the list, too.

The world No. 5 and four-time major champion serves on the PGA Tour’s policy board and, in addressing the Saudi Arabia’s possible league, McIlroy alluded to the PGA Tour’s financial strength.

“There’s a forecast through 2025. Any forecast that the PGA Tour has produced in the last 10 years, they’ve hit their target. So the forecast for 2025, it looks good,” he said. “I think the executive leadership team on the Tour are doing a really good job. It’s sort of a turbulent time in the world of professional golf but I think we’ve got the right people sort of doing the right things.”

While he wouldn’t share numerical details, McIlroy did say, “There’s a ton of guys out here that are going to get rich if they play well, put it that way.”

As for McIlroy’s recent play, he went to Holywood to get in the right frame of mind for Hollywood this week. McIlroy spent a week in Holywood, Northern Ireland, where he was raised, after a disappointing finish in the Dubai Desert Classic three weeks ago. McIlroy hit his approach from 255 yards to the par-5 18th on the final day into the water and fell to third place.

“Obviously the end of that tournament in Dubai was disappointing, made a bad swing at a bad time, but I did a lot of really good things in there that I can’t forget about,” he said. “I try to just focus on the couple negatives that were there and tried to work on those last week and felt like I’ve put in quite a bit of time and quite a bit of work since Dubai and game actually feels pretty good coming here.

“My game feels in a much better place coming into this year at this event compared to last year. I didn’t play so well here last year, and I was sort of, sort of searching a little bit for things, but game feels a lot more settled this time around.”

Since winning his 20th PGA Tour title at the CJ Cup at The Summit in Las Vegas in October, which was his second victory of last season and earned him lifetime status once he completes playing 15 years on the Tour (he’s in year 14), McIlroy has four top-18 finishes in as many starts.

In five starts at Riviera, McIlroy’s never been worse than a tie for 20th. He missed the cut last year and tied for fifth and fourth the two previous trips to L.A. He loves the course and feels his game is in a good place, especially after meeting up with his coach, Michael Bannon, in Holywood, and spending time with friends and family.

“He was with me before the Middle East in Florida for a week. It was nice. I hadn’t been home in over two years just because of COVID, so it was nice to get back, nice to see some people, nice to introduce our daughter to her extended family,” McIlroy said. “It was nice. I got a stomach virus in the middle of that week, so I didn’t see much of anyone for a while, which wasn’t great. It was nice to be home. I don’t think you realize how much you miss it until you go back and see some people. It was certainly nice, a nice way to get over the disappointment of Dubai.”

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Bryson DeChambeau shoots down ‘false reports’ about his health, playing schedule as Saudi-backed league rumors fly

DeChambeau is “very disappointed” to miss this week’s Genesis Invitational with a hip and hand injury.

After an Instagram comment on Charley Hoffman’s scorched-earth post helped fan the rumor flames of the threat of the Saudi Arabia-backed Super Golf League to the PGA Tour, Bryson DeChambeau decided to shoot down some “false reports” about his health and future playing schedule.

The 28-year-old said on his Twitter account on Monday afternoon that he was “very disappointed” to miss this week’s Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club, which also happens to be one of his “favorite golf courses on Tour.” DeChambeau is out of the field due to a hip and hand injury.

In a text message sent to Golfweek’s Steve DiMeglio Monday, DeChambeau answered “Yes” when asked if would defend his title next month at the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill Club & Lodge in Orlando.

The eight-time winner on Tour has recently denied being offered $135 million to join the Super Golf League and implored golf fans to “chill” about his recent WD from the Saudi International.

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Bryson DeChambeau denies being offered $135 million to join Saudi Arabia-backed Super Golf League

The report also alleged the breakaway league is prepared to spend more than $2 billion on players.

After a Wednesday Sportsmail report alleged that Bryson DeChambeau had been offered $135 million to join the Saudi Arabia-backed Super Golf League, the 2020 Masters champion replied from his official Instagram page that the report was “wrong.”

The report also alleged that the league is prepared to spend £1.5 billion (more than $2 billion) on players.

