Business Day

LIV Golf, PGA Tour ‘can sort disputes’

• McIlroy is confident that progress can be made in ironing out issues

- Agency Staff

Rory McIlroy sees a “really big disconnect” between LIV Golf and its financial backer, Saudi Arabia’s Private Investment Fund (PIF), but remains hopeful that progress can be made in the fracture between the PGA Tour and its upstart rival.

Any distance between the negotiatin­g parties could be bridged in an in-person meeting scheduled this week between Yasir al-Rumayyan, governor of the PIF, and player directors of the PGA Tour’s policy board, including Tiger Woods, according to player director Patrick Cantlay and McIlroy, a former player director.

The meeting location was moved from Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, host of The Players Championsh­ip last week at TPC Sawgrass, to Nassau, Bahamas, and the Albany Resort, where Woods hosts an annual fundraisin­g golf tournament and comes nine months after the infamous “framework agreement” between the PGA and LIV was announced.

Expected to meet PIF and PGA Tour officials are player directors Woods, Cantlay, Adam Scott, Peter Malnati, Webb Simpson and Jordan Spieth.

Also expected are members of the Strategic Sports Group, which has committed $1.5bn to PGA Tour Enterprise­s in the form of private equity.

“I think it should have happened months ago, so I am glad that it’s happening,” McIlroy said after his final round at The Players.

“Hopefully, that progresses conversati­ons and gets us closer to a solution.”

Men’s profession­al golf has been in an upheaval since LIV Golf launched in June 2022.

With significan­t financial resources, LIV Golf successful­ly recruited many of the PGA Tour’s biggest names and others with guaranteed money far surpassing their annual earning power on the long-establishe­d tour.

The two sides are working on a partnershi­p that has missed a deadline at the end of 2023.

Reigning Masters champion Jon Rahm, a superstar in the sport, defected to the LIV Tour in December for a contract worth more than $300m.

McIlroy said Rumayyan’s point of view on negotiatio­ns and the future of the sport does not match with LIV officials such as Greg Norman and others.

McIlroy believes Rumayyan “wants to do the right thing”.

“I have spent time with Yasir and his, the people that have represente­d him in LIV, I think, have done him a disservice, so Norman and those guys,” he said.

“I see the two entities, and I think there’s a big, I actually think there’s a really big disconnect between PIF and LIV. I think you got PIF over here and LIV are sort of over here doing their own thing.

“So the closer that we can get to Yasir, PIF and hopefully finalise that investment, I think that will be a really good thing.”

McIlroy called it their “disruptive­ness” compared with PIF’s place in the world of golf.

 ?? Ross Kinnaid/Getty Images ?? On side: Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland, left, and Tiger Woods of the US./
Ross Kinnaid/Getty Images On side: Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland, left, and Tiger Woods of the US./

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