Taranaki Daily News

LIV Tour wants players ranked

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LIV Golf is turning up the heat on the Official World Golf Ranking, asking in a letter to Chairman Peter Dawson that its results be included retroactiv­ely in the world ranking.

LIV Golf, which has 48-man fields that play 54 holes with a shotgun start each day, applied to be included in the world ranking on July 6.

Among the requiremen­ts to receive world ranking points is for a new tour to comply with the guidelines for at least one year before it gets admitted.

The Saudi-funded league did not play its first tournament until June 9.

Dawson, the former R&A chief executive, spoke last month on Golf Channel about the new formula for the OWGR, though he declined to speak specifical­ly to the LIV Golf applicatio­n.

The letter sent to Dawson was signed by all 48 players in the LIV Golf Invitation­al-chicago tournament, along with two-time Masters champion Bubba Watson, who has signed with LIV but is not expected to start playing until next year.

Players who signed with the lucrative LIV Golf series have not received ranking points except in the majors or in the European tour events they were allowed to play.

Dustin Johnson was No13 in the world when he signed with LIV. He tied for 24th in the US Open and tied for sixth in the British Open. He has finished in the top 10 at all five LIV Golf events (including a win and a runner-up finish in the last two). He has fallen to No23.

Talor Gooch was at No35 and was slowly slipping in the world ranking until he played the BMW PGA Championsh­ip on the European tour, finished fourth and moved up back to No35. He dropped one spot a week later.

European tour events and other circuits if they choose to play, such as the Asian Tour or Japan Golf Tour, are currently the only places for LIV players to earn ranking points.

Since 1999, the Masters has invited the top 50 at the end of the year, while the US Open and British Open also use the world ranking as key criteria.

The PGA Championsh­ip has a history of inviting the top 100, though it falls under ‘‘special invitation­s’’.

The letter cites the OWGR’S mission to administer and publish each week ‘‘a transparen­t, credible, and accurate ranking based on the relative performanc­es of players.’’

‘‘How can such a system possibly exclude players competing at such high levels against some of the strongest fields of the year for large purses, at such high-profile events?’’ the letter said.

LIV Golf has 13 of the top 50 players in the world ranking, led by Cameron Smith at No 3.

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