Big money, byes and 2024 eligibility all on the line as LIV Golf returns to Saudi Arabia

A lot is on the line at LIV Golf’s regular-season finale in the Kingdom.

The LIV Golf League returns to action this week with the final event of its regular season in Saudi Arabia, where tens of millions of dollars, first-round byes and future eligibility are all on the line.

At the end of LIV Golf Jeddah, once again held at Royal Greens Golf and Country Club in King Abdullah Economic City, the season-long individual champion will be decided and the winner will take home the lucrative $18 million top prize. Dustin Johnson won the individual title a week before last year’s season finale, but this year’s race is much closer with three players in the mix: Cam Smith, Talor Gooch and Bryson DeChambeau.

Here’s a rundown of what’s on the line this week at LIV Golf Jeddah.

Photos: 2023 LIV Golf Chicago at Rich Harvest Farms

The Saudi-backed circuit returns after over a month off.

The LIV Golf League returns this week to Chicago for its 12th event of the season. The Saudi-backed circuit has been off for a bit, with its last event coming over a month ago at Trump Bedminster in New Jersey — Cameron Smith claimed the individual title by seven shots while his team, Ripper GC, won the team competition.

With just the Chicago and Jeddah stops before the Team Championship in Miami, 4Aces GC leads the team point standings with Torque GC in second and Stinger GC in third. On the individual side, Smith leads the way followed by Talor Gooch and Patrick Reed.

Here are some of the best images from the week in Chicago.

It’s been yet another great stretch of pro golf for Oklahoma State alumni

Oklahoma State players have won eight tournaments on the two Tours combined this season.

[anyclip pubname=”2122″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8171″]

It wouldn’t have been possible had it not been for the creation of LIV Golf last year but Sunday turned out to be a huge day for former Oklahoma State golfers.

Taking it all in was Ponte Vedra Beach resident Bob Dickson, one of the players from OSU who helped lay the groundwork for a steady stream of Cowboys who have lassoed trophies and titles in professional golf since the 1960s.

“I loved it … a couple of ‘Pokes winning the same day makes us all very proud,” said Dickson, who won twice on the PGA Tour and once on the PGA Tour Champions with a career on the PGA Tour executive staff in between.

Within hours on either side of the Atlantic Ocean, Rickie Fowler won the Rocket Mortage Classic at the Detroit Country Club and Talor Gooch captured the LIV Golf Andalucia at Valderrama in Spain, both on dramatic birdie putts at the last.

2023 LIV Golf Andalucia
Talor Gooch celebrates after winning the 2023 LIV Golf Andalucia at Real Club Valderrama in Cadiz, Spain. (Photo: Octavio Passos/Getty Images)

Fowler birdied No. 18 in regulation to earn a playoff with Adam Hadwin and Collin Morikawa, and then birdied the 18th again on a 12-foot putt.

Gooch became the first three-time winner of LIV Golf events when he rolled in a 15-footer for birdie to beat Bryson DeChambeau by one shot.

Oklahoma State players have won eight tournaments on the two Tours combined this season.

In addition to Fowler’s victory last week and Gooch’s three LIV titles, Wyndham Clark won the U.S. Open and the Wells Fargo Championship, Viktor Hovland won The Memorial and Charles Howell III won the opening LIV event of the season in Mexico.

Dickson is taking it all in with pride. He played for the Cowboys from 1964-1966 under Labron Harris Sr., and posted victories in the U.S. and British Amateurs during that time.

Bob Dickson won the U.S. and British Amateurs while playing college golf at Oklahoma State, and went on to win on the PGA Tour and PGA Tour Champions. (Provided photo)

Players such as Dickson, Labron Harris Jr., Danny and David Edwards and Dave Eichelberger begot Bob Tway and Scott Verplank. Then Howell and Hunter Mahan came along, who handed the baton to the likes of Fowler, Clark, Kevin Tway, Gooch, Hovland and Peter Uihlein.

“The golf culture at Oklahoma State has been very good for decades, a really good golf history,” Dickson said. “I’m really proud of these Cowboys.”