“I think every player has been contacted,” said Phil Mickelson. “I don’t think there’s a player that hasn’t been.”

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Both the PGA Tour and DP World Tour have threatened lifetime bans for players who leave for a rival golf league.

DeChambeau, 28, didn’t speak to the media on Thursday following his 3-over 73 in the first round of the Saudi International.

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Lynch: The Saudis aren’t paying players for silence. We must listen for the lies.

We are entering a week in which golf fans will be inundated with obvious lies from the Saudi International.

“Obvious lies serve a purpose for an administration,” wrote Garry Kasparov, the chess great and courageous critic of Vladimir Putin. “They watch who challenges them and who loyally repeats them. The people must watch, too.”

We are entering a week in which golf fans will be inundated with obvious lies from the Saudi International, peddled by players exhibiting all the sincerity of $20 hustlers trying to say it like they mean it.

“I’m trying to grow the game.”

“They are trying to change here.”

“I’m just here to play golf.”

“I want to compete against the best.”

“I’m not a politician.”

The ashamed might at least look uneasy in their prevarications. The shameless will be all thumbs-up and duplicitous grins. And everyone will depart the Kingdom richer, but only in cash terms. This effort to launder the Saudi regime’s grotesque reputation will soil that of many others.

It promises to be a discordant week in golf as the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am is held opposite the Bonesaw Invitational. On one side we have an iconic venue, a longtime sponsor whose investment in the sport runs to tens of millions of dollars annually and a worthy charitable beneficiary. Eight thousand miles to the east, there is only money—unless you think bailing certain golfers out of their financial misadventures constitutes charity.

Sure, it’s all commerce, but one tournament comes with a side of mercy. The other is simply mercenary.

Elite golfers are free to earn money however they wish, but they aren’t exempt from criticism for the manner in which they do so. Participating in the Saudi International—or flirting with the regime’s proposed Super Golf League circuit—is to be an accessory to blatant sportswashing, willingly enlisted in a mendacious effort to distract from its ongoing human rights abuses and war crimes.

Players will sing the same libretto—“We’re not politicians! We’re just doing our job!”—but it’s a bogus deflection. This is an instance where just doing their jobs is a political act. Politics underwrites the money being thrown at them to perform. That’s the essence of sportswashing.

Most PGA Tour members who sought permission to compete in Saudi Arabia will earn a number by making up the numbers. Jason Dufner, Harold Varner III and Jhonny Vegas will be sent home with a check and a cursory nod of thanks, whereas stars like Dustin Johnson, Xander Schauffele and Bryson DeChambeau will be aggressively courted as potential assets in a breakaway Super League. Regardless of the level of interest each man holds for the Saudis, being present is an opportunity to be accounted for. Lewis Hamilton spoke out against regime abuses during the penultimate race of the Formula One season in Jeddah last December. Who will be Hamilton this week?

Bueller? …. Bueller? …

This week begs for moral clarity, not obfuscation and obsequiousness. Greg Norman will supply plenty of the latter as a propagandist for the Crown Prince’s regime. Slender are the chances of a principled protest from any golfer who has chosen to show up for the money. A gloomy few days lie ahead for golf.

Whatever obvious lies players spout to please the Crown Prince will surely find shelter behind the tu quoque tactics used by wankers of ‘whataboutism’, those clods who insist that criticism of the Saudi event is invalid unless it also specifies the evils of China, abuses in the Emirates, grievances about American and European foreign policy and arms sales, and condemnations of sweatshop-operating corporate sponsors, among other cul-de-sacs.

The implicit decree—that we cannot legitimately discuss one issue unless we simultaneously discuss every issue—is so intellectually trite as to barely be worth dismissing. Such shading benefits only the Saudis and those in their pay.

There will come a day when the Saudis either announce signings for a Super League or dissolve their ambitions as one might a dissident journalist in a faraway consulate. The moment of reckoning for the players—on their character, on their willingness to excuse atrocities so long as the check clears—is already at hand. They just won’t admit as much.

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