Fowler, Hovland and Clark, the PGA Tour winners from Oklahoma State this season, have combined for four victories, 22 top-10s and more than $28 million in earnings this season. Austin Eckroat seems poised to join them and had a runner-up finish at the Byron Nelson in April.

More: Rickie Fowler’s prolific golf career and his wife Allison Stokke through the years

Clark is fourth on the FedEx Cup standings, Hovland sixth and Fowler eighth.

Cowboys on LIV Golf, Gooch, Howell, Uihlein and Matthew Wolff, have combined for three victories, nine top-10s and more than $32 million in earnings. Gooch leads LIV Golf’s points list, with Uihlein seventh and Howell 10th.

[lawrence-related id=778360939,778348112,778309922]

2023 LIV Golf Andalucia prize money payouts for each player and team

It pays to play well on the Saudi-backed circuit.

[anyclip pubname=”2122″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8171″]

Talor Gooch has found a home on the LIV Golf League.

The 31-year-old won for the third time this season on the Saudi Arabia-backed circuit at the 2023 LIV Golf Andalucia event at Valderrama in Spain on Sunday. For his efforts, Gooch will take home the top prize of $4 million and has now made $14,706,316 so far this season.

Bryson DeChambeau finished a shot back at 11 under and took home a tasty $2.25 million. Brooks Koepka continued his strong season, finishing three shots back in third at 9 under and banking $1.5 million. Sebastian Munoz also broke seven figures in fourth at 6 under with $1 million in earnings. Eight shots back, Jason Kokrak, David Puig and Patrick Reed each earned $703,333 at 4 under.

Check out how much money each player and team earned at LIV Golf’s eighth event of its 2023 season.

[pickup_prop id=”33872″]

LIV Golf Andalucia individual prize money

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Talor Gooch -12 $4,000,000
2 Bryson DeChambeau -11 $2,250,000
3 Brooks Koepka -9 $1,500,000
4 Sebastian Munoz -6 $1,000,000
T5 Jason Kokrak -4 $703,333
T5 David Puig -4 $703,333
T5 Patrick Reed -4 $703,333
T8 Dustin Johnson -3 $495,000
T8 Cameron Tringale -3 $495,000
T10 Joaquin Niemann -2 $402,500
T10 Sergio Garcia -2 $402,500
T12 Ian Poulter -1 $360,000
T12 Cameron Smith -1 $360,000
T14 Matt Jones E $296,000
T14 Carlos Ortiz E $296,000
T14 Dean Burmester E $296,000
T14 Thomas Pieters E $296,000
T14 Mito Pereira E $296,000
T19 Laurie Canter 1 $250,000
T19 Paul Casey 1 $250,000
T19 Abraham Ancer 1 $250,000
22 Brendan Steele 2 $230,000
T23 Louis Oosthuizen 3 $208,750
T23 Richard Bland 3 $208,750
T23 Phil Mickelson 3 $208,750
T23 Pat Perez 3 $208,750
T27 Kevin Na 4 $187,500
T27 Marc Leishman 4 $187,500
T27 Lee Westwood 4 $187,500
T27 Scott Vincent 4 $187,500
T31 Danny Lee 5 $167,500
T31 Branden Grace 5 $167,500
T31 Henrik Stenson 5 $167,500
T31 Bubba Watson 5 $167,500
35 Bernd Wiesberger 6 $155,000
T36 Martin Kaymer 7 $148,750
T36 James Piot 7 $148,750
T38 Charl Schwartzel 8 $140,000
T38 Graeme McDowell 8 $140,000
T38 Anirban Lahiri 8 $140,000
T38 Eugenio Chacarra 8 $140,000
T38 Harold Varner III 8 $140,000
43 Peter Uihlein 10 $132,500
44 Matthew Wolff 12 $130,000
T45 Charles Howell III 14 $126,250
T45 Jediah Morgan 14 $126,250
47 Chase Koepka 15 $122,500
48 Sihwan Kim 17 $120,000

LIV Golf Andalucia team prize money

Position Team Score Earnings
1 Torque GC -16 $3 million
2 RangeGoats GC -11 $1.5 million
3 Crushers GC -7 $500,000

LIV owns a 75 percent stake in each franchise and provided teams with an undisclosed amount of operating capital for the year. The teams are expected to largely run on their own dime this season, with team prize earnings going directly towards its day-to-day costs.

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=451198867]

Talor Gooch finishes birdie-birdie to claim LIV Golf Andalucia for third win of season

Gooch previously won in Australia and Singapore in consecutive weeks back in April.

[anyclip pubname=”2122″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8171″]

Talor Gooch finished birdie-birdie on Sunday to outlast Bryson DeChambeau and claim his third win of the LIV Golf League season.

The 31-year-old previously won in Australia and Singapore in consecutive weeks back in April and added to his total on the Saudi Arabia-backed circuit at LIV Golf Andalucia at Valderrama in Spain.

Gooch shot a 4-under 67 to finish at 12 under and beat DeChambeau (68) by one shot and Brooks Koepka (68) by three. Sebastian Munoz finished solo fourth at 6 under, while Patrick Reed, Jason Kokrak and David Puig finished T-5 at 4 under.

On the team side, Joaquin Niemann’s Torque GC earned a five-shot win at 16 under over Bubba Watson’s RangeGoats GC, who finished at 11 under. DeChambeau’s Crushers came in third at 7 under.

The league will tee it up in England at LIV Golf London, July 7-9, at Centurion Club in Hertfordshire.

[pickup_prop id=”33872″]

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=451198867]

2023 PGA Championship: Rickie Fowler, Tom Kim, Cameron Young among notables to miss the cut

Several big names are leaving New York early.

[mm-video type=video id=01h0va1d4rf5vm5dkmg4 playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01h0va1d4rf5vm5dkmg4/01h0va1d4rf5vm5dkmg4-b36f9d7c59e9cc58973ee5c1a4bcc4f7.jpg]

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — Cut day brings both joy and misery to the field of 156 that began on Thursday with a chance of hoisting the Wanamaker Trophy.

Some such as Tyrrell Hatton, who bounced back from an opening-round 77 with a 68, and world No. 4 Patrick Cantlay (74-67) have renewed faith that they can continue to vault up the leaderboard and join the trophy hunt. Harold Varner III was on the cutline after a double bogey at No. 11 and responded brilliantly. He closed with five consecutive threes on the card, four of them birdies, and is back in the mix at 1 over. Defending champion Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth, who is seeking to complete the career Grand Slam with a win, both needed to sink 8-foot putts to make the cut and they drained them. In all 76 golfers made it to the weekend at 5-over 145 or better.

But for the men on this list, the chase is over and they’re none too happy about it. A couple of them blew up, shooting 80, while another made bogey at the last to have the weekend off. Here’s the bad news for some of the best in the world who didn’t have their good stuff this week.

LIV Golf Tulsa first round draws one of largest crowds in league’s short history: ‘Just shows we’re doing something right’

“I think this is probably the best one we’ve had in America, to be quite honest.”

BROKEN ARROW, Okla. — There’s no questioning LIV Golf had its most successful event fan wise three weeks ago in Adelaide, Australia.

However, there may be a new top event in the United States.

Fans came out in droves for the first round of LIV Golf Tulsa. They braved rainy conditions at some times, as well. Golf fans in Oklahoma are one of the reasons LIV Golf decided to come to the state, and they turned out Friday to Cedar Ridge Country Club.

“I think this is probably the best one we’ve had in America, to be quite honest,” first-round leader Branden Grace said of the crowds. “In Australia it was fantastic. Singapore was really good, as well. We came out there with a warm welcome, and you come to Tulsa, the guys are really loving it out here. They’re sport hungry, or event hungry, if I can put it that way.

“I’ve heard for the first time in America where — the U.S. where you see where the guys are going to go this week; are they going to support the PGA Tour or come out to LIV, and I heard a hell of a lot more people saying they’re coming out to the LIV and seeing what it’s all about. Just shows we’re doing something right.”

LIV Golf Tulsa: Photos | Merchandise

There’s no official attendance, but LIV officials estimated at least 10,000 fans were going to be at the tournament each day. The number was that and possibly more during the first round.

Now, compared to the 2022 PGA Championship, which was held about 10 miles away at Southern Hills Country Club, the LIV Golf Tulsa crowd is minuscule, and it’s not quite fair to correlate the 14th event in the league’s history to a major championship. It does, however, compare more to the Senior PGA Championship that was held at Southern Hills in 2021.

It’s a sign of growth and interest, even with all of the commotion and controversy surrounding the league.

“The crowds were amazing, and the energy was great,” Brendan Steele said. “So exciting that everybody showed up and is having a great time out here because we think we have a great thing going, and I love to see people in new places come out and check it out.”

[pickup_prop id=”33399″]

Playing only 3 ½ hours north of the PGA Tour event in McKinney, Texas, this is the closest the two tours have competed near each other since LIV began play last June. But the location, being in a golf-crazed state like Oklahoma, is pivotal for LIV having one of its largest crowds yet.

Every player who talked with media after the round spoke about the crowds, including former Oklahoma State star Talor Gooch, who has won the past two LIV events.

“For the American events so far, Miami last year might have been the only one that felt like it was bigger than today from a crowd perspective,” Gooch said. “I was happy that Oklahoma turned out today.”

Added Dustin Johnson: “I think the crowds were great today. A lot of fans out there. There was a lot of support.”

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=]

How did LIV Golf end up in Tulsa? College ties and a golf-crazed state are to thank

Cedar Ridge has a history of high-level golf.

BROKEN ARROW, Okla. — Talor Gooch and Charles Howell III were having a conversation during LIV Golf Bangkok last fall, discussing the future of the league.

LIV Golf’s plans weren’t secret. The league planned to expand its schedule beyond the eight events it held in its inaugural season, but nothing was set in stone yet.

The two former Oklahoma State golfers wanted to bring a professional event to Oklahoma, preferably somewhere in the Oklahoma City or Tulsa area. That prompted Howell to reach out to a few courses in the state.

“I relied heavily on Talor, who’s from here, who knows the golf courses in the areas better than I do, and that kind of started our conversation and started the conversation with LIV and those that help with the scheduling,” Howell said.

More LIV Tulsa: See what’s in the merchandise tent

Cedar Ridge Country Club, which sits in Broken Arrow, a southern suburb of Tulsa, is the site of this week’s LIV Golf event, the sixth of the season and a week before the PGA Championship in Western New York. However, it wasn’t the only course that LIV reached out to in Oklahoma.

LIV Golf reached out to Oak Tree National in Edmond, site of the 1988 PGA Championship, as well as Gaillardia Country Club in Oklahoma City. LIV Golf and Gaillardia, which has hosted PGA Tour Champions events, nearly had a deal in place before it fell through, leaving the door open for Cedar Ridge.

There were also a pair of courses LIV talked to in the Tulsa area, but it was Howell’s conversation with Billy Lowry, the president at Cedar Ridge, that propelled the conversation forward.

Cedar Ridge has a history of high-level golf. It hosted the 1983 U.S. Women’s Open, an LPGA event from 2004-08, and was a subsite for the 2009 U.S. Amateur, which was played mainly at Southern Hills Country Club, a mere 10 minutes from Cedar Ridge and the site of the 2022 PGA Championship.

“I knew it would work well. I know (fans) like their golf here,” Howell said. “You couldn’t write a better script with Talor winning the previous two events and coming back into his home state.”

Gooch is the first back-to-back winner on LIV, winning events in Adelaide and Singapore before an off week. Now, he’s back in Oklahoma, but there are plenty more golfers who have ties to the Sooner State.

Of LIV Golf’s 48 players, six played collegiately in Oklahoma: Howell, Gooch, Matthew Wolff, Peter Uihlein and Eugenio Chacarra played at Oklahoma State, and Abraham Ancer all played for Oklahoma. That’s one-eighth of the LIV field having a connection to Oklahoma.

“I think it’s such a great crowd for golf,” Ancer said. “We’re going to hear a lot of people supporting me and — well, I’m surrounded this week. I think we’ve got five or six Pokes out here this week, but I’m going to try my best to beat them.”

Added Chacarra: “I think the state of Oklahoma deserves good fields, good tournaments, and there’s going to be a lot of people.”

Come this week, Cameron Smith, Brooks Koepka, Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson and others will get another taste of Oklahoma golf, this time at Cedar Ridge when LIV Golf Tulsa gets underway Friday. For some, it’s a final tune-up before heading to Oak Hill next week.

LIV wanted to sign a two-year deal with Cedar Ridge, but the club only approved a one-year contract. The club and its membership have discussed building a new clubhouse with a hefty price tag, but the interest to host LIV Golf in Oklahoma remains even after this year.

LIV is expecting nearly 10,000 fans during the event, though forecasted rainy weather could hamper those numbers. Nevertheless, Oklahoma is a state with plenty of golf tradition, and Cedar Ridge will add to it this week by hosting LIV Golf.

“It’s all worked out really well for us,” Howell said. “I hope everybody has a wonderful week here. I think the fan support will be good, and hopefully, we can come back.”

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=]

Lynch: Phil Mickelson leads LIV Golf crybabies in blaming others for their predicament

The tossing of toys from the LIV crib is an almost daily occurrence now as the reality of their circumstances sets in.

Since being accused of a “dick move” by Phil Mickelson is comparable to having the Pope commend one’s catechism scholarship, Mike Whan ought to take the stigmatic legend’s intended insult as a compliment, and file it as yet more evidence of how Mickelson never emerges best in USGA contests.

Mickelson attacked Whan in defense of Talor Gooch, who Mickelson felt was unfairly discriminated against by a change in exemption criteria that cost him an automatic spot in next month’s U.S. Open. Having now taken a stand in support of someone treated shabbily by tournament regulations, it can only be a matter of time before Mickelson steps forward to shield those who might find themselves at the business end of his employer’s bonesaw.

Gooch himself has a highly-developed sense of injustice, at least as it relates to Talor Gooch. Last week he bemoaned the Australian government deducting a hefty amount of tax from his $4 million winnings at the LIV Golf event in Adelaide, a predictable gripe from someone known to have a flexible interpretation of what he owes and to whom, and when such obligations ought to be settled.

On his disappearing U.S. Open exemption, Gooch claimed the criterion change impacting him was “retroactive.” The USGA publishes Open criteria annually, and with no specifications for 2023 having previously been announced, no change can be “retroactive,” as any dictionary definition will indicate (it’s right there after “retribution,” which is what Gooch imagines this to be).

The tossing of toys from the LIV crib is an almost daily occurrence now as the reality of their circumstances sets in.

Last week in Singapore, Bryson DeChambeau panned the world golf rankings as “obsolete,” while simultaneously demanding LIV be included in said obsolete system. LIV isn’t afforded ranking points because it is non-compliant in many areas, and has made clear it doesn’t intend to become compliant. Nevertheless, DeChambeau (and Mickelson) insist the ranking is broken because it grants points to tours, not based on the past accomplishments of individuals now competing in a closed circuit where they’re contractually protected from the consequences of poor play.

“It’s not right, and I hope people can see through that,” DeChambeau said. (For late arrivals, he’s protesting the denial of ranking points, not of human rights in his benefactor’s kingdom).

\Talor Gooch, Phil Mickelson and Dustin Johnson leave the 12th tee box during a practice round for The Masters golf tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Network

Eager to keep pace in the victimhood stakes, Lee Westwood was among four players to resign their DP World Tour memberships after a British sports arbitration panel ruled that the European tour can sanction members who played LIV events without permission. He too claims rules are being unfairly applied against him.

“As a European Tour member, I was allowed to be a member of the PGA Tour without any problem for all those years. Tell me, what is the difference?” Westwood said to the Telegraph. “Just because LIV is funded by the Saudis — a country where my tour used to play and where we were encouraged to play?”

Westwood is conflating separate reasons why the LIV enterprise upsets people. For many fans — including plenty of his own, once upon a time — the issue is absolutely where the money is coming from, in this case, an autocrat eager to use golf to sportswash his abuses. But for those in charge of the DP World Tour, or the PGA Tour for that matter, the issue has only ever been where the money is going — to a rival league. For them, LIV is a commercial threat, not a moral dilemma.

That’s the context Westwood omits when he says there’s no difference between playing sporadically on other tours versus signing a long-term commitment to a circuit intent on supplanting the very tours he claims loyalty to. The LIV threat underpins the strategic alliance between the DP World and PGA tours, an arrangement Westwood dislikes.

“I don’t want to play under that sort of regime,” he said, displaying all the awareness one would expect of a man who has proudly boasted of never having read a book. Ignorance worn as a badge of honor seldom goes unnoticed.

Among some LIV players, the stench of desperation is rising as rapidly as Greg Norman’s hollow promises are falling apart. Those who believed the flaxen-haired finger puppet have cash, sure, but no access to the PGA Tour, no right to cherry-pick from the DP World Tour, no ranking points, and no respect as game-growing visionaries. Decisions by the British arbitration panel and a federal court in Northern California have for now marooned LIV players on an island, a reality that must be apparent to even the most obtuse of their number (it may take a while longer with Pat Perez).

This explains the rising pitch of whining about access, about ranking points, about all manner of supposed conspiracies against them. It’s the defining trait of LIV and its bottom-feeders: the legitimacy of any institution is entirely dependent on whether it favors them, be it rankings, regulations or elections.

The crybaby routine is destined to grow louder in hopes that some spineless industry executive will act as a pacifier and see to it that LIV demands are met. It could work. Golf’s upper echelon doesn’t lack men who would cheerfully peel off Saudi riyals for their beleaguered organizations under the guise of making peace among warring factions. But for all the noise, the arguments mounted by LIV players are little more than whimpering by those who made a clear-eyed choice, the consequences of which they are increasingly unprepared to live with.

[pickup_prop id=”31735″]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=]

Phil Mickelson gets vulgar in calling out Mike Whan, USGA after U.S. Open exemption rule change

“Total d!*k move by Whan. He leads our governing body. Sad.”

Talor Gooch has won back-to-back titles in the Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf League. However, he’s currently ranked 60th in the Official World Golf Ranking.

What does that mean?

Gooch is on the cutline of being eligible for the 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club. The top 60 in the OWGR as of May 22 and June 12 are exempt into the tournament.

Despite his place in the ranking system, Gooch thought he was already exempt after qualifying for the 2022 Tour Championship at East Lake in Atlanta. He did not play in the event due to his move to LIV.

Thanks to a recent rule change from the USGA, that achievement no longer gets him in the field.

“The USGA annually reviews its exemption criteria for all championships, and we did for the 2023 US Open,” a USGA spokesperson wrote in an email to Golfweek. “Importantly, we provided more clarity to a specific exemption category to reflect that players must be both qualified and eligible for the Tour Championship, beginning with the 2023 U.S. Open. The change was not made retroactively, but rather as a part of our annual review process and included within several other changes made to the criteria for the upcoming 2023 championship.”

Gooch, for obvious reasons, isn’t too thrilled.

“That was obviously disappointing because that changed rule only affected one person, which was me,” Gooch said on the “73rd Hole” podcast. “So that was frustrating and tough because with LIV still not being rewarded with World Ranking points, I have only two options to qualify for the U.S. Open: via my World Ranking, which is going to be very challenging, or trying to obviously go through the qualifying route of sectional qualifying.”

Phil Mickelson has come to Gooch’s aid on Twitter, calling out Mike Whan, the USGA’s CEO, over the exemption change.

Mickelson needs a win at the U.S. Open to complete the career grand slam. He is exempt into the field next month thanks to his win at the 2021 PGA Championship.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=]